128 Ky. 715 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Affirming.
These two appeals grow out of the same transactions. Both the plaintiff and the defendants below appealed from the judgment of the circuit court, and filed copies of the record here. These, by order of this court, were heard together, and will be treated in this opinion as one case. Nicholas Franzell and wife own a farm in Meade county, Ky., between the natural gas fields and the city of Louisville. The Kentucky Heating Company is a corporation owning and operating natural gas wells in Meade county, and is engaged in the business of piping the gas from the wells to the city of Louisville and there selling it to its customers under a franchise which it owns and holds to lay its pipes through the public streets. The Louisville Gas Company is a corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing gas in the city of Louisville and selling it both for lighting and heating purposes under a franchise which it owns of laying its pipes through the public ways of the city of Louisville. This latter corporation is not a party to this record, but it is a rival, to some extent at least, of the Kentucky Heating Company, and it is the theory of the Heating Company that the Calor Oil & Gas Company is but a branch of the Louisville Gas Company, and that the latter was incorporated, among other things, to enable the Louisville Gas Company by indirection to pipe natural gas from the gas fields of Meade county to the city of Louisville, and in this way unlawfully compete with the Kentucky Heating Company in its business. "We shall not enter very deeply into this phase of the ease, for reasons which will appear farther on in the opinion.' The Calor
The first question which is raised by the defendants below'on this appeal is that,-after the judgment
The Kentucky Heating Company was made a party defendant to the condemnation proceedings, because it claimed under a written contract with Franzell and wife, the owners of the land, the “exclusive right and privilege of laying pipe and pipe lines for any and all purposes, whatsoever on, across, in, or upon said land;” the consideration of which was an annual rental of $262 so long as the Kentucky Heating Company “shall continue to occupy and usé any part of the above-described land under this agreement.” In addition to this exclusive privilege- it had, under 'this contract, cértain mineral rights'in'the land, which ■need not bé- set -forth here, as the proposed' right of
The appellee, both by traverse and affirmative allegation, placed in issue the existence of the Calor Oil & Gras Company. When the corporation introduced in evidence a properly certified copy of its charter, which was regular on Its face, and showed a compliance on its part with the statutory requirements, this evidence established its existence. Section 540 of the. Kentucky Statutes provides: “Said articles, or a certified copy thereof, may ’be used as evidence in any action for or against such corporation. ’ ’ ' And in section 542 it is providedWhen the articles are filed and recorded as provided, * * * the corporation shall be deemed to be organized for the purpose of transacting, promoting or carrying on the business or purpose fo-r which it was created; and shall thereupon become a body corporate.” When the corporation is organized as the statute requires, neither its -purpose nor its validity can be inquired into collaterally, and any proceeding which challenges its right to exist must be instituted and maintained by the government, under whose laws it is organized. It would produce manifest confusion and hardship if the right of a corporation to exist could .be called in question hy every litigant with-whom it came in contact during its business career, and therefore the'principle is wisely established that after a corporation is organized as by law required no adverse litigant can, in a collateral proceeding, challenge its right-to exist.' Iri the case of Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Louisville Home Telephone Co., 114 Ky. 892, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 1676, 72 S. W. 4, un this very question we said: "Ap
The real issue in this ease was much obscured by a consideration of the effect upon the heating company of the gas company’s piping its gas to Louisville- — a question which had no valid place in the procedure. If the gas company makes an illegitimate use of its wells or pipe line, and unlawfully attempts to destroy the gas fields by unnecessarily or fraudulently wasting the gas, the Kentucky Heating Company, as a joint owner in the common field, will have a remedy both by injunction and by an action for damages, and undoubtedly the doers of the wrong will be subject to the penalty provided in the criminal statutes forbidding the wrong. But these are considerations which should not have been superimposed upon the simple issues as to (1) whether or not the Calor Oil & Gas Company had under its charter the right of eminent domain, and (2) what damage accrued ‘to Franzell and wife by reason of its exercise in the manner sought in this case. The question of the constitutionality of section 3766a of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, which gives the right of eminent domain to the owners of gas and oil wells for the purpose of piping their products to
This brings us to the question of the excessiveness of the verdict. The laying of the pipe line on the strip of land in question will be an additional servitude upon the right of way of the Louisville, Henderson & St. Louis Railroad Company, which runs through the Franzell farm. The railroad owns • a perpetual and exclusive right of way through the farm, and the strip of ground in question here is within this easement, and is 1,450 feet long and 27 feet wide. In this strip a pipe line 10 inches in diameter is to be buried, and
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed on the appeal of the Kentucky Heating Company, Nicholas Franzell and wife, and reversed on the appeal of the Calor Oil & Gas Company, for a new trial under principles consistent with this opinion.