City of Norwood v. Sheen

186 N.E. 102, 126 Ohio St. 482, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 482, 87 A.L.R. 1375, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 407
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1933
Docket23552
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 102 (City of Norwood v. Sheen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Norwood v. Sheen, 186 N.E. 102, 126 Ohio St. 482, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 482, 87 A.L.R. 1375, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 407 (Ohio 1933).

Opinions

It is strenuously urged on behalf of the city of Norwood that the decision in the case of Hutchinson v. City of Lakewood,125 Ohio St. 100, 180 N.E. 643, compels a reversal of this judgment. That case held that the construction of a sewer, in the absence of statute, by a municipality is a governmental function, and that no liability arises against such municipality for negligence in the performance of that function.

We have not here, however, the case of the construction of a sewer by a municipality, and hence the Hutchinson case does not apply. The sewer in question here was constructed by private parties in a street known as Roseland Mound avenue, in a private subdivision. When Roseland Mound avenue was dedicated to the *Page 486 city of Norwood and accepted by it for street purposes, the sewer was taken over with the street by the city of Norwood. The city constructed no sewer. It later constructed additional municipal sewage facilities in this territory, and thereby abated the condition before the death of Mrs. Sheen.

The defendant in error claims, on the other hand, that we have here, not a case of liability for failure to provide a sewer, but of the faulty construction and maintenance of a sewer, a ministerial act for which liability arises against the city under the decisions of City of Portsmouth v. MitchellManufacturing Co., 113 Ohio St. 250, 148 N.E. 846,43 A.L.R., 961 and City of Salem v. Harding, 121 Ohio St. 412,169 N.E. 457. However, the petition, while it alleges control and maintenance, does not allege negligence on the part of the city of Norwood. Negligence will not be presumed. Village ofWilloughby v. Malone, 122 Ohio St. 315, 171 N.E. 402. Nor will a failure to allege negligence in a petition be made up by assumption of facts not pleaded.

However, the defendant in error claims that an appropriation of private property to a public use is alleged in the petition. It is conceded that such a cause of action does not abate with the death of the owner of the real property. No appropriation of private property to public use in terms is alleged. The facts set forth with reference to the taking over of the street by the city of Norwood and the use by the city of such sewer and drainage facilities in such a way as to cause the flooding and pollution of the land in question are the facts upon which the plaintiff below must rely in order to make out a case of appropriation of private property good as against demurrer.

Whatever taking of property is set forth is clearly temporary only. This was not the case of an actual destruction of the soil, nor any similar permanent injury to the realty. In fact, the second amended petition *Page 487 does not allege any tortious or unlawful act on the part of the city of Norwood after the death of Mrs. Sheen. On the contrary, it is alleged that the condition was entirely abated prior to the death of Mrs. Sheen, and hence it cannot be contended that there was anything but a temporary taking of this property for public use. There is no authority in this state as to whether the averment of such facts without pleading in terms appropriation of private property constitutes the pleading of a taking of private property without compensation, but in other states similar pleadings have been upheld as setting forth such a temporary taking. Jacobs v. City of Seattle, 93 Wn. 171,160 P. 299, L.R.A., 1917B, 329; Faust v. Richland County,117 S.C. 251, 109 S.E. 151.

It was held in Emery v. City of Lowell, 109 Mass. 197: "Under a declaration alleging that the defendants obstructed a drain so that water and filth flowed into the plaintiff's cellar, destroyed his property therein, and put him to trouble and expense to get the water out, the plaintiff may recover damages for any injury which affected his estate, or diminished its value for use and occupation, by reason of the inconvenience and annoyance of flooding the cellar, and of unwholesome or disagreeable smells, or of insects thereby generated or attracted to the house; and also his reasonable expenses in preventing or removing the nuisance, and of changes and repairs thereby rendered necessary and which he could not by reasonable care and diligence have avoided."

The defendant below seems to have considered that an appropriation of private property to public use was alleged in the petition, for the answer specifically denies that there was any such appropriation.

There was, to be sure, no actual taking of the land itself, but there was a direct encroachment upon the land which excluded and restricted the dominion and control of the owner over it until the condition was *Page 488 abated. This constituted legally a taking of the property for public use. Lake Erie Western Rd. Co. v. Commissioners ofHancock County, 63 Ohio St. 23, 57 N.E. 1009.

As stated in 10 Ruling Case Law, 66, Section 58: "If the land, 'in its corporeal substance and entity,' is property, still, all that makes this property of any value is the aggregation of rights or qualities which the law annexes as incidents to the ownership of it. The constitutional prohibition must have been intended to protect all the essential elements of ownership which make property valuable. Among these elements is, fundamentally, the right of user, including, of course, the corresponding right of excluding others from the use. A physical interference with the land, which substantially abridges this right, takes the owner's property to just so great an extent as he is thereby deprived of his right. To deprive one of the use of his land is depriving him of his land; and the private injury is thereby as completely effected as if the land itself were physically taken away. Accordingly it has been held that any use of land for a public purpose, which inflicts an injury upon adjacent land such as would have been actionable if caused by a private owner, is taking within the meaning of the constitution and cannot be authorized by the legislature without compensation."

It was held in the third paragraph of the syllabus inLake Erie Western Rd. Co. v. Commissioners of Hancock County,supra: "Any direct encroachment upon land, which subjects it to a public use that excludes or restricts the dominion and control of the owner over it, is a taking of his property, for which he is guaranteed a right of compensation by Section 19, of the Bill of Rights."

In an annotation to 24 L.R.A. (N.S.), 230, this case was cited together with a number of cases from other jurisdictions, declaring the same rule of law. *Page 489 The principal decision annotated is the case of Lovett v. WestVirginia Central Gas Co., 65 W. Va. 739, 65 S.E. 196, 24 L.R.A. (N.S.), 230. In that case it was held: "2.

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 102, 126 Ohio St. 482, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 482, 87 A.L.R. 1375, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-norwood-v-sheen-ohio-1933.