Maryland-National Capital Park & Planning Commission v. Mardirossian

964 A.2d 713, 184 Md. App. 207, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 2009
Docket2078, September Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 964 A.2d 713 (Maryland-National Capital Park & Planning Commission v. Mardirossian) 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
Maryland-National Capital Park & Planning Commission v. Mardirossian, 964 A.2d 713, 184 Md. App. 207, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 15 (Md. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion by SALMON, J.

Aris Mardirossian and his development company, 12000 River Road Property, LLC., (collectively, Mardirossian) filed a lawsuit in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County against Wayne Goldstein. In the discovery phase of that lawsuit, Mardirossian issued subpoenas duces tecum to Royce Hansen, Allison Bryant, John Robinson, Wendy Purdue, and Meredith Wellington (“the Commissioners”) requiring each of them to attend a deposition and produce certain documents. The persons subpoenaed were all either present or former members of the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission and were then serving (or had served) on the Montgomery County Planning Board.

The Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission (MNCPPC), joined by the Commissioners, filed a motion for protective order asking that the circuit court not enforce the subpoenas. Mardirossian filed a written opposition to the motion and on September 26, 2007, a hearing was held in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The court denied the motion for protective order but in doing so directed counsel for Mardirossian to limit the scope of his deposition inquiries in certain respects. A timely appeal was filed by the *210 MNCPPC and the Commissioners. 1 The court stayed the depositions pending the outcome of any appeal.

The sole issue raised by the appellants in this appeal is: Did the Circuit Court err in failing to follow federal and out-of-state precedent that forbid (under most circumstances) the taking of the deposition of high-ranking government officials in lawsuits that are not specifically directed at the officials’ conduct?

I

In August 2006, Mardirossian began the process of obtaining approval for a forest conservation plan concerning property located at 12000 River Road. Mardirossian first filed a Natural Resources Inventory/Forest Stand Delineation for the property with the Commission’s Environmental Planning staff. After that filing was approved, Mardirossian filed several proposed forest conservation plans that were reviewed by Mark Pfefferle, a member of the Environmental Planning staff.

In response to each of the proposed forest conservation plans submitted by Mardirossian, Mr. Pfefferle sent Mardirossian a written explanation as to why the plan would not be approved by the staff. When the last proposed forest conservation plan was rejected by Mr. Pfefferle, Mardirossian exercised his right to appeal the staff-level denial to the Planning Board (“the Board”). At the hearing before the Board, it was shown that the buildable portion of the 12000 River Road Property sits atop a bluff overlooking the Potomac River and the C & O Canal National Park. The rear of the property drops off steeply towards the National Park, and the property line sits only a few feet away from the C & O Canal. The Planning Board voted unanimously to deny the proposed *211 forest conservation plan because, among other things, the plan proposed removal of more then fifty native species of trees, many of which were located on extremely steep slopes and within stream valley buffer areas where tree removal is generally not permitted.

Following the planning board’s denial, Mardirossian made it clear that he planned to file a petition for judicial review of the Board’s denial. But before such a petition could be filed, Mardirossian had to wait until the Board filed a written resolution denying the forest conservation plan.

II

The Goldstein Lawsuit

On August 8, 2006, which was about three months after Mardirossian began the process of seeking approval for the forest conservation plan, Wayne Goldstein (“Goldstein”) wrote a letter to Mr. Mardirossian that read, in part:

It has come to my attention from a reliable source that you have apparently arranged for a tree company to come to the property at 12000 River Road in Potomac, owned by 12000 River Road Property, LLC, of which you are the manager and resident agent, to cut down sufficient trees to create a view of the Potomac River from the property. It is my understanding that such an action would clearly violate Chapter 22A of the Montgomery County Code and could subject you and the corporate entity that owns the property to a fine of up to $1000, up to six months in jail, and an administrative civil penalty of up to $9 per square foot, as well as a requirement to reforest the cleared area and perhaps place a conservation easement on most of the 3.25 acre property. In addition, if the clearing includes land under a scenic easement with the National Park Service (NPS) related to the C & O Canal National Historic Park, there could be additional federal penalties.
As president of Montgomery Preservation, Inc., my primary concern is the potential negative impact upon the Historic National Park. I’m including a clause from a scenic *212 easement agreement that details the century-long interest of the federal government in the Potomac River and adjacent lands.

Goldstein’s letter, dated October 8, 2006, went on to discuss Montgomery County’s Forest Conservation Law and Mardirossian’s efforts to obtain planning commission approval of a forest conservation plan for his property. Goldstein’s letter continued:

It is my understanding that you have met with representatives of both the NPS (National Park Staff) and the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (M-NCPPC) to discuss your plans for this property. At this point, the M-NCPPC apparently had rejected your Natural Resource Inventory/Forest Stand Delineation (NRI/FSD) plan as inaccurate and incomplete because a number of specimen trees have not been included on the initially-submitted plan. This meeting underscores your great familiarity with the administrative processes and underlying statutes regarding environmental planning and all other planning in Montgomery County as well as the City of Gaithersburg, and that you would have to know that you can do no clearing of any trees on the property before the NRI/FSD plan and other plans have been approved.
It is also my understanding that you want the tree company to do for you what was done for Dan Snyder, the owner of the neighboring properties at 11920 and 11930 River Road. It is because of Mr. Snyder’s actions that Montgomery County raised the maximum available administrative civil penalty for such unlawful tree cutting from $l/foot to $9/foot. In addition, Mr. Snyder had received improper permission from an NPS official to do the clearing an action that nonetheless allowed Mr. Snyder to negotiate a less severe financial settlement. However, even in that circumstance in addition to paying a fine and planting hundreds of trees he also had to place a perpetual easement on three acres of his property.
I hope that my source is mistaken in the information provided to me and if that turns out to be the case, I will *213 then offer my sincerest apology to you.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
964 A.2d 713, 184 Md. App. 207, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-national-capital-park-planning-commission-v-mardirossian-mdctspecapp-2009.