Heard v. Prince George's Cnty.

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 2, 2024
Docket1794/22
StatusPublished

This text of Heard v. Prince George's Cnty. (Heard v. Prince George's Cnty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heard v. Prince George's Cnty., (Md. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Bradley E. Heard v. County Council of Prince George’s, et al., No. 1794, Sept. Term 2022. Opinion filed on February 2, 2024, by Wells, C.J.

ZONING – STANDING – AGGRIEVEMENT

A protestant has standing under Maryland Code Annotated, Land Use (“LU”) Article section 22-407(a)(1) to seek judicial review of a final zoning decision so long as the protestant satisfies each of the criteria listed there. Additionally, the protestant must demonstrate aggrievement, meaning that the decision will adversely affect the protestant’s interests in a personal and specific manner not shared by the public. The proximity of the protestant to the affected area is the most important factor in establishing aggrievement.

Here, the County Council for Prince George’s County, acting as the county’s zoning authority, the District Council, passed CB-42-2021, which changed the Table of Uses in an R-55 residential zone to allow an eleemosynary entity to operate in a defunct public school. Appellant Bradley Heard has demonstrated that he lives approximately 800 feet from the subject property. Additionally, Heard has shown under the “non-demanding” statutory requirements of LU § 22-407 that he and other neighboring county residents would suffer a pecuniary loss because of the District Council’s decision. He, therefore, has standing to contest the District Council’s passage of CB-42-2021.

ZONING – REGIONAL DISTRICT ACT – COUNTY CHARTER

Prince George’s and Montgomery Counties are parties to the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (M-NCPPC), a legislatively created body that administers certain park development, as well as planning and zoning functions in those counties. The Maryland-Washington Regional District Act (RDA), embodied in LU § 22-104(a), authorizes the Prince George’s District Council, through the M-NCPPC, to adopt, amend and administer zoning laws within the county. Because the RDA is the “exclusive source of zoning authority in those areas of Prince George’s County which it covers,” we hold that the zoning provisions of the county’s Charter have been superseded by the RDA. Consequently, assent from the County Executive and any charter-related time constraints are inapplicable to zoning actions such as CB-42-2022.

ZONING – SPOT ZONING – VALID PUBLIC PURPOSE “Spot zoning occurs when a small area in a [zone] district is placed in a different zoning classification than the surrounding property.” Here, the District Council did not rezone the subject property but changed the Table of Uses for the R-55 residential zone to allow a charitable organization to redevelop and then operate out of a long-shuttered public school. Further, a use permitted in a small area, which is not inconsistent with the use to which the larger surrounding area is restricted, although it may be different from that use, is not “spot zoning” when it does not conflict with the comprehensive plan. In this case, the proposed use of the defunct school was consistent with the county’s comprehensive plan and was for a valid public purpose and, therefore, does not constitute spot zoning. Circuit Court for Prince George’s County Case No. CAL21-08992 REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 1794

September Term, 2022 ______________________________________

BRADLEY E. HEARD

v.

COUNTY COUNCIL OF PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, SITTING AS DISTRICT COUNCIL, ET AL. ______________________________________

Wells, C.J., Nazarian, Tang,

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Wells, C.J. ______________________________________

Filed: February 2, 2024

2024-02-02 10:18-05:00 This appeal arises from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County

dismissing appellant Bradley Heard’s petition for judicial review of co-appellee Prince

George’s County Council’s 1 enactment of zoning bill CB-42-2021—an ordinance that

amended the R-55 (single-family detached residential) zone to allow for the adaptive reuse

of an abandoned public-school building by the Mission of Love Charities, the other

appellee (for convenience both appellees will be referred to as “the District Council”). The

circuit court did not reach the merits of Heard’s claims finding that he lacked both property

owner and taxpayer standing to challenge the passage of the bill.

Heard asks us to resolve three questions, which we have rephrased: 2

1. Does Heard have standing to challenge the District Council’s enactment of CB- 42-2021?

1 Under the Maryland Regional District Act (“RDA”), the County Council, sitting as the District Council, has the authority to review and decide zoning and land use matters for most of Prince George’s County. 2 Heard’s verbatim questions to us read:

1. Did the Circuit Court err in finding that Appellant lacked standing to seek judicial review of the District Council’s legislative enactment of CB-42- 2021?

2. Did the District Council’s enactment of CB-42-2021 constitute a valid and enforceable local zoning law within the meaning of the Regional District Act, given that (a) the enacted legislation was neither presented to nor approved by the County Executive in accordance with Section 411 of the Prince George’s County Charter, and thus never became a local law, or (b) the enacted non-emergency legislation was designated to take effect “on the date of its adoption,” rather than 45 calendar days after it became law, in violation of Section 318 of the Prince George’s County Charter?

3. To the extent that the District Council’s enactment of CB-42-2021 constitutes a facially valid local zoning law within the meaning of the Regional District Act, is the regulation nevertheless ultra vires and unenforceable, given that it constitutes unlawful spot zoning? 2. Did the District Council legally enact CB-42-2021?

3. Even if CB-42-2021 was validly enacted, did the District Council exceed its authority because the ordinance constitutes “spot zoning?”

For the reasons that we discuss, we reach a different conclusion from the circuit court and

determine that Heard has standing to challenge the District Council’s passage of CB-42-

2021. On the merits, we conclude the legislation was legally enacted and does not

constitute spot zoning. The ordinance is, therefore, valid and enforceable within the

meaning of the RDA.

BACKGROUND

On June 8, 2021, six members of the Prince George’s County Council proposed and

presented the first draft of CB-42-2021 to the District Council. 3 It provided:

(E) A former public-school building, currently or previously located in a Development District Overlay Zone, where the building is greater than 10,000 sq. ft in gross floor area and the building is situated on a lot or parcel exceeding 2 acres, can be adaptively reused primarily by an eleemosynary, philanthropic or non-profit institution, established prior to (date) and whose previous office headquarters was within 150 yards of the school building. The adaptive user can also operate, sell or lease space within the building to an entity or entities in any use permitted in the CSC zone. (Emphasis added)

The property at issue is known as the Lyndon Hills School located at 6181 Old Central

Avenue. The school has sat unused and vacant for several years.

On June 17, 2021, the Prince George’s County Planning Board 4 submitted written

comments on the first draft of the bill. The Planning Board noted that the bill would run

3 They were Councilmembers Streeter, Davis, Ivey, Franklin, Taveras, and Glaros.

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Bluebook (online)
Heard v. Prince George's Cnty., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heard-v-prince-georges-cnty-mdctspecapp-2024.