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diers' memorial associations or cemetery corporations to acquire real estate necessary, which shall be exempt from taxation.

Secs. 3445-1 to 15, 92 O. L. 410. Provide for ship canal company, with powers.

Secs. 3471-4a and 5. Provide for contracts by electric light and water-works companies with municipalities.

Secs. 3471-6, 7 and 8. Provide for powers and authority in Cincinnati of companies for constructing conduits for electric wires, etc.

Secs. 3713-7 to 9. tural society grounds.

Prohibit trespasses upon fair and agricul

Secs. 3768-1 and 2. Provide that mechanics' institutes incorporated prior to 1851 may borrow money without personal liability by directors or trustees.

Secs. 3779-1 to 3. Provide for descent of lands held for religious purposes, in trust, etc.

Secs. 3796a to e, 77 O. L. 146. Empower secret benevolent associations to invest surplus funds, fix powers of trustees, receive donations, pay endowments not exceeding $5,000, etc.

Secs. 3821-1 to 63. Define unauthorized banks, liability of stockholders, issue of bills, assets of expired and insolvent banking companies, etc.

For authority to lease Hocking canal land to Columbus, Hocking Valley & Athens R. R. Co., see 91 v. 327, 93 v. 216, 94 v. 236.

Secs. 4095 to 4105. Concern management and powers of Cin

cinnati and Toledo Universities.

Act, 88 O. L. 317. Grants right of way through Ohio State. University grounds to Sandusky & Columbus, Lake Erie & Southern R. R. Co.

. Secs. 4211-19 to 23.

Prohibit transportation of cattle to pre

vent infection with "Texas fever."

Secs. 4364-63 and 64. Provided for payment of wages twice a month, etc.

Held unconstitutional in State v. Lake Erie Iron Co., 25 B. 101, 33 B. 6. Secs. 4364-65 and 66. Regulate employment of minors.

Sec. 4364-68. Joining labor organizations protected.

Secs. 4364-69 and 70. Provide for seats, closets, etc., for employes.

Secs. 4427-1 to 12.

Prohibit combinations known as "trusts."

Held constitutional in 43 B. 149.

Act, 93 O. L. 10. Incorporates "The Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Ohio and other States."

Secs. 4748 and 4749. Provide for punishment of railroad company employe, etc., for obstructing road or highway.

Sec. 6881-1. Forbids trespass upon private property by employes of telephone and telegraph companies.

Secs. 6919 to 6926. Prohibit commission of nuisance by injurious trades, stagnant waters, depositing offal, emptying refuse, obstructing ditches, etc.

Sec. 6919. The judgment required by the statute, upon conviction for maintaining a nuisance, under the act of April 15, 1857, cannot be dispensed with upon a showing that the nuisance does not exist at the time of rendering the judgment. The order to abate does not issue as a matter of course. If the nuisance has ceased, the order will not issue. Smith v. State, 22 Ohio St. 539; Matthews v. State, 25 Ohio St. 536.

Sec. 6920. Inspectors to prosecute violations are provided for by the act of April 28, 1890, 87 O. L. 350.

Sec. 6921. As to what is a sufficient description of a highway, where it is obstructed, see Matthews v. State, 25 Ohio St. 536.

Cutting a tree and allowing it to remain in the road is a nuisance. Nagle v. Brown, 37 Ohio St. 7.

When a dam may be a nuisance. Crawford v. Rambo, 44 Ohio St. 279. Sec. 6923. The owners along a natural stream, or sewer substituted for it, are under no obligation to repair it; their duty is only to omit injuring it. Winslow v. Fuhrman, 25 Ohio St. 639.

Sec. 6925. Where a mining company deposited slack and refuse on its own land, which was washed down upon lands of another, it is no defense to an action for damages that this was the general practice and was without malice, and that such deposits were made in the only feasible place. Columbus, etc., Iron Co. v. Tucker, 48 Ohio St. 41.

Sec. 6980. Provides for punishment of person in charge of railroad locomotive for crossing railroad crossing without previously stopping, receiving signal, etc.

Sec. 6980a. Restricts time for obstructing streets in Cincinnati and Springfield by railroad cars, etc.

Sec. 7010.

Prohibits use of hall, theater, etc., without certifi

cate as to safe ingress and egress.

Sec. 7091. Defines making false charter as forgery.

Sec. 7231.

porations

Provides for summons and indictment against cor

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§ 3232. By what laws governed

Corporations created before the adoption of the present constitution, and which have not, by election or some other act, come

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to be governed by laws since passed, shall be governed and controlled by the laws then in force, and the valid modifications thereof since or herein enacted; and other corporations, now existing or hereafter created, shall be governed and controlled by the provisions of this title.

Where charter provided manner in which it should be accepted, that mode should be followed. Owen v. Purdy, 12 Ohio St. 73. But where the corporation has exercised the powers, or enjoyed the privileges secured by the amendment, as against the claims of third persons, it is estopped. Ib.; Goodin v. Evans, 18 Ohio St. 150. But a non-assenting stockholder may deny that he assented, and invoke the aid of the state in a quo warranto, or the power of a court in an action in his own name. Owen v. Purdy, supra, and State v. Cin. Gas Light & Coke Co., 18 Ohio St. 262.

Where a corporation, incorporated before adoption of constitution of 1851, claims to be exempt from legislative control, this fact can never be presumed, but must appear affirmatively by terms of the charter. Gas Light Co. v. Zanesville, 47 Ohio St. 35, affirming 1 C. C. 123. See also 47 Ohio St. 1.

§ 3233. What corporations may accept the provisions of this title

A corporation created before the adoption of the present constitution, and now actually doing business, may accept any of the provisions of this title, and when a certified copy of such acceptance is filed with the secretary of state, so much of its charter as is inconsistent with the provisions of this title is hereby repealed. 50 v. 274, sec. 71; S. & C. 309.

It is not necessary that a certificate of the company's acceptance be filed with the secretary of state; it is the fact of acceptance which binds the company and works the amendment. Railroad Co. v. Cole, 29 Ohio St.

126.

§ 3233-1. Special charters not accepted or acted on, re

pealed

All special acts of incorporation in force in this state, which have not been accepted or acted upon, shall be and the same are hereby repealed.

$3233-2. Duty of secretary of state if charter of religious society lost-Effect of charter

Whenever it shall be made to appear to the satisfaction of the secretary of state that any religious society or corporation heretofore organized or incorporated under the laws of this state has lost its charter or certificate of incorporation, or that the same

has been destroyed, it shall be the duty of the secretary of state to issue a new certificate of incorporation of such religious society or corporation theretofore issued, and the time as near as may be ascertained of issuing such lost or destroyed certificate as shall be made to appear to him; and thereupon all deeds, mortgages, or other instruments of writing for the conveyance of land, as well as all acts done by such religious society or corporation by virtue of such certificate or charter theretofore lost, shall be binding and of full force in law and in equity; provided, that nothing in this act shall be so construed as to make valid any act not authorized under the laws of this state which heretofore have been in force. 75 O. L. 77.

§ 3233-3. Thirty years' exercise of corporate rights prima facie evidence of incorporation

The fact that a religious society for not less than thirty years, claiming to have been duly and legally incorporated as such, and performing during such time duties and exercising rights as such, shall be prima facie evidence of the original issue of such charter or certificate of incorporation as claimed by such society. 75 O. L. 77.

§ 3234. Corporations created prior to 1851-Fire insurance companies

Corporations created before the adoption of the present constitution, which take any action under or in pursuance of this title, shall thereby and thereafter be deemed to have consented, and shall be held to be a corporation, and to have and exercise all and singular its franchises under the present constitution and the laws passed in pursuance thereof, and not otherwise; provided, that any fire insurance company so created, complying with the requirements of sections three thousand six hundred and fiftyfour and three thousand six hundred and fifty-five, or of any police regulation contained in chapter eleven of this title, or in chapter eight of title three, part first, shall not be deemed to have consented, and shall not be affected by the provisions of this section by reason of such compliance. 89 O. L. 74.

Where a corporation organized under the former constitution has repeatedly, since the adoption of the present constitution, changed the time and terms of election of directors, and has elected directors after giving public

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