City of Sandusky v. City Commission

11 N.E.2d 115, 56 Ohio App. 284, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 61, 9 Ohio Op. 382, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 341
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 N.E.2d 115 (City of Sandusky v. City Commission) 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 Sandusky v. City Commission, 11 N.E.2d 115, 56 Ohio App. 284, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 61, 9 Ohio Op. 382, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 341 (Ohio Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By LLOYD, J.

On July 2, 193G, the city of Sandusky, pursuant to demand upon its city solicitor by The Ohio Public Service Company, a taxpayer, filed its petition in the Cour< of Common Pleas against the city commission, the several members thereof and the treasurer and auditor of the city, praying for an injunction restraining them from “taking any steps or proceedings under ordinances and resolutions for the issuance of notes and bonds or either of them for the purpose of constructing or purchasing a municipal electric generating and distribution system for the city of Sandusky, or from offering to sell, contracting for the sale of or selling such notes or bonds,” and praying also that certain ordinances and resolutions pertaining to the proposed municipal electric system be declared to be null and void.

On August..3, 1936, an amended petition was filed dividing the allegations of the petition into seven causes of action, but not otherwise materially changing the purport thereof. To this amended petition the defendants thereto, the city commission and others, filed a general demurrer, which was sustained by the Court of Common Pleas on December 18, 1936. From the judgment thereon, the city of Sandusky appeals to this court on questions of law.

On September 4, 1936, The Ohio Public Service Company filed a written application to be made a party plaintiff in the cause and on December 8, filed an amended motion for the same purpose. This application and motion were denied on December 18, 1936. From this order, The Ohio Public Service Company filed a separate appeal, numbered in this court as Cause No. 472. The granting or denial of this application and motion was largely in the discretion of the trial' court and this court finds that The Ohio Public Service Company was not prejudiced by the denial thereof.

The amended petition of appellant, the city of Sandusky, alleges that it is a municipal corporation acting under a duly adopted charter providing for the commission-manager form of city government; “that on August 7, 1933, the city commission passed an ordinance, numbered 2123-C, declaring it necessary for the city to construct or purchase a municipal electric light and power plant consisting of works for the generation and transmission of electricity and equipping the same, including transmission and distribution lines, for supplying electricity to the city of Sandusky, Ohio, and the inhabitants thereof including the acquisition of the necessary land therefor”; that on the same day it adopted a temporary resolution in efiect that the commission contemplated the submission to the electors of the city of the question of the issuance of $1,400,000 of bonds at the regular election to be held on November 7, 1933, for the purpose of constructing or purchasing a municipal electric light and power plant; and requesting the city treasurer, as fiscal officer of the city, to certify to the commission, as required by §§2293-2 and 2293-10, GC, “his conclusions as to the estimated life of the proposed improvement and the maximum maturity of such bonds”; that the city treasurer having at once complied with this request, the commission, on the same day, August 7, 1933, adopted a resolution authorizing the submission to the electors of the city at the general election to be held on November 7. 1933, of the question of the issuance of the $1,400,000 of bonds and of the levying of a tax to pay the same and the interest thereon, the issuance of the bonds to be authorized by an ordinance to be passed not later than July 15, 1934; that a copy of the resolution was certified to the county auditor for calculation of the average annual levy required to pay the principal and interest of the bonds, and that the auditor complied therewith on August 28, 1933; that on September 11, *63 1933, a resolution was passed and certified to the board of elections of Erie County declaring- the intention and desire of the commission to proceed with the issuance of the bonds and directing its clerk to give the-required legal notice of the election; and ihat at the election held on November 7, 1933, the issuance of the bonds was approved by the electorate. The amended petition then recites the adoption and purpose of other resolutions of the commission relative to the issuance of the bonds and of anticipatory notes pending the issuance and sale of the bonds.

The amended petition also alleges “that there have never been submitted to the City Commission of Sandusky, Ohio, nor approved by it, complete plans, specifications, profiles and estimates for Municipal Electric Light and Power Plant Project, in connection with which the city of San-dusky, Ohio, proposes to issue $1,400,000.00 in notes, as required by §15 of the Charter of the city of Sandusky, Ohio.” That part of §15 of the city Charter to which this allegation of the amended petition refers, reads as follows:

“No resolution declaring it necessary to proceed with any public improvement, shall be adopted until complete plans, specifications, profiles and estimates have been submitted to the City Commission and been approved by it; and the same, or a copy thereof, shall thereafter remain on file in the office of the City Engineer subject to inspection by the public.”

The demurrer to the amended petition admitting all of the facts well pleaded therein, one of the questions presented to this court, and in view of the conclusion reached, the only one the court need consider, is whether non-compliance with this charter provision nullifies the proceedings sought to be taken by the commission to authorize the construction or purchase of the proposed municipal light and power plant.

Section 15 of the Sandusky city Charter, of which the foregoing quoted provision is a part, is to all intents and purposes identical in all respects with §14 of the Charter of the city of Gallipolis, and the precise question now confronting this court -was, as evidenced by its written opinion dated March 1, 1926, carefully considered by the Court of Appeals of the Fourth District in the case of Ohio Utilities Co. v City Commission of Gallipolis (1926). That opinion has not been published, but counsel has furnished this court with a copy thereof, wherein it clearly and without question appears that the Gallipolis case is not distinguishable in fact or principle from the instant case, and that what is there said as to the purpose and legal effect of §14 of the Gallipolis city Charter can, with equal pex’tinency, be said of §15 of the' Sandusky city Charter.

Counsel for appellees suggests that although “the Gallipolis case .is against us in this proposition * * * this court is not bound by this case and the fact that a motion to certify was overruled does not make it the law of the state.”

There would be force in this argument were it not for the fact that the sole question involved therein was the same as that now under consideration; and the question being identically the same, we would think that we may assume, that the overruling by the Supreme Court of the motion to certify the record to that court in that case has some significance, to which this court, with at least some degree of assurance, may give heed.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 115, 56 Ohio App. 284, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 61, 9 Ohio Op. 382, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sandusky-v-city-commission-ohioctapp-1937.