Charls v. Cleveland

28 Ohio Law. Abs. 456, 14 Ohio Op. 70, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1165
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 456 (Charls v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charls v. Cleveland, 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 456, 14 Ohio Op. 70, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1165 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

OPINION

By HURD, J.

The plaintiff brings this suit as a taxpayer of the city of Cleveland against the city, as a municipal corporation, Harold H. Burton, as mayor, Henry S. Brainard as director of law, G. A. Gesel, as finance director, Henry C. Miller, as clerk of council and Morton S. Zaller,. Felix T. Matia, Mary L. Forrest, and Lockwood Thompson, as members of the board of elections of Cuyahoga county, praying for injunctive and other relief.

The applicable prayer of the petition is that the court find and declare Ordinance No. 1388-38 invalid, void and of no legal force and effect; that a special election held on the 21st day of December, 1938, sustaining said ordinance by a popular vote of the people, be declared a nullity and of no legal force and effect; that certain mortgage bonds authorized by said . legislation and by said special election be declared not to be valid obligations of the city and not a valid lien against any of the real-or chattel property of the city; and for such other relief as in the premises is considered just and equitable.

The case has been submitted on the pleadings, original and supplemental stipulations of fact and the oral testimony of the plaintiff. Counsel for the respective parties have presented the case by extended oral argument in addition to the filing of voluminous briefs supporting the respective contentions of the parties and the case is now before this court for final determination on the merits.

Pertinent parts of the stipulations - filed herein necessary to an understanding of this decision are as follows:

[457]*457“1. Tne general bonded indebtedness ot the city of Cleveland is now, and at all times mentioned m the petition was, in excess of the 1% and o% limitations provided by general law for the issuance of general obligation bonds of said city.
“2. The city of Cleveland now owns and operates, and for many years has owned and operated, a public utility, to-wit: an electric generating station, and transmission and distribution system, including substations, the product and services of which are and are to be supplied to said city and its inhabitants. Said system’s existing facilities are m need of substantial rehabilitation and the system requires the addition of supplemental generating facilities in order that its present peak loads may be protected by proper reserve generating capacity and city owned institutions serviced. The council and the administrative offices of said city prepared and studied many plans .or the improvement and extension of said utility, and in connection therewith submitted proposals to the Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works. When the final plans were approved by said council and administrative officers, the same were presented to said Federal Administrator (hereinafter referred to as PlW A.), together with an application for allowance of a federal grant to the city of Cleveland in the approximate amount of Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($2,500,000) as a part of a total project of approximately Five Million, Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($5,500,000). Tentative approval of said project was given by P.WA prior to the introduction of Ordinance No. 1388-38 hereinaiter referred to.
“3. Ordinance No. 1388-38 was introduced at a meeting of the council of the city of Cleveland held on August 10, 1938, and said ordinance as introduced at said meeting was published verbatim .n the City Record, the official publication of the city of Cleveland, of August 11, 1938.
“4. Thereafter and prior to September 1, 1938, public hearings were held in respect of said ordinance, at wlr'ch meetings ■certain amendments of said ordinance were proposed.
"5. At a meeting of the council held September 1, 1938, said proposed amendments to said Ordinance No. 1388-38 were agreed to by the council and they were published in full in the City Record of September 2, 1938. Said amendments were made in the fourth ‘Whereas’ clause and in Sections 2 and 4 of said ordinance.
“6. At said meeting of the council held September 1, 1938 said Ordinance No. 1388-38 as then and there amended was passed by the council and on the same date approved by Harold H. Burton, mayor of the city of Cleveland.
“7. Said ordinance was published in. full in the City Record of September 7, 1938.”

Among other stipulations is one to the effect that a special election on Ordinance No. 1388-38 was held December 21, 1938, The total vote cast was 124,051, 88,678 votes were cast in favor of the Ordinance and 34,894 votes cast against the Ordinance. The cost of said special election for which the city of Cleveland is liable was $32,066.46.

The grounds on which plaintiff predicates his claim to the effect that the legislation passed by the council and the subsequent special election whereby the same was upheld by the voters is void and of no effect, are as follows:

“(a) Ordinance No. 1388-38 is invalid because it was not published in the City Record in final form at least one week before its passage as required by Section 186 of the charter of the city of Cleveland.
“(b) The referendum election of December 21, 1938 on Ordinance No. 1388-38 was invalid because the absent voters’ ballots for said election were not printed and in the hands of the board of elections ready for distribution thirty days before said election as is required by the provisions of the General Code, and Section 15 of the city charter.
“(c) The referendum election on Ordinance No. 1388-38 was invalid because a supplemental petition fixing the date of February 14, 1939 was duly filed and had, the legal effect under Section 57 of the city charter of ■ suspending the ordinance fixing the date of December 31, 1938 as the date for the election.
“(d) The referendum election on Ordinance No. 1388-38 was invalid because the ballot title used in said election was false, in that it stated that no tax funds might lawfully be used for the payment of the bonds ‘ authorized by said ordinance, was argumentative and not descriptive of the ordinance.”

We shall consider these grounds in the order named.

Considering the first ground (a) the complaint of the plaintiff is based upon a claimed violation, of Section 186 of the charter of the city of Cleveland which reads as follows:

[458]*458“Passage of Franchise Ordinances.
“Section 186. No ordinance making, amending or renewing a grant to construct or operate a public utility, or to extend the appliances or service thereof, shall be adopted by the council until adequate public hearings shall have been held on such ordinance, and until at least one week after its publication in the City Record m final form.”

In order to have a full understanding of the problem here presented it is well to understand that the city receives its power to pass an ordinance such as the one under consideration from Art. XVIII, §12 of the Constitution, which reads as follows:

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Related

United States v. Butler
297 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio Law. Abs. 456, 14 Ohio Op. 70, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charls-v-cleveland-ohctcomplcuyaho-1939.