Geauga Lake Improvement Ass'n v. Lozier

182 N.E. 489, 125 Ohio St. 565, 125 Ohio St. (N.S.) 565, 1932 Ohio LEXIS 276
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1932
Docket23268 and 23269
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 489 (Geauga Lake Improvement Ass'n v. Lozier) 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
Geauga Lake Improvement Ass'n v. Lozier, 182 N.E. 489, 125 Ohio St. 565, 125 Ohio St. (N.S.) 565, 1932 Ohio LEXIS 276 (Ohio 1932).

Opinion

AnLEN, J.

The proposed village lies in the extreme southwest corner of Bainbridge township in Geauga county, and the extreme northwest corner of Aurora township in Portage county, and the large area of platted territory resided in by members of the plaintiff association and excluded from the proposed village also lies in the extreme northwest corner of Aurora township in Portage county, immediately adjacent to the platted territory described in the petition for incorporation. The proposed village includes the body of water known as Geauga Lake, and also includes the amusement park situated upon that lake. A large number of the residential buildings within both the pro *570 posed village and the platted territory excluded from the boundaries thereof are small summer cottages not occupied by permanent residents of the community of Geauga Lake. However, the permanent residences excluded from the proposed village appear to be at least as many as the permanent residences included in the proposed village. As shown by the testimony, which is not statistical, and consists of estimates upon this point, within the proposed village there are permanent residences variously estimated to be from 22 to 50 in number. In the platted territory immediately adjacent, which is the territory resided in by the applicants for injunction, it is estimated that there are from 35 up to as high as 100 permanent residences. Within the proposed village there are 53 residence buildings, and in the platted territory now excluded there are estimated to be from 150 to 300; these figures including both permanent and summer residences.

The plaintiff below attacked, not the incorporation of the village of Geauga Lake, but the basis of the proposed incorporation. It urges that the exclusion of platted territory, heavily populated and immediately adjacent to the proposed village, as a matter of law is not right, just, and equitable, and that as a matter of law, under the circumstances of this record, the limits of the proposed corporation are unreasonably small, and hence prays for final judgment in its favor.

On the other hand, it is contended on behalf of the county recorder that the Court of Appeals had no jurisdiction to review the judgment of the court of common pleas. Counsel for the recorder claim that the statutes which provide for a review of proceedings before the commissioners, Sections 3532 to 3535, inclusive, General Code, provide an exclusive method for review, limited to a hearing in the court of common pleas, and not extending to a review in the Court of Appeals. It is also urged that the incorporation of a village is *571 a matter political in nature, and not judicial, and that hence the proceeding in the court of common pleas does not fall within the general provision providing for the review of judgments of the court of common pleas by the Courts of Appeals.

The sections read as follows:

Section 3532. “Within sixty days from the filing of the papers by the county commissioners with the recorder, any person interested may make application by petition to the court of common pleas, or, if during vacation, to a judge thereof, setting forth the errors complained of, or the inaccuracy of the boundaries, or that the limits of the proposed corporation are unreasonably large or small, or that it is not right, just, or equitable that the prayer of the petition presented to the board of commissioners be granted, or containing any or all of such averments, and praying an injunction restraining the recorder from so making the record and certifying the transcript.”

Section 3533. “When the petition is filed, the person filing it shall give notice thereof, in writing, to the recorder and the agent of the petitioners for the corporation. On receiving such notice, the recorder shall forthwith transmit to the clerk of the court where the petition for injunction is pending, all the papers relating to the matter on file in the recorder’s office, and in that event, no record of the papers shall be made by the recorder, or transcript certified by him, as hereinbefore provided, unless he receive a certificate from the clerk of the court, showing that the injunction has been denied.”

Section 3534. “The court or judge shall cause the petition to be filed and docketed in the office of the clerk of the courts, and shall hear the petition at such time as he shall appoint * * *. Upon such hearing the court or judge may hear evidence upon the matters and things averred in the petition. If no error is found in the proceedings before the commissioners, and no *572 inaccuracy in the boundaries, and if the court further finds that the limits of the proposed corporation are not unreasonably large or small, and that it is right, just and equitable that the prayer of the petition presented to the commissioners be granted, the petition for such injunction shall be dismissed. Thereupon the clerk shall return the papers to the recorder, with a certified transcript of the order of the court, and the recorder shall immediately record the transcript certified by the commissioners, the petition for the corporation, the map, and the order of the court, and make, forward and deliver the transcripts as hereinbefore provided.”

Section 3535. “If error is found in the proceedings, or if the boundaries are found to be so inaccurately described as to render indefinite or uncertain the limits or extent of the proposed corporation, or if the court shall find that the limits of the proposed corporation are unreasonably large or small, or that it is not right, just or equitable that the prayer of the petition presented to the commissioners be granted, the court or judge shall make an order enjoining the recorder from making the record. Such order shall not be a bar to subsequent applications to the commissioners for the purpose of effecting such incorporation. The court or judge shall render such judgment as to the payment of the cost incurred in such proceeding for injunction as he deems just and equitable.”

Counsel for the recorder claim that under these sections the decision of the county commissioners is a political question, and is not the subject of judicial review.

What is a “political question”?

“It is frequently used to designate all questions that lie outside the scope of the judicial power. More properly, however, it means those question which, under the constitution, are to be decided by the people in their sovereign capacity, or in regard to which full *573 discretionary authority has been delegated to the legislature or executive branch of the government.” 12 Corpus Juris, 878.

Judicial power, on the other hand, is authority to hear and determine where the rights of persons or property, or the propriety of doing an act, are the subject-matter of adjudication and the judicial act involves the exercise of judgment or discretion. Ward v. Board of Commissioners of Okfuskee Coimty, 114 Okl., 246, 246 P., 376.

“A law that confers upon a court the authority to render a judgment or decree which shall be a judicial settlement of the question in controversy, is a law conferring judicial power.” State v. Cox, 87 Ohio St., 313, 101 N. E., 135.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 489, 125 Ohio St. 565, 125 Ohio St. (N.S.) 565, 1932 Ohio LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geauga-lake-improvement-assn-v-lozier-ohio-1932.