City of Lima v. Cramer

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113
CourtAllen County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113 (City of Lima v. Cramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Allen 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 Lima v. Cramer, 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Mathers, J.

'This action is brought by the city solicitor of the city of Lima by favor of Revised Statutes, 1777, which makes it the duty of such officer to apply to the courts for an injunction to-prevent the abuse by the city of any of its corporate powers, or the execution and performance of any contract made in behalf [114]*114of the corporation in contravention of the laws and ordinances governing the same. He sues, therefore, in behalf of the city. The defendants.are the members^of the council of said city and The Lima Electric Railway & Light Company. The plaintiff seeks to restrain the defendant eouncilmen from taking any further action with reference to a certain ordinance which was passed by them as members of the council on November 5, 1906; which ordinance purported to extend for the full period allowed by law the right of the defendant railway company to operate and maintain its railroad in and along Bellefontaine avenue in the city of Lima.

The plaintiff contends that the action which the council took, and which it proposes to take, was an abuse of corporate power and was 'also- in contravention of the laws governing the same. He bases his contention upon the claim that the Lima Electric Railway & Light Company has no valid franchise in said Bellefontaine avenue; and that if it has, the ordinance referred to was passed without giving the notice by publication required by original Revised Statutes, 2502 (1536-185), and that no consents of the owners of property abutting on said avenue to such es-tension were obtained. The plaintiff also contends that even if the defendant railway company has a franchise in Bellefontaine avenue, that it has about ten and a half years yet to run and that the council has no power to extend it until the expiration- of said franchise. .

Every one of the questions of law raised by this controversy has been passed on by the courts heretofore. In State v. Railway (6 C. C., 318), the circuit court of the eighth circuit had before it and squarely decided the questions of law relied on by the plaintiff, and that decision was adverse to the plaintiff’s contention; and the judgment of the circuit court in that case was affirmed without report by the Supreme Court - of this state, January 26, 1892, in State v. Railway, 27 Bull., 64. The section of the statutes there under consideration and the section ■as it stands to-day are identical so far as their provisions in this behalf are concerned, and while the Legislature carried original Revised Statute 2502 — the one construed by State v. [115]*115Railway, supra — into the new municipal code, as Section 30 (1536-185), it changed it so as to make it of general application throughout the state and thus removed the objections theretofore existing against it as to its constitutionality. It was not materially changed in other parts. So that the consideration given the section by the circuit court referred to, affirmed as it was by the Supreme Court, is the Supreme Court’s construction of the statute as it stands to-day.

In the case of the State v. Railway, supra, it was decided as follows:

“It was not the intention of the Legislature to apply the provision of Section 2502 of the Revised Statutes, in respect to publication of notice and competition in rates, to a renewal of the grant of a franchise to a street railway company to occupy the streets; nor is the consent of the property owners a condition precedent to the validity of such grant.

“Whenever in the opinion of the city council the public welfare would be promoted thereby, it may, by agreement with a street railway company, terminate a grant previous to its expiration, and renew the franchise for any period not in excess of the limitation fixed by statute. ’ ’

The plaintiff bases his claim that the defendant railway company has no valid franchise in Bellefontaine avenue, upon the contention that the Depot Railway Company acquired no franchise- in Bellefontaine avenue, and the defendant railway company, being the successor of the Depot Railway Company, .acquired no other rights therein than those possessed by the Depot Company. The claim is made that the Depot Company acquired no right to operate over the lines of the Lima Electric Railway Company, which it was sought to give the Depot Company by the ordinance of June 13, 1892, and which provided for an extension of the Depot Company’s route over the then existing lines 'which the Lima Electric Railway Company had a right to build and operate.

It appears from this ordinance that the said Lima Electric Railway Company consented to such extension and also that notice of the application for the extension was given for three consecutive weeks by publication in a paper of general circulation [116]*116in the city of Lima, and that there were filed with the council the lawful consents of a majority of the owners of the feet front of the property abutting on the line of said proposed extension. Among other routes, on which the Depot Company’s line was sought to be extended, was the following, as found in Section 1 of said extension ordinance, viz., “commencing at the public square in the city of Lima, thence on Market street and Bellefontaine avenue in said city east to the fair grounds.”

It was suggested in the brief of counsel for plaintiff, that, notwithstanding the recital in the ordinance mentioned, no consents and no notices were actually obtained or given. No proof, however, was adduced in support of this assertion, and, as the court will presume that the council at the time it acted upon the extension, did so according to law and that its acts were regular and legal, the court can only conclude that the extension was legally and regularly authorized.

While some stress was laid upon the fact that the original depot route was but 450 feet in length, while the line as extended was about four miles, and it was earnestly contended that the extended route was in fact a new route, yet the court can not conclude, in the absence of any claim and proof of fraud, that the council did not consider the extension beneficial to the public and, therefore, might honestly attempt it; neither would the court be justified in finding from the fact alone that the extension was so disproportionate to the original length of route that the meat this Caesar fed upon, whereby he grew so great, must have been tainted.

But aside from any question of fraud it was not necessary, in view of the decision in State v. Railway, supra, and its affirmance by the Supreme Court, for the Depot Company to procure consents of abutters to the extension of its franchise to operate over the routes of the Lima Electric Railway Company which were then built and in operation; nor that notice of its application for such extension should be published and the Depot Company and the council could, by agreement, cause the former’s twenty-five years’ franchise to expire before the end of the twenty-five years, and at the expiration, so effected, [117]*117renew the grant for twenty-five years, provided the Depot Company was not released from any obligation or liability imposed by the terms of the original franchise or grant.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lima-v-cramer-ohctcomplallen-1906.