St. Louis County Water Co. v. State Highway Commission

386 S.W.2d 119, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1964
Docket50586
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 386 S.W.2d 119 (St. Louis County Water Co. v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis County Water Co. v. State Highway Commission, 386 S.W.2d 119, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 608 (Mo. 1964).

Opinions

WELBORN, Commissioner.

The St. Louis County Water Company, a public utility engaged in the business and in the area indicated by its name, sought judicial review of an order of the State Highway Commission directing the water company to relocate some of its facilities situated on state highway right-of-way. The circuit court affirmed the order of the commission. This appeal followed. We have jurisdiction because the cost to the water company of the relocation ordered would exceed $15,000.00.

This proceeding arose under Section 227.240, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. The portion of that section here pertinent reads, as follows:

“1. The location and removal of all telephone, telegraph and electric light and power transmission lines, poles, wires, and conduits and all pipe lines and tramways, erected or constructed, or hereafter to be erected or constructed by any corporation,, association or persons, within the right of way of any state highway, insofar as the public travel and traffic is concerned, and insofar as the same may interfere with the construction or maintenance of any such-highway, shall be under the control and', supervision of the state highway commission.

“2. The commission or some officer selected by the commission shall serve a written notice upon the person or corporation-owning or maintaining any such lines, poles,, wires, conduits, pipe lines, or tramways,, which notice shall contain a plan or chart, indicating the places on the right of way at which such lines, poles, wires, conduits,, pipe lines or tramways may be maintained. The notice shall also state the time when the work of hard surfacing said roads is. proposed to commence, and shall further state that a hearing shall be had upon the-proposed plan of location and matters incidental thereto, giving the place and date-of such hearing. Immediately after such hearing the said owner shall be given a notice of the findings and orders of the commission and shall be given a reasonable time thereafter to comply therewith; provided, however, that the effect of any change ordered by the commission shall not be to. remove all or any part of such lines, poles, wires, conduits, pipe lines or tramways from-, the right of way of the highway. The removal of the same shall be made at the-cost and expense of the owners thereof unless otherwise provided by said commission,, and in the event of the failure of such owners to remove the same at the time so. determined they may be removed by the state highway commission, or under its di[121]*121Tection, and the cost thereof collected from ■such owners, and such owners shall not he liable in any way to any person for the placing and maintaining of such lines, poles, wires, conduits, pipe lines and tramways at the places prescribed by the commission.”

Commission Project F-610(ll) was for the improvement of some 8200 feet of Lindbergh Boulevard (Route 66TR) in the vi■cinity of its intersection with Page Boulevard in St. Louis County. The plans called for elimination of a number of curves in Lindbergh, the construction of a cloverleaf interchange at the Page Boulevard ■intersection and an underpass under tracks ■of the Rock Island Railroad. The reconstructed highway was to consist of two 24-foot roadways, paved with concrete and separated by a medial strip, with stabilized shoulders.

In 1947, pursuant to a permit issued by the commission, the company had installed ■a 20-inch water main in the highway right-of-way for more than 6 miles along Lindbergh, which included the area involved in Project F-610(ll). The permit called for the installation of the main 8 feet west of the west edge of Lindbergh Boulevard. This main is the principal facility involved in the proceeding under review.

After conferring with water company representatives, the commission, on May 31, 1961, through its district engineer, issued an order approving plans for the location of the water company’s facilities in the improvement area. Of some 8200 feet of 20-inch line involved, some 2000 feet in locations not affected by the new construction were to remain in place. The company agreed to the relocation of some 2000 feet of the line situated in sites in which the grade of the existing roadway was to be changed, including the Page Boulevard and Rock Island underpasses. Some 4200 feet of the 20-inch line were to be abandoned and relocated, along with 580 feet ■of 8-inch line.

The order, pursuant to Section 227.240, supra, notified the company that a hearing would be held on the commission’s proposal involving the company’s facilities. A hearing was held at which evidence was presented by representatives of the highway department and of the company. Following the hearing, the commission issued the order presently involved, requiring the abandonment of some 2775 feet of 20-inch line in three separate locations and approximately 300 feet of 8-inch line.

The first location in which changes in the company’s facilities were ordered was in the vicinity of the intersection of Dor-sett' Road with Lindbergh. There the roadway was to be widened by the adding of new pavement on both sides of the existing pavement. The order called for the retirement of some 1275 feet of 20-inch main which would have been under the new pavement at distances, measured from the west edge of the pavement, of from 10 to 20 feet. It also called for the retirement of 300 feet of 8-inch main which would have been under the new pavement by a maximum of 20 feet and a minimum of 10 feet from its west edge.

The second and third locations were in areas where curves in the existing roadway were straightened. In both the second and third relocation sites, the 20-inch main would have crossed the new roadway beneath new pavement at oblique angles which would have placed some 550 feet of main under the roadway in the second relocation site. In that site some 650 feet of 20-inch main were to be retired, consisting of the 550 feet which would have been under the pavement and 100 feet which would have been in the shoulder of the roadway. In the third site, 450 feet of 20-inch main which would have been beneath the new paved roadway and some 400 feet of the main which would have been in the shoulder of the new roadway were ordered retired or removed.

The order submitted approved reloca-tions of the mains to be retired or removed. Generally, the relocations were near the edge of the right-of-way of the highway [122]*122as improved. Where crossings of the new roadway were to he made to rejoin portions of the main left in use, the lines crossed the roadway at angles which made the portion of the line beneath the pavement approximately the same length as the width of the pavement at the point of crossing.

By its final order, the commission found that the highway improvement involved the construction of a hard surface highway; that facilities of the company ordered relocated would be either covered with hard surface pavement or incorporated in the shoulders of the roadway; that some of the facilities, if left in place, would cross under the new paved roadway “on a sharp skew angle, thereby creating a crossing of considerable length; that other parts of the facilities, if let in place, will be under the shoulder of the roadway or under the pavement to varying extents; and that the presence of a part of said facilities will interfere with the proper and economical construction and maintenance of said highway and will impede the lawful traffic thereon after reconstructed * *

The company sought judicial review of the final order under Civil Rule 100, V.A. M.R. (Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
386 S.W.2d 119, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-county-water-co-v-state-highway-commission-mo-1964.