Mill Creek Metro. Dist. Bd. of Commrs. v. Less , 2022 Ohio 1289 ( 2022 )


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  • [Cite as Mill Creek Metro. Dist. Bd. of Commrs. v. Less, 
    2022-Ohio-1289
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    MAHONING COUNTY
    The Board of Commissioners of the Mill Creek Park
    Metropolitan District,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    Diane M. Less, et. al.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ___________________________________
    OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
    Case Nos. 20MA0074
    20MA0082
    ___________________________________
    Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of
    Mahoning County, Ohio
    Case Nos. 2019-CV-00485
    2019-CV-00316
    BEFORE:
    Judge Jason P. Smith
    Judge Peter B. Abele
    Judge Michael D. Hess
    __________________________________________________________________
    JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CAUSE REMANDED
    Carl James                                         James E. Roberts
    4450 Market Street                                 Elizabeth H. Farbman
    Youngstown, Ohio 44512                             Roth, Blair, Roberts, Strasfeld & Lodge
    Attorney for Defendant-Appellant                   100 Federal Plaza, East, Suite 600
    Youngstown, Ohio 44503
    Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee
    2
    Dated: April 14, 2022
    Smith, V.J.
    {¶1} Appellant, Diane M. Less, appeals the judgments of the trial court
    denying her motions for summary judgment, which were filed in two different
    cases below. In both judgments, the trial court determined that Less was not
    entitled to summary judgment regarding the issues of whether Appellee, The Board
    of the Commissioners of Mill Creek Metropolitan Park District, (hereinafter “Park
    District”), was authorized to appropriate her property for public use in order to
    expand an existing bikeway, or recreational trail, and whether the Park District
    complied with the statutory requirements governing the taking of private property
    through the power of eminent domain. On appeal, Less raises two assignments of
    error, contending 1) that the common pleas court erred in overruling her motion for
    summary judgment because the Park District failed to have a statutorily authorized
    reason or purpose for the appropriation by eminent domain as required by R.C.
    1545.11; and 2) that the common pleas court erred in overruling her motion for
    summary judgment because the complaint and the process leading up to the filing
    of the complaint did not follow the mandatory requirements set forth in R.C.
    163.04, 163.041 and 163.05.
    3
    {¶2} Because we conclude that the resolutions passed by the Park District
    failed to set forth a statutorily authorized purpose for the appropriation of the
    property at issue, we find the Park District lacked statutory authority under R.C.
    1545.11 to appropriate both Less’s and Green Valley’s private property for the
    development and extension of a public bikeway or recreational trail, and it abused
    its discretion in passing a resolution to go forward with the appropriation of the
    property at issue. We further conclude the trial court erred in finding that Less did
    not meet her burden of proving the Park District abused its discretion in the
    passage of the resolutions. Because we have found that the Park District abused its
    discretion, Less has rebutted the presumption that the resolutions constituted prima
    facie evidence of necessity and therefore, we conclude the trial court erred in
    denying her motions for summary judgment. Thus, the arguments raised under
    Less’s first assignment of error are meritorious and are sustained.
    {¶3} In light of our disposition of Less’s first assignment of error, the
    judgments of the trial court denying Less’s motions for summary judgment are
    hereby reversed and this matter is remanded to the trial courts with instructions to
    enter summary judgment in favor of Less in both cases. Furthermore, despite the
    fact that Green Valley is not participating on appeal, the trial court’s denial of
    summary judgment in favor of Green Valley is also reversed and remanded.
    Additionally, because our disposition of Less’s first assignment of error has
    4
    rendered the arguments raised under her second assignment of error moot, we need
    not address them. Accordingly, the judgments of the trial courts are reversed and
    these matters are hereby remanded with instructions.
    FACTS
    {¶4} On March 8, 2019, the Park District filed a petition titled
    “Petition/Complaint to Appropriate Property” naming Diane Less and several
    others.1 In the petition the Park District alleged that the trial court possessed
    jurisdiction over the subject matter of the petition under Chapter 163 of the Ohio
    Revised Code as well as R.C. 1545.11. The petition alleged that the Park District
    had previously passed a resolution on February 25, 1993, “resolving that the public
    interest demanded the construction of a bicycle path on a railroad right-of-way
    abandoned by Conrail, stretching from the Western Reserve Road on the south to
    the Mahoning County/Trumbull County line on the north, and having a length of
    approximately 10.6 miles, situated in Mahoning County.” The petition further
    alleged that 10.6 miles of the “bikeway trail” had already been constructed, “which
    construction comprised Phases I and II of the Mill Creek MetroParks Bikeway
    1
    Diane Less was the primary property owner named in the petition in lower case no. 19CV485. The other
    defendants were named because they were thought to possibly have an interest in the Less property. Those
    individuals are not part of the present case on appeal. Additionally, the Park District filed an earlier petition on
    February 12, 2019, naming Green Valley Wood Products, LLC (hereinafter “Green Valley”) as the primary
    defendant, but also naming Less and several others, as it was believed they may have had an interest in the property.
    That case number was 19CV316 and was before a different trial court judge. The petition that was filed against Less
    in case no. 19CV485 makes essentially the same allegations as the petition that was filed against Green Valley in
    case no. 19CV316. Less is currently appealing the summary judgment decisions issued in both cases.
    5
    project (the ‘Bikeway’).” The petition went on to allege that the Park District
    intended the following:
    to acquire a perpetual easement and right of way on the Less
    Property and enter upon the property being appropriated for the
    purposes of completing a 6.4 mile extension of the existing Mill
    Creek Metroparks Bikeway in Mahoning County, Ohio, which
    will provide a safe, uniformly designed, multi-use, off-road trail
    facility dedicated to public transportation and recreational
    purposes (herein “Phase III”).
    {¶5} Additionally, the petition alleged that on or about September 10, 2018,
    the Park District, by resolution of the Mill Creek Board of Park Commissioners,
    resolved as follows:
    that it is necessary and in the best public interest that Mill Creek
    be authorized to consummate and complete all acquisition
    transactions as may be necessary to acquire the real property
    contemplated for inclusion in Phase III of the project or, in
    instances where agreement cannot be reached with the
    landowner, that Mill Creek by and through its legal counsel be
    authorized to appropriate such property by power of eminent
    domain and initiate legal proceedings pursuant to Ohio Revised
    Code Chapter 163.
    Elsewhere in the petition the Park District claimed it was seeking to acquire “an
    exclusive perpetual easement for public highway and road purposes, including, but
    not limited to, access, construction, improvement, repair, operation, relocation,
    and/or maintenance of Phase III * * * [,]” pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Chapter
    163 and R.C. 1545.11.
    6
    {¶6} Finally, the petition alleged that the Park District had complied with
    the requirements of R.C. 163.04 and 163.041 by providing and delivering a written
    “Notice of Intent to Acquire and Good Faith Offer” at least 30 days prior to the
    filing of the action and that the Park District had been unable to agree on a
    conveyance with Less. The Park District alleged that the portion of the Less
    property sought to be appropriated had been appraised and had a fair market value
    of $13,650.00. The Park District further requested that the trial court “fix a time
    * * * for the assessment of compensation by a jury, pursuant to R.C. 163.09.”
    {¶7} Less filed answers in both cases, followed by motions for judgment on
    the pleadings in both cases. In both of these motions, Less argued that R.C.
    1545.11 “strictly limits the purposes for which a park district may appropriate
    lands [,]” and that “[t]he statute must be strictly construed.” More specifically,
    Less argued that R.C. 1545.11 only permits the appropriation of private property
    for “conversion into forest reserves and for the conservation of the natural
    resources of the state * * *.” Less argued that the Park District’s attempt to take
    her property for public transportation and recreation purposes, public highway and
    road purposes, and for use as a “multi-use, off-road trail facility dedicated to public
    transportation and recreational purposes” and a “Bikeway,” was not an authorized
    purpose under R.C. 1545.11. Less also argued that the Park District’s failure to
    state an authorized purpose for the takings in its petitions required dismissal of the
    7
    petition/complaint for failure to state a claim. Less further argued that the Park
    District failed to comply with the statutory requirements set forth in Ohio Revised
    Code Chapter 163 for the taking of private property through the use of eminent
    domain. The Park District opposed both motions and the trial court ultimately
    denied both motions.
    {¶8} Thereafter, both Less and Green Valley moved for summary judgment
    in case no. 19CV316. Less also moved for summary judgment in case no.
    19CV485. The summary judgment motions set forth essentially the same grounds
    as the motions for judgment on the pleadings. In both motions, Less supported her
    arguments with references to deposition testimony by representatives of the Park
    District indicating that the appropriation of her property was for the creation of a
    bikeway only, and not for the conversion into forest reserves for the conservation
    of natural resources. The Park District opposed both motions. In addition to other
    arguments, they contended that they had passed a resolution regarding the
    necessity of the appropriation of the property at issue, and that “R.C. 163.09(B)
    provides that the necessity determination of the appropriating agency ‘shall be
    prima facie evidence of that necessity,’ barring proof showing that the agency
    abused its discretion in making the determination.” The Park District further
    argued that Less had the burden of demonstrating either an abuse of discretion,
    8
    fraud, or bad faith on the part of the Park District, and that she had failed to make
    such a showing.
    {¶9} The trial courts eventually denied Less’s and Green Valley’s motions
    for summary judgment in both cases. A judgment entry denying Less’s motion
    without findings of facts or conclusions of law was entered in case no. 19CV485
    on June 30, 2020. A five-page judgment entry that contained findings of facts and
    conclusions of law was entered in case no. 19CA316 on July 22, 2020, denying
    summary judgment to both Less and Green Valley. In the latter decision, the trial
    court found that the Park District’s petition to appropriate the property at issue for
    the purpose of a bikeway was authorized by R.C. 1545.11 and that the Park District
    had complied with the requirements set forth in R.C. 163.04, 163.041 and 163.05.
    {¶10} The trial court further found that the Park District’s passage of its
    resolutions containing necessity determinations constituted prima facie evidence of
    necessity for purposes of the appropriation and that Less and Green Valley failed
    to prove the Park District abused its discretion in making its necessity
    determination. Thus, all three summary judgment motions that were filed by Less
    and Green Valley in both cases were denied. It is from these denials of summary
    9
    judgment that Less now timely appeals.2 The two appeals were consolidated on
    September 28, 2020, and are both now properly before us for review.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    I.       “THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS ERRED IN
    OVERRULING THE MOTION OF THE APPELLANT
    FOR A SUMMARY JUDGMENT DISMISSING THE
    COMPLAINT OF THE APPELLEE BECAUSE THE
    COMPLAINT FAILED TO HAVE A STATUTORILY
    AUTHORIZED REASON OR PURPOSE FOR THE
    APPROPRIATION BY EMINENT DOMAIN THAT IS
    AUTHORIZED BY SECTION 1545.11 OF THE OHIO
    REVISED CODE. SECTION 1545.11 OF THE OHIO
    REVISED CODE ONLY AUTHORIZES A BOARD OF
    PARK COMMISSIONERS TO ACQUIRE LANDS
    EITHER    WITHIN OR WITHOUT THE PARK
    DISTRICT FOR PURPOSES FOR CONVERSION
    INTO FOREST RESERVES  AND      FOR    THE
    CONSERVATION OF THE NATURAL RESOURCES OF
    THE STATE, INCLUDING STREAMS, LAKES,
    SUBMERGED LANDS, AND SWAMPLANDS NOT TO
    CREATE AN EXCLUSIVE PERPETUAL EASEMENT
    FOR A BIKEWAY FOR PUBLIC HIGHWAY AND
    ROAD PURPOSES APART FROM THE PARK
    DISTRICT WHICH ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR
    EMINENT DOMAIN UNDER THE STATUTE.”
    II.      “THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS ERRED IN
    OVERRULING THE MOTION OF THE APPELLANT
    FOR A SUMMARY JUDGMENT DISMISSING THE
    COMPLAINT OF THE APPELLEE BECAUSE THE
    2
    At this juncture we note our disagreement with the view in the dissenting opinion that these orders were not final
    and appealable. The dissent notes that the orders at issue denied summary judgment to Less and Green Valley and
    observes that the denial of summary judgment is generally considered an interlocutory order not subject to an
    immediate appeal. However, Mill Creek already raised this argument in motions to dismiss filed in each appeal
    prior to their consolidation. Despite the argument, this Court issued a judgment entry on September 28, 2020,
    denying Mill Creek’s motions to dismiss and finding that the orders were immediately appealable pursuant to R.C.
    163.09(B)(3), which provides that in appropriation proceedings property owners have “a right to an immediate
    appeal if the order of the court is in favor of the agency in any of the matters the owner denied in the answer * * *.”
    10
    COMPLAINT, AND THE PROCESS LEADING UP TO
    THE COMPLAINT AS SET FORTH IN THE
    COMPLAINT OF THE APPELLEE, DID NOT
    FOLLOW AND EXPRESSLY EXCLUDED              THE
    MANDATORY REQUIREMENTS SET           FORTH AT
    SECTION 163.04, 163.041 AND 163.05 OF THE OHIO
    REVISED CODE BY 1) EXCLUDING IN THE NOTICE
    OF INTENT TO ACQUIRE TO APPELLANT THAT
    SHE HAD A RIGHT TO APPEAL TO THE ELECTED
    OFFICIAL(S) WHO APPOINTED THE DIRECTOR OF
    THE TAKING AGENCY SINCE THE TAKING
    AGENCY OR DIRECTOR ARE NOT ELECTED OR
    DID NOT PROVIDE A NOTICE TO TAKE AT ALL;
    AND 2) NOT STATING A SPECIFIC NEED FOR
    EMINENT DOMAIN BEYOND A PREFERENCE TO
    BUILD A BIKEWAY ON LANDS OF ANOTHER
    WHEN A BIKEWAY ALREADY EXISTED LESS
    THAN ONE (1) MILE FROM THE PROPOSED
    TAKING OF THE LANDS OF THE APPELLANT; AND
    3) NOT ADEQUATELY OR CLEARLY DESCRIBING
    THE PROPERTY TO BE TAKEN AND THAT THE
    PROPERTY BEING LESS THAN A COMPLETE FEE
    AND NOT SPECIFYING THAT PART OF THE LAND
    NOT BEING TAKEN WOULD BE SEPARATED AND
    ISOLATED FROM THE REMAINING LANDS OF THE
    APPELLANT.”
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I
    {¶11} In her first assignment of error, Diane Less contends that the trial
    court erred in overruling her motions for summary judgment which were filed in
    the cases below. She argues that she was entitled to judgment in her favor as a
    matter of law because the Park District’s petitions/complaints failed to include a
    statutorily authorized reason or purpose for the appropriation by eminent domain
    that is authorized by R.C. 1545.11. The Park District, however, contends that
    11
    Less’s argument is based upon an “impermissibly narrow reading and statutory
    construction of R.C. §1545.11 concerning the term ‘Bikeway’ that contradicts
    many Ohio courts’ interpretation of the statute.”
    SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD OF REVIEW
    {¶12} Here, as set forth above, in the case that was filed primarily against
    Diane Less, the trial court overruled Less’s motion for summary judgment, finding
    that there were genuine issues of material fact preventing judgment as a matter of
    law. Further, in the case that was filed primarily against Green Valley Wood
    Products, LLC, but that named Less due to her interest in Green Valley’s property,
    the trial court overruled the motions for summary judgment that were filed by Less
    and Green Valley, finding that the Park District’s response to the motions for
    summary judgment set forth specific facts showing genuine issues for trial.
    {¶13} Although the denial of summary judgment is not normally
    immediately appealable, these cases involve governmental appropriation
    proceedings which are governed by Chapter 163 of the Ohio Revised Code. R.C.
    2505.02(B)(7) specifically provides that “[a]n order in an appropriation proceeding
    [] may be appealed pursuant to division (B)(3) of section 163.09 of the Revised
    Code.” Further, R.C. 163.09(B)(3) states that “[a]n owner has a right to an
    immediate appeal if the order of the court is in favor of the agency in any matters
    the owner denied in the answer * * *.” Because these consolidated appeals are
    12
    from judgment entries denying motions for summary judgment filed by the owner
    (Diane Less) regarding the legality and necessity of appropriation proceedings, the
    judgments were clearly in favor of the agency (Park District) and therefore the
    requirements of R.C. 163.09(B)(3) have been met.
    {¶14} In reviewing an award of summary judgment, appellate courts apply a
    de novo standard of review. Cole v. Am. Industries & Resources Corp., 
    128 Ohio App.3d 546
    , 552, 
    715 N.E.2d 1179
     (1998). Civ.R. 56(C) provides that the trial
    court is to grant summary judgment if there is no genuine issue of material fact
    and, when construing the evidence most strongly in favor of the nonmoving party,
    reasonable minds can only conclude that the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law. State ex rel. Parsons v. Fleming, 
    68 Ohio St.3d 509
    , 511, 
    628 N.E.2d 1377
     (1994). In order to determine whether a fact is material, we look to
    the substantive law of the claim being litigated. Hoyt, Inc. v. Gordon & Assoc.,
    Inc., 
    104 Ohio App.3d 598
    , 603, 
    662 N.E.2d 1088
     (8th Dist.1995), citing Anderson
    v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    106 S.Ct. 2505
    , 
    477 U.S. 242
     (1986).
    R.C. 1545.11
    {¶15} In both the motions to dismiss and motions for summary judgment
    that were filed by Less, it was argued that the Park District’s appropriation of
    private property for purposes of a bikeway was not authorized under R.C. 1545.11.
    Title XV of the Ohio Revised Code is entitled “Conservation of Natural
    13
    Resources.” R.C. 1545.11 governs the Park District’s power to acquire property
    and provides as follows:
    The board of park commissioners may acquire lands either
    within or without the park district for conversion into forest
    reserves and for the conservation of the natural resources of the
    state, including streams, lakes, submerged lands, and
    swamplands, and to those ends may create parks, parkways,
    forest reservations, and other reservations and afforest, develop,
    improve, protect, and promote the use of the same in such
    manner as the board deems conducive to the general welfare.
    Such lands may be acquired by such board, on behalf of said
    district, (1) by gift or devise, (2) by purchase for cash, by
    purchase by installment payments with or without a mortgage,
    by entering into lease-purchase agreements, by lease with or
    without option to purchase, or, (3) by appropriation. In
    furtherance of the use and enjoyment of the lands controlled by
    it, the board may accept donations of money or other property,
    or may act as trustees of land, money, or other property, and use
    and administer the same as stipulated by the donor, or as
    provided in the trust agreement. The terms of each such donation
    or trust shall first be approved by the probate court before
    acceptance by the board.
    In case of appropriation, the proceedings shall be instituted in the
    name of the board, and shall be conducted in the manner
    provided in sections 163.01 to 163.22, inclusive, of the Revised
    Code.
    This section applies to districts created prior to April 16, 1920.
    (Emphasis added).
    Eminent Domain
    {¶16} Article I, Section 19 of the Ohio Constitution provides: “Private
    property shall ever be held inviolate, but subservient to the public welfare.”
    Wray v. Allied Indus. Dev. Corp., 
    138 Ohio App.3d 362
    , 364, 
    741 N.E.2d 14
    238 (2000). Further, “[t]he Fifth Amendment states that private property
    shall not be ‘taken for public use, without just compensation,’ and is
    applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.” Paczewski v.
    Antero Resources Corporation, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 18MO0016, 2019-
    Ohio-2641, ¶ 36, citing Chicago, B. & Q.R. Co. v. City of Chicago, 
    166 U.S. 226
    , 241, 
    17 S.Ct. 581
    , 
    41 L.Ed. 979
     (1897). As the Supreme Court of Ohio
    has explained, “[t]he sovereign's right to take property may be conferred by
    the legislature on municipalities, which enjoy broad discretion in
    determining whether a proposed taking serves the public.” Norwood v.
    Horney, 
    110 Ohio St.3d 353
    , 
    2006-Ohio-3799
    , 
    853 N.E.2d 1115
    , ¶ 70.
    However, “when the authority is delegated to another, the courts must ensure
    that the grant of authority is construed strictly and that any doubt over the
    propriety of the taking is resolved in favor of the property owner.” 
    Id.,
    citing Pontiac Improvement Co. v. Board of Com’rs. Of Cleveland
    Metropolitan Park Dist., 
    104 Ohio St. 447
    , 453-454, 
    135 N.E. 635
     (1922)
    (“The right of eminent domain is an attribute of sovereignty, and only the
    sovereign power, or one to whom it has delegated the right, can take
    property without the consent of the owner, and, when this right has been
    granted to a subdivision of the state, a person, or a corporation, the terms of
    the grant must be strictly pursued. When the matter is in doubt, it must be
    15
    resolved in favor of the property owner. These principles are firmly
    established”).
    Ohio Revised Code Chapter 163
    {¶17} Title I of the Ohio Revised Codes governs state government and
    Chapter 163 of the Ohio Revised Code is entitled “Appropriation of Property,” or
    eminent domain, which is the taking of private property for public use. Here, the
    Park District adopted two resolutions regarding the necessity of creating a bikeway
    over property owned by Less and Green Valley. Both Less and Green Valley
    denied the necessity of the appropriation below and now also challenge the
    necessity determination on appeal.
    {¶18} Pursuant to R.C. 163.021(A), “No agency shall appropriate real
    property except as necessary and for a public use. In any appropriation, the taking
    agency shall show by a preponderance of the evidence that the taking is necessary
    and for a public use.” Importantly, according to R.C. 163.09(B)(1)(a), “A
    resolution or ordinance of the governing or controlling body, council, or board of
    the agency declaring the necessity for the appropriation creates a rebuttable
    presumption of the necessity for the appropriation if the agency is not
    appropriating the property because it is a blighted parcel or part of a blighted area
    or slum.” In this case, as explained above, the Park District passed two resolutions
    indicating that the appropriation actions for the construction of the bikeway were
    16
    necessary for public use. Thus, based on R.C. 163.09(B)(1)(a), there was a
    rebuttable presumption that the appropriation was, in fact, necessary.
    {¶19} As explained in City of Dublin v. Beatley, 
    2018-Ohio-3354
    , 
    119 N.E.3d 826
    , ¶ 15 (5th Dist.):
    * * * under R.C. §163.09(B), the burden of proof fell upon
    [Appellant] to demonstrate that the appropriation was not
    necessary. In order to find that there was no necessity for the
    appropriation, the trial court would have had to determine that
    Appellee * * *abused its discretion. In reviewing the trial court's
    conclusion that there was no such abuse of discretion, we are
    limited to determining whether the decision was supported by
    competent and credible evidence. City of Toledo v. Kim's Auto
    & Truck Service, Inc., 6th Dist. No. L-02-1318, 
    2003-Ohio-5604
    [
    2003 WL 22390102
    ], at ¶ 10; Erie–Ottawa–Sandusky Regional
    Airport Authority v. Orris (Sept. 13, 1991), 6th Dist. No. 90–OT–
    039 [
    1991 WL 254227
    ], at *4.
    Thus, in order to overcome the rebuttable presumptions that the appropriations at
    issue were not necessary, Less had to demonstrate that the Park District had abused
    its discretion in the passage of its resolutions. “An ‘abuse of discretion’ is ‘an
    unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable use of discretion[.] * * *’ ” State v.
    Curtis, 4th Dist. Meigs No. 20CA6, 
    2021-Ohio-1145
    , ¶ 10, quoting State v. Brady,
    
    119 Ohio St.3d 375
    , 
    2008-Ohio-4493
    , 
    894 N.E.2d 671
    , ¶ 23.
    Legal Analysis
    {¶20} The record before us indicates that the Park District filed a
    petition/complaint to appropriate property against Green Valley Wood Products,
    LLC and others, including Diane Less, on February 12, 2019. The Park District
    17
    filed another complaint/petition to appropriate property against Diane Less and
    several others on March 8, 2019. In both petitions/complaints, the Park District
    referenced that it had passed a resolution on February 25, 1993, “resolving that the
    public interest demanded the construction of a bicycle path on a railroad right-of-
    way abandoned by Conrail” and that it had already constructed, during years 2000
    and 2001, “10.6 miles of bikeway trail * * * which construction comprised Phases
    I and II of the Mill Creek MetroParks Bikeway project (the ‘Bikeway’).” The
    petitions/complaints went on to state the Park District’s intention to acquire a
    perpetual easement and right of way on Less’s and Green Valley’s property “for
    the purposes of completing a 6.4-mile extension of the existing Mill Creek
    MetroParks Bikeway in Mahoning County, Ohio, which will provide a safe,
    uniformly designed, multi-use, off-road trail facility dedicated to public
    transportation and recreational purposes (herein ‘Phase III’).”
    {¶21} The Park District alleged that a feasibility study had been conducted
    that “resulted in a determination that the option to align and construct Phase III of
    the Bikeway along the former railroad corridor was the preferred alignment.” This
    “alignment” runs through property owned by both Less and Green Valley. The
    Park District further alleged that “[o]n or about September 10, 2018, by resolution
    of the Board of Park Commissioners, Mill Creek resolved that it is necessary and
    in the best public interest that Mill Creek be authorized to complete Phase III of the
    18
    Bikeway project” and that for the property necessary for inclusion in Phase III that
    it be “authorized to appropriate such property by power of eminent domain and
    initiate legal proceedings pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Chapter 163.” As set
    forth above, the Park District alleged that its actions were authorized by R.C.
    1545.11 and R.C. Chapter 163. Exhibits attached to the petitions stated that the
    Park District would need to appropriate 2.4780 acres of Less’s property and 1.1199
    acres of Green Valley’s property. The record further indicates that Less claims to
    own a perpetual easement across the portion of Green Valley’s property sought to
    be taken by the Park District.
    {¶22} In the present case, R.C. 1545.11 and R.C. 163.01 et seq., together
    govern the purpose and procedure related to a park district’s authority to
    appropriate private property. Further, per R.C. 163.04, a park district may only
    commence appropriation proceedings if it is unable to agree with the owner to a
    purchase of the property. Here, the Park District claims it has authority under R.C.
    1545.11 to appropriate private property for the creation of a bikeway, more
    commonly referred to in case law as a bike path, recreational trail, multi-use trail,
    or linear park. Less contends, however, that the Park District is limited to
    appropriating property for purposes of conversion into forest reserves and
    conservation of natural resources, as expressly stated in R.C. 1545.11, and that the
    creation of the bikeway at issue does not constitute either. Thus, Less argues that
    19
    the Park District lacked statutory authority for the appropriation at issue and
    therefore abused its discretion in passing a resolution to go forward with
    appropriation under R.C. 163.01 et seq.
    {¶23} The trial court found that the Park District enacted a resolution
    demonstrating the necessity of the appropriation of the property at issue for the
    purpose of the bikeway, that the Park District complied with the appropriation
    requirements contained in R.C. 163.01 et seq., that the resolution constituted prima
    facie evidence of the necessity, and that Less and Green Valley failed to
    demonstrate an abuse of discretion on the part of the Park District. In reaching its
    decision, the trial court cited prior reasoning from the Supreme Court of Ohio for
    the proposition that “R.C. 1545.11 authorizes all boards of park commissioners,
    including the Plaintiff, to appropriate property for the construction and use of a
    recreational trail.” State ex rel. Coles v. Granville, 
    116 Ohio St.3d 231
    , 2007-
    Ohio-6057, 
    877 N.E.2d 968
    . It does not appear, however, that the trial court
    considered the question of whether the creation of the bikeway actually constituted
    conversion into forest reserves or conservation of natural resources for purposes of
    R.C. 1545.11. Instead, the trial court appears to have simply relied on the fact that
    the Park District passed a resolution stating the public demanded a bikeway and
    that the creation of such bikeway served a sufficient public purpose to allow the
    private property at issue to be appropriated.
    20
    {¶24} Although there are several cases which have addressed issues related
    to the creation of recreational trails by park districts, we have found no cases in our
    research which directly address the question of whether R.C. 1545.11 actually
    authorizes park districts to create these types of trails. Although the trial court
    cited the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Ohio in State ex rel. Coles v.
    Granville, 
    116 Ohio St.3d 231
    , 
    2007-Ohio-6057
    , 
    877 N.E.2d 968
    , in support of its
    decision, we believe the statement contained in that case was obiter dictum. See
    State ex rel Gordon v. Barthalow, 
    150 Ohio St. 499
    , 505-506, 
    83 N.E.2d 393
    (1948), quoting Webster's New International Dictionary (2d Ed.) (defining “obiter
    dictum” as “ ‘an incidental and collateral opinion uttered by a judge, and therefore
    [as not material to his decision or judgment] not binding * * * Hence, any
    incidental remark, reflection, comment, or the like’ ”).
    {¶25} In State ex rel. Coles, the Court granted a writ of mandamus to
    compel a park district’s board of commissioners to begin an appropriation
    proceeding to compensate relators for the taking of property for the construction of
    a recreational trail that had already taken place. State ex rel. Coles at ¶ 1. In
    Coles, the property owners questioned the park district’s authority to appropriate
    property, in general, because the park district at issue was established after April
    16, 1920, and because R.C. 1545.11 states that “[t]his section applies to districts
    created prior to April 16, 1920.” Id. at ¶ 23. The Court found that “R.C. 1545.11
    21
    * * * authorizes all boards of park commissioners to appropriate property,
    regardless of the date of any park district’s creation.” Id. at ¶ 25. The Court
    reasoned that “[t]his statutory provision was, of course, necessitated by the historic
    presumption applied by the courts of this state that the legislature intends statutes
    enacted by it to operate prospectively rather than retroactively.” Id. at ¶ 26. We
    agree with the Court’s reasoning up to this point; however, the Court made another
    summary statement before concluding. The Court stated as follows:
    Therefore, the board of park commissioners is authorized under
    R.C. 1545.11 to appropriate property for the construction and use
    of a recreational trail, and a mandamus claim to compel the board
    to commence an appropriation proceeding is viable as long as
    relators establish an involuntary taking of their property by the
    board.
    Coles, supra, at ¶ 29.
    {¶26} Because the question of whether the park district had authority to
    appropriate private property specifically for the purpose of creating a recreational
    trail was not a question before the Court, we conclude this summary statement was
    not material to the judgment of the Court and thus constituted obiter dictum that is
    not binding upon this Court.
    {¶27} Having found we are not bound by the language contained in State ex
    rel. Coles, we now turn to the specific question of whether R.C. 1545.11 authorizes
    a park district to appropriate private property for use as a public bikeway, or
    recreational trial, which is a question of law. It appears to be well-settled, and Less
    22
    concedes, that R.C. 1545.11 authorizes park districts to appropriate property.
    However, as set forth above, Less argues that such appropriations must be “for
    conversion into forest reserves and for the conservation of the natural resources of
    the state, including streams, lakes, submerged lands, and swamplands,” as
    expressly stated in the statute. The statute goes on to state that “to those ends” (the
    conversion of forest reserves and the conservation of natural resources), park
    districts “may create parks, parkways, * * * and promote the use of same in such a
    manner as the board deems conducive to the general welfare.” It appears to be
    generally accepted that the creation of recreational trails for public use benefits the
    general welfare of the public; however, such a public use certainly does not
    constitute conversion into forest reserves for purposes of R.C. 1545.11.3 The
    primary question, in our view, is whether the creation of bikeways or recreational
    trails, which are for public use, constitute the conservation of natural resources of
    the state, a purpose which is required under R.C. 1545.11 in order for a park
    district to appropriate private property for a park or parkway.
    {¶28} 41 Ohio Jur.3d Environmental Protection §25 addresses the definition
    of “natural resources” and provides as follows:
    3
    The Ohio Department of Natural Resources currently has a program called “The Recreational Trails Program &
    Clean Ohio Trails Fund.” This program provides grant funding for the creation of new recreational trails and the
    maintenance and restoration of existing recreational trails. Funding is available to cities and villages and other
    entities, including park districts. However, projects that involve the appropriation of property through the exercise
    of eminent domain are not eligible for the grants. Ohiodnr.gov/wps/portal/gove/odnr/buy-and-apply/apply-for-
    grants/grants/recreational-trails-program
    23
    The phrase, “natural resources,” is not restricted to timber, gas,
    oil, coal, minerals, lakes, and submerged land; any given area, to
    the extent that it possesses features that supply human needs and
    contribute to the health, welfare, and benefit of a community,
    constitutes a “natural resource.” Thus, the scope of regulation
    concerning the “conservation of natural resources” is not limited
    to such subjects as land, water, forests, and minerals.
    This section of Ohio Jur.3d cites to two cases from nearly a century ago, in
    support: MacNAB v. Board of Park Com’rs of Metropolitan Park Dist. in
    Cleveland, 
    108 Ohio St. 497
    , 1 Ohio L. Abs. 780, 
    141 N.E. 332
     (1923) and Snyder
    v. Board of Park Com’rs of Cleveland Metropolitan Park Dist., 
    125 Ohio St. 336
    ,
    
    181 N.E. 483
     (1932).
    {¶29} In MacNAB, the question presented was whether various sections of
    the acts of the General Assembly, specifically 2976.7 (the general code precursor
    to R.C. 1545.11), which resulted in the creation of the board of park
    commissioners of Cleveland metropolitan park district, were in conflict with any
    provision of the Ohio Constitution, section 36 of article II in particular, and
    whether the board of park commissioners exceeded its statutory powers in creating
    parks and parkways. MacNAB at syllabus, 499. The Court ultimately held they
    were not in conflict. 
    Id.
     at syllabus. With respect to the question of whether the
    board of park commissioners had exceeded its authority, the Court observed as
    follows:
    The General Assembly of Ohio at a very early date sought to
    confer upon municipalities the power to create parks and
    24
    parkways, and that power has never been seriously questioned,
    and it is too late to question such power in this twentieth century.
    If the General Assembly could confer that power upon a
    municipality, it is self-evident that it could likewise confer it
    upon any district or other political subdivision of the state. The
    usefulness or the serviceableness of public parks, with the
    necessary or appropriate driveways and boulevards, bears such a
    reasonable relation to the public health, recreation, and welfare
    that to hold otherwise would be the sheerest of nonsense.
    {¶30} The Court went on to discuss the constitutional amendment of 1912
    (section 36, article II) which dealt with conservation policy and which reads, in
    pertinent part, as follows:
    “Laws may be passed to encourage forestry * * *. Laws may
    also be passed to provide for converting into forest reserves such
    lands or parts of lands as have been or may be forfeited to the
    state, and to authorize the acquiring of other lands for that
    purpose; also, to provide for the conservation of natural resources
    of the state, including streams, lakes, submerged and swamp
    lands and the development and regulation of water power and the
    formation of drainage conservation districts; and to provide for
    the regulation of methods of mining, weighing, measuring and
    marketing coal, oil, gas and all other minerals.”
    The MacNAB court further reasoned as follows regarding the language contained
    in section 36, article II:
    “Laws may also be passed * * *to provide for the conservation
    of natural resources of the state * * * is so broad and
    comprehensive that any natural tract of land bearing a reasonable
    relation to these words is clearly comprehended within the terms
    of this constitutional amendment.”
    {¶31} In reaching its decision, the MacNAB Court reasoned that “police
    power must be as expansive as the public needs.” 
    Id. at 502
    . Importantly,
    25
    however, the Court also observed that “[i]t is obvious that those public needs, as
    interpreted and applied to the public welfare of densely populated districts, are
    quite different than the public needs of rural communities.” 
    Id.
     Here, at issue is
    the creation of a bikeway, or recreational trail, through the middle of extensive
    acreage of family-owed farm land. Thus, it appears the area at issue here is a rural
    area, not a densely-populated urban area.
    {¶32} In Snyder, the Supreme Court of Ohio again considered an
    appropriation action filed by a park district seeking to acquire a 100-foot tract of
    land which was situated in between two public parks. Snyder at 336. Snyder
    argued “that the park board was without authority to take this land because there
    were no natural resources to be conserved.” Id. at 339. The Court, however,
    disagreed with the property owner’s “limited construction” of the words “natural
    resources” as only encompassing timber, gas, oil, coal, minerals, lakes and
    submerged land, and instead reasoned as follows:
    * * * to the extent to which a given area possesses elements or
    features which supply human need and contribute to the health,
    welfare, and benefit of a community, and are essential for the
    well being of such community and the proper enjoyment of its
    property devoted to park and recreational purposes, the same
    constitute natural resources.
    Id.
    {¶33} The Court ultimately found in favor of the appropriating agency, in
    part based upon its reliance on MacNAB, supra, for the proposition that the power
    26
    granted by the General Assembly to pass laws to provide for the conservation of
    natural resources was “broad and comprehensive” and was a “broad blanket
    power.” Id. at 340. The Court noted that the property at issue therein was situated
    between two public parks and, as such, “[t]he recreational value of the both these
    parks will be conserved by the acquisition of plaintiff’s property, as such
    acquisition is essential to the enjoyment thereof.” Id. at 339. Importantly,
    however, in determining that the board of park commissioners’ appropriation
    action was authorized, the Court noted the fact that the resolution of necessity filed
    by the board was “sufficient in law, declaring, as it did, the necessity of
    appropriating plaintiff’s property to be used ‘for the purpose of conserving the
    natural resources of the Cleveland Metropolitan Park District, by the creation of
    parks, parkways and other reservations of land.’ ” Id. at 338.
    {¶34} In our view, despite the reasoning set forth in both MacNAB and
    Snyder, characterizing essentially anything that serves the public and contributes to
    the health and welfare of the community as the “conservation of natural resources”
    is a bit of a stretch, especially when considering that the statutory grant of authority
    contained in R.C. 1545.11 should be strictly construed and it should be construed
    in favor of the property owner. We believe our concerns that a
    bikeway/recreational trail is not within the current contemplation of R.C. 1545.11
    is further supported by the fact that in 1972, a new statute was enacted charging the
    27
    Department of Natural Resources with the duty of planning and developing
    recreational trails, and giving the department the right to appropriate land for such
    purposes. See R.C. 1519.02.
    {¶35} Upon reading R.C. 1519.02, it is clear that the Department of Natural
    Resources has the right and duty to develop these trails. Reading such right into
    R.C. 1545.11 requires a lot of effort, interpretation, and reference to cases from
    one hundred years ago.4 Reading these two statutes together—although it is clear
    that park districts possess statutory authority to appropriate private property for
    uses that include conversion into forest reserves and the conservation of natural
    resources—in our view, the Department of Natural Resources is the state agency
    with the authority to appropriate private property for the development of
    recreational trails, or in this case, bikeways.
    {¶36} Nonetheless, we are constrained to apply the reasoning of these prior
    Ohio cases to hold that the creation of a bikeway, to the extent it “supplies a human
    need,” “contributes to the health, welfare, and benefit of the community,” and is
    “essential for the well-being of such community and the proper enjoyment of its
    4
    For instance, in California, it has been held that park districts have authority to develop recreational trails and to
    appropriate land for such purposes. See Golden Gate Land Holdings LLC v. East Bay Regional Park Districts, 
    215 Cal.App.4th 353
    , 
    155 Cal.Rptr.3d 546
    , *358. However, unlike Ohio’s statute, the applicable statute there clearly
    provides that park districts may “plan, adopt, lay out, plant, develop, and otherwise improve, extend, control,
    operate, and maintain a system of public parks, playgrounds, golf courses, beaches, trails, natural areas, ecological
    and open space preserves, parkways, scenic drives, boulevards, and other facilities for public recreation, for the use
    and enjoyment of all the inhabitants of the district, and it may select, designate, and acquire land, or rights in land,
    within or without the district, to be used and appropriated for such purposes.” Id. at fn. 3, quoting section 5541 of
    the California Public Resources Code.
    28
    property,” constitutes the conservation of natural resources. We do not agree with
    these principles, however, especially when applied to a rural area where it appears
    the public need is speculative at best and the harm to the private property owners is
    great.
    {¶37} It is these points that lead us to conclude that the resolutions passed
    by the Park District here were insufficient. In Snyder, the Court’s decision was
    based, in part, on the fact that the park district at issue passed a resolution which
    alleged that the private property sought to be appropriated would serve to conserve
    natural resources, a purpose which is expressly set forth in R.C. 1545.11. Here,
    however, the Park District’s two resolutions are completely devoid of any such
    language. The Park District’s 1993 resolution simply stated that “[t]he public
    interest demands construction of a bicycle path * * *.” There is no language tying
    the demand for the bicycle path to the general welfare of the public or the
    conservation of natural resources. Further, the stated purpose of Phase III in the
    Park District’s 2018 resolution was “to extend the existing Bikeway * * *” and that
    completion of such “will provide local and regional users with a safe, uniformly-
    designed, multi-use, off-road trail facility dedicated for public transportation and
    recreational purposes * * *.” Although the 2018 resolution is more elaborate, it is
    still devoid of any language tying the expansion of the bikeway to the general
    health and welfare of the public or the conservation of natural resources. Many
    29
    things provide for public recreation: movie theaters, shopping malls, bowling
    alleys, etc. However, just because those things provide recreation does not mean
    they constitute the conservation of natural resources. We believe the same may be
    said of a bikeway.
    {¶38} Although there are other cases that seem to accept that these types of
    trails may be created by park districts, there is nothing in the resolutions presently
    before us which indicate that the creation of this particular trail or bikeway is
    designed to promote the general health and welfare of the public, which we believe
    requires more than that just a recreational purpose. Moreover, there is no
    statement contained in either resolution even remotely tying the creation of this
    bikeway to the conservation of natural resources. In this regard, the case sub
    judice is factually distinguishable from Snyder, supra.
    {¶39} For these reasons, we conclude that the resolutions passed by the Park
    District purporting to establish the necessity of the taking of Less’s property lacked
    a covered statutory purpose, which is a requirement for the appropriation of private
    property. Thus, the Park District abused its discretion in passing the resolutions
    authorizing itself to take Less’s property through the use of eminent domain, as set
    forth in R.C. 163 et seq. As a result, we conclude the trial court erred in finding
    that Less failed to demonstrate an abuse of discretion on the part of the Park
    District in the passage of its resolutions and in denying her motions for summary
    30
    judgment. Accordingly, having found the trial court erred in denying Less’s
    motions for summary judgment as to the necessity determination, Less’s first
    assignment of error is sustained and the judgments of the trial courts denying her
    motions for summary judgment are reversed. Furthermore, these matters are
    remanded to the trial court with instructions to enter summary judgment in favor of
    Less and also Green Valley, by default, on the issue of whether or not the Park
    District was statutorily authorized to appropriate the property at issue.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II
    {¶40} In her second assignment of error, Less contends that the trial court
    erred in denying her motions for summary judgment because the Park District did
    not follow the mandatory requirements of R.C. 163.04, 163.041 and 163.05 in the
    filing of its petition/complaint and leading up to the filing of its complaint.
    However, in light of our disposition of Less’s first assignment of error, which has
    already resulted in a reversal of the trial court’s denial of summary judgment in her
    favor and a remand order with instructions to grant summary judgment in favor of
    both Less and Green Valley on the issue of whether the Park District lacked
    statutory authority to appropriate the property at issue, we conclude the arguments
    raised under this assignment have been rendered moot. Therefore, we need not
    address them.
    JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CAUSE REMANDED.
    31
    Hess, J., dissenting.
    {¶41} I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion because the orders here
    are not final appealable orders. It is well-established that courts of appeals have
    jurisdiction to “affirm, modify, or reverse judgments or final orders of the courts of
    record inferior to the court of appeals within the district.” Section 3(B)(2), Article
    IV, Ohio Constitution. If a trial court order is not final and appealable, an appellate
    court must dismiss the appeal. Matter of Guardianship of Sammons, 
    2020-Ohio-563
    ,
    
    152 N.E.3d 336
    , ¶ 5 (4th Dist.). Although I agree with the holding reached in the
    well-reasoned opinion, I believe we lack jurisdiction to address the merits and should
    dismiss this consolidated appeal for lack of final appealable orders.
    {¶42} This consolidated appeal involves two separate lawsuits brought under
    Chapter 163 for the appropriation of property. In the first suit, the Park District sued
    Green Valley and others that might have an interest in the Green Valley property,
    including Diane Less and Columbia Gas of Ohio. In the second suit, the Park District
    sued Diane Less and others that might have an interest in the Diane Less property.
    In both lawsuits, the defendants filed answers pursuant to R.C. 163.08, and several
    defendants challenged, among other issues, the Park District’s right to make the
    32
    appropriation, the inability of the parties to agree, and the necessity for the
    appropriation. Thus, under R.C. 163.09(B)(1), the trial courts were each required to
    set a hearing date to hear any of those matters challenged in the answers. If the trial
    courts ruled in favor of the Park District, the cases would proceed to a jury trial on
    compensation subject to the owner’s immediate right to appeal the trial court’s
    decision under R.C. 163.09(B)(3). A trial court lacks jurisdiction to proceed with a
    compensation trial if the owner appeals the trial court’s decision. See State ex rel.
    Bohlen v. Halliday, 
    145 Ohio St.3d 121
    , 
    2021-Ohio-194
    , 
    172 N.E.3d 114
    , ¶ 2-3, 17.
    {¶43} Here, the trial courts have not yet held a hearing under R.C.
    163.09(B)(1). Before a hearing date was set and a hearing on those matters held,
    Less and Green Valley filed motions for summary judgment asking that the
    appropriation petitions be dismissed on several grounds, including that the Park
    District failed to issue a valid letter of intent to take and lacked statutory authority
    to make the appropriation. The Park District filed opposition memoranda in each
    case arguing, “the evidence submitted by Mill Creek demonstrates that genuine
    issues of material fact do exist, which warrant a complete denial of” the defendants’
    summary judgment motions. The Park District asked that the motions be denied and
    the Park District be permitted to proceed forward with the petitions. In keeping with
    its position that genuine issues of material fact exist, the Park District did not file
    33
    cross motions for summary judgment or otherwise seek an order in its favor on any
    of the matters challenged in the answers.
    {¶44} The trial courts each separately denied the summary judgment motions
    on the ground that there were genuine issues of material fact. The trial court in Case
    No. 19CV485 issued a terse judgment entry denying the motion because “there are
    genuine issues of material fact,” the defendant “is not entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law,” and ordering the motion “is hereby overruled.” Likewise, in Case No.
    19CV316, the trial court issued a judgment entry denying the motion. In a lengthier
    decision, that court found that the Park District “did set forth specific facts showing
    genuine issues for trial” and finding the defendants’ motions “are not well-taken and
    are hereby overruled.” Although the trial court’s entry in Case No. 19CV316
    included findings in favor of the Park District, these findings were part of the trial
    court’s denial of summary judgment, were interlocutory in nature, and subject to
    revision at any time under Civ.R. 54(B). Thus, the Park District did not seek or
    receive an order in its favor; rather the trial courts denied the summary judgment
    motions and, in Case No. 19CV316, made findings that it could revise at a
    subsequent R.C. 163.09(B)(1) hearing.
    {¶45} After the trial courts denied Less and Green Valley’s motions for
    summary judgment, the cases should have proceeded forward on the Park District’s
    petition with hearings under R.C. 163.09(B)(1) to hear the genuinely disputed factual
    34
    matters and legal defenses raised in the answers. However, Less appealed the denial
    of the summary judgment motions, divesting each trial court of jurisdiction to
    proceed with a hearing.
    {¶46} “The denial of a motion for summary judgment generally is considered
    an interlocutory order not subject to immediate appeal.” Stevens v. Ackman, 
    91 Ohio St.3d 182
    , 186, 
    743 N.E.2d 901
    , 904 (2001). An interlocutory order denying
    summary judgment is subject to revision by the trial court at any time prior to entry
    of final judgment. Poluse v. Youngstown, 
    135 Ohio App.3d 720
    , 725, 
    735 N.E.2d 505
    , 508 (7th Dist.1999).
    At the outset, it is noted that the denial of a motion for summary
    judgment is a nonfinal order that can be reconsidered by the trial court
    at any time. A court is not bound by its prior decision denying
    summary judgment. To the contrary, a court may reconsider it either
    by motion of one of the parties or sua sponte. It “is subject to revision
    by the trial court at any time prior to entry of final judgment, and the
    court may correct an error upon motion for reconsideration predicated
    upon the same law and facts.” (Citations omitted.)
    First Place Bank v. Blythe, 7th Dist. Columbiana No. 
    12 CO 27
    , 
    2013-Ohio-2550
    , ¶
    18.
    {¶47} No hearing under R.C. 163.09(B)(1) has yet been held and no order in
    favor of the Park District has yet been issued. Thus, the provisions governing an
    immediate appeal under R.C. 163.09(B)(3) are inapplicable as they have not yet been
    triggered. An order denying an owner’s motion for summary judgment on the ground
    35
    that there are genuine issues of material fact is not the equivalent of a judgment in
    favor of the Park District following a hearing under R.C. 163.09(B)(1).
    {¶48} Additionally, although an appropriation proceeding is a “special
    proceeding” under R.C. 2505.02(B)(2), neither judgment entry was an “order that
    affects a substantial right made in a special proceeding.” R.C. 2505.02(B)(2); City
    of Akron v. Carter, 
    190 Ohio App.3d 420
    , 
    2010-Ohio-5462
    , 
    942 N.E.2d 409
    , ¶ 11
    (“An order in an appropriation proceeding instituted under R.C. Chapter 163 is an
    order in a special proceeding as defined by R.C. 2505.02. Cincinnati Gas & Elec.
    Co. v. Pope (1978), 
    54 Ohio St.2d 12
    , 16, 
    8 O.O.3d 7
    , 
    374 N.E.2d 406
    .”).
    An order affects a substantial right for the purposes of R.C.
    2505.02(B)(2) only if an immediate appeal is necessary to protect the
    right effectively. Bell v. Mt. Sinai Med. Ctr. (1993), 
    67 Ohio St.3d 60
    ,
    63, 
    616 N.E.2d 181
     (To prevail in contending that an order affects a
    substantial right, “appellants must demonstrate that in the absence of
    immediate review of the order they will be denied effective relief in the
    future”). Covered rights include any “right that the United States
    Constitution, the Ohio Constitution, a statute, the common law, or a rule
    of procedure entitles a person to enforce or protect.” R.C.
    2505.02(A)(1).
    Wilhelm-Kissinger v. Kissinger, 
    129 Ohio St.3d 90
    , 
    2011-Ohio-2317
    , 
    950 N.E.2d 516
    , ¶ 7. Although Chapter 163 appropriation proceedings are special proceedings,
    the orders denying summary judgment do not affect a substantial right because they
    merely found that genuine material factual issues existed that precluded judgment in
    defendants’ favor as a matter of law. Terpenning v. Comfortrol, Inc., 10th Dist.
    36
    Franklin No. 09AP-315, 
    2009-Ohio-6418
    , ¶ 14 (order denying summary judgment
    in special proceeding is not a final appealable order). Delaying review of the trial
    courts’ decisions until after the hearings under R.C. 163.09(B)(1) will not deny
    defendants full and complete relief. After the trial courts hold the hearings on the
    denials set forth in the defendants’ answers, defendants will be entitled to an
    immediate appeal under R.C. 163.09(B)(3) and R.C. 2505.02(B)(7) if the orders are
    in favor of the Park District.
    {¶49} The orders here are neither orders in favor of the Park District pursuant
    to R.C. 163.09(B)(3) and R.C. 2505.02(B)(7), nor are they orders that affect a
    substantial right made in a special proceeding under R.C. 2505.02(B)(2). For these
    reasons, I respectfully dissent and would dismiss the consolidated appeal for lack of
    jurisdiction.
    37
    JUDGMENT ENTRY
    It is ordered that the JUDGMENT BE REVERSED AND CAUSE
    REMANDED. Costs shall be assessed to Appellee.
    The Court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this Court directing the
    Mahoning County Common Pleas Court to carry this judgment into execution.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule
    27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    Abele, J., concurs in Judgment and Opinion.
    Hess, J., dissents with Dissenting Opinion.
    For the Court,
    _____________________________
    Jason P. Smith
    Seventh District Court of Appeals
    Sitting By Assignment
    NOTICE TO COUNSEL
    Pursuant to Local Rule No. 14, this document constitutes a final
    judgment entry and the time period for further appeal commences from the
    date of filing with the clerk.
    38