Ohio History Journal




THE DEBT OF THE STATE OF OHIO FROM

THE DEBT OF THE STATE OF OHIO FROM

1900 TO 1938, INCLUSIVE

 

By HENRY F. WALRADT

 

One method of raising money with which to make govern-

mental expenditures is to issue bonds or certificates of indebted-

ness. The record of the State Government of Ohio during the

twentieth century as to debt may well be studied in this day when

so many political units too recklessly meet their present desire

or need for revenue by the easy expedient of going into debt.

At the beginning of the present century the debt of the State

Government consisted of the funded or bonded debt and the irre-

ducible debt. The funded debt, which originated in 1825, arose

mainly in connection with the construction of the State's system

of canals. The irreducible debt originated from the practice by

the State of using, for the expenditures it desired to make, the

proceeds from the sale of public land given to the State by Con-

gress for religious and educational purposes. The amounts thus

used by the State were set up as an unfunded debt upon which

the State pledged itself to pay six per cent annual interest. In

an attempt to insure that this debt should be perpetual, there

was incorporated in the Constitution adopted in 1851 a provision

that "the principal of all funds arising from the sale, or other dis-

position of lands, or other property granted or entrusted to this

state for educational and religious purposes, shall forever be

preserved inviolate, and undiminished; and the income arising

therefrom, shall be faithfully applied to the specific objects of

the original grants, or appropriations."1 Later the proceeds from

any bequests or gifts made to Ohio State, Ohio and Miami

universities and turned into the State treasury also became a

part of the irreducible debt of the State.

A. The Funded Debt.

The State's outstanding bonds based on the entire credit of

the State were redeemed in full during the fiscal year 1903 with

 

1 Article VI, Section 1.

(119)



120 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

120    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

the exception of $1,655. This was an old canal debt which ma-

tured in 1849 and upon which no interest was paid after that

year. The last payment on the principal of this debt was made

in 1870.2 As these bonds in all probability will never be pre-

sented for redemption, for practical purposes the public debt in-

volving the general credit of the State was entirely paid before

the close of 1903.

There were outstanding, however, on November 15, 1900,

certificates of indebtedness which were issued by Ohio State and

Ohio universities. The General Assembly on April 15, 1892,

passed an act authorizing the Board of Trustees of Ohio State

University to issue certificates of indebtedness, not in excess of

$120,000 for the erection of buildings and the acquisition of

equipment.3  These certificates were issued in anticipation of the

annual State levies on property for the support of the university

and were to be entirely paid before July 1, 1897. A similar issue

of $30,000 had been sold by the trustees under the authority

granted by an act passed May 4, 1891,4 but as these were all re-

deemed before June 30, 1892, they do not enter into the picture.

Only $110,000 of certificates were actually issued of those au-

thorized by the Act of April 15, 1892, but the Board of Trustees

found it necessary to obtain authority from the legislature by the

Act of March 13, 1894,5 to refund these. The refunding cer-

tificates were payable in eleven annual installments of $10,000,

the first payable June 1, 1895, and the last on June 1, 1905.

The proceeds from the sale of these refunding certificates were

used to take up the outstanding certificates.

Need for additional buildings resulted in the General As-

sembly, on April 17, 1896,6 authorizing a further issue of cer-

tificates of indebtedness in anticipation of the annual State levies

on property in support of the university. These were not to ex-

ceed in amount $300,000 and were to be entirely redeemed be-

fore January 1, 1904. Under the Acts of March 13, 1894, and

April 17, 1896, the indebtedness of Ohio State University reached

 

2 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio (Columbus), 1914, 167, n.

3 89 O. L. 321.

4 88 O. L. 591.

5 91 O. L. 62.

6 92 O. L. 191.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 121

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                   121

 

a peak of $380,000 on December 17, 1897, of which $35,000 was

payable in 1898, $65,000 in each of the years 1899-1903 inclusive,

and $10,000 in each of the years 1904 and 1905. Because of the

growth of the university and its increasing need of more instruc-

tors and equipment, the annual expenditures of the university

increased to such a degree that this indebtedness could not be met.

All attempts to. obtain any other form of relief failing, the Board

of Trustees again requested from the legislature the right to refund

the debt. On April 23, 1898,7 the General Assembly empowered

the board to "extend the time and payment of portions of the

present bonded indebtedness . . . as the same shall become due,

by issuing other bonds in lieu thereof."    This was to be done

in such a way that "the amount of principal falling due each

year shall be $25,000."  The act further provided that the bonds

were to bear interest not exceeding 4 1/2 per cent, payable semi-

annually, and were all to be paid before January 1, 1913, out of

the levies made for the support of the university. The outstand-

ing indebtedness of the university as a result of this financial

procedure at the end of the fiscal year (November 15) of the

years enumerated is shown in the following table.

 

TABLE 1

OUTSTANDING      BONDS (OR CERTIFICATES OF INDEBTED-

NESS) OF OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY AS OF NOVEMBER

15, 1900-1913, INCLUSIVE

Year                            Amount                       Year                         Amount

1900                                          $330,000                                  1907                                      $155,000

1901                                          305,000                                     1908                                      130,000

1902                           280,000                      1909                        105,000

1903                                           255,000                                     1910                                      80,000

1904                                           250,000*                                  1911                                      55,000

1905                           225,000*                    1912                        30,000

1906                                           180,000                                     1913                                      ......

Source: Reports of the Board of Trustees of Ohio State University

to the Governor of Ohio, 1900-1913, inclusive.

* Includes $30,000 certificates of indebtedness issued December 21, 1903,

and payable December 15, 1904, but not paid until June 7, 1906. These were

bid in by the treasurer of the university as an investment for the rents

arising from the Page estate which had been bequeathed to the university

and was under litigation.

7 93 O. L. 221.



122 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

122   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Similarly on April 22, 1896, the General Assembly passed

an act8 authorizing the Board of Trustees of Ohio University to

issue certificates of indebtedness, not to exceed $60,000 in

amount, in anticipation of the annual levies for the support of

the university to be used for the erection of buildings and im-

provements and for buying equipment. These certificates were

to be entirely redeemed before January 1, 1904. This act was

followed by another enacted on April 12, 1898,9 authorizing the

Board of Trustees to issue $15,000 of certificates for the purpose

of redeeming certificates which were maturing September 1, 1898

and 1899. Of the refunding certificates, $5,000 were to be re-

deemed in 1904 and $10,000 in 1905.

Still the university faced financial difficulty in redeeming the

certificates as they fell due.  Consequently, the legislature on

April 3, 1900,10 authorized the issue of certificates of indebted-

ness not to exceed $55,000, the proceeds to be applied exclusively

to the redemption of certificates already issued and maturing

$10,000 on September 1 in each of the years 1900 to 1903 in-

clusive and 1905, and $5,000 on September 1, 1904. Not less

than $5,000 of these refunding certificates were to be redeemed

beginning in 1906 and the entire amount was to be redeemed

before January 1, 1917.

Acting under the authority granted to them by the Act of

April 3, 1900, the Board of Trustees refunded the outstanding

certificates as they matured in the years 1900 to 1903 inclusive.

Beginning in 1904, both the certificates falling due each year and

the annual interest on the debt were paid from appropriations

made for the purpose by the General Assembly from the general

revenue fund of the State. As a result the outstanding debt of

Ohio University on November 15 of the years 1900 to 1903

inclusive was $55,000, after which the debt decreased $5,000 a

year, the last installment maturing on September 1, 1913.

Although these certificates of indebtedness on bonds issued

by Ohio State and Ohio universities are not generally considered

to be a part of Ohio's funded debt, the fact that they were issued

8 92 O. L. 285.

9 93 O. L. 109.

10 94 O. L. 94.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 123

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938               123

 

in anticipation of general property taxes levied by the State in

support of these universities, the acts authorizing their issue

specifically stipulating that they were to be paid out of the pro-

ceeds of such levies, and that actually some of them were re-

deemed by special appropriations from the general revenue fund

of the State, is sufficient from the economic point of view to

justify their inclusion as part of the funded debt of the State.

Thus by 1917 the State Government, including its agencies,

had completely retired its funded debt. At this time the United

States entered the first World War; during the twenties there

was a very rapid increase in the construction of expensive high-

ways; and then followed the prolonged depression which caused

a substantial reduction in the revenue from existing taxes and

forced large increases in public expenditures to provide for the

unemployed. The State Government's relative freedom from

debt throughout the entire period, 1900-1938 inclusive, in spite

of these circumstances, is probably due to a considerable degree

to the provisions in the State Constitution relative to the incurring

of debt by the State Government. Section 1 of Article VIII em-

powers the State to "contract debts to supply casual deficits or

failures in revenues, or to meet expenses not otherwise provided

for; but the aggregate of such debts . . . shall never exceed seven

hundred and fifty thousand dollars." Section 2 of Article VIII

provides that "in addition to the above limited power the state

may contract debts to repel invasion, suppress insurrection, de-

fend the state in war" and Section 3 of Article VIII stipulates

that "except the debts above specified, no debt whatever shall here-

after be created by or on behalf of the state." Section 6 of

Article XII, which was adopted September 3, 1912, added an-

other limitation which reads: "Except as otherwise provided in

this constitution the state shall never contract any debt for pur-

poses of internal improvement."

Of course, if there is sufficient popular support for such a

proposal, it is possible to pass a constitutional amendment for

the contraction of a debt by the State for other purposes and be-

yond the seven hundred and fifty thousand dollar limitation speci-

fied in the Constitution. Such action was taken on November 8,



124 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

124    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

1921, when the voters adopted an amendment (Section 2a of

Article VIII) which provided for an issue of bonds not to ex-

ceed $25,000,000 for the purpose of raising money with which to

pay a State soldiers' bonus to the World War veterans, or their

heirs, with a rank not higher than captain in the Army or Marine

Corps or corresponding grade in the Navy, who at the time they

began service resided in Ohio. The bonds issued in accordance

with this amendment bore 4 3/4 per cent interest per annum payable

semiannually and matured in equal semiannual installments of

$1,250,000, the first to be paid on April 1, 1923, and the last on

October 1, 1932.

 

Another attempt was made in 1931 to pass an amendment

for the issue of bonds to provide larger and better facilities for

the criminal and welfare institutions of the State, but it failed.11

 

The World War Compensation Bonds were completely re-

tired by 1932 as planned, but due to the severe damage suffered

from a gas explosion on April 14, 1932, by the State Office Build-

ing then under construction, the State issued $750,000 of certifi-

cates of indebtedness, the limit allowed by the State Constitution.

These certificates bore 2 1/2 per cent interest and matured July 15,

1933. Although they were redeemed when due, the General As-

sembly, because of the need for additional funds to meet the cur-

rent operating expenditures, authorized a new $750,000 issue of

certificates of indebtedness. This issue, dated July 17, 1933, bear-

ing only 2 1/4 per cent interest, was due and payable on or before

December 1, 1935.12

 

In 193513 the General Assembly created the State Bridge

Commission with authority to acquire and administer all toll-

bridges within the State or which had approaches in the State.

The commission purchased the following bridges for which it

issued over six million dollars of bonds:

 

 

11 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1933, 25.

12 Ibid., 24.

13 116 O. L. 456 (Act of June 3, 1935).



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 125

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                  125

 

TABLE 2

BONDS ISSUED BY THE OHIO BRIDGE COMMISSION AND

OUTSTANDING ON DECEMBER 31, 1938

Bonds

Purchase Outstanding

Name of Bridge                   Date of Bond Issue  Price   Dec. 31,1938

Sandusky Bay                          April 1, 1936 ......... $1,925,000 $1,452,000

Fort Steuben                            October 1, 1936...... 1,600,000           1,418,000

Pomeroy-Mason                     October 1, 1936....... 350,000             350,000

East Liverpool-Chester           September 1, 1938.... 2,135,000         2,135,000

 

Total  .........                    ....................... $6,010,000                 $5,355,000

Source: Auditor of the State Bridge Commission of Ohio.

 

The bonds issued were revenue bonds and it is this fact which

is given by the Ohio Supreme Court as justification for uphold-

ing the constitutionality of the issues, although the amount of the

issues ($6,010,000) was in excess of the $750,000 constitutional

limit. This question was raised in State ex rel. State Bridge

Commission of Ohio v. Griffith, Secretary of State (136 O. S.

334) and the court in its opinion stated that "the state has no

claim on the revenues of this bridge until the bridge revenue

bonds have been paid" and "there is no obligation whatever to

pay these bonds except from bridge revenues." Although tech-

nically the law may not hold these bonds to be a debt of the State,

to the writer it seems that the spirit of the constitutional limita-

tion was violated as the bonds were issued by an instrumentality

of the State, and, on the ground that economically speaking these

bonds are a debt of the State, they are included in the table show-

ing the funded debt of the State. It is interesting to note that

the law authorizing the acquisition of these bridges provides that

as soon as the bonds issued for the purchase of a given bridge

have been entirely retired, that bridge shall become a free bridge.



126 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

126     OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

TABLE 3

THE FUNDED DEBT OF THE STATE OF OHIO AS OF THE END

OF THE FISCAL YEARS 1900-1938, INCLUSIVE

1900    $ 701,665(a)            1904            $300,000       1926             $16,250,000

385,000(b)         1905            265,000         1927             13,750,000

 

1,086,665            1906            215,000         1928             10,000,000

1907           185,000         1929             7,500,000

1901       451,665(a)            1908            155,000         1930             5,000,000

360,000(b)         1909            125,000         1931             2,500,000

 

811,665             1910             95,000          1932                750,000

1911             65,000          1933                750,000

1902       201,665(a)              1912             35,000          1934                750,000

335,000(b)        1913-21        None            1935                None

 

536,665                       1922                    25,000,000            1936                      3,825,000(c)

1923                   23,750,000            1937                      3,537,000(c)

1903         1,665(a)*            1924            21,250,000    1938             5,355,000(c)

310,000(b)         1925            18,750,000

 

Sources: Reports of the Auditors of the State of Ohio, 1900-1938,

inclusive.

Reports of the Board of Trustees of Ohio State University to the

Governor of Ohio, 1900-1913, inclusive.

Reports of the Board of Trustees of Ohio University to the Governor

of Ohio, 1900-1913, inclusive.

 

(a) State bonds. *Canal bonds evidently lost or destroyed.

(b)  University bonds or certificates of indebtedness.  The figures

from 1904 through 1916 are also for these university bonds or certificates.

(c)  Revenue bonds issued by Ohio Bridge Commission.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 127

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                      127

 

B. The Irreducible Debt.

TABLE 4

THE IRREDUCIBLE DEBT OF THE STATE OF OHIO AS OF

THE END OF THE FISCAL YEARS 1900-1938, INCLUSIVE

(Figures are given to the nearest dollar)

1900 $4,672,810                  1910 $5,181,875                  1920 $5,376,308                   1930 $5,541,063

1901 4,691,448                     1911 5,203,033                     1921 5,380,117                     1931 5,542,063

1902 4,705,155                     1912  5,229,850                    1922 5,400,406                     1932 5,559,793

1903 4,723,539                     1913 5,266,291                     1923 5,419,150                     1933, 5,562,669

1904 4,743,920                     1914 5,286,988                     1924 5,425,410                     1934 5,569,879

1905 4,876,989                     1915 5,334,392                     1925 5,435,312                     1935 5,611,515

1906 4,966,300                     1916 5,350,977                     1926 5,477,821                     1936 5,640,147

1907 5,094,185                     1917 5,412,742                     1927 5,484,655                     1937 5,795,368

1908 5,126,279                     1918 5,356,311                     1928 5,500,653                     1938 6,004,741

1909 5,168,733                     1919 5,364,930                     1929 5,533,743

Source: Annual reports of the Auditors of the State of Ohio, 1900-

1938, inclusive.

 

In addition to the amounts as stated above the State holds

$41,024.0514 received from the sale of saltlands in Delaware,

Jackson, and Muskingum counties15 under the authority granted

by an act of Congress approved on December 28, 1824.16 The

proceeds of such sale were to be applied for such literary pur-

poses as the legislature might designate. Under the provisions of

an act passed by the General Assembly on March 2, 1831,17 the

salt land fund was allowed to accumulate until January 1, 1835.

After this date the annual interest on the fund was to be "annually

distributed to the several counties . . . in proportion to the num-

ber of white male inhabitants above the age of twenty-one years

. . . for the support of common schools." In 1839 the interest

which had accrued on the fund from January 1, 1835, to January,

1839, was thus distributed to the counties and the interest was

distributed annually for the next six years. No interest has been

paid since 1845. The last payment received by the State was in

1849, but the State auditors continued to carry this fund as part

14 This includes $7,112.14 interest which accrued on the proceeds from the sale

of saltlands prior to January 1, 1835, and which was added to the principal of the

salt land fund.

15 Report of Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1933, 437.

16 United States Statutes at Large (Boston), IV, 79.

17 29 O. L. 423.



128 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

128    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

of the irreducible debt through 1870, after which year it was

dropped.

The State also holds in trust $25,121.09 received from the

sale of 25,640 acres of swamplands in the northwestern part of

the State,18 chiefly in Ottawa, Sandusky and Wood counties,

which were granted to the State by an act of Congress passed on

September 28, 1850.19 The General Assembly in an act passed

on March 24, 1851,20 provided that the proceeds from the sale

of the swamplands should be set aside for the support of

the common schools and the interest distributed to the several

counties in proportion to the number of white21 male inhabitants

above the age of twenty-one years. The first entry under the

heading "Swamp Land Indemnity Fund" and included as a part

of the irreducible debt of the State was in the State auditor's

report for 1885 and reads "Received from United States as in-

demnity for swamp lands" $21,770.82. By 1898 the principal of

this fund through the sale of swamplands in six of the interven-

ing years increased to $24,772.09. There has been only one year

since 1898 in which any of the State's swampland was sold and

that was in 1905 when $349 was received for such land. This

increased the principal to $25,121.09. The State auditors' reports

carried this amount through 1916. Since that time their annual

reports through 1933 contained a note telling of the existence of

the salt- and swampland funds. This reference to the saltland

fund disappeared in the 1934 report, and beginning with the 1937

report there is no further reference to the swampland fund.

Although there has never been any distribution of interest on

this fund, the last statement made as to the amount of interest

payable was that after January 1, 1915, there would be $43,326.32

so payable.22  At six per cent simple interest the total interest

payable after January 1, 1939, had increased to over $81,000 or

considerably more than three and one-half times the principal.

The irreducible debt in reality consists of trust funds held

 

18 Report of Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1936, 269.

19 United States Statutes, IX, 519.

20 49 O. L. 40.

21 Word "white" omitted in an amendment to this act passed March 5, 1883 (80

O. L. 39).

22 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1914, 154.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 129

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                      129

by the State. The figures for this debt as given above23 may be

divided into three main groups: (I) The Ministerial and School

Funds; (II) Special School Funds; and (III) University Funds.

 

I.  The Ministerial and School Trust Funds.

On May 20, 1785, Congress passed an act24 providing for a

rectangular survey of the public domain and for the sale of public

land. In this act there was a provision reserving one thirty-sixth

of the public land, namely Lot or Section 16, for educational pur-

poses.25 Of the land now included in the State of Ohio, 764,488

acres were thus "earmarked" for the public schools. In the

Western Reserve, located in northeastern Ohio north of the forty-

first degree north latitude and extending west to the eastern

boundary line of Sandusky and Seneca counties,26 and in the

United States Military District27 the allotments for the schools

were two and one-half miles square; in the Virginia Military Dis-

trict28 the school allotments were three miles square; but in the

case of the land sold to the Ohio Company in 1787 in the south-

eastern portion of the State,29 and in 1792 to the group headed

by John Cleves Symmes in the southwestern portion of the State

in what is now part of Hamilton, Butler, and Warren counties,

as well as in Congress lands the allotment for school purposes in

each township was one mile square.

In the case of the Ohio Company's30 and the Symmes' pur-

chases, Section 29 in each township was set aside for the aid of

religious organizations. These are the only lands of this kind

in the United States.31 All denominations with members living

within the original township survey are entitled to share in the

23 Supra, Table 4, p. 127.

24 Journals of Congress (Philadelphia), IV, 520.

25 See also United States Statutes, II, 225 (Act of Congress approved March 3,

1803).

26 Included all the land now in Trumbull, Ashtabula, Lake, Geauga, Cuyahoga,

Medina, Lorain, Huron, and Erie counties and part of the land in Ottawa, Ashland,

Summit, and Mahoning counties.

27 Comprised of all the land now in Coshocton and Tuscarawas counties and of

portions of Noble, Guernsey, Muskingum, Licking, Franklin, Delaware, Marion, Mor-

row, Knox, and Holmes counties.

28 See infra, p. 135.

29 Comprised of portions of Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, Athens, Vinton, Hocking,

Morgan, and Washington counties.

30 Contract of the Ohio Company with the Board of the Treasury quoted in

W. E. Peters' Legal History of Ohio University (Cincinnati, 1910), 43-8.

31 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1931, 374.



130 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

130    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

annual income from the ministerial trust fund in proportion to

the number of members who are at least fifteen years of age and

who live in the original surveyed township.

On February 1, 1826, Congress passed an act32 to permit the

State of Ohio to sell the lands reserved for the benefit of the

schools provided that the capital sum of such sales be kept in-

violate and the earnings of this trust fund be turned over to the

schools in the districts in which the land thus sold was located.

On February 18, 1830, the Ohio legislature passed an act33 re-

quiring the State treasurer to place at the disposal of the com-

missioners of the canal fund the capital of the common school fund

which consisted of the proceeds from the sale of school lands, and

these commissioners were authorized to use the same, as any other

money they obtained through borrowing. The commissioners

were to be charged six per cent on these loans. After the com-

pletion of the canals the commissioners were to use the money

borrowed from the trust fund for the redemption of the State

debt. As stated above, the debt here referred to was entirely

paid in 1903.34

Thereafter, all proceeds from the sale of any ministerial or

school lands were put into the fund out of which the annual six

per cent interest to the churches and schools benefiting from

the original grants of land was paid. Thus this part of the irre-

ducible debt--namely, the ministerial and school funds--continued

to increase. The constitutionality of this practice has been ques-

tioned35 and a change in policy was effected by the Garver Act

of March 20, 1917.

It is clear that Ohio taxpayers of the twentieth century are

paying six per cent annually, in spite of the fact that current rates

of interest have been at times and are at present much lower, be-

cause the State used up most of the capital originally set aside for

the common schools to pay for the canals of the State which have

long since outlived their original usefulness. This policy, how-

ever, has not been detrimental to the schools since they are re-

 

32 United States Statutes, IV, 138.

33 28 O. L. 56.

34 See supra, p. 120.

35 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1918, 172, quoting from the annual

report of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 131

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                131

 

ceiving a perpetual six per cent return on the debt to them thus

incurred by the State. Throughout the entire period under dis-

cussion, 1900-1938 inclusive, this has been a high rate of return

on any good government security.

On February 16, 1914, the General Assembly passed an act36

which authorized the State auditor to lease unsold school lands

for oil, gas, coal and other minerals. Prior to the passage of this

act private individuals were exploiting solely for their own ad-

vantage the natural resources of the State on these unsold school

lands.37

The collection and distribution of the rent from the minis-

terial and school lands as well as their care had been in the hands

of local trustees since 1806. These duties were frequently in-

differently performed and many abuses had crept into the man-

agement of the school land as already implied. On March 20,

1917, the General Assembly passed the Garver Act38 which pro-

vided that the State auditor be the supervisor of all unsold school

and ministerial lands. Since this time the income from royalties

and from the sale of lands or minerals has been deposited in

the State treasury and as soon as possible profitably invested in

bonds. The income from these deposits and bonds as well as the

income from land under lease is distributed to the townships en-

titled to such income for the benefit of the churches and common

schools as already explained.

Thus, from 1918 on, there has been no increase in the irre-

ducible debt to the ministerial and school funds upon which the

State continues to pay six per cent interest, as the annual return

from these lands still held by the State and the actual interest

received from the deposits or bonds held by the State as a trust

fund has been distributed to the respective townships, instead

of being used by the State and the amount added to the irredu-

cible debt. The State, however, continues to distribute to these

same beneficiaries six per cent on the amount of the State's debt

to the ministerial and school fund as it stood on July 1, 1918.

The principal of the irreducible debt which resulted from

36 104 O. L. 224.

37 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1920, 273.

38 107 O. L. 357.



132 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

132    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

the grants made from the public domain for the benefit of the

common schools is carried under four divisions, namely, Section

16, United States Military District, Virginia Military District,

and Western Reserve, because of the difference in the size of the

school allotments in these districts39 as stated above.40

 

II. Special School Trust Funds.

These consist of bequests made by individuals for the bene-

fit of particular schools.  The proceeds were deposited in the

State treasury and the amount was added to the irreducible debt.

The State pays six per cent interest on any such sum which is

turned over to the particular schools designated by the donor.41

There have been three such trusts established, but one of these

has terminated.

TABLE 5

SPECIAL SCHOOL TRUST FUNDS "HELD" BY THE STATE OF

OHIO AT VARIOUS TIMES DURING THE PERIOD 1900-1938

INCLUSIVE

Fiscal Year in Which

Bequest was Received                                             Amount of

Name of Donor              by the State             Beneficiary   Bequest

John Butler......         1877              Bloom  Township          $ 332.50

(subdistrict No. 4)

--Morgan County

Blue Rock Town-         332.50

ship (subdistrict

No. 8)--Muskingum

County

Rex Patterson....              1911           Mt. Pleasant-Jeffer-  5,012.17

son County

George Wright...   Undetermined. Ap-                                 Pleasant Township   2,157.42

parently in 1871 or       --Marion County

earlier

On May 23, 1933, Judge Lyne of the Common Pleas Court

of Morgan County rendered a decision that the schools were

 

39 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1918, 170.

40 See supra, p. 129.

41 Ohio General Code, Section 7581.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 133

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                133

abandoned which had been the beneficiaries of the Butler will

and that consequently the trust created by this will was ter-

minated. Therefore, he directed that the $665 of the Butler Fund

together with any interest due on the same be distributed to the

heirs of John Butler. This was done in July, 1933,42 and con-

sequently the amount of the Special School Funds was reduced

from $7,834.59 at which figure it had stood from 1911, to

$7,169.50.

III. University Funds.

(a)  Ohio State University. The larger portion of the ir-

reducible debt classified as University Funds as it stood in 1900

arose from the sale of 630,000 acres of the public domain which

Ohio received under the Morrill Act of July 2, 1862.43 This

act provided for the grant of land scrip to any state in an

amount equal to 30,000 acres for each senator and representative

it had in Congress provided it would establish at least one college

"where the leading object shall be, without excluding other scien-

tific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach

such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and the

mechanic arts, in such manner as the Legislatures of the States

may respectively prescribe."  As Ohio had twenty-one senators

and representatives, its quota of land scrip was for 630,000 acres.

The State of Ohio in 1864 accepted this grant on the conditions

prescribed.44 The land scrip was sold for $342,450.80. The

State auditor in his 1867 report stated that the entire proceeds

from the sale of this scrip, which he reported to be $340,894.40,

had been paid into the State treasury and that the interest due on

this sum January 1, 1868, would be $18,823.97. In the next

year's State auditor's report, however, it appears that $1,556.40

more came into the State treasury in payment for land scrip mak-

ing a total of $342,450.80 received by the State.

No interest was actually disbursed by the State for a number

of years since the Agricultural and Mechanical College had not as

yet been established. The General Assembly in an act passed

42 Report of the Auditor of the State of Ohio, 1933, 437-8.

43 United States Statutes, XII, 503.

44 61 O. L. 7 (Act of February 9, 1864).



134 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

134    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

February 10, 1870,45 provided that six per cent interest be com-

puted semiannually on this fund, now called the Agricultural

and Mechanical College Fund, and that this interest be added

to the principal of the fund. The State auditor in his 1870 report

computed the accrued interest to January 1, 1871, and stated

that on that date the principal of the fund would be $435,138.27,

consisting of $342,450.80 received for the land scrip plus $92,-

687.47 accrued interest. The Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical

College opened in the fall of 1873 and the fund on January 1,

1874, had increased to $504,807.28 including $34,500 of Franklin

County bonds which were placed in the State treasury as pre-

scribed by the Act of January 20, 1871.46 These bonds were a

portion of the $300,000 bonds issued by Franklin County for the

purpose of donating to the trustees of the Agricultural and

Mechanical College this sum for the use of the college provided

that the institution would be located in Franklin County.47 These

bonds bore seven per cent interest which was added to the prin-

cipal of the fund upon which the State was paying six per cent

interest. They were redeemed in 1881.

From January 1, 1875, in spite of the addition of $13,665.14

from the sale of Virginia Military lands, the principal of the fund

grew slowly, since the college was spending most of the income

from the fund, reaching $559,627.8848 as reported for November

15, 1880. In the year 1885 the principal had dropped to $537,-

846.46 where it remained constant through 1890.

In 1900 the principal of this fund, called the Ohio State

University Fund since 1878, was still nearly eight thousand dol-

lars less than it had been in 1880 in spite of still further additions

amounting to over $16,000 resulting from its Virginia Military

land claims. This shows very clearly that the fund at that time

consisted mainly of the $342,450.80 received from the land scrip

given to the State by the United States under the Morrill Act

plus unused interest which was added to the principal prior to

 

45 67 O. L. 15.

46 68 O. L. 13.

47 Authorized by Act of April 18, 1870 (67 O. L. 95).

48 This figure also included the $34,500 of Franklin County Bonds.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 135

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                    135

 

1881, in fact most of which was added by the time the Ohio

Agricultural and Mechanical College held its first classes.

Ohio State University, as just indicated, has also benefited

from other land, namely, the Virginia Military lands, given to the

State of Ohio by the National Government. Virginia, under the

charter of May 23, 1609,49 granted by King James I of England,

claimed all the land west to the Mississippi River between her

northernmost point near Steubenville and her southern boundary.

When Virginia on March 1, 1784, relinquished its claims to the

lands west of the Ohio River in favor of the United States,50 it

reserved rights to the land between the Scioto River on the east,

the Little Miami on the west, the Ohio River on the south, and

running north into what is now part of Auglaize, Hardin, and

Marion counties,51 to satisfy the claims of Virginia soldiers who

were veterans of the Revolutionary War. Having done this there

still remained 76,735 acres unsold which Virginia released to the

United States in 1852. Congress in turn by an act of February

18, 1871,52 ceded these to Ohio. The General Assembly on March

26, 1872,53 provided for the conveyance of these lands to the trus-

tees of the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College for the

benefit of that institution.

The land thus turned over to the Agricultural and Mechanical

College should not be confused with the one thirty-sixth of the

original Virginia Military District which was reserved for the

benefit of the common schools. Although the proceeds from the

sale of any of these lands were turned into the State treasury, in

the case of the latter the amount was added to the principal of the

irreducible debt until the passage of the Garver Act on March 20,

1917 (after which they have been invested in bonds),54 whereas,

in the case of the former, credit was given in the general revenue

fund to the college or university, now called Ohio State Univer-

 

49 Benjamin Perley Poore, comp., The Federal and State Constitutions, Colonial

Charters and Other Organic Laws (Washington, 1878, 2nd ed.), Part 2, p. 1893.

50 Journals of Congress, IV, 342.

51 Thus this district included the land now in Clermont, Brown, Adams, Clinton,

Highland, Fayette, Madison, and Union counties and some of the land now in Scioto,

Pike, Ross, Pickaway, Franklin, Delaware, Marion, Hardin, Auglaize, Logan, Cham-

paign, Clark, Greene, Warren, and Hamilton counties.

52 United States Statutes, XVI, 416.

53  69 O. L. 52.

54 See supra, p. 131.



136 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

136   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

sity, where it was reserved for such university purposes as the

legislature might authorize.

Owing to the fact that the Virginia Military District was not

surveyed into townships of any regular form and that individuals

who owned a Virginia Military land warrant located wherever

they pleased and shaped their holdings to suit their own desires

just so long as no one else was in possession, a considerable amount

of litigation arose as time went on relative to the legal title to

individual plots of land. The Ohio General Assembly by an act

of March 14, 1889,55 attempted to clarify the situation by providing

that the trustees of Ohio State University should quit-claim title

to any of the land to which its title was disputed, provided that the

claimant of the disputed land, or those from whom the title was

claimed, had for twenty-one years occupied and improved the

land. In return for the deed such a claimant was to pay two dol-

lars to the university trustees and the State auditor was to add

to the principal of the Ohio State University fund in the irre-

ducible debt one dollar per acre for all land to which the univer-

sity trustees surrendered legal claim. This act was supplemented

later56 to permit persons who had been compelled by suit or by

fear of suit to pay Ohio State University for any of this land and

who could show to the satisfaction of a State board set up for the

purpose that they would have been able to take advantage of the

Act of March 14, 1889, to recover from the university the amount

wrongfully paid. This act, however, was amended on May 21,

1894,57 so as to provide that where claims had been or should be

allowed under the act, the amount paid by the university should

be added to "that part of the irreducible debt of the state which

constitutes the endowment fund of the Ohio State University."

The entire cash receipts from the sale of the Virginia Military

lands granted to this institution in 1872 by the State legislature,

including interest received on notes given in payment for the land,

up to June 30, 1900, amounted to $65,425.28. The total expenses

incident to such sale including the costs of survey, litigation and

 

55 86 O. L. 92.

56 90 O. L. 20 (Act of April 21, 1893).

57 91 O. L. 375.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 137

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938               137

 

collection were $29,059.55. Thus the net receipts from these sales

up to June 30, 1900, were $36,366.73.58 Of this sum, under a

joint resolution of the General Assembly adopted April 24, 1877,59

$1,592.56 was added to the endowment fund and in 1880 the rest

of the entire net receipts from these sales up to November 15,

1879, which amounted to $12,073.28 were similarly added to the

university endowment fund. Under the authority granted by the

legislature by an act passed April 17, 1882,60 the university trustees

expended down to June 30, 1900, for the construction and mainte-

nance of residences for professors $22,637.57. This left a balance

of only $64.02. Thus of the total cash received by the university

down to June 30, 1900, as a result of the sale of these Virginia

Military lands only $13,665.14, or slightly over one-fifth of the

total received was added to the university endowment fund and as

a necessary consequence to the irreducible debt of the State.

The endowment fund, however, was increased to June 30,

1900, under the provisions of the Act of March 14, 1889, and the

Act of May 21, 1894 (chiefly the former), by $16,052.18. From

this date to June 30, 1919, the portion of the irreducible debt

known as the Ohio State University fund was increased $209,-

236.65 by this means. Little has been added from this source

since 1919--the total to June 30, 1938, being only $2,371.99.

Thus to the end of the nineteenth century that portion of the

irreducible debt constituting the endowment fund of Ohio State

University is the direct result of the land grants made to the State

by the National Government. Since the turn of the century the

importance of these land grants in building up the university en-

dowment fund has waned. On November 15, 1900, the Ohio State

University fund amounted to $551,633.92 and in 1902 by reach-

ing $559,878.20 surpassed its previous high attained in 1880. From

this time on the increase of this fund has been relatively rapid,

the principal in 1938 being over a million dollars larger or nearly

three times as large as it was in 1900. Of this increase $484,218.74

occurred during the period November 15, 1900, to July 1, 1918.

58 Report of the Board of Trustees of Ohio State University (Columbus, 1900), 15.

59 74 O. L. 539.

60 79 O. L. 144.



138 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

138    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

It should be noted that of this last amount $202,745.68 or a little

over forty per cent was due to the granting of quit-claims by the

university to Virginia Military lands. Thus, although the endow-

ment fund of the university continued to be increased as a result

of the university's claims to land given to the State by the National

Government, the larger portion of its increase from 1900 to 1918

was the result of gifts to the university. The largest of these was

a bequest of over $217,000 made by Henry Folsom Page. All

money turned over to the State treasury by either Ohio State,61

Ohio,62 or Miami universities63 which arises from gifts is credited

to such university and becomes a part of the irreducible debt of the

State upon which it pays six per cent annual interest. In these

days of low interest rates this practice is a boon to these institutions

and is in the nature of a State subsidy to them. Since 1918 the

increase in the Ohio State University fund has been almost en-

tirely the result of bequests to the university amounting to some

$530,000 so that on December 31, 1938, more than half of the

$1,578,262.67 credited to this fund is the result of donations.

(b) Ohio University. In the land purchased by the Ohio

Company from the United States in 1787, it will be recalled that

Section 16 and Section 29 in each township were set aside for

school and religious purposes respectively. In addition two town-

ships, each six miles square or a total of 46,080 acres, were re-

served for the use of a college. The townships of Alexander and

Athens, in Athens County, were selected and on January 9, 1802,64

the territorial legislature provided for the establishment of a uni-

versity, to be called "The American Western University," in the

town of Athens. Two years later, Ohio now being a State, the

State legislature on February 1865 reenacted this territorial act

with a few changes including changing the name "The American

Western University" to "Ohio University." The institution was

opened to students in the spring of 1808, but the first diplomas

were not awarded until 1815.66 Ohio University is the oldest

 

61 67 O. L. 22.

62 101 O. L. 208.

63 103 O. L. 564.

64 1 Sess. 2 G. A. T. 161.

65 2 O. L. 193.

66 Report of Ohio University to the Governor (Athens, 1912), 7-8.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 139

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                139

 

institution of higher learning in that part of the United States

known as the "Old Northwest"67 and is also the first college in

the United States founded upon a land endowment.68

The lands were appraised and the law provided that there

should be a revaluation of all the land outside of the town of

Athens at the end of thirty-five years, another after sixty years,

a third at the expiration of ninety years from the commencement

of each lease and the land was to be leased for a "term of ninety

years, renewable forever, on a yearly rent of six per cent on these

valuations."  On February 21, 1805,69 the General Assembly

passed an act amending the Act of February 18, 1804, and changed

the term of the, lease from ninety years renewable forever to

ninety-nine years, renewable forever. Absolutely nothing was said

in this act relative to revaluation of the land. However, when the

time for revaluation arrived, the right to make such revaluation

was questioned on the ground that it had been the intention of the

legislature in this Act of February 21, 1805, to repeal the provi-

sions in the 1804 act relative to revaluation. This question was

brought to the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of Festus Mc-

Vey and others vs. The Ohio University70 which in December,

1841, held that the 1805 act had not repealed the provisions for

revaluation which were in the 1804 act. Those interested in pre-

venting revaluation succeeded in persuading the General Assem-

bly to pass an act on March 10, 1843,71 which stated "that it is

the true intent and meaning. . . of the act. . .passed February 21,

1805, that the leases granted under. . .said act, and the one to

which that was an amendment, should not be subject to a revalua-

tion at any time thereafter. . . ."

Provision for selling these lands and conveying them in fee

simple as well as for conveying to any lessee of these college lands

the fee simple of such leasehold lands was made by the legislature

in an act passed on February 4, 1826.72 The proceeds from these

sales and from changing leasehold estates to estates in fee simple

67 Ibid., 7.

68 Emilius O. Randall and Daniel J Ryan, History of Ohio (New York, 1912),

III, 174.

69 3 O. L. 79.

70 11 Ohio, 134.

71 41 O. L. 144.

72 24 O. L. 52.



140 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

140    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

were to be deposited in the State treasury and the university was

to receive six per cent interest payable semiannually upon such

deposits. On April 29, 1854,73 the General Assembly passed an

act rewriting this Act of February 4, 1826, as amended by the acts

of January 10, 1829, and March 21, 1840. Section 4 of this act

provided that the treasurer of Ohio University deposit sums re-

ceived for deeds in the State treasury "which said sums shall be

added to the irreducible trust funds held by the State for educa-

tional purposes" and six per cent interest paid to the treasurer of

the university.

As a considerable amount of the land was leased for ninety

or ninety-nine years, not only was the annual income from rents

low as the average rental was about ten cents an acre,74 but the

university in spite of a start of over sixty years was unable to

build up an endowment fund through the sale of its lands as Ohio

State University did. Thus in the State auditor's report of 1837

there is shown a payment into the Ohio University fund of

$465.67 bringing the principal of the fund up to $1,897.39. There

were only three additions to this fund from  1837 until 1881--

$673.34 in 1868, $50.00 in 1871, and $80.00 in 1873. These in-

creased the principal of the fund to $2,700.73.

Beginning with receipts of $360.00 from the sale of land in

1881, the Ohio University fund was increased every year, ex-

cepting in 1882 and 1883, by the proceeds from the sale of land

until by November 15, 1900, this fund had increased to $14,771.88.

Sales continued to be made and the increase in the principal to

$44,648.43 on July 1, 1918, was due to such sales.

Starting with the fiscal year ending June 30, 1919, and run-

ning through the fiscal year 1925, the proceeds from the sale of

the university lands were largest, adding over $21,000 to the uni-

versity fund. The university, however, now began to increase

the principal of the debt owed to it by the State through turning

over to the State treasurer gifts which the university began to re-

ceive--a practice already described in the case of Ohio State Uni-

 

73 52 O. L. 175.

74 Remember in this connection the act of March 10, 1843, had in effect fixed

the annual rent at six per cent of the valuation of these lands early in the nineteenth

century.

75 See supra, p. 138.



OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938 141

OHIO'S DEBT, 1900-1938                     141

 

versity.75  Thus from   1919 through 1938 over forty per cent of

the increase in the principal of the Ohio University fund has been

the result of gifts made to the university.

(c)   Miami University.   No part of the irreducible debt of

the State was due to Miami University until 1913 in which year

the university received a gift of $6,000 which it turned over to the

State treasurer and thus the Miami University fund was started.

Inasmuch as the State has never held any of the proceeds from

the sale of the lands in the township in what is now Butler County

consisting of 23,040 acres which under the terms of the Symmes

purchase was granted by the National Government76 for "an

academy and other public schools and seminaries of learning," the

growth of the Miami University fund has been due to gifts sim-

ilarly turned over to the State by the university.

The development of the irreducible debt of the State since

1900 as described above may be summarized in the following

table.  (The figures are given to the nearest dollar.)

 

TABLE 6

SUMMARY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRREDUCIBLE

DEBT OF THE STATE OF OHIO SINCE 1900

Fund                                 Nov. 15,1900  July 1, 1918  Dec. 31,1938

Section 29 (11 counties) Ministerial

trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          $ 140,439      $                     150,276 $              150,276

Section 16 (68 counties) School trust           3,389,772      3,535,285       3,535,285

United States Military District (12

counties) School trust . . . . . . . . . . .           120,272      120,272      120,272

Virginia Military District (23 coun-

ties) School trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . .         195,598      197,144      197,144

Western   Reserve   (14   counties)

School trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    257,499         257,499          257,499

 

TOTAL ministerial and school trust            $4,103,581    $4,260,476     $4,260,476

funds (arising through the sale

of public lands)

76 United States Statutes, I, 266 (Act of Congress approved May 5, 1792); also II.

226 (Section 5 of an Act of Congress approved March 3, 1803).



142 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

142     OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Fund                Nov. 15,1900 July 1,1918 Dec. 31,1938

John Butler Fund.................. $                                                            333 $                      333                        ......

John  Butler  Fund ...................                                                           333                         333                        ......

Rex Patterson Fund ................                                                           ......                           5,012 $                 5,012

George Wright Fund................                                                          2,157                      2,157                    2,157

 

TOTAL     of Special school trusts $                                              2,822 $                  7,835 $                 7,170

(arising  from   individual  be-

quests)

 

Ohio State University .............. $ 551,634  $1,035,853  $1,578,263

Ohio University ....................                                                             14,772                   44,648                  81,640

Miami University   ..................                                                           ......                           7,500                    77,193

 

TOTAL University Funds ........... $ 566,406 $1,088,001     $1,737,096

 

TOTAL IRREDUCIBLE DEBT...          $4,672,810 $5,356,312 $6,004,741

 

Sources: Reports of the Auditor of the State of Ohio for 1900, 1918, and

1938.