CMDS Residential, LLC v. Mayor and City Council Of Baltimore

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 1, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-01774
StatusUnknown

This text of CMDS Residential, LLC v. Mayor and City Council Of Baltimore (CMDS Residential, LLC v. Mayor and City Council Of Baltimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CMDS Residential, LLC v. Mayor and City Council Of Baltimore, (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

CMDS RESIDENTIAL, LLC,

v. Civil Action No. CCB-21-1774

MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE.

MEMORANDUM This suit centers on Baltimore City’s denial of CMDS Residential, LLC’s (“CMDS”) application for a use and occupancy permit to operate a residential substance-abuse treatment facility in the City.1 CMDS contends that its permit application was denied because the City capitulated to community opposition that focused on discriminatory beliefs about CMDS’s future patients. CMDS challenges the denial as violative of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, the Fair Housing Act, the equal protection and due process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment and their Maryland Declaration of Rights analogues, and as incorrect on its own terms as a violation of the Baltimore City Code. Now pending are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. Mot. for Partial Summ. J., ECF 75-1 (“Mot.”); Cross-Mot. for Summ. J., ECF 81-1 (“Cross-Mot.”). The motions have been fully briefed and no oral argument is necessary. See Local Rule 105.6. After reviewing the arguments and the evidence, and for the following reasons, the court will deny CMDS’s motion for summary judgment and grant in part and deny in part the City’s cross-motion. Additionally, the court will abstain from CMDS’s judicial review claim and dismiss it without prejudice.

1 In this Memorandum, depending on context, the “City” refers either to Baltimore City, Maryland or the defendant, Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, which encompasses the City Government’s administrative bodies. BACKGROUND I. Historical Background A. 6040 Harford Road 6040 Harford Road (the “Property”) was first established as a “convalescent and nursing

home” in 1970. Mot. Ex. 3, ECF 76-4. At the time, although the Baltimore City Code’s Zoning Article did not include restrictions on convalescent or nursing homes, the Hospital Article of the Code provided that establishment of a convalescent home anywhere in the City required approval by an ordinance of the City Council. Balt., Md., City Code art. 30 (1966); id. art. 12 §§ 1, 2; see id. Index at 1033 (citing Article 12 for the “Procedure for establishment” of “Convalescent Homes”).2 Accordingly, Ordinance 808 was passed on June 8, 1970, to grant the necessary approval for the Property. Mot. Ex. 3; Mot. Ex. 4 at 2, ECF 76-5; Cross-Mot. Ex. 6, ECF 81-9. In 1971, the Property owner applied for a use and occupancy (“U&O”) permit to operate a nursing home at the Property. Mot. Ex. 4 at 2. While that application was pending, the City repealed the existing zoning code in its entirety and enacted a new Article. City Code art. 30

(1971); see Ordinance 1051 (April 20, 1971), Preamble (“[T]he Mayor and City Council of Baltimore deem it necessary . . . to enact such regulations, thereby comprehensively amending all zoning ordinances heretofore adopted.”); see Kastendike v. Balt. Ass’n for Retarded Child., 267 Md. 389, 398-99 (1972). Under the new code, the Property was split-zoned R-5 (residential) and B-3-1 (business).3 The convalescent and nursing home use was a “conditional use” in the

2 All “City Code” and “Ordinance” citations refer to those of the City. 3 See CityView, Balt. City, https://perma.cc/V6HP-B5YJ (last accessed 1/24/2024); Mot. Ex. 4 at 2 (describing the Property’s “district” as “B-3-1/R-5” and explaining that “zoning [is] split through bldg”). At some point, the residential part of the prior zoning classification may have been changed to R-3, see Mot. Ex. 9, ECF 76-10 (describing the Property as “split-zoned B-3-1 and R-3”), but the difference is not significant to this case, as both R-3 and R-5 required a convalescent home use to be approved by ordinance, see id. residential zone, meaning that it required City approval to operate, specifically by an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council. City Code art. 30 § 4.5-1(d)(1) (1971); id. § 11.0-6(d); see City Code art. 32 § 1-314(k) (2023) (defining “conditional use”). Had the business classification controlled, the use would not have required any special approval, a status referred to as “permitted by right.”

City Code art. 30 § 6.3-1(b)(19) (1971). Apparently, Ordinance 808 was sufficient to satisfy the 1971 revision’s conditional use requirement. Cf. Mot. Ex. 4 at 2 (“See Ord. # 808 appr. 6-9-70?”). The City issued a U&O permit on August 2, 1971, acknowledging that the nursing home was “to be treated as a conditional use.” Id. at 2-3. The Property then operated as a nursing home, without relevant incident, for forty years. A new U&O permit was issued on September 15, 2011, authorizing use of the Property as a 104- bed nursing home. Mot. Ex. 5, ECF 76-6. A year-and-a-half later, on April 8, 2013, the City issued another U&O permit continuing that use. Mot. Ex. 6, ECF 76-7; Cross-Mot. Ex. 7, ECF 81-10. Four years after that, on May 2, 2017, the Property’s newest owner applied for a new U&O permit to use the Property as an assisted living facility and medical adult day care program. Mot. Ex. 7,

ECF 76-8. B. TransForm Baltimore Around the same time, the City overhauled its zoning code for the first time since 1971. City Code art. 32 (2017). Termed “TransForm Baltimore,” the new revision sought to simplify the City’s zoning regime and make the applicable rules easier to understand. See Transform Baltimore – New Zoning Code, Balt. City Dep’t of Hous. & Cmty. Dev., https://perma.cc/U26H-EHNG (last accessed 1/24/2024). TransForm’s simplifications included collapsing specific use designations such as “convalescent, nursing, and rest homes,” and “residential substance-abuse treatment facilities” (which had been classified as a specific type of use by amendments to the 1971 code, see Ordinance 27 (June 18, 2012)) into a “Residential-Care Facility” category which was split between facilities with “16 or Fewer” and “17 or More Residents.” Compare City Code art. Zoning § 1-182.1 (2015); see id. §§ 4-604, 4-204 (listing “Convalescent, nursing, and rest homes” separately from “Residential substance-abuse treatment facilities housing 17 or more patients”),

with City Code art. 32 § 1-312(p) (2017); id. tbl. 10-301. Under the new revision, the Property was rezoned C-2 (“Community Commercial”) in which a Residential-Care Facility (17 or More Residents) is a conditional use that requires approval by an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council. City Code art. 32 § 10-204 (2017); id. § 1-205(b)(1)(iii); id. tbl. 10-301. Recognizing that it was not breaking fresh ground, TransForm included provisions to allow uses established under the prior scheme to continue without the need for burdensome reauthorizations. Any conditional use granted before TransForm’s effective date remained effective and the use recipient was permitted to develop the property in accordance with previously approved plans. City Code art. 32 § 2-203(j)(1) (2017). But if the pre-existing use approval lapsed or the conditional use was changed, a fresh approval under TransForm’s provisions was required. City Code art. 32 §§ 2-203(j)(2), (3) (2017).4 Additionally, discontinuation of a conditional use

4 Because it will be significant later, the court quotes the “change” provision in full here:

(j) Previously granted variances and conditional uses.

(1) All variances and conditional uses granted before June 5, 2017, or before the effective date of any relevant amendment to this Code remain effective, and the recipient of the variance and conditional use may proceed to develop the property in accordance with the approved plans.

(2) However, if the recipient fails to act timely on the variance or conditional use, as required by § 5-309 {“Expiration of approval”} or § 5- 407 {“Expiration of approval”} of this Code, the provisions of this Code govern and the approval is invalid.

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CMDS Residential, LLC v. Mayor and City Council Of Baltimore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cmds-residential-llc-v-mayor-and-city-council-of-baltimore-mdd-2024.