City of Columbus Ex Rel. Willits v. Cremean

273 N.E.2d 324, 27 Ohio App. 2d 137, 56 Ohio Op. 2d 310, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 496
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1971
Docket71-64
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 273 N.E.2d 324 (City of Columbus Ex Rel. Willits v. Cremean) 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 Columbus Ex Rel. Willits v. Cremean, 273 N.E.2d 324, 27 Ohio App. 2d 137, 56 Ohio Op. 2d 310, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 496 (Ohio Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Troop, P. J.

Defendants, Warren J. Cremean, director of the department of public service, L. E. Meenan, treasurer, and Paul Schooley, assistant safety director of the city of Columbus, appeal from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Franklin County, filed February 23, 1971, on questions of law. The order from which the appeal is taken reads as follows:

“It is therefore ordered and adjudged that defendants be and they are hereby permanently enjoined from collecting or charging any of the sewerage charges sought to be imposed by Ordinance No. 1687-70. * * *”

A supplemental complaint, or petition, was filed in this ease, which is the subject of certain of appellants’ assignments of error. The portion of the order of the trial court giving rise to objections reads as follows:

“* * * The Court finds that as a matter of law any citizen of the City of Columbus has the legal right to a building and sewer permit if he has complied with all legislative and regulatory requirements. Accordingly, defendants Schooley and Cremean should be and are enjoined from their respective freezes and may not, at their discretion, refuse to issue building: and sewer permits on a first-come first-serve basis. * * *”

Appellants predicate their appeal upon six assignments of error. This review will be divided into sections respecting the six errors assigned.

I

“The judgment of the trial court on the original complaint is contrary to law in regard to the standing of plaintiff-appellee, David Willits, to bring this action as a taxpayer’s action.”

So-called “taxpayer actions” have provoked much litigation in Ohio courts which, though somewhat exhaustive, has not resolved every question which might arise under the various legislative authorizations,

*139 E. C. 733.56, 733.57, and 733.58 authorize a solicitor to proceed and file certain actions to accomplish benefits for a municipality, such as the performance of a contract or to prevent abuses or a violation of applicable law. The taxpayer may enter upon the scene, if the solicitor fails in his prescribed duties, by virtue of the provisions in E. C. 733.59. Similar in content, and more directly involved in this case, are sections 71 and 74 in the charter of the city of Columbus. Petitioner in the original action, David Willits, by affidavit, avers that he complied with those applicable charter provisions before instituting his action on behalf of the city of Columbus.

It appears that David Willits is a resident of the city of Bexley, and not a freeholder or tenant in the city of Columbus, although an employee of the Columbus board of education and therefore obliged to pay a Columbus city income tax. Appellants take the position that Mr. Willits is not, being a nonresident, qualified to bring this taxpayer’s action.

Appellants offer a variety of decisions in support of the contention that Willits is without standing to sue. One very old one, Vadakin, on Behalf of the City of Newark, Ohio, v. Crilly (1905), 7 C. C. (N. S.) 341, held that the plaintiff was without standing not because he was a nonresident but because the court found that he had acted in bad faith. At page 342, the court said:

“* * * he is not bringing this suit as a tax-payer, in the interest of the city and the tax-payers of the city, but is bringing it solely for the purpose of furthering private ends, and the ambitions and schemes of other men who are not in court themselves * *

Such a pronouncement prompts the surmise that careful investigation might find many taxpayer suits to have been brought by one who could be found to be acting in comparable bad faith.

The plaintiff in Fischer, a Taxpayer, v. Cleveland (1931), 42 Ohio App. 75, was found to lack standing because he could show no evidence of pecuniary injury when he tried to get a restraining order against boxing exhibitions scheduled for the public gymnasium. And similarly, *140 in Harnett v. Edmonston, Dir. of Dept. of Industrial Relations (1932), 44 Ohio App. 304, this Court of Appeals, then the second district, held that Harnett, oddly enough a citizen and taxpayer of Bexley, could show no material injury to himself by the installation of a heating system in a public school. There was found to be no damage to the plaintiff who filed an action for an accounting and the recovery of money as reviewed in Agins v. University Heights (1952), 68 Ohio Law Abs. 65.

A departure appears in Brauer v. Cleveland (1963), 119 Ohio App. 159, a decision in which the Court of Appeals held that a plaintiff was not obliged to show irreparable damage to establish standing, but need only show an abuse of discretion injurious to his rights as a taxpayer. Appellants also cite Porter v. Oberlin (1965), 1 Ohio St. 2d 143, and rely upon the position taken by Judge Schneider in his concurring opinion, relative to the standing of the plaintiff, where he said, at page 160:

“ * * * claims no special interest or damage to himself or to his property or claims no misapplication of public funds. * * *”

The majority said that the plaintiff could bring his action for a declaratory judgment, designed to test the constitutionality of Oberlin’s fair housing ordinance, under R. C. 733.56 and 733.59, because the evidence, and the face of the ordinance itself, showed an expenditure of money to be necessary.

It should be noted that none of these decisions are squarely decisive of the question raised by this assignment of error. Most of them involve equitable actions in injunction, or other special actions, and invoke traditional equitable propositions of law. They do not directly settle the question of standing as raised in the instant case.

City income tax devices, as might be expected, produced litigation. A rather early decision in Angell v. Toledo (1950), 153 Ohio St. 179, upheld municipal income taxes, including the tax imposed on the income of a nonresident, collected at the source, on the ground that the city affords the taxpayer a place to work, protection, etc.; he has, then, a beneficial interest at stake, said the court. *141 A city of Columbus ease followed later. State, ex rel. Miller, v. Price, City Auditor (1965), 3 Ohio St. 2d 177, concerns a payer of city income taxes who sought to make members of the Ohio General Assembly pay income taxes also. Interestingly, the Supreme Court said in Price that there is no residence requirement contained in R. C. 733.59 which permits a demand to be made on a city solicitor of a municipal corporation to institute suit. The court said the following:

<£* * * If reaitor has a sufficient beneficial interest in the Columbus city government to justify imposition of its income tax on him, * * *,

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Bluebook (online)
273 N.E.2d 324, 27 Ohio App. 2d 137, 56 Ohio Op. 2d 310, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-columbus-ex-rel-willits-v-cremean-ohioctapp-1971.