Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. v. Scapell

336 N.E.2d 637, 44 Ohio App. 2d 13, 73 Ohio Op. 2d 9, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5736
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1975
Docket33428
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 336 N.E.2d 637 (Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. v. Scapell) 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
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. v. Scapell, 336 N.E.2d 637, 44 Ohio App. 2d 13, 73 Ohio Op. 2d 9, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5736 (Ohio Ct. App. 1975).

Opinions

Day, J.

The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company (CEI) filed Case No. 803,259 in Probate Court on March 30,1973, to appropriate land of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Scapell located in Brecksville, Ohio (see Transcript of Docket Entries in Record). CEI claimed that it had to obtain an easement over the Scapell’s property in order to make way for construction of its proposed Valley-Harding transmission lines.

The City of Independence brought Case No. 919,280 in Common Pleas Court on July 17, 1973, to enjoin construction of the Valley-Harding Line (see Transcript of Docket and Journal Entries). CEI had begun construction of power lines in a park area of Independence (R. 1700-01).

The City of Brecksville and The Ohio Department of Natural Resources moved to intervene on the side of plaintiff, City of Independence, in the injunction action (see Transcript of Docket and Journal Entries).

On August 27, 1973, the Probate Court ordered the injunction action pending in Common Pleas Court consolidated with the appropriation proceeding pending in its court (R. 3-4), and permitted intervention by Brecksville and the Department of Natural Resources (R. 6, 9-10). A trial of all the issues was had over a thirteen-day period. On January 21, 1974, Judge Locher rendered the Court’s opinion dismissing the appropriation action and granting the injunction sought by the City of Independence and the intervenors with respect to that part of the proposed Valley-Harding Line which was to traverse a proposed park location in the Cuyahoga River Valley.

In the eminent domain action, the trial court held that the Board of Directors of CEI abused its discretion in determining the necessity for appropriating the Scapell’s property for its transmission lines when the Company *15 could have constructed its power lines along other alternative routes that would not violate the area where combined local, state, and federal agencies were planning a park (see Opinion, pp. 9-10).

In the injunction action, the trial court made a previously granted temporary restraining order premanent “within the boundaries of the Federal-State-Metropolitan Park District project” (Opinion, p. 11) for the reason that the transmission lines are not “consonant with the welfare of the general public” (Opinion, p. 6) as required by Ohio Revised Code 4905.65(B).

CEI appeals the judgment of the Probate Court, assigning three errors:

“I. The Court Below Erred In Case No. 803,259 In Holding That The Company Abused Its Discretion in Determining The Necessity For The Appropriation Of The Scapells’ Property.
“II. The Court Below Erred In Case No. 919,280 In Failing To Hold That The Company’s Proposed Valley-Harding Line Met All The Requirements' of Revised Code Section 4905.65.
“III. The Court Below Erred In Holding That The Illuminating Company Was Prohibited From Constructing Its Proposed Valley-Harding Line Solely Because It Might Be Inconsistent With A Possible Future Public Use, Such A Prohibition Being Unconstitutional In The Circumstances.”

Assignment of Error No. 1:

“The Court Below Erred In Case No. 803,259 In Holding That The Company Abused Its Discretion In Determining The Necessity For The Appropriation Of The Scapells’ Property.”

An abuse of discretion is not a circumstance which lends itself to easy determination. The definitions of abuse swing wildly over a range of statements. Abuse, for example, has been said on the one hand, to imply “perversity of will, passion, prejudice, partiality or moral delinquency”, Hogeboom, J., dissenting in The People v. The N. Y. C. R. R. Co. (1864), 29 N, Y. 418 at 431; “ ‘a discretion exer *16 cised to an end or purpose not justified by, and clearly against reason and evidence ’ ’ ’, Trimmer, et al., v. State, et at. (1930), 142 Okla. 278, 281; “a view or action ‘that no conscientious judge, acting intelligently, could honestly have taken’ ”, Long v. George (1937), 296 Mass. 574, 579, and on the other hand not to exist when the Court displays “a discretion in the sense of being discreet, circumspect, prudent, and exercising cautious judgment”, Murray v. Buell (1889), 74 Wisc. 14, 18. Certain it is that the term “abuse of discretion” in other contexts has been held to mean more than simply an honest mistake in judgment. See Alliance v. Joyce (1892), 49 Ohio St. 7, 22; cf. Steiner v. Custer (1940), 137 Ohio St. 448, 451. And, the Board of .Directors of CEI, in exercising the judgment to appropriate, having been clothed with state power in this particular, is presumed to have acted regularly and in a lawful manner until the contrary is shown — that is the essential meaning of the statute establishing prima facie evidence of necessity when the appropriating agency has declared it. See Ohio Revised Code, §163.09 (B).

Without adopting an extreme definition of abuse of. discretion, it seems to- us enough to determine the issue if the evidence shows the Board of Directors made a reasoned and good faith effort to exercise the discretion given it by Ohio Revised Code. Whether the product of that action is the best conceivable decision or whether we, or the court below, agree with it, or would have made a different judgment on the same evidence, is beside the point.

The record in this case shows the Board of Directors, obviously through surrogates, did make a reasoned, good faith effort to determine the necessity for the appropriation before declaring it. This is made manifest by the evidence that anticipated load increases require an increased power supply and that additional facilities are necessary for that (Tr. 109-111, 171-172, 175-176). Apparent reliance on these facts coupled with reasons for choosing the Valley-Harding Line route as against alternate routes, provide the raw material for a reasoned judgment.

The reasons for choice included cost, disruption of *17 homes, land values (Tr. 246), the possibilities for a two-source power supply (Tr. 247, 250), supply reliability (Tr. 247), relative burdens on the communities involved (Tr. 248-249), the use of existing corridors represented by railroad lines and highways (Tr. 246, 249-250), the avoidance of congested areas (Tr. 250), the economy of a short route (Tr. 250), esthetics (Tr. 251), safety (Tr. 251), a study and recommendation by an independent consulting firm (Tr. 252-254), environmental considerations (Tr. 255-256), and the cost versus benefit of underground lines (Tr. 256-258, 266-267. 1 CEI also made a proffer of opinion evidence on the compatibility of the line with “any state or local park” (Tr. 270). The expert gave his opinion, in answer to a hypothetical question, that the Valley-Harding route was the best for the contemplated line (Tr. 271-274). In our view the record, as postured, provides no basis for a conclusion by reasonable minds that the CEI Board of Directors did not make the reasoned judgment required by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
336 N.E.2d 637, 44 Ohio App. 2d 13, 73 Ohio Op. 2d 9, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-electric-illuminating-co-v-scapell-ohioctapp-1975.