Mayor of Baltimore v. Crane

352 A.2d 786, 277 Md. 198, 1976 Md. LEXIS 962
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 1976
Docket[No. 131, September Term, 1975.]
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 352 A.2d 786 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Crane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Baltimore v. Crane, 352 A.2d 786, 277 Md. 198, 1976 Md. LEXIS 962 (Md. 1976).

Opinion

Singley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Two of the concepts frequently encountered in the law of zoning, “vested rights” 1 and “contract zoning,” 2 have acquired a contentious gloss. While both were referred to in the briefs and argument in this case, we are satisfied that neither concept is applicable here, at least not in the strict sense in which they are used in the cases.

In 1964, the appellees, Leon A. Crane and Charles Crane (the Cranes) held title, in the name of Grindon Realty, Inc., 3 to an 11.1937-acre tract in the northeastern suburbs of Baltimore which had been acquired in 1952. Approximately 4.6 acres of the tract lay in the way of a proposed extension of Perring Parkway from Northern Parkway to Belvedere Avenue, and negotiations had been under way for a year or more looking toward the acquisition of the 4.6-acre parcel by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (the City). The City *201 arranged for an appraisal of the parcel, and its expert concluded that since the Cranes contemplated improving the entire tract with 180 apartment units, the taking of the 4.6-acre parcel, and the consequent reduction in permissible density (16 units per acre), would reduce the value of the Cranes’ holding from $181,341.00 before the taking to $112,000.00 after the taking, a difference of approximately $70,000.00.

At this point, an accommodation was worked out. Ordinance No. 148 was introduced in the City Council and was enacted on 24 March 1964, having been approved by the City’s Planning Commission on 4 February 1964, specifically as it related to the Cranes’ proposed development. In pertinent part, the ordinance provided:

“In determining the number of families which may be housed on a lot or tract of land under subsection A of Section 25 and in determining whether or not a tract of land contains five acres under subsection N. of said Section 25, the area of land designated on an approved subdivision plat or builders’ location plat, certified by the Planning Commission as essential to over-all community planning and not for the sole benefit of any one individual, and that the judgment of the Planning Commission with respect to what is essential to over-all community planning should be limited to what might be called major streets, arterial streets and expressways, as shown on the adopted master plans, and thereby or thereafter given or dedicated to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore by the owner, at the request of the Planning Commission, for the purpose of establishing, extending or widening a street or alley abutting the lot or tract involved, shall be included in the area of such lot or tract of land, and that if buildings have frontage on the new highway, then the Planning Commission can limit the density allowance to the incremental width beyond the right-of-way normally required *202 by the subdivision regulations, and further providing that the Planning Commission may limit the application of [this] Paragraph 31 L if, in the Planning Commission judgment, the absence of a limitation would permit a development of undesirable density or a development which would not be compatible with existing or anticipated future development in adjacent areas.”

The practical effect of the enactment of the ordinance was to give the Cranes, upon their conveyance of the 4.6-acre parcel to the City without receiving any consideration therefor, provided that the Planning Commission approved, the right to develop the remaining 6.5 acres to the same density (180 units) as would have been permissible ¡prior to the conveyance on the entire 11.1937-aere tract.

After the enactment of the ordinance, the Planning Commission, on 21 April 1964, gave final approval to a subdivision and development plan submitted by the Cranes, contemplating the construction of 180 garden-type units, and the City’s Zoning Commissioner certified that his approval would be forthcoming upon the filing of an appropriate application.

Thereafter, the Cranes conveyed the 4.6-acre parcel to the City for a nominal consideration of $1.00 and also granted certain additional utility easements and rights of way to the City, and about one-fourth of an acre to the City’s Board of Education for an aggregate consideration of about $7,500.00. There matters stood until 20 April 1971, when the City enacted a new comprehensive zoning ordinance.

While the zoning ordinance was pending, Mr. Leon A. Crane became concerned about its possible application to the property, and he and his counsel discussed the problem with various city officials. On 28 October 1970, Simon Schonfield, Esq., an Assistant City Solicitor, categorically assured the Cranes’ counsel that “there is no change in the new zoning ordinance which would affect ... [the Cranes’] rights as originally agreed upon . .. [with] the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.. ..”

*203 On 6 March 1972, Mr. Schonfield submitted a formal opinion in response to a request from the City’s Commissioner of Housing and Community Development. After reviewing the factual background, the opinion concluded:

“It is quite evident that the City in accepting the five acres, made itself legally bound to allow the owner of the property to construct the number of dwelling units in accordance with the terms expressed by the provisions of Ordinance No. 148. To allow the City the right to change the density requirements that it had previously approved by an amended zoning ordinance would be unfair and inequitable, as the City is now enjoying the benefits of the transfer of five acres of land. Ordinance 148 was pending before the City Council for one year prior to its adoption on March 25, 1964, and it appears that the City had full opportunity to consider its impact on the community and general public.”
“In view of the above, it is our opinion that the approval of the Planning Commission and the Department of Public Works to allow the Grindon Realty Company to construct 180 dwelling apartments in compliance with the provisions of Ordinance 148 constitutes a valid and enforceable legal agreement, and it therefore follows that the Grindon Realty Company should be permitted to construct its proposed building project of 180 dwelling units.”

In 1973, the Cranes joined with Mr. Howard Brown in an informal partnership looking toward the development of the property. A preliminary development plan for the erection of two midrise buildings containing 178 units (rather than the 180 garden-type apartment units projected in 1964) was submitted to the City’s Planning Commission, which on 25 June 1973, questioned the appropri *204 ateness of the scale and density of the project, but recognized the Cranes’ right to construct 178 units.

Less than three weeks later, the Planning Commission disapproved the preliminary plans primarily because “multiple dwelling development of 100 or more apartment units is [a] conditional use which must be approved by the Mayor and City Council” (under the new zoning ordinance) and ended with the ominous note that:

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Bluebook (online)
352 A.2d 786, 277 Md. 198, 1976 Md. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-crane-md-1976.