Kanfer v. Montgomery County Council

373 A.2d 5, 35 Md. App. 715, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 520
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 11, 1977
Docket332, September Term, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 373 A.2d 5 (Kanfer v. Montgomery County Council) 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
Kanfer v. Montgomery County Council, 373 A.2d 5, 35 Md. App. 715, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 520 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Moore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This unusual zoning case involves a controversial five-acre enclave located among the 1700 acres comprising *717 Montgomery Village, a Town Sector Zone in Montgomery County. Appellant, Morris Kanfer, received a favorable report and recommendation by the hearing examiner, following an unfavorable report by the Montgomery County Planning Board and its Technical Staff, in connection with his application for a zoning reclassification of the property from R-R (one-half acre) to R-T (Town House). The Montgomery County Council, sitting as a District Council, rejected the recommendations contáined in an exhaustive analysis of the application by the hearing examiner and adopted a resolution denying the rezoning. Mr. Kanfer thereupon appealed to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County and in a Memorandum Opinion and Order filed on March 15, 1976, the action of the District Council was affirmed. From that Order this appeal has been taken. Appellant contends (a) that the record is devoid of any legally sufficient evidence which would render the Council’s denial “fairly debatable” and (b) that the decision of the Council was not in accordance, with legally promulgated procedural requirements. We sustain the first contention and reverse.

I

The facts are essentially undisputed. Historically, the subject property has been in the R-R, or one-half acre zone, since 1958. It was part of a 300-acre dairy farm, the major portion of which was sold to Kettler Bros., Inc., the owners and developers of Montgomery Village, a new town established after the adoption in 1966 of the Town Sector Zone, 1 and consisting of some 1700 acres. The record discloses that the appellant retained this five-acre parcel because of the presence within its boundaries of a well affording pure drinking water for his late wife.

In the Master Plan for Gaithersburg and Vicinity, adopted by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission in January 1971, the subject land was recommended for R-90, a one-family, detached, restricted *718 (one-half acre) residential category. Mr. Kanfer did not participate in the hearings in connection with the adoption of the Gaithersburg Master Plan held before the Planning Commission in July, 1968 and before the County Council in September and November, 1970.

Over the years, the developer of Montgomery Village, with required approvals of the Planning Board and the Council, has constructed an extraordinarily attractive town with a mixture of single and multiple family residential classifications, as well as office and shopping amenities, lakes, a golf course, tennis courts and recreational areas. The following improvements abut the Kanfer property.

1) Maryland Place

This is a town house community located immediately north of the subject tract, consisting of 33.6 acres with 270 dwelling units (approximately eight dwelling units per acre) and with an average of 24 persons per acre. The southerly end of this development is approximately 35 feet from the northern boundary of the Kanfer property.

2) Thomas Choice

This is a combination of garden-type apartments and town houses located to the immediate west and north of the subject property consisting of 39 acres and 589 dwelling units (103 town houses and 486 garden apartments). There are between 15.1 and 17.6 dwelling units per acre and a population of between 45 and 53 persons per acre. Thomas Choice is divided into three sections, the first, immediately west of the Kanfer property, consists of 300 apartments; north and west of the first section, there is another area accommodating 186 apartment units, while to the north of the second section there is a development of 103 town houses.

3) Centerway Road

This is an 80-foot divided four-lane arterial highway which the subject property abuts along its southern *719 boundary. The property has approximately 470 feet of frontage along this road. There is a median break opposite its intersection with Thomas Farm Road.

4) Thomas Farm Road

This is a 70-foot arterial roadway along which the eastern part of the subject property has approximately 370 feet of frontage. Thomas Farm Road intersects Centerway Road at the southeastern corner of the property and extends north and west, serving the Maryland Place town house development, from Centerway Road to the southern boundary of the golf course property.

The instant application was filed by the appellant in May 1973, requesting reclassification to either the R-20 (multiple family, medium-density residential) or R-T (town house) zone. (Prior to the hearing before the examiner, the alternative R-20 request was withdrawn.)

In October, 1973 the Montgomery County Planning Board adopted the recommendation of its Technical Staff and recommended denial of the application. 2 The basis for the adverse recommendations were: (a) that the requested rezoning was not in conformity with the 1971 Gaithersburg Master Plan; (b) that the property did not meet the purpose intended for the utilization of the R-T zone; and, (c) although there had been change in the character of the area, such change had been “in strict conformity” with the Master Plan. The Planning Board also cited information provided by one of the opponents to the application, the Montgomery Village Foundation, Inc., and concluded that certain “social implications” militated against the application. These “social” factors related primarily to the recreational and community facilities in the Town Sector Zone which it was believed would “in all probability” not be available to the residents of the Kanfer property for their use.

In early January 1974, a public hearing on the application was held by the hearing examiner for Montgomery County, *720 Stanley D. Abrams. Testimony in support of the application was given by Mr. Kanfer and by a qualified land planner, Werner Kloetzli, Jr. The site plan received in evidence showed a proposed development of 50 town house dwellings (10 units per acre) but the expert’s report and testimony with respect to compatibility, compliance with the purpose clause of the R-T zone, impact on traffic and public utilities and related issues, was premised upon maximum development under R-T zoning, namely 12.5 dwelling units per acre. He defined the “neighborhood” of the subject property, a definition which was thereafter adopted by both the hearing examiner and the District Council.

Appearing in opposition to the application were the Citizens Association of Montgomery Village, the Montgomery Village Foundation, and the residents of the abutting Maryland Place town house community. The former contested the application because of its nonconformity with the Master Plan and its alleged incompatibility with adjacent uses. The members of the Maryland Place town house community were opposed on grounds of alleged overcrowding of school facilities and traffic.

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Bluebook (online)
373 A.2d 5, 35 Md. App. 715, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kanfer-v-montgomery-county-council-mdctspecapp-1977.