FRANK A. KAUFMAN, District Judge.
Plaintiff corporation, a land developer, challenges under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal constitution a provision of the Baltimore County, Maryland, Policy For Processing Proposed Land Developments (December 1973). Baltimore County, Maryland, is the named defendant.
The facts are complicated and require detailed recitation.
Section 22-34 of the Baltimore County Code (“Code”) authorizes the County’s Director of Public Works to require, as a precondition to subdivision plat approval, that the developer enter into a public works agreement (“PWA”) for the construction of certain enumerated public improvements which the Director “may deem necessary or appropriate for the subdivision.”
Section 22-120 provides that those improvements must be constructed either prior to approval of the subdivision plat for recording among the land records of the County, or, if those improvements are not constructed prior to that time, “arrangements must have been made with the Department of Public Works . to insure their subsequent proper completion by the developer.”
Prior to December 10, 1973, the County, through its Department of Public Works and specifical
ly through the Director of that Department, did not require the posting of security in any form by a developer seeking approval of a subdivision plat for recordation. A developer’s contractual undertaking embodied in the PWA was all that was required insofar as Section 22-120 was concerned. On December 10, 1973 the County Administrative Officer approved the Baltimore County, Maryland, Policy For Processing Proposed Land Developments. At issue herein is § 4.3.2 of that Policy, which provides:
The developer, prior to the signing of the PWA, shall present a certified check, letter of credit, or a bank book to cover his financial obligation specified in the PWA, when the development will have only roads and/or storm drains.
In enforcing the provisions of § 4.3.2, the County, through its Public Works Department draws distinctions among the following three categories of land. The first classification pertains to land which does not have public water or public sewers and which the developer desires to improve with wells and septic tanks as well as to be responsible for the financing of roads and storm drains. Classification 2 pertains to land in which public water and public sewerage are available at one or more of the borders of the land and in connection with which the developer desires to connect up to such public water and public sewerage and also to pay for the provision of roads and storm drains. Classification 3 pertains to land which is not provided with public water or public sewers and in connection with which the developer agrees to be responsible for the payment of its share of the costs of providing public water, public sewers, and to pay for roads and storm drains. Section 4.3.2 applies only to developers proposing developments of the type described in classification 1.
Prior to the adoption of that policy provision, the County experienced several instances in which developers in areas requiring only roads and/or storm drains as public improvements (wells and septic tanks not being included within Code § 22-34 as public improvements) failed or refused to honor the terms of their PWA’s. In those instances, lot purchasers, who may or may not have purchased, or contracted for the construction of, a house contemporaneously with the purchase of that lot, found that though the homes they purchased or ultimately constructed were habitable, the roads and/or storm drains had not been completed. Section 4.3.2 was thought necessary to remedy that problem. In addition, the County sought, through § 4.3.2, to protect itself financially from defaulting developers, /. e., to protect itself from having to provide services the developer should have provided.
The requirements of § 4.3.2 were not extended to developers proposing, and executing PWA’s as to, developments described in classifications 2 and 3 (i. e., those requiring the construction of or connection to public water and sewer lines in addition to construction of roads and/or storm drains). As to those classifications, the developer is required to post security for roads and storm drains as well as for water and sewers at a later stage in the overall subdivision-construction process, i. e., prior to the letting of bids for construction of public water and sewer lines in classification 3 and prior to “connecting up” in classification 2. Developers in classifications 2 and 3 are not issued plumbing permits and houses constructed on such lots are not permitted to be lived in until and unless the water lines and sewers are constructed and/or hooked up
and
the security for roads and/or storm drains is posted. The County has no record of ever having received complaints from homeowners in classification 2 and 3 subdivisions in respect to the completion in those developments of roads and/or storm drains.
Plaintiff Delight, Inc., is the owner of certain property known as Delight Meadows, Sections 2,3 and 4. Prior to December 16,1976, plaintiff’s property was zoned “rural deferred development,” a zoning classification permitting construction of single family residences on one acre lots. Plaintiff had secured approval of and had recorded subdivision plats for Delight Meadows, Section 2 prior to December 16,1976 and in
so doing, because
all of
Delight Meadows (Sections 2, 3 and 4) is classification 1 property, complied with § 4.3.2 by posting the required security. On December 16, 1976, the Baltimore County Council adopted a new zoning map pursuant to which Delight Meadows as well as certain other parcels of land were zoned for “Resource Conservation (deferral of planning and development).”
Under that zoning classification, residences on one acre lots are permitted, but development is restricted to a maximum gross density of 0.3 dwellings per acre. The practical effect of that restriction is to (1) limit the construction of residences to three acre lots or (2) limit the construction of residences to cluster' type dwellings leaving a substantial portion of the subdivision as open space.
In accordance with an express grandfather provision in the ordinance creating the new zoning classification, any existing lot or parcel of land with boundaries duly recorded among the land records of Baltimore County on or before December 16, 1976 is permitted to be developed in accordance with the standards in effect at the time of recordation. Pursuant thereto, plaintiff has proceeded with one-acre-lot development of Delight Meadows, Section 2 under the plat recorded prior to December 16, 1976. However, no plats for Delight Meadows, Sections 3 and 4 were recorded prior to December 16,1976 because plaintiff did not tender the security as required by § 4.3.2 with regard to the PWA’s covering Delight Meadows, Sections 3 and 4.
In challenging § 4.3.2 under the Equal Protection Clause, plaintiff contends that § 4.3.2 discriminates on the basis of wealth and that “strict scrutiny” is the appropriate standard of review.
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FRANK A. KAUFMAN, District Judge.
Plaintiff corporation, a land developer, challenges under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal constitution a provision of the Baltimore County, Maryland, Policy For Processing Proposed Land Developments (December 1973). Baltimore County, Maryland, is the named defendant.
The facts are complicated and require detailed recitation.
Section 22-34 of the Baltimore County Code (“Code”) authorizes the County’s Director of Public Works to require, as a precondition to subdivision plat approval, that the developer enter into a public works agreement (“PWA”) for the construction of certain enumerated public improvements which the Director “may deem necessary or appropriate for the subdivision.”
Section 22-120 provides that those improvements must be constructed either prior to approval of the subdivision plat for recording among the land records of the County, or, if those improvements are not constructed prior to that time, “arrangements must have been made with the Department of Public Works . to insure their subsequent proper completion by the developer.”
Prior to December 10, 1973, the County, through its Department of Public Works and specifical
ly through the Director of that Department, did not require the posting of security in any form by a developer seeking approval of a subdivision plat for recordation. A developer’s contractual undertaking embodied in the PWA was all that was required insofar as Section 22-120 was concerned. On December 10, 1973 the County Administrative Officer approved the Baltimore County, Maryland, Policy For Processing Proposed Land Developments. At issue herein is § 4.3.2 of that Policy, which provides:
The developer, prior to the signing of the PWA, shall present a certified check, letter of credit, or a bank book to cover his financial obligation specified in the PWA, when the development will have only roads and/or storm drains.
In enforcing the provisions of § 4.3.2, the County, through its Public Works Department draws distinctions among the following three categories of land. The first classification pertains to land which does not have public water or public sewers and which the developer desires to improve with wells and septic tanks as well as to be responsible for the financing of roads and storm drains. Classification 2 pertains to land in which public water and public sewerage are available at one or more of the borders of the land and in connection with which the developer desires to connect up to such public water and public sewerage and also to pay for the provision of roads and storm drains. Classification 3 pertains to land which is not provided with public water or public sewers and in connection with which the developer agrees to be responsible for the payment of its share of the costs of providing public water, public sewers, and to pay for roads and storm drains. Section 4.3.2 applies only to developers proposing developments of the type described in classification 1.
Prior to the adoption of that policy provision, the County experienced several instances in which developers in areas requiring only roads and/or storm drains as public improvements (wells and septic tanks not being included within Code § 22-34 as public improvements) failed or refused to honor the terms of their PWA’s. In those instances, lot purchasers, who may or may not have purchased, or contracted for the construction of, a house contemporaneously with the purchase of that lot, found that though the homes they purchased or ultimately constructed were habitable, the roads and/or storm drains had not been completed. Section 4.3.2 was thought necessary to remedy that problem. In addition, the County sought, through § 4.3.2, to protect itself financially from defaulting developers, /. e., to protect itself from having to provide services the developer should have provided.
The requirements of § 4.3.2 were not extended to developers proposing, and executing PWA’s as to, developments described in classifications 2 and 3 (i. e., those requiring the construction of or connection to public water and sewer lines in addition to construction of roads and/or storm drains). As to those classifications, the developer is required to post security for roads and storm drains as well as for water and sewers at a later stage in the overall subdivision-construction process, i. e., prior to the letting of bids for construction of public water and sewer lines in classification 3 and prior to “connecting up” in classification 2. Developers in classifications 2 and 3 are not issued plumbing permits and houses constructed on such lots are not permitted to be lived in until and unless the water lines and sewers are constructed and/or hooked up
and
the security for roads and/or storm drains is posted. The County has no record of ever having received complaints from homeowners in classification 2 and 3 subdivisions in respect to the completion in those developments of roads and/or storm drains.
Plaintiff Delight, Inc., is the owner of certain property known as Delight Meadows, Sections 2,3 and 4. Prior to December 16,1976, plaintiff’s property was zoned “rural deferred development,” a zoning classification permitting construction of single family residences on one acre lots. Plaintiff had secured approval of and had recorded subdivision plats for Delight Meadows, Section 2 prior to December 16,1976 and in
so doing, because
all of
Delight Meadows (Sections 2, 3 and 4) is classification 1 property, complied with § 4.3.2 by posting the required security. On December 16, 1976, the Baltimore County Council adopted a new zoning map pursuant to which Delight Meadows as well as certain other parcels of land were zoned for “Resource Conservation (deferral of planning and development).”
Under that zoning classification, residences on one acre lots are permitted, but development is restricted to a maximum gross density of 0.3 dwellings per acre. The practical effect of that restriction is to (1) limit the construction of residences to three acre lots or (2) limit the construction of residences to cluster' type dwellings leaving a substantial portion of the subdivision as open space.
In accordance with an express grandfather provision in the ordinance creating the new zoning classification, any existing lot or parcel of land with boundaries duly recorded among the land records of Baltimore County on or before December 16, 1976 is permitted to be developed in accordance with the standards in effect at the time of recordation. Pursuant thereto, plaintiff has proceeded with one-acre-lot development of Delight Meadows, Section 2 under the plat recorded prior to December 16, 1976. However, no plats for Delight Meadows, Sections 3 and 4 were recorded prior to December 16,1976 because plaintiff did not tender the security as required by § 4.3.2 with regard to the PWA’s covering Delight Meadows, Sections 3 and 4.
In challenging § 4.3.2 under the Equal Protection Clause, plaintiff contends that § 4.3.2 discriminates on the basis of wealth and that “strict scrutiny” is the appropriate standard of review. Alternatively, plaintiff asserts that § 4.3.2 is totally lacking in rational basis and fails to achieve the purposes assigned to it by defendant, and is therefore unconstitutional. Plaintiff seeks a declaration by this Court that § 4.3.2 is unconstitutional and an order enjoining defendant from refusing to approve plaintiff’s plats (covering Delight Meadows, Sections 3 and 4) for recordation solely because plaintiff has not complied with the requirements of § 4.3.2, such order to be issued
nunc pro tunc
as of December 15, 1976.
Defendant, responding, resists plaintiff’s quest for all such relief, contending that § 4.3.2 is rationally related to legitimate County purposes.
In essence plaintiff’s challenge to § 4.3.2 is bottomed on plaintiff’s contention that the County may not with regard to PWA approval treat the subdivision process and the building permit/construction process as a single transaction in respect to code provision 22-120. According to plaintiff, the County’s view of what is likely to take place with regard to lots in a subdivision subsequent to the recordation of the subdivision plat is not a relevant consideration for defendant in respect to the need to make “arrangements ... to insure [the] subsequent proper completion by the developer” of the undertakings contained in the PWA. The record does disclose that the subdivision phase is legally and administratively separate, in some ways, from the building permit/construction phase. The former process is generally controlled by and under the direction of the Department of Public Works; the latter process is under the control of the Department of Permits and Licenses. Further, once
any
subdivision plat is recorded, there is nothing to prevent the sale of individual lots to individuals desiring to build a home on that lot. Defendant concedes that it is possible for a developer in a classification 2 or 3 subdivision to sell such individual lots after recording the subdivision plat, but before the time for posting security then to default upon its [the developer’s] obligations covering one or more services, leaving the prospective home owner (and the County) without roads or storm drains. However, defendant Baltimore County urges that it is entitled to presume that the recording of a subdivision plat is in most instances a practical as well as a legal predicate for actual home construction and that it may treat those two somewhat separate phases as a whole insofar as assuring compliance with rules and regulations relating to each. It would appear to be beyond cavil that it makes common sense for the County, even though it has administratively separated the various functions, not to close its regulatory eyes during the first, subdivision stage, to whatever potential difficulties may arise at the later, construction stage. Moreover, as to the County’s different treatment of the three classifications, the County’s own past actual experience, does provide some (though perhaps minimal) basis for the County’s conclusion, that despite the
possibility
of defaults by developers in all three categories, there are sufficient dissimilarities among and between developers and subdivision proposals to warrant a difference in treatment. Section 4.3.2 is a reasonable response to those perceived differences. The fact that the distinctions drawn by § 4.3.2 are not
expressly
authorized by the County Code is not relevant or material to plaintiff’s within constitutional attack, in the absence of any indication that the County has not acted in good faith and with no suggestion of intent to discriminate on any basis other than in connection with such discrimination as results from the different treatments among the three classifications.
Section 4.3.2 of the County’s subdivision policy is a “local economic regulation.” Very recently, in
Friedman v. Rogers,
440 U.S. 1, 17, 99 S.Ct. 887, 898, 59 L. Ed.2d 100 (1979), Mr. Justice Powell writing for a unanimous court reiterated the standard of review applicable to that type of regulation:
We stated the applicable constitutional rule for reviewing equal protection challenges to local economic regulations such as § 2.02 in
New Orleans v. Dukes,
427 U.S. 297, 303, 96 S.Ct. 2513, 49 L.Ed.2d 511 (1976).
“When local economic regulation is challenged solely as violating the Equal Protection Clause, this Court consistently defers to legislative determinations as to the desirability of particular
statutory discriminations. See, e.
g., Lehnhausen v. Lake Shore Auto Parts Co.,
410 U.S. 356, 93 S.Ct. 1001, 35 L.Ed.2d 351 (1973). Unless a classification trammels fundamental personal rights or is drawn upon inherently suspect distinctions such as race, religion, or alienage, our decisions presume the constitutionality of the statutory discriminations and require only that the classification challenged be rationally related to a legitimate state interest:”
Nor is the County’s policy expressed in § 4.3.2 subject to attack in its application to plaintiff. That policy has been consistently applied.
Nor does the possibility that the County could have chosen some other alternative to accomplish its purposes present any basis for the relief plaintiff seeks. Thus, in
Hughes v. Alexandria Scrap Corporation,
426 U.S. 794, 810-14, 96 S.Ct. 2488, 49 L.Ed.2d 220 (1976) Mr. Justice Powell wrote (at 813, 96 S.Ct. at 2499):
It is well established, however, that a statutory classification impinging upon no fundamental interest, and especially one dealing only with economic matters, need not be drawn so as to fit with precision the legitimate purposes animating it.
Williamson v. Lee Optical Co.,
348 U.S. 483, 489, 75 S.Ct. 461, 99 L.Ed. 563 (1955). That Maryland might have furthered its underlying purpose more artfully, more directly, or more completely, does not warrant a conclusion that the method it chose is unconstitutional. See
Katzenbach v. Morgan,
384 U.S. 641, 657, 86 S.Ct. 1717, 16 L.Ed.2d 828 (1966).
In order to prevail, plaintiff has the burden of establishing a lack of rational connection between the County’s security posting requirement and the County’s interest in assuring compliance with the PWA’s in classification 1 developments. That is a burden plaintiff has not borne. Pursuant to Art. XI-A § 2 of the Maryland Constitution, the General Assembly of the state is authorized to and has enacted pursuant thereto the Express Powers Act, Md.Code Ann. Art. 25A which in turn provides a grant of express powers for charter counties. Under § 5(X) of that Act, Baltimore County is authorized to “enact local laws, for the protection and promotion of public safety, health, morals and welfare, relating to zoning and planning.” The County Code authorizes the adoption of “provisions as to the extent to which streets and other ways,
water, sewer and drain pipes, local open space tracts and other public facilities shall be provided for, as a condition precedent to approval of the subdivision plat.”
The adoption of § 4.3.2 is a reasonable exercise of that authority.
If a developer should sell homes in a subdivision or lots upon which the purchasers plan to build and occupy homes, and then fail to perform his PWA obligations to build the roads and/or storm drains, the potential harm to the public is clear. Both the purchasers and the County taxpayers could suffer since roads and storm drains must be built and financed in any event. Once a PWA is executed and a plat with regard to a classification 1 subdivision is recorded, the risks of harm from the developer’s default may well become greater, since houses without roads and storm drains are legally habitable and thus more marketable if those houses have plumbing (i. e., septic tanks and wells) than if they do not have plumbing. Thus, in the case of classification 1 developments the last point of workable control may be prior to execution of the PWA and final subdivision .plat approval, whereas a later control point may be feasible as to subdivisions requiring new water and sewer utilities or a plumbing “hook-up” since in those cases no plumbing permits can be issued before the utilities are available. Thus, the posting of the security can perhaps be safely delayed until the time for “hook-up” or awarding the utility contracts (a point never occurring in classification 1 subdivisions since the utilities are either already in or are not going in at all, i. e., wells and septic systems). Purchasers may well buy homes without paved streets but they may be much more skeptical about accepting a promise for running water “soon”.
The record in this case discloses a sufficient basis for the County to conclude that the nature and location of the developments proposed and built by each class of developers are different, that subdivisions in classification 1 are constructed primarily in rural areas beyond the limits where public water and sewer facilities will be provided within the County’s ten-year water and sewer plan; and that, on the other hand, subdivisions requiring new water and sewer facilities are generally located in more urban areas. It is also relevant to note that the County pays a portion of the costs for new water and sewer facilities but makes no payments for roads and/or storm drains. Once the developer in classification 1 has made his deposit and secured his plat approval, his development can be under way. Because he is dependent neither on the allocation of
County
funds nor on County installation (or County supervision thereof) of public water and sewer line, the developer in classification 1 retains substantial control over the timing of his construction and the use of his deposited security. The timing of the developer’s project in classifica
tion 3, on the other hand, is dependent on the allotment of
County
funds for its share of the sewer and water costs, an event not within the developer’s control and one which conceivably could tie up the developer’s security deposit for a much longer time if he were required to post it as early as the execution of the PWA. Considerations of those types provide bases for differences which are not irrational.
Nor does § 4.3.2 involve such a distinction based upon wealth so as to require that that provision pass muster under the “strict scrutiny” standard of review. Supreme Court cases so testing classifications based upon wealth have involved burdens placed on the exercise of fundamental important personal rights of individuals, as Mr. Justice Powell has pointed out in
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez,
411 U.S. 1, 20-29, 93 S.Ct. 1278, 36 L.Ed.2d 16 (1973). Nothing approaching a fundamental personal right is in any way implicated in this case. It is true that plaintiff conclusorily alleges lack of sufficient wealth to post security as presently required by § 4.3.2. But plaintiff has proffered no specifics in that regard. Even if plaintiff had so done, plaintiff would seemingly be in the same or worse position as plaintiffs in
Rodriguez.
Therein, Mr. Justice Powell wrote (at 28, 93 S.Ct. at 1294):
However described, it is clear that appellees’ suit asks this Court to extend its most exacting scrutiny to review a system that allegedly discriminates against a large, diverse, and amorphous class, unified only by the common factor of residence in districts that happen to have less taxable wealth than other districts. The system of alleged discrimination and the class it defines have none of the traditional indicia of suspectness: the class is not saddled with such disabilities, or subjected to such a history of purposeful unequal treatment, or relegated to such a position of political powerlessness as to command extraordinary protection from the majoritarian political process. [Footnote omitted.]
The differences in wealth between residents of the Texas school districts involved in
Rodriguez
would appear to be greater than the differences among developers such as plaintiff. But, in any event, they are hardly such differences as create a suspect class.
In summary, on all points, plaintiff’s within challenge fails to pass muster.
Accordingly, judgment will be entered for defendant.