Cardon Investments v. Town of New Market

466 A.2d 504, 55 Md. App. 573, 1983 Md. App. LEXIS 357
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 5, 1983
Docket1704, September Term, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 466 A.2d 504 (Cardon Investments v. Town of New Market) 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
Cardon Investments v. Town of New Market, 466 A.2d 504, 55 Md. App. 573, 1983 Md. App. LEXIS 357 (Md. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Bishop, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Cardón Investments appeals a Frederick County Circuit Court order that overturned a rezoning of its land. The appellees are the Town of New Market (being approximately 350 persons residing in and about the Town of New Market) and the Department of State Planning (Department), intervenor in opposition to the rezoning.

Facts

The subject property consists of 6.125 acres of vacant land located on the south side of Maryland Route 144 at its intersection with Maryland Route 75, immediately north of the Interstate 70 interchange. It is bordered on the east by vacant agricultural land, and on the north, west and south by State Roads Commission rights-of-way for Maryland Route 144, Maryland Route 75 and Interstate 70, respectively. The subject property is just outside the limits of the Town of New Market.

*576 The case before us began its legal journey on October 9, 1981, when appellant filed its application for rezoning, to permit the site to be used for a truck stop. For the purposes of this appeal, it is necessary that we look to some history of the subject property and rezoning in Frederick County.

1959 — The Board of County Commissioners adopted its first comprehensive zoning ordinance, which placed the subject property in zoning classification A-l, agricultural.

1971 — At the request of the then property owner, Humble Oil Company, the property was re-zoned from A-l, agricultural, to B-2, community business zone. The B-2 classification permitted an "automobile service station”; however, the County Code defined only an automotive service station as "[t]hat portion of property where flammable or combustible liquids are stored and dispensed from fixed equipment into the fuel tanks of motor vehicles . . .”. (Frederick County Code, section 40-1).

1972 — Frederick County adopted a comprehensive land use plan with a "highway service commercial” classification, described as:

"Highway Service Commercial (Purposes): To provide for vehicular transient services at major highway intersections.
Areas Classified:
1. Intersections of major highways such as expressways, freeways and major arterial roads.
2. Intersections of highways between employment and residential areas.
Uses Permitted:
Service stations, lodging and accommodations, restaurants, truck stop, rest and picnic areas, specialized tourist-oriented retail commercial and convenience goods.” (Emphasis supplied.)

When appellant filed for rezoning of its land in 1981, the staff report of the Planning Department of Frederick County commented:

*577 "VI. Relationship to the 1972 Comprehensive Plan.
The published 1972 adopted Comprehensive Plan designates this site for Highway Service use. In addition, District and Regional Commercial Centers are designated in the 1972 Plan for this northeast quadrant of the I-70/Rt. 75 interchange.
The staff would note that the 1972 Plan filed in the Frederick County Courthouse includes an adopted Comprehensive Plan map . .. calling for the extension of High Density Residential use south of Rt. 144, east of Rt. 75, on the western portion of the subject site. The remainder of this tract is shown as Rural Reserve. In the staffs opinion, this reflects a mapping error since the staff does not believe this area was intended to be designated Rural Reserve due to the intensity of uses planned around this site and the designation of Highway Service in the published Plan map.”

1977— Frederick County adopted Ordinance No. 77-1-78 "to repeal and re-enact with amendments, Chapter 40, Title 'Zoning’ of the Frederick County Code.”

This ordinance designated May 11, 1959, instead of the date of the passage of the ordinance for determining any changes of mistakes required to be shown for purposes of rezoning. The ordinance also created the G.C. (General Commercial) and the H.S. (Highway Service) classifications.

1981 — Appellant applied for a Zoning Certificate Building Permit to construct a truck stop. Because a "truck stop” was not explicitly referred to in the Frederick County Zoning Regulations, appellant sought and obtained an opinion by the Zoning Administrator providing that a truck stop was a permitted use in the G.C. classification. The Town of NewT Market appealed this interpretation to the Board of Appeals, which affirmed the Zoning Administrator. The Town then appealed to the Circuit Court.

*578 While the above appeal was pending before the Circuit Court, the Board of County Commissioners enacted a zoning text amendment that defined truck stops and restricted them to the H.S. and light industrial classifications. The issue raised by the Town in the pending appeal became moot.

Appellant then applied for rezoning of the subject property from the General Commercial classification to the Highway Service classification, to permit the property to be used for a truck stop.

1982 — The Board of County Commissioners passed Ordinance 82-2-246, which rezoned the property H.S. The Board agreed to rezone the site because:

1. The site was designated as H.S. on the 1972 comprehensive plan; and

2. Substantial change in the character of the neighborhood warranted reclassification of the property (the Commissioners adopted the staff report, which measured the change since 1959).

The Commissioners also found that there was no mistake in the 1977 zoning of the property in the G.C. classification.

The Town of New Market then appealed to the Circuit Court for Frederick County. At this time, the Department of State Planning (Department), which had not appeared before the Commissioners, filed a timely intervention and appeal from the reclassification ordinance, in accordance with Article 88C, section 2 (r) of the Maryland Code. An order of the Circuit Court for Frederick County dated May 4, 1982, designated the Department as a party.

On July 26, 1982, the circuit court reversed the action of the Commissioners, thereby denying the reclassification. This appeal is from the court’s order of August 10, 1982, implementing that decision.

At the beginning of its oral opinion the circuit court pointed out that its function was to determine whether "the decision of the County Commissioners is erroneous as a matter of law,” not to substitute its judgment for that of the County Commissioners. The court observed that it could not *579 make findings of fact, but could "conclude that there was not sufficient evidence before the Commissioners to make the findings that they did make.”

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Related

Kirsch v. Prince George's County
610 A.2d 343 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1992)
Buckel v. Board of County Commissioners
562 A.2d 1297 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1989)
Board of Trustees of Fire & Police Employees Retirement System of Baltimore v. Powell
554 A.2d 440 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1989)
Boyds Civic Ass'n v. Montgomery County Council
506 A.2d 675 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1986)
Cardon Investments v. Town of New Market
485 A.2d 678 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1984)

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466 A.2d 504, 55 Md. App. 573, 1983 Md. App. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cardon-investments-v-town-of-new-market-mdctspecapp-1983.