Thomas v. Board of County Commrs.

162 N.E. 430, 28 Ohio App. 8
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 430 (Thomas v. Board of County Commrs.) 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
Thomas v. Board of County Commrs., 162 N.E. 430, 28 Ohio App. 8 (Ohio Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

These two cases involve largely the samé questions, and are considered together, as they were by the trial court.

The actions were taxpayers’ suits, seeking to enjoin further proceedings in the construction of two' sections of turnpike, one known as the Monroe road and the other as the Oxford-Millville road.

The proceedings with reference to these improve *11 ments had reached the point of’ the making of the contracts, and bonds were being sold, or had been sold, and were in process of delivery, to pay for the improvements. Further proceedings were enjoined by the trial court, and from that judgment defendants appeal to this court.

Several objections are made to the proceedings by plaintiff, three of which we consider of sufficient, importance for consideration:

First. The sufficiency of the preliminary resolution, declaring the improvement necessary, and the question whether unanimity in the vote of the commissioners, other than on the preliminary resolutions, is necessary.

Second. The failure to give notice of the passage of the resolution declaring the improvement necessary. .

Third. Whether or not the failure of the auditor to file the certificate required by Section 5660, General Code, otherwise known as the Burns Law, is fatal to the proceedings.

These road improvements were initiated by the county commissioners without the presentation of a petition.

Section 6910 of the General, Code authorizes such action upon the unanimous vote of the board.

Section 6911 provides that, when they have determined that any road shall be constructed, the board if acting without a petition, shall determine by resolution, by unanimous vote, the route and termini, the kind and extent of the improvement, and at the same time shall order the county surveyor to make surveys, etc.

Et is admitted that none of the proceedings re *12 ceived the unanimous vote of the commissioners except the preliminary resolution, and it is urged that the intent of the statute is that each step shall receive the unanimous approval of the commissioners.

We do not think it is necessary to add anything to the express terms of the statute. If the unanimous vote is required in every step in the transaction, the whole proposition in its finality might be defeated by one member of the board on a vote on the resolution apportioning the assessment, or on a vote on a payment to the contractor for the improvement. We see no reason for extending the unanimity beyond the express terms of the statute.

It is urged that the preliminary resolution which received the unanimous vote of the board did not comply with Sections 6910 and 6911, General Code, in.that the resolution failed to define the route and termini and the kind and extent of the improvement.

While the resolution is somewhat indefinite, and probably should be more specific, if this was the only objection to the proceedings, the omission might well be overlooked, and the resolution sustained as a substantial compliance.

The first serious question with which we are confronted is the admitted failure to give the notice required by Section 6912, General Code.

Section 6912 provides:

“Upon the completion of the surveys, plans, profiles, cross-sections, estimates and specifications for such improvement by the county surveyor, he shall transmit to the commissioners copies of the same; and thereupon, except in cases of reconstruction or repair of roads, where no lands or property are taken, the county commissioners shall cause to *13 be published in a newspaper published and of general circulation within the county, * * * once a week for two consecutive weeks, a notice that such improvement is to be made and that copies of the surveys, plans, profiles, cross-sections, estimates, and specifications for said improvement are on file in the office of the county commissioners, for the inspection and examination of all persons interested therein. * * * Such notice shall also state the time and place for hearing objections to said improvement,” etc.

As above stated, it is admitted that no such notice was given, and it is urged by counsel for defendants that no notice is required, as these improvements are within the exception, ‘ ‘ except in cases of reconstruction or repáir,” etc.

The Monroe road involves the improvement of about three miles of road, at a cost of approximately $70,000, and provides for the surfacing of the road with “some permanent material,” as provided in the determining resolution, and the contract is for asphalt.

The contract for the Oxford-Millville road was a much larger contract, and involves the improvement of the road with several inches of macadam, with an asphalt surface, and involves an expenditure of approximately $185,000.

The exception in Section 6912 cannot be construed to apply to contracts of such magnitude.

The contracts were not for repair of roads. To • state the fact and magnitude of the improvement is to refute the proposition. Reconstruction mentioned in the statute is put in the same category with repair *14 of roads, and undoubtedly refers to an emergency restoration of a road following a casualty.

An attempt is made to give technical meaning to these two words. If we are to take the technical meaning, then the determining resolution itself eliminates the question of reconstruction from Noth contracts, as the resolution provides/' among other things:

‘ ‘ That they do hereby declare that it is necessary to the public convenience and welfare that proceedings be had and taken for constructing, improving and repairing of the road described as follows.”

If we are to resort to technical construction, then what the commissioners were bound to do under their determining resolution was either to construct, improve, or repair.

Section 6911, in mentioning the question of the determination of the board of commissioners, uses the words “constructed, reconstructed, improved or repaired,” and requires unanimity in determining the, improvement intended.

Reconstruction is not in the determining resolution.

We are constrained to give the words as used in Section 6912 the ordinary and reasonable construction in relation to the things to be accomplished. The section provides a purpose for the giving of the notice, and. provides for the fixing of the time and place for hearing objections to said improvement. It certainly would be a strained construction to say that, in contracts involving more than $200,000, no notice was necessary, when .in the construction of an improvement involving the amount of $500 or *15 $1,000, if construction or improvement is intended, a notice would be necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 430, 28 Ohio App. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-board-of-county-commrs-ohioctapp-1923.