Aydelott v. Cincinnati

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 486
CourtHamilton Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 486 (Aydelott v. Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aydelott v. Cincinnati, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 486 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The question submitted to us is, whether an injunction should now issue in this case against the city of Cincinnati, restraining it until the further hearing of the case from taking any action in the proceeding now pending for the establishment of street railroad route No. 25.

One of the claims of the plaintiff is that the ordinance under which said proceeding is being prosecuted, and which purports to have been passed Decern[487]*487ber 20, 1892, was wholly invalid, for the reason that no proper and legal notice of an application for said route had been published for three consecutive weeks prior to the passage of such ordinance, as it is claimed is required, both by the general ordinance of the city, passed February 7, 1879 (Coppock & Hart’s Ord,, 528)., and by sec. 2502, Rev. Stat.

It is conceded, as .we understand, by the corporation counsel, that an application was made by Johnson and his associates to the city authorities for the establishment of a street railroad route to be known as No. 25, on a particular line therein named, and due and legal notice was given of this application; that subsequently this application was amended and changed as to some part of the route, and due notice was given of this amended application, and as to a second amendment to the original application. But then followed another amendment to the application, and as to this no notice whatever was given prior to the passage of the ordinance of December 20, 1892, which is the ordinance in this case, and which purported to establish route No. 25, as applied for in the'several applications, and on the route as shown by them as finally amended and which further prescribed where the tracks were to be constructed, and where said route should be operated upon tracks already constructed, and prescribing also the manner in which said tracks were to be constructed, and the terms and conditions upon which said route should be operated, and said ordinance further provided that sealed proposals should be advertised for to construct and operate said road, at the lowest rates of fare, in accordance with the terms, conditions and stipulations of such ordinance. Such advertisement has been duly made, and bids under the same are to be received until March 3, 1893.

It is manifest from what has been said, and from a reading of the general ordinance of February 7, 1879, that its provisions as to the publication of the notice of the application in this case as finally made, have not been complied with. But as the board of administration and the board of legislation of this city constitute the legislative body of the city, and can at pleasure after or repeal any ordinance merely providing for the manner in which this legislative power is to be exercised, they were authorized, as we think, to waive or ignore such regulations, and by special legislation in a particular instance, enact a legal and valid ordinance, which they have power to enact, though the same may not have been done in the particular mode or manner prescribed by an existing ordinance, which they might at any time have repealed. As was said by Judge Tongworth, in the decision of the case of State v. Henderson, 38 O. S., 649: “The ordinance is passed by council under a self-imposed rule contained in their own general ordinance, which they are at liberty to change or repeal at any time.”

But a more difficult and troublesome question arises when we come to the consideration of the construction to be.placed on secs. 2501 and 2502, Rev. Stat., and whether, under those, it was absolutely necessary to the legality of the ordinance of December 20, 1892, that notice of the application for the establishment of this route should have been published for three consecutive weeks prior to the passage thereof. If it was, and it is conceded that it was not so done, it would seem to follow that all of the proceedings based on such application would fail.

The two members of this court who heard the application for the injunction are not entirely agreed as to the construction which should be placed on these two sections. Judge Swing is of the opinion that, under the provisions of section 2502,..that “no ordinance for the purpose specified in said preceding section (2501) shall be passed until publication of the application therefor has been given” as provided, contemplates such publication before any attempt is made by the officers of the city to point the route contemplated, or to invite proposals for the construction thereof, that such has been the practice hitherto, and seems to be sanctioned by the decision in Sloane v. People’s Elec. Ry. Co., 3 Ohio Circ. Dec., 674. Such, unquestionably, has been the former practice. Indeed, it was provided for by the general ordinance of this city, as we have seen, and may have been the [488]*488requirement of the statutes of the state as they were before the law'was enacted in its present shape, March 20, 188-4. But I incline to the view that, under the statutes as they now read, the publication referred to is not an essential prerequisite to the passage of an ordinance like that of December 20, 1892, but that it is to be made after bids therefor have been obtained and the lowest bidder ascertained, and application is made by the successful bidder for the grant and leave to proceed with the work. Such an application is expressly provided for by sec. 2501 and sec. 2502, after expressly providing that “no ordinance or resolution, ’ ’ (for this preliminary action may be by resolution, while the final grant must be by ordinance) “to establish or define a street railroad route, shall be passed, and no action inviting proposals to construct and operate such railroad shall be taken by the council except upon the recommendation of the board .-f public works in cities” — in this city now by the board of administration — which recommendation was duly made for this ordinance of December 20, 1892, and the only requisite to the passage of such ordinance complied with; for the further and following provision of sec. 2502 is, “that no ordinance for the purpose specified in said preceding section’ ’ (2501) — that is, making the final grant to the lowest bidder, fixing the terms and conditions, etc., and the route thereof — shall be passed until public notice of the application therefor has been given, as specifically provided for. And it would seem that a notice then given, when all the terms and conditions and the route itself are definitely established, and it iss known who is the lowest bidder, would better accomplish the object contemplated by the statute than one given at an earlier stage of the proceeding, and allow all persons interested in the matter to present to the city authorities their reasons for or against the passage of the final ordinance. But whether the one or the other of these constructions is correct (and it must be conceded that the statutes are vague and ambiguous), we agree as to this; that if the notice of the application is to be given before the passage of the first ordinance or resolution, to merely establish or define a route, and inviting proposals for the construction theieof, on certain terms, that it is not so far jurisdictional in its character as to make the first ordinance or resolution invalid if notice is not given, and that if such notice is given before the passage of the final ordinance, that this will be sufficient; and if not so given, the final ordinance would be invalid.

It is further claimed by counsel for the plaintiff that the provisons of sec.

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4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aydelott-v-cincinnati-ohcircthamilton-1893.