Fayette County Agricultural Society v. Scott

121 N.E.2d 118, 96 Ohio App. 6, 54 Ohio Op. 148, 1953 Ohio App. LEXIS 648
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 1953
Docket269
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 N.E.2d 118 (Fayette County Agricultural Society v. Scott) 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
Fayette County Agricultural Society v. Scott, 121 N.E.2d 118, 96 Ohio App. 6, 54 Ohio Op. 148, 1953 Ohio App. LEXIS 648 (Ohio Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

Wiseman, P. J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Fayette County, dismissing plaintiff’s application to assess compensation in an appropriation proceeding wherein plaintiff, appellant herein, The Fayette County Agricultural Society, seeks to appropriate for agricultural fair purposes certain lands owned by the defendants.

Defendants filed a motion in the trial court to dismiss the application to assess compensation “for the reason that said application did not conform to the procedure as defined in the statutes of Ohio relating to appropriation of .private property by municipal corporations, and particularly as defined in Sections 3679 to 3683, inclusive, of the General Code of Ohio, in that no notice was served five days in advance of this application as required # # * ” by the sections relating to appropriation proceedings by municipal corporations. The motion to dismiss was sustained.

*8 Plaintiff states that the five errors assigned raise three propositions which are procedural in nature. First: Whether the notice of the “time and place” of an application to assess compensation as required by Section 3682, General Code, and referred to in Section 3683, General Code, must be served five days before the filing of the application with the clerk of courts, or five days before the preliminary hearing on the application.

Section 9885-1, General Code, provides:

“When it is necessary in the opinion of any county agricultural society to procure or enlarge any site for the purpose of holding an agricultural fair, and the agricultural society and the owner of the property needed for such purposes, are unable to agree upon the sale and purchase thereof, the agricultural society shall make an accurate plat and description of the parcel of land which it desires for such purposes, and file them with the probate judge, or with the Court of Common Pleas in the county in which the land sought to be taken is located. Thereupon the same proceedings of appropriations shall be had which are provided for the appropriation of private property by municipal corporations in Sections 3681 to 3697, both inclusive, of the General Code.”

The pertinent sections controlling appropriation proceedings by municipal corporations, to which reference must be made, are Sections 3682 and 3683, General Code.

Section 3682, General Code, provides:

“Notice of the time and place of such applications shall be given in the ordinary manner of serving legal process, to all owners or agents of owners resident of the state, whose place of residence is known, and to all others by publishing the substance of the application, with a statement of the time and place at which it is to be made, once a week for three weeks nest preceding *9 the time of the application in some newspaper of general circulation in the county.”

Section 3683, General Code, provides:

“If it appears that such notice has been served five days before the time of application, or has been duly published, or that such notice has been waived, the court shall set a time for the assessment of compensation by a jury, but it may be made $t a special term of court, and the jury shall be drawn and the trial proceed as in other civil actions.”

Under Section 3682, General Code, “notice of the time and place of such application shall be given in the ordinary manner of serving legal process.” Under Section 3683, General Code, “If it appears that such notice has been served five days before the time of application # * the court shall set a time for the assessment of compensation by a jury.” Plaintiff contends that service of the notice five days before the preliminary hearing, which was done in this case, complied with the statutory requirements. Defendants contend that no provision is made for a preliminary hearing and that if any time should be given to the owner to protect his rights the notice should be given before the filing of the application. Section 3683, General Code, specifically provides for presenting the application to the court, which at that time must decide whether proper service has been made and whether all legal requirements have been satisfied and, if so, the court then must fix the time for. the assessment of compensation by a jury. The assessment of compensation by a jury is the only matter left undecided. When the application is presented to the court it determines in a preliminary hearing whether all statutory requirements have been met in regard to service of notice to assess compensation. This is the only issue to be tried. 15 Ohio Jurisprudence, 998, Section 334. The statute gives ample notice to the landowner to make de *10 fense on this issue. Appropriation proceedings are actions in rem. In re Appropriation by Supt. of Public Works, 152 Ohio St., 65, 87 N. E. (2d), 257; Martin v. City of Columbus, 101 Ohio St., 1, 127 N. E., 411; 1 Ohio Jurisprudence, 301, Section 12.

. In 32 Ohio Jurisprudence, 370, Section 4, it is stated:

“Furthermore, as to proceedings strictly in rem, and seemingly as to proceedings quasi in rem, notice, where not otherwise provided by the Legislature, may be only that which the law infers an owner receives when his property is seized and proceeded against judicially. ’ ’

In a proceeding to appropriate property by a municipal corporation, the state Legislature has seen fit to provide that the notice shall be served “in the ordinary manner of serving legal process.” Section 3682, General Code. «

We revert to a consideration of the statutory provisions. Legal process does not precede, but necessarily follows the institution of an action or proceeding. 42 American Jurisprudence, 5, Section 2; 32 Ohio Jurisprudence, 365, Section 2; State, ex rel., v. Guilbert, Aud., 56 Ohio St., 575, 619, 47 N. E., 551, 60 Am. St. Rep., 756, 38 L. R. A., 519. It does not consist of a notice of an intention to institute an action or proceeding as contended by appellee. The action or proceeding may never be commenced, and if commenced the owners would not have received notice of the actual commencement. It will not be presumed that the state Legislature intended to enact a law producing unreasonable or absurd consequences. State, ex rel. Cooper, v. Savord, Judge, 153 Ohio St., 367, 92 N. E. (2d), 390. The gist of the requirement of the statute is that the landowners be notified five days before the application is acted upon by the court preparatory to issuing an order that the matter be sent to the jury for the assessment of compensation.

The term, “application,” as used iu the statute, is *11 intended to describe a legal document which, when filed, will start the wheels of justice turning. An application prepared and signed, but not filed, has no legal effect and does not accomplish this purpose. A notice served at this juncture, in our opinion, does not comply with the statutory requirement of legal process. To constitute legal process the notice must relate to some formal legal action or proceeding already instituted.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.E.2d 118, 96 Ohio App. 6, 54 Ohio Op. 148, 1953 Ohio App. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fayette-county-agricultural-society-v-scott-ohioctapp-1953.