Montgomery County v. National Capital Realty Corp.

297 A.2d 675, 267 Md. 364, 1972 Md. LEXIS 678
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 14, 1972
Docket[No. 65, September Term, 1972.]
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 297 A.2d 675 (Montgomery County v. National Capital Realty Corp.) 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
Montgomery County v. National Capital Realty Corp., 297 A.2d 675, 267 Md. 364, 1972 Md. LEXIS 678 (Md. 1972).

Opinion

Levine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal by Montgomery County is from an order of the circuit court reversing a decision of the County Council, sitting as the District Council (the Council), which denied to appellee a zoning reclassification of a parcel of land situated on the northern periphery of the Silver Spring business district.

*366 The subject property, consisting of 1.4 acres, is rectangular in shape and is located on Spring Street, extending the full width of the block between Georgia and First Avenues. The application sought rezoning to the C-2 classification (general commercial) from the C-0 category (commercial office building). The land had been placed in the C-0 zone by the Council in two stages, in May, 1962 and June, 1963, respectively. The parcel had been in the R-60 zone (one-family, detached residential) since 1954, when the adoption of a new zoning ordinance and accompanying maps effected a comprehensive rezoning.

Property to the north is zoned R-60, and it is plainly evident that Spring Street has always been regarded by the planning and zoning authorities as the northern boundary of the Silver Spring business district. To the west and southwest, the dominant zoning feature is C-O, while to the south, especially along the Georgia Avenue corridor, there is a well-established pattern of C-2. In this connection, however, it becomes important to note that a considerable portion of the property immediately to the south and southwest of the subject property, although zoned C-2, has, in fact, been developed as highrise residential, largely due to the demand for such housing which began in the early 1960’s and a loophole, since closed, in the C-2 classification of the zoning ordinance. The result of this has been that while on paper there appears to have been a degree of rezoning activity to the C-2 zone (general commercial) during that period, the movement has actually been towards intensive apartment house construction coupled with a modest amount of “street-floor” retail development on Georgia Avenue. The most conspicuous example is the property immediately to the south containing 3.2 acres of land on which there have been erected 892 units known as the Georgian Towers.

At the time the rezoning petition was being considered, the subject property was covered by a master plan known as the Zoning Plan for the Silver Spring Business Dis *367 trict and Vicinity adopted in 1957. The zoning requested here was contrary to that plan, which apparently divided the subject property between the high-rise and commercial office building categories. At the time the application was under consideration, however, the design of a new plan was in progress. Although not yet adopted when the Council rendered its decision, throughout the period the application was being processed, the new plan was considered by the Planning Board technical staff, the hearing examiner and the Council in its “preliminary” and “draft” forms, respectively. That plan, in each of its phases, recommended high-density, residential use for the subject property.

The technical staff of the Planning Board recommended denial of the application, noting that its consultants had “emphasized the fact that the area in question is considered one of the most critical areas due to its location at the northern periphery of the [Central Business Core] in close proximity to established single-family residential areas. [They] also pointed out that the Central Business Core Plan was in large part based on the premise of encouraging inward development and establishing a functional land use pattern with adequate transitions and buffers between the low-density residential land use areas [to the north] and the high intensity commercial and residential areas [to the south].” Thus, the staff concluded that “maximum development of the site under . . . C-2 with its 143-foot height limit and 100 % ground coverage . . . would not be appropriate nor conducive to the effectuation of the described transition.”

In rejecting the staff recommendation and voicing support for the application, the Planning Board was influenced almost entirely by a Declaration of Covenants which was prepared and submitted by appellee. In relevant part, the Declaration recited:

“WHEREAS, the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance does not convey the right of site plan approval in the C-2 Zone to the Board, *368 but Grantor is nevertheless willing to. submit the subject property to Planning Board approval in the event [the application] is granted . . . .”

Attached to the Declaration as an exhibit was a “site plan” in accordance with which, it was agreed, the property would be substantially developed. The Declaration also provided:

“These covenants, conditions and restrictions shall become effective upon the approval of [the zoning application], and shall have no effect unless said zoning application is approved.
“Subject to the foregoing, these covenants, conditions and restrictions are to run with the land and shall be binding ....
“. . . These covenants shall terminate automatically in the event the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance is amended to provide for site plan approval by the Board in the C-2 Zone, (emphasis added)
HC jfc *99

At the hearing before the zoning examiner, appellee produced an array of experts who, in the course of their extensive and by no means unappealing testimony, which was buttressed by a number of exhibits, made the following contentions:

1. That there had been, since the last comprehensive zoning, a considerable development of properties to the south within the C-2 zone.

2. That, largely due to the covenants, development of the property within the C-2 zone, rather than in the existing C-0 zone, would lead to a more attractive result with a setback neither required nor feasible under C-O, together with less density and ground coverage.

3. That appellee’s proposal, reflected by its site plan, would result in an office building with attractive shops at the lower level.

4. That appellee’s proposal would provide an attractive gateway to the Silver Spring business district.

*369 5. That the dual-use concept of office space and retail stores would insure for the neighborhood a people-oriented vitality in the evening as well as during the day.

6. That construction in accordance with the site plan would afford adequate offstreet parking within the building that would be unobtrusive.

A representative of the local citizens’ association appeared as a protestant to the application. In substance, he stated that residents of nearby homes were concerned with the likelihood of increased automobile traffic which, due to the intense high-rise development without adequate offstreet parking in the vicinity, coupled with additional parking demands generated by the office building on the next block of Spring Street, had already overtaxed neighborhood streets.

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Bluebook (online)
297 A.2d 675, 267 Md. 364, 1972 Md. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-county-v-national-capital-realty-corp-md-1972.