Betzing v. Beckman

193 N.E.2d 741, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 301, 24 Ohio Op. 2d 398, 1963 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 235
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedSeptember 26, 1963
DocketNo. A-189922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 193 N.E.2d 741 (Betzing v. Beckman) 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
Betzing v. Beckman, 193 N.E.2d 741, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 301, 24 Ohio Op. 2d 398, 1963 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 235 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Renner, J.

Plaintiff, in this action for a declaratory judgment, is the owner of a triangular parcel of land lying to the [303]*303east of Winton Road, a county highway in Section 20, Town 3, Entire Range 1, Miami Purchase, Hamilton County, Ohio. The westerly line of plaintiff’s property extends along the center line of Winton Road northeastwardly for a distance of 1000 feet. The east one-half of the present thirty foot paved roadway occupies the westerly fifteen feet of plaintiff’s property.

This cause arose as a result of the proposed improvement and widening of Winton Road by the defendants to a width of forty feet which will entail the paving of an additional five foot strip along plaintiff’s property.

In her petition the plaintiff alleges that she is the owner of the property referred to above and that Winton Road is a paved county road thirty feet in width, fifteen feet of which runs over the westerly fifteen feet of her real estate. She further alleges that the county commissioners plan to improve and widen the paving of Winton Road without instituting appropriation proceedings against her; that Winton Road where it borders plaintiff’s property is not sixty-six feet in width as claimed by the county commissioners and the proposed widening of the paving would include an additional five foot wide strip of her property lying immediately east of the present paved roadway. Plaintiff further alleges that if it is determined that Winton Road is, or was, a county road sixty-six feet in width, the paved portion of Winton Road as it now exists is not within the sixty-six foot right-of-way and that the sixty-six foot right-of-way has been vacated by operation of law. The prayer of the petition asks the Court to declare the rights of the parties in Winton Road and to specifically declare the width and location of such right-of-way in relation to plaintiff’s property.

The answer of the county commissioners admits plaintiff’s ownership of the premises, subject to the rights of the public in Winton Road and admits that they plan to improve Winton Road, and to widen it by adding five additional feet of paving on each side of the present thirty foot paved roadway. The answer then alleges that Winton Road consists of a sixty-six foot right-of-way, the center line of which coincides with the northwesterly line of plaintiff’s property, and that the defendant’s are not appropriating any of plaintiff’s property for [304]*304the contemplated improvement. The commissioners then pray the Court to find Winton Road to be a public highway sixty-six feet in width, the center line of which coincides with the northwesterly line of plaintiff’s property.

All of the evidence in this case is contained in an eight page agreed statement of facts and twenty-nine exhibits which were submitted as a part of the statement of facts.

Counsel for the county commissioners contend that the public acquired the right of use and enjoyment of Winton Road as a sixty-six foot roadway by judicial proceedings instituted in 1798, wherein the court ordered the original highway to be opened and established as a public highway of the county four poles wide, pursuant to the provisions of the first road law of the Northwest Territory, enacted August 1, 1792. Counsel for the commissioners further contends that subsequent proceedings, instituted in 1817, altering the location of the part of that original right-of-way of Winton Road, lying north of North Bend Road, did not lessen the public’s existing rights to a sixty-six foot right-of-way. Plaintiff’s property is located on Winton Road north of North Bend Road in the area affected by that alteration.

Counsel for plaintiff, however, contends that the first road law of 1792 was void ab in itio because the initial legislative body, in the enactment of that law, exceeded the authority granted to it by section 5 of the Ordinance of 1787 and that, in the absence of such road law, the court was without authority to establish and open Winton Road and that whatever right the public has for roadway purposes is limited to the thirty foot width of the existing paving, such right having been acquired by prescription only.

Counsel for plaintiff contends further that even though the first highway law should be found to be a valid enactment, the evidence which has been presented in support of the defendants’ position is insufficient to establish Winton Road as being wider than thirty feet, which the public acquired by prescription only.

In question, basically, is the validity of the legislative, judicial, and administrative actions by which government, exercising its inherent right of eminent domain, established Winton Road,

[305]*305Tbe first question to be resolved is tbe validity of tbe first road law of 1792. Its validity is dependent on what construction is made of the Ordinance of 1787, and particularly section 5 thereof. Neither counsel for plaintiff nor counsel for defendant have cited any reported cases or judicial decisions on this important initial issue, and I have found none. Counsel for plaintiff relies solely upon the opinions of two individuals namely, Governor Arthur St. Clair and George A. Edge.

The Ordinance of 1787 retained for the Congress of the United States full sovereignty over “the territories of the United States northwest of the rivers Ohio.” The governor was to be appointed by the Congress, commissioned for three years, unless his commission be sooner revoked by Congress. A court of three judges was to be appointed by Congress, their commissions to continue in force during good behavior. These officials then must be regarded as agents of the Congress, their duties defined and their authority limited by Congress, their terms of service at the pleasure of Congress. Their official acts, if in conformity with the expressed will of Congress, would have the weight of the authority of the Congress itself. Such laws were to remain in force until the organization of the territorial general assembly, unless disapproved by Congress. The five members of the legislative council were also subject to removal by Congress.

Next to be considered is how much of its legislative authority did the sovereign Congress delegate to its agents, the governor and three appointed judges, “or a majority of them.” In the words of the Ordinance, section 5, they were authorized to ‘ ‘ adopt and publish * * * such laws of the original States, * * * necessary, and best suited to the circumstances of the district. ’ ’

The operative word here is adopt. Its meaning in the Ordinance, an expression of the will of Congress, has been considered and debated innumerable times, from the enactment of the Ordinance of 1787 to the present time.

Among the first, if not the first, to question its meaning, was the first appointed governor for the Territory, General Arthur St. Clair, himself. The governor was strongly inclined to the conservative view, that the Congress meant to deny to [306]*306the governor and judges in their legislative capacity authority to initiate any new laws, and so to restrict them to the adoption and publishing only of such existing laws of the original States as may be deemed applicable.

The St. Clair Papers, volume 2, contains a number of his ■ addresses and letters, which are most informative on the question presented herein.

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Bluebook (online)
193 N.E.2d 741, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 301, 24 Ohio Op. 2d 398, 1963 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betzing-v-beckman-ohctcomplhamilt-1963.