City of Cleveland v. General Storage Co.

162 N.E. 819, 28 Ohio App. 480, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 723, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 597
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 819 (City of Cleveland v. General Storage Co.) 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 Cleveland v. General Storage Co., 162 N.E. 819, 28 Ohio App. 480, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 723, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 597 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Sullivan, P. J.

This is a proceeding in error from the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, and the action is one in injunction, commenced by the General Storage Company against the city of Cleveland, to restrain the municipality from proceeding with a hearing in the insolvency court of Cuyahoga county, begun by the city for the purpose of appropriating certain property of the storage company under authority of an ordinance known as No. 71471, passed October 19,1925, designated as an emergency ordinance, the language of which is as follows:

*481 “An emergency ordinance to appropriate all street rights, property and easements appurtenant to the land hereinafter described in the old Superior street viaduct for the purpose of enabling the city of Cleveland to remove that portion of the old Superior street viaduct which extends from West Ninth street to a point- near the easterly bank of the Cuyahoga river.

“Whereas, the acquiring of the property,. street rights and easements contemplated in this ordinance constitutes an emergency, in that it provides for the immediate preservation of the public property, and to provide for the daily operation of a municipal department of the city of Cleveland:

“Now, therefore, be it ordained by the council of the city of Cleveland:

“Section 1. That for'the purpose of enabling the city of Cleveland to remove all that portion of the old Superior street viaduct which extends from West Ninth street to a point near the easterly bank of the Cuyahoga river, there be and is hereby appropriated for public use, all street rights, property and easements in said old Superior street viaduct which may be appurtenant to the following described premises : [Description of property.]

‘ ‘ Section 2. That the director of law be and he is hereby authorized and directed to apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to have a jury impaneled to make inquiry into and assess the compensation to be paid for such street rights, property and easements in said old Superior street viaduct hereby appropriated.

“Section 3. This ordinance is hereby declared to *482 be an emergency measure and shall take .effect and be in force from and after its passage.

“Passed October 19, 1925. John D. Marshall, President of the Council. F. W. Thomas, Clerk of Council.”

A demurrer was filed in the court below to the petition, and the same being overruled the city pleaded by way of answer, and thereupon a demurrer was filed to the answer, and, upon hearing, it was sustained, on the ground that there were no allegations that in law warranted the proceedings to take and appropriate, begun and pending in the insolvency court, under said resolution.

There being no further pleading, by way of amended answer or otherwise, a decree was entered, perpetually enjoining any further proceedings in the insolvency court, and hence these proceedings in error by the municipality.

It is admitted by the city that the primary purpose of the passage of the ordinance is to change the grade of the street immediately contiguous to the property of the storage company, and unless the ordinance, and the proceedings thereunder, in legal effect, if not by express provision, have that purpose in view, then it follows, even according to the contention of able counsel for the city of Cleveland, that the decree of the court below was well founded in law.

The business of the plaintiff below, the General Storage Company, is located in the, sixth story of a building which is contiguous to what is known as the old Superior viaduct, which crosses the Cuyahoga river, connecting the east and west side of the city of Cleveland. It has heretofore been held, in *483 previous litigation between these parties, by this court, that this bridge was a highway and public street. Egress and ingress to the place of business of the plaintiff below were from the east approach, or portion, of this bridge or viaduct.

Some years ago the United States government caused the removal of what is known as the “turn-bridge” of the structure, which left, after its removal, this portion of the bridge known as the east approach, knd by means of this approach the customers reach and depart from the place of business of the storage company, as heretofore mentioned.

Therefore the question arises whether, under the ordinance, and under the claim that a change of grade is necessary, this east portion of the old viaduct, which this court has denominated by its former decree a street and highway, may be removed for any reason at bar except to change the grade of the street under statutory provisions.

From an examination of the ordinance it is clear that, without any additional information, the only purpose of its passage ascertainable from its terms is to enable the city to remove that portion of the street, otherwise known as the viaduct, which extends from West Ninth street to a point near the easterly bank of Cuyahoga river. Therefore any property owner affected by the passage of the ordinance is denied, by the provisions of the ordinance itself, any information or knowledge of any intent or purpose on the part of the city of Cleveland to change the grade of the street, whether the street be the dirt road which is under the roadway of the bridge, as it was traveled while in existence, or be the highway known as the Superior viaduct, of which *484 the east portion remaining is now the portion which forms the approach to the property and place of business of the storage company, although, in the absence of any knowledge to the contrary, the claim of change of grade, in our judgment, could only refer to the change of grade of what is known as the public highway, a street formed by the structure itself, because, even under the claim of the city, the proposed change of grade could not be applied to the road under the bridge, for the reason that the bridge became a highway connecting the east side with the west side of the city, and instead of being subordinate to the surface roadway it only existed because of the construction of the highway known in other language as the Superior viaduct.

The language of the ordinance is specific as to its purpose. There is no other deduction, excepting that its object is to enable the city to remove the remaining portion of the old viaduct, and to do so it seeks to appropriate whatever rights the storage company may have as to ingress and egress to and from its place of business.

Were the language ambiguous instead of definite and certain, there might arise a necessity for interpreting it and determining whether, in legal effect, the purpose was to change the grade. But no such status exists. The language is absolutely unrelated to and unconnected with any other purpose except that which is specifically incorporated on every occasion found necessary in the ordinance. There is no language which needs construction. There is no situation in the provisions of the ordinance that creates a foundation for construction or interpretation, because the provisions are unambiguous, defi *485

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 819, 28 Ohio App. 480, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 723, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cleveland-v-general-storage-co-ohioctapp-1928.