Walker v. Taylor, 46 U.S. 64 (1847)
U.S. Supreme Court
Walker v. Taylor, 46 U.S. 5 How. 64 64 (1847)Walker v. Taylor
46 U.S. (5 How.) 64
Syllabus
Where the plaintiff below claimed a ferry right under an act of the Legislature of Kentucky, and the ground of defense was that the act was unconstitutional and void as impairing vested rights, and the decision of the highest state court was against the plaintiff, a writ of error, issued under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act, will not lie.
This Court can entertain jurisdiction under that section only when the decision of the state court is in favor of the validity of such a statute. Here, the decision was against its validity.
The case was this.
In 1820, the Legislature of Kentucky passed an act, entitled "An act for establishing and laying off a town at the Iron Banks." 2 Morehead & Brown's Digest 1044. It recited that the General Assembly of Virginia, in 1783, had authorized the deputation of officers of the Virginia line to lay off four thousand acres of land in such manner and form as they might judge most beneficial for a town, on the Mississippi or the waters thereof, and vest the same in trustees for the common benefit and interest of the whole; that trustees were appointed, who located the four thousand acres of land upon the Mississippi, including the Iron Banks, and that said trustees, or a majority of them, had died before executing the trust reposed in them.
The statute then appointed trustees, who were to cause a survey to be executed for the four thousand acres of land and have the same duly recorded in the office of the surveyor of the lands set apart for the military bounty on state establishment, but declared that the trustees should not (unless thereafter authorized by law) sell or dispose of the same or any part thereof in any manner whatever, but hold the same subject to the control and future disposition by the legislature. It then proceeded to authorize them to lay off a town, divide it into lots, cause a survey to be made, adopt rules for the government of the town, and then authorized them to sell at public sale any number of lots, not exceeding one hundred lots, of half an acre each. All the money arising from such sale was to be paid into the public Treasury of the state.
In 1821, an act was passed to amend and repeal, in part, the above act, 2 Morehead & Brown's Digest 1046. This authorized the trustees to appoint a treasurer, who should pay all the money received into the Treasury of the state, to be then divided amongst the officers and soldiers of the Virginia lines; to sell fifty more lots; to sue trespassers &c.
Under these acts, the trustees laid off the Town of Columbus into lots, streets, alleys, and public grounds, and made and recorded a plan therefor, by which they left an open space of ten poles, as a common, along the margin of the river, between low water mark and the lots next to the river, and dedicated this common to public use.
In 1825, an act was passed, acts of 1825, chap. 72, the first section of which authorized the trustees, to sell the whole of the in and out lots, provided they should all concur; and the second section authorized the trustees, or a majority of them, to
"fix the rates of ferriage across the Mississippi River, and lease out ferries for any term of years, not exceeding five, and apply the rents to the improvement of the town. "
In 1829 (acts of that year, page 31), it was provided, by an act passed in that year.
"That a public ferry be and the same is hereby established at the warehouse landing of Owen G. Cates and Robert Walker, fronting their lot, No. 3, in the Town of Columbus, across the Mississippi River to the opposite shore, and that said ferry be in the name, and for the benefit, of said Cates and Walker, their heirs and assigns, forever, provided, however, that said Cates and Walker enter into bond, in the County court of Hickman, in the penalty of $1,000, conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties required of other ferry keepers by law in this commonwealth."
At the session of 1830, acts of 1830, chap. 533, page 148, an act was passed restoring the ferry privileges to the Town of Columbus. The first section was as follows:
"That so much of 'An act to establish a warehouse at the mouth of Jonathan's creek, in Calloway County, and for other purposes,' as establishes a public ferry at the warehouse landing of Owen G. Cates and Robert Walker, fronting their lot, No. 3, in the Town of Columbus, across the Mississippi River to the opposite shore, in the name of the said Cates and Walker, their heirs and assigns, forever, be and the same is hereby repealed, it being satisfactorily proved that lot No. 3, in the Town of Columbus, does not bind on the Mississippi River; that the margin of said river, opposite the Town of Columbus, in laying off the same, was reserved as a public landing, and belongs to the trustees thereof, for the use of the inhabitants; that, under the laws of this state, the trustees of Columbus were vested with ferry privileges from the said public ground, on the margin of the river, across the Mississippi River, for the use of the inhabitants; that said Cates was a lessee of a ferry from the trustees of Columbus, and the said Walker his surety, at the time of granting the ferry hereby repealed; and that no notice of the application to the legislature was given to the said trustees, nor a representation, that a ferry was already established there, made in their petition to the legislature."
The second section repealed the grant to Cates and Walker, and the third section regranted and confirmed to the trustees, and their successors, all the ferry rights and privileges from the public ground, and vested them with power to lease one or more ferries from said public ground, from time to time, not exceeding five years at anyone time.
Cates and Walker had complied with the requisitions of the act of 1829, and put their ferry into operation. Cates sold his interest to Walker, and he, dying, devised it to his wife, who continued in the exercise of it until interrupted by the trustees, who claimed the exclusive privilege of ferriage.
In September, 1842, Elizabeth Walker, the plaintiff in error, brought an action of trespass on the case against the trustees, in the
Hickman Circuit Court. The defendants filed five pleas, but it is only necessary to notice the first. That plea set forth all the aforesaid acts of assembly prior to the act of 1829; averred that the legal title to the land on which the town was situated had been vested for that purpose in trustees, as is above stated; that, upon the sale of the lots, there was a reservation made of all ferry rights to the trustees of the town, for its use; that they had been constantly in the exercise of those rights; that between lot No. 3 and the river there intervened a street, ten poles in width, and between that and the river a "common." From these facts, it deduced and alleged the exclusive ferry right of the defendants, coextensive with the limits of the town on the river, as incident to their alleged legal title to the common, as secured to them by said reservation on the sale of lots, and as granted to them by said prior acts of assembly.
And it therefore further alleged, that the act of 1829, granting a ferry to Cates and Walker, "was unconstitutional and void, being an attempt to impair and divest prior vested rights," &c., and so justified the defendants for the disturbance and trespass complained of.
To this plea the plaintiff demurred, and, upon argument, the demurrer was overruled. The plaintiff, not filing any replication to this plea, judgment was entered for the defendants, for the want of a replication.