Hickey v. Burke, Mayor

69 N.E.2d 33, 78 Ohio App. 351, 46 Ohio Law. Abs. 183
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1946
DocketNo. 20367
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 N.E.2d 33 (Hickey v. Burke, Mayor) 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
Hickey v. Burke, Mayor, 69 N.E.2d 33, 78 Ohio App. 351, 46 Ohio Law. Abs. 183 (Ohio Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law only from a judgment denying the prayer of the plaintiff-taxpayer for an injunction restraining the City of Cleveland and its Mayor from entering into a certain relation with the State of Ohio, involving the title, maintenance, and operation, as a receiving hospital for mentally ill, of Hoover Pavilion, which had been constructed and was owned and operated with funds derived by taxation by the City of Cleveland primarily as a psychopathic unit of its municipal hospital but a minor part of which at the time was being used as a hospital for tubercular patients. A part of the bonds issued to secure funds for .the construction of Hoover Pavilion have not matured and constitute a general obligation of the City of Cleveland, to pay which it must exercise its taxing power.

By §1890-16 GC, effective October 11th, 1945 (119 Ohio Laws, 616; 121 Ohio Laws--S 48) it was enacted:

“Under the direction and with the authority of the director, the division of mental hygiene shall develop, extend and complete a statewide system of receiving hospital service, by contracting- for the use of services for the care and treat *185 ment of patients, or by establishing receiving hospitals or by leasing, or contracting for the use of privately or publicly owned facilities to be designated as receiving hospitals as defined and provided for herein, either separate from or in connection with existing or future state hospitals, which receiving hospitals shall be used for the observation, care and treatment of the mentally ill, and especially for those whose condition is incipient, mild, or of possible short duration. Such receiving hospital shall perform any of the work or duties authorized to or required of the division of mental hygiene.”

As a part of the implementation of the policy expressed in §1890-16 et seq., GC, the General Assembly provided for the expenditure of $726,000.00 for a receiving hospital for the mentally ill of Cuyahoga County, in which the City of Cleveland is situate.

On February 25th, 1946, the Council of the City of Cleveland by unanimous vote, passed an ordinance which was duly signed by the Mayor on February 28th, 1946, in the preamble of which was recited- the appropriation of $726,000.00 by the General Assembly, the fact that the City of Cleveland owned and operated Hoover Pavilion as a receiving hospital for the mentally ill, that it was the desire of the City of Cleveland to make available at once to the State of Ohio the facilities of Hoover Pavilion as a receiving hospital- for the mentally ill and in addition to provide facilities for its necessary and desirable expansion as a receiving hospital; and it also recited its conclusion that it had the legal power to make the transfer without complying with §§3631, 3698 and 3699 GC. Then reciting that it was acting pursuant to the authority of the case of Green v Thomas, 37 Oh Ap 489, it was determined that by reason of the urgency and need of care for the mentally ill and the benefit flowing to the City of Cleveland by reason of the establishment, maintenance, and operation of a receiving hospital for the mentally ill by the State of Ohio in and upon the premises of the City of Cleveland upon which are located the City Hospital facilities, it is in the public interest to transfer the title to the site upon which the Hoover Pavilion is located, together with such additional land owned by the City as is necessary properly to operate a receiving hospital for the reception, treatment and care of the mentally ill, it was determined that sections 236 and 237 of the Municipal Code of Cleveland of 1924 and §§3698 and 3699 GC, (prescrib *186 ing the method to be pursued by municipal corporations in, making sales of municipal property), were not applicable and were waived and this was followed by an authorization of and direction to the Mayor to enter into an agreement with the State of Ohio for the transfer to the State of the real estate, personal property and facilities of Hoover Pavilion upon the following considerations:

“1. The sum of one dollar ($1.00).

2. The designation of such Hoover Pavilion by the state of Ohio as a receiving hospital for the reception, treatment and care of the mentally ill.

3. The maintenánce, operation and development of said Hoover Pavilion as a receiving hospital for the reception, care and treatment of the mentally ill.

■ 4. The expenditure by the state of Ohio of the sum of $726,000.00 appropriated by the 96th General Assembly of Ohio for capital expenditures for a receiving hospital in Cuyahoga County in the improvement of said Hoover Pavilion and its facilities including the ultimate.purchase of approximately ten sublots on Aiken avenue in order to provide adequate space for entrance to said pavilion from said Aiken ave.

Said agreement-shall be prepared by the director of law and shall provide for the furnishing of heat and such other services as the state may require in the operation of said Hoover Pavilion and in addition shall provide for such facilities and services as may be required by the state until such time as the state may operate said receiving hospital as an independent unit, and in addition such other matters pertinent to said transfer.”

And that the deed of conveyance should contain a reverter clause to the effect that if the state should fail to maintain and operate the property conveyed as a reception hospital for the mentally ill, the premises together with all the improvements made or erected thereon should revert to, vest in, and become the absolute property of the grantor.

It was at this juncture that this action for an injunction to restrain action under the ordinance was instituted.

The validity of what is proposed by this ordinance is assailed on the ground that property of the value of $2,274,000.-00 will be transferred to the State of Ohio for the nominal consideration of $1.00, without advertising for bids, or op *187 portunity for competitive bidding, without any finding that the property was no longer needed for any municipal purpose, without statutory authority, and in direct violation of the city charter and the statutes of the State already referred to.

In preparing to consider the problem presented, certain general principles should be kept in mind:—

(1) The State — that is, the people acting as a political entity — is the sovereign and has complete governmental power limited only by the Constitution of the United States.

(2) The people, through the state constitution, have conferred upon the General Assembly the legislative power of the state which embraces, inter alia, the power to. legislate for the public health and that, therefore, it has the power to make provision by legislation for the mentally ill.

(3) Municipal corporations are mere political subdivisions or agencies of the state. The State is the principal and they are the agents', and while they derive their power of local self-government directly from the people through the Constitution (Art.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Asheville v. State of N. Carolina
777 S.E.2d 92 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2015)
Sharon Realty Co. v. Westlake
182 N.E.2d 876 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1961)
Gritton v. City of Des Moines
73 N.W.2d 813 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)
Cleary v. Dade County
37 So. 2d 248 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 N.E.2d 33, 78 Ohio App. 351, 46 Ohio Law. Abs. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickey-v-burke-mayor-ohioctapp-1946.