595 N.E.2d 1044 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1991
This dispute arises from an administrative appeal to the Summit County Court of Common Pleas pursuant to R.C. Chapter 2506. In 1989, plaintiff-appellant, T.O.P. 1 Partners ("TOP"), purchased the Workman Elementary School in Stow for the purpose of establishing a shopping center. In an attempt to secure approval of their site plans, TOP appeared before the Stow City Council ("council"). On March 15, 1990, a resolution authorizing the project was defeated.
TOP filed a notice of appeal to the common pleas court on April 9, 1990. A motion for leave to present additional evidence and an accompanying brief was submitted by TOP on May 24, 1990. Defendant-appellee, city of Stow, then filed its answer on June 4, 1990. No further materials were offered by the parties. On October 15, 1990, the common pleas court denied TOP's motion and affirmed the council's decision. This appeal follows. To simplify our resolution of this dispute, the order of the three assignments of error has been rearranged. *26
Ordinarily, judicial review in R.C. Chapter 2506 administrative appeals is confined to the transcript. R.C.
"The officer or body failed to file with the transcript, conclusions of fact supporting the final order, adjudication, or decision appealed from[.]" R.C.
While incorrectly citing the statute, TOP squarely raised this provision in the common pleas court as grounds for presenting additional evidence. The face of the transcript confirms that the council did not submit conclusions of fact as required.
The common pleas judge excused this omission by allowing counsel for the city of Stow to include "findings of facts" in the answer to TOP's notice of appeal. We cannot agree that this satisfies R.C.
This assignment of error is well taken.
"III. The transcript establishes that the agencies of the City, in denying site plan approval, acted illegally and unconstitutionally; and the trial court erred in finding otherwise."
Having already ruled that TOP should have been permitted to supplement the record, any discussion of briefs or the merits of the administrative appeal would be premature. Accordingly, these assignments of error are overruled.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
QUILLIN, P.J., and COOK, J., concur. *27