Women of the Old West End v. City of Toledo, Unpublished Decision (6-5-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1998
DocketNo. L-97-1204.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Women of the Old West End v. City of Toledo, Unpublished Decision (6-5-1998) (Women of the Old West End v. City of Toledo, Unpublished Decision (6-5-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Women of the Old West End v. City of Toledo, Unpublished Decision (6-5-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION
The relevant facts of this case are as follows. On April 24, 1995, the First Church of God in Toledo, Ohio, submitted an application for a special use permit regarding a building, located in an R-4 zoning district, which the church owned at 436 W. Delaware Avenue in the Old West End neighborhood of Toledo. The church and the Cherry Street Mission sought the special use permit for an emergency shelter facility for homeless women, known as the Sparrow's Nest, which housed fourteen beds and provided showers, meals, clothing and safety for women, along with social service referrals and rehabilitative help. The application was heard before the Toledo City Plan Commission on August 10, 1995. Prior to the hearing, the Commission Staff recommended that the permit be denied because the location did not conform to the group home spacing requirements set forth section 1117.01(i)(8) of the Toledo Municipal Code ("TMC") and because the Old West End neighborhood had already far exceeded its quota for group homes and similar facilities. Nevertheless, at the hearing, the issue was raised as to whether the Sparrow's Nest truly fell within the TMC's definition of a group home. Accordingly, the Commission Board recommended that the issue be submitted to the City Law Department for guidance and deferred the application to its October 12, 1995 meeting.

On October 4, 1995, the City Law Department submitted a memorandum to the Commission setting forth its opinion on the issue. The law department opined that a homeless shelter for women, by definition, did not meet the standards and requirements of a group home special use classification set forth in TMC section 1167.01(b)(21). That is, the Sparrow's Nest is not a "State licensed or certified home for residence care of children or developmentally disabled persons which is owned and/or operated by a public agency, a private community chest funded agency, an established private single-family home or a home established by a nonprofit corporation, into which placement of such persons is made by a public agency and/or which is supervised by such agency with respect to licensing and regulations and standards of operation, program and personnel." As an alternative, the law department suggested that the Commission consider reviewing the application as one for a hospital or institution special use classification. Section 1103.26 of the TMC defines an institution as a "building occupied by a non-profit corporation or a non-profit establishment for public use." The law department noted, however, that in order to utilize this special use, the Commission would have to waive the provision in TMC section 1167.01(b)(7) which requires that the institution be located on a "site of not less than five acres * * *."

On November 9, 1995, the application was again heard before the Commission Board. At this hearing, the Commission Staff recommended that the Commission waive the five acre site requirement of TMC section 1167.01(b)(7) and approve the application of the Sparrow's Nest for a special use permit as a hospital or institution. At that hearing, Brian Prosek, attorney for the applicant, Gary Taylor of the City Law Department, and Don Andrews, the Executive Director of the Cherry Street Mission, spoke in support of granting the permit. Denis Magee, a member of the Board of Directors of Toledo Old Towne Community Organization spoke in opposition to the permit. In addition, the Commission considered a letter from plaintiff-appellant, David Neuendorff, who opposed the granting of a special use permit for the Sparrow's Nest as a group home or similar facility. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Commission voted to approve the staff recommendation. Thereafter, on December 5, 1995, the Toledo City Council passed Ordinance No. 753-95,

"Granting a Special Use Permit for an emergency shelter for women at 436 W. Delaware Avenue, Toledo, Ohio; subject to certain conditions; and declaring an emergency."

The Ordinance then expressly waived the minimum five acre site requirement in TMC section 1167.01(b)(7).

On December 29, 1995, plaintiffs-appellants, Women of the Old West End, Inc. ("WOWE") and David Neuendorff, filed a notice of appeal with the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas (case No. 95-3687), pursuant to R.C. Chapters 2505 and 2506, appealing the passage of Ordinance No. 753-95 and naming the city of Toledo as appellee. In their subsequently filed brief, appellants asserted that the Toledo City Council erroneously granted the special use permit for several reasons. Appellants argued that the TMC does not recognize emergency shelters (which the applicant defined the Sparrow's Nest to be) as permissible uses in an R-4 zoning district, that the Sparrow's Nest most closely resembled a "group home" or "similar facility" thereby triggering the TMC saturation requirements, and that even if the Sparrow's Nest could be defined as an "institution," the five acre parcel size requirement could not be waived.

On April 3, 1996, WOWE and Neuendorff filed a complaint in mandamus, for declaratory judgment and for injunctive relief in the lower court against the Toledo City Plan Commission and the city of Toledo (case No. 96-1073). Appellants alleged that the Commission unlawfully failed, neglected and/or refused to apply the obligatory criteria of TMC sections 1117.01(i)(9), 1123.01(J) and 1167.02(b), and others, in granting the special use permit and site waiver, that appellees knew or should have known of the oversaturation of group homes, similar facilities and/or residential support facilities within the Old West End planning district when it granted the permit and that appellees have routinely failed, refused and/or neglected to apply the obligatory criteria of the TMC for a period of at least ten years. The complaint further alleged that appellees' historic practice of granting special use permits for group homes, similar facilities and/or residential support facilities in violation of the TMC have caused damage and loss to the value of Neuendorff's and WOWE members' property within the Old West End planning district. Appellants then demanded a judgment declaring that appellees had violated provisions of the TMC in the historic granting of special use permits, an injunction requiring appellees to follow and apply the applicable provisions of the TMC in considering and granting any future special use permits, and the issuance of a writ of mandamus permanently enjoining appellees from failing to follow and apply provisions of the TMC in considering and granting any future special use permits.

On May 16, 1996, appellees filed a motion to consolidate and motion for summary judgment in both cases. As to the administrative appeal, appellees claimed that appellants lacked standing to bring an R.C. Chapter 2506 appeal and that the TMC allows for the granting of the special use permit at issue. With regard to the original complaint, appellees argued that appellants did not meet the legal standards for relief under the three theories claimed. On May 7, 1997, the lower court filed an opinion and judgment entry in both cases. As a preliminary matter, the court denied the motions to consolidate for purposes of clarity of the issues. In the administrative appeal, the court held that WOWE did not have standing to bring the R.C. Chapter 2506 appeal but that Neuendorff, as a property owner who appeared either in person or in writing during the administrative process and whose rights as a property owner were affected by the passage of Ordinance No. 753-95, did have such standing.

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Bluebook (online)
Women of the Old West End v. City of Toledo, Unpublished Decision (6-5-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/women-of-the-old-west-end-v-city-of-toledo-unpublished-decision-ohioctapp-1998.