Day v. Forest City Railway

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 60, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 393
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedNovember 28, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 60 (Day v. Forest City Railway) 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
Day v. Forest City Railway, 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 60, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 393 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

WINCH, J.

This ease was heard on appeal. We are asked to enjoin the defendants from constructing and operating a street railway on Denison avenue, between Pearl street and the westerly limits of the city of Cleveland under an ordinance granting such franchise to them as an original grant, passed by the council of said city, September 9, 1903. It is said that said council was without jurisdiction to pass said ordinance, and that the same is null and void because before its passage there were not produced to the council the written consents of the owners of more than one-half of the feet front of the lots and lands abutting upon said Denison avenue between the limits stated.

This is the sole question presented to us for determination in this case.

An agreed statement of facts has been submitted which shows that there is private frontage on that portion of Denison avenue in con-controversy amounting to 28,638.66 feet. The plaintiff claims that to this frontage should be added certain property owned by the Big Four Railway Company, amounting to 154.65 feet. The evidence shows that said railway company owns said land in fee, though a small'part of it is covered by its tracks. We see no reason why this railway company property should not be counted in making up the total of the frontage' on the street and therefore find that, including said property, the private frontage on the street is 28,793.31, and that the validity of the ordinance depends upon whether the written consents of the owners of a majority of said frontage, to wit, 14,397 feet, were produced to the council as aforesaid.

[62]*62The agreed statement of facts contains a list of owners and their frontages, who did not give their consent. This amounts to 10,837.938 feet, and starting with these figures we have examined the contested frontgages, and in this opinion will state as concisely as possible our findings of facts and conclusions of law upon each one of them, in the order that they are set forth in defendants’ memoranda of disputed frontages.

1. Mary C. Lemmerman, 54.6 feet. Consent was signed by her husband for her and we find that he was authorized so to do and that the consent should be counted for defendants.

2. William R. Long, 277.19 feet. Consent signed August 22, 1903, contained the following provision: “This consent holds good only if franchise is passed on Monday, August 24, 1903.” It appears that the ordinance was not passed on that date, and we hold that it was of no validity thereafter, and this frontage is counted as not consenting.

3. Regina Hafele, 110 feet. The evidence shows that this property was formerly owned by one Elizabeth Pletcher. She signed a consent, while owner. July 3,1903, she sold and conveyed the property to Regina Hafele. It does not appear that the latter knew of this outstanding consent until after the ordinance was passed. This frontage is counted as not consenting.

4. Jennie Cleveland, 49.68 feet. Lucius W. Baker formerly owned this property and signed a consent. June 27, 1903, he conveyed it to Jennie Cleveland. She did not know of the outstanding consent until November 16, 1903. This frontage is counted as not consenting.

5. Flora L. Mclntire, 59.38 feet. Consent signed, “Flora Mclntire by D. C. Mclntire,’"’ her husband. He had no authority to sign for her and she new nothing of his signing her name until long after the ordinance was passed. Counted as not consenting.

6. Lucy B. Winslow and Annie L. Chadwick, 575.34 feet. The owners had been in Europe for some time. Their interests here were looked after by N. M. Platt. He had no power of attorney from them and never consulted them about their wishes in the premises, but signed a consent for them. Of this they had no knowledge until December, 1903, when they promptly disaffirmed his act. Counted as not consenting.

7. Barbara Canda, 108.06 feet. Consent signed August 24, 1903, “Barbara Canda by John Canda, agent.” John was Barbara’s son, and from the evidence we find that he was authorized to sign for her and count this frontage in favor of the ordinance.

[63]*638. George Fleisher, 209.59 feet. From the evidence it appears that on August 19, 1903, George Fleisher signed a consent reading as follows :

“The undersigned property owner hereby consents to the construction of a double track street railroad on Denison avenue for all the property standing in my name.”

August 24, 1903, he signed a writing as follows:

“I, the undersigned, being the owner of property to the extent of 210.59 feet upon Denison avenue in the city of Cleveland, hereby withdraw and cancel any and all consents which I have heretofore given for the construction of any other street railroad except the Cleveland Electric Railway Company upon said street.”

These two documents were in the hands of Peter Witt, clerk of the city of Cleveland, and he had them with him in the council chamber when he presented to the council a written communication as follows:

“September 9, 1903.
“To the City Council.
“Gentlemen: I have examined the consents for the construction of the double track street railway on Denison avenue, presented by Albert E. Green, and find that the same represents a majority of the feet fronting on Denison avenue.
“Respectfully yours,
“Peter Witt, City Clerk.”

The council acted upon this communication and did not itself, or by committees, examine the consents. Mr. Witt testifies that he did not count the Fleisher frontage in favor of the ordinance. The question presented is whether the council should have counted said frontage as consenting.

Testimony was admitted, over the objection of defendants’ showing that the Cleveland Electric Railway Company was, prior to the passage of the ordinance in question, operating a street railway in the city of Cleveland, under a franchise granted by the council of said city. That on July 27,1903, it filed with the city council an application for leave to extend its tracks on Denison avenue, the street here in question. This ordinance went to its second reading on August 17, 1903, and was then, and for some time after, pending before the council.

August 3, 1903, George Fleisher signed and delivered to an agent of said company the following writing:

“I, the undersigned, being the owner of property on Denison avenue in the city of Cleveland, to the extent of 210.59 feet front, hereby request the Cleveland Electric Railway Company to construct an exten[64]*64sion of its existing street railway lines upon and along said street in front of my premises, and to maintain and operate the same as a part of its system of street railway now in operation in the city of Cleveland.
“This request is made as a personal request, and to the said Cleveland Electric Railway Company only, and I consent to the construction and operation of such an extension of said company’s lines upon and along said street; but this consent shall not be assignable, and is not intended as authority for any other street railroad to be constructed and operated upon said street.”

For a satisfactory determination of the question here involved, it is necessary to consider the statutes regulating the granting of street railway franchises.

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Related

State v. Henson
50 A. 468 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 60, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-forest-city-railway-ohiocirct-1904.