Harpster v. Brower

5 Ohio C.C. 395
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJune 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. 395 (Harpster v. Brower) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harpster v. Brower, 5 Ohio C.C. 395 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Moore, J.

This action is appealed from the court of common pleas, in which court the action was originally brought to enjoin the defendants,Trustees of Sugar Creek township, from contracting to erect, or cause to be erected, any town hall or building for the public use of said township.

The petition[a vers in substancef that the plaintiff is a taxpayer of the said township, and the defendants are the duly elected and qualified trustees thereof. That as such trustees, without any warrant or authority of law, and without giving the notice as required by section 1443, Revised Statutes, of holding an election as therein provided, are proceeding to and will erect a town hall at a cost of more than $1000. It is also averred that the township has a good, suitable and commodious building sufficient for the purposes of the public, and that the erection of said town hall will be a useless expenditure of money collected by taxation from the taxpayers of such township; that the trustees are threatening to and will, unless [396]*396restrained, misapply and use the public funds raised and to be-raised for the erection of such township building.

The plaintiff prays that the defendants may be enjoined' from contracting for the erection of such building, or doing any act in regard thereto, or paying or causing to be paid any of the public funds for the erection of such building.

Admitting that the plaintiff is a resident taxpayer of the-township, and the defendants are the trustees, as alleged, and that the defendants intend to use the taxes levied and now collected in Sugar Creek township, for the purpose of erecting; a town hall, the defendants deny all the other averments of the petition.

Other matters are alleged in the answer, controverted by reply, which, in view of the facts as deduced from the evidence, it is unnecessary further to notice.

It appears from the evidence that on March 4, 1889, the-trustees of Sugar Creek ordered a vote to be taken for theleyying of a tax to build a town hall, the vote to be taken at the neixt general election. . On the next day, being March 5,. the notices were posted in five public places in the township,, as required by statute, and the spring election was held on-April 1, at which time, in pursuance of the order of the trustees and the notice, the electors did vote on the proposition-thus submitted. The township had in all from 240 to 250' electors. There was present and voted at the spring election, of 1889, 232 of -such electors, and there were cast upon the-proposition to build the town hall 202, 152 for and 50 against,, being a majority in favor of such proposition of 102, and a. majority of all the votes of the township of over fifty.

The trustees afterwards levied a tax of two mills upon the-dollar valuation of the taxable property of the township for the purpose of erecting such building, and certified the same-to the auditor of the county, who placed it upon the tax duplicate for that purpose, and the treasurer of tfie county collected it without protest or objection on the part of the plaintiff or any other person so far as it is shown, and paid it to the-[397]*397treasurer of the county. The amount thus collected ,is $1,142.90. There has been paid from this and before the commencement of this suit, $150 for a site upon which to erect the building, leaving in the hands of the treasurer nearly $1000 unexpended, and now sought to be used by the trustees for the purpose for which the tax was levied which produced it, and for which the taxpayers paid it.

The evidence satisfies us that the township does not have or possess a suitable and proper building for township purposes as is alleged in the petition that it does.

The fund thus raised can be used for no other purpose than that for which it was raised, and unless so used will remain idle in the treasury, and a loss to the taxpayers. So the question arises whether, upon this state of facts, will the trustees be enjoined as prayed for in the petition, upon the application of a single taxpayer, from the appropriation of this fund to the purpose for which it is levied and collected? We think not. We are not called upon to determine the question raised upon the notice given for the election as provided for by section 1443, Revised Statutes.

The purpose of the notice is to inform the electors that they will be called upon to elect — to make choice — and by ballot express such choice upon the1’proposition submitted. If the large body of the electors, as in this case, had actual notice, and exercised the right to vote upon the proposition, and a large majority, nearly all the electors, did vote upon it, with a large majority of all the electors voting in favor of it, we are not prepared to say that one who participated in such election, could have it declared void. The Supreme Court of Ohio, in the case of Forster v. Scarf, 15 Ohio St. 532, Brinkerhoff, C. J., rendering the opinion, says :

In deciding this case, we do not intend to go beyond the case before us, as presented by its own peculiar facts. We do not intend to hold, nor are we of opinion, that the notice by proclamation, as prescribed by law, is per se and in all suposable cases, necessary to the validity of an election. If such [398]*398were the law, in would be in the power of a ministerial officer, by his misfeasance, always to prevent a legal election. We have no doubt that where an election is held in other respects as prescribed by law, and notice in fact of the election is brought home to the great body of the electors, though derived through means other than the proclamation which the law prescribes, such election would be valid.”

In the case at bar, the great body of the electors not only had notice of the election, but more than four-fifths of all the qualified voters of the township voted upon the proposition of erecting a town hall, and more than three-fifths of all the electors voted in favor of the proposition. We would, under such condition, be far from holding that the election should be declared void.

I have said, however, we are not called upon to pass upon this question. The plaintiff seeks in this action to have the defendants enjoined from using the fund already collected and in the hands of the township treasurer, appropriated and used for the purpose for which it was levied and paid. The levy and collection was acquiesced in by the taxpayers of the township without protest or objection — beyond the vote that a meager minority cast at the election. The suit is brought on the part of the plaintiff alone. If he had such right to appeal to a court of equity, it should have been done before the taxes were levied and the fund raised. It is not sufficient for him to say that he was ignorant of such levy. The township records as well as those of the auditor’s office were open to his investigation, and he had the right to, and could have ascertained the purposes for which each levy was made.

Again — the plaintiff can and is only injured to the extent of the tax which he has paid. He can have no grievance beyond that. The statute provided him an ample remedy for any wrong he may have suffered.

Section 5848, Rev. Stat., gives such remedy.

The plaintiff, however, disregarded the plain and adequate remedy that is given by statute to have the&wrong, if any he [399]*399had to complain of, redressed.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio C.C. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harpster-v-brower-ohiocirct-1891.