Wilgus v. Horvath

162 Ohio St. (N.S.) 75
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1954
DocketNo. 33761
StatusPublished

This text of 162 Ohio St. (N.S.) 75 (Wilgus v. Horvath) 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
Wilgus v. Horvath, 162 Ohio St. (N.S.) 75 (Ohio 1954).

Opinion

Stewart, J.

The appellants have assigned six claims of error in this court but in view of the conclusion at which we have arrived only one main question is presented for bur consideration. It is true that appellants earnestly contend that Ruth Wilgus has no standing in this case for the reason that the Court of Appeals was in error in holding that she is the owner of the buildings erected upon the premises in question [79]*79because, as she is a shareholder in the Russell’s Point Resort Corporation, the court could look through the corporate entity of that company, in whose name the buildings are owned, and declare that she is the owner. Appellants contend that, although in certain situations a court can on behalf of an injured third person look through the corporate entity to the shareholders, a shareholder has no right to avail himself of that same principle. However, we shall assume, without deciding, that the Court of Appeals was correct in finding that Ruth Wilgus was the owner of the buildings at the time of the expiration of her leases and her application for a renewal thereof. -

That brings us to the question which we think is entirely dispositive of the present case. If one has a 15-year lease of state park lands made pursuant to Sections 471 and 13966, General Code, is it mandatory for the state of Ohio at the end of the term to renew the lease for an additional 15-year period, if the lessee at the end of his term is in possession and owns any buildings or structures on the leased land?

For the answer to this question it is incumbent upon us to construe certain enactments of the General Assembly.

Section 469, General Code, provides in part:

“The body of water and adjacent state lands * * * in the northwestern part of Logan county, known as the Lewistown Reservoir or Indian Lake * * * are hereby dedicated and set apart forever for the use of the public, as public parks or pleasure resorts.”

Section 471, General Code, provides:

“No state lands in or adjacent to Buckeye Lake, Indian Lake, Lake St. Marys, Guilford Lake or Portage Lakes shall ever be sold but the division of parks may lease such lands, including marginal strips and marsh lands around said lakes, the outer slopes of [80]*80artificial embankments, islands, borrow pits and state lands adjacent thereto as it deems proper under the laws governing the leasing of canal lands.”

Section 13965, General Code, provides:

“That each and every-tract of land, and any part of the berme bank of any canal, canal basin, reservoir and outer slope of the towing path embankment, which such commission shall find to be the property of the state of Ohio, the use of which, in the opinion of said commission, the Board of Public Works and the Chief Engineer of Public Works, if leased, would not materially injure or interfere with the maintenance and navigation of any of the canals of this state, shall be valued by said commission at its true value in money, and if such land shall not then be under an existing lease, may be leased for any purpose or purposes other than for railroads operated by steam, but said commission, the Board of Public Works and the Chief Engineer of the Public Works shall have power to make leases and prescribe regulations for the crossing of the canals, canal basins or canal lands by any railroad operated by steam, electricity or other motive power, or for the necessary use, for railroad purposes, of any part of the berme banks of a canal, canal basin or any portion of the canal lands for a distance not exceeding two miles, or if then under an existing lease, then at the expiration of such lease, may be leased on the terms and conditions hereinafter in this act provided for, but railroad companies unlawfully in the possession and use of state land at the date of the passage of this act shall take a lease thereon for the term of fifteen years in the same manner as when lands aré leased for other purposes, or remove their tracks, buildings or other structures from said land. Any owner of an existing lease for state canal lands may surrender the same to the state in order to have the land described therein included in a new lease, which shall not be for [81]*81a greater term than fifteen years, and the application therefor shall definitely set forth the reasons why an extension of the lease is desired, but before granting a new lease for such state canal land, the Superintendent of Public Works must be satisfied that the extension of the lease is for the purpose of making a valuable improvement thereon, which the lessee could not otherwise afford to make for the remaining portion of the unexpired lease. When a.new lease, which shall not be for a less rental than the original lease, has been granted and approved by the Governor and Attorney General, the Superintendent of Public Works shall cancel the original lease.”

Section 13966, General Code, provides:

“That if such land is not in possession of any person, or persons, or corporation having a building, or buildings, or other valuable structures thereon, it may be immediately leased for fifteen years, at an annual rental of six per cent, per annum of said valuation, to be paid semiannually, in advance, and at such place as said commission, Board of Public Works and the Chief Engineer of the Public Works may fix by the terms of said lease. Any tract of land so to be valued or appraised, if in the actual possession of any person, persons, or corporation who may own a building, or buildings, or other valuable structure thereon, such valuation shall not embrace the value of such building, or buildings, or other valuable structure, and the person, or persons, or corporation owning the same shall be entitled to such lease of said land or lands upon the same terms and conditions as any other person or corporation would or might be entitled to under this act if there were no building or buildings, or other valuable structure upon said land; provided always, however, that each and every building or other valuable structure erected thereon by any person, or persons, or corporation may be taxed as other property [82]*82of individuals or corporation in the same locality. The said commission, Board of Public Works and Chief Engineer of the Public Works may lease for the term of fifteen years, at six per cent, per annum, rental to be paid semiannually in advance, on a valuation made by said commission, the right to erect buildings across any of the canals not less than ten feet above high water line, to be constructed under the direction of the Chief Engineer of the Public Works in all respects so as not to interfere with the maintenance of the embankments and operation of the canal under said buildings.”

It is apparent from a perusal of the above statutes that the premises in question in the present case are a part of a public park or pleasure resort, and that it was entirely legal for the state to have leased the premises to Ruth Wilgus. It is claimed by Ruth Wilgus that under Section 13966 she was entitled to a renewal of her leases at their expiration for an additional 35 years for the reason that she was the owner of buildings and other valuable structures upon the premises when her leases expired.

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Bluebook (online)
162 Ohio St. (N.S.) 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilgus-v-horvath-ohio-1954.