Reusch v. Northern Ohio Traction & Light Co.

19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1
CourtSummit Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1 (Reusch v. Northern Ohio Traction & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reusch v. Northern Ohio Traction & Light Co., 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

This proceeding in error had its inception in an action begun by the defendant in error, the Northern Ohio Traction & Light Company, in the Probate Court of Summit County, to appropriate land belonging to Christian Reusch, the plaintiff in error, for a right-of-way. A preliminary hearing was had in the probate court as required by law and the questions at issue in that hearing having been decided in favor of the plaintiff in that action, a jury was called to assess the damages for the land taken. After the jury had returned a verdict assessing the damages for the taking of the land, the defendant in the action filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the probate court and judgment entered for the plaintiff.

Error was then prosecuted by said defendant to the court of common pleas to reverse the judgment of the probate court. In the court of common pleas the petition in error was dismissed and the judgment of the lower court affirmed, and it is to review the action of the court of common pleas that the plaintiff in error brings this proceeding in error.

At the outset, it is urged by the defendant in error that the plaintiff in error is without standing in this court to ask for a review of any errors which the probate court may have committed in the preliminary hearing, for the reason that the bill of exceptions was not taken in time to preserve the case as to the preliminary hearing for review. A determination of the merits of this contention is therefore necessary at this time. Section 1104-6, G-eneral Code, provides:

[3]*3“On the day named in a summons first served, or publication first completed, the probate judge shall hear and determine the questions of the existence of the corporation, its right to make the appropriation, its inability to agree with the owner, and the necessity for the appropriation. Upon all these questions the burden of proof shall be upon the corporation, and any interested persons shall be heard. ”

Exceptions were duly taken by the plaintiff in error to the findings of the probate court on the preliminary questions, which said court was required to determine under the section of the statutes quoted, to the overruling of a motion for a new trial and to the entry of the judgment for appropriation. The bill of exceptions was allowed, signed and filed within the time required by law if the time is to date from the overruling of the motion for a new trial; but if, on the contrary, the time is to be computed from the day upon which the preliminary and jurisdictional questions were determined, it was not filed in time, and, in the latter event, there could be no review of the matters involved in such preliminary hearing.

In The Pittsburgh, Cleveland & Toledo Railroad Co. v. Tod, 72 O. S., 156, it was held:

“In proceedings for the appropriation of property by a private corporation, the determination of the preliminary questions by the probate judge, as required by Section 6420, Revised Statutes, may be reviewed on error.
“A motion for a new trial, or rehearing, of such preliminary questions is not necessary.
“The time within which a bill of exceptions on such hearing should be taken is to be computed from the day on which said questions are determined, if no motion for a new trial is filed, and if a motion for a new trial is filed, from the day the motion for a new trial is overruled.”

In The Dayton & Union Railroad Company v. The Dayton & Muncie Traction Company, 72 O. S., 429, the syllabus reads as follows:

“Although it may not be necessary to file a motion for a new-trial at the time of the hearing of the preliminary questions in an appropriation proceeding, under Section 6420, Revised Statutes, in order to bring upon the record errors occurring upon [4]*4such hearing; yet if such errors come within any of the causes for a new trial as defined in Section 5305, Revised Statutes, the aggrieved party may include the same in a motion for a new trial to be filed within ten days after the verdict is rendered in such appropriation proceedings, as provided in Section 6432, Revised Statutes. Weaver v. Columbus, Shawnee & Hocking Valley Railway Co., 55 Ohio St., 491, approved and followed.
' ‘ If such motion for a new trial should be overruled, the time for filing a bill of exceptions must be reckoned from the date of the overruling of the motion for a new trial.”

If, therefore, the errors sought to be reviewed by motion for a new trial were such as came within any of the causes for a new trial, as defined in Section 5305, Revised Statutes, now Section 11576, General Code, the time within which the bill of exceptions should be filed to secure a review of such errors should date from the overruling of the motion for a new trial, because by such motion the matters governed by it and embraced within the provisions of Section 11576, General Code, while having once been passed upon by the trial court were nevertheless by such motion again brought to the attention and review of the court.

The motion filed in the probate court by the plaintiff in error specified the following grounds:

First, the petitioner has no right to make the appropriation sought to be made herein.

Second, there is no necessity for the appropriation herein sought.

Third, the court is without authority to impanel a jury in this case.

These grounds in the language stated are not found in Section 11576, General Code; but, in our opinion, the questions raised by this motion could have been raised equally as well if the plaintiff in error had resorted to the language of the sixth subdivision of Section 11576, General Code, which is “that the verdict, report or decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence, or is contrary to law”; or if he had made subdivision eight of said section the .ground of his motion for a new trial, which reads: “Error of law occurring at' the trial and excepted to by the party making the application.”

[5]*5It is not necessary that a motion for .a new trial follow the exact language of the statute. If the causes enumerated as grounds for a new trial are such as are embraced within’ the meaning of the statute, it is sufficient.

We conclude, therefore, that the bill of exceptions was filed within the time required by law, and that it preserved for review the errors alleged to have occurred in the preliminary or jurisdictional hearing, embraced within the motion for a new trial.

The errors alleged to have occurred on the preliminary hearing in the probate court are:

First, that the court erred in determining that the plaintiff there had the right to make the appropriation sought; and

Second, that the court erred in determining the question of the necessity for the appropriation in favor of the plaintiff.

Third, that the findings of the probate court are insufficient.

Section 9119, General Code, as amended May 10, 1910 (101 O. L., 622), reads as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reusch-v-northern-ohio-traction-light-co-ohcirctsummit-1912.