Waddick v. Merrill

5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 103, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 232
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 28, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 103 (Waddick v. Merrill) 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
Waddick v. Merrill, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 103, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 232 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

There are answers filed on behalf of the various defendants, but the issues of fact made are very narrow, and perhaps not very important in certain aspects of the case, unless in one particular. There is an issue made as to the hind and grade of studies taught by the Toledo University and by the Toledo High School, and we have heard some evidence on that issue.

The petition was filed on July 6, 1903. It appears that prior to the enactment of the statute providing for this board of directors which is now in control, to-wit, Section 217 of the new code, the property and the management of the so-called university was under the control of the board of .education of the city of Toledo school district, and that by virtue of an act so providing theretofore in force. It is charged in the petition that this pretended board of directors of the “university” as it is therein designated, “has demanded that the board of education turn over to it all of said property and funds, and that said board of education shall hereafter cease to maintain instruction in said manual training work, leaving such instruction to be provided by such pretended board of directors,” and that unless restrained from so doing the board of education will accordingly turn over the property and affairs to the board of directors of the university. It appears by a supplemental petition filed in the case, and by the records and evidence in the case, that no restraining order was issued, and that subsequently the property was turned over to the board of directors of the university, and the university took charge of it, and has since been in control of the school or the department of education which is designated as “the Toledo University.” It is also stated in the petition that a levy of .3 of a mill on the dollar of valuation has been made on the taxable property of the city for the purposes of the Toledo University; that this was done on June 15, 1903; and that the board of directors of the university has requested the defendant, William M. [105]*105Godfrey, as county auditor, to place the same upon the tax duplicate of the county, the funds to be realized from such levy to be used by said pretended board of directors. With respect to that it appears that no restraining order was issued; that this levy was subsequently made; that the December half of this levy has been collected, and the funds turned over to the board of directors of the university. The June half is upon the tax duplicate, and is about due for collection. So that the aspect of affairs has changed somewhat — we may say, in our judgment, has changed materially, as the case presents itself to the court for disposition, since the action was commenced.

As to the constitutional questions involved. In the case of State, ex rel Attorney-General, v. City of Toledo, found in 3 C. C. — N. S., 468, these constitutional questions and various other questions pertaining to this institution, were very fully considered by this court, as will be seen by reading the opinion by Judge Haynes in that case. A great many of the questions considered in that case are not involved here, but we think that these constitutional questions were necessarily involved there. It is urged that the particular question of the taxing power which is conferred, or undertaken to be conferred, upon the city or upon the board of education, under the statute' in question, was not passed upon by the court there. We think however, that the whole act was necessarily involved, in all its provisions. Even if that were not so, in the situation of this case as I have described it, the tax having gone upon the duplicate, being due for collection and partly collected, the treasurer not being made a party defendant, nor sought to be restrained from making any collection, the case seems to have shifted into one where we are asked to require one board to take control of the property and affairs of the Toledo University, including the amount to be collected as taxes, and to restrain the other board from exercising such control, and that its aspect of a proceeding to restrain the levy of taxes has passed away. We therefore do not believe that it is necessary for us to go any further into a consideration of the constitutional questions involved. They are sufficiently discussed and are necessarily disposed of in the ease of State, ex rel, v. Toledo, supra.

[106]*106It will be observed that what remains of the ease, and the disposition to be made of it, depends in large measure upon the construction to be put upon this section of the statute — 217— providing for the appointment of this board of directors, and more particularly upon the construction of the word “university” found in that statute. It reads in part:

“In any municipal corporation having a university supported in whole or in part by municipal taxation all the authority, powers and control vested in or belonging to said corporation with respect to the management of the estate, property and funds given, transferred, covenanted or pledged to said corporation in trust or otherwise for such university, as well as the government, conduct and control of such university, shall be vested in and exercised by a board of directors consisting of nine electors of said municipal corporation, who shall be appointed by the mayor of such municipal corporation.”

It then gives their terms of office.

It was in pursuance of that provision that this board was appointed, and it is contended that this act does not apply to this city or to this institution in the city of Toledo, because it is not a university. Upon that subject counsel for plaintiff has furnished us with many definitions of lexicographers, men of education, scholars, and it seems to us plain, that according to these definitions, the institution carried on here is not a university as it is and sometimes has been carried on.

But that does not settle the question. What we are called upon to determine is the sense in which the Legislature used this word “university” in this statute. It is said with very good reason, that ordinarily the Legislature would be presumed to have adopted the correct and technical meaning of words, or at least their general and ordinary meaning; but it seems to us that there has been a somewhat loose use or misuse of this word, from the beginning, by the donor in the deed of trust providing for funds for this institution, by the council of the city in its legislation upon the subject, and by the state Legislature in legislating upon the same subject. It seems to us that it is apparent from the legislation of the state that the word “university” has been used with respect to this very institution, [107]*107from the beginning of the legislation upon the subject, or ever since the time the city of Toledo could have come within the purview of the law. It has been suggested that the original statute applicable to the city of Cincinnati, and to that city alone, mentions “university,” and that as we understand it, there has never been, or was not in the first instance, at least, a university there, within the true meaning of the term. It was a university in embryo in the first instance. But, however that may be, with respect to the city of Toledo, it is apparent that the legislation has been directly over the control- 'and management of this institution. It is clear that it is the only institution in the city of Toledo that is a university either in fact or in name, either in existence or in embryo. In point on the subject is 94 O. L., 241. This is Section 4105, Revised Statutes, as amended on April 16, 1900, and it is the law that was in force at the time the ease of

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 103, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddick-v-merrill-ohiocirct-1904.