State ex rel. Waldron v. Toledo (City)

16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 628
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 628 (State ex rel. Waldron v. Toledo (City)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas 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. Waldron v. Toledo (City), 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 628 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

HAYNES, J.

(Orally.)

A petition was filed, asking that a writ of mandamus issue against those defendants, commanding said defendant Randall G. Bacon, as-auditor of said city of Toledo, and his successors in office, to issue and sign a warrant upon the treasurer of said city in favor of relator for the sum of $65 and commanding said Henry M. Barfield, as treasurer of said city, and his successors in office, to pay the amount of said warrant to-relator, the same being for services performed by relator as an engineer, he having been employed by the trustees of “The Toledo University,” so-called. The action is against these officers, claiming that they have failed to perform their duties in not issuing a warrant and paying him for his services, and averring that there are funds existing in their hands properly applicable to the payment of said amount, as he claims.

The real answer in the case is, that the persons who were the board of trustees at the time he was hired, and at the time that these services-were performed, no longer existed as a board of trustees, by reason of a certain act of the legislature which took effect on the day of its passage; and, as it was passed prior to the time of the performance of these services,, that these officers ceased to have any power or authority in the premises. The officers that are spoken of, were officers who had been appointed as trustees of what was known as the Toledo University of arts and trades, a corporate body that had been organized at the instance of the late Jesup W. Scott, arid for the purpose of carrying out certain benefactions which he was intending to give, for the purpose of carrying out and effecting the establishment of this Toledo University which he proposed to establish and for which he gave funds.

The board or rather the university has been leading a rather strenuous life. I believe this is the fourth time it has been before us in one form or another. Its existence has been attacked, and its methods of carrying on business have also been attacked.

The question here is one that we shall pass upon very briefly. In the case of State v. Toledo, 13-23 O. C. C. 327, after full argument of the question, we delivered an opinion in which we set forth the history of this institution, with a very full discussion of the condition of it at that time; and in which we held that it had a legal existence, and that ,the board of trustees that were then appointed to conduct its affairs, had a lawful right'to continue to do so.

Subsequently, in State v. Schauss, 13-23 O. C. C. 283, there is a very lengthy discussion of the powers and duties of the board and a judgment affirming the action of the board in certain matters.

[634]*634On the twenty-eighth of May last, in the case of Waddick v. Merrell, 26 O. C. C. 437, the matter was argued again in regard to this board, and an opinion was delivered, in regard to the construction of the word “university” and the powers and duties of the board.

I do not propose to go over again the ground that has been traveled by these cases, or the points made by them. Reference may be had to those for the views of this court, and with the views there expressed we are .still satisfied to abide as matters that have been adjudicated so famas-this court-is concerned. Suffice it to say, that the board of trustees of this institution up to the time of the passage of this act of the legislature was, so far as this court is concerned, a lawful body, and was conducting the affairs of the board in a lawful and proper manner, and that within the definition of the statutes and the definition of the acts of the corporation, it was a university.

The party who brought this action has brought it in the form of a mandamus. Really, it seems to us that if the city intended to attack the lawful authority and. existence of that board, the better way to have brought it would have been quo warranto. Still perhaps it is sufficient to aver and perhaps they may aver that the body has ceased to exist, and that therefore so far as its office is concerned, that anything they have done is without authority of law and beyond their powers, and is not obligatory upon any officer of the city of any person having funds of the board in charge.

This controversy arises under a statute passed in April, 1904. ; It is sufficient to say that under prior statutes, by the action of the board the property of the university had all been transferred to the city of Toledo, and that property remains still in the city of Toledo, as its property, and it took it and made arrangements to carry out the purposes of the original act of incorporation according to the original views of the donor who established the school.

Prior schools or universities similar to this have been established in Cincinnati, and certain powers in regard to them have been transferred to the city of Cincinnati, and the city of Cincinnati is aiding and carrying on and supporting those schools. In the case of Perin v. Carey, 65 U. S. (24 How.) 465 [16 L. Ed. 701], the whole question of the power of the city of Cincinnati to receive and accept any care or control of these schools or universities that have been established, was brought in question. A was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, -aUá mat decision is referred to at length in a case m he INrncl in the Ohio Circuit Decisions, of State v. Tinker, supra. The subsequent act had made the original acts in regard to such matters extended — it extended them to the city of [635]*635Toledo — and the city of Toledo has received this property and is carrying on this trust.

Now Sec. 4102 of this statute is found in 97 O. L. 544 and Sec. 4105 is found on page 545 of the same volume. Under these sections certain powers have been given to a certain body and certain definitions made by the legislature, and it is claimed that under, and by' virtue of these acts, this definition of this grant of power, the authority was taken away from ■ these trustees, and they were deprived of all authority in regard to the ■administration of this fund or of any powers in fact in regard to the university so called.

The latter part of this Sec. 4102 Rev. Stat. provides of enacts:

“A university supported in whole or in part by municipal taxation, is hereby defined as an assemblage of colleges united under one organization or management, affording instruction in the arts, sciences and the learned professions, and conferring degrees.”

Section 4105 Rev. Stat. provides:

“The custody, management and administration of any and all estates or funds, given or transferred in trust to any municipality for the promotion of education, and accepted by the council thereof, and any institution for the promotion of education heretofore or hereafter so founded other than a university as defined by this act, shall be committed to, and exercised by, the board of education of the school district including such municipality, and such board of education shall be held the representative and trustee of. such municipality in the management and control of such estates and funds so held in trust and in the administration of such institution, excepting always such funds and estates held by any municipality which are used to maintain a university as defined by this act.”

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Related

Perin Ex Rel. Perin v. Carey
65 U.S. 465 (Supreme Court, 1861)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-waldron-v-toledo-city-ohcirctlucas-1904.