Hildebrand v. Toledo

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedFebruary 27, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427 (Hildebrand v. Toledo) 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
Hildebrand v. Toledo, 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

A large number of persons join here as plaintiffs, and they bring their action to obtain relief from assessments laid upon their lands and lots on account of a sewer in this city. The action was begun in the court of common pleas and is in this court upon appeal. Their lots and lands are described in the petition, and it is only necessary to say with respect to their location, in a general way, that they lie along the bank of the Maumee river in the upper part of the city of Toledo in the [429]*429vicinity of where the waterworks standpipe and power house, etc., stand, extending from along in that vicinity up the river; and at about that point the water which is supplied to said city by an intake pipe, is taken from the Maumee river. These are all so-called “river lots;” they face upon Broadway and extend from Broadway back to the river, the owners of said lots having the ordinary riparian rights attaching to lots and lands along the river. The sewer on account of which their lots and lands are assessed, begins in Broadway and extends along the fronts of their lots until it connects with another sewer by which the sewage is carried in a northwesterly direction until it empties into Swan creek. By Swan creek it is brought down a distance of perhaps three miles or less, into the Maumeé river at a point three miles below the waterworks plant or power house. The sewer at the front of these lots is from sixteen to seventeen feet below the street grade. The greater part of each of these lots is below the street grade. The depth of the lots upon the street grade, that is to say at the same elevation as the street grade, varies from fifteen to fifty feet and it appears that all of the lots have parts that abut upon the street that have as great an elevation as the street grade. From these points — from fifteen to fifty feet back from the street — the lots descend from forty to sixty feet with more or less abruptness to the water, and the whole depth of each of the lots is from 150 to 250 feet.

No fault is found with the proceedings except in the matter of the laying of the assessments. No complaint is made of any irregularity in the proceedings affecting the validity of the assessments, but it is claimed that no part of , the costs of this sewer may be rightfully laid upon these river lots, for several reasons:

First. Because they have “sufficient natural drainage and sewei'age into said river,” and under the statute original Sec. 2380 (repealed 96 O. L. 96; see Lan. R. L. 3604; B. 1536-213; 96 O. L. 40, Sec. 53), where a lot has sufficient natural drainage, it cannot be assessed for artificial drainage.

Second. Because -the sewer is not available to these lots, it being laid at too high a level above these lots to make it possible for these lots to use it for the disposal of their drainage.

The attack is upon the assessment in toto. If any part may be sustained, it is not shown nor contended that the amounts levied are too large.

Disposing of the second claim, i. e., that the level of the sewer is laid too high to be available to these lots, the proof shows that the fronts of the lots, as I have said, on the street, for a distance of from fifteen [430]*430to fifty feet back towards their rear, are on a level with the grade of the street; that from this point they descend to the river, so that it is apparent that these parts of the lots so on the level of the street, are from sixteen to seventeen feet above this sewer, and, therefore, they are in a situation so that they could use this sewer for sewage. In the case of many of these lots the houses and improvements upon them are built towards the fronts of the lots and on levels permitting of the carrying of sewage from closets, etc., even at cellar levels, into this sewer, and, therefore, they cannot escape all the burdens of the costs of this sewer on the ground that the sewer cannot be used for them; and, as before stated, if any part of the assessment may be upheld, it is not shown that the amounts levied are excessive; there is no claim of that kind made and no evidence submitted that would enable us to consider it if the claim were asserted; so that we find and hold that the plaintiffs have failed to sustain that ground of relief.

There remains the other ground, i. e., that they have and always have had, sufficient natural drainage or sewerage; and this they assert with respect not only to the parts of lots which lie on the side of the hill, but with respect to the parts that are at as high or higher levels than the street grade.

This allegation of fact the city denies. It is conceded by the city that the property lies so that it may be readily drained into the river and so that its sewage may be readily disposed of by emptying the same into the river; but the city insists that the rights, of the proprietors to thus dispose of their sewage is qualified by the rights of the city and the community and persons having riparian rights in and to the river and especially of the lower proprietors, to have the stream kept pure, and by the right and power of the city in the exercise of its police and governmental power to prevent the putting of anything impure into the river that may contaminate or render unwholesome the water supply of the city; and the city contends that the plaintiffs’ right to cast impurities into the stream, as thus qualified and subject to control and even prohibition, does not amount to adequate 'means or facilities for sewerage, within the purview of the statute.

And the city further says that in this particular instance the casting of sewage from these lots into the river will contaminate the water so near to the intake of the waterworks system whereby water is furnished to the residents of the city for drinking and culinary purposes, that such water will be rendered impure and unwholesome, and that part of the purpose and design of the city in diverting this sewage and other sewage that may originate on these lots and in that locality, to Swan [431]*431creek and thence into the river, is to accomplish the sanitary result of keeping the water pure in the region of the waterworks intake.

The plaintiffs assert, in part in their petition (evidently in anticipation of this defense) and in part in their reply, that the drainage and sewage from their lots does not or would not pollute the water of the river so as to render it inimical to health or in any way injurious to the people using the water of the river for drinking or culinary purposes. They also aver in their petition:

‘ ‘ That the said council of said city are trying to prevent said landowners from using their natural and adequate sewerage and drainage, to wit, the Maumeé river, for the drainage of their said lands, and are trying to compel these plaintiffs to drain into Swan creek over a mile away, at a very large expense to plaintiffs, all on the ground and for the reason to preserve the purity of the water of said river for drinking and culinary purposes for the people of said city generally; that the public waterworks of said city located on said river takes water from said river a short distance below plaintiffs’ said property, and the said city of Toledo is seeking to prevent these plaintiffs from utilizing the natural drainage of their lots for the benefit of the public at large of said city.
“That the council of said city drain the sewers of said city into said river below said waterworks and thereby use said river for the outlet of its sewers, and by the construction of said sewer No.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hildebrand-v-toledo-ohiocirct-1905.