Day, J.
These are companion cases. Because parties are interwoven and the issues in both cases are identical, we shall treat them as one case for the purpose of this opinion. Hereafter, the Hausmann
&
Johnson, Dibenedetto/'Viseonsi group, who were jointly involved as plain
tiffs in the proceedings below, will be called the “appellees”
, and the City of Berea and its officials, who were defendants in the court below and appellants in this court, will be called collectively the “appellants”. Case No. 32590 was appealed to the Court of Common Pleas after running the course of administrative procedure in the City of Berea, including an appeal to the Board of Zoning and Building Code Appeals, resulting in the denial of a permit application sought for the construction of a McDonald’s restaurant. The second case, No. 32591, reached Common Pleas Court by way of a complaint for declaratory judgment and equitable relief. The appellees were successful in the court below. The court ordered the issuance of a building permit in accordance with the appellees ’ application and found for them in the declaratory judgment action.
In the trial court in Case No. 902,329 the parties stipulated an “Agreed Statement of Facts.” This stipulation together with the pleadings and attachments provided the record for the Common Pleas Court’s review of the appeal from the Board of Zoning and Building Code Appeals. An identical stipulation of facts, the pleadings and attachments were the basis for the court’s decision on the complaint for declaratory judgment in Case No. 902,330.
The two cases are now before this court to review the
trial court’s actions on the administrative appeal and on the motion for declaratory judgment.
I.
Appellant assigns two errors. We set them out verbatim :
Assignment of Error No. 1:
‘ The Court in Finding for the Plaintiff on the Declaratory Judgment Action Based on the Stipulation of Pacts, Erred Said Ruling by the Court Being Contrary to Law [sic].”
Assignment of Error No. 2:
“The Court Erred as a Matter of Law in Reversing the Decision of the Building Commissioner et al and Ordering Permit to be Issued.”
Behind these assignments of error lies one issue, and that is, whether a rezoning ordinance can be limited constitutionally by an agreement providing that any petition for a
rezoning
must be accompanied by the petitioner’s consent
to the
proposition that if the property is not used within twelve months in the manner the rezoning allows, it immediately reverts to its former more restrictive use category. The source of the claimed reversionary “agreement”
in the present case is another ordinance
in force for more than twenty years before the
rezoning now in issue took place (see Agreed Statement of Facts).
II.
In Ohio, municipal zoning is an aspect of both local self-government and legislatively granted police power,
Pritz
v.
Messer
(1925), 112 Ohio St. 628, 637-638. Municipal authority to zone stems from the Ohio Constitution, Article XVIII, Section 3, which provides:
“Municipalities shall have authority to exercise all powers of local self-government and to adopt and enforce within their limits such local police, sanitary and other similar regulations, as are not in conflict with general laws.”
and from the statutes,
Pritz
v.
Messer, id.
637. Statutory implementation of zoning authority in non-charter cities is delineated in Ohio Revised Code, Sections 713.01-713.13, as amended, cf.
Morris
v.
Roseman
(1954), 162 Ohio St. 447, 450;
Wintersville
v.
Sales Co.
(1973), 35 Ohio St. 2d 148, 152. Those sections also regulate zoning authority in ehar
ter cities when “the charter does not specifically set forth the procedure to be followed in enacting zoning ordinances.”
State, ex rel. Kling,
v.
Nielson
(1957), 103 Ohio App. 60, 62. The Ohio Constitution, Article XVIII, Section 3, which extends the power of local self-government and local police regulation to municipalities, does not limit Sections 713.01-713.13. See
Sanders
v.
Snyder
(1960), 113 Ohio App. 370, 373-374. However, a municipality may, by charter provision, enlarge the local police power, without limitation from the statutory sections,
Bauman
v.
State, ex rel. Underwood
(1930), 122 Ohio St. 269.
Berea, Ohio, is a charter city. Its charter does set the procedures for enacting zoning ordinances (Berea Charter, Section X) and the council has legislated' extensive zoning, including the reversionary ordinance (see footnote 3,
supra)
so crucial in this case. Because the parties mate no point of the lack of a specific agreement nor raise any issue about a council minute recording one, as the reversionary ordinance requires, we pass this point and treat the ordinance as though it effected an agreement and reach the more vital issue in the case, i. e., whether such agreements are valid.
III.
Appellees Spartico Dibenedetto and D. A. Viseonsi Company own real estate on the north side of Bagley Noad in the City of Berea, Ohio. The area which the property occupies and
no more
was rezoned from residential to com
mercial on the owner’s application.
Thereafter, the denial of appellees’ application for a building permit went through the procedural steps necessary to exhaust the administrative remedies. These were without success and the case was appealed to Common Pleas Court where it became coupled with a complaint for declaratory judgment as described at the beginning of this opinion.
The appellants contend that the reversionary clause in Ordinance No. 627, Section XXV, is a matter of substantive law well within the constitutional zoning power of municipal eorporations.They purport to find one instructive analogy in the concept of the “conditional permit variance” and another in the variance with conditions.
Appellee rejects these arguments contending that conditional rezoning authorizes automatic repeal of the rezoning
ordinance
and reenactment of the
status quo ante
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Day, J.
These are companion cases. Because parties are interwoven and the issues in both cases are identical, we shall treat them as one case for the purpose of this opinion. Hereafter, the Hausmann
&
Johnson, Dibenedetto/'Viseonsi group, who were jointly involved as plain
tiffs in the proceedings below, will be called the “appellees”
, and the City of Berea and its officials, who were defendants in the court below and appellants in this court, will be called collectively the “appellants”. Case No. 32590 was appealed to the Court of Common Pleas after running the course of administrative procedure in the City of Berea, including an appeal to the Board of Zoning and Building Code Appeals, resulting in the denial of a permit application sought for the construction of a McDonald’s restaurant. The second case, No. 32591, reached Common Pleas Court by way of a complaint for declaratory judgment and equitable relief. The appellees were successful in the court below. The court ordered the issuance of a building permit in accordance with the appellees ’ application and found for them in the declaratory judgment action.
In the trial court in Case No. 902,329 the parties stipulated an “Agreed Statement of Facts.” This stipulation together with the pleadings and attachments provided the record for the Common Pleas Court’s review of the appeal from the Board of Zoning and Building Code Appeals. An identical stipulation of facts, the pleadings and attachments were the basis for the court’s decision on the complaint for declaratory judgment in Case No. 902,330.
The two cases are now before this court to review the
trial court’s actions on the administrative appeal and on the motion for declaratory judgment.
I.
Appellant assigns two errors. We set them out verbatim :
Assignment of Error No. 1:
‘ The Court in Finding for the Plaintiff on the Declaratory Judgment Action Based on the Stipulation of Pacts, Erred Said Ruling by the Court Being Contrary to Law [sic].”
Assignment of Error No. 2:
“The Court Erred as a Matter of Law in Reversing the Decision of the Building Commissioner et al and Ordering Permit to be Issued.”
Behind these assignments of error lies one issue, and that is, whether a rezoning ordinance can be limited constitutionally by an agreement providing that any petition for a
rezoning
must be accompanied by the petitioner’s consent
to the
proposition that if the property is not used within twelve months in the manner the rezoning allows, it immediately reverts to its former more restrictive use category. The source of the claimed reversionary “agreement”
in the present case is another ordinance
in force for more than twenty years before the
rezoning now in issue took place (see Agreed Statement of Facts).
II.
In Ohio, municipal zoning is an aspect of both local self-government and legislatively granted police power,
Pritz
v.
Messer
(1925), 112 Ohio St. 628, 637-638. Municipal authority to zone stems from the Ohio Constitution, Article XVIII, Section 3, which provides:
“Municipalities shall have authority to exercise all powers of local self-government and to adopt and enforce within their limits such local police, sanitary and other similar regulations, as are not in conflict with general laws.”
and from the statutes,
Pritz
v.
Messer, id.
637. Statutory implementation of zoning authority in non-charter cities is delineated in Ohio Revised Code, Sections 713.01-713.13, as amended, cf.
Morris
v.
Roseman
(1954), 162 Ohio St. 447, 450;
Wintersville
v.
Sales Co.
(1973), 35 Ohio St. 2d 148, 152. Those sections also regulate zoning authority in ehar
ter cities when “the charter does not specifically set forth the procedure to be followed in enacting zoning ordinances.”
State, ex rel. Kling,
v.
Nielson
(1957), 103 Ohio App. 60, 62. The Ohio Constitution, Article XVIII, Section 3, which extends the power of local self-government and local police regulation to municipalities, does not limit Sections 713.01-713.13. See
Sanders
v.
Snyder
(1960), 113 Ohio App. 370, 373-374. However, a municipality may, by charter provision, enlarge the local police power, without limitation from the statutory sections,
Bauman
v.
State, ex rel. Underwood
(1930), 122 Ohio St. 269.
Berea, Ohio, is a charter city. Its charter does set the procedures for enacting zoning ordinances (Berea Charter, Section X) and the council has legislated' extensive zoning, including the reversionary ordinance (see footnote 3,
supra)
so crucial in this case. Because the parties mate no point of the lack of a specific agreement nor raise any issue about a council minute recording one, as the reversionary ordinance requires, we pass this point and treat the ordinance as though it effected an agreement and reach the more vital issue in the case, i. e., whether such agreements are valid.
III.
Appellees Spartico Dibenedetto and D. A. Viseonsi Company own real estate on the north side of Bagley Noad in the City of Berea, Ohio. The area which the property occupies and
no more
was rezoned from residential to com
mercial on the owner’s application.
Thereafter, the denial of appellees’ application for a building permit went through the procedural steps necessary to exhaust the administrative remedies. These were without success and the case was appealed to Common Pleas Court where it became coupled with a complaint for declaratory judgment as described at the beginning of this opinion.
The appellants contend that the reversionary clause in Ordinance No. 627, Section XXV, is a matter of substantive law well within the constitutional zoning power of municipal eorporations.They purport to find one instructive analogy in the concept of the “conditional permit variance” and another in the variance with conditions.
Appellee rejects these arguments contending that conditional rezoning authorizes automatic repeal of the rezoning
ordinance
and reenactment of the
status quo ante
in disregard of procedure required bv law.
IV.
The Ohio Constitution and implementing statutes which have a relevance to zoning do not reach, either in specific terms or by necessary implication, the question of rezoning with reversionary conditions. And our researches have turned up no Ohio case, and none has been called to our attention by the parties, which has ever determined the validity of a reversionary agreement attached to a successful petition for rezoning.
” However, other states have had occasion to examine the question and there is authority with impressive logic holding that such contractual conditions are not enforceable.
In some cases it is said that a reversionary contract between a city and landowners involves an abuse of zoning power rendering the contract
ultra vires,
illegal, and void and all proceedings to enforce it are
coram non judice.
This conclusion rests on the theory that a contract controlling the exercise of municipal legislative power is against public policy. Contracts “have no place in a zoning plan” and agreements “between a municipal authority and a property owner” should not be a factor either “in the enactment or enforcement of zoning regulations”,
Houston Petroleum Co.
v.
Automotive Product C. Assn.
(S. Ct., New Jersey, 1952), 87 A. 2d 319, 322.
In
Oury
v.
Greany
(S. Ct., Rhode Island, 1970), 267 A. 2d 700, 702, conditional zoning was held to be zoning “without regard to the public health, safety and welfare, concern for which is basic to that comprehensiveness contemplated in the enabling act"
In addition to these considerations it has been held that zoning based solely on collateral promises improperly leaves restrictions in a particular zone to extrinsic evidence,
Baylis
v.
City of Baltimore
(Ct. of App., Md., 1959), 148 A. 2d 429, 433.
Authorities which reach identical conclusions are not always uniform in their reasons for holding invalid a rezoning conditioned upon the property owner fulfilling an agreement between the municipality and him.
A variety of explanations are conveniently catalogued in
Cederberg
v.
City of Rockford
(Ill. App., 1972, rehearing denied 1973), 291 N. E. 2d 249, 251:
. . While no single basis for the rule against such zoning practices emerges from the cases cited, among the courts’ reasons are that by entering into agreement with the property owner, the zoning authority might use the zoning power to further private interests in violation of public policy; that such rezoning is a deviation from a basic zoning plan resulting in nonuniform application of the zoning law and inconsistencies within a zoning classification ; that when the actual zoning requirements in force are determined by reference to evidence extrinsic to the zoning ordinances, the zoning law is rendered vague.”
Granting that the legislative decision of a governing-authority has a presumption of validity, the reasons listed are persuasive ones for overcoming the presumption and finding the restrictions and reversion which the appellants attempted to enforce in this case invalid. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The parties here have made no point of either the presence or absence of a specific reversionary agreement between Appellant Berea and the appellees. We do not assay the legal consequences, if any, of the absence of such a contract. We have assumed a reversionary agreement was effected here by operation of law. Our disposition embraces the broad proposition that reversionary agreements attempting to condition zoning by contract, however derived, are invalid.
V.
The appellants did not brief the issue of the validity of a moratorium resolution of the City of Berea and abandoned their reliance on the moratorium during oral argument. For this reason it is unnecessary to consider any phase of the assignments of error centering on that resolution.
Judgment affirmed.
Corrigan and Manos, JJ., concur.