Turnpike Co. v. Montgomery County

100 Tenn. 417
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 Tenn. 417 (Turnpike Co. v. Montgomery County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turnpike Co. v. Montgomery County, 100 Tenn. 417 (Tenn. 1897).

Opinion

McAlistee, J.

Plaintiff is the proprietor of a toll bridge over Red River, near the corporate limits of Clarksville, and sues the county to recover damages for loss of tolls, which it alleges has been occasioned by the act of defendant in erecting a free bridge over said river in such close proximity to plaintiff’s bridge as to divert therefrom more than three-fourths of its legitimate and accustomed patronage. A demurrer was interposed on behalf of the county, which was sustained by the Circuit Judge, and the suit dismissed. Plaintiff appealed, and has assigned errors.

It appears 'from the record that in July, 1893, the plaintiff, turnpike company, filed a bill against Montgomery County, to enjoin it against the construction of the bridge in controversy across Red River, and from opening a public road running thence northward, on the ground that the same was intended for a shun pike, and that if thrown open to public travel, it would practically destroy the value of complainant’s franchise. The Court of Chancery Appeals held that the proposed road was- not a shun pike, but that it was a public convenience, and that the County Count had a right to open it and build said free bridge. That decree was, on appeal, affirmed by this Court.

[419]*419The declaration in the present action alleges that said Clarksville & Russellville Turnpike Company was. incorporated in 1830, and that its corporate existence will, by its charter, expire in 1899; that under its. charter plaintiff has, for many years, maintained a .turnpike, running from .Clarksville, Tenn., in the direction of Russellville, Ky., about twelve miles; that it owns a toll bridge on its line across Red River, about one mile from Clarksville, and that it maintains gates at which tolls have been collected; that said defendant county has erected a free bridge over Red River a short distance below plaintiff’s said toll bridge, and said free bridge is a part of a public highway established by the County Court between the city of Clarksville and Pea Ridge for the public convenience; that the location of said road diverts the travel from several roads which were tributaxy to plaintiff’s road, and that defendant county actually uses that portion of plaintiff’s pike north of its intersection with the Peterson road in coming to and from Clarksville by way of the said road. It is then alleged that the construction of the free bridge, and the location of the new route, has taken from plaintiff’s pike more than three-fourths of its legitimate travel coming to it north of the said intersection with the Peterson road by the northern end of the pike itself, and by the highway herein named, and to some extent its travel south of said intersection, and has practically destroyed the value of [420]*420plaintiff’s pike and bridge. Wherefore plaintiff sues for damages.

The demurrer interposed by defendant assigns the following grounds, to wit: “The county of Montgomery had the right to construct the highway complained of, in the plaintiff’s, declaration, because it was required by the public convenience; and the fact that such highway had the effect to diminish the travel on plaintiff’s turnpike, and, consequently, to diminish its revenue, will not entitle it to maintain this action. When the State granted a charter to the plaintiff company, it was not intended thereby to deprive the public authorities of the right to lay ■out such highways as the public travel required, and this highway is no infringement upon plaintiff’s charter rights. ’ ’

It is not alleged in the declaration that the rights and privileges conferred upon the plaintiff turnpike company by its charter of incorporation were exclusive, and no such insistence is made by counsel in argument. It is conceded, as was decided in the former litigation between these parties, that the County Court, in the exercise of its powers' and duties in respect of laying out and maintaining roads and highways for the convenience of the general public, had the right to construct this free bridge, and open up the new route. But • the insistence of learned counsel is that the effect of such public improvements by the county was to destroy the franchise of the turnpike company, and is equivalent to [421]*421a “taking” of its property for public purposes,which cannot be done without compensation.

Counsel rely upon Sec. 21, Art. 1, Declaration of Rights, Const. 1870, viz.: “That no man’s particular services shall be demanded or property taken, or applied to public use, without the consent of his representatives, or without just compensation being made therefor.” The argument is thát, if this new highway answers a public convenience, but in its effect necessarily involves the destruction of plaintiff’s property, it is a manifest “taking” or “application ’ ’ of its property to a public use without compensation. It is insisted there need be no actual physical application or taking possession of property to constitute a ‘‘ taking ” or “ application ’ ’ in the sense of the Constitution. The positions assumed by counsel have been reinforced by an able and elaborate argument, but we find ourselves unable to agree to its soundness.

Says Mr. Beach, in his work on Private Corporations, Yol. I., Sec. 25, viz.: “Accordingly, where a right or privilege is claimed under the charter of a corporation, nothing is to be taken as conceded to it but what is given in unmistakable terms, or by an implication equally clear.”

Section 26, viz.: “Especially, in cases where the corporation claims under its charter some exclusive privilege or exemption, have the Courts held that the contract, to be effective, must be clearly expressed in the charter. So that whenever an incorporated [422]*422company, in any action, asserts a right against another person, based upon an assumed franchise or power, the person against whom the right is so asserted may, as a defense, deny the existence of such franchise or power. The policy of the law is to regard with disfavor any claim to exclusive privileges and franchises. Thus, an Act in the usual form, incorporating a bridge company, not explicitly granting any exclusive privileges, and containing no agreement by the State not to permit othér bridges in competition, cannot be construed by implication to prevent the State from subsequently granting a charter to another company for a competing bridge. And where there is no contract in the charter of a turnpike company that prohibits -the legislature from authorizing the construction of a rival railroad, the construction and operation of the railroad are not the subject of legal redress.”

Says Mr. Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, page 473, viz.: “The granting of a charter to a new corporation may sometimes render valueless the franchise of an existing corporation, but unless the State, by contract, has precluded itself from such new grant, the incidental injury can constitute no obstacle.” Citing Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 7 Pickering, 344, and 11 Peters, 420. “In that case the State of Massachusetts granted to a corporation the right to construct a toll bridge across the Charles River, under a charter which was to continue for forty years — afterwards extended to [423]*423seventy — at the encl of which period the bridge was to become the property of the Commonwealth. Daring the term the corporation was to pay T200 annually to Harvard College.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Tenn. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnpike-co-v-montgomery-county-tenn-1897.