[Cite as Hamilton v. Premier Auto Mart, Inc., 2019-Ohio-2493.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
BUTLER COUNTY
CITY OF HAMILTON, :
Appellee, : CASE NO. CA2019-01-002
: OPINION
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:
PREMIER AUTO MART, INC., :
Appellant. :
CRIMINAL APPEAL FROM CITY OF HAMILTON MUNICIPAL COURT
Case No. 18CRB03495
Neal D. Schuett, City of Hamilton Prosecuting Attorney, 345 High Street, 2nd Floor,
Hamilton, Ohio 45011, for appellee
Law Offices of Krista Ray Cure, Krista Ray Cure, 3805 Edwards Road, Suite 550,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45209, for appellant
S. POWELL, J.
{¶ 1} Appellant, Premier Auto Mart, Inc. ("Premier Auto"), appeals its conviction in
the Hamilton Municipal Court for operating a junkyard without proper authorization from the
Hamilton City Council in violation of Section 1150.40 of the Hamilton Zoning Ordinance
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("HZO").1 For the reasons outlined below, we affirm.
{¶ 2} Premier Auto is an automobile sale, service, and repair business that is owned
and operated by Gregory S. Myers. Premier Auto is located in Hamilton at 816 South Erie
Highway. Although opening its business in 1995, Premier Auto has conducted its business
at the South Erie Highway location since 2001. There is no dispute that the property where
Premier Auto is located is included within an I-2 Industrial Zoning District. There is also no
dispute that automobile sales, service, and repair are permitted conditional uses in an I-2
Industrial Zoning District.
{¶ 3} On May 30, 2018, Premier Auto received a notice of violation that it was in
violation of Section 1150.40 of the HZO. Pursuant to that ordinance:
It shall be unlawful to use or occupy or permit the use or
occupancy of any building or premises, or both, or part thereof
hereafter created, erected, changed, converted or wholly or
partly altered or enlarged in its use or structure until a Certificate
of Zoning Compliance shall have been issued therefore by the
City Manager or Designee stating that the proposed use of the
building or land conforms to the requirements of this Ordinance.
{¶ 4} The notice was sent to Premier Auto after an inspection of its property
revealed it was operating an unauthorized junkyard. Specifically, the notice alleged:
There are multiple wrecked, disassembled and inoperable
vehicle, auto body and engine parts that are being salvaged for
parts to fix other autos. This office has no record of a conditional
use approval for an auto salvage/junkyard at this location.
Cease all salvage operations and remove all wrecked and
[disassembled] vehicles, engine and auto body parts from the
property by June 17, 2018.
{¶ 5} Pursuant to Section 1108.00 of the HZO, a junkyard is defined as:
A place where waste, discarded or salvaged materials are
bought, sold, exchanged, baled, packed, disassembled or
handled; including auto wrecking yards, house wrecking yards,
used material yards, but not including pawn shops, antique
1. Pursuant to Loc.R. (6)(A), we sua sponte remove this appeal from the accelerated calendar for the purpose
of issuing this opinion.
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shops, and places for the sale, purchase, or storage of used
furniture and household equipment, used cars in operable
condition or salvaged materials incidental to manufacturing
operations.
{¶ 6} On August 22, 2018, a complaint was issued charging Premier Auto with
violating Section 1150.40 of the HZO. The complaint alleged that Premier Auto – and by
extension Myers – failed to discontinue operating the unauthorized junkyard on its property
as instructed by the notice of violation. The complaint was based on allegations that
Premier Auto had continued salvaging "wrecked automobile parts to repair other
automobiles for sale" despite being told to cease those operations by June 17, 2018. A
violation of Section 1150.40 constitutes an unclassified misdemeanor that carries a fine
ranging between $250 to $500 for each offense.
{¶ 7} On September 27, 2018, the matter was tried to the bench. During trial, the
trial court heard testimony from two witnesses; Myers and Larry Bagford, a planning and
zoning inspector with the city of Hamilton. Bagford testified that the notice of violation was
sent to Premier Auto after he observed "multiple unlicensed vehicles" parked on the
property that "looked like they wouldn't run because they were damaged in some way."
Bagford also testified there were automobile parts laying "outside of his shop area" where
"there's all kinds of body parts. Fenders, bumpers, hoods. That kind of thing." This,
according to Bagford, created a problem of "salvaging," "disassembling," and "exchanging
of parts." This was in addition to those automobiles sitting "around there for long periods
of time like most junk yards."
{¶ 8} Continuing, Bagford testified regarding the condition of Premier Auto's
property. As Bagford testified:
[U]sually a trailer sitting there that has parts sitting on it that I
assume go to uh – take to the scrap yard because they're
already damaged and not working anything other than salvage.
* * * Um – there are multiple cars in various stages of
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disassembling and wrecked and parts laying around um – on
top of other vehicles. Uh – there's one van that's um – been
parked in the same spot that has its back end bashed in that's
been there for at least six months.
{¶ 9} Bagford was then shown several photographs of Premier Auto's property he
had taken approximately two months earlier to compare with other photographs he had
taken earlier that day. Bagford testified the photographs showed a fenced in area on
Premier Auto's property with numerous vehicles, tires, trailers, auto body parts, and
"wrecked vehicles" that had "parts laying on top of them." When asked if the photographs
depicted the property in similar conditions to when the notice of violation was originally
issued, Bagford testified "Yes. Those same vehicles. * * * Some are the very same
vehicles." Bagford also testified that "[b]y looking at the pictures of the cars and the damage
that is done to them some of them not even having engines, it's obviously they're not
running." This court's review of these same photographs confirms Bagford's testimony.
{¶ 10} In Premier Auto's defense, Myers testified that Premier Auto was not
operating an unauthorized junkyard on its property as alleged by the complaint. Myers
instead testified the automobiles and automobile parts observed on the property were all
part of Premier Auto's business model. As Myers testified, "it's like the housing business.
You know people buy houses and they get them ready and they flip them, I do the same
thing with cars." Myers also testified that Premier Auto never sold any of the auto parts that
were removed from the automobiles observed on its property, nor did Premier Auto sell any
automobiles for scrap metal. Rather, according to Myers, the only work Premier Auto did
on the automobiles located on the property was to make them operable and sell them off.
This was because, as Myers testified, "I don't have time to go out and buy cars just to * * *
scrap them or sell parts or whatever."
{¶ 11} On November 29, 2018, the trial court issued a decision finding Premier Auto
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guilty of violating Section 1150.40 of the HZO. In so holding, the trial court initially stated:
The issue is whether the Defendant buys some damaged
vehicles simply to use as donor cars, using the parts from them
for other cars, and stores those donor cars at the lot. In this
case the photographs show multiple vehicles parked on the
Defendant's lot. They are in obvious disrepair and many have
not been moved from the photos taken July 26, 2018 to the
photos taken September 27, 2018. The Court notes that in
these photos a white van, badly damaged, is parked in front of
a dark sedan, and behind a red vehicle. The vehicles do not
appear to have been moved over the time frame in the photos.
{¶ 12} The trial court then set forth its holding as follows:
It is the finding of the Court that the Defendant is using the
property in question as a junkyard, that it does not have the
required Certificate of Zoning Compliance and therefore it is in
violation of HZO 1150.40. The Court finds this to have been
proven by proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The Defendant's
storage and dissassemblage (sic) of vehicles on the property
falls within the definition of junkyard as set forth in the HZO. He
has not obtained the appropriate approval to operate a junkyard
and therefore is in violation of the ordinance.
{¶ 13} In reaching this decision, the trial court rejected Premier Auto's claim that
Section 1150.40 of the HZO was unconstitutionally overbroad. The same was true in regard
to Premier Auto's constitutional challenge to the definition of junkyard as set forth in Section
1108.00. Specifically, as the trial court stated:
The Defendant's argument that the ordinance is overbroad is
also without merit. * * * Here no case law was cited to support
this claim. It was argued that merely handling a salvaged part
might fall within the ordinance's prohibition. However, this case
is not one of merely handling a part. It involves storage and
dissassemblage (sic) of severely damaged, inoperable vehicles.
For many reasons, including aesthetic concerns for the
businesses around the Defendant's place of business, the city
has an interest in regulating the location of junkyards. This
Court finds the Ordinance involved is not overbroad.
Premier Auto now appeals its conviction, raising two assignments of error for review.
{¶ 14} Assignment of Error No. 1:
{¶ 15} THE FINDING OF GUILTY IS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE
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EVIDENCE.
{¶ 16} In its first assignment of error, Premier Auto argues the trial court's decision
finding it in violation of Section 1150.40 of the HZO must be reversed since the trial court's
finding of guilt was against the manifest weight of the evidence. We disagree.
{¶ 17} A manifest weight of the evidence challenge examines the "inclination of the
greater amount of credible evidence, offered at a trial, to support one side of the issue rather
than the other." State v. Barnett, 12th Dist. Butler No. CA2011-09-177, 2012-Ohio-2372, ¶
14. To determine whether a conviction is against the manifest weight of the evidence, this
court must look at the entire record, weigh the evidence and all reasonable inferences,
consider the credibility of the witnesses, and determine whether in resolving the conflicts in
the evidence, the trier of fact clearly lost its way and created such a manifest miscarriage
of justice that the conviction must be reversed and a new trial ordered. State v. Morgan,
12th Dist. Butler Nos. CA2013-08-146 and CA2013-08-147, 2014-Ohio-2472, ¶ 34 (12th
Dist.). This court will overturn a conviction due to the manifest weight of the evidence only
in extraordinary circumstances when the evidence presented at trial weighs heavily in favor
of acquittal. State v. Blair, 12th Dist. Butler No. CA2014-01-023, 2015-Ohio-818, ¶ 43.
{¶ 18} Premier Auto argues the trial court's decision must be reversed because the
record contains no "admissible evidence" to prove it was operating an unauthorized
junkyard on its property. Premier Auto instead argues the only evidence to support the trial
court's decision was improper hearsay testimony elicited from Bagford. Specifically,
Bagford's testimony that he received a call from "a lady who identified herself as the office
manager" at Premier Auto who told him "yeah, we bring in cars. We take parts off of them
to fix [other cars]." Over Premier Auto's objection, the trial court found Bagford's testimony
was admissible as a non-hearsay admission of a party-opponent under Evid.R.
801(D)(2)(d). Therefore, according to Premier Auto, because this testimony should have
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been excluded from trial, the trial court's decision finding it in violation of Section 1150.40
of the HZO must be reversed. We find no merit to Premier Auto's claim.
{¶ 19} Pursuant to Evid.R. 801(D)(2)(d), a statement is not hearsay if the statement
is offered against a party and is "a statement by the party's agent or servant concerning a
matter within the scope of the agency or employment, made during the existence of the
relationship[.]" While Premier Auto concedes that the challenged statement would have
been admissible if it had come from any one of its "automobile mechanic employees," we
see no reason why this would be any different because the statement came from its office
manager. Although Premier Auto argues that its office manager handles only
"administrative tasks," common sense dictates that an office manager would be aware of
the general nature of the business for which he or she was employed. That is certainly the
case here when considering it was the office manager who contacted Bagford to inquire
about the notice of violation that Premier Auto received. This goes well beyond what would
be considered just an administrative task left to low-level support staff.
{¶ 20} Regardless, while Bagford's testimony concerning his conversation with
Premier Auto's office manager was illustrative of its general business practices, that
testimony was in no way the only evidence submitted to support the trial court's decision.
Contrary to Premier Auto's claim, there exists extensive evidence to support the trial court's
finding of guilt. Therefore, because overwhelming evidence exists to support the trial court's
guilt finding, the trial court's decision to admit Bagford's challenged testimony would
constitute, at worst, harmless error. "A reviewing court properly finds the erroneous
admission of evidence harmless error where there is overwhelming evidence of guilt or
some other indicia the error did not contribute to the conviction." State v. Rowley, 12th Dist.
Clinton, 2017-Ohio-5850, ¶ 24, citing State v. Pottorf, 12th Dist. Warren No. CA2014-03-
046, 2014-Ohio-5399, ¶ 20.
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{¶ 21} As noted above, Bagford provided uncontroverted testimony that he had
observed "multiple unlicensed vehicles" parked on Premier Auto's property that "looked like
they wouldn't run because they were damaged in some way." Bagford also testified there
were automobile parts laying "outside of his shop area" where "there's all kinds of body
parts. Fenders, bumpers, hoods. That kind of thing." This was in addition to Bagford's
testimony that "there's one van that's um – been parked in the same spot that has its back
end bashed in that's been there for at least six months." Bagford further testified that "some
of them not even having engines, it's obviously they're not running." This, as Bagford
testified, created a problem of "salvaging," "disassembling," and "exchanging of parts."
Bagford's testimony was confirmed by several photographs taken of Premier Auto's
property admitted as evidence by the trial court.
{¶ 22} Based on the testimony and evidence presented, the trial court found Premier
Auto "was using the property in question as a junkyard, that it does not have the required
Certificate of Zoning Compliance and therefore it is in violation of HZO 1150.40." The trial
court also found that Premier Auto's "storage and dissassemblage (sic) of vehicles on the
property falls within the definition of junkyard as set forth in the HZO." We agree. Therefore,
because this is not one of those extraordinary cases when the evidence presented at trial
weighs heavily in favor of acquittal, but rather a case in which there exists extensive and
overwhelming evidence to support the trial court's finding of guilt, the trial court's decision
finding Premier Auto in violation of Section 1150.40 of the HZO was not against the manifest
weight of the evidence. Accordingly, finding no error in the trial court's decision, Premier
Auto's first assignment of error lacks merit and is overruled.
{¶ 23} Assignment of Error No. 2:
{¶ 24} THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY FINDING DEFENDANT GUILTY OF
HAMILTON MUNICIPAL ORDINANCE SECTION 1150.40.
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{¶ 25} In its second assignment of error, Premier Auto argues the trial court's
decision finding it in violation of Section 1150.40 of the HZO must be reversed since its
"incidental storage" of inoperable automobiles and automobile parts was a permissible
accessory use to its authorized automobile sale, service, and repair business. However,
as discussed more fully above, nothing about Premier Auto's extensive, continual, and
prolonged storage of inoperable automobiles and automobile parts could be considered
"incidental" to its otherwise legitimate business enterprise of operating an automobile sale,
service, and repair shop. The record instead indicates Premier Auto was operating an
unauthorized junkyard in violation of Section 1150.40 of the HZO. Premier Auto's claims
lack merit.
{¶ 26} Also lacking merit is Premier Auto's claim that the trial court's decision must
be reversed since Sections 1150.40 and 1108.00 of the HZO are unconstitutionally
overbroad. "A statute or ordinance may be overbroad, 'if in its reach it prohibits
constitutionally protected conduct.'" State v. Brownfield, 12th Dist. Butler No. CA2012-03-
065, 2013-Ohio-1947, ¶ 19, quoting Grayned v. Rockford, 408 U.S. 104, 114, 92 S.Ct. 2294
(1972). "The party alleging that a statute is unconstitutional must prove this assertion
beyond a reasonable doubt in order to prevail." City of Hamilton v. Hendrix, 144 Ohio
App.3d 328, 332 (12th Dist. 2001), quoting State v. Collier, 62 Ohio St.3d 267, 269 (1991).
This is because "[a]ll legislative enactments, whether of a municipality or state, enjoy a
strong presumption of validity." Brownfield at ¶ 8, citing Cahill v. Lewisburg, 79 Ohio App.3d
109, 117 (12th Dist.1992), citing Benevolent Assn. v. Parma, 61 Ohio St.2d 375, 377 (1980).
{¶ 27} Premier Auto claims both Section 1150.40 and Section 1108.00 of the HZO
are unconstitutionally overbroad since "a multitude of lawful activities, necessary in the
repair of automobiles, would render a property a 'junk yard,' without taking into account the
primary use of the property." However, when reviewing the plain language of the
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ordinances in question, we find neither Section 1150.40 nor Section 1108.00 are overbroad
in that neither ordinance infringes on Premier Auto's property rights. We find both
ordinances are also rationally related and specifically tailored to the legitimate purpose of
public safety in regulating the location of junkyards. "Legislative concern for public safety
is not only a proper police power objective, it is a mandate." Sebastian v. Village of
Georgetown, 146 Ohio App.3d 227, 231 (12th Dist.2001), citing Arnold v. City of Cleveland,
67 Ohio St.3d 35, 47 (1993). Therefore, finding no merit to any of the arguments raised by
Premier Auto herein, Premier Auto's second assignment of error also lacks merit and is
overruled.
{¶ 28} Judgment affirmed.
HENDRICKSON, P.J., and RINGLAND, J., concur.
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