Ford v. Baltimore County

300 A.2d 204, 268 Md. 172, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1097
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 9, 1973
Docket[No. 163, September Term, 1972.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 300 A.2d 204 (Ford v. Baltimore County) 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
Ford v. Baltimore County, 300 A.2d 204, 268 Md. 172, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1097 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal from the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in equity (Menchine, J.), two questions are presented to us: (1) is Council Bill No. 30 of the 1971 legislative session of the County Council of Baltimore County adopting new zoning regulations and new comprehensive zoning maps unreasonable, illegal, arbitrary and unconstitutional as applied to the property of the appellants, Eugene F. Ford, et al., trading as the Pot Spring Joint Venture and (2) were the appellants denied a full, fair and impartial hearing in regard to a proposed reclassification of their property?

The appellants, plaintiffs below, filed a bill of complaint on May 7, 1971, against Baltimore County, the appellee in this Court, praying, inter alia, for a declaratory decree that Bill 30 was invalid and unconstitutional as applied to the subject property and that the property retain its prior zoning status. After the County answered, substantial testimony was taken and a number of documents, maps, plats, etc. were introduced into evidence. The chancellor on February 9, 1972, filed a written opinion indi *174 eating that Bill 30 was valid as applied to the subject property and on February 22,1972, passed an order denying the relief prayed for by the plaintiffs, who filed a timely appeal from that order to this Court.

The subject property consists of 32.603 acres of land located at the southwest corner of Pot Spring and Cinder Roads in the Eighth Election District of Baltimore County. The original comprehensive zoning map for this area was adopted on December 20, 1955. It was the result of that comprehensive zoning plan that 11.323 acres of the subject property were zoned R-20 (single family houses on 20,000 square feet lots) ; 1.225 acres were zoned R-40 (single family houses on 40,000 square feet lots) and 20.125 acres were zoned B.L. (Business Local) . When this original comprehensive zoning was adopted in 1955, the surrounding area was relatively undeveloped. It was, however, located in an area which was on the brink of an intensive development which had been spreading northward from the Towson area for several years prior to 1955. The entire neighborhood in which the subject property is located was zoned for single family houses, ranging from the R-10 zone (one-quarter acre lots) to the R-40 zone (one acre lots) with the exception of two tracts—one, the subject property; the other, a four acre tract approximately one-half mile south of the subject property on the west side of Pot Spring Road which was zoned B.L.

The uncontradicted evidence produced by the property owners in the trial court indicates that the neighborhood had developed in accordance with the comprehensive plan adopted in 1955. A school had been constructed on land abutting the subject property on the southwest; the four acre commercial tract had been improved in accordance with its B.L. classification; and, other properties in the general area had been developed with substantial and expensive residences. Indeed, virtually all of the land in the area had been developed in accordance with the 1955 comprehensive plan except the subject property.

*175 The testimony further indicated that the subject property had certain topographical and other conditions having a direct bearing on its development. These same conditions existed or were known in 1955 and they exist today. One of the most important of these conditions is the fact that the subject property is traversed by two streams (and attendant flood plains) which carry water from open end outlets from the County storm drainage systems in neighboring developments. These outlets involve storm drainage pipes 36 and 66 inches in diameter, respectively. The water from these two pipes crosses the subject property and leaves it by passing through two undersized culverts under Pot Spring Road. During heavy rainfall, the subject property is flooded because of the inadequate culverts.

Since the adoption of the comprehensive plan in 1955, Pot Spring Road has been widened and improved southerly from the subject property and northerly from Cinder Road, but the portion of that road contiguous to the subject property has not been improved. Any development of the subject property will require the widening and repaving of this section of Pot Spring Road with the construction of new and larger culverts, to the cost of which, the developer must contribute.

The testimony established that although the procedural requirements for the adoption of the 1955 comprehensive plan and those for the adoption of the 1971 comprehensive plan were generally similar, there were several substantial differences. Both the 1955 and 1971 comprehensive plans were initiated by the County Planning Board, which it had adopted after conducting public hearings in regard to the respective plans. In 1955, the recommendations of the Planning Board in the form of a map were submitted to the Zoning Commissioner. The Zoning Commissioner then conducted hearings, made whatever changes he thought to be appropriate, and thereafter submitted the map, as amended, as a final recommendation to the Board of County Commissioners. The County *176 Commissioners also conducted a public hearing on the recommended map and then made any changes the County Commissioners deemed appropriate as a result of that hearing. In 1971, however, as a result of intervening changes in the local law, the recommendations of the Planning Board in the form of a map were submitted directly to the County Council, the Zoning Commissioner’s former function having been eliminated. However, before the County Council could make any changes or alterations in the recommendations of the Planning Board, it was required that the County Council have additional public hearings at which issues were restricted solely to those properties in regard to which the County Council proposed or recommended zoning which was different from the zoning recommended by the Planning Board. The County was divided into five sectors and the public hearings by the County Council were held on each sector individually. The subject property was designated as being in the Central Sector, so that in the present case, we are only concerned with the councilmanic hearings for that sector. We reviewed in detail the applicable statutory provisions in Baltimore County in regard to the required procedure for adoption of the proposed comprehensive zoning and zoning maps in 1971 in Nottingham Village, Inc. v. Baltimore County, 266 Md. 339, 292 A. 2d 680 (1972), and need not repeat that review here. We sustained in Nottingham Village the provision in the Baltimore County Code (1968, as amended) in which subsection (b) had been added by Council Bill No. 103, possibly as a result of our decision in Swarthmore Co. v. Kaestner, 258 Md. 517, 266 A. 2d 341 (1970). Subsection (b) provided:

“(b) Any change or amendment to be made in a zoning map as proposed by the planning board shall, before final adoption of such map, be brought to further public hearing, advertised and held in the same manner as provided above in subsection (a). If further changes or amend- *177

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 A.2d 204, 268 Md. 172, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-baltimore-county-md-1973.