172 N.E.2d 726 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1961
Relators filed an action in prohibition in the form of a class suit against the Public Health Council, its members, and the Director of Health. The action is before the court on a demurrer to the petition.
The Public Health Council is an agency within the meaning of Section
The petition alleges that on September 16, 1960, the council duly gave notice of a public hearing to consider the adoption of proposed regulations and the rescission of certain existing regulations. On October 21, a public hearing was held. On November 19, December 10, and December 11, the council held meetings in which the proposed regulations considered at the public hearing were discussed. These meetings were allegedly referred to by the council as "deliberative sessions." The petition refers to these latter meetings as "public hearings," but there are no facts alleged to show that the council so intended them. No public notice of these meetings was given in the manner prescribed for public hearings under Section
During the meetings, the participants allegedly "submitted" what petitioners referred to as "newly proposed regulations and amendments to regulations." The council heard "testimony" on these proposals and on the regulations originally proposed, but not under oath, and without stenographic record. At the conclusion of the December 11th meeting, the council adopted a Code of Regulations "embodying various of the newly proposed regulations and amendments to regulations," and ordered that the code be filed with the Secretary of State. The filing has been restrained by a temporary injunction.
The petitioners alleged that the council exceeded its "jurisdiction" because there was no public notice of these meetings; the statements were not under oath and without stenographic record; it allowed nonmembers to participate and denied a hearing to the public; and because it received and adopted some new proposals after the close of the public hearing of October 21. *115
The petition attacks only the actions of the council which were taken subsequent to the public hearing on October 21, 1960. While there is no direct allegation of complete compliance with Chapter 119, we must assume on demurrer that the council duly complied with the law up to and including that meeting. If the actions alleged are either permissible under Section
Section
The alleged errors of the council are derived from two basic contentions of the petitioners involving the interpretation of Section
(1) The code as adopted cannot contain amendments, substitutions and additions to the code as originally proposed by the agency and considered by it at the public hearing. It is from this contention that petitioners derive all the procedural objections, such as lack of notice, nonparticipation, statements not under oath, lack of stenographic record, etc.
(2) The agency cannot consult its departmental staff after the public hearing as to the advisability of the original proposal, or on suggestions with respect to amendments or substitutes for provisions of the original proposal. It would be petitioners' position apparently that to do either of these, the agency would have to re-comply with all the requirements of the Act.
Section
The first three divisions of Section
However, division (D) of Section
With respect to petitioners' second basic contention, we note that the petition does not allege that the agency consulted anyone except its own staff. We need not consider the validity of an agency consulting other persons after the public hearing. The agency's power to revise the original proposal carries with it the inherent and incidental power to be advised by its staff on the revisions to be made. Nothing in the statute compels a different conclusion. A determination of what to revise also necessarily involves determining what not to revise — and revisions necessitate proposals on the text of the revision. Accordingly, an agency can, within Section
The requirement of Section
We conclude that the allegations with respect to staff statements on the original proposals and on revisions of its proposals made subsequent to the public hearing do not show a failure to comply with the provisions of Chapter 119. The petitioners had no right to have these statements made under oath, or to cross-examine, or to refute them.
Respondents have urged that the rule-making process is not quasi-judicial. See Zangerle, Aud., v. Evatt, Tax Commr.,
(1942),
We find that the complaints with respect to the holdings of the meetings are without legal foundation. To the extent the petition alleges an inconsistency between the original proposals and those adopted, such errors are capable of redress upon an appeal.
The demurrer to the amended petition is sustained. Unless petitioners choose to amend, respondents should submit an entry dissolving the temporary injunction and dismissing the action.
Judgment accordingly.
BRYANT, P. J., and DUFFY, J., concur.