Cleveland Electric Railway Co. v. Board of Equalization

8 Ohio N.P. 487
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 487 (Cleveland Electric Railway Co. v. Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Electric Railway Co. v. Board of Equalization, 8 Ohio N.P. 487 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Strimple, J.,

This matter comes before this court on a demurrer to the amended petition of The Cleveland Electric Railroad Company, a corporation, against Willis Vickery, George Gloyd, William W. Armstrong, Charles W. Woolridge, Otto Jansen, J. G.Pomerene and' William E. Craig, acting as members of the annual city board of equalization of Cleveland, Ohio, the defendant, Craig, being the duly-elected a..* oualified auditor of this county.

[488]*488The petition- alleges in substance, that The ■Cleveland Electric Railroad Company, is the ■owner of and is operating a street railway line upon the streets of the city of Cleveland, and beyond its limits by virtue of various grants .and franchises from the proper authorities and from the city, and that the defendants are ■claiming to act as the annual city board of equalization, for the city of Cleveland, and being constituted under and deriving its powers from section 2803, of the Revised Statutes, of the state of Ohio, and possessing no powers ■or authority beyond that conferred by said section ; and that certain members of said board, to wit, Vickery, Woolridge; Jansen and Pomerene were appointed by the Mayor Tom L. Johnson, — the said Vickery, Woolridge, Jansen and Pomerene constituting a majority of the board, — arid the members, Gloyd and Armstrong, having been appointed by Johnson’s predecessor in the office of mayor, — they, with .the auditor, constituting the board; and that •the board was fully constituted prior to the election of said Johnson, as mayor of the city of Cleveland, as provided by said section 2803.

And complaining further, the plaintiff alleges that Johnson in order to gain control of said board and to carry out his own view-s relative to the valuation of the plaintiff’s property and other like properties, induced four members of the board as constituted prior to his suc- . cession as mayor, by inducements of other and more lucrative offices and better salaries to resign and appointed in iWir stead other members entertaining like views with himself, taking from such appointees their written resignatior'^ for the purpose of compelling them to act m accordance with his views in matters wherein, by law they were required to exercise their own judgments upon the questions coming before them. And that said majority of the. members of the board have conspired to raise the valuation of plaintiff’s property, and are acting in collusion with Johnson, and that they will, unless restrained by this court, raise, and certify to the auditor of this county, which will be by him placed upon the duplicate for assessment against this plaintiff, the valuation of its taxable property within the city of Cleveland, upon a wrong and unlawful basis to an excessive and wrongful amount to this plaintiff’s irreparable damage and injury.

It- is alleged in the petition, that the plaiutiff has returned its personal property for taxation at its true value in money, including all movable and tangible property and money and credits belonging to it; that it has done all in that respect required of it; and that by the unjust methods, all of which this plaintiff claims are coni-ary to law, to raise the valuation of plaintiff’s propertjy the defendants in pursuance of this unlawful plan, are about to and will, unless restrained by this court, add the sum of more than nine millions of dollars to the valuation of plaintiff’s property; and that said threatened increase of, and addition to, the valuation of the personal property of this plaintiff, is grossly excessive and unfair, and that the contemplated valuation by said board of its franchises and grants and a valuation of its said property based on the market value of the capital stock and outstanding bonds of the plaintiff, all of which, it is alleged by the plaintiff, is in excess of the power and authority of said board.

And plaintiff alleges further that this action of contemplated increase of valuation is contrary to law and the well-established interpretation of section 2744, of the Revised Statutes, relating to the return and valuation of personal property generally for over forty years.

And it is claimed that this increased valuation would cause the plaintiff to pay a tax grossly in excess of that paid by other like corporations throughout the state and thereby result in confiscation of their property, all of which, it is claimed is contrary to law.

Further the plaintiff complains that the section of the statute providing for the appointment of the members of this board, is unconstitutional for the reason that is a law of a general nature and does not h'aye a uniform operation throughout the state; and that if they permit the said board to act although illegally constituted, their acts would be held to bcacts of de facto officers and they, therefore, raise the question of the constitutionality of the board, and allege that if they allow this increase, they would have no remedy at law.

The general prayer of the petition seeks to restrain the defendants from making any addition, or taking any action whatever in the way of. increasing or adding to the return made by this plaintiff of its personal'property from taxation, — and I may say, in passing, that a co-ordinate branch of this court has allowed a temporary restraining order in accordance with the prayer of this petition.

To this petition which the court has recited only in substance, the defendants have filed a general demurrer, alleging that the facts set forth in the petition do not constitute a cause of action; that is, that the facts that are well pleaded in the petition, are not sufficient in law to constitute a cause of action.

To briefly sum up the matters complained of in this petition, we think they may properly he stated as follows:

First. That the mayor acting wrongfully [489]*489and unlawfully, so constituted the annual ■city board of equalization, that he might- con trol it, and, acting in conspiracy with certain •of its members which constitute a majority thereof, is about to, in pursuance of said conspiracy and in accordance with the dictation ■of said Johnson, who wrongfully controls a majority of said board, are about to unlawfully and in violation of the law relating to the return of tax values of plaintiff’s property, add nine millions of dollars thereto, and this plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law.

Second. That the board, thus constituted, has no legal existence.

We are of the opinion that if this board, -was constituted in conformity with the law, so long as its members acted only on such matters as were within their jurisdiction, a ■court of equity cannot act upon allegations which alone impeach their motives or the legality of the manner of their appointment.

The qr»estions here presented, which we deem worthy of notice, are:

First. Are the facts alleged in this petition sufficient to lodge in this court the jurisdiction to interfere by the extraordinary remedy of injunction, to correct the errors or control the judgment "of the quasi judicial board, orto enjoin the members thereof from performing an official function which the law has imposed upon them to perform under the sanction of j their official oath? I

Second. If the court has the judicial power j to interfere by this extraordinary remedy, ! does the petition disclose facts which warrant 1 the interference of this court? I

Third.

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8 Ohio N.P. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-electric-railway-co-v-board-of-equalization-ohctcomplcuyaho-1901.