State ex rel. GreenAcres v. Cincinnati

2015 Ohio 5479
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 2015
DocketC-150038
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 Ohio 5479 (State ex rel. GreenAcres v. Cincinnati) 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. GreenAcres v. Cincinnati, 2015 Ohio 5479 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as State ex rel. GreenAcres v. Cincinnati, 2015-Ohio-5479.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

STATE EX REL. : APPEAL NO. C-150038 GREENACRES FOUNDATION, TRIAL NO. A-1403030 : Plaintiff-Relator-Appellee, : O P I N I O N. vs. :

CITY OF CINCINNATI, :

Defendant-Respondent- Appellant. :

Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas

Judgment Appeal From Is: Affirmed as Modified

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: December 30, 2015

Barrett & Weber, and C. Francis Barrett, and White Getgey & Meyer Co., L.P.A., and David Kamp, for Plaintiff-Relator-Appellee,

Paula Boggs Muething, City Solicitor, and Emily E. Woerner, Assistant City Solicitor, for Defendant-Respondent-Appellant.

Please note: this case has been removed from the accelerated calendar. OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

FISCHER, Presiding Judge.

{¶1} Defendant-respondent-appellant, city of Cincinnati (“City”) appeals

the trial court’s granting of a writ of mandamus to compel the City to commence

appropriation proceedings based on its temporary regulatory taking of property,

known as the “Gamble House,” owned by plaintiff-relator-appellee Greenacres

Foundation (“Greenacres”), an Ohio not-for-profit corporation.

{¶2} The city argues the trial court erred in granting the writ of mandamus

because Greenacres’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations and res judicata,

and alternatively, that Greenacres failed to show by clear and convincing evidence

that a regulatory taking had occurred. The City further argues that the trial court

erred in entering findings of fact and conclusions of law without conducting an

evidentiary hearing or permitting the City to conduct discovery. Finding none of the

city’s arguments meritorious, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. Factual and Procedural Posture

{¶3} Greenacres is a charitable foundation that owns a 22-acre site in the

Westwood neighborhood of Cincinnati. On February 18, 2010, Greenacres applied

for a permit to demolish one of the structures on the property, an existing single

family home that had been uninhabited since 1961, and that was in an extremely

dilapidated state. Because the home had been inhabited at one time by James N.

Gamble, who was the son of one of the founders of Procter & Gamble, the house had

become known as the “Gamble House.” At the time Greenacres sought the

demolition permit, the separate 2.85-acre parcel that the Gamble House was situated

on, had been zoned SF-10, single family residential district with no historic overlay.

2 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

A. 2010 Common Pleas Court Action

{¶4} When Amit B. Ghosh, the City’s chief building official, declined to act

on the permit because of purported historic issues relating to the Gamble House,

Greenacres filed a complaint in the common pleas court on February 24, 2010, for a

writ of mandamus and for a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction,

and permanent injunction. Greenacres sought the writ to compel Gosh to issue the

demolition permit or, alternatively, to show cause within 30 days why the court

should not compel the issuance of the permit.

{¶5} At a February 26, 2010 hearing on the writ before the common pleas

court, the City represented that no determinations had yet been made regarding the

issuance of the permit, because Ghosh had not yet completed his review. It asked the

court to dismiss the writ as premature. Instead, the trial court issued a show-cause

order, which required the City to either issue the demolition permit or appear before

the court and show cause why the permit should not be issued. The trial court

scheduled a hearing for 30 days later.

{¶6} The City appealed and moved for an expedited stay of the court’s

issuance of the writ. On March 17, 2010, this court dismissed the City’s appeal. The

City appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court and again moved for an expedited stay of

the writ. While the City’s appeal was pending before the Supreme Court, Greenacres

twice amended the complaint. The first amendment, in March 2010, added a claim

for damages. The second amendment, in May 2010, added additional claims for a

declaratory judgment and a regulatory taking.

{¶7} On May 27, 2010, the City removed the common pleas court action to

federal court and asked the federal district court to stay the proceeding pending a

3 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

decision from the Ohio Supreme Court. On June 7, 2010, Greenacres voluntarily

dismissed in the common pleas court its claims for a declaratory judgment and for

the regulatory taking. Greenacres subsequently filed a third verified complaint in the

federal district court seeking a writ of mandamus to compel the demolition permit,

injunctive relief, and damages. On September 16, 2010, the Ohio Supreme Court

declined jurisdiction, and the case was remanded to the common pleas court. The

federal district court stayed the remaining claims in the 2010 action until they were

voluntarily dismissed by Greenacres on February 15, 2013.

B. The Administrative Proceedings

{¶8} While Greenacres’ 2010 writ action was pending before the common

pleas court, Ghosh had referred Greenacres’s application for a demolition permit to

the City’s urban conservator, Larry Harris, and the Historic Conservation Board. The

Historic Conservation Board determined on March 15, 2010, that the Gamble House

was a historic structure under Chapter 1435 of the Cincinnati Zoning Code and that

Greenacres needed a Certificate of Appropriateness (“COA”) in order to qualify for

the demolition permit. Greenacres appealed the determinations of the City’s urban

conservator and the Historic Conservation Board to two separate administrative

bodies, the Board of Building Appeals (“BBA”) and the Zoning Board of Appeals

(“ZBA”).

{¶9} Despite the urban conservator’s instruction that an appeal from his

decision be taken to the BBA, the BBA, on August 6, 2010, after conducting several

sessions and granting the city’s request for a continuance to hear from Ghosh,

determined that it had no jurisdiction to hear the matter and dismissed Greenacres’s

4 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

appeal. Greenacres appealed the BBA’s decision to the common pleas court on

August 23, 2010 (“Administrative Appeal 1”).

{¶10} On September 13, 2010, the ZBA, after conducting an extensive

hearing and making extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law justifying a

“historic” designation, determined that “the action that the Historic Conservation

Board took on the Gamble House’s designation nomination was a ‘recommendation’

and not a ‘decision’ within the meaning of the Cincinnati Zoning Code.” Accordingly,

the ZBA concluded that it was “without jurisdiction to consider th[e] appeal.” The

ZBA additionally concluded that Greenacres was not entitled to a demolition permit

because it had not procured a COA. Greenacres appealed the ZBA’s decision to the

common pleas court on September 23, 2010 (“Administrative Appeal 2”). The trial

court consolidated the two administrative appeals.

{¶11} In the meantime, Cincinnati City Council had adopted Ordinance No.

155-2010 on May 12, 2010, to impose historic district zoning on the 2.85 acres of the

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