Davis v. Wiemeyer

177 N.E. 37, 124 Ohio St. 103, 124 Ohio St. (N.S.) 103, 77 A.L.R. 1280, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 123, 1931 Ohio LEXIS 268
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1931
Docket22761
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 177 N.E. 37 (Davis v. Wiemeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Wiemeyer, 177 N.E. 37, 124 Ohio St. 103, 124 Ohio St. (N.S.) 103, 77 A.L.R. 1280, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 123, 1931 Ohio LEXIS 268 (Ohio 1931).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

The questions here presented are (1) whether the provision of Section 1191, General Code, which authorizes county commissioners of any county having a tax duplicate of real and personal property in excess of $300,000,000 to co-operate with the department of highways in the construction, reconstruction, resurfacing, widening or repair of state highways, by paying such portion of the costs thereof as is agreed upon by the county commissioners and the director of highways, is unconstitutional because it is not a law of general application throughout the state; and (2) if such a classification is not violative of the inhibitions of Section 26 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio, whether the provision of Section 1193, General Code, which authorizes the county commissioners of any county having a tax duplicate of real and personal property in excess of $300,000,-000 to specially assess a portion of the costs assumed by the county, in the construction of a state highway, against the adjacent real estate, according to any one of the several methods provided by Section 6919, General Code, is in contravention of the provisions of that section — the claimed violation of Section 19 of Article I of the Ohio Constitution, and of Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amend *106 ment to the Constitution of the United States not being seriously relied upon.

The pertinent portion of Section 1191, General Code, authorizes the county commissioners of any county to co-operate with the state department of highways “in constructing, reconstructing, resurfacing or widening a state highway, where the result of such construction, reconstruction, resurfacing or widening is to produce a pavement more than twenty feet in width, and the commissioners shall under such circumstances be authorized to pay all or any agreed portion of the cost of so much of any of such pavement so constructed, reconstructed, resurfaced or widened as lies outside of or extends beyond such width of twenty feet. * # * Provided, however, the county commissioners of any county having a tax duplicate of real and personal property in excess of three hundred million dollars shall also be authorized to co-operate with the department of highways in the construction, reconstruction, resurfacing, widening or repair of state highways * * *, by paying such portion of the cost thereof as is agreed upon by the county commissioners and director of highways. ’ ’

It will be observed that this section authorizes any county to contribute to the cost of the construction of that portion of a state highway which exceeds twenty feet in width, and authorizes counties having a tax duplicate of $300,000,000 or over to participate in the cost of the construction of any state highway, regardless of width.

The pertinent portion of Section 1193, General Code, provides:

“Where the county commissioners cooperate with *107 the department of highways and assume all or part of the cost of constructing, reconstructing, resurfacing or widening any pavement on a state highway to a width greater than twenty feet, such commissioners shall be authorized to specially assess such portion of that part of the cost assumed by them on behalf of the county as they may deem proper, and such special assessments may be made according to any one of the several methods provided by Section 6919 of the General Code of Ohio * * *.

“When the county commissioners of any county having a tax duplicate of real and personal property in excess of three hundred million dollars cooperate with the department and assume a part of the cost of constructing, reconstructing, resurfacing or widening any pavement on a state highway, such commissioners shall be authorized to specially assess such portion of that part of the cost assumed by them on behalf of the county as they may deem proper, and such special assessments may be made according to any one of the several methods provided by Section 6919 of the General Code of Ohio # * # J J

It will be observed that this section authorizes the county commissioners of any county that desires to co-operate with the state in the construction of that portion of a state highway, which is in excess of twenty feet in width, to assess a portion of the expense of such construction upon property specially benefited; but the limit of the authority of the commissioners is to especially assess a portion of the expense of the construction for the excess over twenty feet in width; whereas with reference to counties having a tax duplicate of $300,000,000 or *108 over, it authorizes the county commissioners to especially assess against property benefited a portion of the cost of constructing any portion of a state highway, regardless of its width.

The state highway in question is twenty feet in width, is located in a county having a tax duplicate of $300,000,000 or over, and the county commissioners have assumed a portion of the expense of the construction of such highway and propose to assess a portion of the expense thereof upon property specially benefited.

Under Sections 1191 and 1193, General Code, were the same road located in a county having a tax duplicate of less than $300,000,000,-the county commissioners could neither assume a portion of the expense nor assess any portion of such expense upon property specially benefited.

It may not be controverted that the difference in. the extent of the use to which state highways are subjected in the congested centers, and the extent of the use to which state highways are subjected in the sparsely inhabited districts, affords a reasonable basis for a difference in the character of construction, a difference in the capacity of the highways, and a difference in the way the public ought to be permitted to use such highways, and that such difference may afford a reasonable basis for a legislative classification in an attempt to make the government function under such varied conditions and circumstances, and to proportionately distribute the burdens and benefits thereof.

It may be assumed that the excess use of highways in the congested districts over the use in the sparsely inhabited districts is due to the greater number of *109 inhabitants of the congested districts that use the same. A classification which apportions the burden of construction and reconstruction of highways upon the taxing districts in approximate proportion' to the extent of the use the inhabitants of such taxing districts make of the highways is not an unreasonable classification, such being in pursuance of a policy, long extant, that each taxing district construct and maintain its own public roads, the entrance of the state into the field of road construction being of comparatively recent origin.

The classification of taxing districts with reference to the value of their tax duplicates, except as a means of determining the responsibility and extent of the duties of officials in such taxing districts, and similar purposes, cannot so readily be justified as a reasonable classification.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 N.E. 37, 124 Ohio St. 103, 124 Ohio St. (N.S.) 103, 77 A.L.R. 1280, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 123, 1931 Ohio LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-wiemeyer-ohio-1931.