Trustees of New-Port v. Taylor

29 Ky. 134, 6 J.J. Marsh. 134, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 10, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Ky. 134 (Trustees of New-Port v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of New-Port v. Taylor, 29 Ky. 134, 6 J.J. Marsh. 134, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 143 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the opinionof the court.

The county court having overruled an application by the trustees of New-Port for a ferry, from the town of New-Port across the Ohio river to. Cincinnati, they have appealed to this court.

New-Port was established on the land of James Taylor, sen. by an act of assembly, approved December 14th, 1795. The preamble, and so-much,.of the act as can affect the present controversy, are in the following language:

i4Whereas, it is represented to-the present general assembly, that one hundred and eighty acres of land, the property of James Taylor, in the county of Campbell, has been laid off into convenient lots and-sfreets by the said James Taylor, for the purpose of a town, and distinguished by the name of New-[135]*135'Port, and it is judged expedient to vest the said land, in trustees, and establish the town.”
Section 1. Be it therefore enacted by the “general assembly, that the land comprehending the said .town, agreeably to a plat made by John Roberts, he, and the same is hereby vested in Thomas Kennedy,” (and •others,) “who are hereby appointed trustees for the same, except such parts as are hereafter excepted.”
Section 7. And be it further enacted, that “stoA part nf said- town as lies between the lots and river Ohio, and Licking, as will appear by a reference to the said plat, shall forever remain, for the use and benefit of the said town, for a common: reserving to-the sáid James Taylor, and his heirs and assigns, every advantage and privilege which he has not disposed of or which he would, by law, be entitled <o.”

The streets and lots, as exhibited by the plat referred to in the ac* of assembly, do not extend to either the river Ohio or Licking, a'nd contain, as we infer from the testimony, one hundred and eighty acres. The distance from the lots to the Ohio river, varies, according to the inflexions in the line boufid-ing the margin of the river at '■'•high water markf from five to ten poles; and the distance from high to low-water mark, varies from seventeen to two hundred yards.

The area between the two lots and the Ohio, was designated on the plat as an '•'•esplanade^

Prior to the establishment of the town, a ferry had been granted by the county, court of Mason, (which county then included the land,) to James Taylor, sen. across the Obio to Cincinnati, and which ferry has been in operation generally, ever since its establishment.

In 1799, James Taylor, sen; convoyed to James Tavlor, jr. all his right to the land between the lots in New-Port, and the rivers Ohio and Licking, and also, his right to the ferry and to all incidental ferry privileges.

In 1807, the county court of Campbell, recognizing the legal title of James Taylor, jr. to the ground on the river Ohio, transferred to hipi by its order, the [136]*136ferry privilege which had been granted to the former proprietor, (and his vendor,) James Taylor, sen. and re-established the ferry in the name of James Taylor, jr. who executed bond conformably to law, and has enjoyed the exclusive ferry privilege at Now-Port ever since. He opposed the applir ition of the appellants in Uie county court, and resists-their claim in tais court, insisting that the fee in the land on the river, is no¡ in them, but in him; and that if it be in them, it has been circumscribed so as barely to secure enjoyment of the common, and that all other privileges not inconsistent with tire commonable rights, have been reserved to him.

Order of county court, grantins; Ir-r-ry, appearing correct on its face, conclusive of.right to land arid not to be inci-denta'ly as..sailed.

' The appellants, of course, contend that the exclusive and absolute title is in them, and that there has not been secured to the appellee any exclusive, ferry privilege, but, that they have a right to a ferry, incident to their title in the land on the river.

If does not certainly appear, whether or not, the public interest requires tire establishment of another ferry; but, as the parties have waived that question, we,will consider the case on the ground on which they liave placed it.

If the appellee is not, and never was, the owner of the land on the river, nevertheless, the order establishing his ferry, must now be deemed valid; because it shows that the county court‘decided that he was then the proprietor of the land, and was, therefore, entitled to the ferry privilege; and the judgment. of the county court, thus appearing proper on its face, cannot be incidentally called in question.

Nor can the proximity of the proposed ferry, to that of the appellee, present any legal barrier to the right of the appellants, if otherwise, that right be sustainable; for flv statute of 1819. (I Dig. 593,) as enrolled, excepts from its inhibition, ferries from land where there is a town, or where an impassable river intervenes.

The sole question to he considered, is, therefore, whether the appellants have shown that Ihev possess such an interest in the ground on the Ohio river, and between that river and the'lots in N>wt Port, as will entitle them to tire grant of a ferry across the river [137]*137le Cincinnati. This question may be resolved into two subordinate propositions: •

The grant of aright of co™rann,clot)s ]y divestgrantor of right.of ‘erry-

'1st. Have the appellants any interest, as trustees of New-Part,-in the ground denominated a common?

2d. If they have any interest, what are its 'nature, extent and effect?

1st. None of the appellants are grantees in the act which established. .town of New-Port; and that act did not vest ait» e -in the successors of the trustees to whom i«L nted the land for the -benefit of the town. Ui^PjS therefore some subsequent statute has transferred to their successors all the rights vested in the original trustees, or unless, as the representatives of the town of New-Port, the appellants have such a beneficial interest as should be .considered equivalent to the legal title so far as the ferry franchise may be concerned, the judgment to the county courtis right, even if such a title m fee of the ground called a common had been vested in the trustees designated by the act of 1795, as would entitle them to the grant of a ferry.

But as a decision of this point is not necessary, unless the original trustees held such an interest as would have entitled them to a ferry, and as it is more important to the parties to have the merits of the conflicting claims of the appellee, and of the town of New-Port settled, than to have this particular case disposed of on any other ground, we shall not now further examine the first proposition, but shall proceed to consider the second, by disposing of which, all controversy as to title, may be terminated.

2d. Either the legal title (o the ground designated as an esplanade, was vested in the trustees by the act of 1795, for the purpose of securing its use as a common-, for the benefit of the town, or the right Of common merely, w.as granted to them intrust for the town, the fee still remaining in the proprietor.

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29 Ky. 134, 6 J.J. Marsh. 134, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-new-port-v-taylor-kyctapp-1831.