720 N.E.2d 1011 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1998
A new zoning inspector for Franklin Township took office on February 15, 1997. He received complaints from defendants' neighbors about the operations being conducted on defendants' property. He reviewed the prior zoning inspector's letter to defendants and disagreed with its contents. He also inspected defendants' property and concluded that they were in violation of the township's zoning regulations. He therefore posted a notice on defendants' property on April 9, 1997, in which he informed them that they were in violation of the township's zoning regulations. He sent a letter on April 21, 1997, explaining to defendants that before any commercial or industrial buildings could be constructed, they would need to have their plans approved by the Summit County Engineer's Office and to obtain a zoning permit. Another letter was sent by the township's attorney on April 22, 1997, informing defendants that the township did not consider their business to be exempt from township zoning regulations. On May 22, 1997, Franklin Township filed a complaint against defendants in which it sought a declaration that defendants were in violation of the township's zoning regulations. It also sought a permanent injunction to prevent defendants from operating their business from their land in Franklin Township.
Defendants, even after receiving notice from the township that they were in violation of the zoning regulations, continued to implement their plan to operate the trucking terminal from their property. A witness testified during the preliminary injunction hearing that "hundreds of tons of limestone" had been *708 brought in during April and May 1997. Also during May 1997, gravel was brought in and a driveway was constructed. Truck traffic began on the property at least as early as April 1997. By June 3, 1997, defendants had completed moving their equipment onto the property. On that date, they started operating as a trucking terminal. They did not apply to the township for permission to operate the terminal, believing that they had a right to operate without permission.
On July 8, 1997, the trial court held a preliminary injunction hearing. On July 17, 1997, it issued a preliminary injunction, enjoining defendants from operating their trucking business on the land and prohibiting further construction at the site. Contrary to the trial court's order, however, defendants continued to operate their business, and, on August 12, 1997, the trial court found that they had violated the injunction. It found that Ms. Meadows had solicited business for the trucking firm after the injunction was issued, and it ordered her incarcerated at the Summit County Jail for thirty days, which was suspended as long as no further trucking operations were conducted on the premises. It further ordered defendants to pay the township's attorney fees and the costs of the hearing.
On September 9, 1997, the township's action was tried to the court. On September 19, 1997, the trial court ruled that defendants had failed to provide sufficient evidence that their trucking business could be classified as a public utility, pursuant to R.C.
"Determination of whether a particular entity is a public utility for the purpose of exemption from local zoning restrictions requires consideration of several factors related to the `public service' and `public concern' characteristics of a public utility. While the definition of a `public utility' is a `flexible one, the entity must provide evidence that it possesses certain attributes associated with public utilities or its claim to that status must fail."
Defendants, therefore, had the burden of providing sufficient evidence to demonstrate public utility status. Absent such evidence, their business was not entitled to that classification.Id. at 389,
Public service is demonstrated by the "devotion of an essential good or service to the general public which has a legal right to demand or receive this good or service." Id. at 387,
Besides demonstrating the public service aspect of a public utility, defendants were required to show that their business was a matter of public concern. *710
The public concern of a public utility arises from the monopolistic aspects of the business and the nature of the business in which it is engaged. See A B Refuse Disposers,supra,
Defendants introduced no evidence relating to the nature of their services. They did not demonstrate anything in particular about their specific business or the trucking industry in general. In addition, they introduced no evidence whatsoever concerning the level of competition in the local marketplace. They did not address whether they held a monopolistic or oligopolistic position in the marketplace. In fact, they failed to even define the market. According to Ms. Meadows's testimony at the preliminary injunction hearing, their list of clients did not include any Franklin Township residents, arguably leading, to the conclusion that their business was not a public concern, at least as to Franklin Township residents. See A B RefuseDisposers, supra,
Finally, although defendants are registered with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio and the Federal Highway Administration, regulation alone is not dispositive of the question of whether an entity's business is a matter of public concern.1 Id. at 389-390,
Defendants failed to introduce sufficient evidence to demonstrate that their business was a public utility, entitled to exemption from Franklin Township's zoning regulations pursuant to R.C.
Equitable estoppel prevents relief when one party induces another to believe that certain facts exist and the other party changes his position in reasonable reliance on those facts. Chubbv. Ohio Bur. of Workers' Comp. (1998),
In this case, defendants failed to set forth sufficient facts to demonstrate the applicability of equitable estoppel. First, defendants could assert estoppel against the township only if the prior zoning inspector made a statement that was within his authority to make and that statement actually induced reliance. See Pilot Oil Corp. v. Ohio Dept. of Transp. (1995),
Defendants presented no evidence regarding the scope of the zoning inspector's authority. They only showed, through the testimony of the zoning inspector, that he had given a copy of the letter at issue to the chairperson of the trustees of Franklin Township. That testimony alone was not sufficient. Defendants did not present any township resolutions or zoning regulations that defined the authority of the zoning inspector. Defendants did not show what person or entity, if any, may exempt a business from the township's zoning regulations as a *712 public utility, or what procedures were necessary to resolve such a case. Accordingly, because defendants presented no evidence showing that the zoning inspector was acting within the scope of his authority when he informed them that their business was exempt from the township zoning regulations, defendants have failed to demonstrate the applicability of equitable estoppel to this case.
Second, the February 12, 1997, letter did not necessarily induce defendants to rely to their detriment. Defendants were preparing to move, and were making all of the necessary arrangements to move, well before they were told that their business was exempt from the township's zoning regulations. According to Ms. Meadows, during October 1996, defendants sent the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio a notice of their new address in Franklin Township because they were required to inform the commission of their "home domicile." Defendants failed to demonstrate that they were waiting for confirmation from the zoning inspector before they moved or that they would not have moved had the zoning inspector not determined their business to be exempt from the township's zoning regulations. Instead, they continued with their plans to move while the decision of the zoning inspector was pending. Defendants have, therefore, failed to show that they were induced to move to Franklin Township by the zoning inspector.
Finally, defendants' reliance on the February 12, 1997, letter was not reasonable, considering that that letter's conclusions were revoked when the new zoning inspector informed them that they were in violation of the township's zoning code. The township notified defendants of its position that their trucking company was not a public utility as early as April 9, 1997, when the new zoning inspector posted a notice of violation at their premises, and no later than May 22, 1997, when the township filed its complaint against them. Despite that notice, defendants continued with their plans to move their business into the township and to begin trucking operations. Defendants did not actually begin operations at their facility until the first week of June 1997. According to Ms. Meadows's testimony, after receiving notice that the township considered them in violation of its zoning code, defendants did not stop with their plans to move their operations on the advice of their attorney. At that time, they knew the township's position and understood that the township would consider any further actions on their part to be in violation of the township's zoning regulations. They were, therefore, not operating in reliance on the February 12, 1997, letter. Defendants' second assignment of error is overruled.
Finally, defendants have argued that the trial court improperly awarded attorney fees to the township. They have argued that pursuant to R.C.
Judgment affirmed.
SLABY, P.J., and REECE, J., concur.