Libby v. Paul

17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433, 1915 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 77
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433 (Libby v. Paul) 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
Libby v. Paul, 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433, 1915 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 77 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Estep, J.

This is an action to enjoin the recorder of Cuyahoga county, Ohio, from making a record of the proceedings of the board of township trustees with reference to the incorporation of said village of Maple Heights, and from certifying the transcript thereof to the secretary of the state of Ohio; and that said de[434]*434fendant be ordered and adjudged to expunge from the records of his said office so much of said proceedings as he has heretofore made, before the expiration of ten days from the filing of said record and said proceedings with him, and for such other relief as may be just and equitable.

The following objections have been urged by plaintiffs to the proceedings relating to said incorporation:

First. It is urged that the trustees of the township were without jurisdiction to entertain the proceedings had before them.

Second. Because ten days notice of the election held, as required by the General Code, Section 3527, was not given according to law.

Third. The transcript filed with the recorder does not show that proper proof was presented to the board of trustees, prior to the calling of the election, that said petition was signed by not less than thirty electors.

' Fourth. That the limits of the proposed corporation are unreasonably large, and that it is not right, just or equitable that the prayer of the petition presented to the said township trustees be granted.

I will consider these objections in the order presented.

1. It appears that the first two objections have been settled by our own court of appeals in the case of Edwin Scrivens v. Hosea Paul, Recorder, being opinion No. 582, rendered June 22, 1914. In that case it appeared that the territory involved consisted of six thousand acres of land. Sixty acres had been laid off into lots and surveyed and platted by an engineer, the map thereof being recorded. It was claimed that this fact brought the proceedings under General Code, Sections 3517-3525 inclusive, which vests the jurisdiction to erect a village in the county commissioners. In the present action the territory consists of three thousand or more acres, and of this amount some six hundred acres is allotted property; and hence the same objection is made in this action as to the jurisdiction of the trustees to erect a village as was made in .the Scrivens case. Winch, J., in regard to this question, says:

[435]*435“The jurisdiction of the county commissioners under these sections has existed for many years, and is limited to territory which has been laid off into village lo.ts, etc., although Section 3519 provides that the description of the territory embraced in the proposed corporation may contain adjacent territory not laid off into lots.
“In 1896 a supplementary law was passed providing for the incorporation into a village of ‘any territory or portion thereof’ by proceedings before the trustees of the township in which the territory is located, and requiring an election upon the matter to be held. This law is now found as General Code, Sections 3526 .and 3531 inclusive, and was complied with by the inhabitants of the territory now incorporated as the village of Brook Park. Thus two methods of incorporation of villages are provided by law, and we hold that they are cumulative and not exclusive the one of the' other. Either method may be pursued as to allotted or platted lands, but as to unplatted lands it' seems that the law of 1896 alone applies.”

2. In regard to the question of the notice published in the newspaper: It appears that notices of the election were posted as required by statute, tout that the notice published in the Cleveland Leader was not published the full ten days, as provided in the statute.

It appears from the evidence that 181 votes were polled at the election, and of this number 122 voted in favor of the incorporation of Maple Heights village, and 59 voted gainst the incorporation. It does not appear but the full vote of this territory was counted, and no showing has been made that the majority of 63 would have been in any way cut down if the full ten days’ publication had been made. No showing has been made relating to the insufficiency of the notice of the election throughout this territory. In the case of Fike v. State of Ohio, 4 C.C.(N.S.), 81, the second syllabus is as follows:

“Failure to publish for a full period of ten days the mayor’s proclamation of a special election to be held under Section 4363-20a, Revised Statutes, etc. (commonly called the Beal local option election law) is not fatal to the validity of the election, where the election was otherwise regularly held. Knowledge 'of its approach was general throughout the municipality, and a comparatively full vote was cast, and no attempt was made to [436]*436deceive or mislead any one, and it does not appear that any elector was either without knowledge thereof, kept from voting, or failed to vote on account of the failure to give ten days’ notice. Publication of notice for ten days, under such circumstances, is not jurisdictional, and failure to publish it for the full period is a mere irregularity which does not invalidate the election. ’ ’

There is no charge of fraud made in regard to the,election in this proceeding, and no proof is offered which tends to show that there ivas not the fullest publicity, in the proposed incorporation, of such election; and there is no testimony tending to show that' any elector in the proposed incorporation was prevented from voting on account of the lack of a few days’ notice of the time required by law.

The language used by Winch, J., in the Serivens case, is equally applicable here:

“In this ease the will of the people was clearly and decisively expressed at the polls, and it should not be thwarted by the courts. Bather is it the duty of the courts to sustain the will of the people on all occasions, unless that will plainly undertakes to override some provision of the Constitution or law's duly enacted by the people’s representatives.”

See also language of Judge Brinkerhoff in 15 O. S., page 537.

The court of appeals, in the Serivens case, having held the lack of full ten days’ notice, under the facts in that ca.se, to be a mere irregularity, I am disposed to follow the ruling and apply it in this ease on practically the same state of facts.

3. In regard to the sufficiency of the transcript filed with the recorder — the plaintiffs claim that this transcript should contain the proof offered when the trustees received the petition relating to the proposed incorporation, that the persons w'ho signed it are electors, and reside within the limits of the proposed incorporation, and that a majority of them are freeholders. This proof is referred to in General Code, Section 3527. General Code, Section 3530, refers to the transcript and record, and provides that the trustees shall make a certified transcript of the journal entries of all their, proceedings, etc.

[437]

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433, 1915 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/libby-v-paul-ohctcomplcuyaho-1915.