delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two cases were argued together and present substantially the same questions. Each suit was brought in the state court by a taxpayer attacking the validity of the Park District Act of the State (General Code of Ohio, secs. 2976-1 to 2976-1Oi; 107 O. L. 65-69, 108 O. L., pt. 2, 1097-1100). The one suit related to tie Park District Board of the Akron District, and the other to that of the. Cleveland District, and in each suit the taxpayer sought an injunction against the Park Boards, respectively, together with the auditor of the county where the Board revenues and disbursements are handled, from expending public moneys, or incurring obligations requiring such expenditure, and from taking any other official action on' behalf of the district. The statute was assailed as being 'in violation of the constitution of the State and also of the due process and equal protection clauses of thе Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. The
The grounds for attack, under the Fourteenth Amendment, on the validity of the Park District Act relate to the organization and pоwers of the Park District Boards. The act provides for the presentation to the probate judge of the county of a petition for the establishment of the proposed district and, after noticе and hearing, the probate judge, with or without diminishing or altering, but without enlarging, the suggested boundaries, is to enter an order creating the district, provided he finds the
It was insisted by the taxpayers, plaintiffs in the state court, that these statutory provisions involved an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to the probate court and to the nonelective park commissioners. We do not consider it necessary to consider at length this objection, or the other points sought to be made against the statute under the Fourteenth Amendment, as, in view of the repeated decisions of this Court, we do not find any substantial Federal question presented.
Houck
v.
Little River Drainage District,
The question with respect to the validity, from a Federal standpoint, of the provision of the state constitution that no law shall be held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the State without a concurrence of at least all but one of the judges, except in the affirmance of a judgment of the Court of Appeals declaring a law unconstitutional, was not raised in these suits until after the judgments of affirmance by the Supreme Court. But it is insisted that the point could not have been taken earlier, as in advance of the affirmance on a vote of the minority the question would have been speculative. Hence, it is said that the Federal question was raised at the earliest opportunity.
(Saunders
v.
Shaw,
As to the guaranty to every State of a republican form of government (Sec. 4, Art. IY), it is well settled that the
As to the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, it is sufficient to say that, as frequеntly determined by this Court, the right of appeal is not essential to due process, provided that due process has already been accorded in the tribunal of first instance.
McKane
v.
Durston,
In invoking the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, it is argued that the result of the application of the provision of the state constitution may be that the same statute may be held constitutional in a case arising in one county, and unconstitutional in another case arising in another county. This point is obviously not of importance in relation to the question of the validity of the Park District Act under the Federal Constitution, as the Act of Congress mаkes appropriate provision for the hearing and determination by this Court of such a question where a Federal right has been passed upon by the highest court of the State in which a deci
Judgments affirmed.
