State ex rel. Hildreth v. City of Cincinnati

3 Ohio N.P. 127
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 127 (State ex rel. Hildreth v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hildreth v. City of Cincinnati, 3 Ohio N.P. 127 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

SAYLER, J.

Under proceedings duly taken, the city of Cincinnati annexed the villages of Avondale, Clifton, Linwood, Riverside and Westwood under the act of April 13, 1893, as amended April 24, 1893; Vol. 90, O. L. p. 263, 265.

On February 21, 1896, the Board of Legislation of the city of Cincinnati, passed an ordinance by which the territory theretofore annexed and known as the villages of Clifton and Avondale, were organized into a new ward,known as ward 31; the territory known as the village of Westwood was attached to ward 30, and made part and parcel thereof; the territory known as the village of Linwood was attached to ward 1, and made a part and parcel thereof; and the territory known as the village of Riverside was attached to ward 29, and made part and parcel thereof.

This ordinance was approved by the may- or of the city on March 2, 1896, and was advertised according to law on March 2 and 3, 1896.

The plaintiff is a resident of the territory known as Westwood, and a taxpayer. The contention on his part is thát the passage of this ordinance is not a compliance with the terms of the said act providing for annexation of said municipalities; that this ordinance is void ; that on January 3, 1896, there was regularly introduced and offered in the Board of Legislation of Cincinnati, an ordinance to divide said municipalities so annexed, into wards in accordance with said provisions of said act, which ordinance was on February 21, 1896, by said Board of Legislation, defeated, and the plaintiff prays that a writ of mandamus may be allowed and issued to said defendants, requiring the city of Cincinnati and the Board of Legislation of said city, to duly pass an ordinance providing for the division of said annexed municipalities into wards of the city of Cincinnati, in accordance with law, and to repeal any ordinance conflicting therewith, etc.

The defendants file an answer in which they set out the enactment of the act providing for the annexation of contiguous municipal corporations, and its amendment; that the city took all necessary steps, to carry out the provisions of said act; the election under the same; the proceeding in the Supreme Court in regard to the constitutionality of the act and the regularity of the proceedings ; the further proceedings under the act and the annexation of the villages of Avondale, Clifton, Linwood, Riverside and Westwood on December 31, 1895. The defendants farther set out the vote cast in the various wards of the city in November, 1895; the lowest vote being 1,111 in the Eighth ward, and the highest being 3,316 in the Twenty-third ward (the average vote being about 2,200); that the vote in Avondale was 1,199; in Clifton, 359; in Linwood, 310; in Riverside, 436, and in Westwood, 273. The defendants further set out the ordinance of February 21,1896, and aver that it is a valid ordinance, and that on March 13, 1896, a member of the Board of Legislation from the Thirty-first ward was legally elected.

• The laws governing municipal corporations were codified in 1869, under an act entitled “An act to provide for the organization and government of municipal corporations,” passed May 7, 1869 (66 O. L. 149).

By section 407 of said act, it was provided : “When territory is annexed to any corporation, or one corporation is annexed to another corporation, such territory or corporation so annexed may be organized into a new ward or wards, or attached to any existing ward or wards, as the council may deem proper. ’ ’

This section 407 of the act of 1869 was reenacted in section 1630 of the Revised Statutes of 1880.

Therefore we have the law existing since 1869 by which power was given to the council to organize the annexed territory into new wards or attach it to existing wards, as it might deem proper. This law was in force at the time the act of April 13. 1893,was passed.

By the 8th section of the act of 1893, it is provided: “Upon such annexation the Board of Legislation shall, by ordinance, provide for the division of such annexed municipality.or municipalities into wards.”

And by section 10 it is provided “That all acts or parts of acts inconsistent with the provision of this act are hereby repealed.”

It is claimed by the plaintiff that this provision of section eight of the act of 1893, and by which it is provided that the Board [128]*128of Legislation shall, by ordinance, provide for the division of the annexed territory, is inconsistent with the provisions of section 1630, by which annexed territory may be organized into new wards,or attached to existing wards, as council may deem proper, and that therefore section 1630 is repealed by section 10 of the act of 1893, in so far as it relates to cities of the first grade of the first class, and as there is no provision in section 8 authorizing the Board of Legislation to attach any of the annexed territory to existing wards, such authority does not exist, and that such territory must be divided into independent wards.

If this contention be correct, then as Linwood, Riverside and Westwood do not lie contiguous to each other, the Board of Legislation acting under the provisions of section 8, would be compelled to organize Li'n-wood into a ward with 310 voters; Riverside into a ward with 436 voters and Westwood into a ward with 273 voters.

We would then have wards with 310 and 436 and 273 voters respectively, and a ward —the Twenty-third — with 3,316 voters, and other wards with an averago of over two thousand voters.

As a result, the 273 voters, the 310 voters and the 436 voters of their respective wards, would have the same power in the Board of Legislation or school board, through their respective members, as the 3,316 voters of the 23rd ward, and as the average 2,200 voters in the respective other wards would have.

It is claimed on the part of the defendants that such division of the annexed territory would be contrary to the policy of the state that representation shall be approximately equal, and that therefore, such cannot be the construction of the statute contemplated by the legislature. And the defendants claim that the true construction of the provision of section 8, is that ward government will be given to the annexed municipalities; that is, that the city shall proceed, under the existing law, section 1630, to divide them into wards, by organizing new wards or by attaching them to existing wards.

That there should be an approximate equality of representation would seem to be supported by 28 At. Rep. 428; 30 At. Rep. 544; 35 N. E. Rep. 157; 73 N. C. 198 and 138 N. Y. 95.

In the People ex rel. v. Canaday, 73 N. C. 198, the court held that an act which provided for the division of a city into three wards; two of which with four hundred voters each and one with 2,800 voters, violated the fundamental principles of the constitution of the state, and was therefore void. This decision was, however, by a divided court, and a dissenting judge said that “there is no general controlling intent in the constitution restraining the legislature from an unequal distribution of political power, ’ ’ and he was of opinion that such act was valid.

The question has been lately very thoroughly considered in the case of Baird et al. v. Supervisors, etc., 138 N.Y.95.

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3 Ohio N.P. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hildreth-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohctcomplhamilt-1895.