In re Scioto Conservancy District

738 N.E.2d 109, 108 Ohio Misc. 2d 1, 1999 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 80
CourtMarion County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 28, 1999
DocketNo. 98 MS 0008
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 738 N.E.2d 109 (In re Scioto Conservancy District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Marion 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 Scioto Conservancy District, 738 N.E.2d 109, 108 Ohio Misc. 2d 1, 1999 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 80 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

I Prologue

Richard M. Rogers, Judge.

On May 5, 1999, this matter came on for hearing on the petition filed by the Marion County Board of Commissioners requesting the establishment of a conservancy district pursuant to R.C. Chapter 6101.

The court has previously reviewed the petition as to the form and content required by R.C. 6101.05, and has given notice to the appropriate agencies as required by R.C. 6101.061. The clerk of this court has published notice of this hearing as required by R.C. 6101.08 and 6101.01.

Approximately forty-five members of the public were present for the hearing. The proceedings were conducted in the format of a public hearing in order to allow comment by all interested persons.

The court first recognized the petitioners’ counsel, who called on various residents of the affected areas to speak as to the annual loss of crops, loss of acreage, and other damages caused by annual flooding along the Scioto River in Marion County.

The court next heard from Assistant Attorney General Margaret A. Malone, appearing on behalf of the Director of Environmental Protection for the state of Ohio and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. Malone stated that the director was not opposing the creation of a district, but rather was appearing to offer information to the court and the public.

[4]*4Malone also called upon staff members of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to speak on environmental impact. Agency staff members also addressed the issue of federal and state permits and oversight that would be required preliminary to initiating, and during the progress of, any actual work or improvements on the river.

The court then permitted comments from any and all persons in attendance. Those persons speaking included persons who reside in Marion County but not within the affected territories. Other speakers, who did not claim ownership of property within the proposed district or even in Marion County, expressed concerns about potential negative effects downstream of the affected territories.

Some speakers offered photographs and written materials, all of which were received and reviewed by the court, and which have been retained as a part of the record of this proceeding. A letter was received from an organization known as the Scioto River Valley Federation. That letter has been retained with the materials received from speaker Steve Phillips, who asserted an affiliation with that organization.

The petition in this matter asserted that a map had been attached to the petition. There was no map attached. However, subsequent to the hearing, the petitioners filed with the clerk a map which depicts the territories to be included in the proposed conservancy district.

Proponents of the proposed district included all three members of the Marion County Board of Commissioners, trustees from townships located within the affected territory, and the village administrator of a municipality located within the proposed district. All spoke of the annual damages caused by flooding, and some specifically expressed the opinion that the benefits would outweigh the costs.

II The Law

A. General

“The conservancy act, as found in volume 104 O.L., 13 et seq., which is entitled ‘An act to prevent floods, to protect cities, villages, farms and highways from inundation, and to authorize the organization of drainage and conservation districts,’ is a valid exercise of the police power, under the inherent sovereign legislative power of the state, and particularly under the conservancy amendment of the Ohio Constitution, known as Article II, Section 36, as adopted September, 1912.” Miami Cty. v. Dayton (1915), 92 Ohio St. 215, 110 N.E. 726, paragraph three of the syllabus.

R.C. 6101.08 specifically sets forth what is required of the court at a hearing on a petition to create a conservancy district. This section further directs the court [5]*5as to the necessary elements of a decree, in the event that the court finds that a conservancy district should be established:

“Upon the hearing, if it appears that the purposes of section 6101.01 to 6101.84, inclusive, of the Revised Code, would be subserved by the creation of a district, the court, after disposing of all objections as justice and equity require, shall by its findings, duly entered of record: adjudicate all questions of jurisdiction; determine that the organization of the district for the purposes for which it is being organized, and that the surveys, plans, appraisals of benefits and damages, estimates of cost, land options, and the preparation of an official plan will benefit the area within the territorial boundaries of the district; declare the district organized; give it a corporate name by which in all proceedings it shall thereafter be known. * * *
“In such decree, the court shall designate the place where the office or principal place of business of the district shall be located * * R.C. 6101.08.

In brief, before the court may enter a decree establishing a conservancy district, the court must adhere to the following steps, listed here in the order in which they appear in the statute:

(1) Make a general determination that the purposes of sections 6101.01 to 6101.84, inclusive, of the Revised Code, would be subserved by the creation of a district.

(2) Dispose of all objections.

(3) State the court’s findings as to jurisdiction.

(4) State the court’s findings as to benefit to the district.

(5) Declare the district organized.

(6) Specify the name of the district, and

(7) Designate the location of the principal place of business for the district.

B. Required findings and contents of a decree

1. Subserving the purposes ofR.C. Chapter 6101

R.C. 6101.08 begins with the language, “if it appears that the purposes of section 6101.01 to 6101.84, inclusive, of the Revised Code, would be subserved by the creation of a district.” The court interprets this language to require that a general determination be made by the court as to whether the creation of a conservancy district would subserve (promote or advance) the purposes of R.C. Chapter 6101. If the court does not find affirmatively on this issue, the petition must be dismissed.

[6]*6The purposes of R.C. Chapter 6101 are not specifically defined, except as to the enumerated purposes for which conservancy districts may be established, and as set forth in R.C. 6101.04(A) through (I). However, the petition must allege “the necessity for the proposed work and that it will be conducive to the public health, safety, convenience, or welfare.” R.C. 6101.05.

Further; R.C. 6101.05, by its language, requires that the territory of the district be “so situated that the public health, safety, convenience, or welfare will be promoted by the organization as a single district of the territory described.” It is therefore reasonable to conclude that the promotion of “the public health, safety, convenience or welfare” is the major thrust, or purpose, of R.C. Chapter 6101.

The issue then arises as to the burden of proof that the petitioners must meet to prevail on their request for the establishment of a conservancy district.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
738 N.E.2d 109, 108 Ohio Misc. 2d 1, 1999 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-scioto-conservancy-district-ohctcomplmarion-1999.