State ex rel. Monett v. C. & H. El. St. Ry. Co.

10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 418
CourtButler Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 418 (State ex rel. Monett v. C. & H. El. St. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Butler 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. Monett v. C. & H. El. St. Ry. Co., 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 418 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is a proceeding brought by the state of Ohio on the relation1 of the attorney general of the state, questioning the right of the defendant company to bring or maintain certain proceedings be un and now pending in the probate court of Butler county, Ohio, against the Hamilton- & Lindenwald Electric Transit Company, to condemn the joint use with said company of certain of the tracks of said last named company, over and along certain streets of the city of Hamilton, and over a bridge spanning the Great Miami river in said city, on the ground that for the reasons-stated in the petition the defendant company has no right in law to condemn or appropriate said joint use of the Hamilton & Lindenwald Electric Transit Company road, or to condemn or appropriate any way or [419]*419right of way inside the corporation limits of said city, and that it ought to be ousted from the exercise of any of the unlawful claims and acts above stated, and restrained from further attempting to exercise any of them, and the prayer is that the court so adjudge.

The case was presented to us in a general demurrer to the petition, which reads as follows:

“(State of Ohio, Butler County, Circuit Court.)
“The State of Ohio ex rel. F. S. Monnett, attorney general of the state of Ohio, plaintiff, v. the. Cincinnati & Hamilton Electric Street Railway Company, defendant.
“Petition in Quo Warranto.
‘ 'F. S. Monnett now comes and represents to the court that he is the attorney general in and for the state of Ohio, duly elected, qualified and acting as such attorney general, and as such attorney general gives the court here to understand and be informed that the defendant, the Cincinnati and Hamilton Electric Street Railway Company, is a corporation incorporated and organized under the laws of the state of Ohio, and has its principal office and place of business in Hamilton, Butler county, Ohio, and has constructed and is operating a part of its railroad in Butler county, Ohio; that by the second section of its articles of incorporation it is provided thus:
“Second:. Said corporation is to be located at Cincinnati in Hamilton county, Ohio, and its principal business there transacted.

That by third section of its articles of incorporation it is provided as follows:

“Third: Said corporation is formed for the purpose of building, acquiring, maintaining, constructing, equipping, establishing, operating, leasing and owning a street railway with all necessary turnouts, sidetracks and switches (having Cincinnati, Ohio, and Hamilton as its termini), and to be operated by electricity or other motive power except steam for the conveyance of passengers, baggage, packages, express matter and United States mail (and freight) thereon over the full distance of said route or any portion thereof as the corporation may deem prudent and necessary, and passing in and through the counties of Hamilton and Butler between said cities of Cincinnati and Hamilton or any part thereof, and the right to extend the same beyond either terminus.
“Relator says that on June 23d, 1897, the city council of said city of Hamilton passed an ordinance granting to the said defendant the right to construct, maintain and operate a single or double track street railroad commencing in Front street on the south side of High street; thence south on Front street to Wood street; thence east on Wood street to Second street; thence south on Second street to Washington street; thence on Washington street to Frankfort street; thence on Frankfort street to Eane street; thence southward along Eane street to South avenue; thence east on South avenue to Central avenue; thence southward on Central avenue to the C. H. & D. Railroad crossing:
“Said ordinance in section 2 also provided that said railroad shall be constructed as near as practicable along the center of said street and alleys except on Front‘street between High and Court street, where said tracks shall be laid on the west side of the street so as to make the track of Front street south of Court alley in the center of the street.
[420]*420“And said ordinance in section 4 thereof provides that said company shall have the right to carry passengers, baggage, packages, express matter and United States mail. -
“Relator says that the said defendant on the-day of September, 1899,' made application to the- board of control of the city of Hamilton for permission and authority to contruct, maintain and operate an extension of said route hereinbefore described, and that said board of control on the twenty-seventh day of September, 1899, passed an ordinance granting to the defendant, its successors and assigns the right to construct, maintain and operate an extension of its track and line of railway in the city of Hamilton as follows:
“Commencing at the present northerly terminus of the existing tracks of said company on Front street; thence by curves westward in High street; thence along High street to the bridge across the Miami river; thence over and across said bridge to Main street; thence along Main street to B. street; thence by curves northerly into B street, providing however, that except on the curves from Front street into High street and Main street into B street said company shall use and occupy only the existing. street railway tracks, and existing street railway electrical structures and equipments except trolley and feed wires on said street. And by section 2 of said ordinance it is provided that said street railroad shall be constructed and operated as a double track street railroad on High street from Front street to the bridge across the Miami river, and over and across said bridge to the westerly sideof A street and on Main street to the westerly side of A street to B street, and by curves into B street as a single track railroad.

Relator says that before the passage of said last named ordinance by the city of Hamilton, Ohio, no public notice of the application for said extension was given by the clerk of the corporation in one or more daily papers for a period of three consecutive weeks as required by law, and that therefore said ordinance is illegal and void.

Relator says that it is not true as recited in said last mentioned ordinance that a written consent of the majority of the property owners on the line of said proposed extension of said railroad represented by the feet front on the lots and lands abutting on said street and highways along which extension is proposed to be constructed, to the.building and operating of said railroad over said extension- has been given to said company, and it is not true that such consents have been filed with the clerk of said city, and relator says that in truth no such consents were given or filed, and for this reason said ordinance is a nullity.

“Relator says that defendant’s articles of corporation were granted and its road built solely under the authority of the act of the legislature of Ohio, passed May 17th, 1894, vol., 91, O. L., 285, entitled “An act to authorize and regulate electric railroads.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-monett-v-c-h-el-st-ry-co-ohcirctbutler-1899.