Ampt v. City of Cincinnati

12 Ohio C.C. 119
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio C.C. 119 (Ampt v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts 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, 12 Ohio C.C. 119 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Swing, J.

These cases all involve the same question, and were brought to test the constitutionality of the act of the Legislature, passed April 24, 1896, 93 O. L,, p. 606, generally known as the waterworks bill.

This act, in brief, provides for the building of waterworks for cities of the first grade of the first class, and that bonds may be issued by said cities, to the extent of $6,500,000.00, if necessary for the completion of the same. The works are to be built for said cities by a Board of Commissioners appointed by the Governor of the State. These [120]*120'Commissioners are given full and complete control over the building of the works, and, when completed are to turn the same over to the officers of said cities having charge of the water-works. The Commissioners, under said act, have the power to .let the1 contract for the building of the works as an entirety or otherwise, as they may deem best, or the may contract for the building of the entire plant, and lease the same from the builders for a period of forty years, with privilege of purchase every ten years. The Commissioners may issue the bonds of the city to the extent of $6,500,000.00 for the building of the works,for which the plant itself is pledged, as well as the credit of the city.

. It is claimed that the law is unconstitutional upon several '.grounds:

First — That it is a law of general nature, and does not have a uniform operation throughout the state, and, therefore, violates sec. 26, art. 2, of the constitution..

There can be no doubt but that such a claim.might well be made upon the language used by the judges in the body of the opinion in the case of Hixson v. Burson, 35 Bull. 280; but we do not think the claim is supported by the syllabus of that case, which is the law of the case. But whatever doubt the language of the opinion in that case may have produced in the minds of judges and lawyers as to this question, we think has been dispelled by the recent decision of the Supreme Court in the following cases: State ex rel. Attorney General v. Baker, 35 Bull., 381; Hayes & Sons v. The City of Cleveland; Seifert et al. v. Weidner et al., and others, found in 35 Bull., 399.

These cases clearly show that the’ Supreme Court did not intend, in the Hixson case, to overrule a long line of cases of that court in similar cases to the one here in controversy.

They .uphold the classification of cities, and all laws which may apply to all cities of the same class are constitutional, provided the subject matter of the law is a proper [121]*121.subject for classification. What matters are proper for classification has not yet been determined by our Supreme Court. In the case of McGill vs. The State of Ohio, 34 Ohio St., 238, Judge Boynton says: “The term ‘law of a general nature,’ as employed in the constitution, has not as yet Teceived from this court an authorative definition, and none will be^attempted in the present case. The annunciation of the principles that govern each case as it arises is the better mode of arriving at its proper meaning and effect,”

In that case the court held that a law regulating the selection of jurors for the courts of Cuyahoga county, was not a law of a general nature within the meaning of Sec. 26, Art. 2, of the constitution.

In the case of the city of Cincinnati vs. Steinkamp, 35 Bull. 185, the Supreme Court decided that a law which provides that in all cities of the first grade of the first class (Cincinnati), buildings of three or more stories in height, not used for private residences exclusively, should be provided with fire escapes, was one of a general nature, and not having a uniform operation, was contrary to said section of the constitution. The'court, at page 187, says: ■“The suject of the statute under consideration is the protection of persons from the danger of fire. Protection of life and limb, it would seem, is not a local matter, but is a matter of general public interest, in which every person in the state coming within the category of people exposed to the dangers intended to be guarded against,is equally interested with every other such person, and it would appear to be as much the duty of owners of buildings answering to the description as to construction and occupancy of those named in the statute, to observe the humane directions of this act, whether located in one part of the state as another,”

In this case the court, as was said in the McGill case, supra, says: “It is not intended by this holding to overturn [122]*122earlier decisions of the court upon kindred questions. Each case stands, and must stand, upon its peculiar facts and circumstances.”

The Supreme Court,in the case of Falk, ex parte 42 Ohio St. 638,decided that a law which provided that ‘‘any person found in a city of the first grade of the first class, or within four miles of the corporate limits thereof, having in his possession any burglar’s tools, shall be deemed guilty of misdemeanor,” was a law of a general nature, within the meaning of Sec. 26, Art. 2, and, not having uniform operation throughout the state, was unconstitutional. Judge Okey, quoting from the decision of Judge Thurman, in Cass vs. Dillon 2 Ohio St. 607, says ‘‘The origin of this section is perfectly well known. The legislature has often made it a crime to do in one county,or even township, what it was perfectly lawful to do elsewhere, and had provided that acts even for the punishment of offenses should be in force, or not, in certain localities, as the electors thereof respectively might decide. It was to remedy this evil and prevent its recurrence that this section was framed.” In speaking of the act in controversy, the court proceeds to say: ‘‘It is not merely immoral, but plainly vicious; it is one of a very serious and dangerous character; it is not merely malum prohibitum, but malum in se, and it is a wrong to society, ■ not merely in Cincinnati, not merely in cities, but in every county, in every township, in fact, in each and every part of the state, and no reason can be given why it might not properly be made punishable by statute throughout the whole state as a criminal offense.”

Other cases of the Supreme Court might well be cited upon this question, but they do not conflict with these. These cases clearly show the view taken by that court of this provision of the constitution; and, while in each of these cases they say that they will not laydown any general rule as to its meaning, but will reserve to itself the right to [123]*123pass on every law as it comes before them, it seems to me that there is a rule deducible from these decisions, and that is, that whenever any law, directly operates upon and affects the rights, privileges and interests of the citizen, and there is no reason why it should not operate on all the citizens of the state alike, it is a law of a general nature within the meaning of this section of the constitution, and it should have a uniform operation throughout the state. But wherever a law relates to the government of cities and to the doing of corporate acts by said cities, and only indirectly affects the citizen, it is not a general law within the meaning of this section, although the subject matter, if applied to any portion of the state other than classified cities and incorporated villages, would be a law of a general nature. Such construction seems necessary in order to give effect to Sec. 6, Art. XIII, of the constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio C.C. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ampt-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohiocirct-1896.