City of Akron v. East Ohio Gas Co.

7 Ohio N.P. 553, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio N.P. 553 (City of Akron v. East Ohio Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Akron v. East Ohio Gas Co., 7 Ohio N.P. 553, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Doyle, J.

The East Ohio.Gas Company was incorporated pursuant to and by favor of the provisions of .the statutes of Ohio, on September 8th, 1898, for the purpose of producing, purchasing and acquiring natural g,as; of piping and transporting natural gas from the place or places where it is produced, purchased, or acquired to Saint Clairsville in Belmont county; Uhrichsville, [554]*554Dennison, New Philadelphia, Canal Dover, Bolivar and Zoar in Tuscarawas county; Navarre, Canton and Massillon in Stark county, and Akron and Cuyahoga Palls in Summit county, Ohio, and to other cities, villages and places in the counties aforesaid; of selling and supplying natural gas at said places to consumers, and of laying and maintaining all street mains and pipes necessary for said purpose, with the right to acquire and hold all such lands, leases, right-of-way and other real and personal property as may be necessary or convenient for the purpose of producing, transporting, selling and supplying natural gas as aforesaid.

The kind of improvement intended to be constructed as set forth in the articles of incorporation is a line of wrought iron pipe laid under ground from the place where the natural gas is produced, purchased, or acquired, to the cities and places aforesaid, to connect with street mains and pipes laid in the streets, lanes,' alleys and public grounds of the cities and places aforesaid, for the transportation and supply of natural gas to the said cities .and places and their inhabitants, to which shall be connected all such regulators, valves, curb boxes and safety appliances as may be necessary in the conduct of said business.

The said line shall comménee at a point on the Ohio river in Belmont county, Ohio, and run from there through Belmont, Harrison, Tuscarawas, Stark and Summit counties, Ohio, to Cuyahoga Palls in Summit county. The termini of said improvement shall be a point .on the Ohio river in Belmont county, Ohio, and a point at Cuyahoga Palls in Summit county, Ohio.

In 1902 the company amended its articles of incorporation so as to specifically include Cleveland and Cuyahoga county in its field of operations, but not changing its charter in respect to other places in the counties aforesaid. The amended charter contains another additional privilege, that of manufacturing gas and transporting and supplying tire same in the territory embraced in the franchise, and some other matters incident to the manufacture of gas. s

The company on September 26th, 1898, by an ordinance of the council of the city of Akron acquired the consent of the municipal authorities of that city to lay its pipes for conducting-gas through the city, to supply consumers of the gas therein.

[555]*555The defendant is now actively supplying the cities of Cleveland, Akron, Canton and Massillon ,and is purposing to furnish Youngstown, Warren, Niles, Ravenna, Kent, Cuyahoga Palls and Alliance with natural gas. It has lines of mains and supply pipes extending in ,a southerly direction across the state of Ohio from Cleveland to the state line in .the middle of the Ohio river, one of which supplies the cities of Akron and Canton.

The ordinance giving the consent of tire municipal authorities of Akron to the East Ohio Gas Company to occupy its streets with gas pipes, fixed .the rate to be charged for natural gas furnished to the citizens and public buildings of said city, during the period of ten years next ensuing .after its passage, as follows: during the first five years at twenty-five cents per thousand cubic feet if paid before the tenth day of the month following the selling and delivery thereof, and twenty-seven cents if not paid in that time, and after the expiration of five years from the date of the passage of the ordinance at thirty cents and thirty-two cents respectively, according to whether paid before the tenth day of the month following the use. The ordinance also provided for a discount of ten per cent, for gas furnished certain public institutions. It was accepted in writing by the defendant.

At the expiration of the ten years period provided for in the ordinance and pursuant to Section 1536-567 (2478), Revised Statutes of Ohio, the council on the 7th of October, 1908, passed an ordinance fixing the rates to be charged for natural gas at twenty and twenty-two cents respectively, according to whether paid on the tenth of the month following its use, to be operative for the period of ten years following the expiration of the ten year period provided in the first ordinance.

The defendant notified the plaintiff that it would decline to accept the terms of said ordinance; and that it would cease to furnish the city and its inhabitants with natural gas. The plaintiff thereupon filed its petition in this court asking that the defendant be enjoined from ceasing to supply natural gas to the public buildings and the inhabitants of said city. The answer of the defendant does not controvert the allegations of the petition but pleads as follows as a defense:

[556]*556“Defendant has notified the plaintiff that it would decline to accept the terms of said ordinance; that it would cease to furnish the said city and its inhabitants with natural gas; intending thereby entirely to relinquish and surrender the privileges and franchise granted to it by the ordinance of September 26, 1898, and wholly to retire from said city. This intention defendant now confirms.
“Defendant therefore asks that the temporary injunction heretofore granted herein may be dissolved, and that this defendant may be permitted to surrender said privilege and franchise, to remove its mains and pipes from the streets and other public places of said city, restoring the same to their present condition, and to retire from the business of furnishing natural gas to the said city of Akron and its inhabitants.”

The issue is narrowed down to the question, whether the defendant can now relinquish and surrender the privileges accorded it under the laws of this state and ordinance of the plaintiff consenting to the laying of defendant’s pipes in the city, and wholly retire from the business of furnishing natural gas to the plaintiff and its inhabitants. Has .the plaintiff the right to require the defendant to remain in the city in the exercise of its franchise to furnish natural gas, whether the company is willing so to do or not?

The right of the defendant to exist .as a legal entity to prosecute the purposes of its organization was 'derived from the state pursuant to statutes providing for the incorporation of companies.

Formerly, under the old Constitution, corporations could be created by special acts of the Legislature. These were called charters. Under the present Constitution corporations must be formed under the general laws. The Legislature has provided in detail Avhat shall be done by an aggregation of individuals who desire to incorporate. Having complied with the provisions of the law the- Secretary of State issues the articles of incorporation.

Where -the Legislature .acts directly in granting the privileges of being a body corporate the character of the right is more apparent than where the body is created under a general law. The special privilege emanates directly from the government by [557]*557a special legislative enactment, and has none of the appearance of a right rather than a privilege.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio N.P. 553, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-akron-v-east-ohio-gas-co-ohctcomplsummit-1908.