Scott v. Cincinnati, N. & C. Ry. Co.

105 S.W.2d 169, 268 Ky. 383, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 482
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 7, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 S.W.2d 169 (Scott v. Cincinnati, N. & C. Ry. Co.) 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
Scott v. Cincinnati, N. & C. Ry. Co., 105 S.W.2d 169, 268 Ky. 383, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 482 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court .by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Prior to September, 1932, the City of Newport had vested the Cincinnati, Newport & Covington (Street) Railway Company with.a franchise privilege to operate upon the streets of the city a street railway system, equipped with electrically propelled street cars for the transportation of passengers. Perhaps, also (the record not being clear on that point), it had consented for the substitution of passenger busses on some of its .streets, in lieu of electrically propelled street cars running upon fixed railway tracks. There arose a controversy between the railway company and the city over *385 certain regulatory features of the transportation operation — particularly (a) the alleged obligation on the part of the railway company to equip its transportation vehicles with two persons, and (b) the rate of fare from any part of the City of Newport across the Ohio river into the City of Cincinnati — and the railway company, in conformity with what it concluded were its rights, began to operate its transportation vehicles with only one man; and it also installed a transportation charge of 10 cents for trips across the Ohio river into the City of Cincinnati, Ohio, with :a charge of 15 cents for a round trip. After such changes in operation, the city threatened to take legal steps to prevent them 'being carried into permanent effect because, as it contended, the railway company had no right, under its franchise, to make them without the consent of the city, which had not been given. At that juncture, the railway company filed an equity action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky to enjoin the city from taking any such threatened steps, by which its adopted changes would be interfered with. The court granted the injunction, followed by an appeal of the city to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit when the judgment was affirmed by that court. City of Covington v. Cincinnati, N. & C. R. Co., 71 F. (2d) 117.

The city was threatening to — and perhaps taking steps to — appeal the case to the United States Supreme Court, when it, through its proper officials, and the railway company, came to an agreement whereby the differences between the .two, growing out of the matters to which we have referred, were compromised; and on April 14, 1936, the city commissioners passed an ordinance, designated as Ordinance No. 140, embodying the terms of- the compromise agreement. They were: That the railway company could operate its passenger vehicles with only one man; that it might charge and collect a fare of 8 cents for each passenger transported from Newport into Cincinnati, Ohio, or four tickets for such transportation for 25 cents, with only half that amount for the transportation of school children to and from school. The city also consented, in that ordinance,, that the transportation privilege granted by the franchise to the railroad company might be partially performed with the use of busses, and for the latter vehicles to be operated exclusively upon some of the *386 streets of the city. The ordinance also provided that it should not be binding until it was accepted in writing by the street railway company, which was done. As a citizen and taxpayer of the city, the appellant and plaintiff below, Lorimer W. Scott, then brought this declaratory judgment action against the city and the railway company, in -the Campbell circuit court, for a declaration of rights, and he charged in his petition that Ordinance No. 140, supra, was invalid, and he sought the proper orders of the court to prevent its enforcement.

The alleged invalidating features of the ordinance, as set out in the petition, were and are: (1) That it violated sections 3059 of the 1936 revision of Carroll’s Kentucky .Statutes, which is a part of the charter of cities of the second class to which Newport belongs; (2) that the ordinance was in effect an amendment of the franchise under which defendant railway company was operating and it did not conform to the provisions of the statutes, supra; (3) that the regulatory provisions conferred by the ordinance were in violation of the requirements of section 164 of our Constitution and of the provisions of section 3068 of the same statutes; (4) that it also violated the provisions of section 3235dd-42 of the same statutes; and (5) that the provision requiring the ordinance to become effective from and after the acceptance of its terms by the railway company was unauthorized.

Defendants demurred to the petition and, without waiving it, filed answers setting up the facts to which we have reférred, but in more detail. Plaintiff filed a demurrer thereto and, without waiving it, filed a reply. The cause was then submitted upon the pleadings, and the court sustained defendants’ demurrer filed to the petition as amended and rendered judgment upholding the ordinance, in which it was said: “That said ordinance-eonforms to the requirements of the law in all other respects and is a valid enactment by the City of Newport.” Plaintiff was granted an appeal to this court which he perfected by filing a transcript of the record with the clerk of this court. The grounds set forth in the petition are repeated in brief of plaintiff on this hearing, but evidently the action is a friendly one, filed in order to obtain the approval of the court of the compromise terms embodied in the ordinance, since the very nature of the grounds set forth, in view of our former *387 decisions upon the points raised, clearly indicate the absence of merit in any of them. Bnt they were, no donbt, the only ones that plaintiff could urge as a basis for his, no doubt, friendly action.

The relevant provisions of section 3059, supra, of our Statutes, are similar to the provisions of section 51 of our Constitution, requiring a statute to relate to but one subject which shall be stated in the title, and forbidding the amendment of any statute by reference to its title only, and also requiring so much of a prior statute as is amended to be set out in full in the amendatory act. The statute prescribes the same require■ments with reference to an ordinance passed by a city of the second class. But before the requirement may be invoked the attacked ordinance in this case (No. 140) must be construed as an amendatory one to some prior ordinance, for, if it is not so, then the section of the statutes, supra (3059), would not apply. The title to the ordinance, which is preceded by a number of “Whereases,” says:

“An Ordinance providing for the adjustment of the controversies between the City of Newport, Kentucky, and The Cincinnati, Newport and Covington Railway Company, by agreeing upon the adjustment and regulation of the operations of street cars and buses upon the streets of the City of Newport, and the rates of fare to be charged for the term of seven (7) years.”

In a number of prior cases we have held that the title of a statute, or of an ordinance under provisions such as are contained in section 51 of our Constitution and section 3059, supra, of our Statutes, was sufficient if the general terms employed in the title were broad enough to embrace the subject matter dealt with in the body of the enactment, and that the title need not contain details or minute specifications.

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Related

City of Owensboro v. Evansville & Ohio Valley Transit Co.
448 S.W.2d 375 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1969)
Kansas City Terminal Railway Co. v. Kansas City Transit, Inc.
359 S.W.2d 698 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1962)
Rigelwood v. City of Bowling Green
238 S.W.2d 147 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 S.W.2d 169, 268 Ky. 383, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-cincinnati-n-c-ry-co-kyctapphigh-1937.