State Highway Commission v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.

29 P.2d 1104, 139 Kan. 185, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 10, 1934
DocketNo. 31,804
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 1104 (State Highway Commission v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Highway Commission v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 29 P.2d 1104, 139 Kan. 185, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 261 (kan 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action is one of mandamus, commenced by the state highway commission, to require the pipe-line company to adjust its pipe lines and other structures to highway needs.

The parties have collaborated in a most commendable manner in preparation of the motion for the alternative writ and the answer. Issues of fact have been eliminated, and the highway commission’s motion for judgment on the pleadings raises the legal question on which the parties differ. A summary of the pleadings sufficient to indicate the nature of the controversy follows.

The state highway commission is a department of the state government having authority over the state highway system. It possesses power and is charged with duty to establish, construct and maintain, and to alter, vacate, reestablish and reconstruct highways in every county of the state. The pipe-line company is a Delaware [186]*186corporation, engaged in the business of transporting natural gas by pipe line from gas fields of Texas, Oklahoma and other states, through the states of Kansas and Missouri and other states. In prosecution of its business, which is both interstate and intrastate, it owns, maintains and operates a system of pipe lines, and in connection therewith telephone and telegraph lines. The pipe-line company’s lines are all located on its own rights of way, procured from landowners, and none of the lines is located on, along, or across any previously existing highway.

The highway commission is engaged in making certain necessary highway improvements. These improvements consist in widening existing highways and in constructing new highways. In making these improvements the highway commission encounters the lines of the pipe-line company. The highway commission has acquired rights of way for the highway improvements from landowners, but has not obtained consent of the pipe-line company to cross or occupy its rights of way.

The highway improvements necessitate certain changes in the pipe-line company’s lines. In some instances it is necessary the pipe line be lowered and encased. In other instances it is necessary the pipe line be encased. In other instances it is necessary the pipe line and telephone line be removed to the outer edge of right of way newly acquired by the highway commission for the purpose of widening existing highways. None of the changes- will require the pipeline company to acquire any new or additional right of way.

The highway commission has prepared plans and specifications for the changes described. The highway commission is not so well equipped to make the changes as the pipe-line company, and the work of making the changes should be done by the pipe-line company’s experts. The cost will be in the aggregate not less than $5,460. The highway commission has required the pipe-line company to make the changes at its own expense. The pipe-line company is willing to make the changes according to the plans, but not at its own expense.

The pipe-line company contends that, because its rights of way were acquired and its structures were installed before the present highway rights of way had been obtained and the present improvements had been initiated, it is entitled to compensation for all necessary expenditures incurred in making an adjustment of its private [187]*187use to the later public use of the same rights of way. Certain decisions of this court are cited in support of the contention.

In a series of cases beginning with K. C. Rld. Co. v. Comm’rs of Jackson Co., 45 Kan. 716, 26 Pac. 394, and ending with a per curiam, decision in S. K. Rly. Co. v. Comm’rs of Johnson Co., 52 Kan. 138, 34 Pac. 396, it was held that when a highway was constructed aoross an existing right of way, the railroad company was entitled to damages. These cases were decided by a divided court and, as the court subsequently observed in the opinion in the case of State, ex rel., v. Railway Co., 95 Kan. 22, 27, 147 Pac. 801, were against the great weight of authority. The decisions simply gave literal effect to the eminent-domain statute providing for damages, and are no longer controlling because of enactment of the present highway law regulating highway crossings of railroads under the state’s police power.

The pipe-line company refers to the case of City of Wichita v. Wichita Union Terminal Rly. Co., 127 Kan. 855, 275 Pac. 171. In that case a city street, which did not cross a railroad right of way, was vacated. Afterwards the street was reopened. Then the city undertook to compel the railroad company to construct a subway under its tracks, at its own expense. So far as the evidence disclosed, there was not then and never had been a street which crossed the railroad right of way at the location of the proposed subway, and the subway would not be on any street.

The pipe-line company refers to the case of Cities Service Gas Co. v. Riverside Drainage Dist., 137 Kan. 410, 20 P. 2d 520. In that case a small stream crossed a twelve-acre tract of land owned by the gas company, on which was located its compressor station. The gas company owned the bed and banks of the stream. Beneath the bed of the stream the gas company maintained a large pipe line for transportation of natural gas. The tract was within a drainage district which had power to widen and deepen the stream. Desiring to enlarge the watercourse, the drainage district instituted condemnation proceedings under a statute providing for appraisal of land taken, and assessment of other damages sustained by landowners, to be paid by the drainage district. The gas company was put to great expense ($2,389.17) in adapting its high-pressure pipe line to the situation created by enlargement of the watercourse, and appealed from the award of damages. The trial in the district court was had on the theory the gas company was entitled to damages, [188]*188but the court misinstructed the jury with respect to ascertainment of damages. One instruction was based on the theory the gas company did not own the bed of the stream, another instruction was based on the theory the pipe line was an obstruction of a natural watercourse, and the jury was instructed the gas company could not recover damages consisting of expense of removing and replacing the pipe line to accord with the drainage-district improvement.

When the case reached this court an effort was made to justify the instruction on the theory of exercise of police power. In the opinion it was said priyate property may not be appropriated without compensation under guise of the police power, and it was further said:

“In an ordinary case of condemnation and appropriation of an owner’s property, as in the present case, the constitutional right to compensation cannot be ignored or denied.” (p. 414.)

The following excerpts from the opinion recognized phases' of exercise of police power over use of streets and highways:

“There are cases, too, where franchises have been granted to a street-car company, gas company, telephone company, and the like, to place rails, poles and pipes in public streets and other highways, and which they can be required to move without compensation. The primary use of the highways is for public travel, and the companies accept the grants and occupy the highways with their utilities on the implied and reserved power of the city to require their removal when the streets are needed for the higher purpose of public travel and the public safety.

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Related

Ray v. State Highway Commission
410 P.2d 278 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1966)
Kansas City Terminal Railway Co. v. City of Kansas City
249 P.2d 671 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1952)
Northern Natural Gas Co. v. County of Blue Earth
47 N.W.2d 106 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 1104, 139 Kan. 185, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-panhandle-eastern-pipe-line-co-kan-1934.