Pickering Hardware Co. v. City of Cincinnati

78 N.E.2d 563, 149 Ohio St. 275, 149 Ohio St. (N.S.) 275, 36 Ohio Op. 577, 1948 Ohio LEXIS 455
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1948
Docket31061
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 78 N.E.2d 563 (Pickering Hardware Co. v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickering Hardware Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 78 N.E.2d 563, 149 Ohio St. 275, 149 Ohio St. (N.S.) 275, 36 Ohio Op. 577, 1948 Ohio LEXIS 455 (Ohio 1948).

Opinion

Stewart, J.

Section 19, Article I of the Constitution of Ohio states in part:

“Private property shall ever be held inviolate but subservient to the public welfare. * * * where private property shall be taken for public use, a compensation therefor shall first be made in money, or first secured by a deposit of money; and such compensation shall be assessed by a jury, without deduction for benefits to any property of the owner.”

Section 6, Article XIII of the Constitution of Ohio states:

“The General Assembly shall provide for the organization of cities, and incorporated villages, by general laws, and restrict their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts and loaning their credit, so as to prevent the abuse of such power.”

*282 In several cases’involving the question whether the General Assembly, under the authority of Section 6, Article XIII of the Constitution of Ohio, can authorize a municipality to levy an assessment against an owner of property, a part of whose land has been taken by condemnation for the making of an improvement, for special benefits arising from the improvement, this court has given diametrically different answers.

In 1868, in the case of City of Cleveland v. Wick, 18 Ohio St., 303, this court unanimously held that an assessment, upon lands fronting on a street, to reimburse the amount of compensation paid the owner for his other land taken for the use of the street was authorized by statute and was not in violation of the constitutional provision which guarantees the owners of the land so taken full compensation without deduction for benefits.

In that case, Judge Welch said that the constitutional provision “simply guarantees to the owner of land condemned a full price. When that is paid, he stands on a perfect equality with all other-owners of adjoining lands, equally liable, as he ought to be, to be taxed upon his other lands with them. He has the full price of his land in his pocket, and is an equal participant with them in benefits to adjoining lands.”

In 1900, in Cincinnati, Lebanon & Northern Ry. Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 62 Ohio St., 465, 57 N. E., 229, 49 L. R. A., 566, this court overruled the Wick case, supra, and held that Section 19 of Article I of the Constitution of Ohio is a limitation upon Section 6 of Article XIII as to the power of assessments, and that compensation paid to a landowner for lands taken, by appropriation proceedings, to open a street cannot be assessed back upon the lands of the owner remaining after such taking. Judge Minshall, who concurred *283 in the judgment, did not join in overruling the Wick case because he said the judgment could be justified by the fact that the improvement had not benefited the railroad company against which the assessment was made.

In 1902, in the case of City of Dayton v. Bauman, 66 Ohio St., 379, 64 N. E., 433, this court approved Cincinnati, L. & N. Ry. Co. v. City of Cincinnati, supra, and extended its doctrine further by holding that the limitation of Section 19 of Article I of the Constitution on Section 6 of Article XIII, as to assessments, goes to the full extent of prohibiting the raising of money directly or indirectly by assessment to pay compensasation, damages or costs for lands appropriated by the public for public use.

In 1922, in the case of State, ex rel. Shafer, v. Otter, County Surveyor, 106 Ohio St., 415, 140 N. E., 399, this court overruled Cincinnati, L. & N. Ry. Co. v. City of Cincinnati, supra, and paragraph one of the syllabus of the case of City of Dayton v. Bauman, supra, and approved and followed the case of City of Cleveland v. Wick, supra.

In the opinion in the Otter case, Judge Robinson said, on page 433 :

“On the other hand the doctrine of Cleveland v. Wick, supra, in its practical operation works evenhanded justice to all. The property owner under the Constitution receives full compensation for the lands taken without deduction for benefit. He then has parted with his land, and has in its place its value in money, and, as to his remaining lands, he is in exactly the same position as his neighbors. If such remaining lands and the lands of his neighbors receive special benefits, benefits different from and in addition to the benefits which he and his neighbors received as members of the general public, there is, on principle, no *284 reason why such lands should not bear ratably and in proportion to special benefits an assessment therefor.”

Thus,. under the law of Ohio, according to this court’s last declaration and, as we view it, the sounder reasoning, where an owner has been paid the full value of property taken from him by condemnation and his remaining land is specially benefited in the same way as adjoining lands by the improvement made, the municipality has the power to make an assessment for such special benefits even though such assessment covers a part of the cost of the land taken, provided the assessment is not greater than the value of the special benefit.

In the instant case, Pickering contends that the city has already collected from it the value of the special benefit. Pickering’s theory is that, because the court in the condemnation proceedings charged the jury as quoted above, the jury must have deducted the value of the special benefits for which the city assessed Pickering from the gross damage to the residue.

Pickering contends that, when the jury in the cony demnation proceedings returned its verdict after having been instructed as above set out, the issue as to the value of the special benefits to its residue property was settled and adjudicated, and cites numerous authorities to the effect that if a party accepts the benefit of a judgment he will be estopped to deny its validity and force, and that a party by receiving benefits under a judgment is estopped to- deny any of its expressed or implied terms.

There is no quarrel with the authorities cited by Pickering and they would be persuasive if the assumption made by Pickering were correct, to wit, that under the instruction of the court in the condemnation proceedings, the jury did deduct from Pickering’s award the amount of the special benefit to Pickering’s residue property from the completed East Fifth street.

*285 At the time of the condemnation proceedings, the new East Fifth street had not been built and the record in the instant case does not disclose that there was submitted to the jury in the condemnation proceedings any evidence of the nature, the extent, the cost or value of the benefit of the completed East Fifth street upon contiguous property.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E.2d 563, 149 Ohio St. 275, 149 Ohio St. (N.S.) 275, 36 Ohio Op. 577, 1948 Ohio LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickering-hardware-co-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohio-1948.