State ex rel. Greenwald v. Hagerty

5 Ohio C.C. 22
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. 22 (State ex rel. Greenwald v. Hagerty) 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
State ex rel. Greenwald v. Hagerty, 5 Ohio C.C. 22 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinions

Smith, J.

The first question for consideration in these four cases is,, whether the levy of taxes made by the board of control, mentioned in the pleadings in this case, and certified by it to the county auditor to be placed on the duplicate, waslegal and valid; and this depends in great degree upon the construction which is to be given to the statute providing for the establishment of such a board in this county, Rev. Stat. sec. 964 and post, and particularly of sections 999, 1000, 1003, 1004, 1005 and 1006.

By section 999 it is provided that “the board of control shall have final action and jurisdiction in all matters involving the expenditure of money, or in awarding of contracts, or the assessing or levying of taxes by the board of county commissioners. Every contract shall be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder, on his giving sufficient security for the performance of the same; but the board of control may rejectv all bids.”

“ Sec. 1000. No contract or release made, or liability incurred, nor appropriation or allowance, nor taxes levied or assessed by the board of county commissioners shall be valid and binding unless a majority of all the members of the board of control present, vote in favor thereof; and no contract-or release made, or liability incurred, nor appropriation or allowance made, which involves an expenditure of money to the amount of one hundred dollars or more, nor taxes levied or assessed, shall be approved by the board of control, until the next meeting after such matters or things come before said board, unless a majority of all the members vote for the same.”

“ Sec. 1003. The board of county commissioners shall, at each meeting of the board of control, present to the board, a true and accurate statement of all matters and things which have come before it, which involve an expenditure of money, or the awarding of contracts, or the assessing or levying of' taxes; and it shall also present to the board of control at its meetings, all bids on contracts, plans and specifications, and. [24]*24every paper or document that in any manner comes before said board by the provisions of this chapter.”

The foregoing sections, as they stand in the Revised Statutes, were a part of the original act establishing the board of control, passed March 13, 1872, (O. L. Vol. 69, 40), and with sec. 1004, which is brought into the revision in a different form, were the only ones which throw any light on the question under consideration. Section 1004, as it now stands, is as follows :

Sec. 1004. No action of the board of county commissioners in matters and tilings upon which the board of control is herein authorized to act, shall be valid or binding until the same has been passed upon and approved by said board of control, anything in the law of this state to the contrary notwithstanding.”

By these provisions of the original statute, we do not see that any power is given to the board of control, as to matters submitted to it by the board of county commissioners, other than simply to approve or reject. This was the final action and jurisdiction ” conferred by sec. 999 ; and gave to it the right, (for instance) wher*e the commissioners jhad made a levy of taxes, as they by the general law were authorized to do, and had submitted it to the board of control, as they were bound to do, the latter board could not, (so far as - we see), legally alter or change, but could only approve or reject it. In case it was rejected, it would seem to follow that it should be returned to the commissioners for new action, precisely as if a contract made by them had been rejected; their power to act de novo upon the subject matter not having been exhausted by one or more refusals of the board of control to approve of their action. But in either of such cases, viz : in that of the levy of taxes, as well as in the matter of a contract presented for approval, it would be manifestly right and proper*, and we think must have been the legislative intent, that when such rejection occurred, and particularly so of a proposition as to the levy of taxes, (absolutely necessary to the carrying on of the [25]*25•county affairs), that the board of control should officially advise the commissioners of its action and the reason therefor, that a different and more satisfactory one might be submitted for its approval.

But in the following year, viz: on May 5, 1873, (70 Ohio L. 294), the legislature saw proper to make other and further provisions as to the levy of taxes, pointing out, to some degree at least, the duties of the county auditor, the board of county commissioners, and of the board of control in regard thereto, doubtless with the purpose of correcting defects seen to exist in the original statute. What is now sec. 1005, points out the nature of the information the auditor was to furnish to the two boards; and he was also to give “an estimate of the money needed to pay all lawful (expenses of the county, and its several departments, offices and institutions for the twenty months following said first Monday of April, not exceeding one million dollars,” and directing the auditor how such estimate should be made by him. lie was also in said statement to furnish an estimate of the total percentage he deemed necessary to be levied in that year for paying the county expenses for twenty months; and also to report to what funds said total levy should, in his opinion, be apportioned as special levies. Then comes sec. 1006, as follows:

“ The several members of the two boards aforesaid, shall examine and revise said statements carefully, and ten days after said first Monday of April, the board of commissioners shall first meet and determine the total levy they deem necessary for that year, which they shall apportion to the several funds, but not higher, however, in total levy than that estimated by the auditor; and this action of theirs they shall transmit to the board of control for its approval, amendment or rejection, within the limits aforesaid.”

Hero, for the first time, is the power expressly conferred on the board of control, to amend or change the tax levy presented by the commissioners to it; and by sec. 1007 the same power is given to it to approve, amend or reject, the [26]*26subsequent apportionment of the collected taxes. But such amendment or approval must be “ within the limits aforesaid.”' That is, as we understand it, the total levy made, or the percentage fixed for raising “ money needed to pay all lawful expenses of the county, and its several departments, offices and institutions” (whatever these terms may mean), for the twenty months, is not to be higher than that estimated by the auditor, who was expressly limited in his estimate to the raising of not exceeding one million dollars for that purpose. But apparently “ within the limits aforesaid,” the board of control is authorized to approve or reject the proposition as it comes from the commissioners (fixing the total tax levy and the apportionment thereof to special levies), as a whole; or under the power of amendment given to it, to strike out any particular item, or to change the levy made for one purpose by adding thereto or deducting therefrom or by adding new items, or changing the percentage fixed by the commissioners. This would seem to be the fair meaning of the language used.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio C.C. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-greenwald-v-hagerty-ohiocirct-1890.