Dinesh Patel v. Andrew Glenn

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 2022
Docket21-3499
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dinesh Patel v. Andrew Glenn (Dinesh Patel v. Andrew Glenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dinesh Patel v. Andrew Glenn, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0443n.06

No. 21-3499

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Nov 03, 2022 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk DINESH PATEL, et al., ) Plaintiffs - Appellants, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) v. UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE ) ANDREW GLENN, et al., NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ) OHIO ) Defendants - Appellees. ) OPINION )

Before: COLE, GIBBONS, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.

JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. The City of Maumee, Ohio (the City) declared the Budget

Inn Maumee (the Motel) a public nuisance under Maumee Building Code Section 1345.01(a) and

ordered the Motel to be vacated because of alleged dangerous conditions. The owner of the Motel,

Lovesai, LLC, along with its principal, Dinesh Patel, and his wife, Minaxi Patel, brought suit in

federal court and moved for a preliminary injunction against the City and various officials. The

district court denied the motion. We AFFIRM.

I.

The Budget Inn Maumee operates within a commercial zone in Maumee and is subject to

the City’s code and Ohio’s laws governing hotels and motels. On or about September 10, 2020,

two Maumee zoning officials, Zachary Jenkins and Andrew Glenn, visited the Motel after No. 21-3499, Patel, et al. v. Glenn, et al.

receiving reports of potential code violations.1 Jenkins took photographs of several potential code

violations, including what he determined were generally deteriorating conditions present at the

Motel. The City later noted many code violations, which included, in relevant part, “several areas

of spalling concrete on the underside of the second story balcony and several support piers for

[the] balcony [that] are crumbling and/or have been improperly repaired.”2 Dinesh Patel witnessed

Jenkins taking photos. Jenkins claims that the City, through an official, orally notified Mr. Patel

at that time that the code violations existed and that the Motel needed to be brought into compliance

before October 21, 2020. Mr. Patel disputes this claim.

On October 21, 2020, Jenkins and Glenn, accompanied by a police officer, returned to the

Motel. Mr. Patel accompanied them on a tour of the premises, though Mr. Patel disputes that he

consented to the inspection. At this time, according to Jenkins, he observed the same violations

that existed on September 10, 2020.3 The City determined that spalling and falling concrete was

1 The City is authorized to find and abate public nuisances. See Maumee Municipal Code §§ 1345.01–1345.99. Under the City’s code, a public nuisance is “[a]ny Structure that is in a state of any of, but not limited to . . . dilapidation, deterioration or decay . . . and, dangerous to anyone on or near the premises.” Id. § 1345.01(a). The City may take immediate action to abate a public nuisance if the nuisance presents “an imminent risk of physical harm.” Id. § 1345.08(a)–(b). And the City can do so without prior notice. Id. § 1345.08(a). 2 The City identified many other code violations, including a deteriorated parking lot; broken and heaving concrete and asphalt over an improperly filled swimming pool; rotting wood and improperly maintained weatherproofing on exterior walls; deteriorating, broken, and missing structural supports for the second story; rotting materials on the exterior walls, windows, and doors of a detached accessory structure; broken fencing surrounding a dumpster; and removal without replacement of shrubbery, trees, and plants. We focus on the spalling and falling concrete because it was the condition that the City identified as creating an immediate and significant safety concern. 3 There are several disputes of fact about code violations not directly related to the deteriorating conditions of the Motel. These violations include whether the Motel wrongfully housed extended stay guests, whether certain work was done without permits, and whether the Patels properly occupied an apartment at the Motel. We do not discuss those other violations because the violation that was the predicate for the district court’s ruling was the City’s determination that the Motel was unsafe for human occupancy. -2- No. 21-3499, Patel, et al. v. Glenn, et al.

an immediate and significant safety concern that endangered the safety of the public and the Patels,

who resided at the Motel.

Jenkins and Glenn provided Mr. Patel with a Notice of Public Nuisance and Notice of Code

Violations (the Notices), along with hard copies of several chapters of the City’s code and

photographs of the Motel. The Notices informed the Patels and the Motel’s owner, Lovesai, LLC,

that the City declared the Motel to be a public nuisance and demanded that the Motel be vacated

for safety reasons. The documents included information about how the various issues could be

remedied, including, among other things, meeting landscaping requirements and design standards

and submitting a site plan for review. Also included in these documents was a notice of the right

to appeal the City’s decision, as well as the option to request additional time if some hardship

existed. Jenkins and Glenn further directed the Patels to vacate the premises, and Mr. Patel agreed

to notify motel guests of the need to vacate by 7 p.m. that day. Jenkins then put up three signs

notifying the public that the Motel was unsafe for human occupancy and left the premises. Police

later escorted the Patels from the Motel.

After their removal from the property, the Patels did not appeal the City’s public nuisance

determination. Rather, Mr. Patel hired two engineers, Dwight Gilliland and Larry Fast, to inspect

the Motel and investigate the violations identified in the Notices. Fast, along with Mr. Patel, visited

the Motel on October 29, 2020, to inspect the premises and assess the issues. Gilliland, at the

direction of Mr. Patel, provided the City with two landscaping-related drawings in November 2020

to propose solutions to the landscaping issues.

On November 3, 2020, Fast sent a letter to the City explaining that he had inspected the

Motel. He acknowledged in that letter the “spalled concrete slabs and exposed rusted bottom

rebars in the walkways surrounding the second floor rooms,” as well as “spalled and displaced

-3- No. 21-3499, Patel, et al. v. Glenn, et al.

bricks at the upper brick columns below the walkways.” Fast suggested that, if barricades were

installed, the rooms on the first floor could be used safely while the second-floor walkways and

brick column tops were being repaired. He also stated that he found no structural reasons why the

Patels should not reside at the Motel during repairs.

On November 14, 2020, Fast sent another letter to the City, this time explaining he had

performed a “structural investigation” of the second-floor walkways. Fast again confirmed the

spalling concrete and other issues the City had identified in the Notices. He also acknowledged

that one-third of the brick support columns for the second story had cracked and broken bricks,

and he noted eleven areas of spalling concrete on the underside of the second floor. But Fast

concluded that these issues—which the City considered dangerous—did not preclude human

occupancy at the Motel. Rather, according to Fast, both the first and second floors of the Motel

could be occupied safely during necessary repairs.

At the behest of Jenkins, Mr. Patel met with Jenkins and several other City officials on

December 7, 2020. In that meeting, the City did not discuss the spalling and falling concrete but

reiterated concerns over work done without the required permit. Mr.

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