Cleveland Builders Supply Co. v. City of Garfield Heights

136 N.E.2d 105, 102 Ohio App. 69, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 65, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 621
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 1, 1956
Docket23548
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 N.E.2d 105 (Cleveland Builders Supply Co. v. City of Garfield Heights) 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
Cleveland Builders Supply Co. v. City of Garfield Heights, 136 N.E.2d 105, 102 Ohio App. 69, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 65, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 621 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Skeel, J.

This appeal comes to this court on questions of law and fact from a decree and judgment for the plaintiff entered upon trial of the issues by the Common Pleas Court of Cuyahoga County. The plaintiff’s action seeks a declaratory judgment, injunction and equitable relief against the restricted use of its property provided for by the zoning ordinances of the city of Garfield Heights.

The plaintiff, or a wholly-owned subsidiary, has been the owner of an 81-acre tract of land, which is U shaped, with its *70 westerly line of about 3,000 feet running southeasterly along the curved line of The New York Central Railroad right of way, thence easterly over 1,000 feet to its easterly line which line proceeds northerly about 3,200 feet. The easterly segment of the U is about 535 feet wide, and within its dimensions is a 25.5-acre tract from which the plaintiff desired to mine about 1,230,-000 cubic yards of shale to be used in making brick at its nearby brick plant. This property is very rugged and uneven with three or four deep gullies running through it, with precipitous banks varying in depth between 20 and 60 feet, and is within the southwesterly part of the city of Garfield Heights. The land in this part of Garfield Heights is in part on or near the bank sloping down to the valley of the Cuyahoga River, is filled with gullies with sharp or steep embankments, and for the most part is very uneven and rugged.

Between the east and west legs of plaintiff’s property, and located on high ground, is what is known as the Rockcliff Subdivision through which East 96th Street runs from Granger Road in a southerly direction almost to plaintiff’s property and almost to the top of the slope to the Cuyahoga River Valley above described. Between this subdivision and the west line of the the easterly part of plaintiff’s property is an undeveloped 20-acre parcel. There is also an undeveloped 20-acre parcel directly to the east of the east line of plaintiff’s property, and a 17-acre parcel of vacant land is located to the north. The Rock-cliff Subdivision was laid out in 1924 with 241 lots. There have been about 55 houses built during the intervening 32 years, most of them being on East 96th Street or on side streets to the west of East 96th Street and away from the easterly segment of plaintiff’s land. The nearest housing development to the east is about a quarter of a mile away and is separated from plaintiff’s property by very deep and precipitous gullies or ravines. The property abutting the southerly line of plaintiff’s H-shaped property joins it at about the level of the railroad right of way and slopes down to the lowlands of the Cuyahoga River Valley. It is zoned for industrial use which includes the right to mine shale or other minerals.

The basic material used in the manufacture of tile or brick is clay or shale. The plaintiff purchased the U-shaped 81-acre *71 tract in 1919, wherein nature has deposited a large quantity of high grade shale of exceptional quality. After this property was acquired in 1919, shale was removed therefrom to be used for the manufacture of brick at the plaintiff’s nearby Valley-view plant until 1932. The record shows that during this period over 330,000 cubic yards of shale were excavated and used.

The use of the nearby Valley view Brick Plant was discontinued at the beginning of the economic depression in the early 1930’s when the demand for brick had been greatly reduced. The plant was then considered as obsolete and its use discontinued with the intention of rebuilding it when demand for brick required it. The plaintiff’s other brick plants were so far distant that further use of its shale deposit in the 81 acres was temporarily discontinued until a new plant was built nearby. Because of the depression and World War II which caused governmental restrictions of vital building materials, the new plant was not constructed until 1951 after restrictions were removed. A study of the best place to build a brick plant in this vicinity to take the place of the obsolete Valleyview plant was carried on and the location determined. This plant was built on Warner Boad, a location within the immediate vicinity, and located there with the intended purpose of continuing the use of shale from the 81-acre tract, which use had been interrupted as above set forth. One hundred thousand dollars was expended in the building of this plant.

After the completion of the plant, the plaintiff discovered that in 1942 the city of Garfield Heights had passed a zoning ordinance as an emergency measure by which the plaintiff’s 81 acres, which it had acquired in 1919 to provide shale and clay necessary for its brick manufacturing business, had been zoned as and for single residence purposes. While the following conclusion, reached from the evidence, is not of great legal significance because once a city council has enacted an ordinance, its act is presumed to have been the conclusion reached by it after careful and deliberate consideration of all important applicable facts, yet the manner in which the several zoning classifications decided upon in the zoning ordinance according to testimony of the witnesses who prepared the zoning map was to zone all existing uses as then employed and all remaining vacant land *72 for Class I residence purposes without regard for the situation or usability of the land for such purpose, with the exception of land then used for farming.

The property of the plaintiff, as shown by the evidence, cannot be economically allotted for residence purposes. Its sharp grades and precipitous surface make the cost of providing utility services prohibitive as compared with like costs upon reasonably level ground, while the usability of this land for residence purposes is such as to bring no financial return to its owner if allotted for that purpose. The value of the shale deposit in the property for commercial purposes is over $325,000.

The plaintiff is not a newcomer in this neighborhood. In fact, its ownership of the property in question antedated the zoning ordinance almost 25 years. Its use of the property for commercial purposes had not been abandoned but only temporarily suspended by circumstances far beyond its control. This is not the case where business is attempting to spread into a developed residential area but rather an attempt by the exercise of the police power to extend a residential district into and to include therein property in use for commercial purposes. In the case of Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U. S., 365, 71 L. Ed., 303, 47 S. Ct., 114, the court said, at page 390, that the purpose of zoning “is to divert an industrial flow from the course which it would follow, to the injury of the residential public if left alone, to another course where such injury will be obviated.” The converse must also be true. The forced restriction of commercially used property at a sacrifice of over 90 per cent of its value to residence purposes can find no justification under the exercise of the police power of the city in the absence of some substantial benefit to the community or its residents.

The Rockcliff Subdivision did not come into being until 1926, or seven years after plaintiff purchased its 81-acre tract, and some of the houses were built while the shale-digging operation on plaintiff’s land was in full swing and long before the zoning ordinance of 1942.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 N.E.2d 105, 102 Ohio App. 69, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 65, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-builders-supply-co-v-city-of-garfield-heights-ohioctapp-1956.