In re Petition for Special Election in Toledo

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 469, 14 Ohio Dec. 698, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 53
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedAugust 10, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 469 (In re Petition for Special Election in Toledo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Petition for Special Election in Toledo, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 469, 14 Ohio Dec. 698, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 53 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

In the first place it is claimed that the district described in the petition is not a “residence district,” as defined by Section 4 of the act, because it embraces parts of two streets, on each of which it is claimed more than 55 per cent, of the foot frontage on both sides of such streets, extending along said streets the distance of 500 feet, is used for manufacturing, mercantile or business purposes, not including saloons. The first street referred to is Hillsdale avenue. This street for substantially its whole extent that is available, and the abutting territory, is actually used by the Milburn Wagon Co. as a lumber yard. An examination of the premises in question satisfies me that the only sense in which it can be considered a street is that it was originally platted as such. In fact it appears that an application for its vacation made by the Milburn Wagon Co., who owns the property abutting upon it and to whom it will revert if vacated, is now pending before the council. If this is done all evidence that it is intended for the use of the public will be removed. The street frontage referred to in the Brannock Law is manifestly a frontage upan an actual street: not a paper street that can be found only upon the map, but what is set apart and used by the public for street purposes. It is well settled, as stated by Elliott in his work on Roads and Streets, Section 16, that “it is the purpose for which it (a street) was laid out, and the use made of it, that determines its character.”

[471]*471The second street claimed to destroy the territory described as a residence district is Post street, which is abutted on the north side by the buildings and works and yards of the Baker Foundry Co., for the distance of 440 feet and on the opposite .side for the distance of 277 feet by property belonging to the MeBeth-Evans Glass Co. The Baker Foundry Co.’s frontage is clearly manufacturing property as contemplated by the act in question, and if the opposite abutting frontage to the extent •of 255 feet is also manufacturing, mercantile or business property, this petition should be refused, because in that event the petition does not describe a “residence district.” From the ■evidence introduced and a personal inspection of the premises •of the MeBeth-Evans Glass Co., I am satisfied the claim made is not sustained by the facts. The glass company owns a tract •of ground containing about four and one-half acres, irregular in shape, with its buildings, factory and power plant occupying about one acre of ground in the centre of the tract. The •entire tract, except a small frontage on Post street occupied by .a residence and cooper shop is enclosed by a board fence ten feet high surmounted by barbed wire to prevent access to “their plant except through gates placed at the corner of Delaware avenue and Westlake street. The enclosed part of their frontage on Post street is 240 feet long and for a depth of about 150 feet to the line of the company’s buildings and much more than the ordinary depth of lots in that neighborhood, is “unoccupied and grown up with weeds. In one corner against the fence is an open shed belonging to the man who owns the cooper Shop, and since he ceased to use them more than a year ago, these sheds have been at times and now are to some extent used by the company for the storage of goods. About 100 feet from the fence is a hydrant of the city waterworks with a reel ■of hose attached within an iron building about four feet square and seven feet high. In line with this building is an iron building about ten feet square in which the meters of the gas company which supply the glass company with gas, are kept safe in case of fire, under lock and key and can be opened only by •those authorized to read the meters. Except as stated, this large tract of ground lying behween the buildings of the com[472]*472pany and Posi street and containing 36,000 square feet of land, is unoccupied and devoted to no immediate use. I do not think it can be said with any regard for the ordinary use of words, that this 240 feet of frontage enclosed by this fence, or any part of it, is “occupied for” or “actually devoted to” manufacturing, mercantile or business purposes.

But even if it were so held the contention must fail, because the cooper shop, so-called, is not so occupied or used. As before stated this “cooper shop” stands outside the company’s enclosure though upon its land. It was built at about the time the factory was started several years ago, by a cooper who intended to supply barrels for the glass company. Pie still owns the building and is at liberty to remove it at any time. More than a year ago the company quit using his goods and he gave up the business. Since that time the building has not been occupied for any purpose whatever. This shop stands on 37 feet of the Post street frontage, and, as without it, there are but 240 feet which it is claimed is devoted to manufactuaing or business purposes, the contention or the claim that the territory described in the petition is not a “residence district” can not be sustained.

The only remaining question is whether the petition now before me is signed by 40 per cent, of the qualified electors of the district. Of the 490 signatures to the original petition three names appear twice each, one petitioner has removed from the district since signing and before the petition was delivered to me, and another has moved from the district since it was delivered. I am satisfied that none but actual electors at the time the election is ordered can be counted. There remain therefore, but 485 electors to the original petition, and as the total vote at the last election was 920, and 40 per cent, of this is 368, the election must be ordered unless the activity of interested parties in securing withdrawals is to be rewarded by having the withdrawals allowed and the like zeal of others in securing more petitioners since the original petition was filed, is to beheld for naught.

On the subject of withdrawals from the petition I will say that since the presentation to me of the original petition of 485 electors, 130 have signified to me in writing their desire [473]*473that they be not counted as fayoring an election and asking that their names be stricken from the petition, and up to this tme five of these dissenters have asked that their withdrawals be not counted and that they be considered as still petitioning for an election. So that there remain 125 of the original 485 signers who desire to be not counted, which leaves but 360 petitioners if withdrawals are allowed. Although the propriety of admitting withdrawal, in view of the purpose of the act and the peculiar powers granted to the judge or mayor,, to whom the petition is required to be presented before an election can be ordered, may fairly be questioned, in my judgment, pending a determination of the question in his own mind as to whether the necessary number of electors have asked for an election, and at any time before the order is made, it is not only fair to all parties concerned, but it is also in line with the spirit and purpose of the law to permit electors to withdraw their petition individually or collectively.

I know of no case in which this question has been passed, upon under this law, and the ease of Grinnell v. Adams, 34 Ohio St., 44, cited by counsel, is not a precedent that even by analogy supports the contention that withdrawals are improper. That was a ease in which county commissioners had taken action on a petition filed by citizens as required by law in the matter of laying out or altering a county road.

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2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 469, 14 Ohio Dec. 698, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petition-for-special-election-in-toledo-ohctcompllucas-1904.