Fifth Column v. Village of Valley View, Ohio

100 F. Supp. 2d 493, 1998 WL 1574461
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 16, 1998
Docket1:98CV1343
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 F. Supp. 2d 493 (Fifth Column v. Village of Valley View, Ohio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fifth Column v. Village of Valley View, Ohio, 100 F. Supp. 2d 493, 1998 WL 1574461 (N.D. Ohio 1998).

Opinion

ORDER

O’MALLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiff The Fifth Column, L.L.C. brings this action against defendant Village of Valley View, Ohio, seeking injunc-tive relief. Specifically, Fifth Column asks the Court to preliminarily enjoin Valley View from enforcing Ordinance § 1268.03. This ordinance would have the effect of preventing Fifth Column from operating an adult cabaret, known as “Cleveland PM,” in its present location. For the reasons stated below, Fifth Column’s motion for preliminary injunction (docket no. 4) is GRANTED as follows: Valley View is preliminarily enjoined from enforcing Village Ordinances § 1268.03 (June 15, 1998) and § 1268.03 (Jan. 3, 1995) against Fifth Column, to the extent that, pending final judgment in this matter or until further Order of the Court, Valley View may not prohibit Fifth Column from operating its adult entertainment business at its present location of 7503 Granger Road in Valley View, Ohio, for reasons of its location alone. This Order does not, however, preclude Valley View from legally enforcing any other valid ordinance against Cleveland PM, including applicable building and zoning codes and health and safety ordinances.

The Court further ORDERS the parties to report to the Court how they wish to proceed, in accordance with section IV of this opinion.

I. Background.

Several years ago, Cleveland PM was a well-known restaurant operating in Valley View, Ohio, an unchartered municipal corporation. Before it closed, Cleveland PM served alcohol and presented live entertainment, operating out of a stand-alone building at the busy corner of Granger and Canal Roads. After Cleveland PM closed, *495 the building was purchased by plaintiff Fifth Column, which then undertook a significant amount of interior remodeling. This interior remodeling was done in accordance with a building permit obtained from the State of Ohio. Fifth Column’s intention was, and remains, to open an adult cabaret in the building, featuring topless female dancers, and to market itself to an upscale clientele. Fifth Column plans to continue to use the name “Cleveland PM” for the cabaret, and states its “business and clientele will be very similar to that of Tiffany’s Cabaret located in Cleveland’s Flats.” 1

After it completed the interior remodeling of Cleveland PM, Fifth Column obtained a certificate of occupancy from the State of Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Industrial Compliance. Fifth Column did not, however, obtain or seek approval from the Valley View Building Inspector, in the form of a building permit or occupancy certificate, allegedly because Fifth Column did not trust Valley View to enforce its occupancy certificate requirements in an objective manner, given the proposed use of the building. After obtaining the State occupancy certificate, Cleveland PM opened its doors for business on June 8, 1998. The next day, June 9, 1998,Valley View’s Police Chief delivered to Cleveland PM a “notice of violations.” The notice stated that “You are not permitted to be opened for business until you have satisfied the violations and the Building and Fire Departments have' completed their inspections. Failure to cease business will subject you to penalties set forth in the Codified Ordinances. You are hereby ordered to cease all work and business until the violations are corrected.” The specific violations noted were: (1) failure to obtain a building permit for the interior construction, (2) failure to obtain an occupancy certificate, (3) failure to apply for an occupancy certificate 15 days before occupancy, and (4) failure to obtain an occupancy certificate after a change of tenancy.

On June 10, 1998 — the day after Valley View served its notice of violations upon Cleveland PM — Fifth Column filed its complaint in this case, together with a motion for temporary restraining order (“TRO”).- As part of its complaint, Fifth Column asserted that Valley View’s “Adult Use Ordinance,” ordinance § 1268.03, was unconstitutional, and that Valley View was relying at least in part on the Adult Use Ordinance to shut down Cleveland PM.

The Court held a hearing on Fifth Column’s motion for TRO on the same day. At the TRO hearing, counsel for Valley View conceded that the primary issue driving the case was whether the location of Cleveland PM conformed with Valley View’s Adult Use Ordinance, and whether the Adult Use Ordinance was constitutional. Valley View’s counsel did not, for example, argue that Valley View sought to close Cleveland PM because there existed some important, substantive elements of the Valley View building code that were different from, or in excess of, the State of Ohio building code, so that the State of Ohio’s occupancy certificate was somehow insufficient for Valley View. See transcript at 9 (June 10, 1998). 2 Rather, Valley *496 View’s position was essentially that, even if Cleveland PM had properly applied for a Valley View building permit and occupancy certificate, and even if Cleveland PM met all the other building code requirements, as the state-issued permit implied, Valley View would still not issue an occupancy certificate because Cleveland PM’s location was in violation of the Valley View Adult Use Ordinance, which was part of the applicable zoning code. Valley View thus asserted that its zoning code requirements were “subsumed” into the occupancy certificate requirements, and that it believed only its zoning requirements were unsatisfied. 3

The Valley View Adult Use Ordinance at issue is codified at Valley View Ordinance § 1268.03. At the time of the TRO hearing, this ordinance read as follows: 4

No person shall cause or permit the establishment of an adult entertainment business within one mile of any public or private school, pre-school, or day-care center or within 2,000 feet of any residential zoning district, residential dwelling, church or park. For purposes of this section, distances shall be measured in a straight line, without regard to intervening structures or objects, from the nearest portion of the building within which the adult entertainment business is located to the nearest:
(a) Residential district boundary line; or
(b) Property lines of the premises of a public or private school, pre-school or day care center or residential zone, residential dwelling, church or park.

§ 1268.03 (Jan. 3, 1995). Valley View claimed at the TRO hearing that Cleveland PM was in violation of this ordinance because: (1) it is located less than 2,000 feet from the Cleveland Metroparks '“tow path,” which travels through the Village and which Valley View considers a park; and (2) it is located less than one mile from a school located in the neighboring city of Cuyahoga Heights, which is attended by Valley View children.

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Bluebook (online)
100 F. Supp. 2d 493, 1998 WL 1574461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-column-v-village-of-valley-view-ohio-ohnd-1998.