Coates v. Village of Norwood

16 Ohio C.C. 196
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. 196 (Coates v. Village of Norwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coates v. Village of Norwood, 16 Ohio C.C. 196 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

The village of Norwood instituted proceedings to straighten and widen Highland avenue of that village. It became necessary to take certain property in order to widen and straighten the avenue, and certain property was to be condemned, and the city undertook to proceed under section 2271, which is applicable to Cincinnati, and which section requires the assessment to be made by the foot front on abutting lots or lands to the ordinary depth of lots in the vicinity, and allows the city council to include, with qther damages,the costs and expenses of making the appropriation,

The land was laid out in the immediate vicinity of this avenue in such a manner that when the council declared to the extended depth, to that of 150 feet, it included several parcels of property that did not abut on the improvement, but lay back of it. For example, some of these were where lots were made to front on streets that crossed Highland avenue, and had a frontage on the street that crossed Highland avenue, and yet lay within the 150 feet which was designated as the depth of the taxing district.

This action is brought claiming there are defects in the proceedings of the village that render the whole proceeding null and void, and claiming also, that by reason of the fact that there were many pieces of property in the taxing district that did not abut the street, that the mode of taxing was not applicable to the case in hand, but that some other mode should have been resorted to.

Now, the first objection argued to us, is, that the ordinance declaring the assessing district and the property to be appropriated, is not such as to include lots that did not abut upon the improvement; and the second point raised is, that the assessing ordinance does not conform to the appropriation ordinance in this regard, that the assessing ordinance undertakes to assess property that does not abut [198]*198upon the improvement, while the appropriation ordinance did not include such property; and the first objection is, that the assessing ordinance was not followed up. That the plan of the assessment by the foot front was not followed, but that there are some fifty pieces, or fifty different standards of payment within the assessing district. Some parcels pay a certain amount, while other parcels pay a less amount, and still other parcels a still less amount, and that the city council got away entirely from the plan it adopted of assessing by the foot front at a uniform rate wherever the lots abutted upon the improvement or upon the property that was taken. Then it is claimed that there was certain property known as the Wooley property that had a street through it, and that the village assessed the property, the Wooley property, as though it was not divided by a street, as though it was not in parcels, but as a whole, and that the property even covered by the street was assessed as a part of the Wooley property. Then the question is made as to the charges that were made as a part of the expenses. Expert witnesses testify as to the values of these different properties that were being appropriated, and the expense of the attorney who attended to the matter for the village, and various other matters, and then there are certain irregularities in charging. These irregularities consisted in this: that where there were two pieces in certain places along this improvement that constituted the 150 feet in depth but belonging to different persons, both pieces are assessed against one, and that the evidence in this case does not show separately and distinctly the two pieces by boundaries by which they can now be by us separated so as to put the tax that is against one person,though upon the property as a whole, against the two owners, giving to each the payment of that which belongs to each one to pay.

These cover the objections to this proceeding on the [199]*199part of the plaintiffs, and I think are about all that were argued to us, and all I find in the brief filed in the case.

Now, as to the section of the statutes, 2271, under which this proceeding took place. It is said by the attorneys on both sides,that this is the statute that is made applicable by the legislature to a proceeding of this kind in this county, and there is no objection to the village proceeding under this statute, except this, that it is claimed, that on account of the facts existing in the case as to-the property,that the statute can not be adapted to this case, and therefore can not be used; but the village should have resorted to some other provision in the statutes for making this improvement.

This statute provides that the council, in passing the ordinance appropriating the property, shall indicate what property shall be assessed, The council undertook to do this by indicating that all property abutting upon the improvement should be assessed, and it is claimed that it indicated that any other property lying within the 150 feet that did not actually abut, should be assessed, and it is claimed on behalf of the parties who bring this action, the plaintiffs, that the ordinance does not cover such property as does not abut, and yet lies within the 150 feet. We think that that objection to the proceeding of the council is not well taken, and I will consider that in connection with some of the other objections.

The statute clearly, and the parties agree to this, includes within it, property that lies within the 150 feet of the improvement, and yet dees not abut upon it, and that is a correct construction of the statute. It does include such. In determining, therefore, what lands shall be assessed by the council, we think that the council framed its ordinance in such a way, although not very clearly, that the owners of property lying within the 150 feet would understand that their property was to be assessed [200]*200for the improvement, whether it abutted or did not abut upon the improvement.

As to the question in connection with this — and what I say upon this bears upon the question I have just noticed, as to the question of different values, and getting away from the idea of assessing by the foot front, that arises largely in this way: A. owns a little strip of land, 50 or 75 feet, we will say — a little strip of land that actually abuts upon the improvment, and is only twenty feet deep. B. owns a parcel of land lying right in the rear of that, which is 50 feet wdde and 75 feet long, so that it has the same frontage towards the improvement that the piece that lies in front of it has, and C. owns the land in the rear of these two pieces, extending from those pieces to the depth of the taxing district, 150 feet. Now, how are those parties to pay? There are three parcels 75 feet wide that constitute the 150 feet deep. Now, when it comes to forming the assessing district, those three parcels will be considered by the council as one parcel, abutting 75 feet upon the improvement and extending back 150 feet. They may belong to one owner — that would make it a very clear case.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio C.C. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coates-v-village-of-norwood-ohiocirct-1893.