Bonhage v. Cruse

194 A.2d 803, 233 Md. 10, 1963 Md. LEXIS 587
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 12, 1963
Docket[No. 15, September Term, 1963.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 194 A.2d 803 (Bonhage v. Cruse) 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
Bonhage v. Cruse, 194 A.2d 803, 233 Md. 10, 1963 Md. LEXIS 587 (Md. 1963).

Opinion

Bruñe, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Owners of residential properties fronting on both sides of a rather short dead end road, La Paix Lane, which runs west from a main north-south highway, the York Road, appeal from *12 an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County which affirmed an order of the County Board of Appeals granting a special exception permitting the use as a convalescent home of a one-acre square tract, zoned as residential, at the southwest corner of these two streets. The Zoning Commissioner denied the application for a special exception, the County Board of Appeals, by a 2-1 vote, granted it, and the Circuit Court affirmed the order of the Board, holding that there was evidence before the Board upon which it could reach its conclusion and hence that its action had to be sustained.

The subject property, which has been improved by an old residence, the protestants’ properties and most of the properties in the immediate vicinity of the subject property on both sides of the York Road are zoned as residential, and to a large extent residential use continues, though there is some commercialization, especially at an intersection about 425 feet south on the York Road, where there are several filling stations. Immediately across La Paix Lane north of the subject property is a rather large parking lot belonging to a church which is located diagonally across the York Road and to the northeast of the intersection. Further to the north, on the west side of the York Road, beyond those houses and a part of the property of the Sheppard and Pratt Hospital, are two office buildings, one of which contains a cafeteria and drug store. There are also some permitted uses on residentially zoned properties in the neighborhood which are not strictly residential, such as doctors’ offices. The same general area here involved was also involved in the case of Whittle v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 211 Md. 36, 125 A. 2d 41, and we shall not go into any full description of it here. A large new medical center is now in course of construction not far away and it appears that this development increases the desirability of property in this area for use as a convalescent home.

The York Road is a very heavily traveled highway. La Paix Lane is a little backwater much in keeping with the peaceful atmosphere that its name implies. It is paved only to a width of fifteen feet, and is entered between two brick gateposts on the south and north sides, respectively, and is bordered on each side by a row of trees. The testimony indicates that a fifteen- *13 foot paved road would be inadequate for traffic to and from a convalescent home on the subject property and that an entrance and exit for vehicular traffic on the York Road side would be impractical. It is, therefore, proposed that ingress and egress be on the La Paix Lane side, just as the old residence on this property has been reached by a road entering La Paix Lane and not from the York Road. The testimony also indicated, though the Board’s order did not so specify, that to accommodate traffic to and from the convalescent home, the paved portion of La Paix Lane should be widened to thirty feet approximately to the depth of the subject property. This, it appears, would require removal of the gate posts and of the rows of trees along the widened part of the street.

The Baltimore County Zoning Regulations permit a convalescent home in a residential area, if a special exception therefor is granted. It is also clear that special exceptions are not to be granted as a matter of course, but that all the items listed as possible special exceptions, though proper uses of land, “have certain aspects which call for special consideration of each proposal.” Section 502.1 provides in part that “[b]efore any Special Exception shall be granted it must appear that the use for which the Special Exception is requested will not” produce any of six results, only two of which call for consideration here. The first (a) is that the use shall not be “detrimental to the health, safety or general welfare of the locality involvedand the second (b) is that it shall not “[t]end to create congestion in roads, streets or alleys therein.”

Section 502.2 of the Regulations directs that the Zoning Commissioner or the Board, in granting any special exception, “shall impose such conditions, restrictions, or regulations as may be deemed necessary or advisable for the protection of surrounding and neighboring properties.” The Board did impose restrictions and conditions dealing with the preservation of a green space along the westernmost twenty-foot strip of the subject property and the maintenance and replacement of trees and shrubbery, and requiring that the home be completely air conditioned to prevent noises from emanating therefrom, and that “[a] 11 site plans for the subject property, including plans for *14 egress and ingress from said property, must be approved by the office of Planning and Zoning.”

There was testimony before the Board given by Mr. Frederick P. Klaus, a real estate expert, that “we felt that to apply for a special exception for a nursing home in this location would in no way depreciate or deteriorate the general surrounding neighborhood, due to its location.” Mr. Klaus testified as an expert adviser to a Mr. Chew, who at the time of the hearing was the contract purchaser of the subject property, which was then owned by the Cruses. (Not more than about a month after the decision of the Board, Mr. Klaus had apparently taken over Mr. Chew’s rights as purchaser, and he intervened in the proceedings in the Circuit Court.) There was strong testimony before the Board, contrary to that of Mr. Klaus, to the effect that the use of this property for a convalescent home would depreciate the value of the neighboring property.

We may assume that Mr. Klaus’ testimony was sufficient to warrant the majority of the Board in finding that the granting of the special exception for a convalescent home would not be detrimental to the health, safety or general welfare of the locality involved, at least with the conditions above referred to as to the preservation of trees and shrubbery and the installation of complete air conditioning to prevent the emanation of noise, and that the action of the Board on this phase of the matter should therefore be affirmed. See Amberley Assn. v. Board of Appeals of Anne Arundel County, 229 Md. 261, 268, 182 A. 2d 811. (For cases presenting converse situations in which Board action denying a special exception or permit was upheld, see Crowther, Inc. v. Johnson, 225 Md. 379, 170 A. 2d 768; Dorsey Enterprises v. Shpak, 219 Md. 16, 147 A. 2d 853.)

The majority of the Board did not discuss the traffic problem in its opinion, apparently considering that the evidence was insufficient to call for any such discussion. We note that plans for the proposed convalescent home when the matter was before the Board were exceedingly indefinite. Even the number of beds to be available in the home might have been anywhere between fifty and eighty or possibly a hundred. The uncertainty as to the number of people to be accommodated in the home, *15

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Bluebook (online)
194 A.2d 803, 233 Md. 10, 1963 Md. LEXIS 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonhage-v-cruse-md-1963.