Tyler v. City of Columbus

6 Ohio C.C. 224
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio C.C. 224 (Tyler v. City of Columbus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler v. City of Columbus, 6 Ohio C.C. 224 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Stewart, J.

This is an action to restrain the collection of an assessment which has been levied upon the property of plaintiff to pay the cost of extending Front street 80 feet wide from Naghten street to Park street. The suit is instituted by plaintiff on behalf of himself and numerous other property owners who have been assessed to pay these costs, upon the ground that the-proceedings therefor wore illegal and irregular in many particulars. The allegations of illegality and irregularity are set forth in the amended petition in separate paragraphs, and styled as different causes of action from one to eight. This, however, is not proper pleading, as there is but one cause of' action, and the only relief sought is an injunction to restrain-the collection of one assessment. Looking at the amended petition as stating but one cause of action, we think alii of the so-called causes of action might have been stricken out as irrelevant, except the first, which alleges that the resolution for the appropriation of the property to make the extension, was not recommended by the Board of Public Works. The law in force at the time of the adoption, of this [225]*225resolution, provided (87 Ohio L. 156) that no resolution for an improvement of a street should be passed, except upontbe recommendation of the Board of. Public Works of the city of Columbus. This being so, the council had no authority to pass the resolution without such. recommendation. But it is claimed that the action of the council was invalid for two reasons: First, that it appropriated money by resolution, whereas the statute requires that appropriations of money should only be made by ordinance. The resolution adopted by the council reads as follows: Résolved by the council of the city of Columbus, that for the purpose of meeting the costs and •expenses of opening and extending Front street from Naghten street to Park street the mayor and auditor of said city, be, and they are hereby authorized for and on behalf of said city to borrow the sum of $51,964.52-100, and for andón behalf of said city that they be and are hereby authorized to execute a promissory note or notes for said sum, payable not exceeding 12 months after date with interest at a rate not exceeding 7 per centum per annum, payable annually.” In our view this is not an appropriatiation of money, for by virtue of this resolution no money is taken from the city treasury. It simply authorizes the borrowing of the money in anticipation of the collection of the costs from the property owners assessed for the improvement. The second claim is that the provisions of section 2702 were violated, as there was no certificate then or at any time by the city auditor, that the funds necessary to pay the condemnation money were in the treasury of the city unappropriated. The terms of section 2702, if applicable, are broad enough to cover the action of the city council in passing this resolution, and it was held in Rhoades v. Toledo, 6 O. C. C. R. 9, that section 2702 was ap-< plicable to proceedings by a city council for the condemnation of private property, for street purposes. The decision in that case rests solely upon the opinion delivered in the case of Ryan v. Hoffman, 26 Ohio St. 109, and we are unable to see [226]*226why an authoritative, utterance upon this question was necessary for the decision of that case. With all due respect to the judge delivering the opinion in the case of Ryan v. Hoffman, supra, and to the court deciding the case of Rhoades v. Toledo, supra, we see no reason for changing the views we have held and expressed heretofore, and which are so well stated by the Supreme Court in the case of Elster v. Springfield, 48 Ohio St. that section 2702 “ is intended for the protection of tax payers by checking municipal extravagance and the incurring of indebtedness,” and therefore cannot apply to condemnation proceedings for street purposes in which the municipality incurs no indebtedness and is guilty of no extravagance. The statutes relating to the appropriation of private property for public uses show that the amount of the damages is necessarily indeterminate; that the verdict of one jury thereon may not fix it definitely, and it seems clear to us that no officer of the city could certify that the money necessary to pay therefor, was in the treasury, when by no possibility could he know the amount that would be required. Further provisions of the statute are that the assessment shall be made after the damages are determined, and that the assessment may be collected upon the general tax list (Rev. Stat., sec. 2263), or levied on the abutting and such adjacent and contiguous or other benefited property as the council may determine (Rev. Stat., sec. 2264). In either case it is an assessment for this particular purpose, and the fund thus raised is applied to the payment of the expenses thereof, and it is a payment by the property owneis and not a payment by the city. So that proceedings for condemnation and appropriation of property are not within the spirit or purpose of section 2702, and the impossibility of carrying out the letter of the section in regard to them, which must have been known to the legislature which enacted section 2702, makes it clear to us that this section cannot apply to such proceedings. We have preferred to put our holding upon the ground that section 2702 does not apply to condemnation proceedings rather than upon the provisions of section 4 of the [227]*227act of April 30,1891, (88 O. L. 425) as this proceeding was initiated prior to the passage of that act. As to what is called the seventh cause of action, which alleges that the resolution appointing three freeholders to prepare and report to council an estimated assessment of the costs and expenses of opening and extending Front street, etc., upon the lots and lands therein described according to benefits was not adopted as required by. Rev. Stat., sec. 2267, it is sufficient to say that this was not such a resolution as came within the purview of that section. None of the other so-called causes of action are now seriously urged as rendering the proceedings of the council illegal or void. The answer alleges that the resolution for the appropriation of the property was recommended by the Board of Public Works prior to its adoption by the city council, thus taking issue with the allegations of the petition in that regard. Upon this issue there has been introduced in evidence the record of the board, and also the testimony of the members of the board as to what took place at the meeting. The record of the board is as follows :

“ Resolution recommended to extend Front street, and to condemn property.

Resolution submitted to appropriate private property described to public use to open and extend Front street 80 feet wide from Naghten street to Park street, and rescinding the resolution to same effect adopted April 28, 1.890. The question being on the same for adoption, the roll being called thereon, all the members voted aye, so the same was recommended.”

While this is somewhat informal, we consider it a substantial compliance with the requirements of section 5 of the act of April 3, 1890. (87 Ohio L. 152). It appears from this record that the roll was called and all the members voted aye, so that there were four votes for the resolution.

We have not considered the evidence of the members of the board in reaching our conclusion that the resolution was duly [228]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio C.C. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-city-of-columbus-ohiocirct-1892.