Court St. Dev. v. Stow Cty., Unpublished Decision (8-30-2000)
Court St. Dev. v. Stow Cty., Unpublished Decision (8-30-2000)
Opinion of the Court
Court Street has asserted that the trial court erred when it (1) denied Court Street's motion to introduce additional evidence during the administrative appeal; (2) refused to conduct a de novo hearing; (3) affirmed Council's decision when it was not supported by the evidence; and (4) determined that the denial of the application for a conditional zoning permit did not violate Court Street's constitutional rights. We overrule all four assignments of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Court Street owns a ninety-three acre site in an R-1 district, containing approximately twenty-five acres of wetlands. Court Street proposed developing Springbrook Reserve as a PUD on this site, which it purchased approximately twenty-five years ago. The proposed PUD would have three entrances to the site from adjacent roads. One hundred fourteen of the 121 lots would front on internal streets, and the remaining seven would front on one of the adjacent roads. In response to objections to an earlier proposal,2 Court Street brought the lots on the perimeter of the PUD into compliance with the R-1 restrictions. The average lot size within the proposed Springbrook Reserve PUD is 17,600 square feet, with the minimum lot size being 15,000 square feet. In an R-1 District, lots must be a minimum of 20,000 square feet.
The Stow Planning Commission approved Court Street's application for a conditional zoning certificate. The Stow Planning Commission subsequently gave approval to the final plat. During this approval process, four hearings were held, at which testimony was taken. Residents testified that previous developments had caused flooding problems in the area, which had not yet been abated. They raised the concern that a new PUD would exacerbate the existing flooding. In addition, residents expressed concerns about whether the wetlands would be disturbed by the plan to use them as a drainage basin, and whether they were sufficient to contain the resulting runoff.
The residents also testified about the existing character of the area, which Court Street hopes to develop as a PUD. Springbrook Reserve is "surrounded by existing residential neighborhood of a specific character. In the City of Stow that's a very rural character that is not similar to the subdivisions and the cookie-cutter allotments that otherwise exist." Several of the neighbors of the proposed PUD still farm their land, and most of the lots in the area are oversize. The roads were described as narrow two lane roads that might be unable to handle the increased traffic from 121 homes.
Court Street hired GBC Design to conduct a study of the drainage for the proposed development. Gary Rouse testified, on behalf of GBC Design, that he made computations based solely on "10 Year Stormwater Discharges" map and chart. The map, contained in the record as an exhibit, indicates the discharge rate at numerous points throughout the two districts that the proposed development overlaps. Those rates represent discharge from a storm of a severity that would normally only occur once every ten years. The map appears to pre-date the development of Eastwicke Farms because roads within the area designated as Eastwicke Farms are absent from the drainage map, even though the map does depict other roads.
Based on the drainage map, GBC Design concluded that as long as the water was desilted before entering the wetlands, the plan to use the wetlands for retention or detention of stormwater runoff made good engineering sense. The total discharge for the area, based on two key drainage points, was multiplied by the ratio of the area to be developed to the total drainage area. On that basis, it was projected that the runoff from the 58.8 developed acres would be 17 cubic feet per second. According to GBC Design, the planned detention/retention basins were sufficient to prevent any increase in this peak rate of stormwater run-off. Gary Rouse, from GBC Design, testified that that he was unaware of the existing flooding in the area when he made the computations based solely on a drainage map. Both Eastwicke Farms and the proposed Springbrook Reserve drain into the same culvert at Newcomer Road.
With respect to the wetland area, Court Street obtained permission from the Army Corps of Engineers ("ACE") to fill in approximately .255 acres in one portion of the wetlands on the parcel. In addition, the ACE imposed six requirements on Court Street that were designed to maintain the character of the wetlands both during and following development of the surrounding property.
Finkbeiner, Pettis and Strout, Inc. ("FPS") conducted an on-site traffic study to determine the impact of 121 new homes. The study was based on the expected number of trips per day per home and the expected traffic pattern for individuals exiting the development. FPS projected that traffic on Newcomer Road would increase by 9.7% a day, adding one vehicle per cycle during peak hours of operation at the intersection of Graham Road and Newcomer Road. Traffic on Call Road would likely increase 31.58%, and FPS projected that "there will be fewer gaps in the traffic stream on Call Road for access at side roads and driveways." Despite the potential inconvenience for residents on or near Call Road, "the existing facility can serve many more vehicles" than are currently being served. In response to concerns raised, FPS found that the sight distance at the proposed access road locations exceeded the minimum required.
During the numerous public hearings, residents raised other concerns to which Court Street responded. In response to concerns that the dewatering needed during construction would lower the water table and affect nearby wells, Environmental Design Group indicated that the area of impact of the temporary dewatering would not include any of the surrounding residential properties or affect the viability of the wetlands. In response to concerns that the PUD would increase the density in the area, Court Street created a plan that included strict compliance with the R-1 zoning.3 That proposal eliminated much of the open space, and included 127 homes. Because it is in compliance with R-1 restrictions, Court Street would not need to seek a conditional use permit if it were to implement that plan.
After two hearings, at which it accepted testimony, Council rejected the final plat and conditional zoning certificate. It found that Court Street "failed to meet the criteria established in Section 1167.02, Codified Ordinances of Stow, for approval of a planned unit development, particularly Section
Over the course of the hearings, several comparisons were made to Eastwicke Farms, a neighboring PUD. The average lot size of the Eastwicke Farms PUD is 18,890 sq. ft., with 194 lots covering approximately one hundred ten acres and containing "substantially less open space." Eastwicke Farms was the first PUD in the vicinity. There was testimony that the flooding drastically increased in the area after Eastwicke Farms was developed. The net density of each development, excluding wetlands, is slightly over 2 units per acre, and the two have similar frontage and setbacks.
Council does not have the authority to determine issues of constitutionality. Mobil Oil Corp. v. Rocky River (1974),
Regardless of the substance of the administrative appeal, Chapter 2506 of the Revised Code governs administrative appeals. See Willoughby Hills v. C.C. Bar's Sahara, Inc. (1992),
Court Street does not contend that any of these five exceptions apply; rather it contends that new evidence is permitted because its appeal to the trial court challenged the constitutionality of the zoning ordinance as applied in this particular decision. In drafting the Chapter of the Revised Code, which permits an appeal from an administrative hearing, the General Assembly clearly contemplated challenges to the constitutionality of decisions made by administrative bodies. See R.C.
Court Street's first assignment of error is overruled.
Court Street has agreed that "the Court of Common Pleas weighed the evidence, giving due deference to Council's resolution of evidentiary conflicts and determined that the decision on review of the record was supported by reliable, probative, and substantial evidence." We have already determined that additional evidence was not admissible pursuant to R.C.
Court Street's second assignment of error is overruled.
Uses within the proposed PUD shall be located so as to reduce any adverse influences and to protect the residential character of areas both within and adjacent to the PUD.
Stow Codified Ordinances 1167.02(a). Council also found the plans by Court Street failed to satisfy two other criteria:
The conditional use will be designed, constructed, operated and maintained so as to be harmonious and appropriate in appearance with the existing or intended character of the general vicinity, and that such use will not essentially change the character of the same area;
The conditional use will not be hazardous or disturbing to the use and enjoyment of property in the immediate vicinity for the existing and future uses permitted, nor substantially diminish or impair property values within the neighborhood.
Stow Codified Ordinances 1161.02 (c) and (d).
In deciding an appeal from an administrative body, the Court of Common Pleas must weigh the evidence "to determine whether there exists a preponderance of reliable, probative and substantial evidence to support he agency decision." Dudukovich,
Court Street has argued that it presented the only reliable and probative evidence, because the testimony of the residents opposed to the conditional use consisted of "unfounded fears" of individuals "determined to thwart development." See Adelman RealEstate Co. v. Gabanic (1996),
Neighbors to the proposed development testified as to existing flooding problems which arose from, or were greatly increased by, the development of the Eastwicke Farms PUD. Eastwicke Farms and the proposed Springbrook Reserve both drain into the same culvert at Newcomer Road. Despite efforts to resolve the Eastwicke Farms flooding, the problem remains. GBC Design conducted a drainage study, based on a drainage map, which indicated that the planned retention/detention basins would be able to manage the water flow to prevent any increase in stormwater runoff from the development. The individual who performed the study was unaware of, and did not take into account, the already existing flooding. According to the testimony of the residents, and not contradicted by any other testimony, City Engineers had evaluated the Eastwicke Farms plans and, prior to its development, had predicted that it would not cause flooding problems either.
Neighbors expressed concern about increased traffic. In response to these concerns, a traffic study was done. Although the increase in traffic was minimal on one of the exit roads, traffic on the second exit road would increase by nearly a third. The study concluded that the narrow two-lane road could handle the increased traffic, but predicted that there would be fewer opportunities to enter into the stream of traffic for residents on Call Road, and on the side streets that exit onto Call Road.
Finally, there was testimony as to the existing character of the neighborhood. Although the area is zoned R-1, and could be entirely composed of 20,000 square foot lots, that is not its current composition. The neighborhood was described as semi-rural, with large lots. Some of the neighbors still actively farm their property. Lots close to Springbrook Reserve are generally measured in acres, rather than the fractions of an acre proposed for lots within Springbrook Reserve.
Council determined that the PUD did not satisfy three specific requirements for approval as a conditional use. First, it determined that "the developer failed to provide sufficient evidence that the proposed planned unit development will not have an adverse influence on the residential character of the adjacent landowners," and thus did not comply with Stow Codified Ordinances 1167.02; supra at. This appears to be a misstatement of the ordinance, and is unsupported by the evidence. The ordinance directs the Planning Commission and Council to consider whether "[u]ses within the proposed PUD" are "located so as to reduce any adverse influences and to protect the residential character of areas both within and adjacent to the PUD." The use of the phrase "uses within" indicates that the factor to be considered is not the PUD in its entirety, but components of the PUD with respect to their effect on the residential character of both the PUD and the surrounding community. A plain reading of the language of the ordinance is that the administrative bodies are to evaluate the location of components within the PUD so that the particular uses do not impinge on the essential character of the neighborhood as a residential district. The evidence focused almost exclusively on the impact of the PUD, as a whole, on the surrounding area. There was no evidence that any specific uses within the PUD were inconsistent with or harmful to the residential character of either the PUD or the adjacent portions of the residential district. As a matter of law, this conclusion of fact is unsupported by a preponderance of the evidence.
Council also determined that the PUD was not designed so as to be harmonious with the existing or intended character of the general vicinity, or that it would essentially change the character of the same area. See Stow Codified Ordinances 1161.02(c). As the ordinance is written, see supra at , the PUD must be harmonious with either the existing or intended character of the general vicinity and it must not essentially change the character of the same area. The legislative body that created the Stow zoning scheme deliberately included the ability to develop PUDs in R-1 districts. As such, the intended character in any R-1 district containing large undeveloped sites includes the existence of PUDs. The second portion of the ordinance focuses not on the intended character, but on the existing character. With the exception of Eastwicke Farms, which exits onto one of the adjacent roads, there was credible, probative evidence that general vicinity is largely undeveloped and consists of a mixture of working farms and large residential lots. It was not wrong, as a matter of law, for Council to determine by a preponderance of the evidence that the creation of a development containing 121 lots, with an average size of 17,600 square feet would essentially change the character of the general vicinity.5
Finally, Council determined that the conditional use would either be hazardous or disturbing to the use and enjoyment of property in the immediate vicinity for either the existing or the future use, or that it would substantially diminish or impair property values within the neighborhood. Both flooding and increased traffic can reasonably be described as disturbing to the use and enjoyment of the property in the immediate vicinity. The evidence regarding the increased traffic was uncontradicted. A traffic study predicted a 31.58% increase in traffic on one of the narrow two-lane streets that border the planned development. The study also indicated that there would be "fewer gaps in the traffic stream * * * for access at side roads and driveways." With respect to the flooding, there was direct evidence that flooding is an existing problem. The expert who evaluated the planned development with respect to flooding was unaware, when he completed the study, that there was existing flooding. When provided with that information, he did not indicate whether this new knowledge altered his assessment of the risk of increased flooding. The expert's evaluation was premised on the capability of retention/detention basins to hold the floodwaters from the development for controlled release. It is a reasonable inference that basins that are capable of permitting controlled release of anticipated floodwaters from the proposed development might still be insufficient to permit controlled release of both the existing floodwaters and the anticipated additional floodwaters. This is particularly true since the drainage map on which he based his assessment is undated, but appears to have been created before the development of Eastwicke Farms. Council's determination that there was insufficient evidence to establish that the PUD would not be hazardous or disturbing to the use and enjoyment of the property in the immediate vicinity, premised on the uncontradicted evidence regarding traffic and on the unanswered questions about flooding, was not incorrect as a matter of law.
Council made three findings of fact supporting its decision. By its affirmation of Council's decision, the trial court determined that Council's findings of fact were supported by the preponderance of reliable, probative and substantial evidence. Although one of the findings of fact was incorrect, as a matter of law, the remaining two were not. As a result, the trial court's affirmation of Council's decision was not an abuse of discretion, and will not be reversed.
The Supreme Court of Ohio has held that in "an appeal, pursuant to R.C. Chapter 2506, which challenges the constitutionality of a zoning ordinance as applied, the issue for determination is whether the ordinance, in proscribing a landowner's proposed use of his land, has any reasonable relationship to the legitimate exercise of police power by the municipality." Mobil Oil Corp.
The Court finds that there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the County of Summit, Court of Common Pleas, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(E).
Costs taxed to Appellants.
Exceptions.
___________________________ WILLIAM R. BAIRD
FOR THE COURT, SLABY, J., BATCHELDER, J., CONCUR.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.