City of Fairview Park v. Barefoot Grass Lawn Service, Inc.

685 N.E.2d 300, 115 Ohio App. 3d 306
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 21, 1996
DocketNo. 69947.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 685 N.E.2d 300 (City of Fairview Park v. Barefoot Grass Lawn Service, Inc.) 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 Fairview Park v. Barefoot Grass Lawn Service, Inc., 685 N.E.2d 300, 115 Ohio App. 3d 306 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

Defendant-appellant Barefoot Grass Lawn Service (“Barefoot Grass”) appeals from a no contest plea conviction for violation of an ordinance enacted by plaintiff-appellee city of Fairview Park requiring notice before applying lawn chemicals.

Fairview Park commenced this action by filing a criminal complaint against Barefoot Grass in the Rocky River Municipal Court on July 3, 1995. The complaint alleged that Barefoot Grass applied chemicals/pesticide on a residential property within the municipality without having given prior notice to a specified abutting property owner as required by Codified Ordinances 741.02(a) and 741.02(b).

Barefoot Grass filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that the Fairview Park ordinance was specifically preempted by R.C. 921.23(C) and conflicted with general state laws regulating pesticides. Fairview Park filed a brief in opposition, and each party thereafter filed additional briefs.

The trial court denied Barefoot Grass’s motion to dismiss the charges without opinion. The parties stipulated that Barefoot Grass complied with state law, that the neighbor designated in the complaint did not request notice on the proposed pesticide application, and that Barefoot Grass did not provide notice to the neighbor under the Fairview Park ordinance. Barefoot Grass thereafter pleaded no contest to the charges and was found guilty by the municipal court. The *308 municipal court imposed a $250 fíne and court costs, which were suspended pending appeal. Barefoot Grass raises the following related assignments of error in this accelerated appeal:

“The trial court erred in overruling defendant/appellant’s motion to dismiss and finding defendant/appellant guilty of violating Fairview Park Codified Ordinance Nos. 741.02(A) and 741.02(B).
“The trial court erred in upholding and enforcing Fairview Park Codified Ordinance Nos. 741.02(A) and 741.02(B).”

These assignments are well taken.

Barefoot Grass argues generally that the Fairview Park pesticide preapplieation notice ordinance is unenforceable because it is contrary to provisions in the Ohio Revised Code. Fairview Park argues to the contrary that the ordinance is valid and does not conflict with Ohio law.

Public health, safety, and environmental regulations are frequently enforced by different levels of government. In the case at bar, each party cites authority regarding regulation of other matters to support its arguments concerning the validity of Fairview Park’s pesticide notice ordinance. Cases involving issues of supremacy of law, however, are difficult to apply from one subject to another because of the different regulatory structures governing, for example, foods, drugs, poisons, hazardous substances, and wastes. 1 The parties have cited no authoritative pronouncement in the area of regulation of pesticides in Ohio. 2

Pesticides are comprehensively regulated by the state of Ohio in R.C. Chapter 921. R.C. 921.16(C)(1) specifically delegates authority to the Director of the Department of Agriculture to adopt rules establishing notice requirements for proposed applications of pesticides by state-licensed pesticide applicators. Ohio Adm.Code 901:5—11—09(A)(1)(b) establishes such notice requirements and expressly provides that state-licensed pesticide applicators provide notice only to those residents of abutting property who make a timely written request for such notice:

“(A) After the effective date of this rule, no licensee shall:
*309 “(1) Apply any lawn pesticides to residential lawns in any municipal corporation or subdivided area of a township unless:
“(b) They have made a reasonable attempt to provide, on the previous business day or before, both the approximate time of application and their company name and telephone number to any occupant of a residence whose property abuts to the property on which lawn pesticide is to be applied who has notified the licensee in writing, providing their name, address and telephone number, that he/she wishes to receive prior notification of lawn pesticide applications. The license holder must make available either by telephone or in writing all information listed in paragraphs (A)(1)(a)(i) to (A)(1)(a)(vii) of this rule to an abutting property owner who contacts the license holder following a lawn chemical application requesting this information.”

R.C. 921.23(C), in turn, specifically addresses additional local regulation and provides as follows:

“No person who is licensed, regulated, or registered under section 921.02, 921.021, 921.03, 921.06, 921.07, 921.08, 921.11, 921.12, 921.13, or 921.15 of the Revised Code shall be required to obtain a license or permit to operate or to be otherwise regulated in such capacity by any local ordinance, or to meet any other condition except as otherwise provided by statute or rule of the United States or of this state.”

Fairview Park Codified Ordinances Chapter 741 applies to lawn chemical applicators. Barefoot Grass was charged with violating Section 741.02 of the ordinances, which, unlike the above Revised Code provisions, requires lawn chemical applicators to provide preapplication notice to occupants of abutting property regardless of whether they request such notice. Section 741.02 provides in part as follows:

“NOTICE AND DUTIES TO OCCUPANTS OF ABUTTING PROPERTY.
“(a) No person licensed under Ohio R.C. 921.06, 921.07, 921.08, or 921.12 shall apply any lawn chemical to residential or commercial lawns in the City unless twenty-four hours prior to the time of application a reasonable attempt has been made to provide the following information set forth in this section in writing or orally, through in-person or telephone communication to persons residing on property that abut the property on which the lawn chemical is to be applied:
“(1) The date and approximate time of lawn chemical application;
“(2) The name and telephone number of the employer of the applicator;
“(3) The chemical type (fertilizer, pesticide or defoliant) of each lawn chemical to be applied.
*310 “(b) In the event that an applicator is unable to provide twenty-four hour prior notification to persons residing on property that abut property on which the lawn chemical is to be applied due to the absence or inaccessibility of such persons, the applicator shall leave a written notice at the residence prior to the time of application which shall provide the information specified in subsections (a)(1), (2) and (3) hereof.”

The sole issue is whether these ordinance notice provisions are invalid because they conflict with the regulations adopted under the Ohio Revised Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 N.E.2d 300, 115 Ohio App. 3d 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fairview-park-v-barefoot-grass-lawn-service-inc-ohioctapp-1996.