Charls v. Cleveland

72 N.E.2d 770, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 211, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1152
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1939
DocketNo 17229
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 N.E.2d 770 (Charls v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charls v. Cleveland, 72 N.E.2d 770, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 211, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1152 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

OPINION

By TERRELL, PJ.

This action was filed in the court of common pleas against the City of Cleveland, and upon trial a decree was entered in favor of the defendants. Appeal on questions of law and fact was taken to this court for trial de novo.

Plaintiff seeks injunctive relief against the City of Cleveland from proceeding with the issuance of mortgage bonds which were authorized by the special election under an ordinance for the extension and improvement of the Municipal Light Plant, and the giving .of a mortgage upon the said Municipal Light Plant to secure the said bonds, and the granting of a franchise to operate the said Municipal Light Plant in the City of Cleveland, to the purchaser who might bid in the said Municipal Light Plant at foreclosure sale, if the same mortgage bonds are not paid .according to their terms, and to declare the said election null and void

Plaintiff claims that the passage of che said ordinance, and the said election held thereunder, was null and void, principally because the provisions of the Charter of the City of Cleveland pertaining to the passage of ordinances in granting the franchises were not complied with, and for other reasons as will hereinafter appear.

The three principal objections made by the plaintiff are as follows:

“1. 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 §186 of the. Charter of the City of Cleveland. ..-
,..“2. .The. referendum election pn Or-[213]*213(finance 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 §57 of the City Charter of suspending the ordinance fixing the date of December 21, 1938 as the date for the election.
“3. 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 briefly consider each one of these reasons assigned against the validity of the said ordinance, and the election held thereunder.

1. Section 186 of the Charter of the City of Cleveland provides:

“Passage of Franchise Ordinances. Sec. 18-6. 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 in final form.”

The ordinance in question was introduced into the city council on August 10, 1938, and printed verbatim in the City Record on August 11, 1938.

On September 1, 1938, certain amendments were made co the ordinance and the ordinance thereupon passed, and was signed by the Mayor. Plaintiff contends that this ordinance, under §186 should have been published in its final form with the amendments one week before it was passed and- that the failure to have it so published vitiates the entire ordinance and the election that occurred under its provisions.

The general purnóse for the publication of an ordinance as set out in the Charter, is to advise the people of the city of the' contents of the ordinance. íft'e‘'fiavé‘ Üom'é"t'd' -thé‘'coiiclusioñ' that the publication of the said ordinance on August 11, 1938. fully advised the people of the contents thereof and that the amendments made on September 1, 1938, were so inconsequential that the ordinance itself was not in any wise changed in substance.

The amendments complained of are as follows:

The first amendment was the introduction of the word “tenth” in a blank space in the Whereas clause, and thereby designated that the Director of Finance had certified to the council the estimated life of usefulness of the property, etc., whereas, theretofore the alleged date of said certification by the Director of Finance was blank. The Whereas clause of- an ordinance might be - valuable to set up the reasons for the passing of an ordinance, but in the final analysis the whereas clause is no substantive part of the ordinance itself. We therefore hold that this amendment not having been published one • week before passage of the ordinance does not make the ordinance invalid.

The second amendment complained of is the change of the word ‘of’ to ‘in’ referring to the denomination of the bonds. There is no substantial difference in the meaning of the word “of” and the word “in” in the respect in which they were used in this-ordinance. In fact there is no difference at all.

Complaint is also made that the words “of One Thousand Dollars ($1000.00) ” was inserted after the words “denomination” referring to the denomination of the bonds.

This did not change the total amount of the bonds authorized to be issued: It merely set up the amount of each individual bond, leaving the total unchanged.

We hold that this- is not a material change in the suostance of the ordinance.

The third amendment complained of was the striking out of the word “all” in lieu thereof inserting ■ the words “only such”.

It is'--Our conclusion that there is no [214]*214material change and the meaning of the ordinance is left as it was when published in full.

The fourth and last amendment complained of as not being published, itemized rather than merely totaled such outstanding revenue bonds. This makes no substantive change in the ordinance.

None of these amendments have in the least respect changed the substance of the ordinance from that which was published August 11, 1938.

■ We therefore cannot agree with the contention of the plaintiff that the failure to publish the ordinance, including these amendments, one week prior to its passage, invalidates the ordinance.

For the purpose of this discussion, in considering the matter of the objection to the failure to publish this ordinance with its amendments in final form, we have assumed that §186 of the Charter of the City of Cleveland which provides for said publication was applicable to this ordinance in question and we think that there was a substantial compliance with said §186 of the Charter. But it appears to us, as a matter of law, that §186 of the Charter of the City of Cleveland is inapplicable to the ordinance and franchise before us.

' Section 186 of the Charter of the City of Cleveland is one of a number of sections applying generally to franchises. It is apparent upon reading some of these sections that they do not apply to the franchise in question.

The franchises therein provided for are such that must be accepted within ten (10) days of the passage thereof, as provided in another section of the Charter.

The franchise before us could not be accepted within ten (10) days from the granting thereof, because it might be ten or twenty years or never that the proposed franchise would come into force and effecc. This franchise is effective only after foreclosure upon the mortgage bonds. This foreclosure might never occur.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.E.2d 770, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 211, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charls-v-cleveland-ohioctapp-1939.