Annapolis Market Place, L.L.C. v. Parker

802 A.2d 1029, 369 Md. 689, 2002 Md. LEXIS 500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 18, 2002
Docket46, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 802 A.2d 1029 (Annapolis Market Place, L.L.C. v. Parker) 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
Annapolis Market Place, L.L.C. v. Parker, 802 A.2d 1029, 369 Md. 689, 2002 Md. LEXIS 500 (Md. 2002).

Opinion

HARRELL, Judge.

Petitioner (Annapolis Market Place, L.L.C.) applied for and eventually was denied zoning reclassification of property it owned in Anne Arundel County. At each level of administrative and judicial consideration of Petitioner’s application, compliance with Anne Arundel County’s “Standards and proce *693 dures for granting or denying rezoning” was the required focus. Anne Arundel County Code (“County Code”), Article 3, § 2-105. Of greatest debate was (and is) the meaning and scope of County Code, Art. 3, § 2-105(a)(3), 1 which provides that:

(a) Rezonings shall be granted or denied in accordance with appropriate zoning regulations, but a rezoning may not be granted except on the basis of an affirmative finding that:
(3) transportation facilities, water and sewerage systems, storm drainage systems, schools, and fire suppression facilities adequate to serve the uses allowed by the new zoning classification, as defined in Article 26, Title 2, Subtitle 4, Part 2 of this Code, are either in existence or programmed for construction; ....

According to Petitioner, the reference in § 2-105(a)(3) to “Article 26, Title 2, Subtitle 4, Part 2 of this Code,” the “Adequacy of Facilities” part of the “Subdivision” Article (“the AOF Part”) of the County Code, necessarily incorporates the entirety of that part. 2 Specifically, Petitioner identifies a *694 number of sections within the AOF Part which provide, as an alternative to the actual existence of the needed facilities to serve the proposed development, that a developer’s agreement, proffered at the time subdivision approval is sought, to provide the needed facilities may satisfy the adequacy requirements. By parity of reasoning, Petitioner maintains that a developer’s agreement at rezoning should satisfy the requirement that adequate facilities are “either in existence or programmed for construction.” 3 On the other hand, Respon *695 dents in this ease (Anne Arundel County and neighboring homeowners) maintain that the reference in § 2-105(a)(3) to the AOF Part does not incorporate, by its terms, each of the alternative means provided in the AOF Part for establishing that facilities are, or will be, adequate. According to Respondents, Petitioner does not satisfy the requirement for a zoning reclassification because it did not demonstrate that the enu *696 merated facilities were in existence or programmed for construction in the relevant governmental capital improvements program (the County’s or the State Highway Administration’s).

We granted Petitioner’s writ of certiorari, Annapolis Mkt. v. Parker, 364 Md. 534, 774 A.2d 408 (2001), to address the meaning of Art. 3, § 2-105(a)(3) of the County Code. Petitioner presents the following rephrased question for our review:

Whether, in determining if public facilities are adequate to support a zoning reclassification under Anne Arundel County Code, Art. 3, § 2~105(a)(3), which requires adequate public facilities (defined by reference to the Adequacy of Facilities ordinance) to be “either in existence or programmed for construction,” the Anne Arundel County Board of Appeals may consider evidence of future improvements to existing facilities agreed to be undertaken by a developer.

I. Relevant Background

Petitioner 4 owns 32.93 acres of real property (“the Property”) located in Annapolis, Maryland. As described by the Court of Special Appeals,

[t]he Property fronts Bestgate Road, a four-lane divided highway with a raised medium strip. A portion of the Property contains steep slopes and nontidal wetlands close to Cabin Branch, which drains into Saltworks Creek. A Baltimore Gas and Electric overhead utility line transverses the northeast portion of the Property.
The land to the immediate west of the Property is zoned W[ ]l[-]Industrial and developed as the Annapolis Commercial Park, a 400,000 square foot industrial park. Adjacent to the Property to the east is a cemetery and a church. That *697 property is zoned residential. Two residential subdivisions, Woodlawn and Saltworks on the Severn, lie to the north of the Property. These subdivisions do not have access to Bestgate Road and are separated from the site by Cabin Branch. Across Bestgate Road to the west of the Property is a large, commercial EPA building and land zoned Town center. The Property is within clear sight of the Annapolis Mall.
Approximately 30 acres of the Property are zoned R5 Residential; the remaining two acres are zoned R1 Residential. [Petitioner] sought to build a “novel mix-use” development that would integrate residential, commercial, and retail uses in one location. The project was described as “a street with offices and residential over retail, a town square, that it stands to a community building which looks out to this stream valley park.” The northern portion of the Property, in the area of Cabin Branch, would not be developed. [Petitioner] was advised by County officials that such a project could be accomplished only by C3 Commercial zoning. 5

On 3 March 1998, Petitioner filed an application to rezone the Property to C3 Commercial. Pursuant to County Code, Art. 28, § 11-102(b), Petitioner, as an “applicant for rezoning,” had the “burden of proof, including the burden of going forward with the evidence and the burden of persuasion, with respect to any question of fact.” As provided in County Code, Art. 28, § ll-102(c), 6 the rezoning could not be granted “except on the basis of an affirmative finding that”:

*698 (1) there was a mistake in the zoning map or the character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent that the zoning map should be changed;
(2) the new zoning classification conforms to the County General Development Plan in relation to land use, number of dwelling units or type and intensity of nonresidential buildings, and location;
(3) transportation facilities, water and sewerage systems, storm drainage systems, schools, and fire suppression facilities adequate to serve the uses allowed by the new zoning classification, as defined in Article 26, Title 2, Subtitle 4, Part 2 of this Code, are either in existence or programmed for construction; [and]
(4) there is compatibility between the uses of the property as reclassified and the surrounding land uses, so as to promote the health, safety, and welfare of present and future residents of the County; .... 7

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Bluebook (online)
802 A.2d 1029, 369 Md. 689, 2002 Md. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/annapolis-market-place-llc-v-parker-md-2002.