Cincinnati Entertainment Associates, Ltd. v. Hamilton County Board of Commissioners

753 N.E.2d 884, 141 Ohio App. 3d 803, 2001 Ohio App. LEXIS 991
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 2001
DocketTrial No. A-0004587, Appeal No. C-000698.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 753 N.E.2d 884 (Cincinnati Entertainment Associates, Ltd. v. Hamilton County Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati Entertainment Associates, Ltd. v. Hamilton County Board of Commissioners, 753 N.E.2d 884, 141 Ohio App. 3d 803, 2001 Ohio App. LEXIS 991 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Painter, Presiding Judge.

For the new Great American Ballpark on the Cincinnati riverfront, Hamilton County destroyed parking and access to the Firstar Center. Firstar’s owners sued to force the county to file an appropriation action, so that the value of the taken property interests could be determined. The trial court ordered the county to file a claim for an appropriation, and the county has appealed. The trial court was correct, and we affirm the order requiring the county to file an appropriation lawsuit. When the government takes private property, it must pay for it.

I. A Long History

In 1974, two professional sports teams, the Cincinnati Reds and the Cincinnati Bengals, cooperated and co-existed in one public stadium, then named Riverfront Stadium and later renamed Cinergy Field. At the time, politicians deemed it unwise to invest tax dollars in a second theater for public entertainment. So, to accommodate alternative attractions and reinvigorate the riverfront area, Cincinnati sought and ultimately consummated a variety of interdependent contracts and grants to facilitate private investment. The result was the construction and operation of Riverfront Coliseum, later renamed the Firstar Center, which still operates exclusively on private funds, despite changes in ownership. Cincinnati Entertainment Associates (“CEA”), plaintiff-appellee, owns the Firstar Center and is the successor to the interrelated contracts and reciprocal grants with Cincinnati that enabled a public stadium and a private coliseum to co-exist.

Twenty-six years after the first contracts created a unique symbiosis of public and private interests on the Cincinnati riverfront, then Hamilton County Commissioners Robert Bedinghaus, John Dowlin, and Tom Neyer, Jr., defendants-appellants, became responsible for the city’s commitments to CEA. They did so under a voter mandate to build a football-only public stadium, as well as a new and separate baseball-only public stadium, where only one dual-purpose public stadium had previously existed. Demolition and construction began despite *809 CEA’s protests that commencement of the development would violate commitments originally made by the city.

CEA was unsuccessful in obtaining an injunction to stop the commissioners from proceeding with their vision of a three-theater riverfront, and demolition ensued. CEA claimed that, as a by-product of the demolition, certain property rights that had been created during the course of its interdependent relationship with Cinergy Field were destroyed. The trial court agreed and granted CEA’s petition for mandamus. The court ordered the commissioners to begin appropriation proceedings that would determine appropriate compensation for the property rights taken by the county.

The commissioners now appeal the trial court’s peremptory writ of mandamus ordering the commencement of an appropriation action for three general CEA property rights found to have been taken by the county. The interests in question are (1) CEA’s use of public land for parking and staging during its events under certain agreements; (2) access to the Firstar Center through structures publicly erected and maintained under a reciprocal grant of easements; and finally (3) implied access to the Firstar Center at a specific elevation that conformed with contemporaneous requirements during the construction of the Firstar Center.

We hold that, in each of the three instances, CEA had recognizable property rights taken by the county without compensation; that the commissioners were under a clear legal duty to appropriate those rights; and that CEA had no adequate remedy at law. We therefore affirm the trial court’s peremptory writ of mandamus ordering appropriation proceedings.

II. Standard of Review

CEA urges us to review the trial court’s grant of peremptory mandamus according to an abuse-of-discretion standard. We concede that there is authority for this position. 1 But, in reviewing the underlying case cited to bolster this proposition, we note that the Ohio Supreme Court has held only that “a writ of mandamus may require an inferior tribunal to exercise its judgment, [but] may not control judicial discretion, even if such discretion is grossly abused.” 2

We also note that other cases that use the abuse-of-discretion standard for appellate review of a writ of mandamus are limited to their particular circum *810 stances. So, a common pleas court’s decision to issue a writ of mandamus that ordered the city of Cleveland to make a report public was properly reviewed under an abuse-of-discretion standard. 3 And, in a mandamus action before a referee, when a transcript was not filed with a party’s objections, appellate review was limited to determining whether the trial court had abused its discretion in adopting the referee’s report. 4 Also, mandamus relief was appropriately reviewed under an abuse-of-discretion standard “in extent of disability cases.” 5

The case before us presents a stipulated record, and the record relating to the commissioners’ first two assignments of error consists of unambiguous contracts and instruments of conveyance. Their construction is a matter of law, 6 and questions of law are reviewed by an appellate court de novo 7 Similarly, and even in the absence of unambiguous documents, the function of a trial court in a case tried on a stipulated record is to apply the law to the agreed facts. 8 We will review a trial court’s grant of mandamus de novo when the underlying, stipulated record presents a question of law. Otherwise, a trial court could make a blatant error of law, and the party prejudiced would have no relief from this court.

III. The Writ of Mandamus

Section 19, Article I of the Ohio Constitution states that “[p]rivate property shall ever be held inviolate, but subservient to the public welfare. [Wjhere private property shall be taken for public use, a compensation thereof shall first be made in money * * *, and such compensation shall be assessed by a jury.” Accordingly, when a property owner claims that his property has been taken for public use without compensation, a mandamus action seeking to compel *811 the appropriate public officials to initiate appropriation proceedings under R.C. Chapter 163 is proper. 9

According to R.C.

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Bluebook (online)
753 N.E.2d 884, 141 Ohio App. 3d 803, 2001 Ohio App. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-entertainment-associates-ltd-v-hamilton-county-board-of-ohioctapp-2001.