Mayor of Rockville v. Pumphrey

96 A.3d 859, 218 Md. App. 160, 2014 WL 3752100, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 31, 2014
Docket0599/13
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 A.3d 859 (Mayor of Rockville v. Pumphrey) 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
Mayor of Rockville v. Pumphrey, 96 A.3d 859, 218 Md. App. 160, 2014 WL 3752100, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 79 (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

DEBORAH S. EYLER, J.

This appeal arises from two actions for judicial review filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. In each case, William Pumphrey, on behalf of the Robert A. Pumphrey Funeral Home, and RAP Leasing Corporation (“RAP”) (collectively “Pumphrey”), the appellees, were the petitioners. In the first action for judicial review, Pumphrey challenged a text amendment to the City of Rockville’s zoning ordinance enacted by the Mayor and City Council of Rockville (“Mayor and *163 Council” or “the City”), an appellant, which eliminated language permitting the expansion of off-street parking for certain nonconforming uses within Rockville (“the text amendment case”). Pumphrey alternatively sought mandamus relief against the City. In the second action, Pumphrey challenged a decision of the City of Rockville Planning Commission (“the Planning Commission”), an appellant, denying his final record plat application for the consolidation of two adjacent parcels into one lot (“the plat case”).

The circuit court denied the City’s motion to dismiss the text amendment case, granted Pumphrey’s motion to consolidate the two actions, heard argument, and ruled that the text amendment to the zoning ordinance was invalid because the City acted arbitrarily and capriciously in enacting it. The circuit court further ruled that the Planning Commission’s decision to deny Pumphrey’s final record plat application was arbitrary, capricious, and unsupported by substantial evidence in the record. The circuit court reversed and vacated the text amendment enacted by the City; ordered a prior text amendment to be reinstated; and reversed the Planning’s Commission’s order denying the final plat application.

On appeal, the City and the Planning Commission present four questions for review, which we have rephrased:

I. Did the circuit court err by concluding that the enactment of the text amendment was a quasi-judicial act, and not a purely legislative act, and in denying the City’s motion to dismiss on that basis?
II. Did the circuit court err by reversing the decision of the Planning Commission in the plat case?
III. If the Planning Commission erred, was the circuit court obligated to remand the plat case to the Planning Commission for further proceedings?
IV. Did the circuit court err or abuse its discretion by consolidating the text amendment case and the plat case?

For the reasons to follow, we conclude that the circuit court erred by denying the City’s motion to dismiss the text amend *164 ment case and by reversing the decision of the Planning Commission in the plat case. We shall vacate the circuit court judgment and remand with instructions that it enter orders dismissing the text amendment case and affirming the decision of the Planning Commission. Our resolution of these first two issues obviates the need to address the third and fourth issues.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Since 1980, the Robert A. Pumphrey Funeral Home, f/k/a Pumphrey’s Colonial Funeral Home (“Funeral Home”), a family-run business, has operated out of a three-story house located at the corner of West Montgomery Avenue and Williams Street in the West End neighborhood of Rockville. 1 The Funeral Home’s address is 300 West Montgomery Avenue and it fronts on that road. In 1977, RAP, a corporate entity owned and operated by the Pumphrey family, purchased the property.

The lot next door, 304 West Montgomery Avenue (“the adjoining parcel”), was purchased by the Pumphrey family in 1961. At that time, it was improved with a large house. The house was demolished in 1970. Since then, the adjoining parcel has been open lawn with a perimeter of screening vegetation between it and a neighboring residential property at 306 West Montgomery Avenue. RAP also is the record owner of 304 West Montgomery Avenue.

The Funeral Home has been a nonconforming use since August 3, 1932, when the first zoning ordinance governing the property was adopted. Presently, it and the adjoining parcel are zoned R-90 HD, Single Unit Detached Dwelling Restricted Residential, Historic District.

*165 The Funeral Home has 17 off-street parking spaces available for visitors, all of which are located in its backyard. Two of the spaces are enclosed in a one-story garage. The other 15 spaces are on an open, paved lot. Access to the parking lot is from a driveway off of Williams Street. When, as is often the case, the parking lot is full, visitors park on Williams Street and other nearby residential streets. For some time, this practice has resulted in complaints from neighbors.

A. The 2010 Text Amendment

In 2010, Pumphrey began to investigate expanding the existing parking lot for the Funeral Home onto the adjoining parcel. City officials informed him that the zoning ordinance prohibited the expansion of nonconforming uses except in very limited circumstances not applicable to the expansion of a parking lot. City officials also informed Pumphrey that he could pursue a text amendment to the zoning ordinance to permit such an expansion.

At all relevant times, the City’s zoning ordinance (“the Ordinance”), which is codified at Chapter 25 of the Rockville City Code (“RCC”), and Md. Code (1957, 2010 Repl. Vol.), Article 66B (“art. 66B”), 2 governed the procedure for text amendments. As pertinent here, section 25.06.02 provides that “any interested person or governmental agency” may file “[a]n application for an amendment to the text of [the Ordinance].” RCC § 25.06.02.b.1. The application must be submitted to the City Clerk on a form provided by the City’s Chief of Planning and be accompanied by a filing fee as determined by the Mayor and Council. RCC § 25.06.02.b.2. The City Clerk must transmit the proposed text amendment to the Planning Commission within five days of receipt of an application. RCC § 25.06.02.d.1. The Planning Commission “may submit a written recommendation to the Mayor and Council.” Id. If it does so, its recommendation becomes part of the record upon *166 the Mayor and Council’s consideration of the text amendment. Id.

An application for a text amendment may not be granted unless a public hearing is held by the Mayor and Council. RCC § 25.06.02.f.; art. 66B, § 5.03(c)(1) (before a local legislative body may adopt a regulation, it must hold a public hearing). Before such a hearing, notice of the proposed amendment must be published in “a newspaper of general circulation.” RCC § 25.06.02.c; art. 66B, § 5.03(c)(2). After notice and a public hearing, the Mayor and Council may grant a text amendment “by ordinance” or may deny, dismiss, or allow the withdrawal of the text amendment. RCC § 25.06.02.g.1.

On June 24, 2010, in accordance with these provisions, Pumphrey filed with the City’s Department of Community Planning and Development Services (“Department of Planning”) an “Application for Text Amendment” (“the 2010 Application”), with a $3,000 application fee.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A.3d 859, 218 Md. App. 160, 2014 WL 3752100, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-rockville-v-pumphrey-mdctspecapp-2014.