State Ex Rel. Ayres v. Burton Twp. B.Z.A., Unpublished Decision (11-21-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 2001
DocketCase No. 2000-G-2322.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Ex Rel. Ayres v. Burton Twp. B.Z.A., Unpublished Decision (11-21-2001) (State Ex Rel. Ayres v. Burton Twp. B.Z.A., Unpublished Decision (11-21-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
State Ex Rel. Ayres v. Burton Twp. B.Z.A., Unpublished Decision (11-21-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION
The instant action in prohibition is presently before this court for consideration of the parties' competing motions for summary judgment. Upon reviewing the parties' respective arguments and evidential materials, we conclude that the Burton Township Board of Zoning Appeals, respondent, has jurisdiction to proceed on the merits of the two appeals which are the subject of this action. Accordingly, judgment will be entered against relators as to their entire prohibition petition.

Relators are a group of private citizens who own, or reside upon, certain parcels of real property which are each located in Burton Township, Geauga County, Ohio.1 Each of relators' respective parcels is situated near two other parcels of land which are not used for residential purposes. The first of the non-residential parcels is owned by D R Properties, and is located on Old Rider Road in Burton Township. This parcel is presently the site of a sand and gravel operation. The second of the non-residential parcels is owned by Richard Bonner, and is on White Road in Burton Township. This particular parcel is presently vacant.

On July 11, 2000, D R Properties and the Shalersville Asphalt Company filed with the Burton Township Zoning Inspector an application for a zoning certificate in relation to the "Old Rider Road" property. The application stated that the companies wanted to be allowed to use the land as a site for an asphalt plant and business office. On the same date, Richard Bonner and the Shalersville Asphalt Company submitted an application for a zoning certificate regarding the "White Road" property. This second application also stated that the applicants sought to use the land for an asphalt plant and business office.

Four days later, the Burton Township Zoning Inspector mailed a letter to the three applicants indicating that both applications for zoning certificates had been denied. In regard to the "Old Rider Road" property, the inspector stated that the property was in an area which was zoned solely for single-family dwellings. As to the "White Road" land, the inspector indicated that the land was in an area zoned for limited industrial use which did not involve a noxious, dangerous or offensive emission.

On August 4, 2000, exactly twenty days following the issuance of the Burton Township Zoning Inspector's decision as to the "Old Rider Road" property, D R Properties and the Shalersville Asphalt Company filed a notice of appeal from that decision. On that same date, Richard Bonner and the Shalersville Asphalt Company filed a separate notice of appeal from the inspector's decision in regard to the "White Road" property. Both of these notices were submitted to Joanne George, the Secretary of the Burton Township Board of Zoning Appeals.

In filing the two notices of appeal, the three appealing parties in this instance used a pre-printed form which contained a number of questions concerning the subject matter of the appeal. For example, if an appealing party sought a variance from a specific requirement of the zoning resolution, the form required the party to state the nature of the requested variance and to state any justification for the variance. The form also required the party to state the present zoning classification of the subject property and to provide a description of the existing use of the property.

In attempting to comply with the requirements of this form, the three parties appealing the zoning inspector's decisions, D R Properties, the Shalersville Asphalt Company, and Richard Bonner, completed the majority of the questions on this form. In addition, the three parties attached to the respective notices of appeal a copy of their respective applications for zoning certificates and a copy of the inspector's decision on the application. The three parties also attached to both notices a description of the proposed asphalt plant on the two properties.

In their notice of appeal as to the "Old Rider Road" property, D R Properties and the Shalersville Asphalt Company indicated that they were seeking a use variance because the property in question was located in a residential zoning district. They also argued that the variance should be granted because the fact that the land was already being used for a sand and gravel operation made it difficult to use the property for housing purposes. In their notice of appeal as to the "White Road" property, Richard Bonner and the Shalersville Asphalt Company asserted that no variance was needed in regard to this land, and that they had brought the appeal to challenge the inspector's decision that an asphalt plant would not be an appropriate industrial use for the property.

After its secretary had accepted the two notices of appeal, the Burton Township Board of Zoning Appeals began to take certain steps to go forward on the merits of both appeals, including setting a date for a public hearing on the matter. However, before the hearing could be held, relators' attorney delivered a letter to the zoning board concerning the propriety of the two appeals. Specifically, the letter stated that the zoning board could not go forward on the two appeals because the two notices of appeal had not been legally sufficient to invoke the zoning board's jurisdiction. Citing to Section 1002.4 of the Burton Township Zoning Resolution, the letter argued that both notices had failed to provide to the zoning board all of the information necessary to invoke the zoning board's jurisdiction.

Notwithstanding the jurisdictional arguments raised in relators' letter, the zoning board continued to take steps to exercise jurisdiction over both appeals. In addition to rescheduling the date of the public hearing, the zoning board accepted a supplement to the notice of appeal concerning the "Old Rider Road" property. In this supplement, D R Properties and the Shalersville Asphalt Company indicated that, besides the use variance, they were also seeking a "height" variance in regard to the proposed asphalt plant.

When it became evident that the zoning board did not intend to dismiss the two notices of appeal, relators initiated the instant action for a writ of prohibition. As they had argued in their letter to the zoning board, relators asserted in their petition before this court that the zoning board should be stopped from going forward on the appeals because the notices had not set forth sufficient information to satisfy the specific requirements of Section 1002.4 of the applicable zoning resolution. For their ultimate relief in this action, relators requested the issuance of an order which would prohibit the Burton Township Board of Zoning Appeals from rendering any adjudication on the merits of the two appeals.

In their prohibition petition, relators named as the respondents to the action the Burton Township Board of Zoning Appeals and the five individual members of that board: Sean Reeves, John Hornak, David A. Zeigler, Kimberly Steigerwald, and Timothy Snyder. After this action had been pending for approximately three months, this court granted the motion of the three appealing parties in the board proceedings, D R Properties, the Shalersville Asphalt Company, and Richard Bonner, to intervene as additional respondents.2

After each of the respondents had submitted an answer to the prohibition petition, the parties filed three motions for summary judgment as to the merits of relators' entire claim. In support of their arguments on the merits, relators attached to their summary judgment motion copies of the two original notices of appeals filed with the zoning board and the supplement which was submitted in regard to the notice concerning the "Old Rider Road" property.

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State ex rel. Keenan v. Calabrese
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Bluebook (online)
State Ex Rel. Ayres v. Burton Twp. B.Z.A., Unpublished Decision (11-21-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ayres-v-burton-twp-bza-unpublished-decision-ohioctapp-2001.