State v. Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Co.

360 So. 2d 684, 1978 Miss. LEXIS 2299
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1978
DocketNo. 50092
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 360 So. 2d 684 (State v. Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Co., 360 So. 2d 684, 1978 Miss. LEXIS 2299 (Mich. 1978).

Opinion

PATTERSON, Chief Justice,

for the Court:

This is an appeal by the State of Mississippi from a decree of the Chancery Court of Sunflower County allowing Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company compensation for lowering its pipelines necessitated by the construction of a drainage canal over its alleged easement across state lands.

In 1955 the Chairman and a commissioner of the Board of Commissioners of the Mississippi State Penitentiary executed and delivered a right-of-way instrument to American Louisiana Pipeline Company to construct and maintain a pipeline across penitentiary land for which the company paid $406. However, the board failed to authorize through its minutes the execution of that instrument. The pipeline was constructed in 1956 and the penitentiary was paid for crop damages. '

Prior to 1966 American Louisiana Pipeline Company merged into and became known as Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company (hereinafter Michigan) which is a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware and not qualified to do business in Mississippi. In 1966 pursuant to the previous agreement a second transmission line was constructed parallel to the original for which Michigan paid the penitentiary $405 plus additional sums for damages. By order on its minutes of February 14,1966, the board authorized the acceptance of these payments, referring to the 1955 transaction as an “easement.”

Since the construction and completion of the pipelines, Michigan has transported natural gas from the Louisiana Gulf Coast to terminals in other states. Its sole business activity in Mississippi is the interstate transmission of natural gas.

[686]*686In accord with legislative enactment to make the farming operation on penitentiary lands profitable, the Mississippi Cooperative Extension Service was awarded a lease in 1974. As a result it recommended to the legislature the lands be improved by adequate drainage because Black Bayou, which flowed through the penitentiary lands, occasionally flooded the area which drained poorly, adversely affecting the farming operations, sewage disposal and use of the roads.

To alleviate these problems the state proposed a drainage canal which would traverse the underground pipelines and requested appellee to lower its pipelines. When Michigan refused to do so without compensation, the state filed a petition in chancery to cancel the 1955 right-of-way agreement, to adjudicate that Michigan had no authority to maintain its lines on penitentiary property, and alternatively, if the court should find Michigan was authorized to maintain its pipelines, then the court mandate they be lowered below the depth of the canal. Michigan denied the allegations in its answer and filed a cross bill seeking an injunction against the state or damages in the alternative. Prior to trial, the parties stipulated that Michigan would lower its transmission lines in 1976 at its expense, but in the event the state received an adverse judgment the Extension Service would recommend an appropriation from the legislature not in excess of $193,387 to pay the actual cost of the operation. Further, if the decision were adverse to Michigan, lowering the lines would be at its expense.

From an adverse decree the state appeals, raising the following issues:

1. Are penitentiary lands public?

2. If so, did Michigan acquire a property interest across the lands?

3. And, if so, which party is liable for expenses incurred in lowering the pipelines?

The first two issues, if answered affirmatively, ultimately raise a conflict of rights between the exercise of the state’s statutory and police powers and the constitutional prohibition against taking private property without compensation.

The state argues that the penitentiary lands in question are not public and hence do not come within the scope of Mississippi Code Annotated section 2780’s (1942)1 grant of a crossing right. Essentially, the argument is that by “public lands” the legislature meant all state lands not held or reserved for any governmental or specific public purpose and penitentiary lands are accorded a definite purpose and therefore are not public. In the first instance the meaning of public lands must be defined in the context of the statute in which it appears. Here the words of the statute themselves belie such an interpretation. Part of the statute which grants the right specifies that the grant must not interfere with the common use of the lands. Clearly, crossing of state land was contemplated by the legislature when a restrictive clause was expressly inserted authorizing crossing but prohibiting interference with the common use. In Willmut Gas & Oil Company v. Covington County, 221 Miss. 613, 71 So.2d 184 (1954), sixteenth section lands were held to be public although they were held in trust for the benefit of the schools. And, in Gandy v. Public Service Corporation of Mississippi, 163 Miss. 187, 140 So. 687 (1932), in discussing this section as it concerned utilities crossing public lands, we held:

. The plain purpose of the statute is to encourage such enterprises. The courts in construing a statute must seek the real intention of the Legislature and then adopt such interpretation as will give effect thereto .
(163 Miss. at 197, 140 So. at 689)

And see State v. Cumberland Tel. & Tel. Co., 52 La.Ann. 1411, 27 So. 795 (1899). We are of the opinion the penitentiary lands within the contemplation of Section 2780 are public.

[687]*687The next question is whether Michigan has a valid property interest in these public lands. The state’s grant is encompassed in an instrument of December 2,1955, entitled “Right of Way Contract.” The printed form, prepared by Michigan, specified:

For and in consideration of Four Hundred Six and No/100 Dollars ($406.00) receipt of which is hereby acknowledged the undersigned Frank G. Whitaker, Commissioner, Chairman, Board of Commissioners, Parchman Penal Farm, and C. N. Dorrough, Commissioner (hereinafter called “Grantor” . . ) for themselves, their heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns, hereby grant, bargain, sell, convey and specially warrant to American Louisiana Pipe Line Company [Predecessors of Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Company] a Delaware Corporation, its successors and assigns (hereinafter called “Grantee”), a right-of-way and easement to construct, lay, maintain, operate, alter, repair, replace, change the size of, move and remove a pipe line or pipe lines and appurtenances thereto for the transportation of oil, gas or other substances which can be transported through a pipe line, the grantee to have the right to select, change or alter the route or routes thereof over, through, upon, under and across the following real estate .

The land involved was described as Section 15, Township 24 North, Range 4 West, Sunflower County, State of Mississippi, and the instrument continued:

Should more than one pipeline be laid under this grant at any time by Grantee or its assigns, Grantor shall be paid as consideration therefor a sum equivalent to One Dollar ($1.00) per linear rod of each additional line.

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Bluebook (online)
360 So. 2d 684, 1978 Miss. LEXIS 2299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-michigan-wisconsin-pipeline-co-miss-1978.