Warrensville Heights v. Bowers

188 N.E.2d 85, 90 Ohio Law. Abs. 116, 25 Ohio Op. 2d 101, 1961 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division
DecidedMarch 3, 1961
DocketNos. 208540, 209502
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 N.E.2d 85 (Warrensville Heights v. Bowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warrensville Heights v. Bowers, 188 N.E.2d 85, 90 Ohio Law. Abs. 116, 25 Ohio Op. 2d 101, 1961 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 245 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

Sater, J.

These two cases seeking declaratory judgment and other allied relief were consolidated for trial because all three causes of action contained in them turn on the wording and interpretation of a portion of the same statute, Section 3769.081, Revised Code, effective August 1, 1959. That statute reads as follows:

“The tax commissioner shall collect from each permit holder who conducts a pari-mutuel or certificate system of wagering where the wagering is less than five million dollars a sum of money equal to one tenth of one per cent of the total amount wagered and where the wagering is five million dollars or more a sum of money equal to fifteen hundredths of one per cent, of the total amount wagered during any horse-racing meeting for the purpose of providing operating revenue for the political subdivisions wherein such meetings are held. Such moneys shall be' collected by the commissioner within ten days after the close of such meeting and shall be forwarded immediately to the chief fiscal officers of the municipal corporations or townships in which such horse-racing meeting took place and in which any sueh facilities or accessory uses therefor were located. Such moneys shall be divided equally between the municipal corporations or townships in which such horse-racing meeting took place and in which any facilities or accessory uses therefor were located. Sueh municipal corporations or townships may distribute a portion of the moneys so received to any adjoining political subdivision which incurs increased expenses because of such horse-racing meeting.

“This section shall not apply to any agricultural society which holds a horse-racing permit.

[118]*118“The amount collected under this section from any one permit holder shall not exceed fifteen thousand dollars from any one horse-racing meeting in any calendar year.”

For the purposes of these cases the Village of North Randall is contiguous to and bounded on the west, north and east by the Village of Warrensville Heights (for the sake of brevity these two names will be referred to herein as North Randall and Warrensville). The boundary on the west is Warrensville Road, on the east it is Northfield Road; and on the north it is an east-west line about 557 feet south of Ellacott Parkway which is in Warrensville. Along this line between these two roads is a high heavy wire, Cyclone-type fence surmounted by strands of barbed wire.

Raceway Properties, Inc., formerly, and Cleveland Raceways, Inc., now owns a tract of land of about 122 acres between these two roads and lying mainly in North Randall but extending in its northwesterly portion up to Ellacott Parkway in Warrensville ; it is across this tract that the boundary fence referred to above extends, and so far as the record shows, the fence has been maintained, if not also actually created, by these successive property owners. At least two-thirds to three-quarters of this tract lie south of the fence and in North Randall. In this fence near its western end on Warrensville Road is a gate.

On the North Randall portion of this entire tract is located what is familiarly known as The Thistledown Race Track used for horse racing. There we find, as was conceded by Mayor Recak of Warrensville, the entire track itself, the grandstand for spectators, the horse barns, the paddock for horses ready for or leaving the track, all of the equipment and public totalizer board used in pari-mutuel betting, and sizable parking areas behind (south of) the grandstand for the benefit of officials, horse owners, employees of all sorts, and patrons of the track. The property owners also have a mutual arrangement with the owners of the North Randall Track immediately across Warrensville Road to the west to utilize each other’s public parking area whenever there is an overflow of patrons’ cars in the course of a racing meet at the other track; Thistledown owners have contracted out the public parking concession at their track, and they pay rent to the North Randall Track owners whenever [119]*119Thistledown uses their parking space. A parking fee is charged for patron nse of each of these spaces. Bnt strangely for a track concerned only with making money, this concession does not include the parking lot described immediately hereafter (Guren, page 25).

North of the North Randall-War rensville boundary line with its heavy wire fence, the owners of Thistledown have leased out (see Exhibits 2 and 3), to Musicarnival, Inc., all of the northwest corner of its property bounded on the west by Warrens-ville Road, except for a filling station on the immediate corner, on the east by Northfield Road, and Ellacott Parkway on the south. This leased-out area contains something less than twelve acres. To the east of it, clear to Northfield Road, there is unimproved grassland that Thistledown owners keep mown for hay and whereon race horses may once in a while be exercised; but with this land and its use we are by the pleadings and evidence, not here concerned. The western part of this leased-out acreage (see Exhibits 1, 6, B and N) abutting on Warrens-ville Road and constituting about forty percent thereof is used by Musicarnival, Inc., for its officers and its recreational and amusement equipment and devices. The remainder is a parking lot, the hard surface improvement and maintenance of which was divided roughly equally between Musicarnical, Inc., and the owners of Thistledown.

This lot is used by Musicarnival, Inc. every night of the year that operation is open. On the afternoon of race meets, it is used for over-flow parking by Thistledown and its permittees. The lot is also made available all year long to the Municipal officials and board of education of Warrensville, whose city hall is directly across Ellacott Parkway from the lot. It is not unlikely that utter strangers to the above-named parties also park there at times. There is little question that Thistledown patrons do use this parking lot but there was serious conflict in the evidence whether they paid to park there, whom they paid, and how much; there is also serious conflict whether “free-parking” signs designed for the benefit of Thistledown patrons were erected close to the lot during race meets, who put them up, and how long they remained in place. The foot gate in the heavy wire boundary fence that formed the southern margin of the lot was near the southeast corner of the lot, Some evi[120]*120dence indicated that this gate was always locked except when its lock was unlawfully broken, other evidence indicated that it was rarely locked, and still other evidence indicated that it was locked only part of the time — all during race meets. Suffice it to say that two facts and one conclusion arise from Thistledown patrons’ use of the lot. (1) Patrons who parked there showed a marked disdain for use of the gate; their marked preference was for crawling through a hole or holes in the fence (which holes Thistledown periodically and futility repaired), going under or through hinged parts of the track rail, crossing the track’s infield, and again crossing the track to get close enough to pay admission to the grandstand. (2) There was no evidence that any Thistledown patrons, after parking on the lot, ever walked westerly on the lot to the walkway on the east side of Warrensville Road, and thence to the area of the grandstand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 N.E.2d 85, 90 Ohio Law. Abs. 116, 25 Ohio Op. 2d 101, 1961 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warrensville-heights-v-bowers-ohctcomplfrankl-1961.