American Oil Co. v. Board of Appeals

310 A.2d 796, 270 Md. 301, 1973 Md. LEXIS 685
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 9, 1973
Docket[No. 51, September Term, 1973.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 310 A.2d 796 (American Oil Co. v. Board of Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Oil Co. v. Board of Appeals, 310 A.2d 796, 270 Md. 301, 1973 Md. LEXIS 685 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this zoning case the principal issue is whether the action of the appellee, Board of Appeals of Montgomery County (the Board), in denying, on October 10, 1972, to the appellant, American Oil Company (Amoco), a special exception to construct and operate an automobile filling station on land at the northwest corner of the intersection of Middlebrook Road and Maryland Route 355 in Montgomery County was fairly debatable or was arbitrary, unreasonable, and capricious. The Circuit Court for Montgomery County (Fairbanks, J.) on appeal passed an order on April 2, 1973, affirming the Board and a timely appeal from that order was taken to this Court.

The subject property is somewhat rectangular in shape and, as indicated, is in the northwest quadrant of the intersection of Middlebrook Road and Maryland Route 355 in Montgomery County (the County). It is undeveloped and has several large trees. It is zoned C-2, Commercial.

Amoco indicated in its petition for a special exception for the proposed filling station that the requested use would be to replace an automobile filling station which it had operated at the southeast quadrant of the same intersection. This obsolete filling station has been torn down. At the public hearing before the Board, Amoco produced only three witnesses, i.e., (1) a land engineer and planner, A. Morton Thomas; (2) a construction engineer, Karl M. Hirsch; and~(3) a real estate representative, Henry Cerasoli. No witnesses appeared in opposition to the granting of the petition.

Mr. Thomas, the land engineer and planner, in his testimony before the Board, did not refer to any study or report he had prepared. On the contrary, he used the Report *303 of the Technical Staff of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (the Commission), the street layout of the Germantown area prepared by the Commission’s staff, and the zoning and highway plan map of the Master Plan for Germantown, but not the text of that Master Plan. After using these documents to indicate to the Board the geographic area of the requested filling station, Mr. Thomas stated that the site “is on rural ground that has been mainly farmed. It right now is in pasture.” He also observed that the “intersection of Middlebrook Road and Maryland Route 355 has been and still is ... somewhat of a rural county road intersection [with] just a few residences and just a few small stores around it.” He then stated: “[T]his complex is anticipated to change greatly which is referred to in the staff report when the Germantown master plan is implemented with all of its proposed development.” (Emphasis supplied.) He thought that this intersection “mil serve as the hub or the center of neighborhood areas 7, 8, 9, and 10.” (Emphasis supplied.) He was also of the opinion that neighborhood areas 8, 9 and 10 in which “it is planned on the Germantown master plan that a large commercial area be developed in the vicinity of the intersection of Middlebrook Road and 355, at which the gasoline service station was approved, it would be a part of the overall service area.” Mr. Thomas concluded that in his “thinking and observation, this area is certainly an ideal location for a gasoline service station not only to serve the existing developments that are being generated in this area, but also for the overall 800-aCre tract which mil be intensely developed as proposed by the Germantown master plan.” (Emphasis supplied.)

When a member of the Board inquired in regard to the availability of sewers, Mr. Thomas stated that there was no current service and that, “right at the present time,” everything was “sort of in limbo” at the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission (WSSC). Mr. Thomas suggested that, on a temporary basis, a septic tank could be used.

At this point, Amoco, through its counsel, requested that *304 the Board grant a grace period of two and one-half years to implement the special exception, if granted, because of the lack of sewer facilities.

Even though Mr. Thomas was not a traffic engineer or expert, he testified that at the time of the hearing, Maryland Route 355 had two 12-foot lanes with a total width of 24 feet of macadam surface. On the Germantown Master Plan, Route 355 is classified as a major highway with a proposed 102-foot right of way with a recommended pavement width of four to six lanes. The State Highway Administration, however, has not made any provisions for the proposed improvement to Route 355 in its five-year program, FY 1972-76, and thus the road is not on the State’s program for upgrading at the present time. Mr. Thomas further testified that in front of the site of the subject property, the average daily traffic totalled 900 vehicles for a 24-hour count in both directions. He said that with the proposed improvement to six lanes, Route 355 would have a design capacity of between 32,000 and 37,000 vehicles in both directions for a 24-hour period. Middlebrook Road is not a state road, Mr. Thomas stated, but is a county road having a total width of 20 feet of macadam surface. The current capital improvement program for the County (FY 1972-77) contains no provision for the improvement of Middlebrook Road. Mr. Thomas also observed that the Germantown Master Plan proposes that this road be classified as a major highway, but relocates it to the north of the site of the subject property. This relocation would either eliminate the section of Middlebrook Road located at the site or lead to its use as a service road or its being cut off to the west of the site in a cul-de-sac. Amoco made no traffic count for this road and the County has never made a traffic count on that road since the County considered it to be only a minor road presenting “no problems at all.” Mr. Thomas stated that, upon the relocation of Middlebrook Road, the requested filling station would be oriented toward and dependent upon Route 355, but that, in his opinion, the relocation of Middlebrook Road would not affect the usefulness of the proposed filling station or its consistency with the Germantown Master Plan.

*305 Through Mr. Thomas, Amoco introduced an exhibit, mentioned above, of a street layout within a limited area surrounding the subject property, showing that there were eight existing gasoline filling stations within 3.4 miles of the subject property, two of which were outlets of the American Oil Company. One of the Amoco stations is located at the northwest intersection of Germantown Road (Maryland Route 118) and Aircraft Drive some 2.5 miles from the subject property; the other is located on the west side of Maryland Route 355 in Wilson Heights some 2.7 miles from the subject property.

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Bluebook (online)
310 A.2d 796, 270 Md. 301, 1973 Md. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-oil-co-v-board-of-appeals-md-1973.