Thompson v. Love

42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 61
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 61 (Thompson v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Love, 42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 61 (Ohio 1884).

Opinion

Follett, J.

The questions in those cases are similar, and all arise in the case of Thompson v. Love, except one, and that one relates to the disqualification of county commissioner Lindley M. Rranson to act in case of Jamison v. Love.

The original proceedings were instituted before the county commissioners of Harrison county, to straighten and improve what is known as the Cadiz and Union vale ” road, .in the case of Thompson v. Love; and to straighten and improve what is known as the Cadiz and Harrisville ” road, in the case of Jamison v. Love, and to do this under the provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to Two-Mile Assessment Pikes,” sections 4829 to 4864.

In each case the petition for such improvement was pre sented to the commissioners on March 6,1882, and a bond with sureties was given by the petitioners for the payment of the costs, in case the improvement should not be finally ordered, which bond was accepted and approved by the commissioners. The commissioners thereupon, on the same day, appointed viewers and a surveyor, or engineer, under section 4831, and ordered that they meet on April 4, 18S2, in one case, and on April 11, 1882, in the other case, to make their view and survey, and that they report their proceedings to the next regular session of the commissioners.

The petition asked that said road lie straightened, as well [65]*65as improved, and the report of the viewers and surveyor shows that it was straightened.

The reviewers and surveyor made their report to the June session of the commissioners, and the commissioners, at that session, made a final order that said improvement be made; which order states the kind of improvement, the width and extent of the same, and the lands which shall be assessed for the expense thereof.

Thereupon the plaintiffs commenced their action in the common pleas to enjoin the execution of said final order, alleging in their petition various grounds upon which they claimed the proceedings to be illegal and void. Answers were filed by the defendants, and a reply by the plaintiffs. The case was heard in the common pleas, and a final judgment rendered, enjoining the proceeding. From this judgment the defendants appealed to the district court, where the case was re-tried and a final judgment rendered, by a divided court, dissolving the injunction and dismissing plaintiffs’ petition, with costs.

The object of the present proceeding is to reverse this judgment of the district court. It is not necessary to state at jength the substance of the pleadings, which are quite voluminous, because the district court has stated in writing its conclusions of fact found separately from its .conclusions of law, and the errors assigned in this court are based upon what is claimed to be erroneous conclusions of law of the district court upon the facts so found.

I. Was there error as to the notices ?

The conclusions of fact so found by the district court show that no notice whatever was given, of the filing or presentation, to the county commissioners of said county, of the petition for said improvement.

And the court decided, as matter of law, that no notice was required of the filing or presentation of said petition.

In so deciding the court did not err.

The court also found that no notice whatever of the time and place of meeting of said Viewers and surveyor on the fourth and eleventh of April, 1882, was published, excepting a notice published by the auditor of said county, on the six-[66]*66tcenth day of March, 1882, and twenty-third day of March, 1882, and on the thirtieth day of March, 1882, in two newspapers published in said county, called the “ Cadiz Sentinel ” and the “ Cadiz Republican,” respectively, of which notice in the case of Thompson v. Love, the following is a copy, to wit:

PIKE NOTICE.
Auditok’s Office, Haeeison County.
• “ Cadiz, Ohio, March 10, 1882.
“Notice is hereby given, that a petition was presented to the commissioners of Harrison county, Ohio, at their March session, 1882, asking that a view and survey be had on the direct road leading from Cadiz to Unionvale; beginning at the gate of the Cadiz cemetery (being the terminus of Cadiz macadamized road), thence by said direct road to the west end of the Unionvale bridge, all in said county, and asking that said road be improved by macadamizing, under the two-mile assessment act; and bond with approved security having been filed, according to law, the board appointed Alexander Henderson, Cyrus T. Long and John N. Haverfield, viewers, and Jacob Jarvis, surveyor, to meet at the auditor’s office, Cadiz, Ohio,' on Tuesday, April 4, 1882, at ten o’clock, a. m., who, after being duly sworn, shall proceed to view and survey said road as provided by statute (§§ 4831, 4833, 4835.
“ James M. Scott, Auditor.
“ March 16. 3w.”

The notice in case of Jamison v. Love is similar.

The court decided from the foregoing facts, that said notice was sufficient in form and substance, and that sufficient publication thereof was made.

In so deciding the court did not érr. No one complains that he was not notified.

II. Were the acting officers competent and duly qualified?

The viewers and surveyor or engineer must take “ an oath faithfully and impartially to discharge the duties of their appointments .”

And the court found, “ That the viewers and surveyor, appointed by the commissioners of said county, or any or either [67]*67of them were not sworn nor affirmed to discharge the duties of their appointment, except by the auditor of said county, who assumed to and did administer an oath to them to faithfully and impartially discharge the duties of their respective appointments.

“ That said auditor, at and before the administration of said oath by him, had signed the petition for said improvement, and then owned a lot within two miles of said improvement, which was afterwards reported as benefited thereby, and to be assessed for the expense of the same.

“ The court decide, as a matter of law, on the foregoing facts, that the county auditor had authority to administer an' oath to said viewers and surveyor, and that they were sworn according to.Jaw.”

There was no error in so deciding.

Plaintiff in error, Jamison, claims that, in his case, the proceedings of the board of county commissioners áre invalid by reason of the following facts found by the court:

“ That Lindley M. Branson, one of the county commissioners of said county, was the owner in fee simple in severalty, of a large quantity of land in said county, and within two miles of. said improvement, at and before the time when the petition for said improvement was presented to the county commissioners of said county; his said land is reported as benefited by said proposed improvement, and to be assessed therefor.
After the report of the viewers and surveyor was filed, but before the final order for said improvement was.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Parker v. Burgett
29 Ohio St. 513 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-love-ohio-1884.