Stumpff v. Riverside Bd. of Zoning Appeals , 2020 Ohio 4328 ( 2020 )


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  • [Cite as Stumpff v. Riverside Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 
    2020-Ohio-4328
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY
    KENNETH M. STUMPFF                                   :
    :
    Plaintiff-Appellant                          :     Appellate Case No. 28589
    :
    v.                                                   :     Trial Court Case No. 2018-CV-1720
    :
    THE CITY OF RIVERSIDE BOARD OF                       :     (Civil Appeal from
    ZONING APPEALS                                       :     Common Pleas Court)
    :
    Defendant-Appellee                           :
    ...........
    OPINION
    Rendered on the 4th day of September, 2020.
    ...........
    KONRAD KUCZAK, Atty. Reg. No. 0011186, 130 West Second Street, Suite 1010,
    Dayton, Ohio 45402
    Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant
    DALMA C. GRANDJEAN, Atty. Reg. No. 0024841 and STEVEN E. BACON, Atty. Reg.
    No. 0059926, 1 South Main Street, Suite 1590, Dayton, Ohio 45402
    Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee
    .............
    TUCKER, P.J.
    -2-
    {¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Kenneth M. Stumpff, appeals from the trial court’s
    judgment of September 30, 2019, in which the court dismissed his administrative appeal
    of a decision of the City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals (the “Board”). Stumpff
    argues that the trial court abused its discretion by affirming the Board because the court
    effectively applied the wrong standard of proof to his claim of a continuing, nonconforming
    use of property, because the court erred by considering inadmissible evidence, and
    because the court erred by failing to resolve an apparent conflict between the testimony
    of a witness and certain documentary evidence.
    {¶ 2} We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by affirming the
    Board’s decision because Stumpff did not meet his burden to prove a nonconforming use.
    In addition, we hold that the trial court did not err by considering inadmissible evidence,
    and that the court did not err by failing to resolve the apparent conflict between the
    testimonial evidence and the documentary evidence. Therefore, the court’s judgment is
    affirmed.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    {¶ 3} On or about September 22, 1995, Stumpff purchased Parcel No. I39 0016
    0016 (“Parcel 16”) and Parcel No. I39 0016 0018 (“Parcel 18”) from Greg Salmons, and
    he leased Parcel No. I39 0016 0019 (“Parcel 19”) from Salmons on the same date.
    Decision of the City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals 1-2, Apr. 19, 2018.1 Under
    the City of Riverside’s 2014 zoning code, the three parcels lie presently in an R-3, Medium
    Density Residential District; under the city’s previous zoning code, the parcels were in an
    1Citations in this opinion to the Board’s decision refer to page numbers, rather than to
    paragraph numbers.
    -3-
    R-4 Single Family Residential District. Id. at 2; see Codified Ordinances of Riverside,
    Ohio, Sections 1101.09 (establishing that the current “Unified Development Ordinance”
    took effect on January 1, 2014) and 1107.05(D) (defining “R-3 Medium Density
    Residential District”).   Soon afterward, Stumpff began operating a junk yard, an
    automobile salvage yard, or both. See Transcript of Board Hearing 6-7, Dec. 12, 2017;2
    see also R.C. 4735.05(B) (defining the term “[j]unk yard”); Codified Ordinances, Section
    1117.03 (defining the term “[a]utomobile [s]alvage [y]ard”).          He also operated an
    automobile repair business. See Transcript of Board Hearing 12.
    {¶ 4} Stumpff applied for a permit in or around October 1997 to place a fence on
    Parcels 18 and 19. See Administrative Transcript, Ex. 6. In a letter dated October 28,
    1997, the City of Riverside’s Zoning and Code Enforcement Officer informed Stumpff of
    the requirements he would have to meet to obtain authorization for the fence, adding that
    in light of “what ha[d] recently been observed on [the] property,” the city’s zoning
    regulations further required that Stumpff clear the parcels of “overgrown grasses, debris,
    and other materials which may cause a fire, health, [or] safety hazard, or general
    unsightliness,” and that Stumpff clear the parcels of “junk, inoperable, or unlicensed
    vehicle[s].” Id. Stumpff’s application was later granted. Id. at Ex. 7.
    {¶ 5} On December 28, 2015, the City of Riverside issued a certificate of non-
    conformance with respect to Parcels 16 and 18. Id. at Ex. 11. The certificate stated
    that although “[t]he use of the property for auto repair [was] not consistent with the zoning
    2 The transcript of the hearing is attached as Exhibit 3 to the administrative transcript filed
    by the Board on June 12, 2018. In the administrative transcript, the word “item” is used
    instead of the word “exhibit.” Citations to the hearing transcript refer to page numbers,
    rather than to Bates stamps.
    -4-
    classification as outlined in [Codified Ordinances, Section] 1107.05(D) R-3 Single Family
    Residential District,” the “use of the property for auto repair [was nevertheless] considered
    a legal nonconforming use.” Id. Stumpff was advised, however, that “[a]ll future uses
    [would have to] be consistent” with the city’s zoning code. Id. The official who signed
    the certificate was not aware that Stumpff had leased Parcel 19 from Salmons, and in
    subsequent testimony before the Board, the official indicated that Stumpff did not mention
    any use of Parcels 16 and 18 for purposes other than “minor auto repair.” See Transcript
    of Board Hearing 22.
    {¶ 6} On October 2, 2017, the City of Riverside served a notice of violation on
    Stumpff regarding Parcels 16, 18 and 19. Stumpff challenged the notice, and the Board
    held a hearing on December 12, 2017. At the hearing, Stumpff argued that his use of
    the parcels as an automobile salvage yard was “a valid, nonconforming use * * * because
    of the fact that even before there was a City of Riverside, there was a junk yard on [the
    land].” See Decision of the City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals 2-3. He testified
    that before he leased Parcel 19 and purchased Parcels 16 and 18, their previous owner—
    Salmons—had used them as “a junk yard” for “many, many years,” and that “there was
    always an auto repair shop” on the site. See id. at 6, 12 and 16; see also Administrative
    Transcript, Ex. 6. Stumpff indicated that he, too, had operated an automobile repair
    business there. See Transcript of Board Hearing 12. His description of his use of the
    site was also consistent with the term “automobile salvage yard,” as the term is defined
    in the Codified Ordinances.3 See Codified Ordinances, Section 1117.03; Transcript of
    3
    Stumpff resisted the term “automobile salvage yard,” but his description of his use of
    the parcels satisfied the definition. See Codified Ordinances, Section 1117.03;
    Transcript of Board Hearing 7-8.
    -5-
    Board Hearing 6-8 and 10-11 and 14-15; see also R.C. 4738.01(F) and 4738.02(A)
    (relating to the sale of “salvage motor vehicle parts”).
    {¶ 7} In a decision dated April 9, 2018, the Board found that Stumpff did not prove
    “that a[n] [automobile] [s]alvage [y]ard * * * was ever a lawful use [of] the [p]arcels [at]
    issue, which is a requirement for a nonconforming use to continue [following] a change in
    the zoning code.” Decision of City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals 6. The trial
    court affirmed the Board in its judgment of September 30, 2019, and Stumpff timely filed
    a notice of appeal to this court on October 29, 2019. Both parties thereafter requested
    a series of extensions of time for the submission of their briefs, which has since been
    completed.
    II. Analysis
    {¶ 8} For his first assignment of error, Stumpff contends that:
    THE COMMON PLEAS COURT COMMITTED AN ERROR OF LAW
    BY AFFIRMING AN ADMINISTRATIVE DECISION WHICH WAS BASED
    UPON STUMPFF’S FAILURE TO PROVE THAT BOTH STUMPFF AND
    THE PRIOR OWNERS OF THE PROPERTIES HAD LICENSES TO
    OPERATE A JUNK YARD OR A SALVAGE YARD ON THE PREMISES.
    {¶ 9} Stumpff argues that the Board and the trial court erred by finding that he did
    not prove that his use of Parcels 16, 18, and 19 was a continuing, nonconforming use
    under R.C. 713.15. Appellant’s Brief 15-17. Specifically, Stumpff argues that the Board
    and the trial court erred by effectively requiring proof that he, and Salmons before him,
    had a license to operate an automobile salvage yard on the parcels. Id.; see Decision,
    -6-
    Order and Entry Dismissing Administrative Appeal 5-7, Sept. 30, 2019; Decision of the
    City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals 6-7. Noting that a nonconforming use, once
    established, runs with the land, Stumpff maintains that the “prior lawfulness of an existing
    use is not contingent upon anything other than whether the use was in conformity with
    ‘land use regulations,’ [and] certainly not on the occupational licensing [required] by [R.C.]
    4737.07 [and] [R.C.] 4738.02.” Appellant’s Brief at 16.
    {¶ 10} Every “final order, adjudication, or decision of any officer, tribunal, authority,
    board, bureau, commission, department, or other division of any political subdivision of
    the state may be reviewed by [i.e. appealed to] the court of common pleas of the county
    in which the principal office of the political subdivision is located.” R.C. 2506.01(A). The
    record in an appeal under R.C. Chapter 2506 is “confined to the transcript” of “all the
    original papers, testimony, and evidence offered, heard, and taken into consideration” by
    the “officer or body from which the appeal is taken.” See R.C. 2506.02 and 2506.03(A).
    {¶ 11} Consistent “with its findings [of fact], the [common pleas] court may affirm,
    reverse, vacate, or modify the order, adjudication, or decision, or remand the cause to the
    officer or body [from whose decision or order the appeal is taken] with instructions to enter
    a [revised] order, adjudication, or decision.”         R.C. 2506.04.      In considering the
    underlying decision or order, the common pleas court “is to give due deference to the
    [officer or body’s] resolution of evidentiary conflicts” and “may not ‘blatantly substitute its
    judgment for that of the’ ” officer or body. Snyder v. Beavercreek Twp., 2d Dist. Greene
    No. 2005-CA-53, 
    2006-Ohio-1612
    , ¶ 24, quoting Dudukovich v. Lorain Metro. Housing
    Auth., 
    58 Ohio St. 2d 202
    , 207, 
    389 N.E.2d 1113
     (1979). If the underlying decision or
    order “is supported by a preponderance of reliable, probative and substantial evidence,”
    -7-
    then the common pleas court “is required to affirm it.” 
    Id.,
     citing Dudukovich at 207.
    {¶ 12} The judgment of the common pleas court, in turn, “may be appealed by any
    party on questions of law as provided in the Rules of Appellate Procedure.”              R.C.
    2506.04. On review, an appellate court should evaluate whether “the court of common
    pleas did [or did] not abuse its discretion.” (Citation omitted.) Parisi v. City of Dayton,
    2d Dist. Montgomery No. 20045, 
    2004-Ohio-2739
    , ¶ 12. An “ ‘abuse of discretion’ has
    been defined as an attitude that is unreasonable, arbitrary or unconscionable.” AAAA
    Ents., Inc. v. River Place Community Urban Redevelopment Corp., 
    50 Ohio St.3d 157
    ,
    161, 
    553 N.E.2d 597
     (1990).
    {¶ 13} Under R.C. 713.15, the “lawful use of any dwelling, building, or structure
    and of any land or premises, as existing and lawful at the time of enact[ment] [of] a zoning
    ordinance or an amendment to the ordinance, may be continued [as a ‘nonconforming
    use’], although such use does not conform with the provisions of [the zoning] ordinance
    or amendment.” The “burden of proving a nonconforming use is on the party claiming
    the use.” Penewit v. Spring Valley Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 2d Dist. Greene No. 2019-
    CA-6, 
    2019-Ohio-3200
    , ¶ 32. To prove a nonconforming use, a landowner must show
    by a preponderance of the evidence that “the use [was] in existence prior to the enactment
    of [any applicable] land use regulation[s],” and that the use was “lawful at the time [it] was
    established.” (Citations omitted.) Belich v. City of Olmsted Falls, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    Nos. 84537 & 84807, 
    2005-Ohio-190
    , ¶ 16; Wooster v. Entertainment One, Inc., 
    158 Ohio App.3d 161
    , 
    2004-Ohio-3846
    , 
    814 N.E.2d 521
    , ¶ 48 (9th Dist.).
    {¶ 14} Pursuant to Codified Ordinances, Section 1117.03, an “[a]utomobile
    [s]alvage [y]ard” is defined as “[a]ny lot or parcel that is exposed to the elements and upon
    -8-
    which motor vehicles of any kind [that are] incapable of being operated and not currently
    licensed are placed, located, or found.” Parcels 16, 18 and 19 presently lie in an R-3,
    Medium Density Residential District. Decision of the City of Riverside Board of Zoning
    Appeals 2. To be entitled to use the parcels as an automobile salvage yard, Stumpff had
    to show that such use of the parcels predated the enactment of the city’s zoning
    ordinances, under which the use is not permitted. See Codified Ordinances, Section
    1107.05(D).
    {¶ 15} Stumpff argues that the Board and the trial court erred by finding that,
    because he did not prove that either he or Salmons ever had a license to operate an
    automobile salvage yard, he did not prove that his use of Parcels 16, 18 and 19 was a
    continuation of a nonconforming use begun by Salmons before the enactment of the City
    of Riverside’s first zoning ordinances. See Appellant’s Brief 17; see also Decision, Order
    and Entry Dismissing Administrative Appeal 5-7; Decision of the City of Riverside Board
    of Zoning Appeals 6-7.     Although the Board and the trial court did emphasize the
    absence of any evidence of such licensure, Stumpff’s characterization is not entirely
    accurate. The Board, for instance, referred to the “confusing testimony” it had received
    “regarding the [allegedly] continuous use of the [parcels] as a salvage yard,” and it found
    that at the time Stumpff purchased Parcels 16 and 18, and leased Parcel 19, the parcels
    were “apparently * * * not being operated as a[n] [automobile] salvage yard.” Decision
    of the City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals 8.
    {¶ 16} At the Board’s hearing of December 12, 2017, Stumpff testified that
    Salmons “had a junk yard [on the parcels] for many, many years” before Stumpff
    purchased Parcels 16 and 18 and leased Parcel 19 from Salmons in 1995, mentioning
    -9-
    specifically that at the time of the purchase, Salmons had left “a car flipped over on [its]
    side [t]here for over two months.” Transcript of Board Hearing 6. He also testified that
    the site had “always [been used to run] an auto repair shop,” adding that Salmons crushed
    vehicles there with a wrecking ball. Id. at 16. By Stumpff’s recollection, the site had
    been used for these purposes continuously for more than 20 years before he occupied
    the site. See id. at 6-7 and 16.
    {¶ 17} The balance of the record is not entirely consistent with Stumpff’s testimony.
    In 1995, the City of Riverside commenced an action—Montgomery M.C. No. CRB 95-
    00473—against Salmons for zoning violations. See Administrative Transcript, Ex. 14.
    On March 4, 1995, a zoning inspector employed by the city executed an affidavit in
    connection with the action, averring that Salmons’s violations consisted of “outdoor
    storage of junk, car parts[,] trailers, semi trucks, and inoperable/unlicensed motor
    vehicles.” Id. The affidavit did not refer to a wrecking ball.
    {¶ 18} Moreover, according to a long-time resident of the area who testified at the
    hearing, the parcels had never been used as a junk yard or an automobile salvage yard
    until Salmons purchased them “in the middle [19]90s * * * probably [in] [19]93 or
    something like that.” Transcript of Board Hearing 28-29. The same witness testified
    that a series of other persons had owned the parcels before Salmons, and the witness
    further indicated that for a period of “about a year” before Stumpff occupied the site, the
    parcels were clear of junk vehicles.4 Id. at 29. The witness was not asked to address
    4 The term “[j]unk, inoperable machinery, or inoperable vehicle” is defined as “a vehicle
    including, but not limited to cars, trucks, buses, trailers, motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles,
    snowmobiles and boats” that “is without a valid current registration or does not display a
    valid license plate”; that is “inoperable by reason of dismantling, disrepair, lack of fully
    inflated tires or other cause, and is incapable of being propelled under its own power”;
    -10-
    Stumpff’s testimony regarding the use of a wrecking ball to crush vehicles. See also id.
    at 21 (a city official testifying that Stumpff’s testimony at the hearing was “the first [the
    official had] heard” of vehicle crushing on the parcels).
    {¶ 19} The City of Riverside enacted its first zoning ordinances in 1994. Id. at 21.
    Stumpff did not establish the date on which Salmons purchased the parcels, nor did he
    establish the date on which he claims that Salmons began using the parcels to operate
    an automobile salvage yard. The record of the city’s zoning action against Salmons
    indicates that Salmons was arguably using the parcels as an automobile salvage yard in
    1995, but by that time, the city had already enacted zoning ordinances prohibiting such
    use. Given that Salmons seems to have purchased the parcels shortly before the city
    enacted its first zoning ordinances, or perhaps contemporaneously with the ordinances’
    enactment, the evidence presented to the Board did not suffice for a determination of
    whether Salmons’s arguable use of the parcels as an automobile salvage yard began
    prior to the enactment of the city’s first zoning ordinances or after the ordinances’
    enactment. Moreover, the evidence did not allow for a precise determination of the
    nature of Salmons’s use of the parcels, which could have been consistent with an
    automobile repair shop, rather than a salvage yard.5 See Transcript of Board Hearing 6,
    16, 19 and 28-29; Administrative Transcript, Ex. 14.
    that “has a substantially damaged or missing window, windshield, door, motor,
    transmission, or other similar major component”; or that, “due to its condition, cannot
    lawfully be operated upon any public street,” or where applicable, “upon a public water-
    course.” See Codified Ordinances, Section 1331.03; see also Codified Ordinances,
    Section 1117.03 (defining “[a]utomobile [s]alvage [y]ard”).
    5 For example, unlicensed and inoperable vehicles might incidentally be stored on the
    premises of an automobile repair shop while awaiting repairs.
    -11-
    {¶ 20} Before the City of Riverside enacted its first zoning regulations, the use of
    Parcels 16, 18 and 19 as an automobile salvage yard would presumably have been lawful,
    but to prove that such use of the parcels continues to be lawful as a nonconforming use,
    Stumpff would have to have presented evidence that “the use [was] in existence prior to
    the enactment of the [city’s] land use regulation[s]” in 1994. Belich, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    Nos. 84537 & 84807, 
    2005-Ohio-190
    , at ¶ 16. Stumpff provided little specific evidence
    regarding the nature of the use of the parcels earlier than 1994, yet his testimony leaves
    little doubt that he has used the parcels as an automobile salvage yard since he
    purchased them from Salmons in 1995.
    {¶ 21} On the record of this case, we cannot hold that the trial court abused its
    discretion by affirming the decision of the Board. Stumpff presented some evidence to
    the Board—largely consisting of his own, somewhat imprecise testimony—that Parcels
    16, 18 and 19 were used as an automobile salvage yard before the City of Riverside
    enacted its first zoning ordinances, but Stumpff bore the burden to prove as much by a
    preponderance of the evidence. Wooster, 
    158 Ohio App.3d 161
    , 
    2004-Ohio-3846
    , 
    814 N.E.2d 521
    , at ¶ 48. Other evidence, including the testimony of a zoning official of the
    City of Riverside and that of a long-time resident, suggested that the parcels had not been
    used as an automobile salvage yard earlier than 1994. In light of the ambiguity of the
    record, we cannot conclude that the trial court acted arbitrarily, unconscionably or
    unreasonably by affirming the Board’s decision of April 9, 2018.            Stumpff’s first
    assignment of error is overruled.
    {¶ 22} For his second assignment of error, Stumpff contends that:
    THE COMMON PLEAS COURT COMMITTED AN ERROR OF LAW
    -12-
    [BY] TAKING NOTICE OF GREGORY SALMONS’ NO CONTEST PLEA IN
    CASE NO. CRB 95 00473.
    {¶ 23} Salmons pleaded no contest in Case No. CRB 95-00473 and was found
    guilty as charged, although the case was later dismissed. Here, Stumpff argues that the
    trial court erred pursuant to Crim.R. 11(B)(2) by “cit[ing] inadmissible evidence of
    Salmons’s no contest plea and [by] gratuitously” finding that Salmons had thereby
    “acknowledge[d] [his] violation[s]” of the City of Riverside’s zoning ordinances.
    Appellant’s Brief 17.
    {¶ 24} Crim.R. 11(B)(2) states that “[w]ith reference to the offense or offenses to
    which [a] plea is entered,” a “plea of no contest is not an admission of [the] defendant’s
    guilt, but is an admission of the truth of the facts alleged in the indictment, information, or
    complaint, and the plea or admission shall not be used against the defendant in any
    subsequent civil or criminal proceeding.” (Emphasis added.) As the Board argues in its
    brief, the trial court did not consider Salmons’s plea contrary to Crim.R. 11(B), because
    Salmons was not a party in the Board’s hearing or in Stumpff’s administrative appeal to
    the trial court.
    {¶ 25} Even if the trial court did err by considering the plea, we hold that any such
    error was harmless, because even otherwise, Stumpff failed to meet his burden to prove
    by a preponderance of the remaining evidence that his use of Parcels 16, 18 and 19 was
    a continuation of a nonconforming use established before the enactment of the City of
    Riverside’s zoning ordinances. Stumpff’s second assignment of error is overruled.
    {¶ 26} For his third assignment of error, Stumpff contends that:
    THE COMMON PLEAS COURT COMMITTED AN ERROR [OF]
    -13-
    LAW BY FAILING TO ADDRESS THE ISSUE OF DURATION OF
    VOLUNTARY ABANDONMENT.
    {¶ 27} Stumpff argues that the evidence related to Case No. CRB 95-00473
    contradicted the testimony offered at the Board’s hearing by a long-time resident of the
    City of Riverside, who testified that Parcels 16, 18 and 19 had been cleared of junk
    vehicles for approximately one year before Stumpff occupied the premises. Appellant’s
    Brief 19; Transcript of Board Hearing 28-29. Consequently, Stumpff maintains that the
    trial court erred by referring to the testimony and to the evidence related to Case No. CRB
    95-00473 “without resolving the [apparent] conflict.”       This argument is based on a
    mischaracterization of the Board’s findings.
    {¶ 28} Although Stumpff claims the Board found that “the case against * * *
    Salmons proved that junk cars were (illegally) [parentheses sic] on Parcels 16, 18, and
    19 in April, May June, and July of 1995,” the Board merely noted that at the time Stumpff
    purchased Parcels 16 and 18 from Salmons and leased Parcel 19, Salmons had been
    “found guilty of outdoor storage of junk and inoperable/unlicensed motor vehicles” six
    months earlier. Decision of the City of Riverside Board of Zoning Appeals 6-7. The
    Board noted further that the “charges were dismissed after Salmons cleaned up the
    property and removed the offending junk and motor vehicles,” and on that basis, it found
    that Stumpff was thereby “definitely put on notice that he could not store outdoor junk or
    inoperable/unlicensed vehicles” on the parcels. Id. at 7.
    {¶ 29} Irrespective of the significance the Board attached to Salmons’s plea in
    Case No. CRB 95-004732, the trial court did not err by referring to the resident’s testimony
    and to the evidence associated with the action against Salmons without making a
    -14-
    determination as to which was more accurate. In its judgment, the trial court referred to
    the testimony and to the record of Case No. CRB 95-00473 to illustrate that Stumpff had
    not offered evidence sufficient to allow a definitive determination of when, if ever, the
    nonconforming use of Parcels 16, 18 and 19 as an automobile salvage yard had been
    established. Given that Stumpff bore the burden to prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence that his use of the property was a continuation of a use established before the
    City of Riverside enacted its zoning ordinances, the trial court’s consideration of the
    evidence was not error, nor was its purported failure to resolve the apparent conflict.
    Stumpff’s third assignment of error is overruled.
    III. Conclusion
    {¶ 30} The trial court did not err by affirming the Board’s decision of April 9, 2018,
    because Stumpff did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that his use of Parcels
    16, 18 and 19 was a nonconforming use established by his predecessors in interest
    before the enactment of the City of Riverside’s zoning ordinances. Furthermore, the trial
    court did not consider Salmons’s plea in Case No. CRB 95-00473 contrary to Crim.R.
    11(B)(2), but even if the court’s consideration of the evidence was error, the error was
    harmless. Finally, the trial court did not err by failing to resolve the apparent conflict
    between the testimony of a resident of the City of Riverside and the record of Case No.
    CRB 95-00473. Therefore, the trial court’s judgment of September 30, 2019, is affirmed.
    .............
    DONOVAN, J. and FROELICH, J., concur.
    -15-
    Copies sent to:
    Konrad Kuczak
    Dalma C. Grandjean
    Steven E. Bacon
    Hon. Barbara P. Gorman
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 28589

Citation Numbers: 2020 Ohio 4328

Judges: Tucker

Filed Date: 9/4/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/4/2020