Kittel v. City of Cincinnati

69 N.E.2d 771, 78 Ohio App. 251, 47 Ohio Law. Abs. 81, 33 Ohio Op. 567, 1946 Ohio App. LEXIS 581
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1946
Docket6645
StatusPublished

This text of 69 N.E.2d 771 (Kittel v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kittel v. City of Cincinnati, 69 N.E.2d 771, 78 Ohio App. 251, 47 Ohio Law. Abs. 81, 33 Ohio Op. 567, 1946 Ohio App. LEXIS 581 (Ohio Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*82 OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

This is an action to enjoin the City of Cincinnati and its officers from proceeding under two ordinances to purchase the Price Hill Inclined Plane and from issuing bonds therefor, and, after acquiring it, from entering into the contract authorized by the ordinance for its operation by The Cincinnati Street Railway Company.

The appeal to this Court is on both law and fact. It is submitted to this Court upon the pleadings, the two ordinances relating to the purchase and operation of The Price Hill Inclined Plane, and the ordinance of 1940 of the City of Cincinnati, granting a franchise for twenty-five years to The Cincinnati Street Railway Company to operate a system of street i'ailways on and over certain of its streets.

The Price Hill Inclined Plane was built more than sixty years ago. It extended from a point in West Eighth Street to a point at the brow of Price Hill, the difference in the level of the two termini being in excess of three hundred feet. It was built and is owned now by the Price Hill Inclined Plane Railroad. Company, a corporation that operated it continuously as a common carrier from the time of its construction until the year 1843. At that time, it was declared unsafe for use without extensive repairs and replacements. The Price Hill Inclined Plane Railroad Company, faced with the alternative of expending the money necessary for the making of the repairs and replacements or discontinuing its operation, chose the latter, and since that date the property has been out of use.

The reason for the failure of The Price Hill Inclined Plane Railroad Company to make the additional investment does not expressly appear, but, of course, it is inferable that it regarded the enterprise as not attractive from the viewpoint of profit. It could not have been because it could not be operated as ,an independent undertaking. It had been so conducted for many years when the same circumstances existed as prevailed at the time the service was discontinued.

In response to demand for service by those who had been accustomed to avail themselves of this utility, the City pro *83 ceeded to study the problem.

In the franchise of The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, the City of Cincinnati is given continuing power to require extensions of existing routes and to create new.and additional routes and require the operation thereof by The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, but this power is not unlimited and any order made by the City in that regard probably would be subject to appeal to arbitrators, as provided in the franchise ordinance.

If The Cincinnati Street Railway Company should be required to furnish this service under its franchise, the utility would become its property and not that of the City of Cincinnati, and it would operate it under the terms of its franchise and as an integral- part of its system. Whatever the reason, the City chose another method of providing this public service. It determined to buy and reconstruct the Price Hill Inclined Plane. Apparently, it negotiated with the owners and reached an agreement on the purchase price.

On May 31st, 1945, the Council of the City of Cincinnati passed an ordinance authorizing the issuance and sale of bonds in the sum of $75,000.00 “for the purpose of providing a fund to acquire and reconstruct the Price Hill Inclined Plane for thé transportation of passengers.”

While the relief prayed for in the petition includes an injunction against anything being done under this ordinance this position seems to have been abandoned by the plaintiff. In any event, it is clear that the purposes for which these bonds are to be used are clearly within the municipal power, as conferred by Sec. 4 of Article XVIII of the Ohio Constitution, which provides that: “Any municipality may acquire, construct, own, lease and operate, within or without its corporate limits, any public utility the product or service of which is or is to be supplied to the municipality or its inhabitants, and may contract with others for any such product or service.” Of course, this power must be exercised within the limitations imposed by other constitutional provisions-.

By the express terms of the ordinance, the purpose of acquiring and reconstructing the Price Hill Inclined Plane was to utilize it as a means of transporting passengers. Standing alone, it would seem to be unassailable as the exercise of power conferred by the Constitution.

But the municipal council passed another ordinance on the same day providing for the operation of this inclined plane by The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, and it is contended that this shows that while the bond ordinance ostensibly provides for the expending of the money to acquire a *84 public utility, the actual purpose is to extend credit, raise money, or enter into a virtual partnership with The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, a private corporation, contrary to Sec. 6 of Article VIII of the Ohio Constitution, prohibiting the passing of any law “authorizing any-city-to become a stockholder in any joint stock company, corporation, or association whatever; or.to raise money for, or loan its credit to or in aid of, any such company, corporation or association.”

This contention requires an analysis of this second ordinance. This is what it does:

(1) It grants to The Cincinnati Street Railway Company the right to operate the Price Hill Inclined Plane from the time the City acquires and rehabilitates it to November 1st, 1965, upon certain terms and conditions. (2) It obligates The Cincinnati Street Railway Company to operate and maintain the inclined plane as a part of its transportation system, and defines maintenance as 'including renewals and replacements and keeping properly in safe and efficient operating condition. (3) It requires The Cincinnati Street Railway Company to pay to the City of Cincinnati the sum of $3,000.00 “as its agreed portion of the cost of the repair of the inclined plane” immediately upon acquisition “and an additional $7,500.00 • before entering upon the operation thereof; and in addition thereto shall pay all expenses of operation, maintenance and replacements and shall pay any tax which may lawfully be levied against said property or its operations, and insurance costs; and shall hold the City free and harmless from any liability arising out of the operations thereof.” .(4) All of the appropriate terms of the ordinance under which The Cincinnati Street Railway Company operated its street railway system were made applicable. (5) The fare was fixed at 5 cents with transportation at 12% cents to the general street railway system.

Now does this ordinance provide for supplying money, extending credit, or otherwise violate Sec. 6 of Article VIII of the Constitution? Is it a “grant-in-aid” to The Cincinnati Street Railway Company?

By reading this ordinance and the bond ordinance either together or separately it is impossible to find any express provision that imposes any obligation upon the City of Cincinnati in favor of The Cincinnati Street Railway Company. And the only expenditure of money provide’d for is for the purchase and improvement of property, the title to which was to rest exclusively in .the City of Cincinnati.

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Related

McGuire v. Cincinnati
40 N.E.2d 435 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1941)

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69 N.E.2d 771, 78 Ohio App. 251, 47 Ohio Law. Abs. 81, 33 Ohio Op. 567, 1946 Ohio App. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kittel-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohioctapp-1946.