Turner v. Bexley Bd. of Zoning & Planning

2023 Ohio 3225
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 12, 2023
Docket22AP-554 & 22AP-562
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ohio 3225 (Turner v. Bexley Bd. of Zoning & Planning) 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
Turner v. Bexley Bd. of Zoning & Planning, 2023 Ohio 3225 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as Turner v. Bexley Bd. of Zoning & Planning, 2023-Ohio-3225.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Leah Turner, :

Appellant-Appellee, : Nos. 22AP-554 and v. : 22AP-562 (C.P.C. No. 22CV-878) City of Bexley Board of Zoning and : Planning et al., (REGULAR CALENDAR) : Appellees-Appellants. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on September 12, 2023

On brief: Loveland Law, LLC, and Bryan S. Hunt, for appellee Leah Turner. Argued: Bryan S. Hunt.

On brief: Kegler, Brown, Hill & Ritter Co., LPA and Catherine A. Cunningham, Fishel Downey Albrecht & Riepenhoff LLP, and Marc A. Fishel, co-counsel for appellants City of Bexley Board of Zoning and Planning, City of Bexley City Council, and City of Bexley. Argued: Catherine A. Cunningham.

On brief: Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, Joseph R. Miller, Christopher L. Ingram, Elizabeth S. Alexander, and Jordan C. Patterson, Underhill & Hodge LLC, Aaron L. Underhill, and David Hodge, co-counsel for appellant The Community Builders, Inc. Argued: Joseph R. Miller.

APPEALS from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

BEATTY BLUNT, P.J.

{¶ 1} Appellees-appellants, the City of Bexley, the City of Bexley Board of Zoning and Planning (“BZAP”), the City of Bexley City Council, and The Community Builders, Inc., appeal the judgments of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas reversing a decision Nos. 22AP-554 and 22AP-562 2

of the City Council, which affirmed a decision of the BZAP to grant The Community Builders, Inc. conditional use application. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment. {¶ 2} The Bexley zoning code lists permitted uses and conditional uses allowed in each of the City’s zoning districts. Pursuant to the Bexley zoning code, a permitted use “may be lawfully established in a particular district or districts provided it conforms to all requirements, regulations, and standards of such district.” Bexley Codified Ordinances 1230.92 (hereinafter “B.C.O.”). A “conditional use” is “a use that, because of special requirements or characteristics, may be allowed in a particular zoning district only after review by Board of Zoning and Planning, and granting of conditional use approval imposing such conditions as necessary to make the use compatible with other uses permitted in the same zone or vicinity.” B.C.O. 1230.89. BZAP may approve an application for a conditional use “if, and only if, [the proposed use] meets the intent of [the] Zoning Code and the intent of the zoning district in which the property is located, fits harmoniously with adjacent uses and structures and complies with all other provisions of [the] Zoning Code.” B.C.O. 1226.12. {¶ 3} The Community Builders, Inc. intends to develop a three-story building containing 27 apartment units in the City of Bexley. The location where The Community Builders, Inc. proposes to build the new apartment building—2300 East Livingston Avenue—is in an area of Bexley zoned as the Commercial Service District. Multifamily housing is not a permitted use in the Commercial Service District, so The Community Builders, Inc. filed a conditional use application with the City. The application sought the BZAP’s approval of two uses conditionally allowed in the Commercial Service District: “[d]welling units on [the] first floor” and “[d]welling units above [the] first floor.” See B.C.O. 1254.09 (listing the permitted and conditional uses for Bexley’s commercial and institutional zoning districts, including the Commercial Service District). {¶ 4} After two hearings, the BZAP approved a conditional use for “dwelling units on all 3 floors of this proposed new 3-story building.” (Feb. 25, 2021 BZAP Decision and Record of Action.) Owners of properties near the proposed apartment building appealed the BZAP’s decision to the City Council. However, the City Council recused itself from hearing the appeal. The property owners then appealed the City Council’s decision to the Nos. 22AP-554 and 22AP-562 3

trial court, which reversed the City Council’s decision, remanded the matter, and ordered the City Council to hear and decide the property owners’ appeal. On remand, the City Council affirmed the BZAP’s decision. {¶ 5} Appellant-appellee, Leah Turner, who owns property adjacent to 2300 East Livingston Avenue, appealed the City Council’s decision to the trial court. The trial court determined that the proposed apartment building constituted a “multifamily dwelling” under Bexley ordinances because it consisted of “three or more dwelling units only.” See B.C.O. 1230.26(c) (defining “dwelling” and “multifamily dwelling”). B.C.O. 1254.09 does not list multifamily dwellings as a permitted or conditional use within the Commercial Service District, and “[u]ses not listed as permitted or conditional in [B.C.O. 1254.09] are prohibited.” B.C.O. 1254.09. Thus, the trial court concluded that multifamily dwellings, such as the proposed apartment building, were prohibited in the Commercial Service District. {¶ 6} Appellants maintained that the apartment building could be built in the Commercial Service District because BZAP could conditionally allow “dwelling units on [the] first floor” and “dwelling units above [the] first floor.” See B.C.O. 1254.09 (listing conditional uses allowed in the Commercial Service District in the table). To address that argument, the trial court parsed the definitions of “multifamily dwelling” and “dwelling unit.” A “dwelling unit” is “space within a building designed for occupancy by one family for living purposes and having all of the following permanent components: cooking, bathing, and toilet facilities.” B.C.O. 1230.27. Pursuant to the definition of “multifamily dwelling,” a building containing “dwelling units” becomes a “multifamily dwelling” if it consists of “only” three or more dwelling units. (Emphasis added.) B.C.O. 1230.26(c). Thus, reasoned the trial court, BZAP could conditionally allow “dwelling units on [the] first floor” and “dwelling units above [the] first floor” if a building were not composed “only” of dwelling units, or, in other words, if the building included a space that had a commercial purpose. A commercial space would preclude the building from being a multifamily dwelling, a prohibited use in the Commercial Service District. The proposed apartment building had no commercial space, so as a multifamily dwelling, the building could not be constructed in the Commercial Service District. Nos. 22AP-554 and 22AP-562 4

{¶ 7} The trial court also determined that because the proposed apartment building was prohibited in the Commercial Service District, it did not meet the intent of the Commercial Service District. In conclusion, the trial court found the City Council’s decision illegal, arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, and unsupported by the preponderance of substantial, reliable, and probative evidence on the whole record. Consequently, the trial court reversed the City Council’s decision, and it remanded the matter to the City Council with instructions to deny The Community Builders, Inc.’s conditional use application. {¶ 8} The City of Bexley, City Council, and the BZAP (“the City appellants”) now appeal the trial court’s decision, and they assign the following errors: [1.] The trial court erred when [it] held the Bexley Zoning Code prohibited “dwelling units” as a conditional use in the CS Zoning District without an accessory commercial [use].

[2.] The trial court erred when it determined conditional uses for “dwelling units” in the CS District failed to meet the intent of the zoning district.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mt. Carmel Farms, L.L.C. v. Anderson Twp. Bd. of Zoning Appeals
2024 Ohio 2879 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 3225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-bexley-bd-of-zoning-planning-ohioctapp-2023.