Reese v. City of Cleveland

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193, 18 Ohio Dec. 12, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 3
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMay 18, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193 (Reese v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reese v. City of Cleveland, 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193, 18 Ohio Dec. 12, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 3 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Chapman, J.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff is in possession of a two story brick building abutting on Euclid avenue in the city of Cleveland; that he is conducting a salesroom for automobiles, especially the “Royal”; that he has caused to be erected at right angles to the face of said building an electric sign with the word “Royal” in electrically illuminated letters; that said sign, projects into the street and over the portion thereof used as a sidewalk about ten feet and is about fourteen feet above the sidewalk; that he had received a permit from the board of public [194]*194service to erect a sign of the character stated, but to project over the street only about six feet; that the board is threatening to remove said sign for the reason that it exceeded one quarter of the width of said sidewalk, as provided in said permit. Plaintiff alleges that the city council by ordinance had ordained the mode and manner in which electric signs may be erected and their dimensions, the manner and time of lighting and the length of time they shall remain lighted, and that the plaintiff’s sign in all respects is in accordance with the provisions of the ordinance, and plaintiff asks that the city and the board be enjoined from removing said sign.

To this petition the city demurs, and therefore admits all the facts stated in the petition. So far as the right of the board of public service to prescribe different provisions or regulations for the construction of signs than those provided by the ordinance, it is conceded that the board has no such right, and that the fact that this sign is not in accordance with the permit gives neither the city nor the board any right to remove it. The authority of the board is purely administrative and not legislative and its duty is discharged and its powers exhausted when it sees that the provisions of the laws and ordinances are enforced, and it can not impose new or different conditions to suit its own ideas.

But it is contended by the city that neither the city itself nor the council can authorize or permit signs or other obstructions to be placed in its streets, and it is therefore contended that an abutting owner has no right to place such signs over a street, even under an ordinance regulating such structures and permitting their erection. The city contends that all structures projecting into or over a public street, of whatever character, erected by private owners abutting on the street for private uses and purposes, are nuisances which the city is bound by law to remove, and that a private owner has no right to erect any such structures in a public street.

It is conceded by the plaintiff that the council has the right to regulate such structures and, if in the exercise of a reasonable discretion, to prohibit their erection, but plaintiff contends that [195]*195until council has so prohibited such structures, a private owner may erect and maintain them, in the reasonable exercise of his right in the street; that this right is incident to his ownership of the abutting property.

The question presented seems to call for a determination and to depend largely upon the respective rights of the city and of abutting owners in public streets.

In this state cities may acquire rights in respect to public streets in three different modes:

1. By extension of its boundaries so as to include country roads.

2. By dedication by private owners and acceptance by council.

3. By condemnation for street purposes.

In the first ease the fee of the street remains in the abutting ownei’s. In the second and third the fee of the street is in the city in trust for street purposes. Traction Co. v. Parish, 67 O. S., 181-190.

But, as said by Ranney, J., in Street Railway Co. v. Cumminsville, 14 O. S., 523, at 544:

“In either of the modes known to our laws by which lands are acquired for a public highway, an interest, commensurate with the attainments of the objects of the acquisition, vests in the public at large and is necessarily placed under the exclusive control of the law-making power: Whatever is fairly within the grant, whether voluntary or forced and necessary to its beneficial enjoyment, is within the legal operation of the instrument or proceeding by which it is effected.”

That a fee, in the ordinary legal use of that word, is in the city seems not to be justified by any of our decisions. So far as I can find, it has always been said that “the fee is in the city in trust for street purposes,” and, as pointed out by Ranney, the extent of the public right is limited to whatever is fairly within the grant and necessary to its beneficial enjoyment. Nothing more is taken from the property owner by condemnation- or by voluntary dedication than in the case of country roads. It seems that the limit of the public light must be [196]*196the same in all eases. Ranney, J., has described the limit of the public right in the case of country roads. 2 O. S., 419, at 426:

“The public has acquired, and, we are bound to- suppose, had paid for, to the satisfaction of the owners, a perpetual easement in the land covered by the road, which gave the right to all persons to pass and repass over it at pleasure, either on foot or by any mode of conveyance they might see fit to employ; and also the right to improve it, for that purpose, in any manner that might be thought, by the Legislature, most conducive to the end in view, and would best subserve the interests and convenience of the public at large.

“The owners retained the fee of the land subject to the easement, and the right to use it in any manner not inconsistent with the full and perfect enjoyment, by the public, of the interest acquired by it, so long as it continued to be used for that purpose.”

Again Ranney says, in Traction Co. v. Cumminsville, 14 O. S., 523, at 546:

“The distinction lies between these things which fairly belong to the grant, and those which are reserved to the owner, or by law attach as incidents to his property. For this purpose, there is no occasion to distinguish between lands acquired for ordinary highways, leaving the fee in the owner, and lands dedicated for streets in towns, where the fee vests in the municipal corporation, in trust to answer the purposes of the use. In either case, the interest acquired and used by the public at large, is an easement of a definite character and held for the attainment of known objects; and in either case, ‘distinct from the right of the. public to use the street, is the right and interest of the owners of lots adjacent.’ ”

And in Crawford v. Village of Delaware, 7 O. S., 495, at 496, this language is used:

“Distinct from the right of the public to use a street, is the right and interest of the owners of lots adjacent. The latter have a peculiar interest in the street, which neither the local nor the general public can pretend to claim: a private right of the • nature of an incorporated hereditament, legally attached to their 'contiguous grounds, and the erections thereon; an incidental title to certain facilities and franchises, assured to them by contracts and by law, and without which their property [197]*197would be comparatively of little value.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193, 18 Ohio Dec. 12, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reese-v-city-of-cleveland-ohctcomplcuyaho-1907.