Longworth v. Cincinnati

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 744, 17 Ohio C.C. 15
CourtHamilton Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 744 (Longworth v. Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Longworth v. Cincinnati, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 744, 17 Ohio C.C. 15 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Swing, J.

This is an action against the defendants to enjoin the collection of certain assessments made by said city, on the property of the plaintiff abutting on Fugate alley in said city, for the improvement of said alley. Said improvement was made under and in accordance with the act of March 30, 1893, 90 O. L., 238.

The first section of the act provides :

“That in cities of the first grade of the first class, the board of administration of any such city, shall have authority to cause any alley of said city that is twenty (20) feet or less in width, to be improved with such material as said board shall deem best, and the method of procedure in such case shall be as follows:” etc.

The seventh section of said act provides :

“The entire cost of such improvement, except the costs of intersections and two per cent, of the entire cost which shall be paid by the city, shall be assessed upon the parcels of lots and lands bounding or abutting upon the improvement in the manner provided by law.”

The other provisions of the act relate to the details of fixing the assessment and need not be here set forth.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that this law is unconstitutional in that it conflicts with sec. 26, art. 2, of the constitution. Probably no provision of our constitution has been so difficult to construe or has been so prolific of litigation as this one. That there should be such a provision in the constitution seems reasonable and proper, and yet when the classification of cities is granted by the constitution, it has been found very difficult to ascertain just what laws do and what laws do not contravene this section. This difficulty has been so great that our Supreme Court has repeatedly said that it will not attempt to give any general rule defining its scope, but will reserve to itself the right to decide ever}' case as it comes before it. This court, however, in Ampt v. City, 5 C. D., 356, thought there was a general principle running through the decisions of the Supreme Court, and in deciding that case, used the following language, at p. 358.

“Other cases'of the Supreme Court might well be cited upon this question, but they do not conflict with these. These cases clearly show the view taken by that court of this provision of the constitution, and while in each of these cases they say they will not lay down any general rule as to its meaning, but will reserve to themselves the right to pass on every law as it comes before them, it seems to me that there is a rule deducible from these decisions, and that is this, that whenever any law directly operates on and affects the rights, privileges and interests of the citizens, and there is no reason why it should not operate on all the citizens of the state alike, it is a law of a genera! nature within the meaning of this section of the constitution, and should have a uniform operation throughout the state. But where a law relates to the government of cities and to the doing of corporate acts, and only indirectly affects the citizen, it is not a general law within the meaning of this section although the subject-matter, if applied to any portion of the state other than elassified cities and incorporated villages, would be a law of a gen[746]*746eral nature. Such construction seems necessary in order to give effect to sec. 6, art. 13, of the constitution.”

This decision was afterwards approved by the Supreme Court, Alter (and Ampt) v. Cincinnati, 56 O. S., 47. But it is probable that said court did not intend to approve of the particular portion of the decision above quoted for in the same volume, in Gaylord v. Hubbard, 56 O. S., 25, the court in an able and comprehensive opinion discusses this provision of our constitution, but does not announce such a rule. However, in our opinion, the principle of the rule is fully recognized and is the very foundation of the judgment of the court in that case. The court say, at page 37 :

“It directly concerns every owner of a parcel of land within the state, and indirectly the owner of any other species of property liable to taxation under our system of raising public revenue, and also affects the public revenue itself.”

And again, at page 38, the court say :

“That act granted relief to taxpayers who in a county having a city of the first grade of the first class, had erroneously paid taxes under a certain section of the Revised Statutes, while no relief was provided for a taxpayer for taxes paid under similar conditions in the other counties of the state. The act in that case granted relief to persons who had paid taxes in one county which was denied to persons who, under identical circumstances, may have paid them in the other counties of the state. In the case under consideration the statute imposes a burden upon owners of real property situated in cities of the second grade of the first class (Cleveland), not imposed upon the owners of real property situated in other parts of the state. We think sec. 26 of art. 2 of the constitution prohibits this being done.”

The above is the real ground of the opinion, and is based on the fact that it directly affects the individual property owner.

We are of the opinion that the subject-matter here under consideration, viz: Alleys, is undoubtedly general, and not local. We think the common understanding of mankind is that alleys are like streets, highways and bridges. They are common to every city, village or hamlet within the state, and have the same general characteristics wherever located, and in this respect are easily distinguished from waterworks, sewers and crematories which differ in every locality, and are, therefore, proper subjects for local legislation i but the fact that the subject-matter is of a general nature does not require that the law shall have a' uniform operation throughout the state as to the manner in which the powers of the state shall'be exercised in the different portions of the state. One board or agency may perform the duties incident to sovereignty in one city, and another board in another city, and still another board in another city or village perform the same act. The manner in which the corporate powers and duties áre performed does not affect directly the rights of the individual property owners. If the subject-matter is of a general nature, his right is that his person and his property shall be affected in all material matters in the same way and manner throughout the -whole state. This, we think, is the correct rule.

Therefore, we see no reason to hold this law unconstitutional for the reason that alle}^ of twenty feet or less in width are to be built by a particular board in said city, and alleys oí a different width are to be built by another board. This relates to the acts to be performed by the corporation in the exercise of its sovereignty, and if in doing it the citizen is not directly injured, lie cannot complain.

Thomas McDougall, and Pogue & Pogue, for plaintiff et al. Kinkead & Kattenhorn, city solicitors, for city.

But does this act directly affect the individual property owner abutting on an alley of twenty foot or less in the city of Cincinnati differently from what it does in other portions of the state, or differently irom the owner of lands abutting an alley more than twenty feet wide in said city ? If so, the subject-matter being general, it must be contrary to this provision of the constitution.

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9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 744, 17 Ohio C.C. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longworth-v-cincinnati-ohcircthamilton-1898.