Harlan County v. Cornett
Harlan County v. Cornett
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The Black Mountain Corporation has a coal camp on Yocum’s creek about three miles above the town of Evarts, Harlan county. It desired to have a graded road from its camp to the mouth of Yocum’s creek. The old county road ran up the creek and in the creek bed most of the way. The Black Mountain Corporation in January, 1918, proposed to the fiscal court that on condition the
A. B. Cornett on June 16, 1920, filed this action against the county to recover damages for the taking of his land. On the trial of the case he recovered judgment for $500.00 damages as the value of one-half of the land taken. The county appeals.
It is insisted that the petition is insufficient because it does not show that the cause of action accrued within five years, but limitation was not pleaded and limitation must be pleaded to be available. The record shows that the cause of action accrued within five years before the petition was filed "and limitation if pleaded would not be available. It is also insisted that the road was established without legal authority. The order of the fiscal court is in these words:
“This day came-Puckett, agent for Black Mountain Corporation, and for that company proposed that on condition the county would furnish right of way over lands not owned by it from the mouth of Yocum’s creek up same on survey to-be located by the county road engineer it would furnish the county right of way of the required width over lands owned by it and would construct on said right of way a county public road from the mouth of said creek up same for a distance of five miles or over, whereupon the court by unanimous vote accepted said proposal and ordered said road established and ordered that survey of same be made at once and right of way secured.
‘ ‘ The county judge and county attorney are here- . by authorized to secure said right of way and take deeds for same out of the county levy to pay for said right of way.”
In McDonald v. Powell Co., 199 Ky. 300, the fiscal court without agreement or condemnation proceedings had constructed a roadway thirty feet wide and one mile long through appellant’s farm and since used it as a public highway, the work being done by a contractor. The court, after quoting section 242 of the Constitution and referring to Layman v. Beeler, 113 Ky. 221, and Moore v. Lawrence County, 143 Ky. 450, said:
“In each case it was held th§ut the county was liable for the injury sustained by the landowner. This upon the ground that the constitutional provision, supra, gave express power for that character of action. Those actions were for injuries consequent upon the improvement of roads controlled by the county. This action is for a direct taking of property for public use without compensation. We think the same rule applies in both cases and that this ac*44 tion may be maintained, tbe measure of damages being tbe same as in condemnation proceedings in tbe establishment of a public road.”
There is no substantial distinction between that case and this. The county here owns the entire strip constituting the roadway except the plaintiff’s half of the strip through the plaintiff’s tract. His half of the strip is essential to the roadway. The county in fact has taken his land and must pay for it. Cornett was only allowed one-half of the value of the strip taken and the verdict is well within the evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.