State, Ex Rel. Squire v. Cleveland

74 N.E.2d 438, 80 Ohio App. 83, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 388
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1947
Docket20284
StatusPublished

This text of 74 N.E.2d 438 (State, Ex Rel. Squire v. Cleveland) 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. Squire v. Cleveland, 74 N.E.2d 438, 80 Ohio App. 83, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 388 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By ROSS, J.

This is an appeal upon questions of law from a declaratory judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County.

The only appellant from such judgment is the City of Cleveland.

The proceeding was instituted originally by the State of Ohio, ex rel. Squire, Liquidator of the Union Trust Company of Cleveland, Ohio. The Trust Company held a mortgage upon certain real estate of the Wilson Realty Company, a littoral property owner upon Lake Erie. This mortgage was foreclosed and the property of the Wilson Realty Company was purchased by the Union Properties, Inc., which organization was substituted, by agreement, as plaintiff in this proceeding.

The Lake Erie Salt Company participated in and during the trial of this case was known as Union Salt Company. On May 31, 1944, The Lake Erie Salt Company sold its property to the defendant appellee Union Salt Company, and was given the right to use the name of The Lake Erie Salt Company, which latter organization retained the right to prosecute its original cause of action and recover such damages as should *392 be awarded for any loss it suffered. This presents a rather confusing situation, in that there are two. corporations styled The Lake Erie Salt Company, the first the original littoral owner, which is prosecuting its right of action as a cross-petitioner; the second, its graptee, which changed its name from Union Salt Company (so styled at time of purchase from the original The Lake Erie Salt Company) to The Lake Erie Salt Company. There is, however, only one Lake Shore property involved in which these two corporations have by contract with other other certain rights not important to the issues presented.

The claims of this defendant-appellee are essentially the same as that of the Union Properties, Inc., except that in addition thereto the rights to have free access to the lake for the purpose of draining water therefrom and discharging water' therein, made necessary by the character of its business, is. involved.

The controversy arises by reason of the construction of a highway and a curved roadway connecting East 55th Street with such highway.

The area involved is that extending along the shore line of the City of Cleveland from East 9th Street to East 70th Street. The highway and roadway connect with other highways at the eastern and western ends, and furnish arteries over which traffic to. and from the congested area of Cleveland to the east may pass. The highway, which is officially styled “The Cleveland Memorial Shoreway” is designated in the briefs as the “Shoreway” and will be so referred to hereafter herein.

The Shoreway and curved roadway are built entirely upon filled-in ground, extending outwardly into the lake from the original natural shore line as defined by surveys in the year 1914. It is stated in the appellant’s brief that: “It was admitted by all parties that the title to the land and water area of Lake Erie, whether submerged or artificially filled outward from the last natural shore line of the lake is in the State in trust for the people of Ohio.” (Emphasis added)

The “fills” in the area involved were made by various persons and corporations and at various times, under regulation of the Federal Government.

The appellees are littoral owners of so-called “upland property” the shore line of. which, by reason of such fills, has been extended out into the lake and over which the Shoreway and curved roadway are constructed.

The Federal Government has created two artificial harbors by the erection of breakwaters extending some five miles along *393 the area in question. The expense incident to the construction of such harbors amounted to some $6,000,000.00, and large sums have been expended since in furthering the use of such harbors.

Sometime during the 1890’s, the City of Cleveland built •an overhead bridge across rights of way of the railroads at West 3rd Street and started making a fill along the upland frontage between West 3rd and East 9th Streets, which eventually developed into the filled land deeded by the State of Ohio to the City of Cleveland in 1914. (The validity of such transfer is not involved in this appeal.) Upon this filled land the Cleveland Stadium is now located and the docks leased to the D. & C. Navigation Company. This fill also included an extension of East 9th Street and the construction by the City of what is now called the East 9th Street Pier.

The Shoreway consists of a four-lane highway or boulevard. As now regulated by traffic provisions of the City of Cleveland, it is almost entirely devoted to use of passenger vehicles. Traffic markers request the operators of trucks to .leave the boulevard at the next intersection. The extent of the traffic allowed and the speed at which such traffic is permitted to operate make it practically impossible for heavy trucks to even cross the highways. No provision has been made for effective crossing of the highways by littoral owners, seeking access to navigable water, or seeking the use of lake water in their industries. There is evidence that some littoral owners, other than the parties hereto, are not at present affected by the use of the highways, owing to the fact that no present necessity for access to navigable water of the lake or the construction of wharfs appear. (1) Not only the instant use of the fills on the lakeside of littoral property is involved. The potential use of such property and fills must be considered also.

The principal questions are developed in the two causes of action stated in the pleadings.

ISSUES.

In the first cause of action, the Court is asked to deter - .mine whether plaintiff has the right to the exclusive use of said made lands for the purpose of a wharf in aid of navigation and commerce; whether plaintiff may fill into the waters of Lake Erie for the purpose of reaching to navigable waters, “but subject to regulation by the Federal Government and to lawful and reasonable regulation by other public authority”; whether or not plaintiff has the right to have uninterrupted and unimpeded access from its upland to the navigable waters of the Lake; to determine plaintiff’s easterly and westerly *394 boundaries in said made land, and to determine whether §§3699-1 to 3699-10 GC are invalid and unconstitutional in the respects above set forth; to determine whether or not these sections authorize the City to construct any work contemplated therein upon such made lands without compensating plaintiff for the consequent interference with, or impairment or destruction of its littoral rights, including the right of free and uninterrupted access to the navigable waters of the lake, and further, to determine whether the City may construct such work without first compensating the owner for such impairment or destruction of his littoral rights.

In the second cause of action, the Court is asked to enjoin the City of Cleveland from maintaining the Shoreway' and curved highway and the sewer constructed thereunder, and require the removal thereof, or to'prohibit the indiscriminate use' thereof by the public. The Salt Company also seeks protection of its rights to take water from the lake for use in its industry.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.E.2d 438, 80 Ohio App. 83, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-squire-v-cleveland-ohioctapp-1947.