Bellefontaine v. Shafer ( 2019 )


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  • [Cite as Bellefontaine v. Shafer, 
    2019-Ohio-4524
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    LOGAN COUNTY
    THE CITY OF BELLEFONTAINE,
    CASE NO. 8-19-15
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,
    v.
    RAYMOND A. SHAFER, II,                                    OPINION
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    Appeal from Bellefontaine Municipal Court
    Trial Court No. 18CRB01028
    Judgment Reversed
    Date of Decision: November 4, 2019
    APPEARANCES:
    William T. Cramer for Appellant
    Daniel D. Carey for Appellee
    Case No. 8-19-15
    WILLAMOWSKI, J.
    {¶1} Defendant-appellant Raymond A. Shafer II (“Shafer”) brings this
    appeal from the judgment of the Bellefontaine Municipal Court finding him guilty
    of a local ordinance. On appeal, Shafer alleges that the conviction is not supported
    by sufficient evidence and is against the manifest weight of the evidence. For the
    reasons set forth below, the judgment is reversed.
    {¶2} On July 25, 2018, a complaint was filed indicating that on July 25, 2018,
    Shafer allowed “garbage, trash, rubbish, or other refuse to accumulate out-of-doors
    for more than one week at a time, thus in violation of Section 951.13(i) of the
    Codified Ordinances of Bellefontaine, Ohio. Doc. 1, an unclassified misdemeanor.
    The violation involved a stack of cement blocks that the city classified as
    “construction debris and other materials”. Doc. 16.
    {¶3} A trial was held on the complaint on January 30, 2019. Doc. 30. The
    City argued that since the blocks were used, they were construction debris. Shafer
    argued that he was planning on using the blocks to build a low retaining wall along
    the edge of his property. The trial court found Shafer guilty of the violation and
    imposed court costs and a fine ranging from $500 to $5,000 depending upon how
    long it took Shafer to remove the blocks. Doc. 30-32. Shafer filed a timely notice
    of appeal from this judgment and raises the following assignments of error on
    appeal.
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    Case No. 8-19-15
    First Assignment of Error
    [Shafer’s] state and federal rights to due process were violated by
    a conviction that was not supported by sufficient evidence.
    Second Assignment of Error
    The conviction was against the weight of the evidence.
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    {¶4} In the first assignment of error, Shafer claims that the conviction was
    against the sufficiency of the evidence. “Under the sufficiency of the evidence
    standard, ‘[t]he relevant inquiry is whether, after viewing the evidence in a light
    most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” State v.
    Sullivan, 3d Dist. Hancock No. 5-17-09, 
    2017-Ohio-8937
    , ¶ 28, 
    102 N.E.3d 86
    quoting State v. Potts, 
    2016-Ohio-5555
    , 
    69 N.E.3d 1227
    , ¶ 12 (3d Dist.).
    {¶5} Shafer was charged with a violation of Section 951.13(i) of the Codified
    Ordinances of Bellefontaine, Ohio. This code section is in the chapter regarding
    garbage and refuse collection and disposal. This specific section provides as follows
    in pertinent part.
    951.13 RESPONSIBILITY OF OWNERS AND TENANTS
    ***
    (i) No person shall allow garbage, trash, rubbish or other refuse
    to accumulate out-of-doors for more than one week at a time.
    Such matter shall be placed out-of-doors only in regulation lidded
    containers or plastic bags designed for such purpose. No person
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    Case No. 8-19-15
    shall permit any fermented, [putrefying] or odorous garbage
    and/or rubbish to exist upon any property owned, leased, rented
    or controlled by him.
    Garbage is defined as “all wastes of offal of fish, fowl, fruit or vegetable or animal
    matter resulting from the preparation of food for human consumption in residential
    homes, commercial restaurants and other food service operations.” Bellefontaine,
    OH Code of Ordinances 951.01(a)(1). Rubbish is defined as “baskets, wood, rags,
    old clothing, leather, crockery, ashes, and other similar items, but does not include
    discarded household goods or construction/demolition debris such as refuse from
    repairs, alteration or new construction of curbs, sidewalks, buildings, or yard wastes
    such as branches, brush, leaves and grass clippings.” Bellefontaine, OH Code of
    Ordinances 951.01(a)(2). Trash and refuse are not specifically defined by an
    ordinance, thus we will use their common meanings. The relevant dictionary
    definition of trash is “[w]orthless or discarded material or objects, refuse.” The
    American Heritage Dictionary 1289 (2d College Ed. 1985). Refuse is similarly
    defined as “anything discarded or rejected as useless or worthless, trash.” Id. at
    1040. See also Springfield v. Pullins, 
    130 Ohio App.3d 346
    , 
    720 N.E.2d 138
     (2nd
    Dist. 1998) defining refuse similarly. To prove that Shafer was guilty of the offense
    charged in the complaint, the City was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the items in question were garbage, trash, rubbish, or refuse, and that they had
    been left outside for more than a week.
    -4-
    Case No. 8-19-15
    {¶6} At issue in this case was a stack of used cement blocks which Westin
    Dodds (“Dodds”), the city code enforcement officer, deemed to be “other refuse.
    Tr. 12-13, 20. No one is disputing that the stack of blocks was left in the yard for
    more than seven days. The only issue for the trial court was to determine whether
    the blocks are within the definitions of garbage, trash, rubbish, or refuse so that a
    conviction under the ordinance was supported beyond a reasonable doubt. Dodds
    testified that he filed the complaint after receiving an anonymous complaint and
    seeing the salvaged blocks in the yard. Tr. 11. When asked by the court why he
    filed the complaint, Dodds testified as follows.
    Mr. Dodds: It’s the amount of the material there. It’s the fact
    that it’s obviously been prior used. There’s been no building
    permit pulled for the location to say that the block was going to
    be used for anything else.
    The Court: Oh, okay.
    Mr. Dodds: So, you know, I’m left with my professional opinion
    that those are used blocks and they’re sitting there with no
    purpose.
    ***
    The Court: And then – stand by. And then did – you know what
    that – I’m looking at the blocks and it looks like a – like a grill of
    some sort there, right? How about – is that a concern for you?
    Mr. Dodds: Those are shingles.
    ***
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    Case No. 8-19-15
    The Court: Now, then – okay. So then what’s the difference
    between that pile of shingles and this pile of brick? In your mind,
    in your code enforcement mind.
    Mr. Dodds: Well, the shingles had not been used before. They’re
    new shingles stacked up.
    The Court: Okay.
    Mr. Dodds: So, we’re not – I wouldn’t consider them salvaged or
    cast-off material.
    Tr. 21-22. Dodds also testified that if there were new items with plans for use, it
    would be an exception to the code violation. Tr. 24. Dodds did not note that any of
    the blocks were broken, just that they had obviously been used. Tr. 28. Dodds
    testified that in his opinion, “refuse” was an item that had been salvaged or
    previously used. Tr. 30. Dodds also testified that some of the block were usable,
    though he did not believe they all were. Tr. 30. Dodds testified that if the blocks
    were new, they would look better as they would be aligned and all the same color.
    Tr. 33. At the close of the case-in-chief, the City moved to admit the pictures and
    other exhibits, such as the one below.
    -6-
    Case No. 8-19-15
    Doc. 20.
    {¶7} Shafer then testified on his own behalf. Shafer testified that the blocks
    were all in good shape, although he admitted that there was some mortar still on
    them from the prior usage. Tr. 45. Shafer also testified that he intended to use the
    blocks to build a wall along the sidewalk around his building. Tr. 53.
    {¶8} A review of the testimony does not show that the blocks would qualify
    as either garbage or rubbish as defined by the ordinances as they were not food
    waste or baskets, wood, rags, old clothing, leather, crockery, ashes, and other similar
    items. The closest the blocks would come would be “demolition debris” which is
    specifically excluded from the definition of rubbish. Bellefontaine OH Code of
    Ordinances 951.01(a)(2). Additionally, to qualify as either trash or refuse, as
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    Case No. 8-19-15
    generally defined since there is no definition in the ordinances, the blocks would
    have to be useless or worthless.      See prior definition and City of Dayton v.
    Sheibenberger, 
    33 Ohio App.3d 263
    , 
    515 N.E.2d 948
     (2nd Dist. 1986) abrogated by
    Supreme Court of Ohio Decision on other grounds but stating that the “average
    citizen might reasonably conclude that stacked reusable lumber was not trash or
    debris”.
    {¶9} The City argues that the blocks were worthless because they were used.
    However, not everything that has previously been used is worthless or useless. 
    Id.
    Shafer was able to point to a reasonable use for the material, building a wall, which
    the City agreed would be a legitimate use for the material as long as it was
    structurally sound. Tr. 60-61. Since the blocks were not worthless or useless, they
    do not meet the general definition of refuse or trash. Although the trial court
    indicated that the blocks “looks like rubbish” and yard looked “trashy”, that is not
    what this particular ordinance prohibits. Tr. 47-48. The language of the ordinance
    requires the City to show that items that meet the definitions of garbage, trash,
    rubbish or other refuse were allowed to accumulate out-of-doors for more than one
    week. The yard looking bad may be the basis for a nuisance claim, but it is not the
    basis for a claim for failing to dispose of garbage, trash, rubbish or other refuse.
    Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the City, a reasonable person could
    not say that the City has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the stacked blocks
    are worthless or useless and thus meet the general definition of trash or refuse. They
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    Case No. 8-19-15
    merely look bad. This is not sufficient for a conviction under the Bellefontaine City
    Ordinance 951.13(i). Thus, the first assignment of error is sustained.
    Manifest Weight of the Evidence
    {¶10} In the second assignment of error, Shafer alleges that the conviction is
    against the manifest weight of the evidence. Having determined that the conviction
    is not supported by sufficient evidence, the issue of whether the conviction is against
    the manifest weight of the evidence is moot. Thus it need not be addressed by this
    Court. App.R. 12(A)(1)(c).
    {¶11} Having found error prejudicial to the appellant in the particulars
    assigned and argued in the first assignment of error, the judgment of the
    Bellefontaine Municipal Court is reversed.
    Judgment Reversed
    ZIMMERMAN, P.J. and PRESTON, J., concur.
    /hls
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 8-19-15

Judges: Willamowski

Filed Date: 11/4/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/4/2019