Mayor of Rockville v. Woodmont Country Club

705 A.2d 301, 348 Md. 572, 1998 Md. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1998
Docket35, Sept. Term, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 705 A.2d 301 (Mayor of Rockville v. Woodmont Country Club) 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 Rockville v. Woodmont Country Club, 705 A.2d 301, 348 Md. 572, 1998 Md. LEXIS 16 (Md. 1998).

Opinion

ELDRIDGE, Judge.

This case involves a challenge to the procedures used by the Mayor and Council of Rockville in levying special assessments *575 against the property of the Woodmont Country Club for the construction of a road and water transmission main. We issued a writ of certiorari primarily to decide whether the country club was entitled to cross-examine appraisers commissioned by the City of Rockville at a hearing to value the special benefit accruing to the club as a result of the construction project.

I.

Woodmont Country Club is located on approximately 459 acres in Rockville, Maryland, and is zoned R-E (Residential Estate), although it abuts both residential and commercial development.

The Mayor and Council of Rockville is a municipal corporation organized under Article XI-E of the Constitution of Maryland, and is authorized by Article XI of its Charter to assess the costs of public improvement projects against private property specially benefitted thereby. Article XI of the Charter lays out procedures to be followed by the Mayor and Council before levying any special assessments. Specifically, and most relevant here, Article XI, § 1, states as follows (emphasis added):

“c. Before entering upon the construction of any work or improvement specified herein, the Council shall by ordinance designate the location, extent and kind of work or improvement proposed to be done or made, the kind of materials to be used, the estimated cost of the improvement and the real property which will be specially benefited thereby and which it is proposed to assess to pay all or any part of the cost thereof, and shall fix a time and place when and where the owner or owners of the property to be so assessed therefor can be heard in reference thereto. Notice of such hearing, embodying the substance of said ordinance, shall be served upon the owners of said properties.... “d. If after the hearing the Council shall be of the opinion that the public health, safety, welfare, comfort, or convenience requires the work or improvement to be done or *576 made, it shall provide by ordinance for the same and may charge the expense thereof or any part of such expense against the property which it shall find to be specially benefited thereby according to the front foot rule of apportionment or some other equitable basis as may be determined by it; * * * The Council shall also provide in said ordinance the time and terms upon which payment of said assessments for said work and improvements shall be made by said property owners, the rate of interest, if any, that shall be charged upon deferred payments and shall provide penalties for failure to pay any deferred payment when due. * * * Any person aggrieved by the levy of a special assessment in accordance with the provisions of this Article may appeal the same to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. ”

Thus, the Charter contemplates a two-step process in making special assessments for public improvements. First, the Council must enact an ordinance explaining the particulars of the improvement and which properties are expected to be specially benefitted by it, and must establish a time and place for a hearing at which the property owners proposed to be assessed may be heard. Second, if after the hearing the Council believes that the improvement is required, it must provide by ordinance for its construction. Additionally, it must provide in the same ordinance for the levy of special assessments against property found to be specially benefitted either by the front foot method or some other equitable basis, and must include the time and terms of payment, the interest rate for deferred payments, and any penalties for late payments.

As part of its Master Plan, Rockville designed and planned a road, Wooton Parkway, as “a major east-west traffic corridor and an alternative to going through the Town Center,” and a related water main, which would cut through the Woodmont property. To that end, on March 28, 1990, after negotiations, the Council accepted Woodmont’s offer to sell *577 approximately 20.3 acres of land for construction of the roadway and water main at a cost of $6,400,00o. 1

On May 14, 1990, the City adopted two ordinances, 12-90 and 13-90, proposing construction of the road and water main and providing for a hearing to be held on June 4, 1990. Notice was sent to the owners of five properties proposed to be assessed for the cost of the roadway and water main, including Woodmont. The other properties identified included property owned by D.F. Antonelli (commercial property near the intersection of Wooton Parkway and Rockville Pike), Rockville Pike Joint Venture (the Wintergreen Plaza Shopping Center), Donald N. and P.E. Coupard (the Congressional Oldsmobile dealership), and Tower-Dawson Limited Partnership (the Tower Oaks mixed-use site to be developed subsequently). 2

After the June 4th hearing, the Council adopted two further ordinances, 18-90 and 19-90, officially authorizing construction of the roadway and water main. The Council did not, however, specify which properties it found to be specially benefited, what basis for assessment would be used (front foot or some other equitable basis), or what the terms of payment, interest rates and penalties would be. Rather, the Council merely directed the City Manager to “cause appraisals of the proper *578 ties specially benefited by the proposed public improvements to be made prior to the commencement of the construction ... and, in addition, to cause appraisals to be made upon completion of the improvements____” The Council did not make clear how the appraisals would be used or how any assessments would be determined.

Two appraisals were then made by the City for each of the Woodmont, Congressional Oldsmobile, and Wintergreen properties as to their highest and best use. The construction was completed at a total cost of $24,060,725.00 for Wooton parkway and $946,952.79 for the water main. At that point two fresh appraisals were made by the City for each property, apparently to determine the amount of special benefit accruing to the three properties as a result of the construction. No appraisals were made of the Antonelli or Tower-Dawson properties because the owners of those properties had entered into negotiated “assessment agreements” with the City.

Based on the appraisals and the assessment agreements, two additional proposed ordinances were introduced in the Council on March 22, 1993, to levy special assessments for the construction. The ordinances proposed an assessment of $3,057,816.69 against the Tower-Dawson property for the roadway and $74,226.93 for the water main, based on the negotiated assessment agreement. Similarly, based on an assessment agreement, the ordinances proposed an assessment against the Antonelli property in the amounts of $100,-000.00 for the roadway and $18,750.06 for the water main.

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Bluebook (online)
705 A.2d 301, 348 Md. 572, 1998 Md. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-rockville-v-woodmont-country-club-md-1998.