City of Euclid v. Lakeshore Co.

133 N.E.2d 372, 102 Ohio App. 96, 74 Ohio Law. Abs. 353, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 96, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 626
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1956
Docket23610
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 133 N.E.2d 372 (City of Euclid v. Lakeshore Co.) 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
City of Euclid v. Lakeshore Co., 133 N.E.2d 372, 102 Ohio App. 96, 74 Ohio Law. Abs. 353, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 96, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 626 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

*355 OPINION

By SKEEL, J:

This appeal comes to this Court on questions of law from judgments entered on separate verdicts of a jury in separate proceedings of the trial to determine the value of five parcels of land appropriated for park purposes by the City of Euclid. As the proceedings were initiated by the City, seven parcels, all contiguous, with a total frontage of about nine hundred feet on the north side of Lake Shore Boulevard just east of East 226th Street and extending northerly to Lake Erie, a distance of about seventeen hundred feet, were included in the resolution. The City, by its Council, passed a resolution on November 17, 1952, as authorized by §719.04 R. C., declaring its intention to appropriate the property described, the purpose for which the property was to be taken, the persons to be notified and the interest to be appropriated. Thereafter on March 15, 1954, after all procedural requirements as prescribed by §719.05 R. C., to perfect the appropriation of the property for park purposes, had been complied with, the City Council of Euclid passed Ordinance 10299 as provided by §719.06 R. C., authorizing the Law Director to file this action to appropriate a part of the property described in the original resolution. The land to be taken was a contiguous tract of about twenty-five acres described in four parcels according to ownership as shown by the public records. Parcel No. 1, recorded in the name of the defendant, The Lakeshore Company, by deed dated December 21, 1951, from the defendant, Eugene E. Vogelin, has a frontage of about four hundred feet on the northside of Lake Shore Boulevard and is directly east of the front part of Parcel No. 2, recorded at the time the petition was filed in the name of the defendants, Benjamin and Lillian Zevin. Parcel No. 2 (subsequently divided) recorded in the names of defendants Zevin has a frontage of about two hundred ninety nine feet on Lake Shore Boulevard and extends about seventeen hundred feet to the shore of Lake Erie. This parcel was divided into Parcels Nos. 2A and 2B, the front part (Parcel No! 2A) (which was transferred from the defendants Zevin to The Lakeshore Company on the registered title records of Cuyahoga County after the filing of this case) is located on Lake Shore Boulevard as above described and has an average depth of about eight hundred feet. Parcel No. 2B is the northerly part of the Zevin property with a frontage on Lake Erie of about three hundred twenty five feet and is about nine hundred feet deep. Parcel No. 3, in the name of Robert J. and Irma Bradley, is seventy-five feet wide on its southerly boundary and is seven hundred thirty three feet deep, its north boundary fronting on Lake Erie, and, before being deeded to the Bradleys, was the northeast corner of the property of the defendants Eugene E. Vogelin and his wife. Parcel No. 4 is that of the defendants, *356 Eugene E. Vogelin and his wife, which is bounded on the south by Parcel No. 1, which these defendants sold to The Lakeshore Company, on the west by Parcels Nos. 2A and 2B, originally all in the name of the Zevins, on the north by Lake Erie and on the east in part by Parcel No. 3. Parcels Nos. 1, 2A, 2B, 3 and 4, together comprise a contiguous tract of land of about twenty-five acres with a frontage of about seven hundred feet on the north side of Lake Shore Boulevard, being about seventeen hundred feet deep and having a somewhat wider frontage on Lake Erie. The Bradley’s deed provided for an easement over the Vogelin’s property for ingress and egress and utility services to Lake Shore Boulevard. The Vogelins retained like privileges for themselves and the Bradleys over Parcel No. 1 when it was deeded to The Lakeshore Company. The Zevins retained an easement for ingress and egress and for utility services to Lake Shore Boulevard for Parcel No. 2B, over Parcel No. 2A when Parcel 2A was deeded by them to The Lakeshore Company.

The zoning restrictions of the City of Euclid, dealing with this property at the time of trial and for many years-prior thereto (1927), provided for U-3 use (multi-family dwellings) for the frontage of the property on Lake Shore Boulevard to a depth of one hundred fifty feet and for U-l use (single family dwellings) for the balance of property north of the one hundred fifty foot strip to the shore of Lake Erie.

The property on the south side, or across Lake Shore Boulevard from the property taken by the City in this action, from East 218th Street to East 232nd Street, is zoned for and has for a number of years past been used for retail business as are a few properties on the north side of Lake Shore Boulevard between East 218th Street to East 224th Street, the last mentioned business properties being two blocks west of the property here being taken. With this exception and two or three others of long standing, the property on the north side of Lake Shore Boulevard from the east border to the west border of the City is used as zoned for single family dwellings north of the one hundred fifty foot strip fronting on Lake Shore Boulevard. This strip was zoned for multi-family dwellings until the amendment of 1955 when most of the frontage was changed to U-2 use (two-family houses). There is no evidence in the record that would indicate that there is the slightest probability that the city authorities will lessen the use restrictions of its zoning ordinances in the neighborhood in whch the property here appropriated is located. The property of the defendants is lakefront property originally used as country estates and surrounded by single family dwellings and apartments, some of the garden-type, and two-family houses fronting on the Boulevard. The zoning ordinances of the City of Euclid have maintained the standard of this territory as a residential area and there is not the slightest evidence that within the foreseeable future any lessening of use restrictions will occur.

Upon trial, the jury by its separate verdicts, found the value of each of the several parcels as follows:

Parcel No. 1 —The Lakeshore Company $60,000

Parcel No. 2A—The Lakeshore Company 47,500

Parcel No. 2B—Benjamin D. and Lillian C. Zevin 55,000

Parcel No. 3 —Robert J. and Irma Bradley 23,000

Parcel No. 4 —Eugene E. and Marian Vogelin 37,500

*357 In each instance the jury’s verdict was for the highest value given by the city’s expert witnesses, there being no other testimony on the subject of value, the defendants’ experts not being asked to testify as to their opinion of the value of the various parcels when considered for the highest and best use for which the property was zoned.

The claims of error presented on the appeal of The Lakeshore Company are:

“1. The Trial Court erred in ruling that the Court had jurisdiction to hear the appropriation proceedings despite failure of the City of Euclid to comply with the statutory requirements prescribed for municipal appropriation proceedings.”
“2. The Trial Court erred in refusing to permit Defendant-Appellant to introduce testimony as to the fair market value of the property to be appropriated unless such testimony was limited to the value of the property for uses permitted under current zoning restrictions.”
“3.

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Bluebook (online)
133 N.E.2d 372, 102 Ohio App. 96, 74 Ohio Law. Abs. 353, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 96, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-euclid-v-lakeshore-co-ohioctapp-1956.