Hunter v. Austin

9 Ohio C.C. 583
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. 583 (Hunter v. Austin) 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
Hunter v. Austin, 9 Ohio C.C. 583 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

King, J.

This action comes to this court by way of appeal. The petition was filed in the common pleas court to recover $2217, as taxes, interest, penalties and assessments, upon and against lot 153, Scottwood addition, in the city of Toledo, owned by defendant.

To the petition of plaintiff an answer is filed, setting forth a large number — forty or fifty — of what might be called defenses, although the answer does not so state them, but they are separately stated and numbered, and may be denominated defenses to the petition.

To this answer there is a general demurrer, and the case is submitted to the court on the pleadings, and the question raised is the same as if the demurrer was not filed— whether the answer constitutes any defense to the petition filed by the plaintiff.

Since the case was brought to this court, an amended petition has been filed asking for an additional sum — being taxes levied and assessed for the years 1893 and 1894, those not being included in the first petition, and these defenses, if they are applicable, are defenses to the amended petition as well as to the original. I shall not go over each of them, but only present some that have been argued as being the more important, although they have all been examined.

The answer sets forth, in the 19th, 20th, 23d, 24th and [585]*58525th paragraphs thereof, the levying of a tax by the city at a rate upon the dollar in excess of the legal rate, to wit:

For the year 1882 five-tenths (.5) of a mill;

For the year 1883 two-tenths (.2) of a mill;

For the year 1886 three-tenths (.3) of a mill;

For the year 1887 five-tenths (.5) of a mill;

For the year 1888 five-tenths (.5) of a mill in excess of fourteen mills, which is the limit allowed by the statute in cities of this grade and class. It is claimed that to this extent, the tax sought to be colletced by the plaintiff is illegal and he should not recover it.

The amount of this tax is nowhere stated in the answer, nor can it be ascertained by the pleadings. We understand counsel representing the treasurer agreed that it might be deducted, and if the counsel for the respective parties can agree upon an entry to that effect, it can be done, but we cannot find from the pleadings enough to authorize us in saying that the answer in these respects is any defense to the petition.

In the 26th, 27th and 28th paragraphs of the answer the pleader has undertaken to state, we suppose, that the tax levied was in excess of the legal rate for the year 1889; but it does not appear that that part which he claims was levied —being interest on natural gas bonds issued by the city — • was levied during that year, although we think he intends to say that. If he did, however, the allegation would not be sufficient, since the authority for that levy is contained in a statute especially authorizing it to be made, and siich a levy could be legally made in excess of the fourteen mills allowed by the general statute.

The same thing may be said of the 29th paragraph in the answer, which applies to the taxes levied in 1890, and, for the reason stated above, is not invalid.

We do not find that there are any other illegal taxes set forth in the answer. Most of the questions involved in this answer have been passed upon by this court, and settled.

[586]*586In the forty-second paragraph of the answer it is stated that the defendant's lot is charged with a special assessment for the payment of interest on water works bonds, for the years named, to wit: from 1880 to 1892 inclusive, and is also charged in a general ordinance with a general tax for the same purpose on the value of said lot. If this were so and the answer set forth what part of the tax sued upon was made up of the general levy to pay interest on water works bonds, and what part was made up of the assessment upon this lot to pay interest upon water works bonds and also stated whether defendant’s lot abutted upon a street. where water pipe had been laid, we would be able to apply the legal principle. A general levy made mrder these circumstances would be illegal up. to and including the year 1892 when the legislature, by the act of 1898, repealed the previous statute, and enacted another authorizing a general levy for such purposes; but we cannot hold that any part of this tax is illegal in the absence of any allegation in the answer' showing what the amount of such tax is.

The plaintiff brings his action as he is authorized by statute by setting forth the gross amount appearing upon the duplicate. It is for the defendant to aver and show what part and how much of the amount claimed in the petition is illegal, and the ground of its illegality.

This is not averred or shown. If the parties can agree what that is, and the plaintiff will remit from his petition that illegal amount, it may be done; but we cannot render any judgment requiring it to be done.

It. is claimed that a contract was entered into with the Western Electric Light and Power Company — a new organization — on the 8th of November, 1888, for lighting the streets with electricity; that an ordinance was passed January 10, 1887, by which said company went into operation and entered into a contract with the city without having the question of authorizing its said operation submitted to the vo: ters of the city. ¡[But we do not think the statute relied upon [587]*587by tbe defendant is applicable to that case, since the clear intention, purpose and object of that statute was to provide that, before a company pursuing one method of lighting, should displace or come into competition with another company having the same methods of lighting, and should be allowed to occupy the streets of the city, the question of allowing its operation within the city should be first submitted to the qualified voters; but no such question could be raised when an electric lighting company for the first time appeared in the city of Toledo. It displaced no other company having a similar method of lighting, and there was no necessity of voting upon it.

The allegations in the answer show that this contract was made in 1888. The first statute from which any inference can be drawn that it was necessary to vote upon this question was passed upon the 1st day of March, 1889, and as an amendment to sections 2474 and 2491 of the Revised Statutes, and therefore was not in force when the city of Toledo entered into this contract with the Electric Light Company. The statute then in force did not embrace within its terms electric lighting companies.

It is further claimed that a number of amounts have been assessed upon this lot for cleaning or sprinkling the street under a statute which authorizes the inhabitants of a street or part thereof to organize and petition the council to allow them to take care of their street in a certain manner, and authorizes them to appoint a committee of two freeholders who in connection with the city engineer shall determine the amount to be assessed on all the property abutting on the street and included in a district for such purplose for the year, which amount they shall send to the said council, who shall authorize it to be assessed against the property, requiring property owners to pay it into the city treasury and authorizing the city, in case it is not paid, to bring suit against the property owners to collect it; but in case none of these remedies are pursued, then that the tax may be certified to the

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio C.C. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-austin-ohiocirct-1895.