State Ex Rel. Indian Hill Acres, Inc. v. Kellogg

76 N.E.2d 398, 81 Ohio App. 65, 49 Ohio Law. Abs. 175, 36 Ohio Op. 382, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 664
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1947
Docket6795
StatusPublished

This text of 76 N.E.2d 398 (State Ex Rel. Indian Hill Acres, Inc. v. Kellogg) 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. Indian Hill Acres, Inc. v. Kellogg, 76 N.E.2d 398, 81 Ohio App. 65, 49 Ohio Law. Abs. 175, 36 Ohio Op. 382, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 664 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinions

OPINION

By MATTHEWS, PJ.

This is an action instituted in the first instance in this Court, seeking a writ of mandamus, directing the City Manager and the Superintendent of the Water Works Department of the City of Cincinnati, to permit Relator to connect its water main extensions to the water mains in Miami Road, a public street, and to permit consumers of water to be served by such water main extensions and connections and to accept the application of the Relator to make such connections and permit the same to be made.

Stated tersely, the Relator asks that the Respondents, as the officials of the City of Cincinnati, charged with the duty, *177 be required to supply the Relator with water from the Municipal Water Works, upon compliance by it of the required conditions.

An alternative writ was issued and the cause now comes before this Court upon the Relator’s prayer for a mandatory-writ in conformity to the alternative writ.

There is substantial agreement on the facts.

The City of Cincinnati during all the time material here has owned and operated a municipal water works, with a capacity in excess of the normal requirements of the municipality and its residents. While there is apprehension that at no distant time its capacity may be taxed to supply the increased needs of the municipality, it is clear that at the present there is a surplus of water and that this surplus is being disposed of to consumers outside the municipality.

Acting under the authority conferred by §6602-17 GC, the County Commissioners of Hamilton County in 1925 established Sewer District No. 1, in which to supply water to the public. They caused to be constructed in Miami Road (then a highway in unincorporated territory in Hamilton County, but now in the incorporated Village of Indian Hill) a sixteen inch water main, as well as other mains, and, as authorized by law, levied an assessment of $2.13 per front foot, plus $25.00 per-acre to pay the cost.

The Relator’s land consists of forty-three lots of an area of more than one acre each, no part of which is contiguous to the City of Cincinnati. These lots formed a part of a tract of two hundred and thirteen acres assembled by the Relator and its predecessor in title, all located in Sewer District No. 1. This land was acquired between 1929 and 1936 for the purpose of dividing it into residential lots of not less than one acre each, and this has been done, at least in part. The part that-has not been subdivided abuts on Miami Road, where the sixteen inch water main was installed.

The Relator and its predecessor in title have paid in the form of assessments the sum of $16,892.59, as their share of the cost of installing this water distribution system in Sewer District No. 1.

In 1935, while this land was still in unincorporated territory, the Relator’s predecessor in title, as required by law, filed with the City Planning Commission of Cincinnati, a preliminary plan for its subdivision, which was tentatively approved, and, in 1942, after the land was incorporated as a part of the Village of Indian Hill, the plan was filed with that Village, and tentatively approved by it on January 28th, 1946.

*178 The investment, including the original cost, plus the cost' of constructing roads, streets, sewers, etc., totals somewhere between a quarter and a half million dollars. A very substantial portion of this cost was incurred in constructing water main extensions under the supervision of and in accordance with the plans of the Water Works Department of the City of Cincinnati,- and with the purpose of securing the supply of water through the water main previously constructed in Miami Road.

In 1925, when the County Commissioners created Sewer District No. 1 and laid out the water distribution system therein, they entered into a contract with the City of Cincinnati to provide the water for this district and eight others. On October 10th, 1930, a new contract was substituted. This contract was to expire on May 29th, 1946, and provided that the City of Cincinnati should furnish water from its surplus at one and one-half the price charged by it to its residents, which it would collect directly from the users in Sewer District No. 1.

After May 29th, 1946, the City of Cincinnati continued and still continues to furnish water to residents in Sewer District No. 1, to whom it was supplying water on that date.

In making this contract with the County Commissioners to supply water for the distribution system in Sewer District No. 1, the City of Cincinnati acted under the general authority conferred by Sec. 6 of Art. XIII of the Constitution of Ohio, which authorizes municipalities to own and operate waterworks systems to supply water for the use of its residents and to sell to others outside of the municipal limits any surplus not exceeding fifty per cent of the total furnished to others. By §6602-17 GC municipalities are specifically authorized to sell their surplus water to water supply systems established by counties.

In August, 1946, the Relator applied to the Water Works Department for leave to attach or have attached the water main extensions, which it had constructed in Miami Road, so that it would become a part of the -water distribution system of Sewer District No. 1 and the Relator’si property served with water on the same terms as it was served to all others in said district. When this application was placed before, the Council of the City of Cincinnati in the form of a proposed ordiance, authorizing the connection, the Council refused to adopt it. In November, 1946, the Relator made written demand upon the Respondents for this service, which was refused on January 18th, 1947, on the ground that as the Relator refused to comply with Ordinance 164-1946, they were not authorized to com *179 ply with the request. By Section 1 of that Ordinance, the City Manager was authorized to continue for a period of five years from May 29th, 1946 in accordance .with the terms of existing contracts, except as modified by such ordinance, to supply water, from such surplus as it might have, to areas outside the City of Cincinnati at the rate of fifteen cents per one hundred cubic feet, with the proviso, however, that no water should be furnished through any extension of existing mains outside the City. There was the further limitation imposed that whenever an owner of land outside the City, which is so located that it should become a part of the City, makes a binding commitment on behalf of himself and subsequent owners to sign any petition or other document necessary to procure annexation of the land and to do all things necessary or proper to bring about the annexation of the land, then the City Manager should report such facts and his recommendations to Council for their consideration as to whether water should be furnished to such owner. This ordinance expressly reserved the right of council to furnish water, outside the City limits without such commitment, where a denial would cause great hardship or serious economic social disadvantage to the community.

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.E.2d 398, 81 Ohio App. 65, 49 Ohio Law. Abs. 175, 36 Ohio Op. 382, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-indian-hill-acres-inc-v-kellogg-ohioctapp-1947.