Howard Research & Development Corp. v. Howard County

418 A.2d 1253, 46 Md. App. 498, 1980 Md. App. LEXIS 349
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 8, 1980
Docket1670, September Term, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 418 A.2d 1253 (Howard Research & Development Corp. v. Howard County) 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
Howard Research & Development Corp. v. Howard County, 418 A.2d 1253, 46 Md. App. 498, 1980 Md. App. LEXIS 349 (Md. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Couch, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*500 The Board of County Commissioners of Howard County, in May, 1965, amended the Howard County Zoning Regulations by adopting Section 17 which provided for the creation, organization and regulation of a floating zone known as a New Town (NT) District. 1 This new section of the zoning regulations provided that the beneficial owner of any tract of land in Howard County meeting the requirements of Section 17.012 2 (NT District must contain total area of at least 2,500 contiguous acres) may petition the Board of County Commissioners to designate the property an NT District. A Preliminary Development Plan 3 (PDP) must accompany the petition.

Howard Research and Development Corporation (HRD) *501 submitted such a petition accompanied by a PDP for the placement of approximately 13,600 acres of land in what was to be known as the Columbia New Town District (Columbia). The petition and the PDP for Columbia were approved by the Board of County Commissioners in August of 1965. Following the approval of the PDP, HRD had the choice, under the zoning regulations, of either developing the entire NT District or developing the NT District in separate geographical segments. HRD chose the latter, more manageable course. The process of developing phases of the PDP involves submission of a Final Development Plan (FDP) for each geographical segment (phase) to the Planning Commission for its review and approval.

In November, 1968, a county charter was adopted by the citizens of Howard County. In that charter, the Planning Board was designated to succeed the Planning Commission with regard to matters involving New Town Districts. A Zoning Board was also created and, pursuant to the Zoning Enabling Act, Howard County Code §§ 16.200-210, the Zoning Board, in October, 1977, adopted the 1977 Zoning Regulations. § 119 of the new regulations, governing NT Districts and particularly Columbia, is virtually identical to § 17 of the 1961 Zoning Regulations.

The specific controversy in this case focuses upon Phase 36 of the Final Development Plan which was approved by the Planning Commission in April, 1968. Phase 36 involves approximately 139 acres of land located in a section of the Oakland Ridge Industrial Park in the Columbia New Town District. Approximately 57 acres (collectively, the "Base Parcel”) of Phase 36 were designated for development and given the land-use designation of "Employment Center — Industrial Area.” Having obtained the approval of the Planning Commission, the FDP Phase 36 map and accompanying "criteria” 4 were recorded among the Land Records of Howard County.

The problem presented here deals with the specific *502 implementation of the Final Development Plan — Phase 36. The FDP Phase 36 criteria provides as follows:

"F. Permitted Uses — Section 17.031 D (of 1977 Zoning Regulations)
B. Commercial uses ancillary to, or compatible with, permitted industrial uses are permitted including, but not limited to, all of the following:
d. Gasoline service station.”

Under Paragraph 6.A. of the FDP criteria — Phase 36, "All structures constructed upon lots included within this phase shall be constructed in accordance with a site development plan approved by the Howard County Planning Commission.” In accordance with the Phase 36 criteria, BP Oil, Inc. (BP), appellant and contract purchaser of approximately 1.297 acres, designated as lot 79 in Oakland Ridge Industrial Park, petitioned the Planning Board for the approval of a site development plan which proposed the installation of a gasoline service station on the lot. As noted previously, a gasoline service station is categorized as a permitted use by the Phase 36 criteria. No other gas station had been built on the Phase 36 parcel and BP apparently believed that such a use was permitted as of right and that the imprimatur of the Planning Board, without the requirement of a formal public hearing, was all that was necessary to proceed with development of the lot. The Planning Board felt otherwise. The Howard County Planning Board, pursuant to § 119 C. 15 of the 1977 Zoning Regulations 5 and the Board’s own Final Development Plan Criteria Policy, 6 concluded that a determination "in the *503 nature of’ a special exception decision had to be made by the Planning Board relative to the proposed location of BP’s gasoline service station, because the use had not been assigned to a specified parcel under the recorded FDP Phase 36 criteria.

The Planning Board conducted the proceedings as upon a petition for special exception which requires a public hearing, notice, presentation of evidence and the issuance of a decision and order. The previously referenced policy of the Board required the Board to apply the standards of § 122 F.16 of the Zoning Regulations, which provides for special exceptions for gasoline stations, to BP’s application. The Board held a public hearing on the petition on July 31, August 23, and September 20, 1978 at which appellees, the Concerned Citizens for the Columbia Concept (Protestants) appeared to protest the placement of the gas station on property bordering their residential area. Using the standards delineated in § 122 F.16 for the grant of a special exception, the Planning Board granted BP’s application.

The protestants, uncertain of the route an appeal must take from the Planning Board, filed appeals to both the Circuit Court for Howard County and the Board of Appeals of Howard County. These proceedings are now pending and, although they precipitated the instant case, they are not directly involved here. The protestants’ appeals raised various original and appellate jurisdictional questions involving the administration of the NT District which cast obstacles in the path of the commencement of construction of the gas station. Accordingly, appellant BP filed the present *504 declaratory judgment action in the Circuit Court for Howard County. Appellant HRD, the developer of the Columbia NT District, intervened.

BP’s petition for a declaratory judgment requested the Circuit Court to declare (1) that the Board of Appeals of Howard County has no jurisdiction or authority to entertain an appeal from a decision of the Planning Board granting BP permission to erect a gasoline station in a NT District, (2) that the Planning Board has no authority to grant special exceptions under the zoning regulations applicable to the NT District, (3) that the action of the Planning Board in approving BP’s site development plan was valid, and (4) in the alternative, if it were found that the Planning Board had the authority to grant a permit for the service station as a special exception in the NT District, that its action in approving the site development plan and granting a special exception was valid.

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Bluebook (online)
418 A.2d 1253, 46 Md. App. 498, 1980 Md. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-research-development-corp-v-howard-county-mdctspecapp-1980.