Eighth & Walnut Corp. v. Public Library

385 N.E.2d 1324, 57 Ohio App. 2d 137, 11 Ohio Op. 3d 128, 1977 WL 199825, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 7095
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1977
DocketC-77403
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 385 N.E.2d 1324 (Eighth & Walnut Corp. v. Public Library) 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
Eighth & Walnut Corp. v. Public Library, 385 N.E.2d 1324, 57 Ohio App. 2d 137, 11 Ohio Op. 3d 128, 1977 WL 199825, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 7095 (Ohio Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Palmer, P. J.

This is an action for declaratory judgment under R. C. Chapter 2721, filed by the plaintiffs, owners of business property located at the northwest corner of Eighth & Walnut Streets in downtown Cincinnati, against the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (Library), a free public library established pursuant to R. C. 3375.06, its trustees, and the city of Cincinnati, seeking a *138 declaration that the library and its trustees have no authority to acquire the property of the plaintiffs by eminent domain, nor to employ the city of Cincinnati as its agent for such purpose; to declare that the latter has no authority to acquire such property by eminent domain; and for injunctive relief to prevent the defendants from carrying out plans to acquire the property. To this complaint, answers were filed which, mler alia, denied any want of authority to proceed with a condemnation of the plaintiff’s property. In due course, motions for summary judgment were filed by each party, supported by a wealth of exhibits, affidavits, depositions and interrogatories. The trial court denied the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. but granted that of the defendants “* * * for the reason that Ohio Revised Code Sections 719.01(H) and 721.22 clearly provide- the statutory authority for the defendant The City of Cincinnati to proceed with the pending appropriation action to acquire the property of the plaintiffs for The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County.”

Plaintiffs bring this appeal from the granting of the summary judgment, asserting in their two assignments of error that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motion and in denying their own when as a matter of law, it is argued, plaintiffs were entitled to a judgment, or alternately, there were genuine issues of material fact which precluded the granting of defendants’ motion.

I.

We note at the outset our disagreement with the conclusion of the trial court that its judgment for the defendants was dictated or permitted by R. C. 719.01 and R. C. 721.22. The former of these statutes provides, in part:

“Any municipal corporation may appropriate, enter upon, and hold real estate within its corporate limits: * * * (H) For libraries, university sites, and grounds therefor;***.”

The predicate for this grant of authority, insofar as it relates to libraries, seems to us to lie in the authority of a municipality to establish its own municipal library pursuant to R. C. 3375.12 et seq. or R. C. 715.13. These are *139 libraries established by and financed within the municipality, and governed by trustees appointed by the mayor of the municipality. The defendant library is not such a municipal library, however, but is concededly a creature of R. C. 3375.06, a county free public library and a body politic and corporate, capable of exercising all corporate powers as a separate and distinct entity. R. C. 3375.33. It is governed by trustees appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of the county, financed by a county tax levy (among other private and non-municipal public sources), and is wholly distinct from any municipality, including that city in which its property chances to be located. Although authorized to acquire and hold real property including the right to accept a conveyance of land from the county commissioners, R. C. 3375.08, it has itself no powers of eminent domain, nor does the board of county commissioners have such authority on its behalf. 1 It is, in short, a wholly distinct entity from a municipal free public library.

This being the case, we cannot read into R. C. 719.01 or into R. C. 721.22, the latter of which only authorizes the transfer, lease, or use of municipal property to or by a free public library, the authority to appropriate by condemnation proceedings property directly for the benefit of a county public library. To interpolate this authority into R. C. 719.01(H) would be to find that the defendant city could also appropriate property for transfer to and for the benefit of, say, Harvard University, or any other such private institution, under the grant of appropriation powers “ [F]or * * * university sites, and grounds therefor * * This obviously was not intended by R. C. 719.01, which enumerates fifteen categories of purposes for which the power of eminent domain may be exercised, all of which involve traditional areas of municipal authority (e. g., improving streets and canals, establishing parks, playgrounds, public offices, prisons, hospitals, levees, bridges, *140 sewers, etc.) exercised by the municipality directly for the benefit of its citizens. See, for instance, divisions (M) and (N) of this section, which authorize the municipality to appropriate property of private utilities in order to itself operate, respectively, a municipal waterwork and street railway system. To hold otherwise would involve a wholly unwarranted extension of the power of eminent domain, which remains, despite its frequent application and broader areas of usage in recent times, a power whose statutory expressions are to be strictly construed. City of Cincinnati v. Vester (1930), 281 U. S. 439, 448; Pontiac Improvement Co. v. Bd. of Commissioners (1922), 104 Ohio St. 447, 454-55.

Nor are we able to avoid the inadequacies of R. C. 719.01 as a statutory authority for the exercise of power contemplated here, by discovering some synergistic qualities at work in the combination of these two separate entities, the city and the county library, to attempt the desired condemnation, bearing in mind that here the defendant library entered into a contract with the defendant city in which the latter agreed to act as the agent for the former to acquire the land by condemnation and subsequently to transfer it to the library (see infra Section II). It is true that instances occur where the legislature of this state lias authorized a combination of political entities to concur in condemning property for public purposes. Examples have included school district public libraries, 2 operated by one board of trustees but with condemnation authority vested in another, and agreements for joint construction between cities or a city and county, R. C. 153.61. Cf., Beal v. Elyria (1971), 26 Ohio Misc. 282. We find no such statutory authority authorizing powers of eminent domain for the joint venture at point here, and none, we conclude, may be assumed by inference.

We, therefore, hold that the trial court erred in relying on R. C. 719.01 and 721.22 as authority for granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants, since these enactments provide no grant of power to municipalities to appropriate property, directly or indirectly, for the *141 purposes of a county free public library.

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Bluebook (online)
385 N.E.2d 1324, 57 Ohio App. 2d 137, 11 Ohio Op. 3d 128, 1977 WL 199825, 1977 Ohio App. LEXIS 7095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eighth-walnut-corp-v-public-library-ohioctapp-1977.