State ex rel. Schulman v. City of Cleveland

220 N.E.2d 386, 8 Ohio Misc. 1, 37 Ohio Op. 2d 12, 1966 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 246
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedAugust 8, 1966
DocketNo. 827067
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 220 N.E.2d 386 (State ex rel. Schulman v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas 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. Schulman v. City of Cleveland, 220 N.E.2d 386, 8 Ohio Misc. 1, 37 Ohio Op. 2d 12, 1966 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 246 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Lybarger, J.

The question with which this case is concerned is whether a city, which has adopted a general plan that anticipates eventual urban renewal in a given area, may lawfully proceed under its housing and building codes to inspect properties in a badly deteriorated slum area, find what administrative officials declare to be numerous code violations inimical to public safety, health and welfare, give notice to the owners [3]*3that their houses shall be demolished unless violations are corrected, procure from city council an ordinance ordering such buildings to be torn down, and then, on authority of the codes and legislation enacted thereunder, demolish such structures without paying compensation to the owners.

The plaintiffs, owners of two old boarded-up frame dwellings on Hough Avenue in Cleveland, seek an injunction against the city demolishing their premises on the ground that they are not a nuisance; that the city is not proceeding with urban renewal but is seeking fraudulently and by an abuse of its police power to get these and many other vacant properties in the general area without compensating for them; that this amounts to a lack of due process; and that the ordinances under which the city has taken action are unconstitutional.

The city denies that there is any irregularity or lack of due process in its proceedings, asserts that its ordinances define building and housing standards which must be maintained, provide ample notice and the right of administrative appeals (which plaintiffs have failed to follow) and that said ordinances are constitutional.

Statement oe Facts.

June 12, 1961, the council of the city of Cleveland adopted “University-Euclid General Neighborhood Renewal Plan, Ohio R-32” (Ord. No. 1338-61, Pltfs. Ex. 3), which conforms to the General Plan of Cleveland (1949). The general renewal plan embraced four areas that were designated 1, 2, 3, and 4 to indicate the proposed sequence in which active renewal projects would proceed. The plan served “as an outline of the urban renewal activities proposed for the area involved (and), as a framework for the preparation of urban renewal plans * * (Ord., Sec. 8) The ordinance set up only one actual urban renewal project, Project No. 1, No. Ohio R-44, in the easterly area. It made no findings, set up no proposals and contemplated no early urban renewal activities in any other areas, including the area where plaintiffs’ properties are located. There is no money available for the city to purchase properties here for urban renewal. There is no evidence of any other urban renewal plan or project (active or prospective) in the city of Cleveland today.

Each of the plaintiffs owns a dwelling house (8019 Hough [4]*4Avenue and 8111 Hough Avenue) in the area that is third in sequence for some active renewal project in the unspecified future. One structure is at least seventy-five years old. The houses are best described by the pictures that accompany Joint Exhibits D and E, and by the Housing Inspectors’ reports therein. They have been long vacant, thoroughly vandalized and contain no usable plumbing, lighting, or heating fixtures; walls are cracked; second and third floor windows are broken and open (permitting snow and rain to permeate and rot ceilings, walls and floors); some downspouts do not connect with underground sewers and water flows over neighboring areas; overhead drains appear loose, in one instance chimney bricks are loose; in another, boards on the back porch are rotted and loose. As to 8019 Hough as late as March, 1965, “children of the neighborhood were getting into the house” (Joint Ex. D.), this after a report of October 16,1964 indicated: “Majority of the exterior openings have been secured, however, rear door glass panel has been broken out.” Inspection on June 16, 1964 indicated among other things: “3. This structure is infested by rodents. 8. The banister of the rear porch, up, is loose. 9. The chimney has collapsed and created a hazard.” (Joint Ex. D-9.) As to 8111 Hough Avenue, the front eaves are broken and a danger. Presently the first floor openings of both dwellings have been boarded up and are not necessarily fire hazards.

Turning now to the city ordinances which may apply to the situation revealed by the evidence in the case, the court observes that there are two parts of the codified ordinances of the city stressed in the evidence. Part Five is the Building Code. (Joint Exhibit B.) Section 5.0708 defines unsafe structures:

“Unsafe Structures.

“(A) General. All buildings or structures which are structurally unsafe, insanitary, or not provided with adequate safe egress, or which constitute a fire hazard, or are otherwise dangerous to human life, or which in relation to existing use constitute a hazard to safety or health by reason of inadequate maintenance, dilapidation, obsolescence, or abandonment are, severally, for the purposes of this Title, declared to be unsafe structures. All such unsafe structures are hereby declared to be illegal and shall be abated by repair and rehabilitation or by demolition in accordance with the following procedure:

[5]*5“1. Examination of Unsafe or Damaged Structures. The. Commissioner of Building and Housing shall examine or cause to be examined every building or other structure reported to be unsafe or damaged, and shall make a written record of such examination.

C 6 * * * ? J

The ordinance then provides for notice to the owner, posting of condemnation notice on the building, and a right of appeal to the Board of Building Standards and Building Appeals (whose duties are fully set forth in Section 5.0717). The Building Code applies to all structures whether occupied or not, and whether boarded up or not.

Part Six, the Housing Code (Joint Exhibit C), is concerned with standards, restrictions and remedies which must be applied to structures intended primarily for human occupancy. It deals with the requirements for habitable rooms, window area, ventilation, sanitary facilities, safety, health, foundations, exterior walls and roof and the like.

Nowhere is there a provision that an owner may exempt himself from the provisions of the housing code when his building is vacant by boarding up the first floor appertures, letting upper windows open to the weather.

Chapter 13 of the Housing Code provides in detail for enforcement, inspection, notice to owners in violation of the established standards, steps to be taken if there is non-compliance with a notice of violations or for demolition, and the right of appeal (Section 6.1309) by any owner who thus may challenge such notice and ‘ ‘ suspend action on enforcement. ’ ’

A review of Joint Exhibits D and E gives a picture of what steps have been taken relative to the plaintiffs’ properties. As to 8019 Hough, as early as March 7, 1955, five violations were on record. On May 24,1963, it was reported that the “chimney has collapsed.” By October 30, 1963, the structure was “open, vacant and vandalized.” December 5, 1963, the Commissioner of Housing notified the plaintiff Tower Development and Investment Corporation, Inc., of 14 violations and indicated a permit should be obtained to make repairs. No response. January 10,1964, a report indicated “vagrants have been breaking the windows.” By April 15, 1964, “all exterior openings have been boarded up.” July 14, 1964, the owner was again notified [6]

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Related

Rhoden v. City of Akron
573 N.E.2d 1131 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.E.2d 386, 8 Ohio Misc. 1, 37 Ohio Op. 2d 12, 1966 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-schulman-v-city-of-cleveland-ohctcomplcuyaho-1966.