State ex rel. Kmart Corp. (K-Mart) v. Westlake Planning Comm.

1994 Ohio 419, 68 Ohio St. 3d 151
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1994
Docket1993-1350
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1994 Ohio 419 (State ex rel. Kmart Corp. (K-Mart) v. Westlake Planning Comm.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Kmart Corp. (K-Mart) v. Westlake Planning Comm., 1994 Ohio 419, 68 Ohio St. 3d 151 (Ohio 1994).

Opinion

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The State ex rel. Kmart Corporation v. City of Westlake Planning Commission et al. [Cite as State ex rel. Kmart Corp. v. Westlake Planning Comm. (1994), Ohio St.3d .] Mandamus to compel planning commission to either approve or reject development plan -- Writ granted, when. (No. 93-1350 -- Submitted September 28, 1993 -- Decided January 12, 1994.) In Mandamus. Relator, Kmart Corporation ("Kmart"), plans to build an expanded retail store, a "Super Kmart," in Westlake, Ohio, and has purchased property already zoned for this use. Kmart seeks a writ of mandamus to compel respondents, the city of Westlake, its planning commission, and Robert M. Parry, Westlake's Director of Planning and Economic Development, to review and either approve or reject the development plans proposed for the project. Kmart submitted its application for development plan approval, including an application fee, a letter describing its project, fourteen copies of its development plan and a January 1992 traffic study, on February 17, 1993. The plan was distributed to certain city departments for comment that day. On March 10, Parry prepared a "Box Score Sheet," which "identified aspects of [the] plan that either did not meet Westlake Zoning Code or raised other concerns." On March 12, the planning department received supplementary plans for "signs, wall details, [and] site cross-section" from Kmart. On March 15, these plans were submitted for comment to the pertinent city departments, and comments and recommendations were returned by March 29. In particular, the city engineer recommended that Kmart provide storm sewer alternatives, a dedication plat, an assembly plat, an independent traffic study, and a plat for widening a road. Also on March 15, the planning commission met to consider Kmart's development plan. Toward the end of the meeting, some local residents voiced concerns about Kmart's project, and Kmart agreed to withdraw the plan from the commission's agenda so that it could be discussed further at a "work session" to be held March 29, 1993. At the March 29 work session, the planning commission heard from more residents who opposed Kmart's project, and also from Westlake Mayor Dennis M. Clough, who shared the residents' view. (The mayor later advised a constituent that he had "instructed [the city's] Law Department to take every legal option available to prevent [the proposed Kmart store] from going forward.") In addition, Parry submitted a report describing his concerns about Kmart's proposal, which included the need for another traffic study that would take approximately four to six weeks to complete. No action was taken on the application at the March 29 session. Thereafter, Kmart and the planning department corresponded regularly about additional materials necessary for development plan approval. On April 5, Parry asked if Kmart would help pay for the new traffic study. On April 8, Kmart resubmitted its development plan and accompanying materials under protest, claiming that the documents filed on February 16 were still pending. On April 14, a title company submitted on Kmart's behalf a supplemental list of the names of adjacent property owners who were apparently to be notified of Kmart's proposed development. On April 16, Parry acknowledged receipt of Kmart's "new" application, requested additional fees pursuant to a February 18 revision of the application fee schedule, and advised Kmart of "missing" data as follows: "Survey including permanent parcel numbers (note: PP# cannot be read on copies submitted); "A plat for the entire development area; "Location, size, height, use, general design, color and material of all main and accessory buildings or structures (plus all appurtenances thereto including but not limited to HVAC units, vent fans, coolers, compressors, chimneys, etc. located on the roof or outside the building); "Location and outline of buildings on adjoining parcels of land (such as those residential buildings on adjacent parcels on Dover and Westown); "The location and layout for all areas of all permitted storage and displays of any material, vehicle, waste material, products or container for storage including storage enclosures; "The location, size, height, design and material of all signs to be placed on the outside surfaces of all structures or vehicles on the property[.]" Kmart's "new" development plans were distributed again to city departments for comment on April 19, and while Kmart initially refused to provide more fees and materials, it forwarded the requested street dedication plat and assembly plat, with the associated application and fee on June 30. On July 7, these were submitted to the city engineering and service departments for comment. Meanwhile, the Westlake City Council was considering five proposed ordinances that affected, and Kmart claims restricted, construction of large retail stores, including the planned Super Kmart. These proposals, Ordinance Nos. 1993-73, 1993-74, 1993-75, 1993-76 and 1993-77, were introduced on April 1, 1993, just after the March 29 work session. The ordinances were passed by the city council on July 15 and apparently became effective on August 15, 1993. Suspicious that the planning commission was deliberately delaying action on the development plan until the five "anti-Kmart ordinances" became law, Kmart filed this action on July 1, 1993. Kmart's request for an alternative writ was granted, and Westlake was ordered to show cause by July 29, 1993 why a writ of mandamus should not issue. After briefing was completed, Westlake asked that this cause be dismissed as moot because the pertinent ordinances had become effective.

Grendell & Marrer Co., L.P.A., Timothy J. Grendell and John P. Slagter, for relator. Rademaker, Matty, McClelland & Greve, Robert C. McClelland and Bryan P. O'Malley, for respondents.

Per Curiam. This cause presents four issues. First, does Parry have a clear duty to immediately review Kmart's development plan and place it on the planning commission's agenda? Second, does the planning commission have a clear legal duty to immediately review and act on Kmart's development plan? Third, does Kmart have an adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law? Fourth, is this case moot? For the reasons that follow, we hold that Parry owes the duty alleged, but that he complied by arranging for commission review on March 15. We further hold that (1) the planning commission had a duty under Section 1220.07 of the Westlake Zoning Code to approve or reject Kmart's development plan within sixty days after the March 15 meeting, (2) Kmart consented to an extension of this period until March 29, (3) the commission was then required to complete review within the next sixty days, and (4) the commission is now in default of its duty to approve or reject Kmart's plan.

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1994 Ohio 419, 68 Ohio St. 3d 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kmart-corp-k-mart-v-westlake-planning-comm-ohio-1994.