Nye v. Board of Co. Commissioners

24 Ohio Law. Abs. 598, 9 Ohio Op. 160, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1003
CourtSummit County Probate Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 598 (Nye v. Board of Co. Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nye v. Board of Co. Commissioners, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 598, 9 Ohio Op. 160, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1003 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By MAY, J.

This case came on for hearing before James B. Danasher, special master commissioner, heretofore appointed .by this court to hear said cause, on the petition on appeal from an order of the board of county commissioners of Summit County, Ohio, and the demurrer filed by the county commissioners; and the interested parties [599]*599being before the court, said master commissioner, now files his said report herein and finds that plainiff’s claim for damages arises out of killing of sheep by dogs not owned by her, nor harbored by her; the statute invoked being §5840 et seq GC.

The demurrer of the county commissioners is based on the theory that the statutes invoked are in derogation of the common law, and that a strict construction of them would require a sustaining of said demurrer.

It should be noted that the funds to be used with which to pay the owner of horse», sheep, cattle, swine, mules or goats, are not derived from general taxation. Every owner of a dog or of a dog kennel is required to pay into this fund. Payment of claim is contingent on this fund only.

It should also be noticed that the owner or harborer of a dog, either registered or unregistered, and irrespective of negligence or of known or unknown viciousness on the part of the dog, is liable for damage done to either persons or animals. See §5838, GC.

In order to recover for any of the enumerated animals, as against the dog and kennel fund, certain procedure has been prescribed by the General Assembly, which is found in §5840 et seq, GC. Among these procedural steps are the following:

First: The claimant must notify a county commissioner in person or by registered mail, within forty-eight (48) hours after such loss or injury has been discovered.
Second: The claimant must present to the township trustees, in which such loss or injury occurred, within sixty (60) days, a detailed statement of such loss, supported by claimant’s affidavit.
Third: A duplicate of such statement must be presented to the county commissioners.
Fourth: Such detailed statements must be filed with in sixty (60) days after the discovery of such loss or injury.
Fifth: The statement, among other things, must, contain a description of the kind, grade, quality and value of the animals injured or destroyed, and the place where such loss or injury occurred; and this detailed statement of loss or injury must be supported by the testimony of at least two freeholders who viewed the results of the killing or injury, and who can testify thereto.

See §5840, GC.

It is contemplated that the trustees shall thereupon hear the proof in respect thereto. It might be well to include within the detailed statement the following facts, which the claimant must show to the satisfaction of the trustees, before he is entitled to an allowance at the hands of the trustees:

First: That the damage complained of was not caused in whole or in part by a dog kept or harbored on the owner’s premises; or
Second: If so kept or harbored on the owner’s premises, that the dogs were registered and that they were killed within foi’ty-eight (48) hours from the time of the discovery of the fact that the damage was done by a dog or dogs kept or harbored on the premises.

If no formal hearing is had and if the two facts above outlined are included within the detailed statement, supported by claimant’s affidavit, such proof would be sufficient to permit the trustees to make an award without formal hearing.

Sec 5844, GC requires the trustees to endorse the amount allowed on a claim and then to transmit their findings with the testimony so taken to the county commissioners in cax-e of the county auditor, and it apparently contemplates that the auditor shall enter each claim so reported by the trustees upon a book kept for that purpose, and in the order of their being received by the county auditor.

The attorney general has ruled that if no allowance at all is made to the claimant by the trustees, there would be no duty to transmit their findings and the testimony to the auditor and to the commissioners for any other further action. In this opinion we cannot agree, for if nothing is allowed, surely the trustees are required to make a recox'd of that fact on a claim duly presented to them. The statute should be liberally construed and within the language “amount allowed on each claim” would surely be included the endorsement of no amount allowed.

Under §5846, GC, the commissioners are required to hear these claims which have been submitted, at their next regular meeting. They may hear additional testimony or i'eceive additional affidavits in regard thereto. The power of the commissioners xs x-ather large. They may allow the amount determined by the trustees, or they may reduce the amount, or they may add to the amount, as they may find to be just, to be paid out of the fund created by the registi-ation of dogs and kennels and known as “The Dog & Kexxnel Fund.”

[600]*600We are of the opinion that if the trustees have made an award, the commissioners may wholly disallow the same, although the language does not so state, but having the power to increase or diminish, certainly that would include the power. to totally deny, as we have observed in respect to the total disallowance of the claim by the trustees.

Under §5843, GC, if the claimant is dissatisfied with the allowance made by the commissioners, he may within thirty (30) days appeal to the Probate Court, in which he files a petition setting out the facts in the case as contended for by him. In this action the county commissoners are parties defendant.

Sec 5849, GC, among other things provides that “The Probate Court shall hear such proceedings as in equity and determine the value” of the animals killed or injured. The Probate Court thereupon certifies the amount back to the commissioners, who are to order the amount paid out of the Dog & Kennel Fund.

From what has been pointed out above, it is apparent that three successive steps are involved in such case:

' First: The proceeding before the township trustees;
Second: The proceeding before the commissioners;
Third: The proceeding before the Probate Court.

It would rather seem that the first two steps are jurisdictional, and must be substantially complied with before the Probate Court may entertain a petition by the claimant. However, on the converse, it would seem that the General Assembly contemplated that ultimately the claimant should have a judicial review in the Probate Court, after having' exhausted what may be termed as “Administrative remedies,” and this irrespective of what may have been done with his claim by the trustees or by the commissioners.

In respect to the question of the enumerated animals being either injured or killed within the corporate limits of a village or city, the following may be observed:

First: §5840 et seq., GC are laws of a general nature. Being laws of a general nature, Article .II, §26 of the Constitution is applicable, which said section is as follows:

“All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state.”

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ohio Law. Abs. 598, 9 Ohio Op. 160, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nye-v-board-of-co-commissioners-ohprobctsummit-1937.