Frankenstein v. Goodale

26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 584, 1927 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1378
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedNovember 27, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 584 (Frankenstein v. Goodale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frankenstein v. Goodale, 26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 584, 1927 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1378 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Struble, J.

The court feels that it understands the questions involved in this case and will make its decision at the present time. This will save counsel the trouble of preparing briefs. Counsel in their oral arguments have covered all the points involved, and inasmuch as there is nothing new to be presented by briefing the case the court may as well announce its decision from the bench.

The several claims or objections to the proposed modification and extension of the present lease of the Cincinnati Southern Railway fundamentally considered are to be classified first, as denials of the power of the city to enter into the proposed modification and extension of the present lease; and second, to the policy of doing so according to the proposed terms; and third, the procedure whereby the city and the railway propose to do so.

Considering first, as to the power: Counsel for the plaintiff claims that the proposed contract of modification and extension is in effect a granting of the credit of the city to the Lessee Co. the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway; and second, that the proposed extension will make the city of Cincinnati a stockholder [585]*585of said Lessee company, and third a partner of the Lessee company.

The court feels that the aforesaid claims of counsel for plaintiff are untenable.

The power, of the city to acquire, own and manage the Cincinnati Southern Railway has been in question before the courts on numerous- occasions and has been settled by authoritative decisions of this state. The city of Cincinnati in the proposed contract of modification and extension is not making a new lease', but is merely agreeing to a modification of certain terms of the old lease, the validity of which has been affirmed as constitutional and legal by the courts of last resort of this state. The proposed modification of the original lease is merely an extension of the term of such lease in consideration of an additional rental for this property.

The claim that this modification is a loaning of the credit of the city to the Lessee company, and makes the city a stockholder of said company, and a partner of said company, were asserted as objections to the original lease as well as to the first modification of the original lease and were fully considered by the several courts in the litigation as to the original lease and the first modification. So that all of the questions that relate to the power of the city to manage this property in the form of a lease, and to own the property, and issue the bonds of the city to pay for the same have been adjudicated and settled by authoritative decisions of this state.

According to these decisions the city in what it is doing in this proposed modification and extension of the present lease is not loaning the city credit to the Lessee company, nor is it becoming a stockholder of the Lessee company, nor is it becoming a partner of the Lessee company in the operation of this road.

The claim that the city is becoming a partner of the Lessee company by force of this proposed contract is based upon a provision of the lease providing for an increased rental equivalent to certain proportions of the net earnings from this property for certain periods of the lease. It will be noted by the language used that the city is not to have a percentage of the profits, but it is to [586]*586have as an additional rental the equivalent of a certain percentage of the profits for several periods mentioned in the proposed lease. The provision merely provides a rule whereby to determine the additional rental the city is to have for the periods specified in the proposed lease.

The authorities and decisions quoted from by counsel for plaintiff in his oral argument- as to the general proposition as to what constitutes a loan of the credit of the city, and would make the city a stockholder, or a partner in a particular enterprise, are of no value in passing upon the question involved in this case because the questions have all been settled as they relate to the Cincinnati Southern Railway. The Cincinnati Southern Railway as Colonel Colston very well said in his argument, is a thing apart; it has in fact an individuality and character of its own, in that it is a municipally owned property, and as to the Cincinnati Southern Railway all those questions have been fully and finally adjudicated. ■-

As to the policy of the city in entering into the proposed modification and extension of the original lease counsel’s claim is that the consideration — that is the rental which the city is to receive by force of the new arrangement, is inadequate and is in violation of the orders of the Ohio utilities commission, which counsel claims requires that property of this character is entitled to an earning equivalent to six per cent, on its valuation, which valuation counsel claims has been agreed to be approximately forty-eight millions of dollars, by the Interstate Commerce Commission for rate making purposes.

Counsel in support of this claim is presenting arguments that might have been very proper to submit to the people at the election for their approval or disapproval of the proposed modification; but such arguments are to have no weight with the court because it is not the function of the court to pass upon the wisdom or unwisdom of the proposed modification. This property belongs to the people of Cincinnati, and it is for them to determine whether or not this rent is adequate or inadequate, or whether it is wise or unwise to enter into this proposed contract. As I understand the matter the city can do with this property whatever it pleases. If the people want to [587]*587they can sell this property, or rent it on such terms as they may think proper, or the people can give this property away if they want to providing they proceed according to the procedure provided by the statutes. Whether or not in the proposed modification the city of Cincinnati is accepting an inadequate rent is something about which the court is not concerned. It is a valuable consideration, and if the people have made a bad bargain they made it with their eyes open and they will have to suffer the consequences, as it is not within the province of the court to consider any such claim.

As to the claim that this property must bring six per cent, income on its valuation according to the rules of the Ohio Utilities Commission, the court’s judgment is that the Ohio Commission has no jurisdiction of this property for rate making purposes, and its rules and regulations would have no application to the situation involved in this litigation.

The Cincinnati Southern Railway is engaged in interstate commerce and is subject to the rules of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and as I look at the matter the Ohio Utilities Commission has no jurisdiction or control over this property.

Now as to the procedure whereby the city of Cincinnati and the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway Company are making this contract of modification and extension, the court will say that it concludes that the proper procedure is being followed by the parties to this proposed contract. Counsel’s contention that the Interstate Commerce Commission must approve the proposed extension prior to the matter being submitted for the approval of the people, is untenable in the court’s view of the matter. It seems to be conceded that the Interstate Commerce Commission must give its approval of the proposed contract before it becomes binding upon the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 584, 1927 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frankenstein-v-goodale-ohctcomplhamilt-1927.