Casey v. Mayor of Rockville

929 A.2d 74, 400 Md. 259, 2007 Md. LEXIS 476
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 30, 2007
Docket85, September Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 929 A.2d 74 (Casey v. Mayor of Rockville) 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
Casey v. Mayor of Rockville, 929 A.2d 74, 400 Md. 259, 2007 Md. LEXIS 476 (Md. 2007).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

This case invites examination of a decision of Respondent, the Mayor and Council of Rockville, Maryland, to designate as historically/architecturally significant and, as a result, place within Rockville’s historical district, a certain piece of improved real property. The property at issue is an 11,300 square foot parcel of land located at 115 Park Avenue, at the intersection of Fleet Street and Park Avenue, and improved with a llk story bungalow (collectively the “Property”) constructed approximately 80 years ago by one Henry Howes for J. Roger Spates and his wife, Annie E. Spates. The bungalow, now owned by the Betty Brown Casey Trust, 1 is commonly referred to in Rockville as the “Spates Bungalow.”

Because the historic designation of the Property may hinder substantially Petitioner’s ability to raze the bungalow in order to put the land to arguably a more economically rewarding use, 2 the Trust filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County seeking judicial review of the historic *265 designation action. The Circuit Court, on 15 October 2004, opined that the decision to place the Property in the historic district was not arbitrary on the record before it, but nevertheless remanded the matter to the Mayor and Council in order to consider the economic feasibility of preserving the bungalow. According to the Circuit Court, the Mayor and Council erred in neglecting to consider this factor in the course of its deliberations on whether to designate the Property as historic. Upon appeal by the Mayor and Council, the Court of Special Appeals, although agreeing with the Circuit Court’s conclusion as to the sufficiency of evidence supporting the Mayor and Council’s decision concerning historical significance, reversed the Circuit Court’s judgment remanding the matter. The intermediate appellate court reasoned that the Mayor and Council was not required to consider economic infeasibility of preservation when deciding whether to include the Property within the historic district. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the intermediate appellate court.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Since the date it was platted, the land upon which the Spates Bungalow is located has been linked for most of the time to arguably significant figures in Rockville history. Prior to construction of the bungalow, the land was part of a larger tract (“The Park”) 3 owned by Judge William Veirs Bouic, Sr., a prominent political leader during a period of rapid growth in Rockville in the mid- to late-19th century. Considered instrumental in securing self-governance for Rockville in 1860, Judge Bouic served as a Town Commissioner until 1867. Previously the State’s Attorney for Montgomery County and counsel to the B & O Railroad, he was appointed to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County in 1867, and served in that capacity until 1882. By the end of Judge Bouic’s judicial career, his only son, William Veirs Bouic, Jr., also a resident of *266 “The Park,” 4 had himself become a prominent civic leader. Bouic, Jr., educated at the Rockville Academy and Columbian University in Washington, D.C., was admitted to the Bar of Maryland in 1870. During his illustrious career, Bouic, Jr., was Rockville’s first Mayor under the Town Charter of 1888, elected to the State Senate in 1897, a presidential elector, and helped form the Maryland State Bar Association. Maryland State Archives, 110 Maryland Manual 178-79 (1898).

Despite the land’s historical roots prior to construction of the bungalow, it is the bungalow itself that was the main focus of the current historic designation controversy. After the death of Bouic, Jr., his estate sold to Mr. and Mrs. J. Roger Spates two subdivided lots located within “The Park.” Constructed for the Spates family approximately in 1928, the bungalow is believed to have been the Spates family’s primary residence during Roger’s term as Rockville’s Mayor from 1926 to 1932. 5 The Spates Bungalow is one of the last two original structures remaining in what had been “The Park” subdivision. It is considered by some to be “an excellent and little-altered example of the Craftsman style of architecture” popular in the 1890’s to 1920’s. 6 J. Roger and Annie E. Spates sold *267 the Property on 5 December 1949 to Bernard and Catherine J. Poss who, in turn, sold the Property in 1954 to Mary E. Clements Offutt. Mrs. Offutt was the widow of Lee Offutt, the Mayor of Rockville from 1906-1916 and again from 1918-1920. After Mrs. Offutt’s death in 1963, the executors of her estate sold the Property to Eugene B. Casey who, in 1990, along with his wife, Betty Brown Casey, as trustees, transferred the Property to the Betty Brown Casey Trust (“Trust”). The Trust remains the current owner.

From 1980 until 1999, the Property was leased to a Montgomery County surveyor who used the bungalow primarily for *268 the purposes of storage and some office space. 7 When the surveyor, due to the bungalow’s deteriorating condition, declined to renew his lease and vacated the premises in 1999, a structural engineer was engaged to evaluate the Property. The engineer determined that rehabilitation of the bungalow would not be cost effective, and concluded that demolition of the building was appropriate. Specifically, the engineer’s report indicated that the bungalow was unusable for commercial leasing due to its extensive disrepair. The record indicates that Petitioner’s consultants estimated the costs of restoration of the house at approximately $293,086.20, that the assessed value of the restored Property would be $318,000, and that the amount expended to achieve such a result could not be recouped easily through rental income derived from lease of the Property. This evidence regarding the economic feasibility of restoration, based on our perusal of the record, has not been met yet with contrary evidence. 8

*269 In light of this financial picture, the Trust began the building demolition process in June 2001 by obtaining a preliminary forestry sign-off regarding the preservation of trees on the Property. A formal demolition permit application was filed with the Rockville Planning Department on 7 September 2001. The application was accepted and entered into the permit computer system on 17 September 2001. At the time of filing of the application, the Property was not designated as being within a municipal historic district. 9 Sometime in September of 2001, Petitioner contends a representative of the City staff informed it that all requirements for issuance of a demolition permit had been satisfied and that a permit would be issued shortly. 10

*270

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Bluebook (online)
929 A.2d 74, 400 Md. 259, 2007 Md. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-v-mayor-of-rockville-md-2007.