Seifert v. Weidner

12 Ohio C.C. 1
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio C.C. 1 (Seifert v. Weidner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seifert v. Weidner, 12 Ohio C.C. 1 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Summers J.

The question to be determined is the constitutionality of the act of the general assembly, passed March 27, 1893, entitled “An act to authorize the boards of city affairs in cities of the second grade, second class, to contract for the removal and disposition of garbage, night soil, dead animals and animal offal, and to erect and maintain garbage crematories or furnaces for such purposes. ’ ’ 90 Ohio Local Laws, 375.

The plaintiffs, in their petition, aver that they are residents and taxpayers of the city of Dayton; that they had in writing requested the solicitor to bring suit, and that the defendant Weidner, and others of the defendants, compose the board of city affairs of said city; that said board has entered into a contract with The Dixon Sanitary Crematory Company for the construction of a crematory; that bonds [2]*2of said city have been sold to pay for the same, and that the city is about to levy a tax to pay said bonds, and for the removal of garbage under said act, which it avers is in contravention of section 26 of article 2, and of section 1 of article 13, of the constitution, Dayton being the only city of the second grade'of the second class; and they pray for an injunction restraining the city from levying any tax to pay said bonds or to carry out the provisions of the act, and for a rescission of the contract for the construction of the crematory.

A demurrer to the petition was filed and overruled, and a temporary injunction allowed, and an answer was then filed averring that the bonds had been sold and the money paid into the city treasury; and that the contract for the crematory had been entered into before the written request was made upon the city solicitor; states facts showing the regularity of all proceedings under the act, and avers that the city has a population of 79,331; that Montgomery county is densely populated; that the city cannot, unless permitted to build a crematory, otherwise dispose of its garbage than by dumping it in the river, wüereby it is polluted and the public health endangered.

To this answer a general demurrer was interposed and sustained, and the injunction made perpetual, and.the case appealed to this court.

Section 1 of the act in question provides: “That boards of city affairs in all cities of the second grade, second class, be, and they hereby are authorized to contract” for the removal of garbage.

Section 2. That they may, when in their judgment the best interests of the city will be subserved thereby, build crematories.

Section 3. That they may issue bonds for that purpose.

Section 4. That the city council of any such city may levy a tax to pay the bonds and interest thereon, and

[3]*3Section 5. That in any such city, when the board of city affairs may build and equip such garbage crematory or crematories, furnace or furnaces, the city council of such city may levy a tax to operate the same.

The act is published in the volume containing the local laws of 1893, and under its title is the word [Dayton] in brackets.

The act confers corporate power, and its constitutionality depends upon the validity of the system of classification of cities adopted by the general assembly; for Dayton is the only city in the second grade of the second class, and if such classification is not warranted, then the act is special and confers corporate power in violation of article 13, section 1, of the constitution, which provides that, “the general assembly shall pass no special act conferring corporate powers.”

The present system of classification of municipal corporations into cities, villages and hamlets, and the division of cities into cities of the first class, first, second and third gradps, and into cities of the second class, first, second, third and fourth grades, was first adopted with the revision of the statutes in 1880, and Dayton was then, now is, and ever since has been, the only city of the second grade of he second class.

The provision in the Revised Statutes of 1880 was, “Section 1548. Existing corporations organized as cities of the second class, shall remain such until they become cities of the first class, and their grades, and the grades of those which may be, or may become, cities of the second class, shall be determined as follows: those which on the first day of July, last, had, and those which, on the first day of July in any year, have, when ascertained in the way mentioned in the last section, more than thirty thousand five hundred, and less than thirty-one thousand five hundred inhabitants, shall constitute the first grade; those which on the first day [4]*4of July last, had, and those which, on the first day of July in any year, have, when ascertained in the same way, more than twenty thousand, and less than thirty thousand five hundred inhabitants, shall constitute the second grade.”

The system then adopted has been upheld by repeated decisions of the supreme court.

Under the decisions an act which confers corporate power upon all the cities of one of the grades of one of the classes of cities into which they have been so divided by the general assembly, or which relates to the administration by them of their government, is not in contravention of section 6 of article 13, which provides that the general assembly shall, provide for the organization of cities and villages by general laws, or of section 1 of article 13, which provides that the general assembly shall pass no special act conferring corporate powers, or of section 26 of article 2, which provides that laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state, although there may be [but one city in such grade, unless the act is so limited in its provisions that it cannot apply to cities thereafter coming into that grade.

In State ex rel. Attorney General v. Hawkins, 44 Ohio St. 98, it is held that, ‘‘The act of the general assembly, passed April 3, 1885. (82 Ohio Laws, 101-11), conferring, certain corporate powers on cities of the first grade of the first class, is one of a general, and not of a special, nature; and, therefore, not in conflict with article 13, section 1, of the constitution, prohibiting the passage of special acts conferring such powers.”

And in The State ex rel. Attorney General v. Hudson, 44 Ohio St. 137, it is held that: ‘‘The act of April 3,. 1885 (82 Ohio Laws, 101),providing for a police force in ‘cities of the first grade of the first class,” applies to all cities of that grade and class in the state, and is a law of a general nature, having a uniform operation throughout the state, and is constitutional.”

[5]*5In The State ex rel. v. Smith et al., 48 Ohio St. 211, it is held that: “A statute applicable only to a particular ■city in the grade and class to which it belongs, and which cannot, by reason of its provisions,be adapted to any other city in the same grade and class, is special in its nature, and not general, and where corporate power is conferred thereby, is invalid.”

. In The State v. Pugh, 43 Ohio St. 98, the act under consideration, providing for the reorganization of cities of the first grade of the second class, was held invalid for the reason that its provisions so limited it that it would not apply to cities thereafter coming into that grade, and Columbus then being the only city in that grade and class, the act was special.

It is unnecessary, however, to review the many decisions upon this question.

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Related

Bucklin v. State
20 Ohio St. 18 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1851)
State ex rel. Attorney-General v. Covington
29 Ohio St. 102 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio C.C. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seifert-v-weidner-ohiocirct-1896.