Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Council of City of Independence

475 N.E.2d 144, 16 Ohio App. 3d 204, 16 Ohio B. 219, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 12341
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1984
Docket47256
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 475 N.E.2d 144 (Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Council of City of Independence) 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
Hydraulic Press Brick Co. v. Council of City of Independence, 475 N.E.2d 144, 16 Ohio App. 3d 204, 16 Ohio B. 219, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 12341 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Markus, J.

A landowner applied to the city’s planning commission for permission to drill a gas well on its property. After extended proceedings, the planning commission approved that request pursuant to authority created by the city’s zoning code. The city council then reviewed the planning commission’s decision and decided to deny the *205 landowner’s request without specifying its reasons.

The landowner appealed that action as an administrative decision to the common pleas court, which affirmed the council’s action. On landowner’s appeal from the adverse common pleas court judgment, we conclude that the city council’s action was not supported by sufficient evidence. Therefore, we reverse and direct that the city permit landowner’s requested use subject to reasonable conditions.

I

The administrative record supplied by the city to support its council’s ruling contains no evidence beyond the data gathered by the planning commission. The record includes: (a) minutes of the planning commission meetings, (b) minutes and a partial transcript of the council meetings, (c) maps and photographs, (d) a seismologist’s report and safety recommendations, (e) correspondence, and (f) two gas well drilling permits which the state issued to the landowner for this property. Collectively that data provides the history for this controversy.

The landowner holds a plat containing approximately seventy-five acres which the city has zoned “U-6” for commercial or industrial use. The ordinance governing class “U-6” uses provides:

“1141.07 CLASS U-6 USES. (Commercial or industrial)
“(a) Bakeries, bottling works, ice and ice cream manufacturers and cold storage plants.
“(b) Warehouses for storage of household goods and building materials and equipment.
“(c) Coal, ice and wood sales.
“(d) Laundry, carpet cleaning, dry cleaning and dyeing.
“(e) Repair shop for motor vehicles.
“(f) Wholesale produce market and salesroom.
“(g) Storage of refined petroleum products.
“(h) Any other commercial, manufacturing or industrial building or use which shall not be injurious to the adjacent premises or occupants thereof; which shall not constitute or threaten to become a public nuisance by reason of noise, smoke, vibration, odor, possibility of explosions, glaring lights, radio or television interference, pollution of ground or surface waters, accumulation of obnoxious or undesirable wastes of inherent nature; which shall not tend to create safety or traffic hazards, which may be approved by the Planning Commission and Council; and which shall not be forbidden or prohibited by any provision of this Zoning Code or any other ordinance of the Municipality.
“(i) Accessory uses customarily incident to an authorized use.” (Emphasis added.)

Pursuant to its 1969 agreement with the city, the landowner has been manufacturing construction materials on that property, using shale that it mines there. Shale mining requires blasting and excavation. The landowner’s manufacturing process uses substantial quantities of natural gas which landowner previously purchased from the local gas utility. In an effort to reduce its costs, the landowner sought to develop its own gas source on its own land.

The U-6 zoning classification does not specificially list a gas well as a permitted use, but no zoning ordinance prohibits that use. The city may permit that use of property zoned U-6 under the criteria provided by ordinance 1141.07 (h), supra. The procedure for considering such requests is set forth in ordinance 1141.09:

“1141.09 HEARINGS BY PLANNING COMMISSION: COUNCIL.
“Where approval of the Planning Commission or council is required by this section for the location of a designated or undesignated use or struc *206 ture within any use district, an application for such approval shall first be submitted to the Planning Commission.
“After public notice and hearing, the Planning Commission shall determine whether such use or structure shall be approved. In making such determination, findings of fact shall be made and entered in the minutes of the Commission as to the effect of such use or structure on neighboring property, the possible creation of public nuisances by reason of noise, smoke, wastes, odor, vibrations, lights, stream or ground pollution, traffic and safety hazards or otherwise, and as to the effect of such proposed use or structure on the public peace, health, safety, morals and welfare.
“If Council’s approval is also required for such use or structure, the determination and findings of fact of the Planning Commission shall be submitted to and reviewed by Council, which may also make such investigations, require such supporting data and make such findings as it may deem necessary. Council may thereupon affirm or deny the application and shall enter its determination in its minutes.”

The planning commission gave public notice and scheduled public hearings on this landowner’s request to drill a gas well on its property. The landowner presented oral and documentary evidence to support its application. A topographical map showed the site of the proposed well. The location more than satisfied state minimum requirements that the well be at least three hundred feet from the lot boundaries and one hundred fifty feet from buildings. The landowner originally proposed construction of two gas wells but voluntarily amended its proposal to eliminate one of them. The landowner’s contractor had obtained a state gas well drilling permit for the proposed well.

Total drilling time would involve forty-five hours over a five-day period. Noise from the drilling would be similar to the sound of two diesel trucks at the well site. The proposed drilling would occur four hundred feet from the nearest road. The contractor would bring approximately eight truckloads of equipment onto the property and later remove it. He would also require one truckload of water per hour during actual drilling. A state oil and gas well inspector would supervise the drilling.

When the well became operable, it would produce brine and oil as reportedly non-hazardous waste products. The landowner would temporarily store those products in tanks on its property. It would truck the brine to another county for disposal once each week. The landowner would truck the minimal oil residue for disposal several times a year. However, it would store none of the gas produced, since it would pipe all gas production directly to its manufacturing activity for prompt consumption.

The well and pipelines would conform with state regulations and the local gas utility’s specifications. Photographs and drawings depicted the assembled well structure which would not be visible off the property, because the landowner would fence and screen it. The only neighboring property owner who could see the well area expressly agreed to the proposed well.

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Bluebook (online)
475 N.E.2d 144, 16 Ohio App. 3d 204, 16 Ohio B. 219, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 12341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hydraulic-press-brick-co-v-council-of-city-of-independence-ohioctapp-1984.