Doering v. South Euclid City

170 N.E.2d 87, 112 Ohio App. 177, 84 Ohio Law. Abs. 245, 13 Ohio Op. 2d 397, 1960 Ohio App. LEXIS 654
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1960
Docket25231
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 N.E.2d 87 (Doering v. South Euclid City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doering v. South Euclid City, 170 N.E.2d 87, 112 Ohio App. 177, 84 Ohio Law. Abs. 245, 13 Ohio Op. 2d 397, 1960 Ohio App. LEXIS 654 (Ohio Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

OPINION

By SKEEL, J.

This appeal on questions of law and fact comes to this court from a decree and judgment entered for the defendant in the Court of Com *246 mon Pleas after trial on the merits. The action is one seeking to enjoin the taking of private property by appropriation to be used in the construction of a “retention basin.”

The City of South Euclid is a “Charter City.” Under Article XVIII, Ohio Constitution, it possesses all powers of local self-government. The record shows that many residences of the city have experienced flooded basements and living quarters during heavy rains. The location of the city is such that some portions of its territory are subject to the natural flow of drain water from other municipalities to the south of its southerly border. The City of University Heights bounds the City of South Euclid along the center line of Cedar Road from South Green Road to the west. The Village of Beachwood bounds the rest of the .southerly border of South Euclid to the east where its easterly border meets the westerly border of the City of Lyndhurst. The property said to be needed for the “retention basin” faces on both sides of Langerdale Boulevard (which runs on a curved line in a generally northerly and southerly direction at the bottom of a ravine), and begins at the intersection of Langerdale Boulevard and Laurel Hill Drive to the south and ends at the northerly end of Laurel Hill Drive as it again meets Langerdale Boulevard some eleven hundred feet to the north.

By ordinance passed June 22, 1959, the City Council of South Euclid declared in Section 1:

“That for the purpose of constructing and operating and maintaining storm water drains, sewers and a dam to divert the excess water from existing overflowing storm water sewers during heavy or prolonged rainfall into the natural retention basin formed by the valley existing along Langerdale Boulevard north of Cedar Road between Green Road and Laurel Hill Drive thereby relieving flooded basements, yards and buildings of residents of the City, this Council hereby determines that it is necessary and essential to the public peace, health, prosperity, welfare and safety of the community to appropriate the interests as herein designated in the land described below.

(a) The fee simple right, interest and title in and to the entirety described as:

Situated in the City of South Euclid, County of Cuyahoga, State of Ohio and known as being sublots Nos. 150, 159, 166, 167, 186 and 195A in the Belvoir Gardens Subdivision as recorded in Vol. 96, page 26 of the Cuyahoga County Records.

(b) The fee simple right, title and interest in and to parts of sublots as described below for construction, operation, maintenance and repair of the diversionary drains, sewers and dams:

Situated in the City of South Euclid, County of Cuyahoga and State of Ohio and known as being part of original Euclid Township Lot 32, Tract 3, and being parts of sublots Nos. 149, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 162, 165, and 176 in the Belvoir Gardens Subdivision as recorded in Vol. 96, page 26 of Cuyahoga County Records. Each of the portions to be appropriated being described by metes and bounds as follows: * *

Then follows a complete description of that part of each of the sublots to be taken as shown on the map designated as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 — “Langerdale Retention Basin” prepared by H. P. Peterson, City *247 Engineer. The portion of the lots under (b) of the ordinance quoted, supra, comprises that part of each lot (and in some cases a little rhore) the surface level of which is (as shown on the map) at or below 1030 feet above sea level. Most of the lots, of which a part is taken, face to the west on the west side of South Green Road and to the east on the east side of Langerdale Boulevard. The plaintiff’s lot (No. 149) will be separated from her neighbors to the south by the taking of all of sub-lot 150.

The city now owns all of the sublots (Nos. 187 to 195, inclusive) fronting on the west side of Langerdale Boulevard so that by the appropriation proceedings, if not enjoined, the city will become vested with a fee simple interest in all the property in the ravine facing on both sides of Langerdale Boulevard of sufficient depth to include all of the land, the surface of which is below 1030 feet above sea level from ' the point where it intersected Laurel Hill Drive on the south to the intersection of such thoroughfares on the north, a distance of about eleven hundred feet.

Langerdale Boulevard was dedicated as a public thoroughfare in the Belvoir Gardens Subdivision, October 29, 1924, and the plat thereof was approved and recorded March 3, 1926. There has been constructed within the limits of such “Boulevard” an eight inch water main, a ten inch sanitary sewer and a thirty-six inch storm sewer extending from Cedar Road to and in front of the properties described above “comprising ravine” and beyond to the north of the ravine to Belvoir Boulevard. There are no other improvements of any kind in that part of Langerdale Boulevard upon which all the properties above described abut. Within the ravine area of the property to be taken, as well as. the city-owned lots, and including that part of the ravine shown on the map as a sixty foot boulevard, the surface of the ground is completely covered with underbrush and trees. Traffic on Langerdale Boulevard passes around the ravine area to the west over Laurel Hill Drive. There is no indication in the record that Langerdale Boulevard has ever been otherwise than an unkept area since it was dedicated for public use in 1926.

The proposal which the plaintiff seeks to enjoin deals with the city’s purpose to control the flooding of basements and the inundation of homes occurring during heavy rain storms because of the inadequacy of the surface drainage sewer system in the areas affected. The “reten-tion basin” is a part of an “overall” plan devised by the Engineering Department of the City of South Euclid to control flood waters in the city. The plan, by action of the City Council, was presented to the voters of the city and a bond issue of $900,000 was passed by the electors of the city to provide the funds necessary to carry the “overall” proposal into effect. Three hundred and ten thousand dollars of the amount voted by the people was estimated as the cost of the basic work for the “retention basin” to be constructed over that part of Langerdale Boulevard as above described.

The “retention basin” is to be constructed by building an earthen dam completely across Langerdale Boulevard just south of its intersection with Laurel Hill Drive beginning on Sublot 14? (that part of *248 Sublot 149 sought to be taken from the plaintiff) and ending on Sublot 186 directly across the boulevard to the west. The dam will be about thirty feet high from the lowest point or bottom of the ravine. The topographical markings on the map show that this part of the ravine is 998 feet above sea level while the southerly end of the basin at the southerly intersection of Laurel Hill Drive with Langerdale Boulevard is 1035 feet above sea level.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.E.2d 87, 112 Ohio App. 177, 84 Ohio Law. Abs. 245, 13 Ohio Op. 2d 397, 1960 Ohio App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doering-v-south-euclid-city-ohioctapp-1960.