State, Ex Rel. City, Akron v. Slusser, Mayor

61 N.E.2d 318, 75 Ohio App. 141, 30 Ohio Op. 456, 1944 Ohio App. LEXIS 424
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1944
Docket3661
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 N.E.2d 318 (State, Ex Rel. City, Akron v. Slusser, Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Ex Rel. City, Akron v. Slusser, Mayor, 61 N.E.2d 318, 75 Ohio App. 141, 30 Ohio Op. 456, 1944 Ohio App. LEXIS 424 (Ohio Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Stevens, P. J.

This action in mandamus, filed originally in this court, upon demand of a taxpayer of the city of Akron, seeks the issuance of a writ of mandamus requiring the defendants “to amend and revise the budget” of the city of Akron, “and to make a levy for the purposes set forth in said budget other than •for the payment of bonds, interest and taxes duly authorized by vote of the electors of said city * * *, within the limitation” (charter) “of seven and five-tenths (7.5) mills,” and for other relief.

An intervening petition has also been filed by leave of court, wherein the same relief sought in the original petition is requested.

The answer of the defendants, after admitting many of the allegations of the petition and the intervening petition, alleges that the budget had been prepared and adopted in conformity to existing legal requirements, “and that the relator nor anyone else protested said annual appropriation measure there and then made, and that the relator or others similarly situated are estopped from now protesting said budget or appropriation measure. ’

The answer then sets out in detail the rates, amounts and uses of the levy as modified by the city council, showing what part was inside and what part outside the charter limitation of 7.5 mills, and then alleges that “the action taken by the budget commission herein, following the action taken by the city council of Akron in modifying and adopting the same, was pursuant to law and authority by placing outside the seven-and-one-half-mill limitation an amount equal to approximately 3.15 mills for the reason that the same *143 represented a pre-existing debt within the meaning of the Constitution and the laws of the state of Ohio, said debt having been incurred lawfully and legally subsequent to December 31, 1920, and prior to 1934.” .. ¡

The answer then continues:

“Further answering, these respondents say that the amendment to the Akron city charter hereinbefore referred to and set out as Sections 86a, 86b and 86e, was enacted and became effective on November 6,1928, and that for the year 1929 when the said seven-and-one-half-mill levy first became available to the taxing authorities, there was available as a tax base taxable property in the city of Akron the sum of $422,099,188, and that for the year 1930 there was available in a like manner the sum of $432,042,580.
“By reason of the laws passed subsequent to January 1, 1931, when Article XII, Section 2, became effective, the personal property list of the city of Akron was decreased, and the taxable property on the general tax list of the city of Akron does not now provide a base which is equivalent to the base in existence prior to the effective date of the said constitutional amendment and the schedule thereto attached. The city of Akron is therefore entitled to levy outside of said seven-and-one-half-mill limitation the amount required to equalize any reduction in the amount of taxable property available for such levies or the rate imposed upon such property effected by such laws. The said schedule to the constitutional provision herein-before referred to reads as follows:
“ ‘If the votes for the proposal shall exceed those against it, the amendment shall go into effect January 1, 1931, and original Sections 2 and 3 of Article XTT of the Constitution of the state of Ohio shall be repealed and annulled; but all levies for interest and sinking fund or retirement of bonds issued, or auth *144 orized prior to said date which are not subject to the statutory limitation of fifteen mills on the aggregate rate of taxation then in force, and all tax levies provided for by the conservancy act of Ohio and the sanitary district act of Ohio, as said laws are in force on said date, for the purposes of conservancy districts and sanitary districts organized prior to said date, and all tax levies for other purposes authorized by the General Assembly prior to said date or by vote of the electors of any political subdivision of the state, pursuant to laws in force on said date, to bo made outside said statutory limitation for and during a period of years extending beyond said date, or provided for by the charter of a municipal corporation pursuant to laws in force on said date, shall not be subject to the limitation of fifteen mills established by said amendment; and levies for interest and sinking fund or retirement of bonds issued or authorized prior to said date, shall be outside of said limitation to the extent required to equalize any reduction in the amount of taxable property available for such levies, or in the rale imposed upon such property, effected by laws thereafter passed’ (italics supplied), with the result that there was available for taxation purposes in 1931 for 1932 collections $332,163,776, said reduction being put into effect by authorities other than the city of Akron taxing authority, first, by the removal from the taxable property available for levying taxes, $95,407,760 of personal property pursuant to state law and replacing said personal property tax base loss by including $46,-619,456 of intangible property as provided for by state law. The remaining reduction was effected by the action of the county auditor in reducing such valuation on the taxable duplicate of the city of Akron real estate by an amount equal to approximately $54,500,000; that by reason of the foregoing action taken by the *145 state of Ohio pursuant to law in removing the personal property, these respondents have the duty and obligation pursuant to law to levy an amount necessary to equalize the loss of personal property; said respondents did equalize, but not to the full extent as provided by law, which would have allowed an additional levy of 1.33 mills, but did in fact levy only to the extent needed to meet outstanding obligations lawfully incurred between the years 1929 and 1931, inclusive.”

The cause was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts. From the agreed statement of facts it appears that:

1. Municipal bonds in the amount of $673,000 were issued by the city of Akron prior to the enactment of Sections 86a, 86b and 86c of the Charter of the city of Akron, on November 6, 1928, upon which bonds $202,-619 of interest has accrued, making a total liability thereon of $875,619 for principal and interest.

2. Municipal bonds in the amount of- $55,000 were issued by the city of Akron between November 6,1928, and January 1, 1931, upon which bonds interest of $21,994 has accrued, making a total liability thereon of $76,994 for principal and interest. In addition thereto, bonds in the amount of $7,000 were issued October 1, 1931, upon which interest in the sum of $1,330 has accrued, making a total of $8,330 owing on bonds issued after January 1, 1931.

3. All of the above bonds were limited tax bonds, and were issued by action of council and without a vote of the people of said city.

4. Prior to November 6, 1928, there was no charter limitation upon the amount of bonds which might be issued by the city of Akron.

5. On November 6, 1928, Sections 86a, 86b and 86c, of the Charter of the city of Akron became effective by vote of the people. Those sections are as follows:

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61 N.E.2d 318, 75 Ohio App. 141, 30 Ohio Op. 456, 1944 Ohio App. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-akron-v-slusser-mayor-ohioctapp-1944.