McClure v. Montgomery Co. Planning Bd.

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 2, 2014
Docket1031/13
StatusPublished

This text of McClure v. Montgomery Co. Planning Bd. (McClure v. Montgomery Co. Planning Bd.) 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
McClure v. Montgomery Co. Planning Bd., (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 1031

September Term, 2013

MARQUIS McCLURE,

v.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY PLANNING BOARD OF THE MARYLAND-NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION.

Eyler, Deborah S., Reed, Sonner, Andrew L., (Retired, Specially Assigned),

JJ.

______________________________________

Opinion by Reed, J. ______________________________________

Filed: December 2, 2014 Few cases inflame such deep passions as a dispute involving individual property

rights. The belief that fundamental concepts of liberty entailed strong property rights

informed and influenced the Founders as they undertook the epochal task of drafting our

Constitution. See Sharon A. Rose, Kelo v. City of New London: A Perspective on

Economic Freedoms, 40 U.C. D AVIS L. R EV. 1997, 2002 (2007). Infringers of these

cherished rights should beware for “nothing is better calculated to arouse the evil passions

of men than a wanton and unredressed invasion of their . . . property rights.” Cameron v.

Chi., Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co., 65 N.W. 652, 655 (Minn. 1896).

Appellant, Marquis McClure, seeks our review of the decision of the Circuit Court

for Montgomery County in a land use case. Mr. McClure sought judicial review in the

circuit court of an order issued by appellee, the Montgomery County Planning Board (the

“Planning Board”) of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission

(“MNCPPC”), which imposed a civil administrative penalty on Mr. McClure and

mandated he take remedial actions to correct his violations of a forest conservation

easement on his property.

1 Appellant raises three questions for our consideration. Based on the circuit court’s

opinion on his petition for judicial review, however, we rephrase and reorder those

questions as follows:1

I. Did the Planning Board err where it found that the forest conservation easement encumbered appellant’s property and appellant had actual and constructive notice of that easement?

II. Did the Planning Board err where it interpreted its statute to find an enforceable forest conservation easement and then acted according to that interpretation?

III. Did the Planning Board err where it found it had the jurisdiction and authority to enforce the forest conservation easement?

We answer these questions in the negative. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment

of the circuit court and shall explain.

F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

In March 2000, Mr. McClure entered into a contract of sale for a vacant recorded

lot in the Fairhill subdivision development (“Fairhill”) in Laytonsville, Maryland. The

Fairhill Partners Limited Partnership (the “Fairhill Partners”), which is a venture arm of

1 Appellant originally presented the following three questions in his brief:

I. Did the Planning Board err in conducting an administrative enforcement hearing on the issues raised in the notice of violation? II. Did the Planning Board err in holding that the easement agreement in the instant case was effective to encumber the title of Mr. McClure at the time he took title to the subject property? III. Did the Planning Board err in asserting jurisdiction and the scope of the administrative fine and corrective actions it imposed upon the appellant?

2 the Bozzuto Group (“Bozzuto”), was the developer of the Fairhill subdivision and was

selling the lots. Fairhill Partners and Mr. McClure contracted for the purchase of Lot 7, a

5.21-acre parcel of land within the subdivision.

Fairhill’s intersection with Montgomery County’s forest conservation laws dates

back to 1992. The Fairhill subdivision was originally approved by the Planning Board in

1980 and Preliminary Plan 1-74019R was recorded at Plat 13190 in the land records of

Montgomery County. This plan created 19 outlots and 27 lots, which included Lot 7.2 The

Planning Board approved Preliminary Plan 1-90057 in 1990, which would have converted

four of the subdivision’s outlots to lots. That plan expired, however, because the lots were

2 We think an explanation of the difference between a ‘lot’ and an ‘outlot’ will be helpful to our discussion at this juncture.

The Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance provides a general definition of a ‘lot’: “A lot is a contiguous area of land that is described by a plat recorded in the land records for which a building permit can be issued.” Montgomery County Code § 59-4 § 4.1.7(A)(3). Chapter 22A of the Montgomery County Code provides a more detailed definition of ‘lot’ that is relevant to the present dispute: “[A] tract of land, the boundaries of which have been established as a result of a deed or previous subdivision of a larger parcel, and which will not be the subject of further subdivision, as defined under Section 50-1[, the Definitions section of the Subdivision of Land chapter], without an approved forest stand delineation and forest conservation plan.” Id. § 22A-3.

Remarkably, neither the Maryland Code nor the Montgomery County Code defines ‘outlot’. The jurisdiction closest to Mr. McClure’s property that does provide a definition of ‘outlot’ is the City of Gaithersburg. According to the City’s municipal code, an ‘outlot’ is “[a] parcel of land which is shown on a subdivision or record plat but which is not to be occupied by a building or otherwise considered a buildable lot.” City of Gaithersburg Code of Ordinances § 20-4 (2014). We think this definition of ‘outlot’ is applicable to the present case because the language in the City's Code of Ordinances that sets forth outlot conversion procedures includes several verbatim provisions from the comparable section of the Montgomery County Code. Compare id. § 20-34(a)(2) with Montgomery County Code § 50- 35A(a)(2). We do not think that the City intended its use of 'outlot' to be markedly different from the way it is used by Montgomery County. 3 not recorded. In 1995, Bozzuto approached MNCPPC regarding the development of the

27 extant lots and the potential conversion of up to 5 outlots.

In the intervening years between the approval of Preliminary Plan 1-90057 and

Bozzuto’s initial discussions with MNCPPC regarding its potential development of

Fairhill, the Montgomery County Forest Conservation Law (“MCFCL”), Montgomery

Cnty., Md., Code §§ 22A-1 et seq. (2004), was enacted. The primary reason for

Bozzuto’s inquiry of MNCPPC regarding Fairhill was because it wanted to know whether

Fairhill was subject to the forest conservation requirements of the MCFCL. MNCPPC

officials explained the 27 lots would be subject to the new conservation requirements if a

new subdivision plan was approved. Bozzuto, via its Fairhill Partners venture, submitted

and received approval of Preliminary Plan 1-96071 from the Planning Board. Approval of

the preliminary plan was contingent on the recordation of a final record plat that

delineated a forest conservation easement on the lots. A final plat was never completed

and recorded, however, nor was the forest conservation easement (“FCE”) specifically

marked on the plats for the 27 lots, including Lot 7.

In lieu of recording an updated plat to reflect the FCE, Fairhill Partners executed a

Conservation Easement Agreement (the “Agreement”). The Agreement was recorded in

the County’s land records on March 13, 1998. Pursuant to its terms, Fairhill Partners was

required to refer specifically to the FCE in any instrument that would convey an interest

in property.

Mr. McClure and Fairhill Partners settled on Lot 7 in May 2000. The deed Mr.

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