Raynolds ex rel. Cleveland v. Cleveland

14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 215, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 139
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJune 21, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 215 (Raynolds ex rel. Cleveland v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raynolds ex rel. Cleveland v. Cleveland, 14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 215, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 139 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

CALDWELL, J.

Wm, M. Raynolds, as a taxpayer on behalf of the city of Cleveland, alter making application to the corporation counsel to bring this action, which he refused to do, brings this action on behalf of himself, and says [216]*216that he is a resident and taxpayer of the said city; that the defendant, the city of Cleveland, is a municipal corporation under the laws of Ohio, and is a city of the second grade, first class; that Tom T. Johnson is the duly qualified and acting mayor of said city; that said Johnson, together with the defendants, Harris R. Cooley, Charles P. Salen, Charles W. Tapp, James P. Madigan, John Dunn, and M. W. Beacotn are the duly and legally constituted board of control of said city; and that The People’s Street Railway Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Ohio. And then he sets up his request served upon the city solicitor to bring this action, and the refusal of the city solicitor to do so and his failure to comply with the request. He states that on January 6, 1902, a certain ordinance, known as ordinance No. 35,897-a, and referred to hereinafter as the “establishing ordinance,’’was passed by the council of the city of Cleveland, to establish street railway routes, to provide for granting of a franchise to construct and operate a street railroad thereon, and specifying the manner whereby such franchise should be granted, to the party offering to charge the lowest rates of fare under competitive bidding therefor, and prescribing the terms and conditions under which said street railroad should be constructed and operated; that said ordinance was approved by the mayor of said city on January 7, 1902, and was thereafter published as required by law, and took effect and became in force on January 18, 1902. And then he sets out the “establishing ordinance” in full, and the caption to the same is:

‘‘An ordinance to establish street railroad routes, to provide for granting a franchise to construct and operate a street railroad thereover and specifying the manner whereby said franchise shall be granted to the party offering to charge the lowest rates of fare, under competitive bidding therefor; and to prescribe the terms and conditidns under which said street railroad shall be constructed and operated.”

Then the ordinance provides to establish seventeen diflereut routes, all within the city of Cleveland.

Section 2 provides for advertising lor three consecutive weeks for sealed proposals, to be received at the office of the board of control, cn the fourth Monday, after this ordinance takes effect, to construct and operate a street railroad oyer the routes as established in Sec. 1 hereof; and each and all bids for such street railroad, franchise so proposed to be granted shall be under and subject to the terms and conditions specified in the following sections of this ordinance.

Section 3 provides for the form and words of the bid, and the form is for the bid on a street railroad on routes as the same are described in Sec. 1 of the ordinance, as well as other matters, and the rates of fare [217]*217proposed to be charged, and requires that, accompanying the bid, there shall be $50,000 put up in money, to be forfeited, under the conditions ot said ordinance, if the same are not complied with. ,

Section 4 requires that each bid shall be accompanied by $50,000 in United States notes, national bank notes, or gold or silver certificates, to insure the performance of the contract. And the same section provides that the money accompanying the bid declared to be the lowest and accepted by the city shall be retained and become the property of the city as liquidated damages against said lowest bidder, upon the following conditions: “Said money shall be so retained as liquidated damages upon the failure of said lowest bidder, within ten days alter being declared such lowest bidder, to request in writing lrom the council and the board of control of the city oí Cleveland permission to construct and operate a street railroad over the routes defined in this ordinance.” And that, “Said money shall be retained as liquidated damages as aforesaid upon the failure of said lowest bidder, within ten days after the passage and legal publication ot the ordinance granting permission to construct said six miles of double track, to accept in writing the terms and conditions of said grant.” And, “Said¡ money shall be retained as liquidated damages as aforesaid upon the failure of said lowest bidder, within six months after the passage and legal publication oí the ordinance making said first grant as above specified, to have constructed at least six miles of double track of said street railroad. “On completion within the time specified, of said six miles ot double track, said money shall be returned to said lowest bidder.”

Section 5 provides: “The board of control shall report all bids to the council with a recommendation as to which is the lowest bidder, and the moneys of all other bidders shall be returned to their respective owners immediately after such recommendation.”

Section t> provides: “The party whose bid is accepted by the city, within ten days after the date of being declared the lowest bidder, shall request in writing from the council and the board of control of the city of Cleveland permission to construct and operate a street railroad over the routes defined in this ordinance, and within thirty days after being so declared the lowest bidder said party shall apply in writing for a grant to construct at least six miles of double track and shall lurnish the necessary consents of the abutting property owners to so construct said six miles of double track within said thirty days. Said party shall accept in writing the terms and conditions of the Ordinance making said grant, within ten days after the passage an(| legal publication thereol. and the said six miles of double track shall be constructed within six months after the date of the grant thereof. The said lowest bidder shall [218]*218make application, within six months after the date of said first grant, for permission to construct at least an additional six miles of double track of said street railroad, and shall obtain the necessary consents of the property owners and accept the terms oí the ordinance making said grant the same as specified for said first grant. Said lowest bidder shall continue to make such applications to construct at least six miles of double track, at intervals oí six months, obtain consents and' accept the grants, as above specified, until permission to construct said entire system has been granted. The board of control shall have the power to extend the time for making said applications and obtaining the necessary consent of abutting property owners, and all parts of track shall be constructed, equipped and operated within one year irom the time of the granting of each section, unless prevented by legal proceedings over which said lowest bidder has no control.”

Section 7 grants certain privileges as to property owned by the city-

Section 8 gives the right to the party whose bid is declared to be the lowest, to erect the necessary lines of poles and wires to connect the necessary power-houses with said railroad system, and wherever the said route or routes provide for a private right of way the party so constructing said railroad shall have the right to construct the necessary curve into said private right of way, and to lay said tracks through and across the intervening streets.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 215, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raynolds-ex-rel-cleveland-v-cleveland-ohcirctcuyahoga-1902.