287 N.E.2d 814 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1972
For clarity the parties will be designated "plaintiffs" and "defendant" or "defendants" as in the trial court. The defendant City of Cleveland may also be called the "City" or "Cleveland."*
The Court of Common Pleas affirmed. We affirm the Court of Common Pleas.
I. The judgment of the Board of Zoning Appeals is null and void in that said body lacked jurisdiction as previously determined by this Court in Kovacic v. City of Cleveland, Case No. 27037.
II. Said judgment is contrary to the zoning ordinances of the City of Cleveland which do not restrict the number of rooms in a mutiple-family zone.
III. The Board denied plaintiff-appellant use of its property despite the fact that the building was legally built within the provisions of the Zoning Code in effect at the time of its construction for 101 suites as presently used on the premises, and as permitted under Section 1281-13 *202 (d) of the Cleveland Zoning Code of 1929. (Sec. 211-22 (1945)).
IV. The decision is contrary to the weight of the evidence as presented in the trial court by the transcript from the Board of Zoning Appeals and by the pertinent and applicable zoning ordinances as presented to the trial court.
V. That the decision attempts to enforce zoning provisions retroactively contrary to Article
VI. That the decision of the Board was arbitrary and capricious and had no relationship to the health, welfare, morals and safety of the community.
VII. That the Board of Zoning Appeals required parking facilities beyond the requirements of Sec. 211-2.5 of the Zoning Code of the City of Cleveland in effect at the time of the construction of the subject building and that such was contrary to the provisions of R. C.
VIII. That the Board of Zoning Appeals is restricted by Charter to act as an appellate body and, therefore, had no right to act as an administrative body and sua sponte place additional parking requirements on the premises not held in violation by the Commissioner of Housing.
IX. The Board of Zoning Appeals had no right to hold arbitrarily without legislative provision that 300 square feet of parking space was required per car for each tenant when there is no such requirement in Section 5.1118 of the Zoning Code of Cleveland of 1949.
X. That Section 5.1118 of the Zoning Code of Cleveland is invalid, illegal and unconstitutional in that it is indefinite without definite standards or rules therein provided to guide the administrative officer and unlawfully delegates to an administrative officer legislative powers as prohibited under Article
XI. That the plaintiff-appellant was deprived of his *203
constitutional rights and his day in court by being prevented from offering additional testimony in defense of his property as provided in Article I, and especially Article
XII. The trial court failed to answer written interrogatories, which if answered would have required the Court to find for the plaintiff-appellant. Specifically, plaintiff-appellant inter alia placed the following interrogatories before the Court: (Interrogatories omitted.)
We are required by Rule 12, Appellate Rules, to dispose of each assigned error in writing. Assignments XI and XII are covered specifically under Section VII of this opinion. The balance of the opinion is devoted to considerations which answer the first ten. We find all twelve without merit.
The permit issued for the original construction did not conform to existing zoning limits. That is, it permitted construction with less than one parking space for each suite. Moreover, the alterations were made without any permit, although the plaintiff contends the work done to alter the original construction was within an ordinance exception making a permit unnecessary [Sec. 1007(b), Code of Cleveland, 1924].2 Whether a permit was required or not, plaintiff insists that all the work done conformed to *204 building and zoning standards applicable at the time of construction. The alleged conformance includes the claim that the original construction, and the original construction as altered, met the garage space requirements determined by law by the number of suites and individual families on the premises.3 For its part the City contends that plaintiff relies on antiquated ordinances not in effect when the plaintiff "sought a permit * * * for the purpose of adding three suites and nineteen rooming occupancies" and further that the original construction was illegal because when the permit issued it did not meet zoning ordinance requirements then in effect and the alterations fare no better because they were made without any permit. This argument boils down to a contention that the plaintiff does not have either a conforming or a non-conforming use and therefore seeks and needs a variance to legalize non-compliance with current zoning.
It is undisputed that 1962-1963 amendments to Cleveland zoning ordinances currently control zoning in the City. It is also conceded that the original construction and alterations made in this case could not meet the requirements imposed by the zoning ordinances as amended in 1962-1963.
With respect to the City's claim that plaintiff seeks a variance, plaintiff insists that it attempted to get a certificate of occupancy for the 101 suites and 19 rooming occupancies presently at 12701 Shaker Boulevard but that because of "an arrangement between the various Cleveland Building and Zoning Departments, a person denied a certificate of occupancy because of alleged improper use and occupancy must appeal such a decision to the Board of Zoning Appeals in order to procure the necessary certificate." Thus, the plaintiff says that its present effort had to be formalized in such a way that itappears to be requesting a variance even though the premises were constructed, altered *205 and have always been used in a manner conforming to the zoning code in effect at the time, excepting only the formality of a permit for the alterations.4 And, if this argument is not persuasive, the plaintiff contends it has a legal non-conforming use which cannot be defeated by the mere technical fault represented by the failure to get legal building permits.
If, in fact, the plaintiff seeks only a certificate of occupancy, then its initial appeal properly should have been addressed to the Board of Building Standards and Appeals rather than to the Board of Zoning Appeals, Kovacic v. Cleveland Boardof Zoning Appeals, Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, No. 27037, 1965, unreported. However, the critical question is whether the zoning ordinances were complied with. For this reason we have determined that the appeal is one asserting a pre-existing non-conforming use and/or the right to a variance. This establishes the jurisdiction of the Board of Zoning Appeals of the City of Cleveland (see fn. 8, infra). We will resolve those issues in the light of the zoning standards in effect at the time of the original construction and alterations.
Zoning ordinances, on the other hand, control land use (e.g., types of building, heights, style, commercial, non-commercial multi-family, residential) and setbacks, side-yards, and parking. Only the Board of Zoning Appeals hears8 complaints generated by the application of the zoning regulations. Rulings of the Board of Zoning Appeals can be taken to the Court of Common Pleas for review.9
Because there is no claim by the City that plaintiff is in violation of the building code, except in the matter of the failure (1) to get a legal permit to authorize the original construction, and (2) to get any permit at all to make the alterations, there is no other building code issue in the case. However, there is a question whether the omission determines the issue of a non-conforming use under the zoning ordinance in effect at the time (see fn. 12).
"Garage and parking space.
"(a) No main buildings may be hereafter erected in a residence district without providing adequate space on the premises for the parking or garaging of the motor vehicles of the occupants, employees, patrons, clients and guests thereof. Adequate access to motor vehicle storage space from the street shall be provided on the lot and kept open and unobstructed * * *.
"* * * *
"(c) In any use districts, private garage space not to exceed 200 feet of floor area for each family occupying or permitted to occupy the premises, may be provided as an accessory use. On a lot on which hereafter any dwelling or apartment house is erected or remodeled for more than two families, space, not in a driveway nor nearer the street than half the depth of the lot, except in the case of a basement garage, shall be provided andmaintained for the storage of motor vehicles at the rate of atleast one car for each family to be housed in thebuilding."11 (Emphasis supplied.)
"* * * *
"(Ord. No. 483-43. Passed June 25, 1943. Effective August 5, 1943.)"
The record is clear beyond peradventure that the construction and alterations in issue were made during 1945-1949 when Section 211-2.5 was the controlling ordinance. Thus, when the initial permit was issued in this case, the building which it purported to sanction was prohibited by the zoning ordinances applicable at the time and *208 date of issuance, for the permit allowed the appellants 98 suites and 85 parking spaces. This was done in the face of Ordinance 211-2.5 which required a parking space for "at least one car for each family." We assume only one family per suite. Were there more, additional problems would confront the plaintiff. Additional problems or not the permit could not legalize beyond the ordinance. Therefore, the permit was a nullity authorizing nothing. It follows that the original construction was characterized by a fundamental fault from the outset — the substantive vice inherent in insufficient garage space. The fault was compounded when alterations increased the number of suites to 101 and added 19 rooming occupancies without parking additions.
It is a well-established principle of law that an illegal use cannot achieve the validation represented by a pre-existent non-conforming use so as to exempt it from a zoning regulation which became effective subsequent to the illegal use.12Leigh v. City of Wichita (1938),
Construction which is substantively illegal (that is, in violation of the standards set by the building or zoning codes) is deemed, quite reasonably, an unfit subject for vindication by a principle based on lawful use pre-dating a subsequent regulation. It is for this reason that any use substantively illegal never achieves the plateau allowed a "pre-existent" non-conforming use. The use in the instant case is governed by the principle that construction and/or alterations not made in conformity with the applicable substantive zoning regulation cannot achieve the status of a pre-existent non-conforming use and must be validated, if at all, by a variance.
It may be argued that "equity" requires a balancing of hardship after the fact of long violation. If there is equity in a prolonged violation, it has only a specious quality. The wrongdoer brought his condition on himself, cf. Anderson v.City of Minneapolis (1970),
Absent some evidence in the record to undergird a judgment that the action by the Board was "unconstitutional, illegal, arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, or unsupported by the preponderance of substantial, reliable and probative evidence on the whole record,"15 we cannot upset the Common Pleas Court's affirmance of the Board's conclusions that the variance allowed conformed to the legal standards the Board was authorized to apply. After a careful review of the record we find no basis to support reversal.
The essence of number XI is the claim that the plaintiff was denied due process of law because it was prevented from offering additional testimony in defense of its property on appeal to the Court of Common Pleas.
We find this claim empty of persuasiveness because the record will not support the claim (see VI above). Moreover, the mere filing of an affidavit16 does not automatically quicken the statutory right nor compel the Court of Common Pleas to take additional evidence unless the record will support some one of the deficiencies enumerated in the statute, see R. C.
The gravamen of assignment number XII seems to be that the failure of the trial court to answer interrogatories posed by the plaintiff amounted to the omission of findings of fact and conclusions of law required by R. C.
In our view the constitutional concepts embodied in Article
Judgment affirmed.
KRENZLER and JACKSON, JJ., concur.
Sec. 1281-3; dwelling house districts
Sec. 1281-3; 1281-4; parking and garages
Sec. 1281-11; heights districts
Sec. 1281-12; heights districts exceptions
Sec. 1281-13; area districts
Sec. 1281-14; front yards
Sec. 1281-15; rear yards
Sec. 1281-16; side yards
Sec. 1281-17; yard exceptions
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§ 2 Right to alter, reform, or abolish government, and repeal special privileges.
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