Price v. Toledo

15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 617, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 57, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 617 (Price v. Toledo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Toledo, 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 617, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 57, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

HULL, J.

This action was brought by Luella Price and twenty others to enjoin the city of Toledo and its officials from levying and collecting a certain assessment made for a pavement laid on Junction avenue in the' city of Toledo. The assessment was made on the rule of benefits, not by the foot front. It is claimed that there were some irregularities in the proceedings, but it is complained chiefly that the assessment was in excess of the benefits and that, therefore, its collection should be enjoined. It is claimed that the benefits were very much below the amount of the assessments. The street (Junction avenue) is in the westerly part of the city and runs through what is spoken of as the “Polish settlement,” most of the people living in that vicinity being Polanders and owning small lots, worth from $200 up to $300 or $400, and, in some cases, a little beyond that, without the buildings, and it is urged that this assessment is very oppressive. It is claimed that notices were not given to some of the plaintiffs, as required by Sec. 2304 Rev. Stat. [repealed 96 O. L. 99; see Sec. 1536-212 Rev. Stat.J, of the resolution passed by the city council declaring the necessity of this improvement. Mr. Taylor claims that there was no notice given to him. We find, however, that he was at the time living in a hotel which was his home, and the notice was given to the clerk of the hotel, pursuant to his directions, he having directed the clerk to bring such notices to his room, and, after a time, directed that the notices should be left at the office of the Detwiler company, or taken to that office. The officer whose duty it was to leave the notices testifies to leaving them with the hotel clerk and we are of the opinion that the notice was given in accordance with the statute. There were objections by some of the other plaintiffs that they were not served with notice, but their testimony is indefinite; some say they cannot remember whether they received notice or not, but in the case of each one Mr. Voight testifies positively that he either served him personally or left the notices at his place of residence or where he had been directed to leave them, and we find and hold that notices were served upon each one of these parties as required by law, and, therefore, that the city had jurisdiction to proceed. Under a recent decision, Joyce v. Barron, 67 Ohio St. 264 [65 N. E. Rep. 1001], it was held by the Supreme Court that failure to give this notice is fatal; that no assessment can be made without it; that it does not simply leave open the claim of the party for damages, but that the notice is a prerequisite to the city obtaining jurisdiction over the party and his property. We hold in this case, however, that notice was in fact given.

[620]*620Another objection to this assessment, as to five of the lots, is, that they do not abut upon the street improved. They did at one time abut upon the street, the property being appropriated for the street by the city, but, some time afterwards, a portion (a narrow, wedge-shaped strip along the side of the street), was vacated so as to straighten the lines of •the street, this strip being eight or ten feet wide at one end and running down to a point at the other end; and lying in front of five of these lots; and it is urged that they cannot be assessed because they do not now abut upon this street. We hold, however, that this cannot be maintained. This strip of land was vacated by the city and no longer held for street purposes. It belonged at the time it was taken by the city to lots other than those in question in this case and lying in front of them; but, upon the vacation of this strip the title reverted, not to the original owners, but to the owners of the lots that did abut and bound the street before the vacation. It has been held in several cases that the title in such case reverts to the owners of the lots that did abut immediately upon the street before such strip was vacated. This question is discussed very fully in a well considered opinion by Judge Shearer in Stevens v. Shannon, 3 Circ. Dec. 386 (6 R. 142). The first paragraph of the syllabus is:

“The vacation of the streets and alleys of a duly established addition to a municipal corporation extinguishes the interest of the public therein; and the title to such streets and alleys vest's in the owners of the abutting lots.”

This case was approved by the Supreme Court in Kerr v. Commissioners, 51 Ohio St. 593 and in Stephens v. Taylor, 51 Ohio St. 593. Kinnear Mfg. Co. v. Beatty, 65 Ohio St. 264 [62 N. E. Rep. 341; 87 Am. St. Rep. 600], is also in point on this question. There is no question but that the title to this property is in these lotowners, and the effect of it is that this adds to their lots — they have that much more property— and brings them to the street; it is immaterial that this strip still goes under the numbers of the lots that it .formerly belonged to; the truth and fact is that it has become a part of the lots of these owners adjoining it, and in the improvement of the street these lots are to be regarded as bounding and abutting upon the street. They do in fact abut upon the street and have all the. advantages and benefits of it and there would be neither justice nor equity in holding that they cannot be assessed for the improvement of the street, and we hold that they may be.

We now come to the question whether this assessment was so excessive that the court can interfere in behalf .of these plaintiffs. It is claimed that it is largely in excess of the benefits. This assessment was made under [621]*621Secs. 2271 and 2272 Rev. Stat., which are special acts applying only to the city of-Toledo, allowing an assessment of twenty-five per cent, upon the value of the property after the improvement, but subject to the general rule that the assessment shall not exceed the benefit. There is a provision in Sec. 2272 Rev. Stat., however, that if three-fourths of the owners of the property upon a street petition for an improvement the owner signing the petition may be assessed in any amount — to the full value of his property, or even twice its value, but probably the courts would hold that it could not be assessed for more than the value, of a man’s property, for that would perhaps be confiscation. But in this case it is claimed by the city that the assessment did not exceed twenty-five per cent, of the value of the property after the improvement was made and, further, that the assessment does not exceed the benefits.' That was a question of fact contested on the trial before us and witnesses were called.

There are several decisions in this-state on this question of assessments and the powers of a municipality in these matters and the power of the courts and the limitations upon municipal power in making assessments. The fundamental principle, as stated by many of the decisions, is that the right to assess rests upon the basis of benefits to the property assessed; that the right is given to a municipality by reason of' the fact that the property is specially benefited by the assessment; this is the “fundamental principle.” If it were not for that — if it were not thus benefited, it would be taking property without due process of law and making a man pay for an improvement by the municipality, which was of no special benefit to him, which would be the taking of property for public uses without compensation, and all these statutes and cases recognize this general principle.

As to just what the powers of the courts are in these matters, no definite rule has been laid down, perhaps, but the general question has been discussed in several cases. One is Walsh v. Barron, 61 Ohio St. 15 [55 N. E. Rep.

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Related

Douglass v. County of Pike
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68 N.E. 1 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 617, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 57, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-toledo-ohcirctlucas-1903.