1 Ohio Law Rep. 559 | Ohio | 1903
Plaintiff’s action was based upon Section 5848, Revised Statutes, which confers jurisdiction to enjoin the illegal levy or collection of taxes and assessments, and the grounds on which this assessment is claimed to he illegal are two. One that the statute under which
We think neither proposition can be maintained. It is true that the section referred to is obnoxious to the late rulings of this court condemnatory of special legislation, but that conclusion by no means concludes the inquiry. The section, or the act of which it is a part, repeals former laws upon the subject, and if the act in the particular complained of be unconstitutional the repealing clause, by a well understood rule, would also fall with it. It can not be important to pursue this inquiry in detail and thus settle upon the next preceding act' which would meet the present view as to uniform operation. It is enough to say that the original municipal code, in its provision for special assessments, 66 O. L., 245-247, provides generally for street' improvements “by any city or incorporated village”; and while the specific steps there provided are not precisely the same as those enjoined by the later acts including the act in question, yet the substance is the same. The later ones equally protect the rights of the land owner; and in this inquiry we are to he controlled, by substantial considerations and not by mere technicalities. Sections 2289 and 2327, Revised Statutes.
But another consideration sufficiently answers the proposition. This improvement' was made in the year 1897. Prior to that date legislation in its essential features identical with that which is here assailed had been distinctly sustained by tlie courts upon a full consideration of the precise objection which is here urged. The case of Scheer v. Cincinnati, brought to enjoin a street assessment, decided by the Superior Court of Cincinnati in 1885, involved an inquiry into the validity of the act of April 25, 1885 (82 0. L., 156), which was supplementary to Section 2293, Revised Statutes. The act authorized the improvement by paving with granite blocks, etc., streets in cities of the first grade, first class; and the holding was (opinion by Harmon, J.), that it was not invalid by reason of
■Jt is a principle of universal 'application that a cause of action once finally determined between parties .by a competent tribunal can not afterward be litigated between the parties or the-ir privies by a new proceeding. It is the principle o-f res judicata. It rests not only on the private rights of -the parties, but is a principle of public policy, having been characterized as a “fundamental concept in the organization of civil society.” Jeter v. Hewitt, 22 How., 352. It is equally well settled as a general proposition, admitting, however, -of exceptions, that courts- will adhere to- and follow decisions of the highest court of the jurisdiction where the same points come again in litigation; and the rule is -of universal application where the law has become settled -as a rule of property, by reason of such earlier decisions, and rights have- become vested oax the faith, of them. This is- the doctrine of stare decisis. The bro-ad principle lying at the base of both of these rules is embraced in the translation of the term res judicata, viz., “That the matter has been decided.” So that if a matter or point in issue has been decided- in such -a way as- to- bind the parties to- the new action, .whether they were parties to the former suit -or- not, and -whether, where the -validity of -a statute is involved, the precise statute
The underlying principle presented is not dissimilar from that involved in the City of Cincinnati v. Taft, 63 Ohio St., 141. There was present in that case a question as to the constitutionality of an act supplementary to that which authorized the issue of bonds for the construction of the Cincinnati Southern Railway. This act, if it were new legislation, would be now condemned as unconstitutional; but it having been sustained by the decision in Walker v. Cincinnati, 21 Ohio St., 14, the court held in the Taft case, without regard to the constitutional question, that:
“An act of the General Assembly to authorize a municipality to issue bonds for the construction of a public ‘improvement having been adjudged by this court to be constitutionally valid, and the bonds having been thereafter sold and the improvement made, the court will f ollow the former decision as to the validity of supplementary acts relating to the renewal or extension of such bonds.”
It would appear that this branch of the present case might be disposed of on the authority of that case.
Nor is the assessment invalid because made in terms by the abutting foot instead of in terms according to benefits, the record-showing that the assessment did not exceed the special benefit to the land. Schroder v. Overman, 61 Ohio St., 1; Walsh v. Barron, same volume, 15; Walsh v. Sims, 65 Ohio St., 211.
Judgment affirmedi.