Plessner v. Pray

6 Ohio N.P. 444
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 444 (Plessner v. Pray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plessner v. Pray, 6 Ohio N.P. 444 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Pratt, J.

(orally).

Last night I examined this matter, so far as I had time to do so, it being an application for a preliminary injunction against the board of commissioners of Lucas county. It is perhaps one cf the misfortunes of the position which a judge occupies, that he is frequently called upon to decide important matters like this with very little opportunity for examination; and,, where the point is one which involves the action cf public officers, in the performance of their official duties, it is very important that the court should not overstep the lines of its proper jurisdiction. These public officials are elected by the people and are entrusted with certain discretion, and it is not tne business of the courts to interfere with that discretion, unless there has been a clear abuse of their legal power, or a gross disregard of the proper exercise of their discretion. In a case which has been referred to by counsel, Commissioners v. Pargillis, 10 Circuit Court Rep., 376, and which is perhaps the controlling case so far as the matter now before me is concerned, Judge Haynes says on page 387: “Courts are to exercise certain. judicial powers, and generally speaking, they are well known and understood ;and county commissioners have certain powers, and those powers are vested in no other body. The courts cannot reach or control them in the exercise of the power conferred upon them, as I understand the law, unless by some act the commissioners have brought themselves within the judicial cognizance of the courts, as, for instance in matters cf fraud.

“The courts have a right under the statute, where officials are proceeding to make an illegal contract, to interfere and enjoin. Possibly they have the right to some extent to interfere’5" where there is a gross abuse of power, etc.

These are general principles, well understood by every lawyer; and, in the hasty examination which I have-been 'able to make in this case, it has-been made with a view to observing these lines of demarkation between the powers of the oourt and the powers of the commissioners. The statutes pertaining to this matter come frequently under the cognizance of the courts and [445]*445lawyers. I have had frequent occasion to examine them, in the course of practice, but still find that every tiuie a lawyer looks at them he has got to go over them anew and as tnough he had never seen them before. They are lengthy and complicated in their provisions, and the question is, what do they exactly mean and what is their intent? In the arguments, I have been referred especially to secs. 794, 795, 799, 785 and 851. Section 785 is relied upon strongly, by counsel for the plaintiff. It follows, and as I read it, has reference to sect. 782 and 784, which plainly relate to improvements when a public building is being erected by the state, not having any reference to county commissioners and their duties If you should take out from these sections some particular expressions, it would be easy to infer and apparently prove that I am wrong in this view; but, to look them all through and examine them one in connection with another, I think it is fairly conclusive that secs. 782 to 798, inclusive, relate to buildings and improvements being constructed by the state, and certainly have no necessary reference to anything being done by the county commissioners.

Sections 794 to 808 apply to buildings and improvements being erected by-the county commissioners. That is not the general county commissioners statute, but it has a special class of sections providing for buildings being erected by county commissioners and the purchase of materials, etc. These last sections are all intended to be embraced in an act passed in the year 1888,wrhich repealed these old sections and amended sections, and was followed up by a section which was not put into the revision of 1890, as though it were a matter of no importance; but it was a general section, known as sec. 2, though I do not think it outs any figure here, which says that these sections shall apply to all buildings. I presume the revisers supposed that was sufficiently expressed in the statute itself.

The question here is, whether this work — the building of these elevators for this building — comes within the restrictive provisions of these sections;. especially section 798, which requires that in all contracts amounting to a thousand dollars, there shall be plans and specifications provided and bids, advertised for for the period of four-weeks before the letting of the work.

New we have a decision by our own circuit court in the case to which I have referred, from Wood county; and, when our circuit court speaks — as I had occasion recently to remark in another case — -it is the business of this court simply to follow it, and if this court commits an error and does not understand what the circuit court has decided, it is proper for the aggrieved party to go to that court and get it corrected.

In the Wood county case, Commissioners v. Pargilis, supra, the thing which was being put into the courthouse, which they were building under tho power granted to them by a special act, passed in the same year as our special statute — differing from it in some respects, but, so far as the power-to erect a courthouse is concerned, although vested in a different sort of a body, containing simply the general-provisions and tnus both are presumed to he subject to the general provisions of the statute. In that case, the court was troubled with a great many questions which, happily, we do not have here. But the question as to whether it was necessary to advertise 'for the furnishing of the heating apparatus, claimed in that case, and the question made in this case as to whether there .is a limitation upon the commissioners in the letting of a contract for these elevators, involve the same principle and refer to the same class of matters, both being mechanical contrivances or apparatus or improvements, and it is not important, perhaps, to inquire whether they are controlled by patents or controlled by particular individuals, or particular firms,and as to which it may be utterly impossible that there shall be competition. This is a matter that has been discussed frequently by different courts. I have not looked up the subject now, but have been ever it heretofore — as to whether there can be [446]*446•competition. Of course, the patent laws are expressly made for the purpose of giving rights to certain parties that are exclusive, and exclude competition; and that is true, in a commercial sense, with a great many concerns that are manufacturing different mechanical contrivances, where it is a matter of common knowledge that they rely upon the fact that they make them and that no one else cau compete with them.

In the case in Wood county, supra, there had been no attempt to comply with those provisions of the statute. In this case, there was an apparent compliance with the provisions of this statute, supposing, or at least reading it as coming within the provisions of the statute; but, after the bids were in, they were all rejected and the bids returned — of course I take it that the allegations of the petition are true in these matters, because they stand upon the petition— the bids were returned to the respective parties and the situation was the same as though there never bad been any bids made or any advertisement, and it stands, so far as the principle is concerned, exactly upon the same ground as the Wood county case, and the circuit court, sc far as these cases are concerned, disposes of the matter that we have here in question in two paragraphs, and brief ones at that, on page 888.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plessner-v-pray-ohctcompllucas-1896.