State ex rel. Hadden v. East Cleveland R. R.

3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 471
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 471 (State ex rel. Hadden v. East Cleveland R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hadden v. East Cleveland R. R., 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 471 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

UPSON, C. J.

This case comes before the court on a demurrer to the amended petition. The petition is in quo warranto, filed in the name of the state cn relation of the prosecuting attorney .against the East Cleveland Railroad Co., alleging that that railroad company is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Ohio; that the city of Cleveland [472]*472is a city of the second grade of the first class, and that Garden street is a public street in said city; that the East Cleveland Railroad Co. claims to hold and exercise the privilege and right of maintaining a street railway in and upon said Garden street, between Brownell street on the west and Wilson avenue on the east, for the transportation of passengers for hire, in contravention of law; that by' an ordinance of said city, which was passed and took effect on January 14, A. D. 1868, said franchise, privilege and right were granted to the defendant for the term of twenty years from said date, and no longer; that immediately upon the passage of said ordinance the defendant accepted said grant; that on March 22, A. D. 1880, the council of said city passed an ordinance in the following words: “An ordinance to permit the East Cleveland Railroad Company to extend the Garden street branch of its railway.” The ordinance is then recited at length in the 'petition; and it is then alleged that no notice was given by the clerk of the pendency of that ordinance, as required by statute. And there are other allegations in the petition which need not be stated.

To this .amended petition a demurrer was filed, upon three grounds:

“1. Because said plaintiff has not legal capacity to bring this suit.

“2. Because there is a defect of parties plaintiff in said action.

“3. Because said petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff or against said defendant.”

As to the first ground of objection to the amended petition, that the plaintiff has not legal capacity to bring this suit, we are not satisfied that that ground can be maintained.

Nor are we satisfied that there is a defect of parties plaintiff in the action. The statute provides that the right to exercise the franchise may be tried by proceedings in quo warranto, and by a recent amendment to the statute it is provided that it may be tried whether the right is claimed by contract or otherwise; and upon examination, not only of the statute, but of the decisions of the supreme court of this state, we are of opinion that the plaintiff has legal capacity in this suit to test the question as to whether this franchise is exercised in contravention of law, and that the state on the one side and the corporation claiming to exer cise that franchise upon the other are the proper parties to the proceeding.

This brings us to the third ground of objection to the petition — that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff or against the defendant; and the question which arises under that clause of the demurrer is whether this franchise, which, as is admitted by the demurrer, is exercised by this corporation, is exercised in contravention of law. The petition states the fact that in 1868 the franchise of constructing and maintaining a street railroad upon Garden street, between Brownell street upon the west and Wilson avenue upon the east, was regularly granted by the city council, and that the street railroad was constructed and has been operated in accordance with the grant; but the ordinance which is set forth at length in the petition provides not only for the extension of this street railroad east of its terminus at Wilson avenue to a point named, which is two or three miles, perhaps, east of Wilson avenue, but for giving to the East Cleveland Railroad Co. the privilege of operating the railway as thus extended for the period of twenty-five years from the date of the passage of the ordinance, thus operating as a renewal or extension of the grant of the right to operate this part of the street railroad between Brownell street and Wilson avenue for a period of twenty-five years from the date of the passage of this ordinance; and it is claimed that this last ordinance of the city council is invalid upon two grounds — perhaps three — but mainly upon two grounds; and the decision of that question depends upon the proper construction of the statutes of Ohio in that regard.

Sec. 2501 Rev. Stat. of Ohio provides that “no corporation, individual or individuals, .shall perform any work in the construction of a street railroad until application for leave-is made to the council, in writing, and council, by ordinance, shall have granted permission, and prescribed the terms and conditions upon, and the manner in which the road ■shall be constructed and operated, and the streets and alleys which shall be used and occupied therefor, and cities of the first and second grades of the first class may renew any such grant at its expiration upon such conditions as may be considered conducive to-the public interests.”

[473]*473Sec. 2502 Rev. Stat. provides that' “no ordinance for such purpose 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, in one or more of the weekly papers published in the corporation, for the period of three consecutive weeks; and no such grant shall be made except to the corporation, individual or individuals that will agree to carry passengers upon such proposed railroad at the lowest rates of fare, and shall have previously obtained the written consent of a majority of the property-holders on the line of the proposed street railroad, represented by the feet front of lots abutting on the street along which such road is proposed to be constructed; provided that no grant nor renewal of any grant for construction or operation of any street railroad shall be valid for a greater period than twenty-five years from the date of such grant or renewal; and after such grant or renewal of grant is made, whether by special or general ordinance, the municipal corporation shall not, during the term of such grant or renewal, release the grantee from any obligation or liability imposed by the terms of such grant o'r renewal of grant.”

The first objection made to this ordinance is that it is invalid by reason of a failure to comply with the provision of sec. 2502, that notice be given in the newspapers by the clerk of the corporation, it being alleged in the amended petition that no such notice of this application was given. Secondly, it is claimed that another provision of the same section should have been complied with, viz.: that in regard to obtaining the written consent of a majority of the property holders on the line of the proposed street railroad. Upon the other side it is contended that this provision that “no ordinance for this purpose shall be passed until public notice of the application therefor has been given,” applies not to the action of the council in renewing the grant “upon such conditions as may be considered-conducive to the public interests,” but solely to that part of the preceding section which provides for the giving to the corporation of permission for the construction of a street railroad, the terms and conditions upon which it shall be constructed and the streets and alleys which shall be used and occupied therefor.

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3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hadden-v-east-cleveland-r-r-ohcirctcuyahoga-1891.