Madison County v. Clay's Ferry Bridge Co.

218 S.W. 299, 186 Ky. 518, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 27, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 218 S.W. 299 (Madison County v. Clay's Ferry Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison County v. Clay's Ferry Bridge Co., 218 S.W. 299, 186 Ky. 518, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 68 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Settle —

Sustaining motion and dissolving injunction.

The object of this action, brought in the Madison circuit court by the plaintiffs, Madison and Fayette counties, against the defendant, Clay’s Ferry Bridge Company, was and is to prevent that company from charging and collecting of the travelling public moneys by way of tolls for the use by the latter of an iron bridge spanning the Kentucky river at Clay’s Ferry, Kentucky, owned and operated by it. On the.bearing of the plaintiffs’ motion tberefor, a temporary injunction was granted by the judge of the Madison circuit court restraining the collection by the defendant of the tolls complained of; and the latter, by proper notice to the plaintiffs and motion [520]*520duly made for that purpose, now seeks at the hands of the writer of this opinion, a judge of the Court of Appeals, the dissolution of that injunction.

A brief statement of the facts out of which this litigation arose is essential to a proper understanding of the questions of law presented for decision by the motion of defendant to dissolve the injunction. The Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company, which was incorporated in 1834 by an act of the General Assembly, under the corporate powers conferred by its charter constructed the present turnpike leading from Lexington to Richmond, which crosses the Kentucky river at Clay’s Ferry. The charter permitted the erection of toll gates and the charging and collecting of tolls by the corporation for the use of the turnpike by the traveling public, and prescribed the rate of tolls to be charged. For several years after its completion the turnpike was used for travel without a bridge over the Kentucky river at Clay’s Ferry, during which time, as for many years prior to the construction of the turnpike, a ferry, of which the Richmond anu Lexington Turnpike' Company was not the owner, was there operated, by the boats of which all persons, vehicles or stock finding it necessary in traveling the turnpike to cross the river, were ferried over it. In 1836, however, by another act of the General Assembly, amendatory of that of 1834, the Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company was authorized to construct a bridge across the Kentucky River at Clay’s Ferry and necessary approaches for the use of the traveling public in connection with its turnpike. The act of 1836 empowered the company to charge and collect tolls for all travel over the bridge, in addition to tolls collected for travel on the turnpike, but limited the bridge tolls to such amounts as were, or before the construction of the bridge had been, paid by users of the turnpike for ferriage across the river. Land on each side of the river for providing the necessary approaches to the bridge, was acquired and the bridge constructed by the Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company shortly after the passage of the act; and from its completion until 1898 the bridge and approaches were owned and maintained by it and used by all travellers of the turnpike in crossing the Kentucky river by the payment to the turnpike company of the bridge tolls fixed by the act of 1836. By virtue of an act or acts of the General Assembly of [521]*5211898, conferring, among other enumerated powers, authority upon the fiscal courts of the several counties in which turnpikes were maintained to purchase such turnpike® and maintain them for the use of the traveling public free of tolls, that part of the Richmond and Lexington turnpike lying in Fayette county was purchased of the Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company by the fiscal court of Fayette county, and that part of the turnpike lying in Madison county was purchased of it by the fiscal court of Madison county. Deeds were duly executed by the Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company to the counties named conveying the interests thus purchased by them, respectively, in the turnpike. By the terms of both these deeds, however, the bridge at Clay’is» Ferry and the approach thereto on each side of the river, including the ferry landing on each side and amounting altogether to about 314 acres, were expressly excluded from the sales and conveyances made of the turnpike to Fayette and Madison counties, respectively, and the title thereto retained by the grantor, Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company, which continued its ownership of same, operation of the bridge and the collection of tolls for its use by the traveling public, until January 2, 1907, when the property, including the bridge, approaches, and ferry landing on each side of the river, the franchise, and all charter rights of the Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company, under the act of the legislature authorizing it to construct, own and operate the bridge, and collect tolls for its use by the public, was sold by it at public auction to Thomas J. Smith, W. S. Moberly and James Erskine at the price of $1,755.00.

The purchasers, as authorized by Kentucky Statutes, section 562, immediately organized a corporation under the corporate name of “Clay’s Ferry Bridge Company,” to which their bid for the property in question was assigned, followed by a deed from the Richmond and Lexington Turnpike Company conveying it the legal title thereto, including the franchise and all other.corporate rights of the grantor above enumerated.

From that conveyance, January 2, 1907, until, the granting of the injunction in this action, the Clay’s Ferry Bridge Company, defendant herein, has owned, maintained and operated the Clay’s Ferry Bridge, assumed and performed all obligations and duties imposed upon the former owner, Richmond and Lexington Turnpike [522]*522Company, by its charter, charged and collected tolls of the public for the use of the bridge as authorized by that charter, and year by year paid to the Commonwealth of Kentucky and counties of Fayette and Madison all taxes assessed against the property, including each year a tax upon its franchise.

In legal effect the injunction granted by the circuit judge as completely deprives the defendant of its property as if a forfeiture of its charter had been adjudged; for of what value to the defendant would be the bridge or its approaches without the right to charge and collect tolls for their use by the public? And how could a purchaser be found for the property, when its purchase would not invest him with the right to collect tolls for its use? Moreover the market value of the material in the bridge and of the ground at either end constituting the approaches, would be insignificant when compared with the loss resulting to defendant from the deprivation of its right to the tolls it has been accustomed to receive for the use of the bridge.

It is not meant that the conditions resulting from the granting of die injunction referred to will necessarily compel its dissolution, but as these conditions indicate the gravity of the situation in which the granting of the injunction has placed the defendant and give emphasis to the imporrance of the rights involved, they must be considered in passing on its motion to dissolve the injunction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 299, 186 Ky. 518, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-county-v-clays-ferry-bridge-co-kyctapp-1920.