W. B. Gibson Co. v. Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority

29 N.E.2d 236, 65 Ohio App. 84, 18 Ohio Op. 302, 1940 Ohio App. LEXIS 785
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 236 (W. B. Gibson Co. v. Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority) 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
W. B. Gibson Co. v. Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority, 29 N.E.2d 236, 65 Ohio App. 84, 18 Ohio Op. 302, 1940 Ohio App. LEXIS 785 (Ohio Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Phillips, J.

Tbis case comes before this court on *85 the appeal of the plaintiff and the cross-appeal of defendant the city of Warren on questions of law from a declaratory judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Trumbull county.

Both defendants filed demurrers to plaintiff’s petition in the lower court which were subsequently abandoned, and by agreement of counsel the case was submitted to that court on an agreed statement of facts, which constitutes the bill of exceptions in this court.

Council of the city of Warren, a municipal corporation and body politic, herein called the city, duly passed resolution No. 1300 on January 18, 1939, by which the city was authorized to and by a cooperation agreement did agree, among other things, to plan or replan, zone or rezone, any area in the city to an appropriate neighborhood classification for the construction of a housing project by the defendant, The Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority, a corporation and body politic organized and existing under and by virtue of the housing authority law of Ohio, hereinafter referred to as the housing authority, and to waive building and inspection fees, if subjected to any, and make such exceptions to the building regulations and ordinances as were found necessary by the housing authority in the development of the project.

Pursuant to the terms of that resolution the housing authority purchased a parcel of land situated in residential class “A” of the city known as the Beck farm.

Subsequently on the twenty-fourth day of August 1939, the housing authority entered into a written contract with the plaintiff, The W. B. Gibson Company, an Ohio corporation, for the construction of the houses, which provided inter alia as follows:

“This contract is conditioned upon the rezoning on or before February 15, 1940, unless said time is extended by written agreement of the authority and the contractor from ‘A’ residential to ‘B’ residential of the site known as the Carrie Beck farm, upon which *86 said project is to be erected. In the event said site is not rezoned by the time herein mentioned or any extension hereof, then said contract shall be void, cancelled and of no effect; and said authority shall be fully released from any and all suits, debts, actions, damages, causes of action, sums of money, claims, and demands of any kind or description whatever, which said contractor has or claims to have under this contract. ’ ’

Thereafter, on September 20, 1939, the council of defendant city duly passed ordinance No. 2933 rezoning the Beck farm as class “B” residential.

Referendum petitions were duly filed to this ordinance and the ordinance submitted to the electorate of the city at the November election, 1939, and defeated.

The lower court held that ordinance No. 2933 was necessary in order to rezone the property in question and was subject to referendum; that the quoted paragraph of the contract between the plaintiff and the housing authority was a condition precedent to the performance of the contract, and unless the time was extended in accordance with the terms thereof the contract had “become void, cancelled and of no effect; and the authority released from all liability under the contract;” and rendered judgment on its finding against the plaintiff.

From that judgment plaintiff appealed, and defendant, city of Warren, filed a cross-appeal on questions of law to determine the constitutionality of Section 1078-56, General Code, and the other sections of the Housing Cooperation Law, claiming that this section of the Code, and others of the act, are unconstitutional and would frustrate a referendum upon measures passed thereunder, and accordingly conflict with Section If, Article 2 of the Constitution of Ohio, which provides:

“The initiative and referendum powers are hereby reserved to the people of each municipality on all'questions which such municipalities may now or hereafter *87 be authorized by law to control by legislative action; such powers shall be exercised in the manner now or hereafter provided by law.”

Plaintiff claims that ordinance No. 2933 was not necessary in view of the passage of resolution No. 1300 and the subsequent cooperation agreement between the city and the housing authority and the right of eminent domain granted to the housing authority by Section 1078-34, General - Code, and that if it was necessary it was not subject to referendum because of the operation of Sections 4227-3 and 1078-56, General Code.

Presented for consideration and determination are the questions of the necessity of ordinance No. 2933, and the right to subject it to a referendum after the adoption of resolution No. 1300 and whether the quoted paragraph of the contract between plaintiff and the housing authority is a condition precedent to the performance of the contract.

Resolution No. 1300 was only an agreement on the part of the city to cooperate with the housing authority in the respects heretofore outlined. It was not a rezoning ordinance and did not attempt to rezone any district anywhere in the city. By that resolution, styled by council as a resolution, not an ordinance, the city simply agreed to rezone any area in the city to an appropriate neighborhood classification for the construction of the housing project at the proper time. A number of fine distinctions have been drawn by the courts with reference to ordinances and resolutions.

“A resolution ordinarily is a declaration of a council, or a legislative body evincing some purpose or intent to do some act not the doing of the act itself. Ordinarily it is the intention to enter upon some enterprise of public moment, something authorized by law that it may do. An ordinance ordinarily provides a rule of conduct and is a law binding upon a community. They are declarations of a rule of conduct for the en *88 forcement of a right or the creation of a duty.” Cleveland, S. & C. Railway v. City of Norwalk, 17 N. P. (N. S.), 580, 25 O. D. (N. P.), 267.

“Resolution. In the proceedings of a municipal board, a resolution is something less formal than an ordinance, and, generally speaking, is a mere expression of the opinion or mind of the council concerning some matter coming within its official cognizance. No set form of words is essential if the requirement which calls for such expression is met.” Ballentine Law Dictionary, 1130.

We hold therefore that resolution No. 1300 was nothing more than a declaration of the council of the city to perform the acts agreed and not the doing of those acts and was in no sense a rezoning ordinance. Since we take this view we do not pass upon the question of the applicability of a referendum to that resolution or whether the cooperation agreement to rezone authorized by that resolution was void as an unlawful delegation of legislative authority as urged by the city, since there was no legislative act of the city, with reference to actual rezoning until the passage of ordinance No. 2933.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 236, 65 Ohio App. 84, 18 Ohio Op. 302, 1940 Ohio App. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-b-gibson-co-v-warren-metropolitan-housing-authority-ohioctapp-1940.