Gilmor v. Mayor and City Council

109 A.2d 739, 205 Md. 557, 1954 Md. LEXIS 302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 10, 1954
Docket[No. 33, October Term, 1954.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 109 A.2d 739 (Gilmor v. Mayor and City Council) 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
Gilmor v. Mayor and City Council, 109 A.2d 739, 205 Md. 557, 1954 Md. LEXIS 302 (Md. 1954).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from an order of the Baltimore City Court, which affirmed the action of the Board of Munici *559 pal and Zoning. Appeals of Baltimore in granting an application for the erection of billboards in a first commercial use district. The appellants are nearby property owners.

The Maryland Advertising Company, one of the appellees, sought a permit to erect, on an unimproved triangular lot at the southeast corner of Cathedral and Chase Streets in Baltimore, two illuminated poster boards, which were to be of all steel construction, set back seventy feet from the south edge of, and parallel with, Chase Street, and eight feet above ground, and along and at least two feet away from the north wall of the building known as 1037 Cathedral Street.

The Baltimore City Zoning Ordinance, sec. 37(3) (Revised by Ordinance 711, approved May 21, 1953) permits a “billboard for the display of outdoor advertising or poster boards” in first commercial, second commercial, and industrial use districts, provided they are approved, after a public hearing, by the Board of Municipal and Zoning Appeals. Sec. 38 provides that: “No such permit shall be issued until the application shall have been approved by the Board of Municipal and Zoning Appeals * * *”, which shall require the applicant to post the premises and advertise in the customary manner, and which shall submit drawings, plans" and other data to the Board of Fire Commissioners for investigation and report as to the fire hazard, the Commissioner of Health for investigation and report as to the health hazard, and to the Traffic Commission for investigation and report as to the traffic hazard. Sec. 39 provides the guides and standards in cases of original jurisdiction, which applications for the use of billboards come under. Its directions are these: “The Board of Municipal and Zoning Appeals shall fix a reasonable time for the hearing as well as give due notice to the parties in interest. The Board of Municipal and Zoning Appeals shall inspect the premises and shall hold a public hearing, giving all parties in interest the right to testify as to any material facts in connection with the proposed use, and shall act *560 as the fact-finding body and shall approve or disapprove the issuance of the permit for the proposed use in accordance with the evidence adduced before it and from its own investigation as to whether or not such proposed use would menace the public health, safety, security or morals, and as a further'"guide to their decision upon the facts of the case, they shall gvie consideration to the following: * * Eight factors, which the Board is to consider, are then set forth, most of which, in the nature of things, are not applicable to billboards. The pertinent ones are: the rules and regulations in the Ordinance; the decisions of this Court in similar cases; the type of electric illumination for the proposed use, “with special reference to its effect upon nearby structures and the glare, if any, from such illumination in surrounding sleeping quarters, if any.”

At the hearing before the Board, the only protestants were the Misses Gilmor, who owned 22 West Chase Street, and Mr. William Goldman, who owned 17 West Chase Street, who are appellants, and their counsel, who doubled as a witness. Miss Francés Gilmor admitted that she would not be able to see the signs from her property but felt that they would be: “a great detriment and great eyesore. * * * I think it pulls down the whole tone of the property.” Mr. Goldman’s'testimony was that he had rented his property to a drugstore “and the signs will not do my property much good.” Mr. Douglas Gordon, when asked how the signs would affect the public health, safety, security or morals, testified that although the neighborhood was first commercial, there were <a number of residences dotted about in it, and that these people should not have to look from their homes at illuminated signs “because of the fact it is obviously injurious to their property and injurious to sound zoning, the thing you are administering, and therefore injurious to the City as a whole.” When asked by a member of the Board: “What right have we to refuse the sign. Is it injurious to health, safety and morals?”, his answer was: “It is obviously injurious to all these. Everyone *561 here knows the minute that sign goes up the standards of the neighborhood go down. * * * everyone knows an obnoxious sign of this kind in a neighborhood where people live pulls down values and living conditions and leads to slums which do produce these things of health and safety the law calls for.” A moment later, he added: “You have asked me why this injures the health, etc. and I have told you.” This was substantially all of the evidence of the protestants. The reports of the Fire Commissioner, the Health Commissioner and the Traffic Commission found no hazard to, or adverse effect upon, the matters under their respective jurisdictions. The Board unanimously approved the application. Its resolution recited that it had inspected and studied the premises and the neighborhood, held a public hearing, and considered all of the data submitted, and found that the property involved is in a first commercial use district, that to the south of it was a radiator repair shop, to the north, across Chase Street, an automobile tire and service station, an automobile upholstering establishment, an automobile sales and service building, and that across Cathedral Street, the entire block on the west side is occupied by commercial enterprises and service shops. It added that it was apparent to the Board that the proposed signs would not be visible from the homes of those who had protested. It found that the proposed signs “would not create hazards from fire or disease and would not menace the public health, safety, security or morals.”

On appeal to the Baltimore City Court, a number of the adjoining property owners intervened. One additional witness was there produced, a real estate man, who testified that the establishment to the south of the proposed signs on Cathedral Street, which the Board had called a radiator equipment place, was occupied by Parks & Hull, who dealt in automobile equipment and repair. He also testified that the building to the north, across Chase Street, described by the Board in its opinion as an automobile tire and service station, was now used for the storage of pinball machines. This had been *562 noted by one of the Board members at the hearing, who said, as did the witness, that it had- formerly been occupied by the Lee Tire Company, whose sign was still on the building. He also testified that in the block on the west side of Cathedral Street, - from 1100 to 1130, there were two properties used exclusively as dwellings, two other property owners maintained shops in their dwellings, and the other properties include a china repair shop, a paint store,, and a large vacant store. It is agreed that across the street, near the former Lee tire building, is a saloon, that on the northeast corner of Chase Street and Maryland Avenue, diagonally across the street from the proposed signs, a liquor store. There are no openings in the north wall of 1037 Cathedral Street, along which the signs would stand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A.2d 739, 205 Md. 557, 1954 Md. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmor-v-mayor-and-city-council-md-1954.