Electric Street Railroad v. Hamlet of North Bend

70 Ohio St. (N.S.) 46
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1904
DocketNos. 8682 and 8683
StatusPublished

This text of 70 Ohio St. (N.S.) 46 (Electric Street Railroad v. Hamlet of North Bend) 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
Electric Street Railroad v. Hamlet of North Bend, 70 Ohio St. (N.S.) 46 (Ohio 1904).

Opinion

Summers, J.

These cases, The Cincinnati, Lawrenceburg & Aurora Electric Street Railroad Co. v. The Hamlet of North Bend and Patrick Farrell, and. The Cincinnati, Lawrenceburg & Aurora Electric Street Railroad Co. v. The Hamlet of North Bend, present the same question. One was a suit to enjoin, the defendant below, a street railroad corporation engaged in constructing a road between Cincinnati, Ohio, and Aurora, Indiana, and through the hamlet, of North Bend, from constructing its road over, along and upon certain streets therein; and the other to enjoin the company from constructing an elevated road, from its power house to the Ohio river, over [47]*47and above one of the streets of said hamlet without, its consent.

In each case a temporary injunction was allowed and subsequently dissolved, and appeals were taken: to the circuit court from the order of dissolution. On appeal the circuit court stated the following conclusions of fact, as summarized by counsel for defendant in error.

“1. The plaintiff, the hamlet of North Bend, some-years prior to October 22, 1902, was organized as a hamlet under the statutes then in force relating-to the subject.

“2. Its officers were three trustees, each of whom, had been elected and qualified for a term of three years; a clerk and treasurer, elected and qualified. for a term of two years; and a marshal and supervisor, elected and qualified for a term of one year.

“3. The population of the hamlet, according to the-federal census of 1900, was 532.

“4. The secretary of state, in his proclamation made November 17, 1902, under section 2 of the new municipal code, included North Bend as a municipal corporation having a population of less than 5,000.

“5. North Bend has no other officers except such, hamlet trustees, clerk, treasurer, marshal and supervisor.

“6. North Bend has taken no steps to organize as-a village (not refused to organize as a village, as-counsel for plaintiff in error have it in their brief).

‘ ‘ 7. The finding in each case as to the grievances,, which need not be stated here at length.

‘ ‘ 8. The said electric street railroad company has-pending before the county commissioners of Hamil[48]*48ton county an application for authority to construct its railroad -within the limits of North Bend.

“9. The said electric street railroad company does not intend to, nor claims the right to, make such construction without the authority from said county commissioners.

“10. This application has not been acted upon by the county commissioners, who are awaiting a decision by the courts on the question of their jurisdiction over the streets in question, and will not be acted upon by them until this question is decided.

“11. The said electric street railroad company has not procured, in the one case, nor procured or attempted to procure, in the other case, from the hamlet of North Bend authority either to'construct its railroad across the streets of said hamlet, or to construct said bridge over the one particular street before mentioned.

“12. The reason for this failure to procure, or to attempt to procure, such authority from said hamlet is that said electric street railroad company is advised and claims that there is no such municipal corporation under the laws of Ohio as the hamlet of North Bend.”

That court should have found also that the defendant, in the event permission was granted to it by the county commissioners, intended to proceed with the construction of its road above and across the streets of the hamlet as averred; but it is perhaps immaterial as the case proceeded in that court, and has been argued in this, on that assumption.

The circuit court concluded as matter of law that the plaintiff was, at the time of the commencement of the suits a village and as such had capacity to bring them, and that its title in the actions should be [49]*49amended by substituting the word “village” for “hamlet,” and that it was entitled to the relief prayed for and it ordered and decreed that the order setting aside and dissolving the restraining order and temporary injunction should be superseded and set aside and that the restraining order and temporary injunction should be continued, and remanded the suits for further proceedings. These proceedings in error are prosecuted to reverse the order and decree of the circuit court.

The contention of counsel for plaintiff in error, “briefly stated, is, that section 231 of the new municipal code (96 O. L., 96), repealed sections 1550 and 1552, Eevised Statutes, creating hamlets and conferring powers upon them, and that on and after the first Monday of May, 1903, municipalities ceased to exist as hamlets and that they became either villages by electing village officers ■ or unincorporated villages by failure to elect, and that inasmuch as the municipality of North Bend failed to elect, the county commissioners, under section 29 of the new municipal code, have authority to grant permission to the defendant to construct its road above and on the streets of said municipality.

In support of this principal contention it is argued that hamlets had no existence under the constitution, that instrument recognizing only cities and villages and that to hold that corporations organized as hamlets became villages under the new code, but that such of them as failed to elect village officers may continue through their hamlet officers to exercise the powers of hamlets would make the code, to that extent, unconstitutional for want of uniform operation.

By the act of May 3, 1852, “to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages” [50]*50(50 O. L., 223), it is provided: “Section 1. That' all corporations which existed when the present constitution took effect, for the purposes of municipal government, either general or special, and described or denominated in any law then in force, as cities, towns, villages, or special road districts, shall be, and they are hereby organized into cities, and incorporated villages, with the territorial limits to them respectively prescribed, or belonging, in manner following: All such municipal corporations, as in any such law are denominated cities, shall be deemed cities; and those denominated towns, villages, or special road districts, shall be deemed incorporated villages; to be respectively governed as cities, or incorporated villages, and in case of the latter, for general or special purposes, as provided in this act. ’ ’

“Section 19. All municipal corporations organized, or to be organized under this act, except incorporated villages for special purposes, shall have the general powers and privileges, and be subject to the rules and restrictions granted and prescribed in the twenty succeeding sections of this act.”

“Section 40. In respect to the exercise of certain corporate powers, and to the number, character, powers and duties of certain officers, municipal corporations are, and shall be divided into the classes following: Cities of the first, and cities of the second class; incorporated villages, and incorporated villages for special purposes.”

Section 44 provided that the corporate authority of incorporated villages organized, or to be organized under this act, for the special purposes of being a road district, shall be vested in three trustees; that they should appoint a clerk and might [51]

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ohio St. (N.S.) 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electric-street-railroad-v-hamlet-of-north-bend-ohio-1904.