Fisher v. Graham

Storer, J.,

dissented, and gave the following opinion:

This case is reserved from Special Term for the opinion of the judges upon the following questions:

First. "Was an ordinance of the city council of Cincinnati a valid exercise of power on the part of that body to authorize the improvement of a street at -the expense of the adjoining land owners, unless the mode of assessment, whether it shall be by front foot or otherwise, is first prescribed ?

Second. Is there any legal evidence in the case that the ordinance was passed by the council upon the recommendation and approval of the board of city improvements ?

We need not now examine the proposition first stated, as we have determined, in another case while this action has been pending, that there was a general ordinance of the council in force when the proceedings in this cause were had, which prescribed the mode of all assessments, declaring that when the price to be paid for the contemplated improvement was not specially assessed upon the *117adjoining property, it nevertheless was to be regarded as assessed upon it by the front foot.

. The only question, therefore, we are now to determine is, can the city council direct a public improvement to be made, and the cost assessed upon the adjoining lot owners, unless the work has previously- been recommended to be done by the board of public improvements ? This involves the proper construction of the city charter, and the ordinances that are in force whiéh confer the power upon that board and prescribe its duties.

Three commissioners, one of whom is elected annually, with the mayor of the city and the city civil engineer, constitute this board; and by section 60 of the charter (Disney, 107), it, is declared, “ that in all cities of the first class, where there shall be a board of city improvements, no improvement or repair in relation to streets, sewers, or bridges shall be .ordered or directed by the city council, except on the report and recommendation of the said board; they shall report from time to time to the council when any such improvements and repairs are necessary or proper, and when an assessment is required and the proper amount to be assessed, and the council shall take such action thereon as may be deemed proper.”

By the same statute, the city council were authorized to prescribe additional duties to be performed by the board; and on the 17th March, 1865 (Disney, 265), an ordinance was accordingly passed, defining the duties and powers of the board, which “ gave them full power and control over the streets, lanes, and alleys of the city, requiring all applications for the establishment of grades or the change of grades, or the grading, paving, repairing, or improvement of the public thoroughfares, to be made to them, who were then required to investigate and determine the propriety of the proposed improvement, causing an estimate of the probable cost to be made by the city civil engineer, a copy of which shall be placed op. file in their ofiice.”

They were further empowered, if no petition was pre*118sented, should they be satisfied the work is proper to be done or the improvements made, after they have caused an-estimate of the cost to be calculated by the city engineer, to present the subject to the city council for their consideration. By section 5 of this oi’dinance the clerk of the board “ is required to prepare all ordinances and resolutions which shall be submitted to the council, and his certificate should be proof of the action of the board on the subject.

It is matter of municipal history that before the establishment of the board of city improvements, the duties now devolved upon its members were performed by committees of the council, who examined the propriety of the proposed improvement and reported to the corporate body, what is now required to be done by the board of improvements. This imposed much labor upon the members of the council, who could not be expected to devote the time necessary to a minute examination of the subject when it interfered with their ordinary pursuits. Consequently, there was pot unfrequently hasty legislation, which produced, unintentionally, great injury to property, and imposed heavy burdens upon its owners. This necessitated the organization of the board of city improvements, to whom was properly confided the important duty of examining, estimating, and carefully judging the work to be done; and its cost, as well as its necessity, were to be considered preparatory to the final action of the council. The introduction of this new agency into our municipal government was intended also as a check on the council, and became a virtual restraint on their ordinary powers; and while it gave this board the authority to recommend what should be done, it imposed upon it the responsibility of carefully arid thoroughly investigating the subject.

The council, then, it is clear to us, should not act until they have first been informed by the board that their action is necessary, and the projected improvements proper to be made. The recommendation thus required to be made by *119the charter gave jurisdiction over the subject' to the council and' justified them in ordering the work to' be done, while it protected individuals from injudicious, if not oppressive taxation.

We suppose, in all cases like this, the action of the council is legislative and not judicial, and therefore nothing can be inferred to sustain it, but, on the contrary, every step required by the charter to confer the power must be proved. This was held in Culbertson v. City of Cincinnati, 16 Ohio, 574; McMicken v. Same, 4 Ohio St, 394.

In Harbeck v. City of Toledo, 11 Ohio St. 219, the question ’ is fully examined by Judge Peck, who decided that the power conferred on municipal corporations to take private property for public use must be strictly followed, and when the statute giving the authority requires the publication of a notice, preparatory to the appropriation, which requirement was not complied with, the appropriation could not he sustained. He quotes, among other eases, The State v. Jersey City, 1 Dutcher, 310, and Bonaparte v. Camden and Amboy Railroad, 1 Baldwin, 229, in both of which it is said that the authority given to the corporate body must be strictly pursued, “ as it is special, limited, and conditional.” This decision isfoundedupon the assumption thatthe jurisdiction conferred can not be sustained by implication; it must have been first acquired before it can be legally exercised, and such also was the opinion of the court in Adams’ Lessees v. Jeffries, 12 Ohio, 253, where the question was carefully investigated by Judge Lane.

The right to adjudicate must appear before the jurisdiction attaches; while it is always ¡the privilege of the defendant to deny it, or show that it did not legally exist. We find the rule vindicated to its largest extent by Judge Bronson in Sharp v. Johnson, 4 Hill, 93, where the subject is treated with great clearness and ability; but upon so plain a question it is needless to multiply authorities.

Before the organization of the board of city improvements, there was a time in our municipal history when the consent *120of a majority of the lot owners bounding on a public street was required to authorize its improvement, and it was always regarded that no power existed in the council to order the work to be done unless that provision was first complied with. Indeed, such power was never otherwise exercised, and it would seem that the recommendation of the board has been now substituted, and was intended to protect the property holder as well as to confer jurisdiction upon the council.

We have been furnished with certified copies of the proceedings of the council in the case before us, and it does not appear that the board of city improvements took the preparatory steps required by the charter, nor recommended the improvement to be made for which the defendant is assessed. On the contrary, the ordinance seems to have been passed by the sole action of the council, as if it had originally been presented on the motion of one of its members. This may have been an oversight, but the fact should substantially appear on the record that what gave jurisdiction to the council really existed, and was before that body when the ordinance was passed. This is not found in the proceedings, and can not be inferred from the passage of the ordinance.

We but state the rule that in the proceedings of any tribunal whose jurisdiction is limited, the power assumed must be shown to exist, and conclude, therefore, the ordinance before us is ultra vires, and the defendant can not be charged with the assessment made on his property.