Baylin v. State Roads Commission

475 A.2d 1155, 300 Md. 1, 1984 Md. LEXIS 298
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 4, 1984
Docket113, September Term, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 475 A.2d 1155 (Baylin v. State Roads Commission) 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
Baylin v. State Roads Commission, 475 A.2d 1155, 300 Md. 1, 1984 Md. LEXIS 298 (Md. 1984).

Opinion

COUCH, Judge.

This appeal involves the question of the measure of compensation to be applied where approximately 30 years elapses between the initial design of a highway project and the ultimate taking of private property for a substantially enlarged public project. The issue now before the Court is whether evidence of enhanced value, under the circumstances present here, may be introduced at a jury trial on the issue of just compensation. We granted certiorari prior to *4 consideration by the Court of Special Appeals to address this issue of first impression in Maryland.

(I)

The Facts

In 1948, Baltimore County requested that the State Roads Commission develop a plan for construction of a limited access highway to service the corridor between Liberty Road and Reisterstown Road. This project (relocating U.S. Route 140, which was later termed the Northwest Expressway) was budgeted as of July 1, 1954 in the State Roads Commission’s twelve year road construction and reconstruction program, published in 1952. As of 1954 the state was committed to build the Northwest Expressway which was then scheduled for completion between 1962 and 1965.

In 1957, the alignment of the Northwest Expressway was approved by the State Roads Commission. The alignment established the location of the centerline or median of the highway. Construction drawings, ground surveys, and right-of-way plats were prepared in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s. The construction drawings showed the location of the Northwest Expressway through appellants' property and an interchange with then existing Painters Mill Road, all of which would have required a taking of 19.32 1 acres from appellants’ property, which was a small part of the entire tract. These plans were consistent with the interchange design and location as shown on the 1957 Baltimore County Zoning Map.

The location of the Northwest Expressway was approved by the State Roads Commission and the Bureau of Public Roads in 1960.

In order to permit landowners to determine if and how the proposed Northwest Expressway would affect their property the state superimposed the proposed taking on a *5 plat and furnished this to landowners. Appellants’ predecessor in title received such a plat showing the location of the Northwest Expressway in 1963. The taking indicated on the plat was consistent with previous construction drawings requiring 19 acres of appellants’ land. However, the state noted in an accompanying letter and on the plat itself that the plans and proposed right-of-way were “TENTATIVE AND SUBJECT TO REVISION.”

At about this time a federally funded study was undertaken to consider construction of the Northwest Rapid Transit line. The study was completed in 1965. One suggestion was to locate the northwest line in the median of the proposed Northwest Expressway. Subsequent studies, published in 1968 and 1970, considered this alternative favorably.

Appellants acquired the property which is the subject of this appeal in 1965. They engaged an engineer to plan the site for a regional shopping center, together with residential and industrial uses. In 1967, the engineers obtained copies of the state’s tentative construction drawings for the Northwest Expressway. The plans still showed the project alignment going through appellants’ property, requiring 19 acres. The state informed the engineers at that time that the plans dated back to 1959 and were very tentative. They also indicated that the Northwest Expressway and its interchange at Painters Mill Road were “under restudy and subject to change based on traffic needs, latest design criteria, and B.P.R. 1M-21-6-66.” 2

Construction of the Northwest Expressway did not begin as originally planned because funds for the project were transferred to the Patapsco Freeway in the late 1960’s. Before funds could be reappropriated several things occurred affecting the construction of the Northwest Expressway. The National Environmental Policy Act was implemented in 1969. The Act subjected highway projects to *6 new developmental processes, including the preparation of environmental documents and the necessity for public hearings. New safety standards for highways were also adopted. In 1971 the state requested federal funding for the Northwest Expressway project. Additionally, the Mass Transit Administration was established and there were preliminary plans for the joint development of the highway project with a rapid transit facility. The 1970 Alternative Transit alignments recommended placing the rapid transit line in the median of the Northwest Expressway, with stations at Milford Road, the Beltway, McDonogh Road, and Owings Mills near Dolfield Road. This was an extension of previous work undertaken by the Metropolitan Transit Authority in 1964-1966. As a result of these events new project planning studies were commissioned in 1971.

The transit line appeared in the 1972 Consolidated Transportation Program combining a segment of the Northwest Line of the Mass Transit Administration’s rapid transit facility with the Northwest Expressway.

In 1973 the first public hearing required under the National Environmental Policy Act was held in connection with the preparation of an environmental impact statement; a preliminary draft of this impact statement was available at the hearing. There were several alternatives considered for the Northwest Expressway. Alternates 1 and 2 of the statement were the same alignment of the Northwest Expressway with the interchange at Painters Mill Road which had been previously planned, requiring 19 acres of appellants’ property. The other two alternates considered were to improve Reisterstown Road, including a full interchange at the Beltway, or do nothing.

The draft impact statement also considered proposals for a Rapid Rail Facility of the Mass Transit Administration. Several possible alternate routes were considered for the transit line as well as alternates for the parking facilities. Two of the alternates would have involved the taking of approximately 60 acres of appellants’ property. Because of *7 public concerns neither alternate was adopted and the state prepared two additional alternates. These were presented at public hearings in 1974. Under both of the new alternates, the interchange and major transit station were shifted to appellants’ property. However, location of the parking facility for the transit station was different. In one alternate the parking was located on appellants’ property; in the other the parking was located off appellants’ property.

An area included within these two alternate proposals qualified as a Historic District in 1975. This led to the inclusion of a third alternate plan, which reduced the land required from the Historic District, along with the two original alternates in the draft Environmental Statement, which was prepared and circulated in 1975. This third alternative plan required location of the parking facility on appellants’ property.

This final plan was recommended for approval by the state in 1976 and was accepted by the federal government in 1977.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 A.2d 1155, 300 Md. 1, 1984 Md. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baylin-v-state-roads-commission-md-1984.