Crawford Co. v. Huron Co.

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 551
CourtHuron Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 551 (Crawford Co. v. Huron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford Co. v. Huron Co., 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 551 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

Three eases numbered on the docket, 413, 414 and 415 involve proceedings relative to a joint county ditch, so-called, with regard to which there is some dispute concerning its precise character, and as to what proceedings should have been taken. The first of the cases so numbered is that of the board of county commissioners of Crawford county against the board of county commissioners of Huron county; the second of them, that of Charles R. Smith and others against the board of county commissioners of Huron county, and the third, that of Daniel Ferguson and others against the board of county commissioners of Huron county and others.

These are all based upon claimed errors of the court of common pleas in a proceeding instituted under favor of Rev. Stat. 4488a (Lan. 7672).

It appear^ that at some lime in the year 1905, petitions were filed in the three counties, Huron, Crawford and Richland, for the widening, deepening and straightening of a so-called joint ditch, known as the Noggle joint county ditch and certain ditches draining into the same, known as Spring run and Marsh run.

One of the three counties named, Huron county, is the lower county and the one into which the waters of the other two counties would naturally drain,-or into which waters might be conducted by proper drainage.

[553]*553The commissioners of the three counties held certain meetings and had certain proceedings; but we are favored with no record of any of them until the date of March 6, 1906, when a meeting was held at the office of the board of county commissioners of Huron county, Ohio, for the purpose of further considering the petition of one J. W. Dawson and others, which was the foundation of the proceedings. An-examination of the record of this meeting is vital to the proper determination. of the controversy here involved.

I may say that the claims of Richland county, as represented by the board of' commissioners of that county, are practically eliminated from the contention here; no petition in error has been filed by the board of commissioners of that county and the, real controversy here is between the. board of commissioners of Huron county and the board of commissioners of Crawford county except in so far as certain residents of the two counties of Richland and Crawford have sought to become parties in the proceedings to contest before the court the claims of Huron county under the statute to which I have referred.

Before entering upon any critical examination of the recorded proceedings, it may be well to. mention, in a general way,' the terms of Rev. Stat. 4488 (Lan. 7671), immediately preceding Rev. Stat. 4488a (Lan. 7672), which provides for the bringing of a proceeding in the court of common pleas. Revised Statute 4488' (Lan. 7671) provides .that when a ditch 'or improvement is proposed, which will require a location in more than one county, application shall be made to the commissioners of each of said counties, and the surveyor or engineer shall make a report for each county. Application for damages shall be made, and appeals from the finding of the commissioners, in joint session, locating and establishing such ditch, and from the assessment of damages or compensation, shall be taken to the probate court of the county in which the greatest length of such ditch or improvement is located; and a majority of the commissioners of each county, when in joint session, shall be competent to locate and establish such ditch or improvement; but no commissioner shall serve in any case in which he is personally interested, and any two of the commissioners may form a quorum for the transaction of business for their respective counties.

There are certain other provisions in the section which it is not necessary to read.

Now, Rev. Stat. 4488a (Lan. 7672) provides:

“If the commissioners in joint session find in favor of the proposed improvement, and are unable afterwards to agree as to the proportion of the costs of location and constructing the improvement, which shall [554]*554be assessed in each, of the counties, respectively, the board of commissioners of either county may petition the court of common pleas of their county for the appointment of three disinterested freeholders, not residents, of either of said counties, who shall within thirty days thereafter, after being duly sworn and upon actual view of said improvement, estimate and report to said court the amount which should be charged to the land in each county interested in said improvement, respectively.”

Now, examining the proceedings of March 6, 1906, we find it recited that, among other persons present, were two commissioners of Crawford county, Samuel Easterday and J. II. Petri, with all the members of the Richland and Huron county boards.

The meeting was called to order by the chairman of the joint board. It is recorded that the minutes of the meeting of February 23 were read and on motion, duly approved, but we are not' informed as to just what had taken place at the meeting of February 23.

I now read from the record of the proceedings of March 6:

“After a further explanation of their reports by the engineers of the several counties respectively, it was moved by Felton and seconded by Miller, that ‘Noggle Joint county ditch,’ ‘Spring run’ and ‘Marsh run’ be cleaned out, deepened and widened as prayed for in the petition. ,
“Mr. Easterday moved to amend the motion by providing for the elimination of that part of ‘Noggle Joint county ditch’ which lies in Crawford county from the proposed improvement. The amendment being accepted by Mr. Miller, the following vote was had on the amendment: Crawford county — Easterday, aye, Petri, aye; Huron county —Noble, aye, Miller, aye, Felton, aye; Richland county — Finney, aye, Baker, aye, Patterson, aye. The amendment was carried by a unanimous vote.
“Then it was moved by Mr. Finney to further amend the motion by providing that that part of ‘Spring run’ lying in Richland county be eliminated from the proposed improvement. That amendment was accepted and the motion was carried.”

It was moved by Felton and seconded by Miller that the motion be amended by providing that of the cost of said proposed improvement exclusive of that part of “Noggle Joint county ditch” in Crawford county, and that part of “Spring run” in Richland county, there shall be paid by Crawford county, $1,300; Richland county, $750, and by Huron county, the balance of the cost thereof.

. A vote was taken on this motion and it was declared lost. All these are proposed amendments to original motions. Then it was moved by [555]*555Finney and. seconded by Patterson to amend the motion by providing that Huron county pay all the cost of said proposed improvement.

The vote on this amendment was unanimously no, all the commissioners from the three counties present voting against the proposition to amend the original motion by throwing the entire charge upon Huron county. It was then moved by Finney and seconded by Baker that the motion as amended be laid on the table and the vote was unanimously in favor of so doing.

It was then moved by Finney and seconded by Baker—

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19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-co-v-huron-co-ohcircthuron-1907.