203 N.E.2d 505 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1963
In this action in the Court of Common Pleas, the plaintiff sought the issuance of an injunction against the defendant to enjoin the defendant from appropriating certain described property of plaintiff allegedly needed for a rest area in the construction of Interstate Route No. 71.
The plaintiff alleged that, by reason of the provisions of Section
Plaintiff alleged further that there exists no opportunity to inquire into the right of defendant to appropriate said property except by this action; and that, unless defendant is enjoined from proceeding with the appropriation, she will be denied due process of law.
Defendant, for answer, admitted that the property described is being appropriated "for a rest area on a limited-access highway," and asserted that rest areas are required for the safety, convenience and welfare of the traveling public, and that, therefore, the maintenance of such rest areas is a proper exercise of the police power inherent in the state of Ohio.
Defendant denied that Section
Upon hearing, the cause was submitted on a stipulation of facts, which is incorporated in the conclusion of facts found by the trial court and filed herein. The trial court's conclusions of law are likewise incorporated in the record, and upon those conclusions the trial court denied the relief sought and dismissed plaintiff's petition.
An appeal on questions of law and fact was then duly filed by plaintiff.
The question presented may be stated as follows: Does the appellee, Director of Highways, possess constitutional or statutory authority to appropriate private property adjacent to a limited-access highway right of way for use as a rest area?
It is the opinion of the members of this court that Section
The rules governing the exercise of the right of eminent domain have been variously stated by our Supreme Court.
"1. Eminent domain is the power of the state, or an agency designated by the state, to take private property for a necessary public use, and its exercise depends upon the existence of a *64 statute which either by express words or plain implication authorizes the employment of the power.
"2. Statutes delegating the power of eminent domain are to be strictly construed, and where an appropriation of private property for public use is made by a governmental agent without authority, no compensation can be recovered from the government."Blackman v. City of Cincinnati,
In McMechan v. Board of Education,
"1. Statutes conferring the power of eminent domain are construed strictly against the appropriation, and only such interest as to quantum and quality of an estate as is expressly authorized by such statutes may be appropriated."
The latest statement as to the power of a court to enjoin an attempted appropriation of property appears in Village of BlueAsh v. City of Cincinnati,
"* * * The limit of the court's power is to enjoin an unlawful or improper exercise of the power of eminent domain beyond the limits of a constitutional or statutory grant of such power. Injunction, in this class of cases, is a matter of strict right, not of equitable discretion."
We have carefully examined the contents of Chapters 5501, 5511 and 5519 of the Revised Code in an effort to discover a statute or statutes which, by express words or plain implication, vest the Director of Highways with authority to appropriate property, adjacent to the right of way of a limited-access highway, for use as a rest area. We have been unable to discover any such grant, either in express words or by plain implication.
Indulging the strict construction against the appropriation which the decided cases require, we are compelled to conclude that the Director of Highways possesses no such power, and that the injunction sought by appellant should issue.
A decree may be prepared granting to appellant a permanent injunction against the appropriation sought by the appellee, Director of Highways, at his costs. Counsel for appellant shall furnish an appropriate journal entry so providing.
Decree for appellant.
HUNSICKER, P. J., and DOYLE, J., concur. *65