Woodland Avenue & West Side Street Railroad v. City of Cleveland

7 Ohio N.P. 161, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio N.P. 161 (Woodland Avenue & West Side Street Railroad v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodland Avenue & West Side Street Railroad v. City of Cleveland, 7 Ohio N.P. 161, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

The case of the Woodland Avenue & West Side Street Railroad Company against the city of Cleveland, George W. Gardner, mayor, and J. W. Schmitt, superintendent of police, is before the court upon an application for an injunction.

In brief, the allegations of the petition are that the Woodland Avenue & West Side Street Railroad Company is the successor of the Kinsman Street Railroad Company, which was chartered many years ago, and that in 1879, on the expiration of the char[162]*162ter of the Kinsman Street road after a lapse of twenty years for which it was originally granted, a renewal ordinance was granted, and, by the terms of the renewal'ordinance, it is said that it was provided that—

‘ ‘ Whenever it shall be deemed necessary to 'grade, pave or improve any of the streets wherein said tracks are laid, the company shall be required to pave any part or all of the track between the rails with gravel, stone or other pavement as the council may deem proper, and, if said company, after reasonable notice, shall fail to do such paving at the same time with any such street or streets so being so improved by said city, or at the time named in such notice, then said city may do such paving and assess the cost of such paving against said company in the same ordinance with the property owners on said street, or by a separate ordinance, and may collect the amount thereof by suit or otherwise, according to law, and said company is also required to keep said pavement in constant good order; and paving and repairing to be done under- the direction of and to the acceptance of the board of improvements.”

It then avers that it has at all times complied with the provisions of the ordinance under which the renewal of the grant was effected. It further avers that in 1889 the city came to the conclusion and so expressed itself by way of resolutions and ordinances, to again pave Woodland avenue, between' Wilson avenue and East Madison avenue;. that they passed the necessary ordinance to repave, and required thereby the plaintiff company to pave between the rails — to pave its track between the rails of its tracks, and assessed upon the property owners adjoining this street sufficient to pay for the improvement, less the space between the rails; that is, less the intersection which the city at large would pave; that the money was paid into the treasury by the property owners, and that the plaintiff company paved its tracks as required, or substantially did so — perhaps it is not quite completed in all respects as yet; that some time in'June, 1890, the city passed another ordinance, by which they amended the assessing ordinance, and therein provided that this street railroad company should pave not only its track between. the rails, but should pave what is known as the “devil strip,” the space lying between its two tracks.

Against this action of the council they protest and insist [163]*163that by the terms of the contract as provided in the renewal ordinance, they were only bound to pave their tracks between their rails, and that the city has no authority or right to require more of them; this renewal ordinance being an ordinance which was accepted by the plaintiff company and was, by its terms, to continue- in force for twenty-five years; that'it is, therefore, a contract between the city and this plaintiff company and can not be abrogated by the city; but the city claimed this right and, having passed'such an ordinance, and the railroad company refusing to either pave this additional strip itself or to pay the cost and expense of it to the city, the city then passed a resolution forfeiting the fights of this plaintiff company under its charter or under the ordinance renewing its rights, until such time as the company should comply, and directed the mayor to issue his order to the superintendent of police to prevent the street railroad company from running its ears, or in any manner using this strip of ground for the propelling of its cars- over it, until it complied with the provisions of this ordinance by paving or paying for the paving of this disputed strip of ground. It says that all this was in violation of the rights of the company, and that it is a substantial interference with the contract rights of this company; interferes with its business, breaks it up, and interferes with and discommodes the patrons of this railroad company who are in the habit of using this road for going over this space or territory, and hence it asks an injunction at the hands of this court to prevent this state of things continuing.

The city, by way of answer, admits that there was- a renewal ordinance in 1879 granted to this company or its predecessors; admits the passage of the ordinance of 1889 for paving this street; admits the passage of the ordinance in June, by which it required the plaintiff company here to pave this ‘ ‘ devil strip, ’ ’ so-called, and admits the passage of the resolution by which it seeks to forfeit the rights of the company for non-compliance with that ordinance, and admits the taking possession of this road by its officers, the police force of the city, and the preventing of the running of its cars. It however denies that the plaintiff company has the contract rights which it claims, and expressly claims that this renewal ordinance was subject to the [164]*164general railroad ordinance passed for the government of all the railroads, and that, by its provisions, and by the provisions, perhaps, of the ordinance of renewal itself, it was to be subject to all future legislation of the city in respect to that road.

They further say that, by the provisions of the charter, ‘ ‘ charter” so-called (it is merely a contract relation, this ordinance of 1879) it was therein provided that, on failure to comply with the ordinance and with the former ordinances, the general ordinances, then the city reserved to itself the right to pass a resolution declaring a forfeiture of the rights of the railroad company to run its road and to take posession and prevent the exercise of its rights. There is no controversy as to the fact that they did pass an ordinance originally; that is, the ordinance of 1889, for the repavement of this street, requiring the railroad company to pave the space between its rails or its tracks, and that subsequently they passed this requirement that it do more than that, to-wit, pave the “devil strip.”

They further say that, whether that be so or not, there was a settlement and adjustment of all this controversy between the city and its officers and this plaintiff company, setting out that there was still another ordinance passed than the one mentioned in the petition, to-wit, an ordinance just prior to the oue in June, which required the paving of the tracks themselves and the “devil strip,” but there had been an ordinance passed just prior to that, some time perhaps in April (April 21, 1890), by which the city required it to pave not only its tracks and the devil strip, but a foot outside of its tracks, making a space of sixteen feet instead of fourteen feet as was finally compromised and agreed upon; and that that being the condition of things, a law having been passed on April 21st, 1890, by the Legislature of this state, authorizing them to so tax in reference to these pavements all railroad companies in the city, in pursuance of that authority, they passed that ordinance, and, having thus passed it, that the railroad companies of the city protested.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio N.P. 161, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodland-avenue-west-side-street-railroad-v-city-of-cleveland-ohctcomplcuyaho-1908.