Brissel v. State ex rel. McCammon

87 Ohio St. (N.S.) 154
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1912
DocketNo. 13586
StatusPublished

This text of 87 Ohio St. (N.S.) 154 (Brissel v. State ex rel. McCammon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brissel v. State ex rel. McCammon, 87 Ohio St. (N.S.) 154 (Ohio 1912).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The joint board referred to was formed in pursuance of Section 3148, General Code, which reads as follows:

“In accordance with the purposes, provisions and regulations of the foregoing sections, except as hereinafter provided, the commissioners of any two or more counties, not to exceed five, may form themselves into a joint board for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a district hospital for the care and treatment of persons suffering from tuberculosis, and may provide the necessary funds for the purchase of a site and the erection of the necessary buildings thereon, in the manner and for the purposes hereinbefore provided.”

The succeeding sections confer the same power of appropriation on the joint board, as boards of trustees of benevolent institutions have, as well as power to receive donations and bequests of money or land.

[161]*161They provide for the appointment of a board of trustees by the joint board, one member from each county, and that the joint board may remove any trustee for good and sufficient cause, after hearing; that the board of trustees shall prepare plans and specifications, and proceed to erect and furnish the necessary buildings for the district hospital referred to, and for the appointment of superintendent, nurses, and other employes by that board; that the first cost of the hospital and the cost of betterments and additions thereto shall be paid by the counties comprising the district, in proportion to the taxable property of each county, as shown by their respective duplicates. And, further, that the boards of commissioners of the counties jointly maintaining the district hospital for tuberculosis shall make annual assessments of taxes sufficient to support and defray all necessary expenses.

In support of the demurrer to the petition, plaintiffs in error maintain, that Section 3148 grants no power to the joint board, to appropriate funds, nor to determine the amount necessary for the equipment of the hospital, but that, that power is lodged solely with the commissioners of the various counties, and that, although as alleged in the petition, the joint board had been duly formed, and had purchased and paid for the site and had appropriated $90,000.00 for the building, and although each of the counties had paid their proportion of the $10,000.00 to purchase the site, and of the $90,000.00 for the building, yet there was [162]*162no power in the joint board to go forward with the enterprise!

The language is, “the commissioners of any two or more counties, not to exceed five, may form themselves into a joint board * * * and may provide the necessary funds for the purchase of a site,” etc. Substantially, it is contended that from the above language, the matters referred to at all times rest in the discretion, and depend on the will, of the commissioners of the several counties, each county having the right to determine for itself whether it should provide its share of the money.

This law was passed in response to an intelligent public sentiment which was formed in the light of the gratifying advances in medical science, in recent years. The legislature, in the enactment of the law, exercised the police power which belongs to it, as the depositary of the sovereignty of the state, and in the performance of its duty to provide for the health, safety and best interest of the people. It was an effort on the part of the legislature, to provide a plan for arresting the advance, and if possible, for the extermination of a dreadful disease.

It may be conceded, that the law is not as full in some of its details as might be desired, to give facility to its administration, but the court will not let its purpose fail, of its beneficent result, for this reason alone. In the absence of plain terms to require a different course such a construction will be put on the statute as will prevent the failure of the manifest purpose of the legislature. The [163]*163court will not by construction paralyze the arm of the joint board by denying to it the power necessarily incident to the actual and definite grant of authority.

The “foregoing” sections referred to in Section 3148 are sections which provide for the establishment of a similar hospital by the county commissioners of a county, and this act will be considered in connection with the provisions of that act where it is necessary.

What is it that has been done when the commissioners have met and acted in accordance with the statute?

In the first place, it is plain that Section 3148 provides for the creation of a complete legal entity, a political subdivision, for the specific purpose of “establishing and maintaining” a district hospital, for the care and treatment of persons suffering from tuberculosis.

The enactment is, the commissioners of two or more counties * * * may form the joint board and may provide the necessary funds.

It is the board, as a board, which shall determine what buildings are necessary for its purpose, and shall provide the funds for the “purchase of the site” and erection of the “necessary buildings” thereon.

The subsequent sections referred to furnish the method of raising the money, and impose upon the commissioners of the different counties the duty of levying the tax for the purpose of paying their several shares into the general fund, and having done this, it is the duty of the joint board to [164]*164appoint the trustees, as the instrumentality to carry on the detail work of erecting and operating the hospital.

The position of the plaintiffs in error necessarily is, in its logical result, that the commissioners of any county may' join with the commissioners of other counties, not exceeding four more, and proceed in full accordance with the terms of this statute to the formation of a joint board; may participate in all of the work necessary to carry out the objects of the statute, including payments into the fund necessary to the purchase of the property and erection of . the buildings; may thereafter, at any time, retire from the enterprise in response to any caprice, or change of mind, and really, that this statute does not furnish a substantial, operative plan at all.

It would be a vain thing for the commissioners of any county to participate in an)^ of the undertakings described in this act if this view of the law is correct. We think it clear that that conclusion is not justified.

When a board of commissioners has proceeded with the commissioners of other counties to the formation of a joint board referred to, and when that board has been formed and proceeded to the carrying out of the duties imposed on it by the statute, each óf'the counties whose commissioners have joined in the forming of the board, have fixed and definite obligations, with reference to the hospital, which cannot bé terminated at the mere will of any such county. The will of the majority must control, as long as it violates no [165]*165provisions of the law. In re State Treasurer’s Settlement, 51 Neb., 116; Whiteside v. The People, 26 Wend., 634. The words “may provide the' necessary funds,” etc., are part of the same sentence which describes what the commissioners of two or more counties can do, as such board.

It is also contended that certain portions of the law are unconstitutional.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Whiteside v. People ex rel. Upham
26 Wend. 634 (New York Supreme Court, 1841)
In re State Treasurer's Settlement
36 L.R.A. 746 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 Ohio St. (N.S.) 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brissel-v-state-ex-rel-mccammon-ohio-1912.