Dawson v. Barron

8 Ohio N.P. 354

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 354 (Dawson v. Barron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawson v. Barron, 8 Ohio N.P. 354 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Bigger, J.

This is an action to enjoin the collection of an assessment levied upon the plaintiff’s lands to pay for the construction of the Gahanna and New Albany turnpike- It is claimed that the names of these plaintiffs were not placed upon the list of property to be assessed in the first instance, but were afterwards, and, irregularly, added to the duplicate.

. In my judgment, however, if the lands of these plaintiffs were within the assessable discrict and the commissioners had jurisdiction to order the improvement, they cannot object to the fact that in a court of equity their names have beer) placed upon the list irregularly, because they are rightly there.

Whether or not they are within the assessable district depends upon whether the Granville road and the Granville turnpike are connected or disconnected roads, within the meaning of the statute. They are very old loads and originally the junction of the two roads was some distance west of the Creek, but about 1853 a bridge was built over the creek and by legal proceedings the location of the Columbus and Johnstown road was changed from the north corporation line of Gahanna to the east end of the bridge which was located but little north of the Granville road, in fact so close to that by being constructed at an angle with the Granville road, the bridge meets and obstructs the line of the Granville road proceeding across the stream before the bridge reaches the west bank. Of course, it can be shown that the old line of the Granville road does not touch the line [355]*355cf the Gahanna and New Albany turnpike before it terminates at the east end of the bridge. But these roads, in my judgment, were never anything else but connected roads. They were connected when they were laid out and the travel from the Granville road to the other road never was obstructed, or the junction of the two roads interrupted for a moment. But, upon the building of the bridge, which, as I say, was built so close to the •Granville road that it partly at least obstructed the line of the Granville road where it crossed the creek, the travel upon the Granville road ■was simply deflected sufficiently to the n'orth to permit it to enter the east end of the bridge. I do not think that the fact that in doing so, ft used part of Mill street, changes the fact. ■In fact it simply crossed Mill street at an -angle sufficient to permit it to enter the east end of the bridge. I am of opinion that Lear v. Halstead, 41 Ohio St., 566, is not in point -or decisive of this case. In that case the two roads were never connected roads. The one •of them never terminated in the other. But in my opinion these two roads never were •disconnected; and one of them never, in. fact, ■ceased to terminate in the other. For these reasons in my judgment, the Granville road ■and the Gahanna and New Albany turnpike ■are connected roads within the meaning of "the statute- That being true, the lands of ■these signers of the petition, which lie south ■of the Granville road and within the statutory ■distance of the pike, are properly to be counted ;as petitioners; and in fact, it is conceded by •counsel for plaintiffs, that, if the two roads are to be considered as connected roads, then 'these lands lie within the bounds of the assessable district.

This question being determined, the next ■question which presents itself, is, did a ma- ¡ jority of the land owners within the assessable •district petition for the improvement? With•out undertaking to make out a list of the names counted for and against the improvement, I think I can use the very excellent brief and chart of these names, prepared by Mr. Thrailkill so as to clearly indicate those I bave counted for and against the improvement, with my reasons for doing so.

In the first place, counsel for defendants, in his brief makes out a list of 88 names which be says counsel for plaintiffs admits to be ■proper petitioners. An examination of the ■chart shows that counsel for plaintiffs has been mqre magnanimous than that: for he counts 89 petitioners, John Ulrey on the last page of the chart being a petitioner instead of a remonstrator, and is so marked on the chart. This makes the count staled, according to counsel for plaintiffs, 89 names for the improvement and 117 against it, or 206 names in all counted for and against the improvement. The 89 names which are marked on the chart as petitioners, I think are properly so marked. These 89 names include the names of those whose lands lie south of the Granville road, which counsel for plaintiffs claim should not have been counted but which, in my opinion, and for the reasons I have indicated, I think should have been counted as petitioners, as in my judgment they are within the assessable district.

Within • the bounds of this improvement there are seven churches, two of which own parsonages. Counsel for plaintiffs includes in his count of 117 remonstrators the two churches which own parsonages, but does not include the churches which own only houses of worship, although he claims that the churches should also be counted which have no parsonages. On the other hand, counsel for defendants claim that neither should be counted as petitioners or remonstrators. In my judgment the count as made by counsel for plaitiffs in his chart is the correct count as to these churches.

Section 4799, Revised Statutes, provides that only freehold taxpayers should be counted as petitioners and remonstrators. Churches having no parsonages cannot be regarded as freehold taxpayers because they are not so in fact. The Supreme Court, however, has decided in Gerke, etc. v. Purcell, 25 Ohio St., 229, that a parsonage is taxable property, and, therefore, these churches which have parsonages should be counted against the improvement. No change, therefore, should be made in the county as furnished by counsel for plaintiffs on account of these churches.

Of the 117 names which counsel for plaintiff count or remonstrators, are the following names which counsel for plaintiffs in his brief admit appear both upon the petition and the remonstrance: John Bender, Harriet Neiswander, William Paul, William Slygler, William F. Bauer, William Cummings, Abraham Shull, Mary Shull, Conrad Schank, Sallie Dague, Levi Dague, Sr., David Ely, Russell E. Wilkins, Nelson Wilkins. Fourteen in all. In addition to those names, an inspection of the petition and the remonstrance discloses the fact that there are several others whose names also appear upon the petition and remonstrance. For example, the names' of Lewis Shull and Noah Swickard are also found upon both and they were called as witnesses and testified that they signed both, but signed the remonstrance last.

Those 16 names, counting these two, without [356]*356going further in regard to the total number of names which thus appear upon both the petition and remonstrance, were scattered through a long list of petitioners and remonstrators.

Counsel for plaintiffs now claim that all these 16 persons signed the remonstrance last, and testimony has been introduced to prove that at least part of them did sign the remonstrance last. Some of these persons have tes,t:fied that they signed the remonstrance last. It is therefore claimed by counsel for plaintiffs that these names- should all be counted as remonstrators.

There is no question as to the right of a petitioner to withdraw from a petition at any time before the final order for the improvement is made, and this he may do in any manner that will indicate unmistakably his intention to withdraw his consent and become a remonstrator instead of a petitioner.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-barron-ohctcomplfrankl-1898.