MacDonald v. Cleveland Income Tax Bd. of Rev. (Slip Opinion) ( 2017 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as
    MacDonald v. Cleveland Income Tax Bd. of Rev., Slip Opinion No. 
    2017-Ohio-7798
    .]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 
    2017-OHIO-7798
    MACDONALD ET AL., APPELLEES, v. CLEVELAND INCOME TAX BOARD OF
    REVIEW ET AL., APPELLANTS.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as MacDonald v. Cleveland Income Tax Bd. of Rev., Slip Opinion
    No. 
    2017-Ohio-7798
    .]
    Taxation—Supplemental executive retirement plan was not taxable under city’s
    income-tax ordinances—Board of Tax Appeals’ decision affirmed.
    (No. 2016-0778—Submitted June 21, 2017—Decided September 26, 2017.)
    APPEAL from the Board of Tax Appeals, No. 2009-1130.
    _________________
    DEWINE, J.
    {¶ 1} This appeal presents the question whether a corporate executive’s
    supplemental executive retirement plan (“SERP”) is subject to Cleveland’s income
    tax. Upon retirement, the executive became entitled to receive benefits from the
    plan, which will be paid from an annuity over the course of his and his wife’s lives.
    The city of Cleveland sought to tax the present value of those future payments at
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    the time of the retirement. A Cleveland ordinance, however, exempts “pensions”
    from the city income tax. Because we conclude that the SERP constitutes a
    pension, we hold that the city income tax does not apply.
    {¶ 2} In the proceeding below, the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”) reached
    the same conclusion that we do today. Thus, we affirm the BTA’s decision.
    I. BACKGROUND
    {¶ 3} William E. MacDonald III retired from National City Corporation in
    2006, after having worked there for 38 years. As one of the bank’s top executives,
    MacDonald was entitled to participate in National City’s SERP.
    {¶ 4} Common in the corporate world, a SERP is used to supplement the
    benefits received by executives under traditional plans, such as qualified defined-
    benefit or defined-contribution (401(k)) plans. For federal-tax purposes, a SERP is
    considered   a   “nonqualified    deferred-compensation      plan.”     26    U.S.C.
    3121(v)(2)(C). The payments are “nonqualified” in the sense that the plan is not
    entitled to receive the favorable tax treatment accorded to qualified plans under the
    Internal Revenue Code.
    {¶ 5} Because payments from “qualified” plans are limited by federal tax
    law, the SERP provides additional benefits in order that covered executives may
    receive a targeted percentage of their pay upon retirement. A SERP is sometimes
    referred to as a “top-hat plan” because it is typically limited to a small number of
    highly compensated employees.
    {¶ 6} Although considered to be a “nonqualified deferred-compensation”
    plan under federal tax law, MacDonald’s SERP did not involve any deferral of
    current wages owed or the set-aside of any amounts in a segregated account by the
    employer. Rather, the SERP was an unfunded promise to pay—in other words, a
    general, unsecured obligation on the part of the employer.
    {¶ 7} MacDonald’s SERP was designed to allow him to receive
    approximately 60 percent of the compensation he had received in his top-earning
    2
    January Term, 2017
    years, after taking into account Social Security and other retirement benefits. Under
    the terms of his SERP, MacDonald and his wife, Susan W. MacDonald, began
    receiving payments in 2007 from a joint-survivorship annuity.
    {¶ 8} MacDonald was required to pay federal Medicare tax on the present
    value of the annuity payments for the 2006 tax year. The present value was
    calculated to be $9,107,013.16 and was reported in box 5 of MacDonald’s W-2
    form. MacDonald was not required to pay federal income tax on the SERP in 2006;
    instead, federal income tax will be imposed on payments as they are made over the
    MacDonalds’ retirement years.
    {¶ 9} National City did not withhold and remit city income tax on the SERP.
    Ultimately, the city assessed $182,140.26 in taxes on the SERP, which represented
    the application of the city’s 2 percent tax on the present value of the annuity
    payments, which had been reported in box 5. The MacDonalds protested the
    assessment, asserting that the SERP was not subject to city tax.
    {¶ 10} In September 2008, the city’s tax administrator issued an
    administrative ruling rejecting the MacDonalds’ assertion and upholding the
    assessment. The MacDonalds appealed to the Cleveland Income Tax Board of
    Review (“review board”), which also upheld the assessment. The MacDonalds then
    appealed to the BTA.       The BTA looked to Cleveland Codified Ordinances
    191.0901(d), which excludes pensions from the city income tax. Reasoning that
    the SERP fell within the “commonly accepted definition of pension,” the BTA
    found that the SERP was not subject to the tax and reversed the review board’s
    decision. The review board and Cleveland’s tax administrator, Nassim M. Lynch,
    have appealed to this court. Lynch, through the Central Collection Agency,
    administers the income-tax laws of the city. For convenience, we will refer to
    appellants collectively as “Cleveland” or “the city.”
    {¶ 11} The proceeding below was actually the second time the BTA had
    considered the taxability of the MacDonalds’ SERP. The city of Shaker Heights
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    had also sought to impose its income tax on the SERP. The BTA determined that
    the SERP was not taxable under the Shaker Heights code, and the Tenth District
    Court of Appeals affirmed that decision. See MacDonald v. Shaker Hts. Income
    Tax Bd. of Rev., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 13AP-71, 
    2014-Ohio-708
    . We accepted a
    discretionary appeal from the court of appeals’ decision as to the scope of the
    BTA’s review but declined jurisdiction over the substantive issue of the taxability
    of the SERP. MacDonald v. Shaker Hts. Income Tax Bd. of Rev., 
    144 Ohio St.3d 105
    , 
    2015-Ohio-3290
    , 
    41 N.E.3d 376
    , ¶ 4. In this appeal, we squarely confront the
    taxability of the SERP under the ordinances and regulations of the city of
    Cleveland.
    II. ANALYSIS
    {¶ 12} We review the decision of the BTA to determine whether it is
    reasonable and lawful. R.C. 5717.04. In doing so, we review de novo the BTA’s
    construction of Cleveland’s ordinances and regulations. See Gesler v. Worthington
    Income Tax Bd. of Appeals, 
    138 Ohio St.3d 76
    , 
    2013-Ohio-4986
    , 
    3 N.E.3d 1177
    ,
    ¶ 10. We find nothing unreasonable or unlawful about the BTA’s decision.
    A. The SERP Is a Pension
    {¶ 13} The MacDonalds’ argument for affirmance is straightforward. They
    rely upon Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.0901(d)’s exclusion of pension
    benefits:
    The tax provided for in this chapter shall not be levied on the
    following: * * * [p]roceeds of insurance paid by reason of the death
    of the insured; pensions, disability benefits, annuities, or gratuities
    not in the nature of compensation for services rendered from
    whatever source derived.
    4
    January Term, 2017
    (Emphasis added.) We will call this provision the “pension exclusion.”           The
    MacDonalds maintain that the SERP is a pension and that therefore it is excluded
    from taxable income.
    {¶ 14} Cleveland counters that the pension exclusion does not apply to the
    SERP for four reasons: (1) the SERP is compensation for services rendered, (2) the
    SERP does not qualify as a pension under the tax administrator’s Rules and
    Regulations, (3) the SERP is taxable as a nonqualified deferred-compensation plan
    under Cleveland ordinances, and (4) the SERP is taxable as a matter of state law.
    {¶ 15} We address each of the city’s arguments in turn.
    1. Cleveland’s compensation-for-services-rendered argument
    {¶ 16} We start our analysis with the pension exclusion. Cleveland’s
    income-tax ordinances unambiguously exclude “pensions” from the city income
    tax. Black’s Law Dictionary provides the following definition of “pension”: “[a]
    fixed sum paid regularly to a person (or to the person’s beneficiaries), esp. by an
    employer as a retirement benefit.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1315 (10th Ed.2014).
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary includes the following definition: “a
    fixed sum paid regularly to a person * * *: one paid under given conditions to a
    person following his retirement from service (as due to age or disability) or to the
    surviving dependents of a person entitled to such a pension.” Webster’s Third New
    International Dictionary 1671 (2002). Under either definition, the SERP plainly is
    a pension. It is a sum of money regularly paid to the MacDonalds as a retirement
    benefit. An ordinary speaker of the English language would have little difficulty
    in concluding that what the MacDonalds received from National City was a
    pension.
    {¶ 17} Such an understanding of the term is reinforced when the pension
    exclusion is read as a whole. The language of the ordinance has broad reach,
    evincing an intent to reach a multitude of retirement, death, and disability payments.
    The exclusion is phrased to encompass all those amounts that are themselves “not
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    in the nature of compensation for services rendered” but instead substitute for such
    compensation upon death, disability, or retirement. Cleveland Codified Ordinances
    191.0901(d).
    {¶ 18} Cleveland characterizes the SERP as compensation for services
    rendered and thus suggests that the exclusion does not apply. What Cleveland
    apparently means is that because MacDonald received the SERP by virtue of his
    having been employed by National City, the SERP retirement benefit is “in the
    nature of compensation for services rendered.” But this argument stretches the
    meaning of the phrase much too far. Virtually any pension—including a traditional
    qualified defined-benefit plan, which Cleveland admittedly does not tax—comes
    about as a result of someone having performed services for an employer. Plainly,
    if the pension exclusion is to have any application at all, the phrase “in the nature
    of compensation for services rendered” must have a more limited scope than
    Cleveland would give it.
    {¶ 19} By its terms, the purpose of McDonald’s SERP was to “provide for
    the payment of certain pension, disability, and survivor benefits in addition to
    benefits which may be payable under other plans of the Corporation.” Thus, under
    the plain language of the pension exclusion in the Cleveland income-tax ordinance,
    the SERP is exempt from taxation.
    2. Cleveland’s regulation-based argument
    {¶ 20} Cleveland argues that the definition of “pension” is limited by the
    tax administrator’s Rules and Regulations in effect in 2006:
    2:30 Pensions means distributions from retirement plans as
    reported on Federal Form 1099R, or its equivalent or successor
    form, in the year paid, and which are designed to provide primarily
    for the retirement income of employees. Pension distributions are
    not taxable; contributions to pension plans, retirement plans,
    6
    January Term, 2017
    deferred compensation plans, as well as any other type of deferred
    compensation arrangement or income deferral arrangement or plan,
    are taxable in the year the income is earned and deferred.
    ***
    6:03 Insurance and Annuity Proceeds, Certain Employee
    Benefits and Gifts.
    (A) The following additional items are specifically
    exempted from the tax imposed by this ordinance:
    ***
    2. Distributions from pension plans reported to the payee on
    Federal Form 1099-R or substantive equivalent.
    ***
    (B)   The following items are not exempt from the tax
    imposed by the ordinance (this is not an exhaustive list):
    ***
    2. Deferred compensation of any kind, whether deferred
    under a retirement plan or under any other type of compensation
    arrangement or contract, including any qualified or nonqualified
    deferrals made by an employer or the employee or both.
    As a nonqualified deferred-compensation plan, the SERP was not reported on Form
    1099-R. Internal Revenue Service, Instructions for Forms 1099-R and 5498,
    https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1099r.pdf (accessed Aug. 23, 2017).          Thus,
    Cleveland argues, it does not qualify as a pension.
    {¶ 21} The problem with Cleveland’s argument is that it requires that we
    hold that the tax administrator had the power to adopt rules that supersede an
    ordinance passed by city council.        Under Cleveland Codified Ordinances
    191.2303(a), the tax administrator may (with the approval of the review board)
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    adopt and enforce “rules and regulations relating to any matter or thing pertaining
    to the collection of taxes and the administration and enforcement of the provisions
    of this chapter, including provisions for the re-examination and correction of
    returns.” This section, however, does not provide the administrator with the power
    to change the terms of ordinances. The limiting definition of “pension” adopted by
    the tax administrator goes beyond the “collection of taxes” and the “administration
    and enforcement” of Cleveland Codified Ordinances Chapter 191 and works a
    substantive change regarding what is taxable.
    {¶ 22} At oral argument, Cleveland’s counsel asserted that the Rules and
    Regulations had been first promulgated by the tax administrator and then adopted
    and incorporated into the city ordinance. It is true that in 2004—with the applicable
    regulations already in place—city council amended its ordinance, adding a
    reference to the Rules and Regulations in the definition of “taxable income”:
    “ ‘Taxable income’ means all qualifying wages, net profits and all other income
    from whatever source derived set forth in Section 191.0501, and the Rules and
    Regulations as taxable.” (Emphasis added.)         Cleveland Codified Ordinances
    191.0318. But as counsel conceded, city council did not vote to ratify the specific
    Rules and Regulations promulgated by the tax administrator. And we are not
    convinced that mere reference to the Rules and Regulations is sufficient to allow
    the tax administrator to make taxable what an ordinance specifically says is not
    taxable.
    {¶ 23} We were confronted with a somewhat similar situation in Nestle
    R&D Ctr., Inc. v. Levin, 
    122 Ohio St.3d 22
    , 
    2009-Ohio-1929
    , 
    907 N.E.2d 714
    .
    There, an administrative rule authorized the director of the Department of
    Development to “adopt rules necessary to implement” a tax credit for the creation
    of new jobs. The issue before us concerned the proper reading of a statute, R.C.
    5733.12(B), which provided the limitation period for filing for a tax refund for
    creating new jobs.     We held that while the statutory authorization for rule
    8
    January Term, 2017
    promulgation “surely confers authority on the Department of Development to
    establish reasonable deadlines for submitting documentation, we do not read that
    provision as authorizing the Director of Development to provide the definitive
    construction of R.C. 5733.12(B).” Id. at ¶ 40. Similarly, we do not read either
    Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.2303 or 191.0318 as authorizing the tax
    administrator to make a definitive determination as to what is taxable.
    {¶ 24} A rulemaker possesses only the authority granted it by a legislative
    body; an administrative rule that conflicts with a municipal ordinance is invalid.
    See Hoover Universal, Inc. v. Limbach, 
    61 Ohio St.3d 563
    , 569, 
    575 N.E.2d 811
    (1991); Athens Home Tel. Co. v. Peck, 
    158 Ohio St. 557
    , 562, 
    110 N.E.2d 571
    (1953). In United States v. Calamaro, 
    354 U.S. 351
    , 358-359, 
    77 S.Ct. 1138
    , 
    1 L.Ed.2d 1394
     (1957), the court declined to defer to a treasury-department
    regulation in construing who was covered by a tax imposed by the Internal Revenue
    Code. The regulation, which expanded the universe of who was covered by the tax,
    was “no more than an attempted addition to the statute of something which [was]
    not there.” 
    Id. at 359
    . The same goes here: the Rules and Regulations attempt to
    expand the tax by adding to the ordinance “something which is not there”—in this
    case, a requirement that only those pensions reported on federal Form 1099-R are
    subject to the exclusion.
    {¶ 25} Contrary to the city’s claim, our decision in Hillenmeyer v.
    Cleveland Bd. of Rev., 
    144 Ohio St.3d 165
    , 
    2015-Ohio-1623
    , 
    41 N.E.3d 1164
    , does
    not compel a different result. In that case, we held that the tax administrator’s
    rulemaking authority extended to spelling out a formula for applying the city’s
    income tax to nonresidents who performed a portion of their work in the city. Id.
    at ¶ 20. But in Hillenmeyer, the ordinance was silent about the manner in which
    taxes should be levied against nonresidents. Here, in contrast, the ordinance
    specifically provides that anything that is a pension is beyond the scope of the
    9
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    income tax. The tax administrator’s rulemaking authority does not allow him to
    dictate otherwise.
    3. Cleveland’s ordinance-based argument
    {¶ 26} Cleveland’s further attempt to avoid the pension exclusion rests on
    the definition of “qualifying wages” in Cleveland’s Codified Ordinances. For tax
    year 2006, Cleveland imposed taxes on “all qualifying wages, earned and/or
    received * * * by nonresidents of the City for work done or services performed or
    rendered within the City or attributable to the City.”            Cleveland Codified
    Ordinances 191.0501(b)(1). The ordinance defined “qualifying wages” to include
    “compensation attributable to a nonqualified deferred compensation plan or
    program as defined in section 3121(v)(2)(C) of the Internal Revenue Code.”
    Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.031501. The SERP is a nonqualified deferred-
    compensation plan for purposes of 26 U.S.C. 3121(v)(2)(C). Thus, Cleveland
    argues, the ordinance makes the present value of the SERP immediately taxable.
    {¶ 27} The two Cleveland income-tax ordinances are at odds. One—
    Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.031501—would seem to make the SERP
    taxable because it falls within the definition of “qualifying wages.” The other
    ordinance—Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.0901(d) (the pension exclusion)—
    says that the SERP is not taxable. In reconciling this conflict, we turn to the familiar
    rule of statutory construction that when there is a conflict between a general
    provision and a more specific provision in a statute, the specific provision controls.
    Scalia & Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 183 (2012). See
    R.C. 1.51. The canon rests on the rationale that “ ‘[t]he particular provision is
    established upon a nearer and more exact view of the subject than the general, of
    which it may be regarded as a correction.’ ” Scalia & Garner, Reading Law at 183,
    quoting Jeremy Bentham, A Complete Code of Laws, in 3 The Works of Jeremy
    Bentham 210 (John Bowring Ed.1843). Here, the more general definition of
    10
    January Term, 2017
    “qualifying wages” is limited by the specific provision, which excludes pensions
    from the broad definition.
    {¶ 28} Adoption of Cleveland’s interpretation of the ordinances would have
    the effect of making the pension exclusion largely, if not completely, superfluous.
    Quite simply, the definition of “qualifying wages” in the ordinance refers to the
    definition of “wages” in 26 U.S.C. 3121 that is used for the so-called payroll or
    FICA taxes that fund Social Security and Medicare benefits. That definition
    broadly includes “all remuneration for employment” for purposes of the FICA tax
    base, subject to the exclusion of items prescribed in 26 U.S.C. 3121(a)(1) through
    (a)(23). These exclusions include the benefits a retiree receives from a qualified
    pension plan, 26 U.SC. 3121(a)(5)(A), as well as an employer’s payments made
    “on account of sickness or accident disability,” 26 U.S.C. 3121(a)(4). These same
    benefits are excluded by the pension exclusion. If, as Cleveland argues, 26 U.S.C.
    3121’s definition of “wages” is fully controlling, there would be no need for the
    separate pension exclusion.
    {¶ 29} The city counters that the BTA’s decision finding the SERP
    nontaxable “renders meaningless” the income-tax-ordinance provisions levying the
    city tax on nonqualified deferred compensation.          See Cleveland Codified
    Ordinances 191.0501(b)(1) and 191.031501. But this is not the case. In fact, the
    record shows that National City offered its executives the opportunity to defer a
    portion of their wages or bonuses to be paid later, and this deferred compensation
    would be “nonqualified deferred compensation” subject to the city’s taxation. Such
    a deferred amount would be included as “qualifying wages” because it is
    “compensation attributable to a nonqualified deferred compensation plan or
    program” under Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.031501. And because it is
    clearly not a pension, it would not be excluded under Cleveland Codified Ordinance
    191.0901(d). Thus, the deferred amount would be taxable.
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 30} We conclude that the definition of “qualifying wages” in Cleveland
    Codified Ordinances 191.031501 does not override the exclusion of the SERP from
    the city income tax as a pension in Cleveland Codified Ordinances 191.0901(d).
    4. Cleveland’s state-law argument
    {¶ 31} Cleveland also argues that because the city had elected to tax on a
    qualifying-wages basis under former R.C. Chapter 718, it was required by state law
    to impose its income tax on the SERP. Under former R.C. Chapter 718, “qualifying
    wages” were defined as those wages included in 26 U.S.C. 3121(a), subject to
    certain adjustments. See former R.C. 718.03(A), Am.Sub.H.B. No. 95, 150 Ohio
    Laws, Part I, 396, 638.1 The chapter excluded from “qualifying wages”
    any amount attributable to a nonqualified deferred compensation
    plan or program described in section 3121(v)(2)(C) of the Internal
    Revenue Code if the compensation is included in wages and has, by
    resolution or ordinance, been exempted from taxation by the
    municipal corporation.
    Former R.C. 718.03(A)(2)(c), 150 Ohio Laws, Part I, at 639.
    {¶ 32} As Cleveland reads the statute, because the city taxes on a
    qualifying-wages basis, it is required to tax “amount[s] attributable to a
    nonqualified deferred compensation plan” unless it specifically excludes those
    amounts by ordinance. But the city has excluded these amounts by ordinance—the
    pension exclusion exempts the SERP at issue from taxation. Further, even if the
    pension exclusion somehow did not satisfy the requirement of the state statute, our
    decision in Gesler, 
    138 Ohio St.3d 76
    , 
    2013-Ohio-4986
    , 
    3 N.E.3d 1177
    , would
    prevent the imposition of the tax. There, we held that although the General
    1
    R.C. Chapter 718 was comprehensively rewritten in 2014. 2014 Sub.H.B. No. 5 (effective Mar.
    23, 2015). We rely on the version of the law that was in force in 2006.
    12
    January Term, 2017
    Assembly can restrict a city’s power to tax, it “cannot command [a city] to impose
    a tax [on specific income] when [the city] has chosen not to tax that income.” Id.
    at 21-22.
    B. Cleveland’s Additional Arguments Lack Merit
    {¶ 33} Cleveland raises a number of other arguments that we can dispose of
    quickly. It challenges certain procedural aspects of the BTA proceeding, arguing
    generally that the BTA failed to afford appropriate deference to the decision of the
    review board. But in MacDonald v. Shaker Hts. Income Tax Bd. of Rev., 
    144 Ohio St.3d 105
    , 
    2015-Ohio-3290
    , 
    41 N.E.3d 376
    , we specifically held that the BTA has
    authority to review municipal-tax-board decisions de novo as to both facts and law.
    Id. at ¶ 23. We also conclude that the BTA did not abuse its discretion in allowing
    Patricia Emond to testify regarding background information about the SERP or in
    considering the testimony she gave in the Shaker Heights case. See Orange City
    School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 
    74 Ohio St.3d 415
    , 416-
    417, 
    659 N.E.2d 1223
     (1996). Further, we are not persuaded that the BTA restricted
    Cleveland’s home-rule authority under Ohio Constitution, Article XVIII, Section
    3, when it applied Cleveland’s ordinances to determine whether the SERP was a
    pension. In short, we find no error in the review undertaken by the BTA here.
    {¶ 34} Finally, Cleveland contends that the MacDonalds are estopped from
    contesting the tax assessment because in 1997 their counsel in this case signed a
    settlement letter on behalf of National City and other corporate clients that allegedly
    acknowledges that a SERP like the one at issue here is subject to city taxation.
    There is some dispute as to what type of retirement benefits that agreement covered;
    but regardless, the MacDonalds cannot be estopped by an agreement to which they
    were not a party.
    III. CONCLUSION
    {¶ 35} For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the BTA correctly
    reversed the review board’s decision.
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    Decision affirmed.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and O’DONNELL, KENNEDY, FRENCH, O’NEILL, and
    FISCHER, JJ., concur.
    _________________
    Baker & Hostetler, L.L.P., Christopher J. Swift, Edward J. Bernert, and
    Elizabeth A. McNellie, for appellees.
    Barbara A. Langhenry, Cleveland Director of Law, and Linda L.
    Bickerstaff, Assistant Director of Law, for appellants.
    _________________
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