Shook v. Mahoning Valley Sanitary District

166 N.E. 415, 120 Ohio St. 449, 120 Ohio St. (N.S.) 449, 1929 Ohio LEXIS 370
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1929
Docket21500
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 N.E. 415 (Shook v. Mahoning Valley Sanitary District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shook v. Mahoning Valley Sanitary District, 166 N.E. 415, 120 Ohio St. 449, 120 Ohio St. (N.S.) 449, 1929 Ohio LEXIS 370 (Ohio 1929).

Opinion

Marshall, C. J.

Section 6602-35, General Code, provides that a court of common pleas of any county *452 has authority to establish sanitary districts within such county, and that districts partly within and partly without such county may be established by a court comprised of one common pleas judge from each'county having area within the district. Among the purposes for which such a district may be established is that of providing a water supply for domestic, municipal, and public use within the district, and as an incident to such purpose authority is conferred to construct necessary public works.

Section 6602-36, in its pertinent parts, provides that, before any court shall establish a district for the purpose of providing a water supply for domestic, municipal, and public use, the petition for the establishment of the district shall be filed by the governing body of each municipality, or part thereof, included in the proposed district. That section further provides what shall be set forth in the petition, viz, the proposed name of the district, the necessity for the improvement, a general description of the purpose of the contemplated improvement and of the territory to be included in the proposed district, and a prayer for the organization of the district by the name proposed. Subsequent sections provide for a bond to be filed securing the costs of the proceedings, notice of hearing on petitions, and the procedure relating thereto; that the district so created shall be a body corporate, with perpetual existence, and power to sue and be sued, incur debts, exercise the right of eminent domain and of taxation and assessment, to issue bonds and perform all acts authorized or necessary and proper to carry out the purposes for which the district is created.

*453 Section 6602-41 provides for the appointment of directors; each county to he entitled to one director, who shall he a resident freeholder of such county. Sections 6602-58 and 6602-59 provide for the appointment of appraisers to appraise the lands or other property within and without the district to be acquired for rights of way, reservoirs, and other works of the district, and to appraise all benefits and damages accruing to all lands within or without the district by reason of the execution of the official plan.

Sections 6602-62 to 6602-64, inclusive, provide for. a notice and hearing and the filing of exceptions by property owners; and Sections 6602-65 and 6602-66 provide for a hearing and determination by the court on all exceptions, and for approval and confirmation of the appraisers’ report. Sections 6602-74 to 6602-90 provide for the financial administration of the district, including the issue and sale of bonds, the levies of assessments upon the property of the district in payment of preliminary expenses, and the payment of principal and interest of bonds, and provide for a fund for the maintenance of the improvement.

The district is composed of the territory included within the municipalities of Niles, in Trumbull county, and Youngstown, in Mahoning county, and does not include any territory outside of those municipalities.

The first objection is that the act violates the home rule aineridments to the Ohio Constitution, as set forth in Sections 3, 4 and 5 of Article XVIII. To this objection it seems a sufficient answer to say that the home rule provisions of the state Constitution *454 are permissive, and not mandatory upon the municipalities of this state, and that the authority conferred by those provisions may or may not be exercised. Those provisions are not exclusive, but, on the contrary, are additional to the other provisions found in the statutes of this state. When municipalities see fit to invoke the home rule provisions for their own use and benefit, it is beyond the power of the Legislature to circumvent or in any way interfere with those efforts; but, until action taken by municipalities, all of the statutes relating to the government of municipal corporations continue in full force and effect. This legislation does not confer upon municipalities any power which they did not have before, or authorize or permit them to do anything which they could not have done before. It only provides additional machinery for doing in a new way that which they could have done in a different way before. This legislation does not infringe upon the freedom of municipalities from legislative control, and any municipality may employ its own method of providing a supply of water for its own municipal and other public purposes, in utter disregard of the provisions of this legislation.

No such question is presented by this record. The Mahoning Yalley Sanitary District includes no territory except municipal territory. The two cities of Niles and Youngstown have voluntarily, and in the regular way, through action of their respective municipal councils and by concurrence of action, invoked the provisions of this act in the method pointed out by the act itself, and through the instrumentalities provided by that act, to bring about an improved water supply for the purposes of the re *455 spective municipalities. It is difficult to see upon what theory there has been an infringement or encroachment upon the constitutional rights of the municipalities, or that the statute has by involuntary or compulsory means taken from the cities the power to acquire, construct, or lease and operate within or without their corporate limits any public utility the product or service of which is or is to be supplied to the municipality or its inhabitants, or to contract with others for such products or service. This legislation seems to be in perfect harmony with Section 4 of Article XVIII.

Section 3973-1, Q-eneral Code, provides that “two or more municipalities may unite in the construction of a water works plant for the purpose of supplying water to such municipalities and the inhabitants thereof for domestic, manufacturing and other purposes.” That section, within the space of a few lines, confers powers which are quite as broad as those which are conferred by the Sanitary District Act; the only difficulty being that the earlier statute does not provide any of the machinery. Counsel have not questioned the legality of Section 3973-1, but, on the contrary, have even offered that section as a valid substitute to enable Youngstown and Niles to combine their capital and energies in availing themselves of a common supply of water for municipal purposes, and it is difficult to see how, if one statute is valid and constitutional, the other will not also be equally valid and constitutional. There is no distinction in the power conferred; the only difference is in the means employed.

We find nothing in the Sanitary District Act attempting to limit or control municipalities in the *456 acquisition, ownership, or operation of public utilities, but, on the contrary, Section 6602-49 specifically forbids any such attempt. That section provides that the powers of a sanitary district board shall not include construction and maintenance of water mains and distributing systems, or other related improvements, for local service within the political subdivision forming the district.

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Related

Village of Dennison v. Martin
210 N.E.2d 912 (Tuscarawas County Court of Common Pleas, 1964)
Spagnola v. Mahoning Valley Sanitary District
161 Ohio St. (N.S.) 259 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1954)
Wadsworth v. Santaquin City
28 P.2d 161 (Utah Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 N.E. 415, 120 Ohio St. 449, 120 Ohio St. (N.S.) 449, 1929 Ohio LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shook-v-mahoning-valley-sanitary-district-ohio-1929.