Maumee Valley Electric Co. v. City of Toledo

13 F.2d 98, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 704, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3506
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 14, 1926
Docket4483
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 F.2d 98 (Maumee Valley Electric Co. v. City of Toledo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maumee Valley Electric Co. v. City of Toledo, 13 F.2d 98, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 704, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3506 (6th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal grows out of the following state of facts:

The Miami & Erie Canal, constructed by the state of Ohio (as part of its system of public navigable canals), and completed by the year 1845, extended from Cincinnati northerly to and through Defiance; thence northeasterly along the Maumee river, into and through the city of Toledo, to Lake Erie. The part of the canal involved in this case lies on the northerly side of the Maumee river, and extends a distance of about 18 miles northerly from Providence (just below tho state dam at Grand Rapids, Ohio) to lock 45, which is just northerly from appellant’s plant, and thence on and into the city of Toledo, and to a point near tho mill of the Toledo Grain & Milling Company, where the canal ends. Appellant is a corporation organized under the laws of Ohio, for the purpose of generating electricity and supplying it to the public for heat, light, and power. Its plant lies on the south side of the canal at Maumee, between the canal and the river.

By the Act of February 8, 1830, express authority was given the canal commissioners to sell, from time to time, for hydraulie purposes, subject to such conditions and reservations as the commissioners might deem necessary and proper, either in perpetuity or for a term of years, for an annual rent or otherwise, as deemed for tho best interests of the state, the surplus water in either of the canals above the quantity required for purposes of navigation; water passing around the locks being included in the term “surplus water.” Every lease, grant, or conveyance of water was required to contain a “reservation and condition” whereby the state could at any time resume the “privilege or right” to the use of the water in whole or in part, whenever deemed necessary for purposes of navigation, or whenever its use for hydraulic purposes should he found in any way to interfere with and injuriously affect the navigation of either of the canals, feeders, or streams from which water was being taken for hydraulic purposes; in the event of which resumption in whole or in part the sum paid by the grantee or the rent reserved, in whole or in reasonable part, should be “refunded or remitted to the purchaser or lessee, his heirs or assigns.” These provisions were carried into the Act of March 23, 1840, now found in sections 14009 to 14012, inclusive, of Page & Adams, O. G. C. of 1910. 1

Plaintiff is the owner of six water leases given by tho state officers under due legislative authority therefor. The first and most important is known as the Law lease granted in 1895 for a period of 30 years from March 12th of that year, entitling the lessee to all the surplus water flowing in the canal between the village of Providence and the state dam in Lucas county, Ohio, and the city of Toledo, not needed for navigation and not under lease to other parties — such leased water to he taken from the canal at the village of Maumee. It called for an annual rental of $500 and gave right of renewal for *100 30 years from March 12, 1895. 2 This lease was assigned to'plaintiff September 11,1900, by the consent and permission of the board of public works. Plaintiff has paid in full all rentals accruing under this lease, and, as hereinafter more fully shown, has taken advantage of the renewal privilege. In the year 1902, although' public navigation upon the portion of the canal in question had already cerned, the General Assembly of the state of Ohio declared it the settled policy of the state that the Miami & Erie Canal, together with its water supplies, reservoirs, dams, feeders, and adjacent lands, from Cincinnati to Toledo, should be retained and maintained as a public canal..

Thereafter plaintiff, with the consent and approval of the state of Ohio, acquired four other leases of water (all apparently • to be taken from the canal level in question), given at various dates between the years 1901 and 1906, calling respectively for amounts ranging from 833 to 2,100 cubic feet of water per minute, the estimated horse power therefrom ranging respectively from 47 to 58, and at rentals ranging from $300 to $450 per year. Each of these leases ran for 30 years from its date, and each contained the 30-year renewal right, as in the ease of the Law’lease. None of these four leases has yet expired. On December 14, 1910, the state entered into a lease and agreement with plaintiff supplementary to the Law lease, 3 whereby plaintiff agreed to and did, at its own expense, remove rock bars and other obstructions in the canal, and deepened and widened the same throughout • the 18-mile section referred to, from Providence -to Lock 45, thereby materially increasing 'the amount of water which the canal could supply. 4 By this supplementary agreement the water rent was greatly increased, 5 **and in addition appellant was required to bear the expense of keeping the banks of the canal in good repair throughout the 18-mile section, and' to pay the expense of daily service of three patrolmen of the canal.

Plaintiff’s disbursements for the removal of obstructions and deepening and widening the canal were about $53,000. The increased rentals provided by the supplemental lease, as weE as the expense of patrolling the banks, has been regularly and fully paid by plaintiff. Since 1911 plaintiff has greatly increased the capacity of its plant at Maumee, enlarging its buddings, instalEng new and larger water wheels and electric machinery, with auxiEary steam plant to assist in generating electricity in the dry seasons, when the water supply was insufficient. Its plant is worth several hundred thousand dollars, a large part of which value would be lost to plaintiff, if deprived of the water power in question. By virtue of the leases referred to plaintiff is entitled normaEy to receive 422 out of the 536 cubic feet per second reaching its plant at Maumee; the remaining 114 cubic feet going past plaintiff’s flume.

On January 22, 1920, the General Assembly of the state of Ohio (108 O. L. pt. 2, p. 1138) declared the abandonment for both canal and hydraulic purposes (“subject, however to the rights hereinafter under sections 6 and 7 provided for”) of that portion of the canal extending from the north 'end thereof, in the city of Toledo (the canal outlet), and extending south a distance of 8.85 miies, to a point just north of what is known as the Maumee side cut, and 1.6 miles southerly from plaintiff’s plant, thus including the portion of the canal from which plaintiff takes its water power. By the same act authority was given for the sale of such abandoned section of canal to the city of Toledo, at a price to be determined by appraisement, subsequently fixed at $300,000. The exceptions in sections 6 and 7 of the legislative act are these: The provision for deed “conveying said property in fee simple *101 to the city of Toledo,” ete., is followed by the words: “But excepting (herefrom, and subject to the rights of owners of existing leases of either lands or water or both, and the rights of said owners to a renewal of said existing leases.”

Seetion 7 of the act

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Bluebook (online)
13 F.2d 98, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 704, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maumee-valley-electric-co-v-city-of-toledo-ca6-1926.