Pittsburgh, Cleveland & Toledo Railroad v. Tod
Pittsburgh, Cleveland & Toledo Railroad v. Tod
Opinion of the Court
The questions presented are questions of practice in appropriation proceedings by a private corporation.
The principal contentions on the part of counsel for plaintiff are: First, Error cannot be prosecuted to review the determination of the preliminary questions by the probate judge; Second, If error lies, a motion for a.new trial is necessary; Third, If a motion for a new trial is not necessary, still the petition in error must be filed within thirty days from the determination of the preliminary questions; and Fourth, The filing of the certificate mentioned in section 3280, Revised Statutes, is not a condition precedent to the right to make an appropriation.
Section 6420, Revised Statutes, provides that the probate judge shall hear and determine the questions
The contention is, that these sections provide for two separate proceedings: First, A finding and determination of the right to appropriate; and, Second, A trial in which compensation and damages are assessed; that the taking of a hill of exceptions ■on the trial only is provided for, and that corn
The constitution of 1851 restricted the exercise of the right of eminent domain. Theretofore the compensation, if any, was assessed hy a commission, or commissioners, and a deduction made of the benefits, and the commissioners generally found the benefits equal to the value of the property taken [Kramer v. Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad Co., 5 Ohio St., 140; The Toledo, Ann Arbor & Northern Michigan Railway Co. v. Toledo & Michigan Belt Railway Co., 3 Circ. Dec., 566; 6 C. C. R., 521; Willyard v. Hamilton, 7 Ohio, pt. 2, 111;] but thereunder compensation was required to be assessed by a jury, and without any deduction for benefits, and it made necessary new legislation on the subject of appropriation. Accordingly, on April 30, 1852, an act was passed (50 O. L., 201) providing the mode of procedure. It provided when the corporation was unable to agree with the owner upon the compensation to he paid, it should file a statement with the probate judge, and then provided for a jury for a view of the premises, and thereafter for a trial, to be conducted in the same manner that the trial of civil causes is conducted in the court of common pleas. Section 9 of that act reads as follows: “All proceedings hereinafter provided for in the probate court shall he open to exceptions, in the same manner that exceptions are or may be taken in civil suits in the court of common pleas; and either party may take the same up to the court of common pleas of the proper county, .on a writ of certiorari, which shall be issued of course by the clerk thereof, upon the filing of a precipe, in which case such exceptions, signed and sealed by
In 1872, the act of 1852, with numerous amendments which had been made thereto, was repealed, and its provisions, together with such new provisions as time and the increasing number of applications had shown to be desirable,, were comprised in a new act (69 O. L., 88). This act for the first time provided for a preliminary hearing. Section 3 of the act provided that the probate judge, before issuing a venire for a jury, should proceed to inquire and determine the questions which he is now by section 6920, Revised Statutes, required to hear and determine, and that the corporation should satisfy the court affirmatively by satisfactory proof; and section 12 of this act provided: “All the proceedings herein provided for in the probate court, shall be open to exceptions, in the same manner that exceptions are or may be taken in civil suits in the court of common pleas; and either party may file a petition in error in the court of common pleas of the proper county, within thirty days from the rendition of the final judgment in the probate court, and thereupon the proceedings in error shall be proceeded in, in all respects, as is now provided by law in like cases.” This is as broad as section 9 of the original act, and while that act did not provide for a preliminary hearing on the questions;of the corporate existence of the corporation, its legal right to make appropriation of private property, its inability to agree with
The provisions of this act were carried into the revision of the statutes of 1880, and while, looking alone to section 6422, it may appear that bills of exception on the trial only are provided for, yet no reason for and no purpose to so change the law is apparent, and it is therefore to be presumed that such was not the intention. Indeed, the commissioners who revised the statutes refer to section 12 of the act of 1872 as one of the sources of section 6222. The fact that the burden of proof is on the corporation on the hearing of the preliminary questions and that the property owner has the affirmative on the trial is of no significance in determining the right to review. In providing that the property owner should have the affirmative the legislature was conferring a privilege and not imposing a burden. 52 O. L., 51.
Again, if the determination of these questions for the corporation may not be reviewed, neither may a determination against it, and it hardly will be contended that the legislature intended to make a great public improvement depend, without possibility of review, upon the sole determination of the probate judge as to the legal right of the corporation to make appropriations of property or as to the necessity of the taking of a particular property.
The next question is whether it is necessary in order that the determination of the preliminary questions may be reviewed on error to file a motion for a new trial. Section 6411, Eevised Statutes, provides that “The provisions of law governing' civil proceedings in the court of common pleas shall, so far as applicable, govern like proceedings in the probate court,” when there is no provision on the subject in the title relating to procedure in the probate court. Section 5305, Eevised Statutes, defines,
The next contention is, that the petition in error to review the determination of these preliminary questions must be filed within thirty days from the time of their determination.
We have already referred .to section 6437, and it has been held, and we think correctly, in the circuit courts of the first and sixth circuits, in well considered opinions by very able'judges, that the final judgment here referred to is the judgment confirm
Counsel for plaintiff contends that the court could not have reached the conclusion it did in The Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Co. v. Magruder, 63 Ohio St., 455, excepting upon the assumption that the determination of the preliminary questions is not subject to review, while counsel for defendants as conclusive of the rights to review rely upon the later cases — The C. C. C. & St. L. Railway Co. v. The Ohio Postal Telegraph Cable Co., 68 Ohio St., 306; The State ex rel. v. The Judges, 69 Ohio St., 372. It appears from the record in the first case that the Bridge Company filed its petition in
The opinion in the case of The Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Co. v. Mag ruder et al., supra, is not to be interpreted as authority that the preliminary questions determined by the probate judge may not be reviewed. ' Such an interpretation would bring the case in direct conflict with the first paragraph of the syllabus *in the later case of State ex rel. v. The Judges, 69 Ohio St., 372. In the Bridge Company case the common pleas court when it reversed the judgment of the probate court for error in the determination of the preliminary questions and for error in overruling the motion of plaintiffs in error to set aside the verdict of the jury and for a new trial, did not retain the case for hearing and trial, but, as is plainly pointed out in the opinion, without hearing the preliminary questions “upon further consideration of the' ‘ petition in error, the record and proceedings of the probate court and the argument of counsel’ found that there existed no right nor necessity for the appropriation of the interest of the defendants in the described property, and thereupon rendered final judgment.” When a judgment is reversed by the court of common pleas for error in the determination of the preliminary questions the court of common pleas must retain the case and hear and determine these questions de novo, and it is clearly error for it to determine them upon the evidence in the record of the hearing before the probate judge, unless the parties see proper so to submit them, and in the Bridge Company case
The next question is whether the filing with the secretary of state of the certificate specified in section 3280, Eevised Statutes, is a condition precedent to the right to construct the branch road therein authorized.' The petition avers that such certificate had been made and filed, but the record shows no proof of such facts.
Section 3280, Eevised Statutes: “A company may construct branches from the main line to towns or places within the limits of any county through or into which its road passes, .or to a connection with any railroad which is or may be built within this state, or to any coal or other mine, stone quarry, plastic clay, pottery clay and fire clay pit or banks, ore or shale banks, if, at a meeting of the stockholders called for that purpose, the holders of a majority of the capital stock of the company, by a vote, in person or by proxy, so determine; and upon such determination the president and directors shall make and acknowledge a certificate setting forth the facts, and file the same with the secretary of state.”
The contention is that .this provision of the statute is merely directory; that compliance with it is
Counsel say: “In respect to the organization of a corporation in Ohio, section 3239 provides, that ‘upon such filing of the articles of incorporation, the persons who subscribe the same, etc., shall thereafter be deemed a body corporate. ’ Of course, until such filing under that section the subscribers would not be a corporation.
“So in case of amendments to the articles of incorporation, allowed by section 3238a, provision is made for the filing of a certificate of such amendment with the secretary of state; then follows the provision that ‘no such amendment shall take effect until filed for record with the secretary of state as herein provided.’
“For the filing of the certificate of the amendment with the secretary of state is a condition precedent.
“Section 3273 provides that, ‘when a change of line or termini is made a duly authenticated copy of the same shall be filed with the secretary of state/ and ‘when so filed such change shall be considered as made. ’
“Here is evidently a condition precedent, without which the change cannot be considered as made.”
The legislative policy seems to be not merely to direct filing with the secretary of state, but to make such requirement a condition precedent, and in view of such policy we are not at liberty to be hypercritical of the language used or to assume that if such was the intention another “if” would have been used,
Section 3237 requires the articles of incorporation of a railroad company to set forth the termini of its road and the counties in or through which it or its branches shall pass, and if the line or termini are changed the change must be described in the resolution providing for it and a copy must he filed with the secretary of state and be by him recorded “with the proper reference on- the record of the articles of incorporation, and, when so filed, such change shall he considered as made.” If, when the construction of branches is proposed as a part of the original improvement, it is a condition precedent that they he described in the articles of incorporation, or when a change of line or termini is desired, it is a condition precedent that it he certified to the secretary of state, is it not equally important that a subsequent determination to construct branches he so certified?
No question is made as to the time within which either of the hills of exceptions was taken, and as the record shows an exception to the determination of the preliminary questions and that the defendants “are allowed the statutory time to prepare and have allowed a hill of exceptions, ’ ’ and as one was taken on the twenty-seventh day, we are not called upon to determine whether the hill taken on the overruling of the motion for a new trial was taken in time to preserve the exceptions on the preliminary hearing.
It appearing, therefore, that no proof was offered of the making and filing of a certificate of the deter-
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.