Swan Creek Township v. Wylie & Sons Landscaping

859 N.E.2d 566, 168 Ohio App. 3d 206, 2006 Ohio 584
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 10, 2006
DocketNo. F-05-005.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 859 N.E.2d 566 (Swan Creek Township v. Wylie & Sons Landscaping) 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
Swan Creek Township v. Wylie & Sons Landscaping, 859 N.E.2d 566, 168 Ohio App. 3d 206, 2006 Ohio 584 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Singer, Presiding Judge.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a judgment of the Fulton County Court of Common Pleas, denying injunctive relief sought by a township in a zoning dispute. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

{¶ 2} In September 2002, appellees, Thomas J. and Lisa Wylie and Wylie & Sons Landscaping, purchased a 79-acre parcel of land on Fulton County Road 5 in Swan Creek Township. Appellees are in the business of mining, excavating, and selling topsoil and sand.

{¶ 3} On September 16, 2002, appellees applied to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (“ODNR”) for a surface-mining permit for the County Road 5 location. As part of the permit process, appellees were required to publish notice of their application.

{¶ 4} Advised of appellees’ intention by the published notice, neighbors to the property became concerned that the proposed operation would negatively affect their property enjoyment through increased noise and dust near their homes and through additional traffic on the rural county road. A group of 30 to 40 of these residents formed an organization called Concerned Residents of Swan Creek Township to oppose excavation and mining on appellees’ land.

{¶ 5} The group formally notified ODNR of its opposition to appellees’ permit application, and many appeared in opposition at an ODNR public hearing. Advised by the township trustees that since Swan Creek Township was unzoned, appellees’ proposed use was permitted, the group initiated a petition drive to place enactment of township zoning on the May 6, 2003 ballot.

{¶ 6} The neighbors’ entreaties to ODNR were unsuccessful. On April 21, 2003, ODNR issued the permit appellees sought. Efforts to bring zoning to the township fared differently. On May 17, 2003, the Fulton County Board of Elections certified passage of the zoning initiative. Pursuant to R.C. 519.11, when the election board certified enactment of the zoning plan, the property at *209 issue became zoned “agricultural-real estate,” a classification that would preclude mining or excavating.

{¶ 7} On Saturday June 7, 2003, neighbors to appellees’ site awoke to the sound of dump trucks and heavy equipment extracting and hauling away soil. Several neighbors complained to township officials, who dispatched the township zoning inspector to the site. The inspector ordered operations to stop because mining violated the township’s newly enacted zoning code.

{¶ 8} When appellees refused to comply with the zoning inspector’s order, appellant, Swan Creek Township, instituted the action that underlies this appeal. Appellant sought preliminary and permanent injunctions barring appellees’ mining activities. Appellees responded to appellant’s verified complaint, admitting that it was engaged in mining, but pointing out that R.C. 519.19 expressly permits the continuance of the nonconforming use of land that was established before the enactment of zoning. Appellees insisted that they began to excavate and mine the land prior to the institution of the township zoning code.

{¶ 9} At the hearing on the preliminary injunction, three neighbors to the property testified that they had first observed activity on the land on June 7, 2003. Appellee Thomas Wylie, however, testified that he had obtained his mining permit from ODNR effective April 21, 2003. On that very day, Wylie testified, he took an excavator to the site and began stripping topsoil for later removal. According to Wylie, his employees returned to the site the following Saturday, April 26, 2003, and removed between 4,000 and 6,000 cubic yards of topsoil, some of which they sold and some of which was stored for sale elsewhere. Wylie’s testimony was corroborated by his operations manager, who testified that on April 26 he had dispatched “a half dozen” trucks to the County Road 5 project. A farmer, who had contracted with appellees to grow crops on the part of the Road 5 project not being mined, testified that he was on the property in early May 2003 and observed a hole and “some piles of dirt.” Appellees also introduced invoices and corresponding payment checks for topsoil delivered on April 26, 2003.

{¶ 10} Following the hearing, the trial court denied the preliminary injunction, finding that appellees had “commenced mining operations on April 21, 2003, and clearly engaged in ‘substantial mining operations’ on April 26, 2003.”

{¶ 11} On September 28, 2004, the court held a hearing on appellant’s petition for a permanent injunction. At the hearing, James and Karen Irwin, whose home is directly across the road from the site, testified that they were both home on April 26 and failed to see any activity on the property on that date or any date prior. By contrast, the Irwins reported, they knew immediately from the noise and dust produced that the operation had begun on June 7.

*210 {¶ 12} William and Douglas Bauman, father-and-son farmers of the property immediately adjacent to appellees’ land, testified that as of May 30, 2003, they had seen no excavation at the project. Douglas Bauman testified that, indeed, they had been watching the property to see when work activity would begin, yet saw nothing before June 7.

{¶ 13} Edwina Mattimore testified that although she did not live near the site, on April 26, she was at the County Road 5 home of her grandson, Matthew, and his wife, Carla, preparing for a birthday party for her great-granddaughter. All three testified that they were outside for a substantial part of that day, but saw no activity at the site across the road.

{¶ 14} Ron and Amy Jo Rouleau live on the same side of Road 5 in front of appellees’ property. The route appellees’ dump trucks take out of the excavation site is directly south of the Rouleaus’ barn. Both testified that they believed they were home on April 26 and failed to observe any activity on the site. Both reported seeing no site work until June 7.

{¶ 15} The entrance to the site is immediately north of Robert Markey’s home. He was awakened by the sound of trucks on the morning of June 7, “about fifty feet from my back room.” According to Markey, this was the first time he had noticed work on the site.

{¶ 16} On cross-examination, appellees tried to shake the certainty of these witnesses. Some wavered, but most remained adamant that if there was excavating occurring on April 26, they would have seen it, and they did not.

{¶ 17} The matter was submitted to the court on written final arguments by the parties. Appellant, relying on the testimony of some 13 witnesses, argued that the vast weight of the evidence revealed that appellees’ assertion that work on the site predated the zoning code was pure fabrication. Additionally, appellant argued, if work on the site did precede zoning, it was not “mining” within the legal definition and/or that the extraction of some 6,000 cubic feet of soil out of some 1.1 million tons of soil did not meet the common-law standard of a substantial nonconforming use necessary to establish preexisting use.

{¶ 18} Appellees, pointing to the testimony that they received their ODNR surface-mining permit on April 21, 2003, commenced work on the site the same day, and used the profit from the excavation in commerce on April 26, 2003, argued that they had established a substantial use of the land antecedent to the May 17, 2003 zoning code.

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Bluebook (online)
859 N.E.2d 566, 168 Ohio App. 3d 206, 2006 Ohio 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swan-creek-township-v-wylie-sons-landscaping-ohioctapp-2006.