Mirabile v. State Roads Commission

231 A.2d 693, 247 Md. 492, 1967 Md. LEXIS 386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 20, 1967
Docket[No. 469, September Term, 1966.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 231 A.2d 693 (Mirabile v. State Roads Commission) 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
Mirabile v. State Roads Commission, 231 A.2d 693, 247 Md. 492, 1967 Md. LEXIS 386 (Md. 1967).

Opinion

McWieeiams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Prior to its taking by appellee (Commission) for highway purposes appellants (Mirabile) owned a 5.1 acre tract on Eastern Boulevard. The business conducted thereon was known as ■“Silver Lake Trailer Court.” After 5 days of trial before Jenifer, J., in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, the condemnation jury returned a verdict of $103,000 in favor of Mirabile. This appeal reflects his dissatisfaction with the result. The facts ■are not in dispute.

Mirabile bought the property in 1954. During the years 1956 through 1959 the site was prepared for use as a trailer park. Concrete pads to accommodate 45 trailers were installed. Beginning in 1962 and continuing through 1963, 1964 and 1965, the park was fully occupied. The land is zoned ML (Manufacturing, Light). In 1956 the zoning authorities granted the •special exception required for use as a trailer park. The Bureau •of Permits and Licenses on 28 December 1965 issued a permit to operate a trailer park for the year ending 31 December 1966.- We shall assume similar permits were issued for the years 1963, 1964 and 1965. Baltimore County also collected from Mirabile a tax of $5.00 per month per trailer. Since the annual *495 tax would be $2,700 it will also be assumed that the trailer court was a matter of some importance to the county.

The Commission produced John Hocheder, an engineer, who testified that the trailer park was in violation of Section 414 of the Baltimore County Zoning Regulations. The maximum number of trailer sites legally available to Mirabile, he said, was but 28. He conceded, however, that if a variance had been granted by the zoning authorities, 45 sites could be placed on the property. He agreed that Mirabile’s park had been approved by the County Health Department.

Clayton Reid, produced by the Commission as an expert real estate witness, said the highest and best use of the land would be for something in the ML classification other than a trailer park. He thought it was worth $51,800 on the basis of 32 trailer sites, $67,700 on the basis of 45 trailer sites, and $76,500 on the basis of comparable sales of Other ML properties.

John Slowik qualified as an expert witness on behalf of Mira-bile. He said it was his opinion that the highest and best use of the property was as a trailer park and that, as such, it was worth $166,500. Oddly enough, he also said it was worth $178,000 using the sales of comparable ML properties as a basis.

Mirabile produced another expert witness, Hugh Gelston, who valued the property at $153,000, using the comparable sales approach.

Mr. Slowik testified that “apparently” a variance allowing the use of 45 trailer sites had been granted by the zoning authorities. Asked if he was familiar with the contents of the zoning file in the Zoning Commission’s office he said he had read it once but that when he went back tO' look at it more carefully it had disappeared. Asked if a variance had ever been granted he said he did not know.

Oliver Myers, on behalf of the Commission, testified that he was a planning assistant in the office of Planning and Zoning. He said file 3607X, pertaining to the Silver Lake Trailer Park, had been misplaced since 2 August 1965 when it was “signed out to Mr. John Slowik.” Counsel for the Commission agreed, and so stipulated, that Mr. Slowik returned the file, although Mr. Myers could not recall what information in that regard may have been on the log sheet. Mr. Myers said he had with him “a *496 file copy of the Zoning Commissioner’s [original] order, * * * and copies of the Board of Appeals’ original order.” When he was asked to read the copy of the Zoning Commissioner’s order, counsel for Mirabile said he “would like to know where * * * [the] copy came from” and asked permission to approach the bench. What transpired at the conference at the bench does not appear in the record but immediately thereafter counsel for the Commission “withdrew the question.” While one might assume, with some justification, that the trial judge indicated to counsel that he would sustain an objection to the reading of the file copies, there is no such objection nor any such ruling in the record.

Mirabile testified that in 1955 the county granted him a special exception to operate a trailer park and counsel stipulated that the county issued to him a permit to operate the trailer park for the year 1966. He was not asked by his own counsel whether a variance giving him the right to have 45 trailers was ever granted nor, oddly enough, was he asked such a question by counsel for the Commission. Mirabile seems to have given testimony before trial but whether this occurred in a pre-trial deposition pursuant to the Maryland Rules of Procedure or in the proceedings before the Property Review Board is not clear. Except for occasional references during the trial to the pages of some kind of a written transcript, the record does not contain a transcript of any such testimony. Mirabile also answered interrogatories directed to him by the Commission. No mention is made in either the interrogatories or the answers thereto of any action of the zoning authorities in respect of a variance.

At the conclusion of the evidence Judge Jenifer instructed the jury, in detail and at length, as to what was required of them. We have set forth the part of his charge which Mirabile contends is erroneous:

“There has been evidence introduced relative to the sections of the Baltimore County Zoning Regulations dealing with trailer parks, namely Section 414.1 through 414.6 and the section regarding the granting of variances from the Regulations, namely Section 307. These Sections were read into evidence and photostats thereof have been filed as exhibits. Unfortunately, *497 the file in the Office of Planning and Zoning of Baltimore County relative to the granting of a special exception for the use of this property as a trailer park has been mislaid or lost and is unavailable. It is uncontradicted, however, that the property is zoned in a ML (Manufacturing, Light) Classification and that in the year 1956 a special exception was granted by the zoning authorities of Baltimore County for the use of the property as a trailer park. You have also heard the testimony of Mr. Mirabile as to the number of trailer sites which have been installed on the property and which have been in operation since the year 1963. You have also been informed that on December 28, 1965, a permit was issued by the Baltimore County Department of Permits and Licenses authorizing the use of said property as a trailer park as it then existed for the calendar year 1966. It is your prerogative, therefore, to determine under all of the evidence which you have heard whether or not said trailer park was or was not being operated in violation of the Zoning Regulations on November 1,1965, the date of the taking cmd the date of valuation in this case, and whether or not the owners of said trailer park were entitled to operate the same at variance with said Regulations and to consider these factors in determining the fair market value of the property as of said date.

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Bluebook (online)
231 A.2d 693, 247 Md. 492, 1967 Md. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mirabile-v-state-roads-commission-md-1967.