133 Ky. 614 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The fiscal cour-t of Jefferson county granted to appellee the right to lay its pipe lines for conveying natural gas from its field in Meade county to Louisville, Ky., under a certain public highway in the county. The county owned only the easement for the public travel in the. highway. The fee wias owned, as to particular parts of it,-by appellants, the abutting owners. The question for decision in this case is whether the use of the highway by appellee’s gas line is an additional servitude upon appellants’ estate, land argument is made that it is not, because appellee is a public service corporation, whose business it is to bring natural gas to the metropolis of the State., to be sold there for illmninating and heating purposes; that, as the public has acquired the highway for one public purpose, it may be used for all public purposes of a kindred land similar kind. As tending to sustain the doctrine, it is cited that a steam railroad on a public highway is not an additional servitude (Lexington & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Applegate, 8 Dana, 289, 33 Am. Dec. 497); that (an electric street railway is not an additional servitude upon a city street (Louisville Bagging Manufacturing Co. v. Central Passenger Railway, 95 Ky. 50, 23 S. W. 592, 15 R. 417, 44 Am. St. Rep. 203); that an electricrailwayis not an additional servitude uponacoun
The question is not made to turn at all upon the character of the person using the new means, but upon the quality of the use. Appellee is incorporated to do the business of furnishing gas for illuminating and heating purposes in the city of Louisville. It either manufactures g-as, or gathers it from the subterranean deposits of natural gas. In either event, it must be confined, as well as conducted to the places of consumption. Appellee serves the public in such matters, but in no different sense from the butcher or coal dealer, for gas is no more essential to the public than meat or coal. Could it be truly asserted that the coal dealer might build a tramroad along and upon a public highway to enable him to haul his coal to the public market from his mine, so that thereby he might serve the public? If he were building and operating a tramroad on which the coal of all shippers who desired to use it would be transported, the case would seem to come within the line of authorities noted above. In the case ¡at bar, appellee is not a common carrier. It does not propose to carry gas for everybody — the owners of all wells along- its line — but it proposes to carry its own gas alone to the market. The carrying of its gas is a private enterprise, just as would be the coal dealer carrying his coal to market. The analogy is attempted to be extended by the argument that, if the coal dealer was entitled to haul his coal by wagons, or, if practicable, if appellee hauled its gas in transportable retorts, there would be no question of their right to use the highway for such purposes; and as the means adopted is an improved one, and really
The question at the bottom is not so much whether the public is not in some way, directly or indirectly, benefited by the matter (for it may be safely assumed that it is benefited by any enterprise that adds
Now, as to gas mains: Public lighting is also a public necessity in cities. Not so in the country. Public lighting must, from its nature, be upon the public streets. Hence it is implied in the grant of land for use 'as a street in a city that the city may also light it, and, in order to light it, it may use it for laying-gas mains. The gas so distributed may also be used for -private lighting, but such private lighting- is for the enjoyment of the inhabitants of the city. They all may use it, and hence all get the benefit of the use of their public streets. But there is neither custom nor exigency nor consideration for the appropriation of a rural highway to the public uses of a city of a nature that are peculiar to the city alone, and which the rural -community cannot share.. There is therefore no such implication in the dedication by the owner of his land to the public use for a highway in the county, as there is in the city, in so far as sewers and gas mains are concerned.
Following the reasoning of this opinion, and the case of Ward v. Triple-State Natural Gas & Oil Co.,