Dorsey Enterprises, Inc. v. Shpak

147 A.2d 853, 219 Md. 16, 1959 Md. LEXIS 316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 23, 1959
Docket[No. 104, September Term, 1958.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 147 A.2d 853 (Dorsey Enterprises, Inc. v. Shpak) 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
Dorsey Enterprises, Inc. v. Shpak, 147 A.2d 853, 219 Md. 16, 1959 Md. LEXIS 316 (Md. 1959).

Opinions

Bruñe, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This zoning case originated with the filing of an application by the appellee, Shpak, for a special permit to operate an automobile junk yard in Howard County on property near the intersection of the Washington Boulevard (U. S. Route 1) and the Dorsey Road. Shpak had entered into a contract with one Maria Gattuso for the purchase of the property in question upon condition that such a permit be obtained. After a hearing the Board of Zoning Appeals denied Shpak’s petition therefor, and he sought a review of the case by the Circuit Court for Howard County. In that court, the appellants, Dorsey Enterprises, Inc. and Carl W. Meyer, acting both individually and as President of Dorsey Enterprises, Inc., intervened in opposition to Shpak. Following a hearing the court reversed the Board of Zoning Appeals and issued an order directing the Board “to issue said permit, as applied for, subject, however, to such reasonable regulations as said Board may, in its sound discretion, impose, and subject also to the approval of the County Health Officer in accordance with the provisions of Section 23 of the Zoning Regulations of Howard County.” The intervenors appealed from that order.

The record is unusual in that there is no transcript of the testimony taken before the Board of Zoning Appeals. The reason for that is that the operator of the recording machine thought that it was set so as to record the testimony, but actually it was not correctly set and it did not record the proceedings. The parties proceeded to take testimony in the Circuit Court which, we were informed at the argument in this Court, was on the whole very similar to that presented before the Board. Both sides apparently acquiesced in going ahead in the trial court on the basis of testimony to be taken there, and no objection appears to have been made to the absence of any testimony taken before the Board. In this Court the appellee Shpak, who was the appellant below, has sought in his brief [19]*19to make some point of there being no evidence in the record to support the action of the Board. Since the burden was his in the trial court to show, if he could, that the determination of the Board was erroneous, it would seem that it was incumbent upon him, rather than upon the Board or the objectors, to produce the evidence which was before the Board. We find no merit in the appellee’s argument on this point.

We think that it would have been better either to have sent the case back to the Board for the taking of testimony or at least to seek from the Board a certification of the substance of the evidence. However, since the provisions of 1957 Code Art. 66B, Sec. 22 (1) and of Sec. 25 D of the Zoning Regulations of Howard County are both rather broad with regard to the taking of testimony in the Circuit Court, we shall not remand the case for that purpose.

The subject property lies on the southeasterly side of the Washington Boulevard and has a frontage of approximately 200 feet on that road. It runs back with this width to a depth of approximately 71 feet. It then widens out to 455 feet and extends in depth an additional 1060 feet. In this general vicinity property on each side of the Washington Boulevard for a depth of 300 feet is zoned as M-l, which might be described briefly as light manufacturing. On the northwest side of the Boulevard beyond the 300-foot line, property is zoned residential. On the southeast side beyond the 300-foot line in this general vicinity the property is zoned M-2; which might be briefly described as heavy manufacturing or heavy industrial. An automobile junk yard is not permitted in an M-l zone at all. Such a junk yard may be established in an M-2 zone, if a special permit therefor is granted by the Board of Zoning Appeals. The rear portion of the Gattuso tract is zoned M-2.

Section 23 of the Zoning Regulations of Howard County provides that, subject to the limitations, guides and standards provided in Section 24, the Board of Zoning Appeals shall have power, among other things, “A. To approve any use of land or building not permitted as a matter of right in the M-2 District where the Board finds the proposed use would not menace the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare [20]*20of the community or would prevent the most appropriate use of land, * * Section 23 A further provides that before the Board of Appeals shall approve any use thereunder it shall refer the matter to the County Health Officer for a report concerning the health hazard, if any, involved. It further provides that the Board may impose such reasonable safeguards and conditions in granting any application approved under this subsection as will protect the surrounding properties and encourage the most appropriate use of land in harmony with the purpose and intent of these regulations.

Section 24 of the County Zoning Regulations provides in part that where the approval of the Board of Appeals is required before a permit may be issued the Board shall examine the specific property involved and the neighborhood, and further provides that the application shall not be approved where the Board finds the proposed use would menace the public health, safety, security, morals or general welfare. It further provides that in deciding such matters the Board shall give consideration, among other things, to the orderly growth of the community, the reasonable needs of the entire community and' particular neighborhoods, the purpose of these Regulations as provided in Sections 1 and 2, the effect of odors, dust, gas, smoke, fumes, noise upon the use of surrounding properties, and the most appropriate use of land. One of the objectives stated in Section 1 of the Regulations is to prevent blight and property deterioration. Section 1 also uses the general terms of promoting the health, safety, morals and general welfare of the community. Section 2 sets forth a number of things to be taken into consideration for the purposes set forth in Section 1. These include the most appropriate use of land, the conservation and stabilization of property values, the preservation of the scenic beauty of the County and the needs of the County as a whole and the reasonable needs of particular communities within the County.

Shpak wishes to use the Gattuso property to carry on the business of buying used and wrecked automobiles, scrapping and wrecking such as are beyond repair or not worth repairing, selling used parts therefrom, also selling some new.parts, and selling used cars which are, or may be put, in operating [21]*21condition. It is proposed to erect a building on the front of the rear part of the property for use in the conduct of the business. It is also planned to keep the used cars which are in operating condition and which may be offered for sale on the front part of the lot, and to store the wrecked cars and others which do not seem worth repairing on the rear portion, that is, in the M-2 area. It is also proposed to leave a fringe of trees along the sides and at the rear of this M-2 area and to erect a fence which (together with the proposed building) would cut off a view of that storage yard from the front along the Washington Boulevard. An architect’s rendering of the proposed layout shows about two cars on the used-car lot in front and about two cars in the rear portion of the lot. It is quite impossible from this rendering to see that any of the cars have been damaged in any way. This scene is so charming that it seems that only a churlish neighbor could object to such an industry.

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Dorsey Enterprises, Inc. v. Shpak
147 A.2d 853 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
147 A.2d 853, 219 Md. 16, 1959 Md. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsey-enterprises-inc-v-shpak-md-1959.