Moore v. Sandusky Bldg. Code Bd. of Appeals

2024 Ohio 1799
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 2024
DocketE-23-042
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ohio 1799 (Moore v. Sandusky Bldg. Code Bd. of Appeals) 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
Moore v. Sandusky Bldg. Code Bd. of Appeals, 2024 Ohio 1799 (Ohio Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

[Cite as Moore v. Sandusky Bldg. Code Bd. of Appeals, 2024-Ohio-1799.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ERIE COUNTY

Shameka L. Moore, Trustee Court of Appeals No. E-23-042

Appellant Trial Court No. 2022 CV 0116

v.

City of Sandusky Building DECISION AND JUDGMENT Code Board of Appeals ` Decided: May 10, 2024 Appellee *****

Shameka L. Moore, pro se, appellant.

Stewart Hastings, City of Sandusky Law Director, and Sarah C. Chiappone Assistant Law Director, for appellee.

*****

DUHART, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Shameka L. Moore, Trustee, appeals, pro se, from a judgment

entered by the Erie County Court of Common Pleas, affirming a decision by appellee,

Sandusky Building Code Board of Appeals, to demolish appellant’s building located at

937 W. Washington Street, Sandusky, Ohio. For the reasons that follow, the trial court’s

judgment is affirmed. Statement of the Case and the Facts

Notice, Order and Pending Order of Demolition

{¶ 2} On November 17, 2020, a Sandusky resident contacted the Sandusky Police

Department, complaining that a large piece of metal had detached from the roof of

appellant’s property at 937 W. Washington Street and struck his vehicle, which had been

parked nearby. As a result of that incident, together with the property’s long history of

degradation, the City of Sandusky’s Chief Building Official, Scott Thom, issued a

“Notice, Order and Pending Order of Demolition” (the “Order”). Appellant appealed the

Order to the City of Sandusky Building Code Board of Appeals (“the Board”).

April 29, 2021 Hearing

{¶ 3} At a hearing held before the Board on April 29, 2021, appellant stated that

she did not want to see her building demolished, and that she would do whatever was

needed to fix any problems. When Board member John Feick asked appellant whether

she had assessed the damages herself, appellant stated that the only issues she had seen

involved leaking in the skylight areas. She said she did not see any safety concerns.

{¶ 4} Feick said that his walk-through of the building earlier that day

demonstrated to him that a third of the roof was rotten and beginning to fall in. Appellant

said she would have her structural engineer come in to assess the condition of the roof.

Feick told appellant that she would need to provide engineered structural drawings.

{¶ 5} Board member Roger Gundlach said that he saw the same items that Feick

did with respect to the roof. He further commented that the mechanical systems in the

building were 40-50 years old and, for safety, probably needed to be replaced.

2. {¶ 6} Board member Greg Schmid stated that the building was in “really bad

shape,” recounting,

We, obviously, all saw the water issues in that back room, but there’s also a water leak in the corner of the front room; and that has nothing to do with the skylights because it’s on the higher side of that roof. … The skylights are leaking. There’s also some vents or piping in that roof area that had a big leak in it. The stucco is falling off the exterior of the building. It’s heavily cracked. The flashing at the roof, there’s areas where there is not flashing at the roof, so that water is just running into the walls.

… I would like to see a testing agency come in and do a mold report and inspect the walls and see how much mold … is in that building.

{¶ 7} Feick said that if appellant were to hire an engineer, the engineer’s job

would be to evaluate the building and provide a set of construction documents, so the

building could be fixed. Feick clarified that he did not want a report that said that the

building could be fixed; instead, he wanted a report stating how the building would be

fixed in order to make it safe. Specifically, he sought “a set of construction documents

[showing] how to repair [the] building top to bottom.” Feick stated that he wanted those

documents by June 30, 2021.

{¶ 8} Next, Feick said that appellant’s engineer would have to put together a

timeline as to how long the repairs should take to complete.

{¶ 9} Finally, Feick stated that appellant’s engineer should have cost estimates for

the work to be done and that appellant should have a letter from her bank confirming that

she had the funds sufficient to complete the work.

3. {¶ 10} Appellant and all of the other Board members agreed with Feick’s plan.

Appellant indicated that she understood the plan, stating “[W]e have until June 30th to

get the documentation to [Chief Building Official Scott Thom] about the overall

structure, what needs to be done, how we supposed to do it, and a guideline.”

January 20, 2022 Hearing

{¶ 11} At a second hearing, held on January 20, 2022, the Board stated that it had

received only a report from appellant’s structural engineer, and not a full set of

rehabilitation plans. In addition, the Board stated that it had received no timeline, no cost

estimations, and no letter from appellant’s bank.

{¶ 12} Appellant and her counsel stated that they believed that the requested

paperwork had been sent to the Board, but also that the necessary work had been

completed by appellant’s husband, and that the building was no longer a dangerous

building.

{¶ 13} At one point during her comments, appellant suggested that the

administrative process was being used against her in this matter due to racial

discrimination:

The reason why you are going through what you are going through is because you are trying to hold us up unjustly, and it’s a racial discrimination when one of your head people tells me that I should not be queen sugar because I want to buy property in this city. No, you have – or I have a recorded conversation where they said, ‘Shameka, they want you gone, and that building, too.’ Scott has made that very well – very well clear in the email that he sent us to let us know that this board had already come to a decision, and his attorney, which is very smart, cut it off right there where it was supposed to go.

4. {¶ 14} She subsequently suggested that she had been a victim of not only racial

discrimination, but also sex discrimination, sexual harassment, and bullying:

Now, my husband can fix everything. Yes, the repairs are done. Scott has not even came back to check and see. Why? Why? Why? Why? Because I’m black? Because I’m a woman? … Just because we’ve got this building we’ve got to go through this bullshit? It has been 16 years. 16 years. I’ve been getting sexually harassed; I’ve been getting bullied. It’s enough. No, Mr. Feick.

{¶ 15} Ultimately, Feick said that in order to verify that the work had been done,

the Board would like to have a chief building official do a walkthrough of the building,

and if the building was “in a safe condition,” with a deterioration percentage of no more

than 50%, “then it would come out of condemnation.”

February 7, 2022

{¶ 16} In an inspection report dated February 7, 2022, Chief Building Official

Scott Thom stated that he, Primary Master Plans Examiner George Poulos, and Electrical

Safety Inspector Greg Capucini had performed an exterior and interior inspection of

appellant’s property at 937 W. Washington Street on February 4, 2022, and that, pursuant

to that inspection, they found the property to be “at least 80% damaged, decayed and

deteriorated from its original construction,” with the property’s plumbing, HVAC,

electrical, lighting, and hydronic mechanical systems 95% deteriorated. According to the

report:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 Ohio 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-sandusky-bldg-code-bd-of-appeals-ohioctapp-2024.