In re the ascertainment & assessment of damages caused to the owners of private property

6 Ohio N.P. 160
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 160 (In re the ascertainment & assessment of damages caused to the owners of private property) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the ascertainment & assessment of damages caused to the owners of private property, 6 Ohio N.P. 160 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

On&, J.

The questions to be determined by the court in this proceeding arise upon a demurrer interposed by the city of Cleveland to the answer of J. K. and W. O. Millard, filed in response to the notice given by the city, of its application to have damages determined and assessed in this proceeding.

The applic ant. the city of Cleveland, being a municipality by virtue of the laws of the state, has the control and management of all the streets, thoroughfares and alleys within the corporate limits, and, among others, is the street or avenue known as Euclid avenue.

In 1898, the legislature of Ohio, by an act duly passed, created what is designated in the statute as “A board of park commissioners, consisting of five members who shall be electors cf the city for which they are appointed, who, by the terms of the act, shall have exclusive charge, supervision and control of the parks, park entrances, and park driveways, now belonging to such city or-in its control, and of all such property as may hereafter be acquired for parks and for park entrances and park driveways connecting or leading to and from such parks, and such board of park commissioners shall have power to acquire and hold property in the name of the city, by purchase or condemnation, for public parks and for park entrances and park driveways connecting and leading to or from such parks, to receive gifts, donations and devises of land and other property for public parks, park entrances or park driveways, on behalf of the city, in the name of the city; to.lay out, construct, and improve with walks, drives, reads and bridges, shelter-houses, and other improvements, the public parks, park entrances and park driveways held by it or under its control; to enter into contracts for the construction and improvement of such parks, park entrances and park drivewys; to adopt rules and regulations regulating the use of the same, and the travel and traffic thereon, and to prevent disorder and improper conduct within the precincts of any park or paik entrance or park driveway. ”

Under this act, the board of park commissioners in the city of Cleveland, exercising the authority vested m them by virtue of the entire act, to a part cf whioh I have just referred, have constructed many beautiful parks and driveways in and about the city cf Cleveland, and are continuing to construct, build, and maintain different parks, entrances and driveways to what is known as the system of parks in and about the city of Cleveland.

Prominent amoug the park drive[161]*161ways and parks, is that known as Wade park, which is a park lying north of Euclid avenue in the eastern portion of the city of Cleveland. The board of park commissioners, under and by virtue cf the authority vested in them m the section I have just read, have deemed it advisable and for the purposes of a better and more extended entrance to Wade park boulevard, tnat it should have the control of Euclid avenue from Brownell street eastward to the entrance to the boulevard cr Wade park, — making so much cf the avenue, about four miles in length, a park entrance and park driveway connecting with or leading to the boulevard or Wade park. And, in keeping with such view and judgment of the board of park commissioners, they did (the exact date I do not now have before me) adopt the following resolution:

“Resolved: That this brard take charge of, control and improve for the purposes of a park driveway, all that portion of a certain street in the city of Cleveland, county of Cuj'ahoga and state of Ohio, known as Euclid avenue,” (here follow a description of that portico of the street or avenue, which it is sought to take charge of, control and improve as a park driveway), being all that portion, in fact, of Euclid avenue between the intersection of Brownell street and the east side of the entrance of Euclid avenue to Wade park or Wade park boulevard.

After the adoption of that resclu? tion, the city of Cleveland which has the control, management and government of all the streets including Euclid avenue, adopted the’ following resolution:

“Resolved: That the consent of this council Le and is hereby given to the board of park commissioners to take charge of, control and improve for the purposes of a park driveway, ail that portion cf a certain street in the city of Cleveland, ” — and then again follows a description of that certain portion of Euclid avenue tc which I have just referred.
After the adoption of the two resolutions, then, as provided by the statute, the city of Cleveland filed in this court a paper-writing designated “A petition,” and entitled on the dockets of this court, as follows: “In the matter of the ascertainment and assessment of damages caused to the owners of private property injured by the transfer of the charge and control of a part of Euclid avenue, from the council of the city of Cleveland to the board of park commissioners of said city.” In which petition the city sets forth the fact that it is a municipal corporation cf the second grade and first class, duly organized under the laws of the state of Ohic. It further says, that it acted by and through its board of park commissioners, which commission was duly created by the legislature of the state, April 5,1898, by an act entitled “An act to provide a board of park commissioners,” etc.

Then the, city avers the fact that for the purposes of taking charge of, controlling and improving that portion of Euclid avenue to which I have referred, and, after setting forth the adoption of the two resolutions to which the court has also referred, the city proceeds'to say: “And for the purpose of ascertaining what damage, if any, may be caused by the action of this board in taking charge of, controlling and improving said portion of said street, the corporation counsel of the city of Cleveland is requested to apply to the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, by proper proceedings, and to cause notice thereof to be given as required by Jaw.”

And after a further reference to the resolutions and the benefits thereof to the system of parks aud park driveways, the city concludes its petition by praying that “after due and legal notice of the filing, pendency, and prayer of this petition, has been given, that this honorable court will proceed to hear, ascertain, determine and assess the damage, if any, caused by the said transfer of the charge and control of said part of the said avenue from the council of said city to the board of park commissioners thereof, to any person or persons owning or having any interest therein and private property injured thereby, and prays for any [162]*162other relief that it may be entitled to in the premises.

In response to the petition of the city of Cleveland, a very large number of owners of property abutting on Euclid avenue, have filed their answers in this proceeding and, among others, is J. E. and W C. Millard.

The first defense in their answer (Millards’) is, that the court is wholly without jurisdiction in this case, because, they say, the act of April 5, 1898, creating the board of park commissioners, is unconstitutional.

The second defeuse is, they say, that Euclid avenue and the part thereof described in the petition, is a county road and part of .a continuous highway loading from the public square in the city of Cleveland to the easterly limits of the city of Cleveland, and so on to the easterly limits of the county of Cuyahoga.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-ascertainment-assessment-of-damages-caused-to-the-owners-of-ohctcomplcuyaho-1899.