White v. Cleveland

23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 317, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 369
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 317 (White v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Cleveland, 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 317, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 369 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

WINCH, J.

In these cases we are asked to enjoin the city of Cleveland from appropriating certain so-called reversionary interests in the lands of Lake View Park for the ostensible purpose of perfecting its title in fee simple to said lands for park uses, but really for the purpose, as is claimed, of selling about thirty-five acres of said lands to the railroads for depot purposes, and from leasing a pier or dock in front of said park, near the extension of East Ninth street, to the navigation companies.

For these purposes, four suits were originally brought in the court of common pleas, two by taxpayers, one addressed against the appropriation proceedings, and one against the lease of the pier, and two by owners of reversionary rights, one against the appropriation proceedings and one against the lease of the pier.

By separate appeals of various parties interested, these four common pleas cases have become six cases in this court.

[326]*326The lands of Lake View Park, originally appropriated in 1872, lie on the side hill fronting Lake Brie, for a distance of over 2,000 feet, between Erie, now East Ninth street on' the east, and'’Seneca, now West Third street, on the west, and extending from Summit avenue on the top of the hill at the south, to the right of way of the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad Company at the bottom of the hill on the north, an area of about nine acres, which, in these proceedings, have been called the uplands;'next north of the Cleveland and Pittsburgh right of way is the right of way of the Lake Shore Railroad Company, at that time nearly at the water’s edge, and by the same proceedings all the property north of the Lake Shore right of way was appropriated, it being then a narrow strip of land, but a few feet in width. In 1894 the city of Cleveland put in a row of sheet piling and bulk heads parallel to the shore in front of the park and over 1,000 feet out in the lake, and established a public dumping ground there so that since said date the same has been filled in, and there are now about ninety-nine acres of made land in front of the upland.

In front of this made land, as an extension of East Ninth street, the city has built a pier 100 feet wide, extending out 713 feet to the harbor line established by the United States Government in 1898. Two hundred feet west of this pier is another pier of the same dimensions, which is the pier the city has undertaken to lease to the navigation companies.

The claims of plaintiffs with reference to the rights and title of the city in the premises, a¡s acquired by the appropriation proceedings of 1872, are as follows:

‘ ‘ The claim of plaintiffs in all four suits is that by the appropriation proceedings of 1872, the city acquired only, an easement .for park purposes in Lake View Park, including the uplands; that by appropriating an easement for park purposes in the shore, it at the same time appropriated for park purposes the riparian rights which were appurtenant to the shore; that these riparian rights included the right to wharf out, or make land to the limit of navigability, unless prevented by the state; that the city appropriated this right for park purposes; [327]*327and having made land by the exercise of this riparian right without interference by the state, the made land was affected by the same easement for park purposes with which the upland was affected; that the piers are but a portion of the made land. Having the right to fill out the entire land to the harbor line, unless prevented by the state, the city had the right to fill out so much of it as it desired for this purpose, and its rights were neither lessened nor increased by the fact that it did not fill out-uniformly, but made part into piers and left part water.”

For the reasons and upon the authorities cited by counsel, for plaintiff in his brief, we conclude that the above recited claims are well founded.

As to the rights in the property which were not taken by the appropriation, and which in these cases are represented by the so-called reversioners, their claims are that “the word ‘easement’ presupposes an underlying right of property in somebody else than the owner of the easement. What is the nature of that property, whether it is to a reverter or a right to additional compensation in case of change of use, or only a right to prevent the change of use, is immaterial.”

The city, by procuring an amendment to the appropriation laws in 1906, recognized that as the law stood in 1872, it acquired only an easement for park purposes in the lands appropriated, and that if its title to the lands was to be enlarged, additional compensation would have to be made to the owner of the “underlying right of property.”

The amendment referred to is found in 98 O. L. 164, and as the city is proposing to proceed under that apt, to perfect in itself a title in fee simple, and its appropriation proceedings thereunder are the proceedings here sought to be enjoined, it is necessary to examine the purpose and effect of the said amendment.

The law, as amended, is now found in Gen. Code 3679, 3680, 3681, 3690, 3691, 3692, 3699, 3700, 3701 and 3702.

Said act reads as follows:

‘ ‘ Section 1. That sections 12, 13, 18 and 24 of an act passed October 22, 1902, entitled, ‘An act to provide for the organiza-. [328]*328tion of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit so as to prevent the abuse of such power as is required by the constitution of Ohio, and to repeal all sections of the Revised Statutes inconsistent herewith/ be amended to read as follows:
“Sec. 12. Whenever it is deemed necessary to appropriate property, council shall pass a resolution, declaring such intent, defining the purpose of the appropriation, and setting forth a pertinent description of the land, and the estate or interest therein desired to be appropriated; and for waterworks purposes the council may appropriate such property as it may determine to be necessary; and immediately upon the passage of such resolution, declaring such intent, for which but one reading shall be necessary, the mayor shall cause written notice thereof to be given to the owner, person in possession thereof, or having an interest of record in, every piece of property sought to be appropriated, or to his authorized agent, and such notice shall be served by a person designated for that purpose, and return made in the manner provided by law for the service and return of summons in civil actions, and in case said owner, persons or their agents, cannot be found, notice shall be given by publication once a week for three consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the corporation, and council may thereupon pass an ordinance by the votes of two-thirds of all members elected thereto', directing said appropriation to proceed.
“Sec. 13. Upon the passage of the aforesaid ordinance, the solicitor shall make application to the court of common pleas or to a judge in vacation, to the probate court, or to the insolvency court, in the county in which the land sought to be taken is located, which application shall describe as correctly as possible the land .to be appropriated, the interest or estate therein to he taken, the object proposed, and the name of the owner of each lot or parcel thereof.
“See. 18.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 317, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-cleveland-ohcirctcuyahoga-1911.