Stone v. Cuyahoga Light Co.

9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545, 20 Ohio Dec. 130, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 89
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545 (Stone v. Cuyahoga Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. Cuyahoga Light Co., 9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545, 20 Ohio Dec. 130, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 89 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Phillips, J. (orally).

The plaintiff owns and occupies a lot fronting fifty feet on Euclid avenue, having a six story and basement building thereon, the basement extending thirteen feet under the sidewalk. The roadway of this street is sixty feet wide, and each sidewalk is nineteen feet wide. This space under the sidewalk, thirteen by fifty feet, is, and for many years has been used by plaintiff in connection with his basement, ¡and is of great value to him and to his property.

The defendant, an Ohio corporation, is engaged in the business of furnishing light, heat and power to the public generally, by means of pipes and conduits laid under ground, and is about to place one of its steam pipes1 in and along said excavation under the sidewalk. Plaintiff asks that defendant be enjoined from making such use of said part of the street.

The defendant .answers, justifying its proposed action under an ordinance of the city council and the direction of the board of public service. To this answer the plaintiff demurs.

The nature of the case 'and the course of the arguments involve two questions: first, is the proposed use of this part of Euclid avenue a proper street use ? In other words, is the laying of steam pipes beneath the surface of the street, for supplying steam to such of the public .as may want to use it for heat and power, such use of the highway as may properly be authorized by the public authorities; and, secondly, has the plaintiff such right to the use he is making of the part of the street as makes it immune from the proposed interference therewith?

The suggestion in argument that'this is not a public use of the street is answered by our Supreme Court and others, holding that the public use does not mean a use for the benefit of the entire public, or of any large portion of it; .but the use may be limited to the inhabitants of a small or restricted locality, if the use and benefit be in common, and not to particular individuals, or a very few persons. I cite McQuillen v. Hatton, 42 Ohio St., 202; Costar v. Water Co., 18 N. J. Eq., 55; Ross v. Davis, 97 Ind., 79; Pocantico Water Works Co. v. Bird, 130 N. Y., 249.

Any contention in this regard, however, must be deemed foreclosed in this case by the averment in the petition that the defend[547]*547ant is “engaged in the business of furnishing light, heat and power to the public generally.” The question remains, however, whether this public use of the street is a proper street use.

ITow stands this question upon principle—upon principles to be drawn from the trend of well-considered authoritative cases? In the earlier cases, controlling effect w.as too often given to the ownership of the fee in the land embraced within the highway. But in the later cases little or no effect is given to this feature. In Lewis, Em. Dom. (3d Ed.), Section 28, the author says:

“The uses which the public may make of a street do not de,pend upon the ownership of the fee. If the fee is in the abutting owner, it is subject to all legitimate street uses. If it is in the public, it is in trust for street uses, and is subject to certain rights or easements in the abutting owner, which can not be impaired by any diversion of the street to other uses. * * * It seems every way desirable that a distinction which is never made in the every-day dealings between man and man, touching abutting property, should be abandoned by the courts. There is no substantial distinction between a perpetual easement for street uses, and a fee for street uses.”

The same doctrine has been announced by our Supreme Court again .and again. The latest expression of that court upon the subject is found in Kellogg v. Traction Co., 80 Ohio St., 331. I will not stop to read. ,

In many of the earlier cases, and in some of the more recent cases, the public right is limited to such uses of the highway as will in some way, directly or indirectly, promote and subserve the primary purposes of travel and transportation. The efforts of some courts to bring some new use within this narrow .and partial view of the primary purposes of the highway, are more amusing than instructive. In the march of progress, in the social and in the business world, the law must necessarily follow; it can not lead. But while the courts can not keep .abreast of the march of progress, they ought at least to keep within hailing distance of the procession.

We are making many uses of streets in large cities that were not intended, or thought of, when the streets were dedicated; and it is reasonably certain that in the future still other uses will be made—must be made of municipal highways to meet the [548]*548growing necessities of dense population and of congested business. Following this inevitable enlargement of street uses for public purposes, the courts have taken a broader view of street uses than was demanded in the earlier cases, and have generally held that the legitimate public uses of a municipal highway are not limited to such uses as must have been in actual contemplation by the dedicator, but are to be extended to all such public uses as are not destructive of, or inconsistent with, the uses so originally contemplated. The sound logic of this view is, that the preservation and maintenance of the original purpose and benefits of the dedication, does’ not require a restriction to such uses as were originally contemplated, but only that no new use shall be allowed that -will destroy or impair the uses originally contemplated.

It is very clearly to be seen that the rule of restriction—the old rule, if I may so call it—while it preserves to the public all of the benefits originally contemplated by the dedication, stands in the way of making new and necessary uses of the highway that do not come within the original contemplation. It is just as clearly to be seen that the new rule, if I may so term it, preserves to the public just as fully all the benefits originally contemplated by the dedication, and at the same time sanctions and fosters the additional public uses that grow out of the necessity of the situation. The former rule is narrow and restricted; the latter is broad and comprehensive, as all rules should be that concern the public welfare.

This gradual development of the law is not at all exceptional; it is a natural process. However erratic and disorderly the' course of legislation may be, the laws that rest upon principle, and that embody doctrines, are evolved by an orderly sequence of events coincident with the progress of social and business conditions. Herbert Spencer says that the growth and adaptation of the law is brought about mostly by small accumulated changes, the unprompted workings of organized society—much as towns and cities have insensibly grown up—to meet the growing wants of a progressive humanity.

It may safely be assumed, I think, that the primary purpose, and perhaps the only purpose in actual contemplation in the dedi[549]*549cation of land for a highway was the surface use thereof. But, as I have said, this has been found to be only a partial view of the authorized uses of a municipal highway. Lewis, Em. Dom., 182, says:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545, 20 Ohio Dec. 130, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-cuyahoga-light-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1909.