Haddon v. City of Cleveland

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 13, 2023
Docket1:18-cv-02574
StatusUnknown

This text of Haddon v. City of Cleveland (Haddon v. City of Cleveland) 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
Haddon v. City of Cleveland, (N.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION LISA HADDON, ET AL., ) CASE NO.1:18CV2574 ) Plaintiff, ) JUDGE CHRISTOPHER A. BOYKO ) vs. ) ) CITY OF CLEVELAND, ET AL., ) OPINION AND ORDER ) Defendant. ) CHRISTOPHER A. BOYKO, J: This matter is before the Court on the Motions for Summary Judgment of Defendants City of Cleveland and Obon, Inc. For the following reasons, the Court grants Defendants’ Motions and grants judgment in Defendants’ favor on all Plaintiffs’ claims. Background Facts Plaintiffs Lisa Haddon, (“Haddon”) titled owner of the subject property, Haddon’s son Dominique King, her sister Pamela Haddon and ex-boyfriend Cy Rabb, bring their Complaint against Defendants City of Cleveland and Obon, Inc. for the destruction of Lisa Haddon’s house, located at 156 E. 156th Street, Cleveland, Ohio, without adequate notice. The destruction of Haddon’s house also destroyed Plaintiffs’ personal property which was located inside the destroyed house causing injury to Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs allege violations of their Due Process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States and Ohio Constitutions, Trespass, Negligence and Conversion under Ohio law and seek Declaratory Judgment against Defendants. According to their Complaint, Plaintiffs allege that on or about May 15, 2017, there was a fire at the subject property, resulting in substantial damage to the structure and loss of personal property of each Plaintiff. Plaintiffs boxed their respective personal property, including clothes, shoes, furniture and other personal effects that were not destroyed in the fire for removal. Plaintiffs allege the personal property totaled approximately $70,000. Plaintiffs contend that after the fire, the subject property was still sound, could be

repaired with reasonable notice and did not require condemnation. However, shortly after the fire, the City of Cleveland conducted an exterior inspection, made several attempts to contact Haddon and finally posted a notice of condemnation on the property door. The City now acknowledges it cannot locate the original Notice, however, there is no factual dispute a Notice was posted to the house. Haddon testified that her sister sent her photographs of the Notice but there is no clear indication of when that happened. After failing to contact Haddon after multiple attempts, the City of Cleveland obtained a search warrant to enter the premises for an interior inspection which occurred on June 26, 2017. On June 27, 2017, the City of Cleveland (“The

City”) issued a Notice of Violation of Building and Housing Ordinances (Condemnation Notice), finding the property was damaged and requiring Haddon to abate the damage that same day or the property would be demolished. This second Notice instructed Haddon she could appeal within thirty days of the Notice. On June 29, 2017, the City condemned the subject property and hired Defendant Obon, Inc. to demolish the home. Obon proceeded to demolish the home on July 15, 2017, which was prior to the running of the thirty-day appeal time. The Condemnation Notice sent by certified

mail on June 30, 2017, to the property address informed Haddon she had the right to appeal the decision within thirty days of the issuance of the condemnation notice. Moreover, it was also sent by certified mail on July 20, 2017, to Haddon’s California address. Notice was only perfected on Haddon by certified mail on August 5, 2017, after demolition occurred and the appeal and abatement times had run. As a result, Plaintiffs lost the value of their personal property and Haddon incurred costs for the demolition totaling approximately $10,000.00.

Previously, the Court granted in part Defendants’ summary judgment motions, finding that the pre-deprivation Notice provided Haddon was sufficient to satisfy her procedural due process rights as she admitted her sister had photographed the Notice on the property and had sent it to Haddon in California. Moreover, Sixth Circuit caselaw held that Notice on the property was adequate if the City made other reasonable attempts to contact the homeowner. The Court granted summary judgment to the City of Cleveland on Plaintiffs’ state law claims as well. The Court also granted summary judgment for Defendant Obon on Plaintiffs’ Due Process claims but denied summary judgment for Obon on Plaintiffs’ state law claims. But that holding was not

dispositive of all Plaintiffs’ claims. There were factual disputes surrounding whether the property was a danger to the public after the fire such that it needed to be destroyed on an emergency basis. Moreover, there was caselaw that held the City of Cleveland’s Codified Ordinances did not provide adequate post-deprivation remedies. The Court reserved final ruling and instructed the parties to address three issues the Court believed were critical in determining liability. These questions were: 1) Does the City of Cleveland’s Codified Ordinances provide adequate post-deprivation

remedies under the United States Constitution? 2) Does the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution require that the City of Cleveland provide post-deprivation remedies or is Due Process satisfied so long as there is a post-deprivation remedy available to Plaintiff through state law or state courts? 3) Despite a search of the record, the Court is unable to locate the Notice posted to Haddon’s house according to the City, on May 17, 2017 and scanned by Haddon’s sister prior to demolition. Therefore, the Court orders the City to point to its location in the record or provide an authenticated copy of the Notice prior to the hearing.

The Court held oral arguments on these questions then instructed the parties to submit post-hearing briefs on these questions. Those briefs have now been filed and the issues are now ripe for ruling. Does the City of Cleveland’s Codified Ordinances Provide Adequate Post-Deprivation Remedies Under the United States Constitution? In response to the first question, Plaintiffs argue that the City of Cleveland’s Codified Ordinances do not provide a meaningful remedy to address losses of Plaintiffs and are therefore, inadequate as a matter of law in failing to provide constitutionally sufficient due process. According to Plaintiffs, Cleveland’s Codified Ordinances do not provide monetary compensation. Thus, the City’s Ordinances do not provide an adequate remedy. In addition, the City’s Notice process fails to provide Notice to personal property owners but is instead strictly

limited to homeowners. Also, Haddon’s home was demolished fourteen days before her thirty- day appeal time had run. The Notice at the house did not inform Haddon she could seek post- demolition relief. It failed to provide a meaningful remedy to Haddon, failed to provide Notice to Rabb and King and therefore, failed to provide adequate Due Process. Defendant City of Cleveland argues that its Codified Ordinances provide an adequate post-deprivation remedy. According to the City, its Codified Ordinances allow any aggrieved individual to file an administrative appeal. The filing of an appeal would have stayed the demolition. In the alternative, Plaintiffs could have requested an injunction from a state court. This process was available to Haddon but she failed to take advantage of it. Due process requires no more than what the Codified Ordinances and state remedies allow. Moreover, simply because the Codified Ordinances do not provide monetary relief does not mean the process offered is inadequate.

After the parties submitted their post-hearing briefs, the Sixth Circuit issued an Opinion on this issue. In Patel v. Glen, No. 21-3499, 2022 WL 16647974, (6th Cir. November 3, 2022), the Sixth Circuit considered a district court’s denial of plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. At issue was a motel owned by plaintiffs that was found to be a public nuisance by a municipality.

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Bluebook (online)
Haddon v. City of Cleveland, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haddon-v-city-of-cleveland-ohnd-2023.