Shoemaker v. City of Howell

982 F. Supp. 2d 745, 2013 WL 5998517, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 160778
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 12, 2013
DocketCase No. 11-15135
StatusPublished

This text of 982 F. Supp. 2d 745 (Shoemaker v. City of Howell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shoemaker v. City of Howell, 982 F. Supp. 2d 745, 2013 WL 5998517, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 160778 (E.D. Mich. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

LAWRENCE P. ZATKOFF, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This matter is before the Court on the parties’ cross Motions for Summary Judgment [dkts. 25, 26]. The Motions have been fully briefed. For the following reasons, Plaintiffs Motion is GRANTED and Defendant’s Motion is DENIED.

II. BACKGROUND

The City of Howell, Michigan (“the City”) enacted a version of City Ordinance § 622.02 (“the Ordinance”) over 50 years ago. The Ordinance currently requires the City’s owners or occupants of land to maintain the grassy area between the sidewalk and the street curb so that grass, weeds, and other vegetation do not grow in excess of eight inches. The Ordinance states:

a) Cutting and Removal. No owner, lessee or occupant, or any agent, servant, representative or employee of such owner, lessee or occupant, having control of any occupied or unoccupied lot or land or any part thereof in the City, shall permit or maintain on any such lot or land, or on or along the sidewalk, street or alley adjacent to the same between the property line and the curb, or between the property line and the middle of the alley up to twenty feet outside the property line if there is no curb, any growth of weeds, grass or other rank vegetation to a greater height than eight inches on the average, or any accumulation of dead weeds, grass or brush .... No person shall neglect to cut, remove or destroy weeds, grass or other vegetation as directed in this section, or fail, neglect or refuse to comply with the provisions of any notice herein provided for or violate any of the provisions in this section, or resist or obstruct the City Manager or his or her authorized agent in the cutting and removal of weeds, grass and other vegetation.

Ordinance § 622.02(a).

If the homeowner fails to mow this area, the Ordinance provides:

d) Noncompliance; Remedy of the City. If the provisions of the foregoing subsections are not complied with, the City Manager or his or her duly authorized representative shall serve notice upon the owner, lessee or occupant or any person having the care or control of any such lot or land to comply with the provisions of this section. Such notice shall be given verbally to any of such persons or in writing. If in writing, it shall be sent first class mail to the owner of record of the lot or land in question [749]*749.... If the person upon whom the notice is served fails, neglects or refuses to cut, remove or destroy, or to cause to be cut, removed or destroyed, such weeds, grass or other vegetation within five business days from the date of such notice .... the City Manager shall cause such weeds, grass and other vegetation to be removed or destroyed and the actual cost of such cutting, removal or destruction, plus and administrative fee of seventy-five dollars ($75.00) for inspection and other additional costs in connection therewith, shall be certified to by the City Manager or his or her duly authorized representative and shall become and be a lien upon the property on which such weeds, grass and other vegetation were located. A statement for such actual costs plus administrative fee shall thereupon be sent by first class mail to the property owner ... Should the obligation as described by this statement remain unpaid after forty-five days from the date of the statement, the City Manager or his or her representative may then certify the delinquent amount, after first adding a penalty of ten percent, to the Assessor. At the discretion of the City Manager, this amount shall either be incorporated into a special assessment roll, to be processed in the manner prescribed by the City Charter and ordinances of the City, or shall be entered upon the next tax roll as a charge against such premises and be collected and the lien thereof enforced in the same manner as general City taxes against such premises are collected and liens enforced. In general, the decision as to whether the obligation shall be made a part of a special assessment roll or certified directly to the assessing officer for collection as a City tax shall depend upon the number and magnitude of such outstanding delinquent statements.

Ordinance § 622.02(d).

The instant case centers on whether the Ordinance is constitutionally valid.

David Shoemaker (“Plaintiff’) owned his home at 121 S. Elm, at the corner of S. Elm and E. Sibley in the City of Howell, Michigan (“the City”) for some nine years. For most of this time, he was under the impression that he owned the property right to the street. Based on this impression, Plaintiff had customarily mown the grass between the sidewalk and the street; he and his daughter even planted a five-foot high red maple tree in that area.

In or around 2009, the City was repaving and upgrading E. Sibley Street as part of a citywide road refurbishment program. On Sibley, the City reworked the road by pulling up the gutters, expanding the width of the area between the sidewalk and the street, adding a new lower curb, and paving the crosswalk with brickwork. While performing this work, the City removed the red maple tree Plaintiff and his daughter had planted between the sidewalk and the street on Sibley, in order to replace it with nine saplings (along with their supporting wiring that Plaintiff compares to “guide wires”).1 At that time, Plaintiff was told by officials from the City that the property between the sidewalk and the street belonged to the City.2

[750]*750Since he had been told that he did not own the property and could not control what was planted in it, Plaintiff has refused to maintain the grass and nine trees the City planted on the expanded space it created.

The City sent Plaintiff a notice on August 9, 2011, demanding that he mow the City’s property between the sidewalk and the curb by August 16, 2011. The notice does not state how to request a hearing on the matter. The City’s Code Enforcement Officer, Jack Donahue (“Donahue”), testified in his deposition that this is a standard form he uses for all such notifications; while he has made other adjustments to the form, no one has involved Donahue in any discussions of adding to the form any language about opportunities for hearings.

According to Donahue, because Plaintiff refused to comply with the notice by August 17, 2011, he ordered the City’s contractor to mow it. On August 18, Donahue stopped by Plaintiffs home to discover the area between the sidewalk and curb was still unmaintained. Donahue left a door hanger with a final warning to cut the area. While the lower right-hand corner of the hanger had a phone number on it, nothing on it advised Plaintiff of any hearing or appeal rights.

Plaintiff later spoke with Donahue by telephone, at which time both agree that Plaintiff objected to his mowing of the City’s land and that Donahue told Plaintiff the Ordinance required him to do so. Al[751]*751though accounts differ as to the exact content of the conversation, it is uncontested that Plaintiff asked Donahue to issue Plaintiff a ticket. Instead of ticketing Plaintiff, Donahue and the City had its contractor — Shaner’s Cutting Edge (“Shaner’s”)3 — mow the area. The City sent Plaintiff an invoice for $150.00 ($75.00 for the contractor plus a $75.00 “administrative fee”). The City enforced the Ordinance against Plaintiff — using the same procedure — three more times.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
982 F. Supp. 2d 745, 2013 WL 5998517, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 160778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoemaker-v-city-of-howell-mied-2013.