Waghray v. City of Westlake, Unpublished Decision (4-4-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 2002
DocketNo. 79311.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Waghray v. City of Westlake, Unpublished Decision (4-4-2002) (Waghray v. City of Westlake, Unpublished Decision (4-4-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Waghray v. City of Westlake, Unpublished Decision (4-4-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
This is an appeal from an order of Judge Stuart A. Friedman granting summary judgment against appellant Sudhir Waghray, dba Care Cleaners, on his claims against the appellee City of Westlake ("Westlake") arising from, and originating in, an eminent domain proceeding. Waghray contends he was entitled to displacement expenses under R.C. 163.51 et seq., and damages for constitutional violations resulting from Westlake limiting those expenses to its appropriation of the land occupied by his business. We affirm.

Waghray's cleaning establishment was located at 23730 Center Ridge Road on the northwest corner of Clague Road, in Westlake from 1987 until March 16, 1997. He leased the building from Jesse M. Firestone through a written lease and subsequent renewals that were never witnessed, acknowledged or recorded, as R.C. 5301.01 mandated.

On November 12, 1997, Westlake's Director of Law notified Waghray by letter that the city planned to appropriate the property for refurbishing and widening the Clague Road-Center Ridge Road intersection, and he should make other arrangements for his business. The project itself was administered by Westlake with a grant of $1.3 million from the Ohio Public Works Commission to help fund the $2.1 million project budget.

Westlake instituted eminent domain proceedings in Probate Court to appropriate the land and Waghray counterclaimed for relocation costs under R.C. 163.51 et seq. and damages for the value of the remainder of his lease interest; he also asserted claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and third-party claims for injunctive and declaratory relief.1

On February 25, 1998, Westlake passed an appropriations ordinance authorizing the payment of $16,000 to Waghray for moving expenses and tendered an $8,000 check to him on March 4, 1998 as an inducement to vacate the premises and accept $7,500 in settlement for the value of his "alleged lease interest." In return, Westlake allowed him to preserve his non-leasehold claims and relocation expense claims if he wished to reassert them in a Common Pleas Court action. He vacated the premises on March 16, 1998, and moved to a strip-mall location at 24569 Center Ridge Road, in Westlake.

Waghray instituted the case sub judice on January 25, 2000 and on November 9, 2000, Westlake moved for summary judgment, to which Waghray responded. Westlake presented a March 5, 1998, letter from Firestone's law firm that advised Waghray that his rent was in arrears and that, if he did not vacate the premises, legal action may be instituted. The judge granted Westlake's summary judgment motion in its entirety under the rationale that Waghray vacated the condemned property on March 16, 1998 in response to a forcible entry and detainer action suit, rather than Westlake's appropriation of the land and, therefore, did not qualify as a "displaced person" for relocation expenses under R.C. 163.51 et seq. He assigns three errors for our review:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT CONSTRUED THE DEFINITION OF A DISPLACED PERSON TO EXCLUDE PLAINTIFF UNDER OHIO'S RELOCATION ASSISTANCE STATUTE.

The interpretation of a statute is a question of law and is subject tode novo review on appeal.2 As defined by Ohio's relocation assistance statute, in relevant part, ""[s]tate agency" means any department, agency, or instrumentality of a state or of a political subdivision of a state * * *."3 R.C. 163.51(B) defines "displacing agency" as: "* * * any state agency or person carrying out a program or project with federal assistance, or carrying out any state highway project that causes a person to be a displaced person." According to R.C. 163.53(A), "[w]henever the acquisition of real property for a program or project undertaken by a displacing agency will result in the displacement of any person, the head of the agency shall make a payment to any displaced person, upon proper application as approved by such agency head, for all * * *" eligible expenses as further set forth in that section (emphasis added). Since it is conceded that no federal assistance was used to improve the intersection, the decisive issue becomes whether a public street improvement project to widen an intersection with a state road within a municipality, administered by the municipality and partially financed with some State funds, can be characterized as a "state highway project," in order to qualify Westlake as a "displacing agency" liable to Waghray. We hold that it cannot.

While Westlake is undisputably a "state agency" as defined by R.C.163.51, the relocation statute does not provide a special definition of either a "state" or a "state highway project." As such, in defining those terms, we are required to apply common meanings to those words unless otherwise statutorily directed by the Revised Code.4 "The polestar of statutory interpretation is legislative intent to be determined from the words employed by the General Assembly as well as the purpose to be accomplished by the statute."5 Effect must be given to words utilized; a court cannot ignore words used nor add words not included to reach a desired result.6

According to R.C. 1.59(G), "state," as used in the Ohio Revised Code, "* * * when applied to a part of the United States, includes any state, district, commonwealth, territory, insular possession thereof, and any area subject to the legislative authority of the United States of America. `This state' or `the state' means the State of Ohio." "Highway," where described in the Revised Code, means "* * * the entire width between the boundary lines of every way open to the use of the public as a thoroughfare for purposes of vehicular traffic,"7 and, according to common usage, may be defined as either a main road between cities or any public road.8

While Waghray urges that "state highway project," within the meaning of R.C. 163.51 et seq., can be read to refer to any improvement of a road by a governmental entity in Ohio, where the improvement is partially funded by the State but administered locally, or to any improvement to a road on the "state highway system," as established by the Ohio Department of Transportation under the authority of R.C. 5511.01, we are unable to agree. In order for us to sanction such an interpretation, it would be necessary for us to essentially engraft the definition of "state agency," which includes a municipality like Westlake, onto the definition of "state" found in R.C. 1.59(G), which by its terms does not expressly include municipalities, but instead focuses on states as entities or other pre-state territorial designations under Federal law, such as territories or commonwealths (e.g., Puerto Rico). While we agree that remedial statutes like R.C. 163.51 should be liberally construed in order to promote their objects,9

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Bluebook (online)
Waghray v. City of Westlake, Unpublished Decision (4-4-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waghray-v-city-of-westlake-unpublished-decision-4-4-2002-ohioctapp-2002.