State Highway Commission v. Smith

62 S.W.2d 1044, 250 Ky. 269, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 685
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 23, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 1044 (State Highway Commission v. Smith) 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
State Highway Commission v. Smith, 62 S.W.2d 1044, 250 Ky. 269, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 685 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Eeversing.

*270 This case presents the question whether the state highway commission has the authority under present laws to establish and operate permanently a free ferry. It is also submitted that if the commission has such authority generally, it may not do so wijthin one mile of an existing ferry, under the limitations of section 1820 of the Statutes.

As a permanent part of the highway between Glasgow and Albany, the commission was proceeding to establish and maintain a ferry across Cumberland river near Burkesville in lieu of a bridge at that point. It was necessary to do this or build a bridge as a condition precedent to obtaining aid from the federal government in the construction of the road, and an agreement was made with the road department of the United States to that effect. The commission had purchased and placed a boat in operation and was carrying traffic free of tolls at a point slightly less, than one mile of the ferry owned and operated by the appellee. The appeal seeks to vacate a judgment in the suit of the appellee enjoining the state highway commission from operating the ferry and proceeding with its purpose to maintain it. The road on either side of the river continues several miles wholly within the state, so the question before us is.not affected by any restriction on interstate traffic.

In all of the various acts establishing and re-establishing the state highway commission or department, it has ever been expressly provided that it shall be the duty of such commission or department to cause to be done all things necessary to construct and maintain a system of primary roads designated as such by statute and that where there is no provision of law covering any necessary thing to be done in the construction and maintenance of such roads, the commission shall do Such necessary things in the way and manner best calculated in its judgment to accomplish the necessary object. These acts further specifically provide that their provisions shall not be treated as restrictions on the power of the state highway commission or department save as expressly stated or clearly implied and that it is intended that such commission or department may do all things necessary in the construction and maintenance of the said roads except where the power to act is expressly or by clear implication denied or re- *271 striated by law. See section 4356t-3, Kentucky Statutes, 1930 Edition, and section 4356t-3f, 1933 Supplement. Further, all of these acts specifically authorize and empower the state highway commission or department to enter into all contracts and agreements with the United States government relating to the survey, construction, and maintenance of roads under the provisions of the Act of Congress, approved July 11, 1916, and popularly known as the “Federal Aid Act” (39 Stat. 355), and to submit a scheme or program of construction and maintenance as may be required by the Secretary of Agriculture of the United States, or any other officer who may be designated by Congress and to do all other things necessary fully to carry out the ■co-operation contemplated or that may hereafter be contemplated and provided for by said federal act. See section 4356t-3 of the 1930 Edition of the Statutes, and section 4356t-3f of the 1933 Supplement. The broad powers which the Legislature has expressly delegated to the highway commission in the construction and maintenance of the state highway projects would seem sufficient independently of its power in respect to contracting with the federal government. It has all power except where expressly or by clear implication denied in determining as to how a state highway project is to be constructed and maintained. Of course, such highways must be carried across streams. The usual method is by a bridge. Though the department is given express authority to build bridges and tunnels and no mention of ferries is made, it does not follow that because ferries are not expressly mentioned, the highway department has no authority to adopt that method to carry a highway across a stream, because the act creating the department expressly says that it has all power to determine how a highway shall be constructed and maintained unless such power be expressly or by clear implication denied, and there is no such denial of the power to operate a ferry as a method of getting a state highway across a stream. This leads to the question whether a ferry is a proper method of getting a state highway across a stream and whether its operation ■comes fairly within so broad a power as the commission has to construct and maintain a highway.

In 25 C. J., pages 1048 and 1049, a ferry is defined as follows:

*272 “A ferry is a libérty to have a boat upon a stream, river, arm of the sea, lake or other body of water, for the transportation of men, horses, and vehicles with their contents, for a reasonable toll. The term is also used to designate the place where the right is exercised, and sometimes is limited to the landing place. Perries are frequently referred to or regarded as public highways, being continuations of the highways with which they connect, and serving the purpose of a bridge where a bridge is impractical. ’5

In the footnote of the foregoing text on page 1049, it is said that:

“A ferry is a continuation of the highway from one side of the water over which it passes to the other, and is for transportation of passengers or of travelers with their teams and vehicles and such other property as they may carry or have with, them. * * * Merely the continuance of a road across a river. It is only a substitute for a bridge. * * * A ferry has been aptly called a public highway across a stream of water by boat, instead of by bridge. * * * As the bridge is made for the road, not the road for the bridge, so is the ferry made for the road, not the road for the ferry; the ferry is the incident, the road is the principal. * * * A public ferry being merely a party of the highway, a county may establish such ferries in the absence-of statutory authority.”

In the case of Reid v. Lincoln County, 46 Mont. 31, 125 P. 429, 437, decided by the Supreme Court of Montana, the right of a county to establish and operate a. free ferry by the expenditure of county road bond proceeds was involved. It was argued that the county did not have authority to establish or operate a ferry or to expend any of the bond proceeds for that purpose. The court held that a public ferry, being merely a part of the highway, the county had the right to establish, such ferry even in the absence of special statutory authority. The court said:

“The construction of a ferry is, ordinarily, a matter of relatively small expense. Unlike an expensive bridge across a river like the Kootenai, it may, we think, well be considered as a mere detail or in *273 cident of the highway. It seems to ns it may he presumed that the people would unhesitatingly intrust to the hoard of county commissioners so relatively unimportant a detail as the selection of sites for ferries and the manner of construction thereof. A ‘ferry’ is simply a movable portion of a highway where it crosses a stream.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 1044, 250 Ky. 269, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-smith-kyctapphigh-1933.