Ksiezyk v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (8-29-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
DocketNo. 80895.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ksiezyk v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (8-29-2002) (Ksiezyk v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (8-29-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Ksiezyk v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (8-29-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
{¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants Donald Ksiezyk and Doned, Inc.1 appeal from the trial court's order affirming the decision of the Cleveland Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA).2 The property owned by the appellant is zoned general retail. The city denied appellant a permit to establish use as an Adult Cabaret and the appellant appealed first to the BZA, then to the Court of Common Pleas, and now to this court. At each administrative level, the city's decision to deny the permit has been upheld.

{¶ 2} When the BZA sustained the decision of the Commissioner of Building and Housing it issued the following ruling:

{¶ 3} "The evidence presented establishes that the property in question was placed in zoning for a Retail Business District in 1929; that the Commissioner of Building and Housing was not capricious nor arbitrary in citing the appellant under Sections3 347.07(1), 347.07(2), 347.07(2)(A), 347.07(4), 347.07(5) and 347.07(6); that the appellant's proposal to establish a use as an Adult Cabaret is not a permitted use in General Retail District but subject to the Enforcement and Penalty Requirements of Section 327.99 and 327.03 and the Jurisdiction and Power of Section 329.02 of the Codified Ordinances; that several neighboring property owners expressed their opposition to the appellant's appeal both in writing and by testimony at the hearing; that the Council representative and the local development corporation are also opposed to the use as proposed herein."

{¶ 4} The transcript of the hearing held before the BZA indicates that the parcel of land at 3129 West 25th Street is owned by the appellant. The business operating on the land is a bar known as Peek-A-Boos which features "sophisticated, female, topless dancing performances". (BZA T. 9). The appellant presented the testimony of Cleveland Police Commander Robert Taskey. Commander Taskey testified that from 1978 to 1981 the bar was "strictly a bikini class dancer's club", but that it was cited three times for topless dancing (BZA T. 38). The citations were issued under the state liquor law in effect at the time which prohibited such activity. Frank Bobosky, a resident of the neighborhood for over forty years, testified that there has been topless dancing at the bar since the latter part of the 1970's or the early 1980's. Mr. Ksiezyk testified that he purchased the real estate and the business in 1980, but that he was the day-shift manager for the prior owner between 1978 and 1980. He stated that female topless dancing started at the bar in 1976 (BZA T. 49). He opined that a string bikini could be considered topless.

{¶ 5} In 1990, the appellant was criminally charged with failure to have an adult cabaret license. The appellant was ultimately acquitted of all charges. In 1998 the appellant received a complaint for an injunction filed by the City of Cleveland.

{¶ 6} Mr. Riccardi, the Zoning administrator since 1997, testified that since 1987 he has been associated with the city and has held various positions in the Division of Building and Housing. Referencing this specific case, Riccardi stated that in his capacity as an employee of the Division of Building and Housing, he was presented with a permit application to establish an Adult Cabaret. He testified that there are no previous records establishing a permit for this business as a bar or a dance hall4. There are records of dance hall inspections, but no records that a dance hall permit was issued. Such a permit would have to be renewed annually. The record indicates two inspections, one in 1962 and one in 1978.

{¶ 7} Mr. Riccardi testified that in order to establish a legal nonconforming use there must be proof that the use was existing at the time the ordinance was passed and that the use was legal at the time the ordinance was passed. The ordinance in this case requiring a permit for an adult cabaret was passed in 1989. This particular premises had some alteration permits, but no use was ever established. In order to establish whether the use was legal at the time, Mr. Riccardi would examine whether the use was permitted in the district, the parking requirements, and the landscape requirements. If the business in question was an adult cabaret before 1989, and met all of the other requirements, it would be grandfathered in as a legal nonconforming use. Mr. Riccardi determined that this was not a legal bar with entertainment in 1989. Mr. Riccardi made this determination because there was insufficient parking as required under the parking ordinance as enacted in 1971. Before a permit is issued for a dance hall there are various departments which have to sign off on the permit: Building and Housing, Division of Environment, Division of Sanitation, the Fire Department and the Public Safety Department. Evidence of two inspections is not tantamount to a permit being issued. The appellant pointed out that he had obtained a liquor permit every year since 1980.

{¶ 8} The BZA then heard evidence from various members of the community all seeking to prohibit the use of the premises as a topless bar.

{¶ 9} The BZA also considered the deposition testimony of Dushan Kaluznik who has been a building inspector for Cleveland since 1989. Because he was a resident of the neighborhood between 1972 and 1980, he remembers "half naked" women dancing at the bar (Kaluznik Depo. T. 16). Mr. Kaluznik testified that in 1991 the bar had go-go dancers. He referred to these dancers as "half naked" (Kaluznik Depo. T. 7). Mr. Kaluznik cited the appellant because he did not have the proper certificate of occupancy, i.e., an adult cabaret license. He visited the establishment with Tom Ardito. Mr. Kaluznik does not remember being present at the appellant's criminal trial in 1991.

{¶ 10} Thomas Ardito is Cleveland's Chief Building Inspector. He has held this position since 1986. While he testified that in the late 1980's and early 1990's the bar was a go-go bar, he also testified that the dancers were not topless. The dancers had pasties on the top and g-strings on the bottom. He testified that on May 21, 1990, a citation was issued to the appellant for failure to have an adult cabaret certificate of occupancy (Ardito Depo. T. 23).

{¶ 11} After the BZA issued its decision, the appellant filed an appeal with the trial court. The trial court determined that it would hear additional testimony from Dushan Kaluznik because there were some questions as to the veracity of Mr. Kaluznik at his first deposition. Mr. Kaluznik again testified that in the mid 1970's he resided in the area near the appellant's establishment. Mr. Kaluznik described the appellant's business as a "go-go place" (T. 10). However, he testified before the trial court that the dancers at Peek-A-Boos were not topless in the 1970's. He clarified his earlier testimony and stated that although he said the women were "half naked", that they had "brassiers and little things on." (T. 11). He testified that at the time the appellant was given the citation, May 1990, there was no nudity at the bar. Mr. Kaluznik testified that the appellant was given a citation for having adult entertainment without an Adult Entertainment License. The essential difference between Mr. Kaluznik's deposition testimony and his testimony given before the trial court is that, during the deposition, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Ksiezyk v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (8-29-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ksiezyk-v-city-of-cleveland-unpublished-decision-8-29-2002-ohioctapp-2002.