Blue Ink v. Two Farms

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 30, 2014
Docket1487/12
StatusPublished

This text of Blue Ink v. Two Farms (Blue Ink v. Two Farms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Ink v. Two Farms, (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 01487

September Term, 2012

BLUE INK, LTD.

v.

TWO FARMS, INC. D/B/A ROYAL FARMS, INC.

Zarnoch, Kehoe, Leahy,

JJ.

Opinion by Leahy, J.

Filed: July 30, 2014 Drive-in movie theaters, like soda fountains, juke boxes, and The Platters, are

instances of 1950s post-war Americana that trigger instant feelings of nostalgia.

Maryland once boasted as many as 47 drive-ins;1 today, however, only Bengies Drive-In

Movie Theatre (“Bengies”) remains. This case involves a jury’s verdict in favor of

Bengies against Royal Farms for private nuisance. The jury awarded Bengies

$838,000.00 in damages to construct a fence to block light that emanates at night from the

Royal Farms. The Circuit Court for Baltimore County considered Royal Farms’ Motion

for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict (“JNOV”) and, after concluding there was

insufficient evidence for a jury to find a private nuisance, set the jury’s verdict aside and

entered judgment in favor of Royal Farms.

On appeal, Bengies, through its operator Blue Ink, Ltd., presents one question for

our review,2 which we have rephrased as follows:

Was the evidence presented at trial, when viewed in the light most favorable to Bengies Drive-In, legally sufficient for the jury to find the existence of a private nuisance by a preponderance of the evidence?

Two Farms, Inc. (doing business as “Royal Farms”) filed a Cross-Appeal raising

an additional issue, which we have rephrased as follows:3

1 K ERRY S EGRAVE, D RIVE-IN T HEATERS: A H ISTORY FROM T HEIR INCEPTION IN 1933 app. 6 (1992) (citing 1958 Census of Business, vol. 5, Selected Services—Summary Statistics (Washington, D.C.: United States Bureau of the Census, 1961)).

2 Bengies phrased the question as, “Did Appellants present evidence that, taken in the light most favorable to them, legally supported their claim for private nuisance?”

3 Royal Farms phrased the question as, “Did Appellant/Cross-Appellee Blue Ink Limited meet its burden to prove damages using the proper measure of damages?” 1 In the event this Court concludes that the trial court erred in granting the Motion for JNOV, did Blue Ink Limited meet its burden to prove damages using the proper measure of damages?

Maryland requires that in order to recover for private nuisance, a plaintiff must

demonstrate that the defendant’s interference with plaintiff’s property rights is both

unreasonable and substantial, and that the harm or inconvenience created by such

interference is “objectively reasonable” to the ordinary person. Accordingly, we find the

evidence presented at trial was not legally sufficient to support a jury verdict in favor of

Bengies against Royal Farms for a private nuisance. In light of this holding, we do not

address the Cross-Appeal. We affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court for Baltimore

County.

BACKGROUND

A. The Bengies Drive-In

In the late 1950s, Jack K. Vogel and his three brothers constructed Bengies Drive-

In, which has remained a family business since its establishment. Eventually, D. Edward

Vogel (“Mr. Vogel”) began operating the drive-in and in 2000, negotiated a buy-lease

agreement to purchase Bengies from his parents, Jack and Aileen Vogel. In order to

facilitate a commercial loan in connection with the transfer,4 Mr. Vogel needed to ensure

that the property was accurately zoned. During the re-zoning process, Mr. Vogel entered

into a Restrictive Covenant Agreement, dated August 25, 2004, with a community group

4 At trial, Mr. Vogel testified that, “when I went for the loan it turns out . . . [that] the Bengies Drive-In Theater did not sit upon property that was zoned correctly to make that purchase.” 2 called Bowleys Quarters Improvement Association. The Association agreed to forego

opposition to the zoning reclassification in exchange for Bengies’ agreement limiting

future expansions on the property to an indoor theatre, a second outdoor drive-in screen,

miniature golf, batting cages, a restaurant, a dairy bar, cell communications, and a

souvenir shop. Drawings exhibiting two possible locations for a second screen

accompanied the Agreement. Mr. Vogel officially acquired the property in December

2007, but apart from a cell communications tower, none of the other improvements were

constructed.5

Today, Bengies is located at 3417 Eastern Boulevard in an area that has been

commercially developed for many years. Other businesses surrounding Bengies and pre-

dating the Royal Farms include a Wal-Mart, McDonald’s, Home Depot, Rite-Aid, and a

restaurant called “By the Docks.”

B. The Royal Farms

Peppermint Woods, Ltd. owns the property at 3300 Eastern Boulevard located on

5 In its Memorandum Opinion and Order Granting Defendant’s Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict (“Memorandum Opinion”), the Court found:

No evidence was presented that any of these expansion or improvements ever occurred, except that a cell communications tower was later constructed – in close proximity to where the proposed second screen would have been located had that option been pursued. At best, the evidence of the content of the Restrictive Covenant, coupled with Mr. Vogel’s testimony, established that there were once “proposals” made to expand the business operation of the drive-in and that one of these proposals involved the construction of a second outdoor movie screen. Plaintiff never acted upon that proposal. 3 the opposite side of Eastern Boulevard across from Bengies.6 In 2003, Peppermint

Woods, Ltd. filed a petition for special exception with the Zoning Commissioner of

Baltimore County for the construction of a service station and accompanying carryout

restaurant and rollover car wash. Mr. Vogel attended the public hearing on special

exception to represent Bengies’ interests. The Zoning Commissioner granted the petition,

subject to submission of “a landscape and lighting plan for review and approval by the

Office of Planning and Avery Harden, Landscape Architect for Baltimore County” that

“provide[s] sufficient screening so that security lights, permanent lighting and vehicle

headlines do not inappropriately spill onto adjacent properties, particularly the Bengies

Drive-In Movie Theater.”

Avery Harden and the Office of Planning thereafter approved the plans for the

construction of a convenience store, gas pumps, and a car wash. In an e-mail dated

October 8, 2008, Avery Harden stated, “All together [Royal Farms’ use of new LED

technology] sounds like a precedent setting lighting design for convenience stores in

Baltimore County. I can now point to this for others to follow. The drive-in should be

fine.”

The Royal Farms opened its doors for business in December 2008. The general

layout of the subject Royal Farms may be described as follows:7

6 Bengies voluntarily dismissed Peppermint Woods, Ltd. as a defendant in the action more than a year prior to trial. 7 We quote the circuit court’s description of the layout in its Memorandum Opinion. The court noted that apart from the Development Plan and “Site Lighting” drawing, neither party introduced evidence detailing the layout of the Royal Farms or the location or direction 4 [T]he gas station aspect of the facility consists of a number of gasoline pumps located below a canopy of the type designed to protect those pumping gas from inclement weather.

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