Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Dunn

300 S.W. 916, 222 Ky. 422, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 940
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 300 S.W. 916 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Dunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Dunn, 300 S.W. 916, 222 Ky. 422, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 940 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appellant; Louisville & Nashville Bailroad Company, which we shall refer to as the L. & N., seeks by this appeal to reverse a judgment for $6,608.07, plus $660.80 penalty, or' a total of $7,268.87, recovered against it by Alex Dunn. Of this sum, $6,608.07 was assessed against •the property of the L: & N. as its proportionate part of the cost of constructing sewers in the fifth sewer district *423 of the city of Corbin. . The $660.80 represents- a- 10 per cent, penalty upon the above sum. It will be necessary for us to embody in this opinion some of the historical background of this -litigation. Some six or seven years ago, the city of Corbin planned to construct a system of sewers and divided the city into seven sewer districts. We are not concerned with any of these districts except districts 4, 5, and 6. It was part of the plan of the city of Corbin to have all the sewers in these three districts to lead to and connect with a sewage disposal plant which it proposed to construct on Lynn Camp creek. The L. & N. owned the property whereon the city desired to place this sewage disposal plant. It also owned property across which the city desired to construct a 24-inch outfall sewer to reach this disposal plant. If the improvements in all three of these sewer districts had been constructed at one time, then the assessment against the L. & N. in sewer district 4, where the principal part of its property is located, would have been very much less than its assessment would be if only sewer district 4 was con•structed and all the cost of this sewage disposal plant and this outfall sewer was charged agaist sewer dis-trict No. 4. The L. & N. saw this, and the governing authorities of the city of Corbin saw it. It was plain to any one that it would be an injustice to the property owners in'sewer district 4 to impose upon them the whole cost of constructing this sewage disposal plant and this large outfall sewer, and to then thereafter permit sewer district 5 and sewer district 6 to connect with and empty the sewage from these two districts through this outfall sewer and into this sewage disposal plant without making any contribution to the cost of constructing the same.

To solve these problems, the city of Corbin and the L. & N. agreed upon a contract, which was signed by the L. & N., and which was enacted and adopted as an ordinance of the city of Corbin and is npw known as ordinance No. 606, and which we .shall refer to hereafter ,as the agreement. By this agreement the city of 1 Corbin changed the boundaries of sewer district No. 4 so as to ¡exclude therefrom-that property of the L. & N. lying east of an imaginary line drawn parallel to Railroad street and 210 feet east from Railroad street. In other words, they estimated -that the assessment -against the L. •& N. property lying east of this imaginary line would equal the-value of the land and the -easement which the city de *424 sired 'to acquire, and in consideration of this change in the boundary of the fourth sewer district, the L. & N. conveyed to the city a tract of land whereon the city afterwards constructed and now has its sewage disposal plant. The L. & N. also conveyed to the city an easemont or right to construct and maintain a 24-inch sewer across its property leading to and connecting with this sewage disposal plant, and in this agreement it was further provided by section 6:

“That, in case the main outfall sewer and the sewage disposal plant are made a part of a system of sewers serving property other than the fourth sewer district, the cost of aforesaid main outfall sewer and sewage disposal plant shall be reapportioned and the railroad company reimbursed by the city to the amount of its pro rata share of that portion of the cost of said sewers and sewage disposal plant assessed against the property other than the fourth sewer district.”

About three years ago, the city of Corbin by proper ordinances, etc., made provision for the construction of sewers in sewer districts 5 and 6. They have been constructed, and the co'st of these sewers has been apportioned among the property holders of these districts according to the superficial areq, of their holdings therein. There is no dispute about the amount of the holdings of the L. & N. in district 5, and upon its holdings in that district an assessment of $6,608.07 was made and levied for the purpose of paying for the sewering of this district. The L. & N. refused to pajr that assessment, whereupon the contractor Dunn instituted this action to recover that assessment and 10 per cent, penalty thereon. ITe was successful and from that judgment the L. & N. has appealed. It has asked for a reversal thereof for several different reasons which we shall discuss.

Its first contention is based on section 6 of the agreement it had with the city of Corbin, and which section wé have copied above. It sought in the lower court, and is seeking here, to obtain a credit of $5,104.37 upon this assessment of $6,608.07. In other words, it conténds that; if it is to be assessed at all, the difference between these two sums' just stated is all that can be assessed against it; that is, that $1,503.70 is all that it can be required to pay.' This contention of the L. & N. cannot be maintained because by this sectioir 6 of the agreement there was no *425 provision made that a credit should he given the L. & N. upon anything that might be assessed against it for the sewering of district 5 or district 6. On the contrary, the city agreed with the L. & N. that, when sewers from other •districts were connected with this outfall sewer and sewage disposal plant constructed by the fourth district, the cost should be reapportioned and the railroad company reimbursed by th$ city, so that without deciding whether this contractor was required to take notice, of the ordinances of the city or not, if he had read this agreement, he would not have seen anything in it to cause him to think that, after he had built this sewage system, the. L. & N. would claim a credit on its assessment for what may be due it upon a reapportionment of the cost of this •sewage disposal plant, and main outfall sewer among all three of these districts.

The trial court probably reached the conclusion that the city was no longer bound by this agreement. We say this because the second contention, of the L. & N. is that the state and federal Constitutions forbid the impairment of this agreement. It is not necessary for us to •decide that question. In fact, our decision would mean nothing, because that question is not here. That is a question to be decided when the L. & N. undertakes to make the city of Corbin reimburse it as provided in section 6 of this agreement.

In its third ground for reversal, it discusses the -validity of this contract, cites many authorities, and devotes ten pages of its brief to a discussion of whether or not the city had, by this agreement, bargained away its taxing power, but that question also is not before us and will only be here when the L. & N. attempts to make the •city reimburse it.

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Related

City of Corbin v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad
26 S.W.2d 539 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 916, 222 Ky. 422, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-dunn-kyctapphigh-1927.