Miller v. Abrahams

211 A.2d 309, 239 Md. 263, 1965 Md. LEXIS 546
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1965
Docket[No. 320, September Term, 1964.]
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 211 A.2d 309 (Miller v. Abrahams) 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
Miller v. Abrahams, 211 A.2d 309, 239 Md. 263, 1965 Md. LEXIS 546 (Md. 1965).

Opinions

Prescott, C. J.,

delivered the majority opinion of the Court. Barnes, J., dissents. Dissenting opinion reported at page 275, infra.

The question involved in this appeal is a narrow one, and few of the facts are disputed. The question is whether the County Council of Baltimore County committed a basic mistake when it adopted, on November 15, 1962, the comprehensive Western Area Zoning Map for the 3rd District of Baltimore County, on which the subject property was classified as R-6 (residential, 1 and2family).

Some two months after the adoption of the map, appellee petitioned the Zoning Commissioner for a reclassification of the 5.2 acre parcel, the subject property, to B-L (business-local). This request was denied. An appeal was taken to the Board of Appeals (Board), and, after a hearing on April 8, 1964, with two of its three members sitting, the Board reversed the action of the Commissioner. An appeal was taken to the Circuit Court, which affirmed the Board’s ruling, and the appeal to this Court followed.

The appellee argues that he has presented a classic example of original mistake. In his attempt to sustain this argument and meet the heavy burden placed upon him, the record before us, summarized, shows the following. The Commissioner denied the request because “from the facts presented * * *, the only real point the petitioner has was that there was a possibility of error [italics ours]” in the map, and this possibility of error was that the Council might have been under the impression that the Planning Board had recommended R-6 zoning, when the map submitted by the Planning Board to the Council showed a recommendation of B-L zoning.

[266]*266The Board, on the other hand, felt that petitioner had shown “a clear case of a mistake.” The board laid great stress upon Item 21 of the Council’s agenda at its meeting on October 16, 1961, which we will now consider as appellee apparently deems it his “ace in the hole.” This Item 21 of the Council’s agenda of that day, after a description of the subject property, reads: “Mrs. Boone [a member of the Council], seconded by Mr. Dignan, moved to accept the Planning Board’s recommendation of R-6 zoning. Carried unanimously.” It is undisputed that the original preliminary proposed map submitted to the Council by the Planning Board showed applicant’s property as recommended for B-L zoning. Appellee argues that this establishes an obvious mistake on the part of the Council when it zoned the subject property R-6, and very substantial weight was given the above Item, both by the Board of Appeals and the trial court.

The argument is not sustainable for, at least, two reasons. First, we are not dealing with a matter of correcting a possible clerical error, or establishing the motivating cause for the Council’s action, but with a matter of whether or not the Council made a basic and actual “mistake,” as that term is used in zoning law, at the time when it classified the property as R-6. Therefore, no matter what reason prompted the Council’s action, it was still incumbent upon the petitioner, if he were to be successful, to meet the heavy burden of establishing such a mistake in the classification of his property.

Secondly, the argument takes Item 21 alone from the agenda, and ignores other and very important portions of the Council’s minutes, and then attempts to construe the Item out of context. The minutes show the meeting was a special one to consider the “Western Planning Area Map,” and no one was permitted in attendance, except the members of the Council and its advisers. Under the heading “Amendments [italics added] to the Western Planning Aera Zoning Map,” we find the following :

“The Chairman recognized Mrs. Boone, who presented to the Council a proposed schedule of changes in the Second District of the Western Planning Area [267]*267Map. Mrs. Boone explained these changes item by item with comments by Mr. Malcolm Dill, Director of Planning and Zoning; Mr. Leslie H. Graef, assistant to Mr. Dill; and Mr. Robert Gould, also assistant to Mr. Dill. After further discussion, each individual change was voted on with the following results:”

There then followed 22 separate motions by Mrs. Boone, which were the only motions made, relative to 22 properties on the map, and all motions carried; some granted requested changes from the map, and others denied such changes. There is nothing in the record to show what authority, if any, Mr. Dill, Director of Planning and Zoning, and his two assistants had from the Planning Board to make suggested changes from the map in its behalf (we do not intimate that any such authority was necessary in order to validate the Council’s action). But, with the minutes showing that the purpose of the meeting was to make possible “amendments” to the Area Map, that “Mrs. Boone explained these changes item by item with comments by Mr. Malcolm Dill,” and two xof his assistants, and “after further discussion, each individual change was voted on” (without further explanation), we think, the likelihood that the Council was acting under the misapprehension that it was adopting the Planning Board’s recommendation on the preliminary map relative to the subject property is quite remote. And, as we indicated above, even if the Council did act under such a misapprehension, this, alone, would be insufficient to establish a basic mistake in the classification.

After reciting Item 21 from the Council’s minutes, the Board assigned (in substance) as its reasons for believing that a mistake had been made the following: “The original plat of the property prepared for sales purposes indicates this tract of land as ‘proposed shopping center,’ ” and these “plats were used in the sale of lots to prospective purchasers”; “there is in evidence newspaper advertising presented by the [former owners of the property] which clearly states ‘proposed shopping center on site’ ”; Mr. Gavrelis, Acting Planning Director, indicated that his department and the Planning Board were aware of this planned use and he had recommended to the Council that the [268]*268property be zoned B-L; there was testimony before the Board that Old Court Road will be relocated “so as to eliminate a sharp right angle turn near this property,” and another road will be extended. “There was testimony to the effect” that there is a definite need for a small shopping center in this area; a witness from the County Roads Department testified “that the builder will be required to dedicate the land and pave [Old Court Road] referred to above * * “there was testimony” that the rezoning of the subject property would not adversely affect the surrounding residential property; and the protestants’ testimony consisted mostly of expressed fears as to what might happen in the future in the operation of the shopping center. (All italics ours.)

We deem it desirable to analyze this “opinion” of the Board before proceeding further with the summary of the testimony. It must be remembered that we are considering an alleged original mistake in zoning, not an alleged change in the neighborhood. Hence, any changes in the neighborhood and the existing situation surrounding the subject property are significant only to the extent that they were reasonably foreseeable and tend toward establishing original error. The opinion has little in it to disclose the situation as it existed when the Council acted—either in November of 1962, when it formally adopted the map, or on October 16, 1961, when it approved a resolution that the property be zoned R-6.

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Bluebook (online)
211 A.2d 309, 239 Md. 263, 1965 Md. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-abrahams-md-1965.