Levinson v. Montgomery County

620 A.2d 961, 95 Md. App. 307, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 26, 1993
Docket1051, September Term, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 620 A.2d 961 (Levinson v. Montgomery 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
Levinson v. Montgomery County, 620 A.2d 961, 95 Md. App. 307, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 52 (Md. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

BISHOP, Judge.

The Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection (the “DEP”) issued a notice of zoning violation (the “Notice”) to Appellant, Lawrence M. Levinson, M.D. (“Dr. Levinson”). Dr. Levinson filed a notice of appeal with Appellee, the Montgomery County Board of Appeals (the “Board”). The Board conducted an evidentiary hearing and affirmed the Notice. Dr. Levinson then filed an appeal to *311 the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. Appellee, Montgomery County (the “County”), filed a motion to intervene. The circuit court granted the County’s motion, and affirmed the decision of the Board. Dr. Levinson filed a timely notice of appeal to this Court.

Issues

Appellant raises the following issues, which we restate as follows:

I. Whether a zoning ordinance that prohibits a home health practitioner from selling prescribed remedial devices that are available from a commercial source, without establishing specific criteria and standards for granting special exceptions or allowing sales that are compatible with the general welfare of the community as permitted uses, or both, is illegal, arbitrary, and capricious?
II. Whether a zoning ordinance that prohibits a home health practitioner from selling prescribed remedial devices that are available from a commercial source, without establishing specific criteria and standards for granting special exceptions or allowing sales that are compatible with the general welfare of the community as permitted uses, or both, deprives physicians of due process of law and equal protection of the laws, as guaranteed by the United States Constitution and the Maryland Declaration of Rights?
III. Whether Dr. Levinson acquired a vested right to sell commercially available eyeglasses?
IV. Whether the DEP is prevented, under the doctrine of equitable estoppel, from enforcing the Notice?

Facts

The facts of this case are essentially undisputed. Dr. Levinson, an ophthalmologist, has maintained a private practice in Potomac, Maryland since 1975. Around 1981, Dr. Levinson added to his office an optical dispensary from *312 which eyeglasses were sold. The office was located in the Sovran Bank Building in Potomac Village. Sometime in 1990, however, Dr. Levinson moved his ophthalmology practice, including the optical dispensary, to the basement of his single-family residence in Potomac. Although the property is zoned “RE-2” (residential, one-family), the Montgomery County Code, § 59-A-6.1 (1984, as amended), permits a home health practitioner to maintain a professional office within his or her home, subject to certain requirements and restrictions.

Before moving his practice, Dr. Levinson submitted two building permit applications to the DEP. In the first application, dated November 22, 1989, he requested a permit to alter the existing structure for use as a basement professional office. In the second application, dated January 19, 1990, he requested a permit to construct a professional office. The applications were accompanied by floor plans, which indicated an area for an “Optical Shop.” The DEP approved the applications on January 25 and 30, 1990, respectively. On January 29, 1990, Dr. Levinson submitted an application for a “Use and Occupancy Certificate,” on which he listed as the proposed use: “PROFESSIONAL OPHTHALMOLOGY OFFICE DISPENSING GLASSES + CONTACT LENSES” (emphasis in original). The DEP approved the application and, on March 13, 1990, issued the certificate. The certificate specified the use as “Professional Office for resident of dwelling — Ophthalmology.”

In August 1990, the West Montgomery County Citizens Association (the “Association”) sent a letter of complaint to the DEP. The Association alleged that Dr. Levinson was selling, in his home, commercially available eyeglasses in violation of a County zoning ordinance. Section 59-A-6.1(c)(6) of the Montgomery County Code provides: “The sale of goods on the premises is prohibited, except for medication prescribed by the health practitioner or a prescribed remedial device that cannot be obtained from a commercial source ” (emphasis added). In response to the complaint, Mark Moran (“Moran”), a County zoning inspector, visited Dr. Levinson’s home, and confirmed the Associa *313 tion’s allegation. In a subsequent conversation with Moran, Dr. Levinson admitted that the eyeglasses he sold were available at commercial establishments. At the hearing, Dr. Levinson testified that, to the best of his knowledge, all eyeglasses are commercially available. Dr. Levinson gave his patients the option of purchasing glasses at his shop, or elsewhere. He neither advertised that he sold eyeglasses, nor filled other doctors’ prescriptions.

The County Council adopted Section 59-A-6.1 on January 16, 1990 as part of a series of text amendments aimed at “minimizing the adverse impacts of non-residential uses in one-family residential zones and removing certain distinctions between types of occupations which no longer appeared to be valid.” On February 5, 1990, the effective date of the text amendments, § 59-A-6.1(c)(6) replaced a similar provision contained in § 59-A-2.1, which provided in pertinent part:

Office, professional, residential: Rooms and/or buildings used for office purposes by not more than one (1) member of any recognized profession ...; provided, that such use shall be incidental to and subordinate to residential use and not one involving a commercial enterprise. Such use shall preclude manufacturing or sale of any hardware product, except those remedial devices which are prescribed as a direct result of the specific service rendered on the premises and which devices cannot be obtained by the client from any commercial establishment.

(Emphasis added).

In October 1990, the DEP requested that the County Attorney provide an interpretation of § 59-A-6.1(c)(6). Moran testified that because the home occupation provisions of the zoning code were changed, the DEP wanted to confirm that, under the new text amendments, the sale of commercially available eyeglasses was prohibited. After receiving a memorandum from the County Attorney’s office, which concluded that the sale of commercially available prescribed remedial devices by home health practitioners *314 was prohibited by the zoning ordinance, Moran issued the Notice directing Dr. Levinson, inter alia, to “[c]ease sale of prescribed remedial devices on the premises that may be obtained from a commercial source.”

Dr. Levinson filed a notice of appeal to the Board. After an evidentiary hearing on August 14 and September 11, 1991, the Board affirmed the Notice and found that there was a “facial violation of an unambiguous ordinance.” The Board determined that the doctrines of vested rights and equitable estoppel were inapplicable, but declined to pass on the constitutionality of the ordinance.

Dr. Levinson filed an appeal to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. After hearing the arguments of counsel, the court affirmed the decision of the Board.

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Bluebook (online)
620 A.2d 961, 95 Md. App. 307, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levinson-v-montgomery-county-mdctspecapp-1993.