Tugwell & Madison v. Eagle Pass Ferry Co.

9 S.W. 120, 74 Tex. 480, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1085
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1888
DocketNo. 6613
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 9 S.W. 120 (Tugwell & Madison v. Eagle Pass Ferry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tugwell & Madison v. Eagle Pass Ferry Co., 9 S.W. 120, 74 Tex. 480, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1085 (Tex. 1888).

Opinions

Gaines, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellants, a ferry company, to enjoin appellee, a ferry corporation, from operating a ferry boat across the Rio Grande between Eagle Pass, Texas, and Pie[488]*488dras Negras, in Mexico. The plaintiffs claimed an Exclusive right to operate a ferry between the towns named by virtue of a license granted to them by the Commissioners Court of Maverick County in June, 1886.

The defendant company in its answer claimed its right to maintain a ferry between the points designated, first, by virtue of its incorporation as a ferry company under the general laws of the State on the 7th of July, 1885, and secondly, by prescription. Its charter was for the express purpose of operating a ferry between Eagle Pass and Piedras Negras. It also alleged that it had -tendered to the Commissioners Court $100 for a license, and that the court had refused to grant it. By order of the judge of the District Court for that judicial district a bond was given and an injunction sued out, but upon final hearing the injunction-was dissolved and a judgment rendered for damages in favor of defendant .against plaintiffs, and against the sureties on the original bond, and also against the sureties upon an additional bond given by order of the court during the progress of the cause.

The case was submitted to the judge without a jury, who filed the following conclusions of fact:

1, That the proceedings had between the County 'Commissioners Court of Maverick County and A. P. Tugwell relative to a grant of ferry privilege between Eagle Pass and Piedras Negras was intended to be and was in effect an exclusp license to the said Tugwell to land a ferry at the Eagle Pass bank of the Rio Grande, and that defendant had no license therefor.
“ 2. That said river over which this ferry was to operate is a bound.ary water-course between the United States and the Republic of Mexico.
3. That the defendant (appellee) was operating a rival ferry between said towns after the license had been granted to said Tugwell, and continued to interfere with said A. P. TugwelFs ferry for four days, when the latter and his partner Madison sued out this injunction.
“4. That the facts fail to show a prescriptive right in either party to exclusive ferry privileges between said towns/’

As applicable to the facts so found the court concluded the law to be:

“1. That the statutes of Texas do not authorize the County Commis- - sioners Court of. a county to establish or license ferries over boundary streams such as the Rio Grande.
“2. That article 4438 of the Revised Statutes does not confer such . authority.
“3. That in the absence of statutory authority the County Commissioners Court of Maverick County have no power to grant exclusive license to any person to operate a ferry on said river.
“4. That the injunction was improperly sued out and should be dissolved and actual damages awarded the defendant.”

The findings of fact are supported by the evidence. The only con[489]*489froverted issue found by the judge is as to the prescriptive right of the defendant corporation, and we think the evidence wholly insufficient to show such right.

But we do not concur in the conclusions of law. It is true that article 4438 of the Revised Statutes does not confer authority upon the Commissioners Courts to establish ferries across a stream “ which makes a part of the boundary line of this State,’” and indeed we may look in vain in the entire chapter upon the subject-of ferries from which this article is taken to find any express authority for granting ferry licenses to any persons except the owners of the land fronting upon the streams, lakes, or bays in the State, except in cases where the owners of ferries shall refuse to keep the same at the rates allowed by the Commissioners Court. Rev. Stats., art. 4442.

Yet no one is permitted to keep a public ferry and charge fees without obtaining a license from the court and giving bond as required by the statute. Rev. Stats., art. 4450.

To keep a ferry and to receive anything of value for crossing persons or property without first obtaining license, as is required by law, is made punishable by the Penal Code. Pen. Code, art. 415.

It was certainly not intended that the important matter of the establishment of public ferries should be left to the caprice of those who might perchance own the land at the points at which the public convenience might require them. This seeming difficulty is removed by reference to article 1514 of the Revised Statutes, which defines the powers of the Commissioners Courts. They are there given authority “to establish public ferries whenever the public interest may require it.” The grant is as full as the Legislature can make it. Chapter 6, title 87, of the Revised Statutes contains merely the regulations of the power delegated to these -courts. Article 4439 provides that any person wishing to establish a ferry shall apply to the Commissioners Court, and shall show that he is the owner of the land on which the ferry is sought to be established. It is said that the statutes merely give a preference to the land owner. Hudson v. Cuero Co., 47 Texas, 56.

And we incline to the opinion that this right of preference does not exist at points where public roads have been established across the streams of the State. In acquiring the right of a public road along any designated route, by condemnation br otherwise, it would seem the public acquires the right to use such means as are necessary and proper for the ordinary purposes of travel. This is indicated by article 4436, which contains the provision that should the owner of the land upon one bank of the stream be unable to get the consent of the owner of the land on the opposite bank, he may establish his ferry by procuring an order of the court to lay out a public road from such opposite bank. These considerations impel us to the conclusion that the Revised Statutes confer upon the Com[490]*490missioners Courts the power to license public ferries in their respective-counties in all cases except in those instances where the Legislature has-specially granted the privilege of establishing a ferry to some person or persons or some municipal body.

But the question arises, has the State the right to grant a franchise for a ferry across a stream which constitutes a boundary between it and another State or between it and a foreign nation? The answer to this is, that it has the right as far as its territory extends—that is in ordinary cases to the middle of the stream. This principle is distinctly announced by the Supreme Court of the United States in Conway v. Taylor’s Executor, 1 Black, 603. It is held in that case that the power to establish ferries is coextensive with the legislative jurisdiction of the State, and that an exercise of this power over a stream which is the boundary of a, State does not infringe that provision of the Constitution of the United States which gives the Congress power to regulate commerce between the-States and with foreign nations. See also Marshall v. Grimes, 41 Miss., 27; People v. Babcock, 11 Wend., 586; Columbia D. B. Co. v. Geisse, 38 N. J. Law, 39; Memphis v. Overton, 3 Yerg., 387.

In The People v. Babcock, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W. 120, 74 Tex. 480, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tugwell-madison-v-eagle-pass-ferry-co-tex-1888.