283 N.E.2d 648 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1971
This original action in mandamus was filed by the soldiers' relief commission of Lucas County, hereinafter referred to as relators, against the board of county commissioners, hereinafter designated respondents, to compel a levy of certain funds allegedly due the relators pursuant to R. C.
R. C.
R. C.
It is stipulated that respondents and relators entered into an arrangement in January, 1969, whereby the relators agreed to allow all vouchers for general relief from the soldiers' relief commission to be processed through the Lucas County welfare department.1 *132
Pursuant to this ad hoc agreement, and despite the detailed procedure for processing applications enumerated in R. C. Chapter 5901, the relators received $177,807.56 for relief of indigent veterans for the year 1970. On May 26, 1970, the relators "certified" to the respondents the sum of $861,364.29 as the amount allegedly necessary for the relief of indigent veterans for the year 1971. The respondents rejected the request and voted to appropriate the sum of $100,325 as the budget for the soldiers' relief commission for 1971. On March 30, 1971, the relators requested a further review of the sum previously certified to the respondents but they declined to budget any further amount.
The relators have failed to comply with the provisions of R. C. Chapter 5901 in the following respects: (1) the relators have failed to appoint soldiers' relief committees for the various townships and wards within Lucas County; (2) no lists of needy applicants or their dependents have been compiled; (3) the relators have failed to procure statements reflecting the financial condition of applicants for welfare benefits; and (4) no determination has ever been made of the probable amount necessary for relief on the basis of the lists of indigent applicants. Therefore, the threshold issue before the court is whether the failure to comply with the statute is fatal to the relators' claim for relief.
R. C.
"On the last Monday in May in each year, the soldiers' relief commission shall meet and determine from the lists provided forin section
Essentially, the relators contend that because the commission is authorized to furnish relief to certain indigents not named on the lists required by R. C.
Nevertheless, the relators argue that any certification by the commission within the five-tenths of a mill ceiling requires the county commissioners to levy a comparable amount regardless of the methods employed by the commission in computing the certification.
R. C.
As an alternative argument, respondents urge that R. C. Chapter 5901 is repugnant to the concept of equal protection of the law embodied in the United States Constitution and the Constitution of Ohio. A decision on the constitutionality of R. C. Chapter 5901 is not essential in order to dispose of the case at bar and we find it unnecessary to reach the issue at this juncture.3 See American Cancer *135 Soc. v. Dayton (1953),
For the reasons set forth, the court finds that the relators have shown no clear right to relief and the petition in mandamus is dismissed at relators' costs.
Petition dismissed.
POTTER, P. J., BROWN and WILEY, JJ., concur.
"Whereas the Board of Lucas County Commissioners has requested the Lucas County Soldiers' Relief Commission to authorize all vouchers from the Soldiers' Relief Commission for general relief be processed through the Lucas County Welfare Department.
"And Whereas the Board of Lucas County Commissioners has assured the Soldiers' Relief Commission, in writing, that it has no intention of taking away any of the rights of Soldiers' Relief Commissions guaranteed under Ohio Law;
"And Whereas the Board of Lucas County Commissioners agree that they, the Commission Members, will assume any and all legal responsibility for any actions which might arise as a result of this arrangement;
"And Whereas all present programs of the Lucas County Soldiers' Relief Commission, including the work project, shall continue in the basis as established by the Soldiers' Relief Commission;
"And Whereas the Lucas County Soldiers' Relief Commission may at any time, on notice to the County Commissioners, withdraw its consent to participate in this agreement.
"Therefore Be It Resolved that the Lucas County Soldiers' Relief Commission does hereby authorize the Lucas County Board of Commissioners to take the necessary steps to implement this agreement."
The respondents also contend that since the classification in the instant case infringes a fundamental interest, the relators must show that the legislative distinction effectuates a compelling state objective. As a general rule, any recognized constitutional right may be classified as a fundamental interest. See Shapiro v. Thompson (1969),