Rogers v. City of Cincinnati

22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 401
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedApril 3, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 401 (Rogers v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. City of Cincinnati, 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 401 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Gusweiler,- J.

This cause is before the court upon an application of the plaintiff for a restraining order to enjoin the enforcement of Ordinance 253-1918 City of Cincinnati, by a challenge of the validity of said ordinance revising the fifty year franchise of The Cincinnati Street Railway Company. It is claimed that the City of [402]*402Cincinnati had no authority to pass such an ordinance and that in various respects said ordinance is invalid.

The question as to what might be a fair, reasonable rate of passenger car fare charge is not in issue. Our sole matter of concern involves the validity of the passage of Ordinance 253-1918 on August 23, 1918, as a compliance with the provisions of the Rogers law authorizing the fixing of rates of fare at the end of twenty years from the passage of the Act of April 22, 1896 (92 O. L., 277).

I.

As to the first question raised by the plaintiff we note that the Rogers law reads, as found in the Revised Statutes, Section 2505d:

“* * * the municipal corporation in which such street railroad is situated shall have the power at the end of twenty years from the passage of this act and every fifteen years thereafter, to fix the rates of fare, car license fees, percentage tax on gross earnings, transfers and all other terms and conditions on which said railroad is operated in said city.”

Plaintiff contends that the first twenty year period provided for in the Rogers law having expired on April 22, 1916, the passage of said ordinance on August 23, 1918, was too late for the City to exercise its power to revise such rates, etc., ‘‘at the end of twenty years from the passage of this aat.” This contention is based on the theory that ‘‘at the end of” means at the very moment of the expiration of that period. The defendants contend that the words ‘‘at the end of” as used in the Rogers law mean “withim a reasonable time after the expiration of” such time.

The evidence discloses that in 1913 the city council sought a valuation of the property of The Cincinnati Street Railway Company for the purpose of assisting in the revision; that in pursuance thereof, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio handed down a tentative valuation; that on April 18, 1916, the city council passed a resolution finding that it was necessary that the terms and conditions of the grant be revised and changed and fixed April 22, 1916, as the date for commencing public [403]*403hearings thereon; that said hearings and proceedings were continued until the adoption of an ordinance of March 14, 1917, which was held invalid by the Supreme Court about March 5, 1918; that the city immediately resumed its proceedings and adopted the ordinance now in question, which was agreed to by the Street Railway Companies.

With the plaintiff we do not agree on this question. While the defendant’s theory is logical and reasonable, nevertheless we do not feel that the city is bound to act at all during the fifteen years; that it is not bound during said period at any particular moment to act, whether reasonably near the end of twenty years or not. We believe that the proper construction to be placed on this disputed language is such as would give the city the right to act at any time during the fifteen year period or at least within a reasonable time subsequent to the twenty year period, which we find was done in the case at bar. State ex rel Herman, v. The Oakwood Street Railway Company, 11 C.C.(N.S.), 263; affirmed, 81 O. S., 502; Davidson v. Mfg. Co., 99 Mich., 501; La Dow v. Bement & Son, 119 Mich., 685. However, after said decision and the exercise of such right, assuming that the Traction Company accepts the city’s change, then no further change can lawfully be made during the' remainder of the term of said fifteen years.

The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, having accepted the provisions of the original ordinance, effective beginning April 22, 1896, made in pursuance of said Rogers law, we must determine all the issues in this case based upon said ordinance and said Rogers law.

The Legislature of Ohio, in passing the Rogers law, considered fifty years as a reasonable period for the grant of the right to use the streets, etc., of a municipality, but when it came to the exercise of the power to regulate the rates of fare, etc., it realized that fifty years would be an unreasonable period to suspend such power of regulation, and therefore' divided said fifty year period into three periods, namely: First, the period of twenty years and the two periods of fifteen years each. Council had the delegated power of regulating such rates until such time as the city and the company agreed upon a rate mutually satis[404]*404factory. The acceptance of the fifty year franchise by the company resulted in the bargaining away by the City of Cincinnati of its power to regulate for the period of twenty years. At the end of such period the city was vested with two rights:

First. The delegated power to regulate which did not require the consent of the company. In fact, the rate continued to be established contrary to its wishes with the right of the company to file proceedings in court to collect said rate in accordance with the provisions of the Rogers law.

Second. The city could fix a rate satisfactory to the company, and the company accept the same, thereby constituting a contract and suspending the power of the municipality to regulate the rate during the period not exceeding fifteen years as provided by said Rogers law.

Our judgment is that at the expiration of the twenty year period, if the city and the company did not agree as to the rate fixed, said rate would be a regulatory rate and not a contract rate, and council having the power, could change said rate as often as public exigencies required. But as soon as a rate was fixed which was accepted by the company, a contract was thereby created, which can not be changed for the unexpired portion of said fifteen year period. That is, council and the company could agree at any time during said first fifteen year period, but could not exceed a period which would extend beyond the fifteen year period after the expiration of the twenty year period.

The power granted to the City of Cincinnati under the Rogers law to fix rates at the end of twenty years was continuing, we think, until an effectual ordinance was passed by council and accepted by the company resulting in a contract for the remainder of the fifteen year period. In re Railroad Commission Cases, 116 U. S., 307; Providence Bank v. Billing, 4 Peters, U. S., 514; Pond on Public Utilities, Section 499; Omaha Water Company v. Omaha, 147 Fed., 1; Freeport Water Co. v. Freeport City, 180 U. S., 587; Detroit v. Detroit St. Ry. Co., 184 U. S., 368; Home Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 155 Fed., 554. The last sentence of Section 2505d reads:

“Should the parties not agree as to whether said terms are equitable, the same may be submitted to adjudication of a court [405]*405of competent jurisdiction in a suit brought by the company to enjoin the municipal corporation from enforcing the terms so fixed.”

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22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohsuperctcinci-1919.