Beall v. Montgomery County Council

212 A.2d 751, 240 Md. 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 27, 1965
Docket[No. 395, September Term, 1964.]
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 212 A.2d 751 (Beall v. Montgomery County Council) 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
Beall v. Montgomery County Council, 212 A.2d 751, 240 Md. 77 (Md. 1965).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On May 28, 1962, Jack Kay, et al, as owners of 43.2579 acres of land in Montgomery County, Maryland bounded by the Washington Beltway, Colesville Road and University Boulevard East (the subject property), filed an application with the Montgomery County Council, acting as the District Council, (County Council) to rezone the subject property from *80 an R-60 zone (one-family, detached residential, with a minimum lot area of 6000 square feet) to an R-H zone (multiple-family, high-rise planned residential). The Montgomery County Capital Park and Planning Commission (Planning Commission) and its Technical Staff recommended that the application be approved. After due notice, a public hearing was held before the County Council which approved the requested rezoning for 41.6 acres, withholding 1.6 acres for future road construction. An appeal from the approval was perfected by various neighboring property owners to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. That court, after a hearing, affirmed the reclassification and dismissed the petition. Judge Anderson filed a well-considered memorandum opinion in the case.

The subject property was the northerly portion of the Old Indian Spring Country Club, Four Corners. It is now unimproved by buildings and is overgrown with natural vegetation, but many evergreens and deciduous trees, which were planted when the subject property was used as a golf course, still remain. The subject property has a gently rolling terrain which slopes toward the southeast. It is triangular in shape and is entirely surrounded by three large improved dual-lane highways. On the north and east is University Boulevard East, on the south is the Capital Beltway and on the west is the Colesville Road. At the easterly end of the subject property — the apex of the triangle — is an elaborate interchange between the Capital Beltway and University Boulevard East. At the southwesterly end of the subject property is an elaborate interchange between the Capital Beltway and the Colesville Road. To the north of the subject property, between the east and west bound lanes of University Boulevard is a large brick Methodist Church, Marvin Memorial Methodist Church, and a gasoline filling station. To the northeast of the Capital Beltway is Saint Bernadette’s Roman Catholic Church, School, Rectory and associated buildings. Both of these churches are separated from the subject property by the roads mentioned. The other surrounding properties are, for the most part, one-family detached residences. It will be seen that the subject property is an “island” completely surrounded by major highways and completely separated from the one-family, detached residences lying to the south, west and northeast of that property.

*81 The subject property for a number of years was in the R-60 zone. On February 13, 1962, the County Council created and added to the Montgomery County Code a new type of zone, known as the R-H zone. 1 The purpose of the establishment of the new R-H zones is stated in the ordinance as follows :

“The purpose of the R-H Zone is to provide suitable sites for relatively high density residential development, to accomplish economies in the construction and operation of such public services as transportation, retail shopping facilities, and other community facilities which depend upon convenient access by residents of the area, and so as to prevent undue congestion in sections of the County where such facilities are not available or cannot be conveniently and economically provided. These sites will provide a maximum of light, air, and open space, for the benefit of the residents of the development and for the surrounding area. Within the limits of these requirements, it is the purpose of the R-H Zone to provide the maximum possible amount of freedom in the design of residential structures and their grouping and layout within the areas classified in that zone; to prevent detrimental effects to the use or development of adjacent properties or the general neighborhood; and to promote the health, safety, morals, and welfare of the present and future inhabitants of the district and of the County as a whole.”

The uses permitted as a matter of right include a business office in a multiple-family or multiple group dwelling, operated in connection with the rental, operation, service and maintenance of the dwelling; churches, convents, monasteries and other places of worship; dwellings, one family detached; dwellings, multiple-family and multiple group; farming and other agricultural uses; libraries, museums, and similar institutions *82 of a noncommercial nature; off-street parking of private automobiles in connection with the permitted uses; public and government operated buildings, and public parks, playgrounds and other recreational uses; and, private swimming pools as an accessory use. By a special exception, the following uses may be permitted: — apartment hotels; retail sales and consumer service establishments incidental to a multiple-family structure or apartment hotel on a site of not less than 20 acres and limited to drug stores, restaurants, beauty shops and other like uses and under certain definite limitations as to use and operation; home occupations, medical or dentist offices under definite limitations as to location, operation and parking facilities; and, public utility buildings but not including above ground transmission lines and radio and television broadcasting stations and towers.

There are many restrictions in the new R-H zone and they are stringent regulations. There must be a minimum width of 200 feet at the front building line. The minimum net lot area per dwelling unit is provided on a graduated scale with a low of 1000 square feet for 8 multi-family dwellings, or less, to 1400 square feet for more than 11 but not more than 12, but it is provided that in no case shall coverage exceed 12% nor be less than 1000 square feet of net lot area for each dwelling unit.

In regard to yards, it is provided that the minimum front, side and rear yards are generally 30 feet for buildings not more than 30 feet in height with a provision for the increase by one foot for each foot the height of the building exceeds 30 feet. Between multiple-family dwellings a distance of 50 feet is required1 and this distance also increases one foot for each foot the taller building exceeds 30 feet. Off-street parking is required as set forth in Section 104-20 of the Montgomery County Code, that is, as applied to the proposed project, 1 x/2 parking spaces for each residential unit. Not less than 55% of the net area used for multiple-family or multiple-group dwellings must be devoted to green areas as defined in the ordinance, and these green areas must be maintained in good condition. There are restrictions on lighting to protect “abutting or facing premises.”

To obtain a building permit or a certificate of occupancy under the new R-H zone, the applicant must submit “a plan of *83 development” to the Department of Inspection and Licenses which in addition to the usual information required:—

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Bluebook (online)
212 A.2d 751, 240 Md. 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beall-v-montgomery-county-council-md-1965.