Kraus v. Halle Bros.

100 N.E.2d 103, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 418, 45 Ohio Op. 115, 1950 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 351
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1950
DocketNos. 603635, 603636
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 100 N.E.2d 103 (Kraus v. Halle Bros.) 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
Kraus v. Halle Bros., 100 N.E.2d 103, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 418, 45 Ohio Op. 115, 1950 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 351 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

OPINION

By BLYTHIN, J.

These two causes were tried and are treated together, because the issues are precisely the.same in each.

The actions are brought by William J. Kraus, a taxpayer, on behalf of the City of Cleveland against The Halle Brothers Company and the City of Cleveland following demand by the plaintiff upon the proper officers of the city that such an action be brought, and rejection of that demand.

Defendant, The Halle Brothers Company is a corporation operating a department store and doing a general mercantile business.

Cause No. 603,635 concerns that portion of East 12th Street, in said city, a public thoroughfare which runs in a general southerly direction a distance of about two hundred and forty-five feet from Huron Road to Prospect Avenue and being about twelve feet wide.

[420]*420On May 26, 1947 the Council of said City passed Ordinance No. 2835-46, which ordinance became effective July 6, 1947 and, in substance, authorized The Halle Brothers Company its successors and assigns to construct, maintain and use a bridge structure across said East 12th Street (twelve feet wide) and extending from Prospect Avenue northerly to about its intersection with Brownell Court, a distance of about ninety-six feet, and having a clearance above the grade of East 12st Street ranging from fourteen feet, eight inches to seventeen feet. The ordinance further authorized the company to construct, maintain and use under East 12th Street, across its full width, a reinforced concrete tunnel starting a very short distance north of Prospect Avenue and running under East 12th Street a distance of about eighty-two feet, with an inside height of approximately sixteen feet and with the ceiling not less than two and a half feet below the grade of. East 12th Street. . The ordinance stated plainly the purpose to be to permit the company to connect all floors above the second floor of two buildings of the company, one on each side of East 12th Street and to likewise connect the basements of those buildings. It also provided that the company was to be obligated to secure all customary permits and was to pay the entire cost and expense of supporting, altering, changing, moving or relocating any city owned structure made necessary by reason of the construction of the tunnel and that no structure or support was to be placed within East _12st Street between the established grade of the1 Street and the overhead clearance of the bridge and that the company was to provide the required artificial lighting within East 12th. Street covered by .the bridge structure and was to restore East 12th Street to as good a condition as before being disturbed by the authorized operations. All of these things were to be done to the- satisfaction and approval of the Director of Public Service of the city.

Section 3 of the Ordinance provided that the company was, upon the city’s modification or revocation of the authority then being granted, to support, alter, change, relocate or remove, at its own expense, the structures erected under the authority granted; such right of modification or revocation .being specifically retained for exercise whenever the public interest required it. It was also provided that the company was to be obligated, at its own cost and expense, to restore East 12th Street to its original condition following operations involved as a result of modification or revocation of the authority granted.

Section 4 of the Ordinance provided that the company, its [421]*421successors and assigns, were to save the City harmless from any damage, loss or liability .for injury to persons or property, public or private, due to the contemplated constructions or by reason of the presence, use and maintenance of the structures, both above and below East 12th Street.

Section 5 provided for acceptance of the terms of the Ordinance by the company within twenty days after its passage.

The company accepted the terms of the ordinance by appropriate action within the twenty day period. The Halle Brothers Company is the long term lessee or the owner in fee of the properties on both sides of East 12th Street within the boundaries of the structures authorized by the terms of the ordinance and it will be noted that the ordinance, by its express terms, forbids any placing of any structure or support within East 12th Street. There is, in fact, no encroachment or structure on the surface of East 12th Street. The authority granted under the ordinance was to construct above and below the street surface. There is no proof that the use of the street surface has been interfered with beyond the period actually necessary for the construction operations. The tunnel or subway has been completed and the structure above has been completed to the extent of nine stories high and it is not claimed that the construction in any manner deviates from the authority granted. It is claimed by plaintiff that the company proposes to use, and is actually using, the space within the structures above and below the street for their general business use and that public rights are violated by the existence of the structures in that they occupy air and subterranean rights which are public property. It is also claimed that the ordinance itself is wholly void in that it presumes to authorize the use of public property for private use and is, therefore, an abuse of corporate power, wholly unauthorized and a violation of law. It is further claimed that the company is occupying “valuable land” free of taxation contrary to the provisions of the Constitution of the State of Ohio, Article VIII, Section 6, but no evidence was offered to substantiate such claim. It- is still further claimed that the reasonable rental value of claimed rights of the city occupied by the company is about $7500.00 per year and that unless relief is granted herein the company will continue to occupy rights of the public, and to the exclusion of the public, without compensation. .

Relief is sought to the extent of a restraining order to halt building operations over and under the street, an order declaring the ordinance of Council void; an order requiring the company to demolish and remove its constructions over [422]*422and below the street; but if those are not granted there be found the reasonable rental value of the use of the street by the company and an order made for payment of same by the company to the city, and for other relief warranted by the pleadings and the evidence.

The issues in cause No. 603,636 can be said to be identical with those in cause No. 603,635. They are, however, raised between the same parties concerning a similar situation and construction on that section of East 12th Street running in a general southerly direction from Euclid Avenue to Huron Road, which construction proceeded under Ordinance No. 2011-45 passed' by the Council of the City of Cleveland on October 15th, 1945 which ordinance is similar in terms generally to Ordinance No. 2835-46 and differing from it only in such details as location, size of construction etc. East 12th Street between Euclid Avenue is approximately two hundred feet long and sixteen and a half feet wide. The construction underneath the street is across its entire width and for about seventy-two feet of the length. The construction above the street is about eleven stories high, across the entire width and for about ninety-eight feet of the length. The company owns, either on long term lease or in fee, the properties on both sides of East 12th Street and there is no encroachment by any structure on the surface of the street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.E.2d 103, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 418, 45 Ohio Op. 115, 1950 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraus-v-halle-bros-ohctcomplcuyaho-1950.