Raynolds v. Cleveland (City)

33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 327, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 228
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 327 (Raynolds v. Cleveland (City)) 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 v. Cleveland (City), 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 327, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 228 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

This canse is a tax-payer’s action wherein the main relief sought is an injunction prohibiting the Forest City Ry. from exercising the right, attempted to be granted to it by the ordinance of the city of Cleveland of January 11, 1904, to use, for street railway purposes, certain portions of Erie street, Central avenue, and Quincy street in said city, from and after March 22, 1905, and to acquire for the same purposes the Cleveland Electric Ry’s fixed property then and now located on said streets.

It is claimed that said ordinance is void, as being an abuse by the city of its corporate powers in three particulars, to wit:

1. That it is a violation of the city’s subsisting contract obligations to the Cleveland Electric Ry. with respect to said streets, by attempting prematurely to terminate the same; 2. That it provides for the taking of the Cleveland Electric Ry. property on said streets without due process of law; 3. That it attempts to renew the city’s grant of permission for the use of said street for street railway purposes to a corporation which is a stranger to the original grant.

For convenience we shall consider the last claim first.

The power, which the city has sought to exercise, is defined in the last clause of Sec. 1536-184 R. S. (See. 3768 G. C.):

[328]*328“No corporation, individual or individuals, shall perform any work in the construction of a street railroad, until application for leave is made to the council in writing, and the council by ordinance shall have granted permission, and prescribed the terms and conditions upon, and the manner in which the road shall be constructed and operated and the streets and alleys which shall be used and occupied thereof, but the council may renew any such grant as it expires upon such conditions as may be considered conducive to the public interest.”

The plaintiff contends that the renewal of a grant can only be made to a part-/ to the original grant, this being the ordinary and natural meaning of the words used in the statute, and in accord with the purpose of the legislature, frequently manifested to favor the unification of different street railway routes in the same city into a system that will enable passengers, by means of transfers and without additional fare, to ride whithersoever they will upon such system, irrespective of the termini of its original or constituent routes. And because the length of such original routes is apt to be rendered inadequate by reason of the city’s natural growth and spread, and because the grants for such original routes may expire at different times, the Legislature has provided for the extension of routes and for the renewal of grants by a city, without its having to jeopardize the unity of its street railway system by a general summons to the bidding post.

In other words, plaintiff’s contention is that the very reason for permitting non-competitive extensions and renewals is to enable cities to encourage and preserve the unity of their respective street railway systems for the convenience of the public.

The defendants, however, claim that Sec. 1536-184 (3768) is not a donation but a mere limitation of power, and that the full effect of the sentence, “But the council may renew any such grant at its expiration upon such conditions as may be considered conducive of public interest,” is exhausted when it is construed to mean that the restrictions imposed by the preceding sentence shall not be held to apply to the situation at the expiration of the grant. It is suggested also that a city’s grant of permission to use its streets for street railway purposes does not, of itself, constitute a contract implying a particular grantee, even though it necessarily results in such a contract; but that [329]*329the granting of permission-is essentially impersonal, and may inure to anyone qualified to make use of it, though, in fact, it does inure only to the one ascertained by the selective process provided in Sec. 1536-185 R. S. (Sec. 3769 G. C. et seq.). And if this be true, it is argued further, that the renewal of such grant of permission is likewise impersonal in its nature and may inure to the foi’mer grantee, or to a stranger, as the city may elect. In other words, it is claimed that a grant, or renewal, is a mere right or res, and not essentially a relation between parties.

And it is urged that this construction is not only wan-ranted by the letter of the law, but that it is clearly in the public interest; for otherwise a city’s existing street railway system has an unfair advantage in negotiating the terms and conditions of renewals. But if the law may be construed to mean that a city in providing for the renewal of an expiring grant is given a free hand for negotiation as to both terms and parties, it may drive a better bargain in its attempt to secure better terms and conditions without sacrificing the unity of the existing system or producing an interregnum, unless and until the latter becomes the more desirable course for the public interest.

Before resorting to considerations of this sort in aid of our interpretation of this statute, we must first consider whether its meaning is fairly open to doubt. At the outset it may be said that we entertain no doubt that Sec. 1536-184 (3768) is to be construed as a donation of power to municipal corporations rather than as a limitation of plenary power elsewhere donated. It is true that Secs. 1536-66 (3584) and 1536-131 (3714) confer upon municipal corporations plenary powers of control over their streets and vest in them the fee thereof, in trust for and to the use of the public for street purposes subject to the right of the state to direct the mode of administering that trust, or even to administer it for itself. So far as the state has undertaken to do this, its action is, of course, binding on the corporation. And it has so undertaken with respect to certain phases of the general street purpose, notably in the case of the right of the telephone companies to use city streets. This right the state has seen fit to confer by direct grant upon the companies themselves, without the agency or even the consent of its municipal [330]*330corporations. Farmer v. Columbiana Co. Tel. Co., 72 Ohio St. 526 [74 N. E. 1078]; State v. Toledo Rome Tel. Co., 72 Ohio St. 60 [74 N. E. 162]; Zanesville v. Zanesville Telegraph & Telephone Co., 64 Ohio St. 67 [59 N. E. 781; 52 L. R. A. 150; 83 Am. St. 725].

Por reasons hereinafter more clearly appearing, we have reached the conclusion that, in a somewhat analogous manner, the state has also excepted from its general grant to municipal corporations of the power of control over their streets, that other phase of the general street purpose here under consideration, viz: the use thereof for street railway purposes. And Sections 1536-184 et seq., operate by way of a new and distinct grant of power to municipal corporations to deal with that subject to the extent and in the manner therein prescribed.

The fact that, in the exercise of that power, they may contract with street railway corporations as to the terms and conditions of the latter’s use of the streets, makes possible paving, sprinkling and the like. But Secs. 1536-184 et seq., can not properly be construed as mere limitations on the general power conferred by Secs. 1536-66 and 1536-131. This we take to be the true bearing of the decision in Cincinnati Street Ry. v. Smith, 29 Ohio St. 291.

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

Related

Cincinnati Street Railroad v. Smith
29 Ohio St. 291 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 327, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raynolds-v-cleveland-city-ohcirctcuyahoga-1905.