Slusser v. City of Sidney

11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297
CourtShelby County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297 (Slusser v. City of Sidney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Shelby County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slusser v. City of Sidney, 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Mathers, J.

Decision on demurrer.

There are two cases pending under the above title, the petition in the first being filed October 29th, 1909, and in the other one May 9th, 1910. The plaintiff, in the first one, seeks an injunction against the city, its officers and agents from proceeding to collect and enforce a certain assessment for a sidewalk along*, her premises on West avenue; and in the second case seeks similar relief against an assessment for paving the street at said point. The defendant demurred to the petition and the cases are now for disposition upon that demurrer.

The gist of the complaint is that the street where the sidewalk has been ordered to be constructed and where the paving has been done is an approach to a bridge which the county commisers are required to erect and maintain. It is averred in the pe[298]*298titions that this paving, done and to be done, is on the approach to this bridge, which approach commences at the north line of Poplar street, which intersects West avenue at right angles, and abuts the plaintiff’s premises on the south, and arises thence immediately to a height of seven and one-half feet at the north end of the approach where it goes on to the bridge. It does not appear from the petitions whether the street paving is assessed by the foot front or by the taxable value or accordng to benefits. It appears from the petition that the premises upon which this assessment is threatened to be levied abuts upon the approach to the bridge. Without' referring to the sections of the statute which govern the subject-matter of bridges in municipalities, it may be said that it appears that it is the duty of the county commissioners to build and maintain the bridge mentioned in the petition, and also its approach, for the reason that the municipality, while it has the right to receive, yet does not receive its proportion of the bridge fund. It has been held in several eases that an approach to a bridge is a part of the bridge, or at any rate is so much a part of it that it must be built and maintained by the person, corporation or authority which is charged with the duty of building or maintaining the bridge. .That was the rule at common law, and by an act of Parliament during the reign I think of Henry the Eighth, the length of the approach was.fixed at three hundred feet. The case in 88 Mass., 449, which goes into the question pretty thoroughly, as well as the learned opinion of the trial judge in the case cited by counsel for the plaintiff in 24 ■Atlantic, 700, as well as 2 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 557, all clearly show that the approach to a bridge at common law, and under most statutes, is practically considered part of the bridge. So there can be no doubt that it is the duty of the commissioners not only to build this bridge, but to build the approach to it. An approach may be said to be that structure which will afford a reasonable use of the bridge to persons, in the lawful use of the highway, having occasion to cross it.

The questions here presented are: first, whether or not'the plaintiff can be assessed for the construction of the sidewalk; secondly, whether or not she can be assessed for the paving that [299]*299has been laid upon the approach to this, bridge. The questions are not 'without difficulty; and there seems to be but little precedent to..enlighten the court. The statute in relation to special assessments seems to contemplate full power on the part of the ¡council to levy and collect special assessments for street improvement upon property which is either abutting, adjacent or contiguous, or specially benefitted; and the methods pointed out by law are, by a percentage of the tax value of the property assessed, or in proportion to the benefits which may result from 'the improvement, or by the foot frontage of the property bounding and abutting upon the improvement. ,

As was before observed, there is no doubt that this property abuts upon this improvement, yet speaking of precedent it was held in the case of Town of Salem v. Henderson, 41 N. E., 1062, that under the Revised Statutes of Indiana, 1894, Section 4293, requiring the engineer to report the average cost per running front foot of the whole length of that part of a street which had been improved, etc., land abutting on a bridge connecting the portions of the street so improved is not liable for any part of the assessment, particularly as the engineer excepted from his estimate the length of the bridge, which was not improved. But the council of a municipality are required to keep the streets of the municipality in repair and free from nuisance. Their duty is a continuing one and one which they can not escape even where some other authority is ultimately liable for the repair of the street. That point was clearly decided in Mooney v. Village of St. Marys, 15 C. C., 440, where the east end of a bridge across a canal was burned out and the sidewalk so destroyed that a person, who was lawfully using the highway, in walking upon the sidewalk one dark night, fell through and was killed; and the city was held responsible in damages, notwithstanding it had no right to the bridge fund and did not receive any part of it and that the county had to make repairs. Just the status of an approach to a bridge in a municipality, in view of our statutes, however, is the puzzling question here.

Section 7444, General Code, provides that the county commissioners shall keep in repair the portions of such roads within [300]*300their respective comities, as are included within corporate limits of a city or village in such counties, to points therein where the sidewalks have been curbed and guttered, and no further. In the case of Wabash Railroad Company v. City of Defiance, 10 C. C., page 27, it was held that "where a part of a county road comes by the annexation of contiguous territory within the limits of a municipal corporation, it is subject to the control and supervision of the municipal authorities, and may be improved as other streets of the municipality. ’ ’ In that case the court holds that a bridge over a railway is a part of the road. But in the 12 C. D., in the case of Dayton v. Harmon, pages 575 and 576, the circuit court observed, obiter, however, that a bridge is no part of the street; so that if the dictum in Wabash v. Defiance is to control, and the bridge considered part of the street and the approach part of the bridge — an appurtenance to it — the conclusion that the court might reach would be one thing.' But if the decision in Dayton v. Harmon is to control and the bridge held to be no part of the street, and the approach an appurtenance to the bridge and practically a part of it, then neither the approach nor the bridge is a part of the street and the court ought to reach another conclusion.

There are not the practical difficulties in the way of a decision against the city, as was urged by its counsel, because if the plaintiff is not to be assessed for this paving, and it is necessarily a part of the improvement, the cost of that part of it ought to be distributed among the rest of the assessable property or paid for by the city out of the general revenue or some other appropriate fund, for there is no statutory authority for assessing the cost upon the county, and neither the approach nor the bridge is property within the meaning of the statute which authorizes assessments against property for street improvements. But even if the court were to disregard the obiter dictum — and that is all it is in Dayton v. Harmon, ante

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Related

Commonwealth v. Inhabitants of Deerfield
88 Mass. 449 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1863)
Town of Salem v. Henderson
41 N.E. 1062 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slusser-v-city-of-sidney-ohctcomplshelby-1910.