Court Opinion

ID: 3696256
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:36:46.820908+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:36:13.021675
License: Public Domain

I concur in the principal opinion but believe that several distinctions are desirable.
It is not clear from the record whether appellant is attempting to appeal (1) the failure of council to adopt the proposed ordinance of appellant or (2) the enactment of a particular ordinance (No. 105-62). From the brief, it appears to be the former.
In support of the right to appeal, appellant argues that the city council is an "authority" within the meaning of Section2506.01, Revised Code.
The people of Ohio in their Constitution have vested a portion of their sovereign power directly in the municipalities. Among the powers granted by Section 3, Article XVIII of the Constitution, is the power to legislate, including the exercise of the constitutional police power to control private property uses for the public welfare. Except as limited by the "conflict" clause of that section, a municipality's power to enact police regulatory measures within its limits is coextensive with the legislative authority of the General Assembly. Under the Constitution, the municipality's enactment or failure to enact an ordinance is the legal equivalent of the General Assembly's enactment or failure to enact a statute.
I think it apparent that the failure of a legislative body to enact a proposed law under its police powers is not subject to judicial review. This is true whether the proposal relates to an entirely new matter or is for the amendment of an existing law. In that regard, I think that the Legislature could not constitutionally provide for such a review.
Of course the enactment of a purported law is subject to *Page 460 
judicial review both as to the manner of enactment and as to its constitutionality. (It might be noted that appellant does not attack the manner of enactment nor challenge the constitutionality of the ordinance under the "conflict" clause of Section 3, Article XVIII of the Constitution.) It is also clear that the Ohio General Assembly may prescribe by statute the manner in which judicial review is obtained such as designating the proper court, the method of invoking its jurisdiction, etc. However, while a court can review the validity of a purported law and declare all or a portion of it invalid, it cannot supplant the legislative action with action of its own.
In the present case, the legislative authority of Whitehall is vested in the City Council. Municipalities need not, in theory, establish a structure of government involving a separation of powers. It may be conceded that under a city charter a council could also be vested with administrative authority. For example, a charter might provide that the council review, on appeal from an administrative officer, the application of an existing building code ordinance with respect to the issuance of building permits. While the circumstances are not clear, this was apparently true in Gibson v. City ofOberlin (1960), 171 Ohio St. 1. However, in the present case the council was clearly acting in a legislative capacity in determining what amendment, if any, should be made to the zoning ordinance. In legal contemplation, it was not determining the application of that ordinance, as already enacted, to a particular tract of land.
Therefore the issue in this case is, as the principal opinion states, whether Chapter 2506, Revised Code, applies to the enactment or failure to enact a law in the exercise of legislative power. I agree with the majority that Chapter 2506, Revised Code, cannot be reasonably interpreted to provide for an appeal as the method for judicial review of the municipal legislative function. *Page 461