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State, ex Rel. Srovnal, v. Linton

Supreme Court of Ohio
May 12, 1976
46 Ohio St. 2d 207 (Ohio 1976)

Summary

In Srovnal, the city council adopted a resolution approving the Solon Planning and Zoning Commission's issuance of a permit to build a hotel and office complex.

Summary of this case from Buckeye Community Hope Found. v. Cuyahoga Falls

Opinion

No. 75-904

Decided May 12, 1976.

Municipal corporations — Zoning — Exceptions — Council affirmance of grant of use exception — An administrative act — Not subject to referendum.

Where the city council, under favor of the city's Planning and Zoning Code, by resolution confirms the action of the city planning and zoning commission granting a zoning use exception as to height regulations for a hotel and office building, which exception will not, in the judgment of the commission, substantially and permanently injure the appropriate use of neighboring property, and the applicant for such use exception files notarized consents of the owners of 89.47 percent of the area of the land deemed by the commission to be immediately affected by the proposed zoning use exception, such resolution is not legislative but is an administrative act and is not subject to the referendum provisions of R.C. 731.29.

APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County.

On January 27, 1975, the Planning and Zoning Commission of the city of Solon heard a proposal by the Stouffer Corporation and Davis Construction Company for the building of a hotel-office building complex in the city of Solon. The proposed site for the complex consists of 11.89 acres of land in a "Use District, Class U-8, or Motor Service District" under Section 1123.01 of the Planning and Zoning Code of the city of Solon. .

Section 1132.03 of the Planning and Zoning Code permits as main uses in Motor Service Districts: automotive facilities; lodging facilities; and eating and drinking establishments. The Motor Service District does not authorize office buildings as such. Additionally, there is a 35-foot height limitation on buildings in the Motor Service Area (Section 1132.09). The proposed office building was to be 50 feet high and the hotel 89 feet.

On February 10, 1975, the planning and zoning commission decided to permit a "use exception" for the Stouffer project, pursuant to Section 1127.02, which reads, in part, as follows:

"The city planning and zoning commission may in the event of property being alloted [ sic] which was undeveloped at the time of the passage of this ordinance * * * and in other specific cases, after public notice and hearing and subject to such conditions and safeguards as the commission may establish, determine and interpret the application of the use district regulations herein established, which permission shall be confirmed by resolution of council before effective, as follows:

"* * *

"Permit the location in any use district of any use provided such use in such location will not, in the judgment of the commission substantially and permanently injure the appropriate use of neighboring property, provided the petitioning applicant for such permit files the consents, duly acknowledged, of the owners of eighty per cent of the area of the land deemed by the commission to be immediately affected by the proposed use."

The planning and zoning commission set a public hearing and ordered the developer to obtain a petition of consent signed by at least 80 percent of the owners of land within a radius of 500 feet of the proposed site excluding all streets, highways and railroads.

The commission held a public hearing on April 14, 1975, and the developer presented the notarized consenting signatures of 89.47 percent of the property owners affected by the proposed development. As a result of these hearings and considerable discussion, the commission adopted Resolution No. 1975-1 granting a use exception to the Stouffer Corporation and the Davis Construction Company.

On June 16, 1975, the council of the city of Solon adopted Resolution No. 1975-78 confirming the action of the city planning commission in the granting of a use exception to Stouffer and Davis. The resolution reads as follows:

"A RESOLUTION

"Confirming the action of the city planning commission in the granting of a use exception to the Stouffer Corporation and the Davis Construction Company to construct a hotel, office building and all necessary appurtenances thereto on approximately 11.89 acres of land at the southeast corner of Bainbridge Road and Old Harper Road.

"WHEREAS, the city planning commission adopted its Resolution No. 1975-1 on May 12, 1975, granting a use exception to the Stouffer Corporation and the Davis Construction Company to construct a hotel and office building and all necessary appurtenances thereto on approximately 11.89 acres of land at the southeast corner of Bainbridge Road and Old Harper Road * * *.

"WHEREAS, this council approves the action of the city planning commission in granting of the aforesaid use exception, subject to the conditions stated therein, and the additional condition hereinafter stated.

"NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED By the Council of the city of Solon, state of Ohio:

"SECTION 1. That pursuant to Section 1127.02 of the Planning and Zoning Code this council confirms the aforesaid action of the city planning commission subject to the additional condition that the use exception shall not be transferred or assigned by either the Stouffer Corporation or the Davis Construction Company.

"SECTION 2. This resolution shall take effect and be in force from and after the earliest period allowed by law."

Following the adoption of Resolution No. 1975-78, the appellants filed a referendum petition with the appellee, Thelma Linton, Director of Finance of the city of Solon, Ohio. The appellee refused to certify the petition to the board of elections, maintaining that Resolution No. 1975-78 was not an ordinance or any legislation whatever but an administrative act made pursuant to existing law and, therefore, not subject to the referendum provisions of R.C. 731.29. The appellants then filed an original complaint for a writ of mandamus in the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, seeking to require the appellee to certify the petition to the board of elections.

The Court of Appeals granted the appellee's motion to dismiss the complaint and denied the writ of mandamus on the basis that the granting of the zoning use exception by the planning and zoning commission and its approval by the Solon city council was an administrative action subject to an administrative appeal but not subject to referendum.

The cause is now before this court pursuant to an appeal as a matter of right from the judgment of the Court of Appeals.

Messrs. Cain Lobo and Mr. Arthur L. Cain, for appellants.

Mr. Joseph W. Bartunek, law director, Messrs, Bartunek, Bennett Garofoli and Mr. Isaac Schulz, for appellee.


I.

It should be borne in mind that in this case we are concerned with a zoning use exception and not with a zoning use classification change. The former is purely administrative in character in connection with executing provisions of a municipal zoning code. The latter is legislative in character.

The appellants argue, in their brief, that Resolution No. 1975-78 makes substantive changes in the zoning code which are not provided for in the administrative procedure of the code and is, therefore, legislative in nature, constituting an amendment of the zoning code and subject to the referendum provisions of R.C. 731.29. Appellants maintain further that, where there is doubt on the question of whether or not the action of a legislative body is legislative or administrative, uncertainty should be resolved in favor of determining the action to be legislative because the right of referendum should be promoted to ensure a liberal construction of the voting rights reserved to the citizens of a municipality.

Specifically, the appellants urge that Resolution No. 1975-78 effects a zoning use change in the height regulations in a Motor Service Area as required by Section 1132.09 of the Planning and Zoning Code of the city of Solon.

II.

The question of whether particular actions of a legislative body are legislative or administrative in nature is not a novel one for this court's consideration.

In Donnelly v. Fairview Park (1968), 13 Ohio St.2d 1, this court held, in paragraphs one and two of the syllabus:

"1. A public body essentially legislative in character may act in an administrative capacity.

"2. The test for determining whether the action of a legislative body is legislative or administrative is whether the action taken is one enacting a law, ordinance or regulation, or executing or administering a law, ordinance or regulation already in existence."

The Donnelly case involved a resubdivision of land by the appellants. The resubdivision proposed by the appellants met all the provisions of the Fairview Park Zoning Code and was accepted and approved by the planning commission. The city council refused or declined to act on the proposed resubdivision. This court, Judge Zimmerman speaking for the majority, held that the refusal to approve a plan, which met the terms of a zoning ordinance already adopted and in existence, is an administrative act, and an appeal from such failure or refusal to approve lies to the Court of Common Pleas under R.C. Chapter 2506.

The court held that the test involved in that case was a functional one. If the action of the legislative body creates a law, the action is legislative; if the action consists of executing or administering an existing law, the action is administrative.

In Myers v. Schiering (1971), 27 Ohio St.2d 11, this court held that municipal referendum powers under Section 1f of Article II of the Ohio Constitution are limited to questions which municipalities are "authorized by law to control by legislative action." The court held that the passage by a city council of a resolution granting a permit for the operation of a sanitary landfill, as required by an existing zoning regulation, constitutes administrative action and is not subject to referendum proceedings. Clearly, in that case, the action of the city council consisted of executing or administering an existing zoning regulation which empowered the council to grant permits to dump in an area zoned "heavy industrial."

Section 1127.02 of the Planning and Zoning Code of the city of Solon allows the planning commission of said city to permit zoning use exceptions in any use district when the commission determines that such use will not substantially and permanently injure the appropriate use of neighboring property, provided that the applicant files the consents of the owners of 80 percent of the land deemed by the commission to be immediately affected.

The planning commission held a public hearing at which the developer presented the requisite signatures and, after discussion, adopted the resolution granting a zoning use exception.

The city council, pursuant to Section 1127.02 of the Planning and Zoning Code, confirmed the action of the planning commission and added an additional condition that the zoning use exception not be transferred or assigned.

Clearly, the actions of the planning commission and the council of the city of Solon consisted of executing and administering the zoning provisions of the city of Solon in respect to the granting of zoning use exceptions.

Appellants maintain that, while the procedures for a zoning use exception were followed, the mere fact that the procedures were administrative does not transform the action into an administrative decision if, in fact, the effect of the action was to amend or rezone a use district. Appellants maintain that the allowance of the proposed facilities so exceeded the height limitations of Section 1132.09 of the Planning and Zoning Code as to constitute a change in the zoning use classification of the use district. We disagree.

As has been previously pointed out, a zoning use exception is applicable only to a specific set of facts involving a specific parcel of land in a use district. Zoning ordinances imposing height restrictions ordinarily provide for the making of use exceptions or the granting of variances in appropriate circumstances. Schwartz v. Wagner (1956), 385 Pa. 364, 123 A.2d 417. Section 1127.02 permits the planning commission to allow use exceptions in respect to specific property in a use district. A use exception usually contemplates different structures than those provided for in the use district. An examination of Section 1127.02 of the Planning and Zoning Code does not disclose any intention to make height restrictions mandatory and, therefore, invulnerable to change by means of use exceptions, as maintained by the appellants.

This court is of the opinion that the actions of the planning commission and the council of the city of Solon consisted of executing and administering the provisions of the Planning and Zoning Code of the city relative to the granting of zoning use exceptions; and, that the action taken in granting such an exception affected only the property of the applicant and did not alter the character of the use district or any mandatory zoning requirements. The action taken was within the administrative discretion of the municipal government of the city of Solon and does not constitute legislative alteration or amendment of that municipality's Planning and Zoning Code. If appellants wish to challenge the exercise of the municipal government's discretion as improper, relief is available by means of an administrative appeal, pursuant to R.C. Chapter 2506.

The judgment of the Court of Appeals, dismissing appellants' writ of mandamus, is, therefore, affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

O'NEILL, C.J., HERBERT, STERN, CELEBREZZE, W. BROWN and P. BROWN, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

State, ex Rel. Srovnal, v. Linton

Supreme Court of Ohio
May 12, 1976
46 Ohio St. 2d 207 (Ohio 1976)

In Srovnal, the city council adopted a resolution approving the Solon Planning and Zoning Commission's issuance of a permit to build a hotel and office complex.

Summary of this case from Buckeye Community Hope Found. v. Cuyahoga Falls
Case details for

State, ex Rel. Srovnal, v. Linton

Case Details

Full title:THE STATE, EX REL. SROVNAL ET AL., APPELLANTS, v. LINTON. APPELLEE

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: May 12, 1976

Citations

46 Ohio St. 2d 207 (Ohio 1976)
346 N.E.2d 764

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