Blackwood v. Tanner

Opinion op the coubt by

JUDGE BURNAM —

Aepieming.

This case is the sequel of the decision of this court in Warren v. Tanner, 21 R., 1678 (56 S. W., 167) (49 L. R. A., 248). In that case this court affirmed a judgment of the circuit court enjoining appellants from operating an unlicensed ferry within less than a mile of appellees’ licensed ferry across Green river between the counties of McLean and Webster. After the decision in that case, appellees instituted this suit against appellants, seeking to recover toll lost by them in consequence of the operation of their ferry by appellants; second, damages to the salable value of their plant; and, third, they seek to recover the penalties prescribed by subsection 2 of section 1820 of the Kentucky Statutes. These various causes of action were set out in. three separate paragraphs, and a general demurrer was *675sustained to the second and third paragraphs, and appellants filed an answer, denying liability for the cause of action stated in the first paragraph. A jury trial resulted in a verdict in favor of appellees for $600 for loss of tolls, and the defendant appealed. Plaintiffs also prosecute a cross appeal from the judgment sustaining a demurrer to ■the second and third paragraphs of their petition.

Several distinct grounds are relied on for reversal: First, it is insisted that there was no joint cause of action in favor of appellees, and the motion to elect should have been sustained. 11 is next insisted that the damages sought to be recovered are so remote and uncertain as to afford no basis for an action. Appellees’ license to operate the ferry was a joint one, and they executed a joint obligation to discharge their duties. The fact that Tanner ran the ferry one week and Mulligan the next, is not important. This was simply a plan agreed upon by them for conducting the business, and in no wise affects their rights or liabilities. The suit was properly instituted in the' name of ■both parties. And the claim that appellees could not recover for loss of' toll resulting from the illegal infringement of their, ferry franchise by appellants is equally unitenable. Appellees enjoyed the exclusive franchise to maintain and operate a ferry at the point on Green river fixed in the order of the county court, and were required, under heavy penalties, to maintain it in good condition for the convenience of the traveling public; and they were expressly protected in this right by the statute, which prohibited the establishment of any other ferry within a mile of their place of business, and the running of an unlicensed ferry within the prescribed distance was an actionable wrong, for which they were entitled to recover damages. See Owens v. Roberts, 69 Ky., 609, and City of Newport v. *676Taylor Ex’rs, 55 Ky., 699. And the measure of damages for the infringement of a ferry franchise is the amount of tolls lost to the. owner of the franchise by diminution in the number of customers who would have used the ferry. See 12 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law p. 1104. And the income derived in former years from toll's and those received during tixe continuance of the infringement are competent evidence to show the value of the franchise and the extent of the' losses. See 6 Lawson, Rights, Rem. & Prac., section 2958, and Bridge Co. v. Geisse, 38 N. J. Law, 39., There is therefore no error''in the instruction.

It is very earnestly insisted for appellees that the circuit judge erred in sustaining a demurrer to the third paragraph of their petition, in which they sought to recover the penalty prescribed by the statute in addition to their loss of tolls. The section of the statute under which this claim is asserted is as follows: “No ferry shall take or land any. passenger or thing within such prohibited distance of an-, other ferry, under a penalty of fifteen dollars for each offense, to be recovered before a justice against the owner or keeper, and by the owner of such other ferry.” Kentucky Statutes, section 1820, subsec. 2; 7 Lawson, Rights, Rem. & Prac., section 3777, says that: “When a statute has Created a new right, and has prescribed a remedy for the enjoyment of the right, he who claims the right must pursue the statute remedy. So, when a summary remedy is ■given by the statute, those who wish to avail themselves of it must confine themselves strictly to its provisions, and can take nothing by intendment. When a statute to obtain a particular object prescribes the mode of proceeding to enforce it, that mode must be pursued.” This view of the learned author was approved by this court in the cases of Com. v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 18 R., 610, 27 S. W., 589, *677and Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Com., 102 Ky., 300 (19 R., 1462) (43 S. W., 458). In the last case the question is carefully and fully considered, and the court held that it was not the policy of the law or the intention of the Legislature to oust magistrates courts of cases of which the statute gave them exclusive jurisdiction by allowing the joinder of a number of separate causes of action into one; that public interest required that violators of penal statutes should b© proceeded against as soon as the violations were committed in the courts having jurisdiction thereof. We are of the 'opinion tha)t the circuit judge properly sustained a demurrer to the third paragraph.

For the reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed on the original and cross appeal.