Smith ex rel. City of Columbus v. Columbus, London & Springfield Railway Co.

8 Ohio N.P. 1

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 1 (Smith ex rel. City of Columbus v. Columbus, London & Springfield Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith ex rel. City of Columbus v. Columbus, London & Springfield Railway Co., 8 Ohio N.P. 1 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

Tbis_ is an action brought by the plaintiff, on behalf of the oity of Columbus, to enjoin the defendant from constructing and from operating and maintaining a street railway upon ceitain streets in the city of Columbus under and by virtue of the provisions of a certain ordinance, upon the ground that said ordinance is illegal and void.

Four reasons are assigned for the invalidity of said ordinance, to-wit: |

First: That public notice of the application for the grant expressed in said ordinance was not given in a daily paper, published in said city of Columbus, for a period of three consecutive weeks.

Second: That the ordinance under which the defendant was attempting to proceed when restrained was, on the 9th day of March, 1900, introduced at a meeting of a regularly elected council and duly read the first time, and the second time, and referred to the committee of said council on judiciary, and railroads and viaducts, and that the same was, at a regular and second session of said council, on the 9th day of April, 1900, reported back by said committee not approved. That said committee was relieved from the further consideration of said ordinance, and said ordinance was put upon its passage; that the yeas ana nays were taken upon the passage of the same, seven votes being in the affirmative and eleven votes in the negative, and said ordinance was lost and so declared; that a motion to re-consider was made, and lost, and that on said April 9, 1900, said council adjourned and never again convened; that at a regular municipal election held April 2, 1900, an entirely new council, consisting of nineteen members, was elected; that less than half of the members of said council so elected on said April 2, 1900, had been members of said former council; that on the 16th of April, 1900, said nineteen members elect, convened, presented their certificates, qualified and proceeded to organize,as prescribed by statute; and that thereby an entirely new council of *aid city was constituted; that the life of said former council and the [2]*2term of all of the members of said former council ended prior to said organization of said new council; that at the regular meeting of said new council on April 23, 1900, said council, by a vote of a majority of its members, caused the aforesaid ordinance as introduced and defeated in said former oouneil, to be read; that said reading was the first and only time said ordinance was read before said council; that the rule requiring said ordinance to be read on three different days was not dispensed with, but that said reading of said ordinance was wrongfully and falsely styled the third reading; that thereupon it wa* moved, and the motion prevailed, that •certain amendments recommended by the board of public works to said ordi nance be read, and the same were read, a copy of which amendments is set out in the petition. That thereupon a vote was taken upon the adoption of all of said amendments collectively, and a majority of the members of said council voted in the affirmative. That the said amendments were upon one call of the yeas ani nays, declared adopted; that thereupon one further amendment was offered and declared adopted; that said amendments had not, nor any of them, ever before been introduced or read either before said council, or before the former council, or any council of the oity of Columbus; that said ordinance as amended was not introduced or read before said council, nor before any former counoil of said city at any time; that immediately after said amendments were declared adopted, a motion was made and carried that said ordinance as amended be placed upon its passage, and that the yeas and nays were taken upon the passage thereof as .amended, and there being twelve votes •in the affirmative and six in the negative, said ordinance was declared passed; that a moHon to re-consider ■said vote was made and lost; that thereafter, on said April 23, 1900, said oouneil adjourned; and that said proceedings of said city council, at said meeting of April 23rd, touching said ordinance, were illegal, null and void, and that said ordinance as amended, was not legally passed at that meeting, and that the same has never been passed.

Third: That the defendant failed to ■produce to the oity council the written consents of the owners of more than one-half of the feet front of the lots and lands abutting on the public ways along which it is proposed, under the authority of said ordinance, to construct said railway. And,

Fourth: That said ordinance was prepared by the defendant and purports to and was intended to provide a single track loop encircling the central part of the oity of Columbus for the circulation of interurban cars and traffic; that said provision is illusory and abortive by reason of the fact that the route specified for said loop is interrupted for a distance of two hundred feet; that said space constitutes a break in said loop in which there is no authority to construct said railway; that the failure of said ordinance to provide such loop as it purports and was intended to do, vitiates and annuls the contract on the part of the city which said ordinance represents.

A temporary restraining order was allowed in this case pending application for a temporary injunction, and by agreement of counsel the application was submitted, and it was agreed that it should be considered upon the pleadings, affidavits and exhibits thereto attached; that in event of the petition being considered sufficient upon its face to warrant the granting of a temporary injunction, that a motion of the defendant to dissolve said injunction on the ground that the facts stated in the petition were untrue, should be considered as submitted and for decision.

The case is before me for determination upon the naked legal question of the right of the defendant to proceed under the ordinance claimed to have been passed by the city council. Hence that part of the able argument of counsel upon the great value of the proposed improvement, the benefits to accrue to the city in event it is permitted to be made, and the public demand for the same, on one hand,- and on the other hand the able argument on the question as to whether or not the city authorities have voluntarily surrendered, without sufficient consideration, a great ahd valuable franchise, and terminal facilities for a new railroad, are not matters to be considered in determining the questions here submitted, but rather subjects which should have been, and probably were, addressed to the authorities having the power and right to grant such privileges.

I shall endeavor to deal solely with the legal phases of the question.

The first reason assigned for the invalidity of the ordinance is the want of public notioe, as before stated.

Section 2502, of the Revised Statutes, provides that no ordinance of the nature of the one under consideration “shall be passed until public notice of the application therefor has been given by the clerk of the corporation in one or more of the daily papers, if there be such, and if not then in one or more weekly papers published in the corporation, for the period of at leasi; three consecutive weeks.”

In this case the affidavit of the assistant city clerk states that notice of such application was published one day in [3]*3each of three consecutive weeks in three daily papers of general circulation in the city of .Columbus, in two of which papers the publications were on the same day of the week for the three oonsecutive weeks.

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8 Ohio N.P. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-ex-rel-city-of-columbus-v-columbus-london-springfield-railway-ohctcomplfrankl-1901.