City of Cincinnati v. Dawson

372 N.E.2d 628, 53 Ohio App. 2d 109, 7 Ohio Op. 3d 81, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 6980
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 1977
DocketC-77072
StatusPublished

This text of 372 N.E.2d 628 (City of Cincinnati v. Dawson) 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
City of Cincinnati v. Dawson, 372 N.E.2d 628, 53 Ohio App. 2d 109, 7 Ohio Op. 3d 81, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 6980 (Ohio Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Palmer, P. J.

This appeal arises from an action for a declaratory judgment brought by the city of Cincinnati ■against its then director of finance, James G-. Flick, and' his successor, Frank A. Dawson, to determine whether Flick and Dawson improperly declined to process certain Cincinnati ordinances authorizing $34,100,000 of unvoted general obligation bonds issued for various purposes, including waterworks, public buildings, equipment, and hospital improvements. It is agreed that the additional millage required to service these couneilmanic bonds would, when added to millage required to service existing *110 indebtedness, exceed ten mills, or one percent of tbe assessed value of property within the taxing unit. 1 The defendant-appellant Flick, and later Dawson, declined to certify the ordinances to the county auditor because of apprehension that the issuance of the bonds would violate provisions of the Ohio Constitution and various statutory enactments in aid thereof. The trial court, after extensive arguments, entered its judgment declaring: “* * * [Defendant has wrongfully refused to certify the bond ordinances to the county auditor, for the ten-mill limitation does not apply to the city of Cincinnati’s tax levies.” The defendant filed a timely appeal from this judgment, urging, a single assignment of error: that the judgment of the trial court, in holding that various provisions of the charter of Cincinnati relieved it from the strictures of the ten-mill limitation, was contrary to law.

The resolution of this issue becomes, since there exist no factual dispute and no controlling or minimally helpful precedent, a matter of interpreting the intent and meaning of the several public enactments, constitutional, statutory, and charter. Rather than a seriatim recitation of these enactments, which, without gloss, can be something less than instructive given the complexities of the subject matter, it will be, we believe, useful — as it is certainly permissible — to examine them, in turn, in their historical context together with such legislative motivation for and circumstances surrounding enactment as the record and available documentation will permit us to bring to bear. 2 R. *111 C. 1.49; 50 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 234, Statutes, Section 250 et seq.

In November 1933, the electors of this state adopted Section 2 of Article XII of the Constitution of Ohio, providing in part:

“No property, taxed according to value, shall be so taxed in excess of one per cent of its true value in money for all state and local purposes, but laws may be passed authorizing additional taxes to be levied outside of such limitation, either when approved by at least a majority of the electors of the taxing district voting on such proposition, or when provided for by the charter of a municipal corporation. * * *” (Amended in other respects, effective July 1,1975.)

This enactment replaced earlier sections providing a “one and one-half per cent” or fifteen mill limitation in a 1929 amendment, effective in 1931, which in turn replaced a 1918 section (and earlier enactments) without such millage limitation. See State, ex rel. Ohio National Bank, v. Hudson (1938), 134 Ohio St. 150 at 161. These constitutional provisions, however, reflected rather than established or initiated public policy; the battles had been, and continued to be fought in the General Assembly, whose enactments we must look to for more instructive guidance. Thus, as early as 1910, there existed statutory limitations on millage levied by municipalities. The Smith One Per Cent Law, G. C. 5649-2 to 5649-5b, fixed a limitation of 10 millR for all purposes, both operations and debt service, on tax levies imposed by municipalities.

“The Smith one per cent law was enacted in response to a popular demand for legislative action fixing a definite restriction and limitation upon the rate of tax levies, for the evident purpose of limiting the expenditure of public funds and bringing about a more just return and valuation of property for the purposes of taxation. It provides in substance that the maximum rate of taxes that may be levied for all purposes, upon the taxable property within a taxing district, shall not in any one year exceed ten mills on each dollar of the tax valuation of the taxable property of *112 such taxing district for that year.” State, ex rel. Menning, v. Zangerle (1916), 95 Ohio St. 1, 6.

Although eased by subsequent legislation to 15 mills (State, ex rel. City of Akron, v. Slusser [1944], 144 Ohio St. 123 at 124), the limitation apparently proved unreasonably restrictive and certain cities were forced to borrow money for operating deficits. We are told that in 1925 the city of Cincinnati had over $6,000,000 in such deficit bonding.

In any event, beginning in the early 1920’s, a substantial movement commenced to secure legislative relief for the hardpressed cities eventuating in the passage of a series of bills in 1925 which, among other things, limited the purpose for which bonds could be issued and regulated their form, provided certain budgetary reforms, and, more importantly for our purposes, provided a home rule operating millage limitation bill. This latter legislation, known as the Tallentire Act, provided in its original form as follows:

“The provisions of sections # * * [here follow numerous General Code sections affected by the legislation, including those providing millage limitations] shall not apply to any municipality, which by its charter or amendment thereto provides for a complete budget system of municipal receipts and expenditures, and further provides for a limitation on the total tax rate which may be levied without a vote of the people for all purposes or for current operating expenses by the legislative authority of such municipality in each year on the tax list of real and personal property therein.” G. C. 5649-10. (Emphasis added.)

This legislation, effective January 1, 1926, was designed in sum to serve a number of fiscal needs and reforms, one of which was to relieve the pressure on cities caused by limitations on debt service millage. Home rule cities were permitted by charter to divorce themselves from the Smith Act stricture by adopting limitations on the total unvoted tax rate either for all purposes or for current operating expenses. The suggestion that the disjunctive “or” was inadvertent in the act, and that the *113 legislation intended relief from total millage limitations only when the charter provided a millage limitation “for all purposes” was decisively, and we conclude correctly, rejected by this court in State, ex rel. Thomas, v. Heuck (1934), 49 Ohio App. 436, 441, 442. A contrary holding would, in effect, eviscerate one of the primary objectives of this remedial legislation, vis., the provision of relief from unreasonably restrictive limitations of debt service millage, and would, in addition, do violence to the plain language of the legislation.

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Related

State, Ex Rel. Thomas v. Heuck
197 N.E. 376 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1934)
State Ex Rel. City of Akron v. Slusser
56 N.E.2d 129 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1944)
State Ex Rel. Ohio National Bank v. Village of Hudson
16 N.E.2d 266 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
372 N.E.2d 628, 53 Ohio App. 2d 109, 7 Ohio Op. 3d 81, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 6980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cincinnati-v-dawson-ohioctapp-1977.