Cleveland v. Sopjack

2025 Ohio 4952
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 2025
Docket114807
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 4952 (Cleveland v. Sopjack) 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 v. Sopjack, 2025 Ohio 4952 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Cleveland v. Sopjack, 2025-Ohio-4952.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

CITY OF CLEVELAND, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : No. 114807 v. :

ROBIN SOPJACK, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

_____________

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: VACATED AND REMANDED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: October 30, 2025

Criminal Appeal from the Cleveland Municipal Court Housing Division Case No. 2021-CRB-004646

Appearances:

Mark Griffin, Cleveland Director of Law, and Yaa B. Bediako, Assistant Director of Law, for appellee.

Cullen Sweeney, Cuyahoga County Public Defender, and Thomas T. Lampman, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.

WILLIAM A. KLATT, J.:

Defendant-appellant Robin Sopjack (“Sopjack”) appeals from the

trial court’s January 17, 2025 judgment entry expanding the conditions of her

community control. For the following reasons, we vacate the trial court’s additional community-control sanctions related to uncited property for being overbroad and

an abuse of discretion. Because no other aspect of the sentence or conviction was

challenged in this appeal, they remain in effect.

Factual and Procedural History

This is the second appeal arising from the Cleveland Municipal Court,

Housing Division’s, imposition of community-control sanctions against Sopjack.

The underlying controversy began in December 2019, when a Cleveland housing

inspector inspected a vacant residential property located on East 61st Street in

Cleveland, Ohio (“the subject property”) owned by Sopjack. In January 2020, the

inspector issued a notice of violation of numerous Cleveland Codified Ordinances

and gave a repair deadline of February 23, 2020. On May 10, 2021, a complaint was

filed against Sopjack alleging three counts of failure to comply with an order of the

building department under Cleveland Cod.Ord. 3103.25(e), which states:

No person shall fail to comply with any stop work order issued under the provisions of this Building Code; nor refuse, neglect or fail to comply with a notice to repair, rehabilitate or demolish a building or other structure declared to be unsafe under the provisions of this Building Code; nor maintain a use or occupancy prohibited by this Building Code; nor refuse, neglect or fail to maintain stair enclosures, stairways, fire escapes, exit passageways or other required means of egress in a safe and usable condition as required by OBC or this Building Code.

The counts all related to the subject property.

On September 20, 2023, Sopjack pleaded no contest. On November

2, 2023, the court sentenced Sopjack to two years of community-control sanctions

and advised that failure to comply would result in a maximum sentence of 18 months in jail and a $3,000 fine. The court’s sentencing order referred to both the subject

property and Sopjack’s personal residence (“the uncited property”) and stated, in

relevant part:

Defendant is verbally ordered not to sell, gift, or transfer the two (2) properties it owns within the City of Cleveland while on community control without the approval of the Court, which also applies to all other business entities and limited liability companies owned by the Defendant.

...

7. Defendant is ordered to clean all of the properties owned within the City of Cleveland and keep them free from all junk, debris, and dumping, specifically the cited property located at . . . E. 61st Street . . .

8. Defendant is ordered to cut all grass and remove any shrubbery or overgrowth of shrubbery from any of the properties owned within the City of Cleveland.

On January 31, 2024, the court held a status hearing. At this hearing,

the housing court specialist told the court that a general external cleanup was

required for the subject property and that an external inspection of the uncited

property revealed a need for repair. The court issued an order following this status

hearing in which it ordered Sopjack to allow a city housing inspector “to do an

interior and exterior inspection of [the uncited property].”

Sopjack appealed this order, arguing that the trial court erred when it

amended the conditions of her community control to include a mandatory

inspection of the uncited property. On December 26, 2024, this court agreed with

Sopjack and reversed the trial court’s order to inspect the interior of the uncited property. Cleveland v. Sopjack, 2024-Ohio-6018 (8th Dist.) (“Sopjack I”).1 The

Sopjack I opinion did not explicitly address the ordered exterior inspection of the

uncited property.

On January 14, 2025, the court held a “community control violation

status hearing.” At this hearing, the court and the parties discussed at length this

court’s decision in Sopjack I. At one point, the court stated:

It was very obvious from the [uncited] property that she — Ms. Sopjack could have gotten written up for about three violation notices from the exterior inspection from Inspector Shockley. That’s not the court’s goal. But we come over here, and the Eighth District pretty much tell [sic] us that should be the court’s goal. So it’s a catch-22. All right. So that I don’t have these issues anymore, when we do an inspection of all the jurisdictions — all the property that’s under the court’s jurisdiction, we’re going to have them, moving forward, just issue a violation notice when they see violations. That’s what the court is going to ask them to do. And why wouldn’t the prosecutor ask them to do that either?

So again, you go over and they’re giving directions. I read it to say that either a violation notice could be issued or she could be found in violation of community control. Well, she is found in violation of community control.

(Tr. 10-11.)

The housing specialist testified at this hearing and described visiting

and viewing the uncited property, in relevant part, as follows:

Then I went to Ms. Sopjack’s residential property at 5908 Hosmer Avenue. The exterior is still deteriorating as far as the gutters, the front porch. There’s still boxes stacked up in the back — on the back porch. And then as I was walking to my car, there was a neighbor who stopped me, asked if she could speak to me because she’s reporting that there are vermin coming into her household from Ms. Sopjack’s household.

1 In Sopjack I, Sopjack also argued that the trial court erred when it amended her community-control sanctions to include mandatory financial disclosures; this court found this argument barred by res judicata, and it is likewise not relevant to the instant appeal. And she stated that her gutters are leaking and causing water damage on her side of the front porch, and she notified me that her landlord had put in a complaint with the City.

(Tr. 24.) The housing specialist then stated that the housing inspector never

conducted a formal exterior inspection of the uncited property because of the stay

ordered in Sopjack I.

Later in this hearing, the court informed Sopjack:

And also, you’re being ordered to allow an inspector from the Department of Building & Housing and/or Department of Health to inspect the property, your residential property . . . . That inspection should take place no later than January the 22nd. You can be there, you should be there, so that they can tell you what is going on with your property. Your residential property.

(Tr. 48.)

Defense counsel objected to the “exterior inspection amended order”

described above. In response, the city stated:

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Related

N. Olmstead v. Rock
2018 Ohio 1084 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2018)
Johnson v. Abdullah (Slip Opinion)
2021 Ohio 3304 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2021)
State v. Jones
550 N.E.2d 469 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1990)
Cleveland v. Sopjack
2024 Ohio 6018 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)
Cleveland v. Johnston
2025 Ohio 1061 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 4952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-v-sopjack-ohioctapp-2025.