Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. King

288 S.W. 733, 216 Ky. 736, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1006
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 733 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. King) 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. King, 288 S.W. 733, 216 Ky. 736, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1006 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the 'Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

"When appellant, Louisville- & Nashville Railroad Company, sued S. L. King, drainage commissioner, in the Ohio circuit court, to recover $1,061.58, alleged to be due it under section 2380-13, Kentucky Statutes, as “ actual expenses incurred by the railroad company for opening its tracks,” to allow a floating dredge used in the construction of the drainage district to pass through the right of way, the drainage commissioner denied his liability for the claim, and by a second paragraph of his answer, in substance, pleaded that after institution of the proceeding for the establishment- of the public ditch through the drainage district known as Roy Muffett, and after the report of the viewers, classifying and fixing the assessments of property in the district subject to taxation for the construction and maintenance of the ditch, including the appellant, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, for benefits, had been filed in the proceeding then pending in the Ohio county court, and after the viewers had reported the assessment for benefits against the L. & N. Railroad Company in the proceeding on account of the proposed construction of said ditch in accordance with the judgment of the court in the proceedings in the sum of $2,00000, and before the assessment had been finally determined and fixed by the court, and before the expiration of the time allowed by law to the property owners in which to file exceptions, and while the owners of property in the drainage district were contemplating the filing of exceptions to the report of the viewers fixing the assessment against the appellant, rail- ' road company, at $2,000.00 for the benefits derived from the construction of the ditch as inadequate and insufficient and not equal to the benefits derived by the railroad company on account of the improvements, the commissioner and other persons interested in the ditch and the owners of land situated in the district, met at the court *739 house in Hartford, on March 21, 1921, in answer to process of the court duly executed upon them, for the purpose of filing and each desired to file exceptions to the viewers’ report in the proceedings classifying and fixing the assessment of landowners, including the appellant railroad company, for assessment on account of the construction of the proposed proceeding, and particularly the portion of the viewers’ report in the proceeding fixing the assessment for benefits against the railroad company at $2,000.00, or at any sum less than $5,000.00, and did then and there propose and intend immediately to file in the proceeding exceptions, and asked that the assessment of the railroad company be increased from $2,000.00 to $5,000.00, whereupon the railroad company, through and by its attorneys, then and there, representing it in the proceeding, mutually agreed with the parties to and interested in the establishment of the ditch, including those who own land and were assessed for benefits, that if such parties and none of them would file exceptions to the report of the viewers asking that the assessment for bene1fits against the appellant railroad company be increased from $2,000.00 to $5,000.00, or increased at all; and further that such person would not ask the court to require appellant railroad company to remove its trestle on which its railroad track rested over and across an arm of the ditch known as North fork of Adams fork, and an arm of the ditch known as Stevens creek, in order to permit the construction of the ditch; nor require the company to incur any expenses at its trestle No. 32 before November 1,1921, that it would remove its track, trestle, ties, stringers and obstructions over and across the ditch at trestle No. 32, and permit the dredge boat to pass, in the construction of the ditch, through the right of way of the railroad company without expenses to the drainage district or to any of the landowners therein, and that all the landowners and persons interested in the drainage district then and there immediately accepted the proposition of the railroad company so made, and agreed with the railroad company not to file exceptions to the report of the viewers on any of the grounds mentioned above, or for any reason, and agreed with them that they would not require the trestle of the railroad company to be removed from the North fork of Adams creek or from Stevens creek, and would not require the railroad company to begin work on the removal of its tracks or trestle No. 32 until November 1st, and, in fact, agreed to each *740 and all of the terms proposed by the railroad company, and in pursuance to that agreement did not file exceptions to the report, or do any of the other things which they agreed to refrain from doing, and that by reason of their failure to file exceptions the county court was, without objection, allowed to and did adjudge the assessment against the railroad company for benefits at $2,000.00, and made an order with respect to the time when the railroad company should remove its tracks at trestle No. 32, and also governing their conduct at other points upon the drainage ditch, all to the satisfaction of the railroad company, all of which was pleaded and relied upon by the commissioner of drainage and the landowners in the drainage district in bar of the right of the railroad company to recover the actual expense incurred by the company in opening its tracks at trestle No. 32, as provided in section 2380-13, Kentucky Statutes, to which we have referred.

There was filed as an exhibit with the amended answer a certified copy of the judgment rendered by the Ohio county court on May 2,1921, which, as appears from the record, as well as from the judgment itself, was an agreed one pursuant to the understanding reached by all parties concerned at the meeting on March 21,1921. Plaintiff’s demurrer filed to that pleading was overruled, to which it excepted. By reply it controverted the alleged agreement of the parties in the conference on March 21, 1921, but it nowhere sought to impeach the judgment rendered by the Ohio county court, a copy of which, as we have said, was filed as an exhibit with the answer. Appropriate pleadings made the issues and upon trial before a jury a verdict was returned in favor of defendant, followed by a judgment dismissing the petition, to reverse which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The chief, and what we regard the only material grounds urged for a reversal of the judgment are: (1), That the court erred in admitting extraneous testimony to prove what occurred at the conference on March 21, 1921, when it is shown that all of such agreements, understanding’s and negotiations then had were afterwards merged in the county court judgment of May 2,192.1, and that such testimony is not admissible to impeach that judgment, since it will be conclusively presumed that all suóh agreements, negotiations and understandings were merged therein; and (2), that attorneys for plaintiff: had no- right to enter into such pleaded agreement without *741 specific authority from their client, the plaintiff, and that no such authority was given or attempted to he proven.

We are disposed to agree with counsel for plaintiff .as to their contention made in both of those grounds. It is «, universally established doctrine that prior negotiations to a written contract are merged in the contract when afterwards made, and, a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 733, 216 Ky. 736, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-king-kyctapphigh-1926.