The plaintiffs, G. D. Herold, Talithá S. Herold, Eugenia P. Herold and Laura V. Wolverton, instituted a chancery-cause in the Circuit Court of Nicholas County against C. J. Hughes and the Hamilton Gas Corporation praying that a mandatory injunction be issued requiring the defendants to remove certain “gas transmission pipeline from the said property of these plaintiffs”; that the defendants be restrained from any further trespasses on the real estate of plaintiffs, and for damages. The defendants answered, denying any trespass on real estate of plaintiffs and alleging the right to construct and maintain the gas pipe line complained of by virtue of a permit issued to Hamilton Gas Corporation by the State Road Commission of West Virginia. The trial court, after the taking of depositions, entered a decree granting the injunction.
The Hamilton Gas Corporation is a producer of natural gas which it transports and sells to Hope Natural Gas Company. The Hope Natural Gas Company is a public utility, but the Hamilton Gas Corporation is not a public for Hamilton to construct a four inch pipe line from the utility. For the delivery of such gas it became necessary
producing wells to the -point of delivery to Hope Natural Gas Company. In doing so it employed the defendant, C. J. Hughes, to construct the pipe line. The line constructed,
The permit, issued by the State Road Commission to Hamilton, October 19, 1953, pursuant to Code, 17-16-6, authorized the construction and maintenance of a “4" Gas line along U. S. Rt. 19 parallel to and at least 5' from present pavement and buried at a minimum depth of 18" below ditchline". The permit, however, was on condition that the work be done under the direction of the State Road Commission; that the State Road Commission be saved harmless from damages; that the applicant be responsible for all repairs necessitated by the construction of the pipe line; that applicant would remove the installations at no cost to the State Road Commission when required for the improvement of the road; and that the applicant shall be “subject to all regulations now or hereinafter adopted by the State Road Commission”.
One of the pertinent statutes, Code, 17-16-6, as amended, reads in part: “No opening shall be made in any state or county-district road or highway, nor shall any structure be placed therein or thereover, nor shall any structure, which has been so placed, be changed or removed, except in accordance with a permit from the state road commission or county court, as the case may be. No road or highway shall be dug up for laying or placing pipes, sewers, poles or wires, or for other purposes, and no trees shall be planted or removed or obstructions placed thereon, without the written permit of the commission or county court, or its duly authorized agent, and then only in accordance with the regulations of the commission or court. The work shall be done under the supervision and to the satisfaction of the commission or court; and the entire expense of replacing the highway in as good condition as before shall be paid by the persons to whom the permit was given, or by whom the work was done: Provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to prevent any oil or gas company or person having a proper permit or franchise from transporting oil or gasoline along any of the public highways of this State, nor to give such company a franchise without paying to the landowners through whose lands such road passes the usual and customary compensation paid or to be paid to the landowners for such right of way. Any grant or franchise when made shall be construed to give to such company or person only the right to use the easement in such public road.”
The other pertinent statute, Code, 17-4-8, as amended, in so far as material, reads: “No railroad or electric or other railway shall be constructed upon the roadbed of any state road, except to cross the same, nor shall any person, firm or corporation enter upon or construct any works in or upon such road, or lay or maintain thereon or thereunder any drainage, sewer or water pipes, gas pipes, electric conduits or other pipes, nor shall any telephone, telegraph or electric line or power pole, or any other structure whatsoever, be erected upon, in or over any portion of a state road, except under such restrictions, conditions and regulations as may be prescribed by the state road commissioner.”
The defendants say that the permit issued to defendant Hamilton Gas Corporation by the State Road Commission vests in it the right to construct and maintain the gas line on the conditions set out therein, whether the State owns the fee in the land or whether it owns merely an easement for public road purposes. Thus the controlling question relates to the right or authority of the State Road Commission, under the statutes quoted above, to issue such a permit where it owns merely an easement for public road purposes.
It may be conceded, at least for the purposes of this case, that the State can not grant, by permit or otherwise, any right or property as to such an easement which would place upon the fee in the land a burden greater or in addition to that which is necessarily included within a grant of an easement for public road purposes. To permit such would be to permit the depriving of the owner of a part of his property without just compensation, in violation of constitutional provisions. But such a conclusion does not furnish an answer to the question posed, for we must determine whether the right or privilege granted Hamilton Gas Corporation is a right or privilege included within the grant of an easement for public road purposes.
The public highways of this State belong to the State and are subject to the control of the State.
Nulter
v.
State Road Commission,
In
Thacker
v.
Ashland Oil & Refining Co.,
In
Hardman
v.
Cabot,
In the opinion in the
Hardman
case the Court said: “That railroads, whether operated by steam or other motive power, and telegraph and telephone lines, do not impose additional servitudes, when located in highways, be they city streets or country roads, is abundantly settled by the decisions of this Court.
Watson
v.
Railway Co.,
One of the holdings in the
Hardman
case emphasizes the fact that, as to the question here involved, there is no difference whether the question arises in regard to a rural highway right of way or to a city street. In
Fox
v.
City of Hinton,
As early as
Spencer
v.
Point Pleasant & Ohio R. R. Co.,
In
Lowther
v.
Bridgeman,
We have not overlooked the holding in the case of
Hark
v.
Mountain Fork Lumber Co.,
We conclude that the granting of the permit to the Hamilton Gas Corporation by the State Road Commission was an act within the power and discretion of that governmental agency, and that the construction and maintenance of the gas pipe line complained of constitute no additional burden on the fee ownership of plaintiffs in the public highway right of way involved.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Nicholas County is reversed, the injunction issued herein by that court is dissolved, and the bill of complaint filed in the cause dismissed.
Reversed; injunction dissolved; bill of complaint dismissed.
