Tri-State Ferry Company v. Birney

31 S.W.2d 932, 235 Ky. 540, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 417
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 932 (Tri-State Ferry Company v. Birney) 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
Tri-State Ferry Company v. Birney, 31 S.W.2d 932, 235 Ky. 540, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 417 (Ky. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

In April, 1924, the county court of Ballard county, in accordance with the provisions of the Statutes governing the establishment and regulations of ferries, Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, 1930 Edition, secs. 1800 to 1821, inclusive, granted to the appellee, R. I. Birney, a franchise to operate a ferry across the Ohio river between East Cairo, Ky., and Cairo, Ill. In the summer of 1928, the appellant, Tri-State Ferry Company, which was operating a ferry between Cairo, Ill., and Wiekliffe, Ky., a town situated on the east bank of the Mississippi river about six miles below Cairo, began the ferriage of passengers and vehicles between East Cairo and Cairo. Birney thereupon brought this suit to enjoin the ferry, company from landing its boats at East Cairo within a mile and a half of the landing of his ferry-for the purpose of embarking passengers and vehicles for ferriage across the river and from ferrying passengers and vehicles from any landing within that mile and a half *542 to the opposite shore. The circuit court, on final hearing, granted Birney the relief he sought, and the ferry company has appealed.

The defense of the ferry company to this suit ofBirney is based upon two contentions. \

- First, Birney’s ferry franchise is void because it was not sold in accordance with the provisions of section 164 of our State Constitution.

Secondly, the state of Kentucky has no power to legislate with reference to the right of ferriage across the Ohio river, because such legislation is an interference with and a burden upon interstate commerce and hence violative of the Federal Constitution (article 1, sec. 8, cl, 3.)

Section 164 of our State Constitution reads: 1

“No county, city, town, taxing district or other municipality shall be authorized or permitted to grant any franchise or privilege, or make any contract in reference thereto, for a term exceeding twenty years. Before granting such franchise or privilege for a term of years such municipality shall first, after due advertisement, receive bids therefor publicly, and award the same to the highest and best bidder; but it shall have the right to reject any or all bids. This section shall not apply to a trunk railway.”

The limitations created by this section are by the provisions of the section itself applicable only to action by municipalities or other local subdivisions as to matters under their control. The section does not refer to the Legislature nor to matters which the Legislature may withhold from municipal or local control. The inherent right to grant a franchise inheres in the sovereignty within which it is proposed to exercise that franchise, but, as said in the case of Irvine Toll Bridge Co. v. Estill County, 210 Ky. 170, 275 S. W. 634, 636:

“It is competent for such sovereignty to delegate the right to grant the franchise to some or all of its municipalities as political subdivisions of the government, or perhaps it may vest such power in such agencies of government as it sees proper.”

When the Legislature does delegate the right to grant a franchise to some political subdivision of the *543 government, then the provisions of section 164 of the Constitution come into play. But when the Legislature retains to itself the granting of the franchise, the pro-, visions of section 164 of the Constitution have no application. The granting of a ferry franchise has never been expressly confided by the Legislature to any municipality or local political subdivision of the government, nor does any section of our State Constitution require the Legislature to do so, not even section 163, which reads:

“No street, railway, gas, water, steam heating, telephone, or electric light company, within a city or town, shall be permitted or authorized to construct its tracks, lay its pipes or mains, or erect its poles, posts or other apparatus along, over, under or across the streets, alleys or public grounds of a city or town, without the consent of the proper legislative bodies or boards of such city or town being first obtained; but when charters have been heretofore granted conferring such rights, and work has in good faith been begun thereunder, the provisions of this section shall not apply.”

The provisions of this section are by its very terms applicable only to those utilities which use the streets, alleys, or public grounds of a municipality, and a ferry of course, does not do so. The case of People’s Transit Co. v. Louisville Railway Co., 220 Ky. 728, 295 S. W. 1055, construing this section 163, involved a utility which used the public streets of the city of Louisville. It did not decide that the granting of the franchise of a utility which did not use the streets, alleys, or public grounds of a municipality must be confided to some other local political subdivision of the government or that, even if not so confided, the provisions of section 164 were applicable to the grant when made by the sovereignty, in the person of the Legislature, itself. Returning to the provisions of sections 1800 to 1821 of our Statutes, above mentioned, an analysis of them discloses that the application to establish a ferry must be addressed to the county court and the franchise is obtained when that court enters its judgment establishing the ferry. The county court to which jurisdiction over this matter is confided is not the governing body of the county, for that body is the fiscal court or county commissioners. In the exercise of this jurisdiction, the county court is not *544 acting in a legislative or executive capacity for the county, but in a judicial capacity to determine whether the conditions precedent to the granting of a ferry franchise as provided for in the Statutes have been complied with or not. If they have, then the county court must by its judgment establish the ferry. That this is so may be seen from the fact that such judgment,.unless void when entered, cannot be collaterally attacked and can only be directly assailed on appeal as in other judicial proceedings. It was so held in Decker v. Tyree, 204 Ky. 302, 264 S. W. 726, 728, where a collateral attack was made on a judgment of a county court establishing a ferry. We there said:

“The jusisdiction to grant ferry privileges under sections of the statute supra is exclusively conferred upon the various county courts in the commonwealth, and for that purpose it is a court of original as well as exclusive jurisdiction, and the same presumptions in favor of its jurisdiction, in collateral attacks of its judgments in such cases, will be applied as is done to judgments of superior courts of. general jurisdiction. ’ ’

To the same effect is Hatton v. Turman, 123 Ky. 844, 97 S. W. 770, 98 S. W. 1000, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 194, 382.

Acting thus in a judicial capacity, the county court exercises the judicial power of the commonwealth. The franchise obtained' by the entry of the county court’s judgment establishing the ferry flows, not from any action on the part of any local governing body, but from the action of the Legislature as expressed in the ferry statute.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W.2d 932, 235 Ky. 540, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-state-ferry-company-v-birney-kyctapphigh-1930.