Ampt v. City of Cincinnati

1 Ohio N.P. 379
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio N.P. 379 (Ampt v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ampt v. City of Cincinnati, 1 Ohio N.P. 379 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Sayler, J.

It appears in this case that for the six months ending Juné* 30, 1893, there was appropriated from the park fund of said city, for park purposes, $-, and for the six months ending December, 31, 1893, from the same fund for the same purposes $-, making the appropriation for the year 1893, $67,060; that of this fund there was a balance remaining unexpended on October 20. 1893, of $21.218.27.

That on October 20, 1893, the Board of Legislation of said city passed an ordinance to appropriate $30,000 from the contingent fund of said city to its park fund, as follows:

“ An Ordinance No. 657
To appropriate $30,000 from the contingent fund to the park fund.
“ Sec. 1. Be it ordained by the Board of Legislation of the city of Cincinnati, that the sum of $30,000 be, and the same is hereby appropriated from the contingent fund to the park fund. Said sum may be expended in the improvement of the city parks, by the construction of roads, grading and otherwise. No person shall be employed on any work carried on with said fund unless he shall have been a bona fide resident of the city of Cincinnati for at least one year prior to the date of such employment, and in the prosecution of such work the Board of Park Trustees are requested to employ only such persons as may be suffering by reason of their inability to find employment elsewhere.
“ Each and every workman employed in the parks, under the provisions of this ordinance, shall receive the sum of $1.60 per day for each day so employed.
“ Sec. 2. This ordinance shall take effect at the earliest period allowed by law.”

Said ordinance was approved by the mayor of said city on October 21, 1893, and was duly published, as required by law, and took effect on November 3, 1893. On November 3, a balance of over $18,000 of the fund originally appropriated from the park fund for park purposes, remained unexpended.

The said fund so appropriated from the contingent fund was being expended under the terms of said ordinance at the time the petition was filed herein, and was all expended prior to December 31,1893.

The plaintiff asks that the defendants be enjoined from contracting any obligations as against said $30,000 and from expending any of the same.

The plaintiff claims said ordinance is illegal for the following among other reasons:

1. That there was no deficiency in the fund appropriated far park purposes for the year 1893.

2. That no unforeseen emergency had happened requiring such appropriation from the contingent fund.

Under section 269Oh of the Revised Statutes the common council shall make, by the first week of each fiscal half year, detailed and specific appropriations for the several objects for which the city has to provide, etc.; and, ■“all expenditures within the following six months shall be made in accordance with and within said appropriation.” But, “in making the semiannual appropriation and apportionment hereby required, it shall be the duty of the common council to deduct and set apart out of the fund for [381]*381general purposes, the sum of fifty thousand dollars as a contingent fund to provide for any deficiency in either of the detailed and specific appropriations so to be made which may lawfully and by any unforeseen emergency happen; which contingent fund and any part thereof may be expended for any such emergency only by an ordinance passed by the votes of two-thirds of all the members of each branch of the common council, and approved by the mayor of the cit}7.”

From the statement of the case, it is clear there was no deficiency in the fund appropriated to park purposes for the year 1893. There was a balance of $21,000.00 remaining of said fund at the time the said ordinance was pass.-d. The mayor of the city, in speaking of the emergency, says: “And there not being any money in the park fund appropriated for the purpose, except barely sufficient to pay current expenses,” etc. That is, there were sufficient funds for the ordinary park purposes. The deficiency contemplated was to be the deficiency which would grow out of the use of the money in the improvement of the parks.

Was there an emergency as contemplated by the statutes?

It will be noticed the statute provides that an appropriation may be made from the contingent fund to provide for any deficiency in the specific appropriation which may lawfully, and by any unforeseen emergency happen.

The deficiency shall be occasioned by the happening of an unforeseen emergency. Something unforeseen shall happen, affecting the object for which the specific appropriation is made, and which, by requiring an unexpected expenditure of money appropriated to that particular object, has caused, or will cause a deficiency in the appropriation. An improvement of a park by construction of roads, grading snd otherwise, could certainly not be an unforeseen emergency. That, in this case, it was not unforeseen, is established by the evidence of the mayor in his answers to interrogatories, when he says : “ It was absolutely necessary to do certain work in Eden Park and Burnett Woods, but owing to the lack of funds, it had been put off from' time to time, but it was felt that the emergency was such that it could not be put off any longer.” Now, if the work was such as became necessary, but had been put off from time to time, it could not be called an unforeseen emergency. In its very nature the necessity of the improvement was apparent for a long time; probably before the appropriation was made for the six months ending December 31; and could have been considered in making such appropriation.

Where a deficiency will be occasioned by the expenditure of money in a contemplated improvement of a park — improvements which bad been contemplated, but put off for lack of funds — it would be idle to claim that an appropriation could be made from the contingent fund to supply the deficiency.

If there were a fund provided, under the statute, to be used in giving employment to the worthy unemployed, and if, by some unforeseen occasion, an unusual number of worthy persons should become unemployed, and thereby a deficiency should occur in such fund, an appropriation could be made from the contingent fund, to make good the deficiency. But no such fund is provided for or contemplated under the statutes. A need of a fund to be used in the employment of such persons, and the use of money for such purpose can in no way affect the object of parks. Neither can the park fund be used for such purposes under the statutes. It is clearly an evasion of the law, to say that a fund is necessary to be used to give employment to such persons, and as such fund is not provided by statute, that the park fund shall be used for such purpose; and, the park fund being thereby exhausted, to say that there is a deficiency in that fund [382]*382occasioned by an unforeseen emergency, and that such deficiency shall be made good out of the contingent fund.

W. M. Ampt, for plaintiff. F. Hertenstein, Corporation Counsel.

If the object of the ordinance was to make improvements in the parks, then there was clearly no unforeseen emergency which made such improvements necessary.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio N.P. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ampt-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohctcomplhamilt-1895.