Prince George's Co. v. Zimmer Dev.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 20, 2015
Docket64/14
StatusPublished

This text of Prince George's Co. v. Zimmer Dev. (Prince George's Co. v. Zimmer Dev.) 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
Prince George's Co. v. Zimmer Dev., (Md. 2015).

Opinion

County Council of Prince George’s County v. Zimmer Development Company, No. 64, September Term, 2014

ZONING AND LAND USE – REGIONAL DISTRICT ACT – DISTRICT COUNCIL REVIEW OF PLANNING BOARD DECISION – SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE

The County Council of Prince George’s County, sitting as the District Council as a zoning body under the Regional District Act, exercises appellate jurisdiction when reviewing the action of the county Planning Board to approve or deny a comprehensive design plan or specific design plan of a property zoned previously to a comprehensive design zone (a floating zone). The Council may only reverse the action of the Planning Board if the Planning Board’s decision is not supported by substantial evidence, is arbitrary and capricious, or is predicated on an error of law.

ZONING AND LAND USE – REGIONAL DISTRICT ACT – DISTRICT COUNCIL REVIEW OF PLANNING BOARD DECISION – LIMITED TO ISSUES ON REMAND

If the County Council of Prince George’s Council, sitting as District Council, remands such a case to the Planning Board to consider or reconsider select issues, pursuant to Prince George’s County Code § 27-523(a), and reviews after remand the modified decision of the Planning Board, it may reverse the modified decision of the Planning Board based only on the issues that were remanded for consideration or reconsideration.

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – JUDICIAL REVIEW OF DISTRICT COUNCIL DECISION – REVERSAL OF AGENCY DECISION

A reviewing court may reverse the decision of an administrative agency, and need not remand the case for further consideration by the agency, when there remains no administrative discretion or function for the agency to exercise or perform properly and the outcome is required by law. Circuit Court for Prince George’s County Case Nos. CAL 12-19612 & CAL 12-19613 Argued: 3 March 2015 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND

No. 64

September Term, 2014

COUNTY COUNCIL OF PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, SITTING AS THE DISTRICT COUNCIL

v.

ZIMMER DEVELOPMENT COMPANY

Barbera, C.J., *Harrell, Battaglia, Greene, Adkins, McDonald, Watts, JJ.

Opinion by Harrell, J.

Filed: August 20, 2015

*Harrell, J., now retired, participated in the hearing and conference of this case while an active member of this Court; after being recalled pursuant to the Constitution, Article IV, Section 3A, he also participated in the decision and adoption of this opinion. Given the battle of almost epic proportions waged by the respective angels in the present litigation, it seems fitting to describe metaphorically with select readings from the entirely fictional Book of Land Use the forced march this case has made:

Chapter MMIV (2004):

In the beginning, a landowner applied to reclassify to a floating zone a certain property in Adelphi, in the county of Prince George’s, in the State of Maryland. The District Hegemon looked upon the application and saw that it was good.

Chapters MMX – MMXII (2010-2012)

Time passed. The landowner sought at last approval to complete that which had been initiated lo’ those many years ago. Although the landowner’s latest initiatives were deemed acceptable by the County planning satraps, the District Hegemon, being displeased with these offerings, spurned them as unworthy.

The landowner, feeling much afflicted, brought its plight before a local Sanhedrin who, finding uncharitable the District Hegemon’s most recent treatment of the landowner’s offerings, decreed that the offerings were pleasing indeed unto the eyes of the law.

Chapter MMXV (2015)

The displeased District Hegemon brings its case now before the Great Sanhedrin, which, having heard the piteous wailing and cries from all concerned, shall now pass final judgment.

I. THE RELEVANT LAND USE REGIME IN PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY: A MIND-NUMBING PRIMER

Most judges and lawyers, and many public officials and members of the general

public, are uninitiated (and perhaps even uninterested, unless their oxen are being gored)

in the mysteries of land use regulation. With apologies particularly to the uninterested, the following introduction to the relevant zoning, planning, and land use regime in play

virtually throughout all of Prince George’s County (and the Regional District of which it

is a part) is useful, if not essential, in order to grasp the context of the facts of this case

and our decision to follow. Because the dispute is primarily about the source and terms of

the locality’s authority to regulate land use, we will explore first the well-spring of that

authority.

The modern authority to regulate land use in Maryland may be traced to the

colonial Maryland Charter of 1632. The Charter granted to the Lord Proprietor “free, full,

and absolute power . . . to ordain, make, enact, and . . . publish any laws

whatsoever . . . .”1, 2 Maryland Charter of 1632 (modified for modern spelling). Much of

1 The Charter required any legislative action to “be consonant to Reason, and be not repugnant or contrary, but (so far as conveniently may be) agreeable to the Laws, Statutes, Customs and Rights of this Our Kingdom of England.” The laws of England at the time did not limit the regulation of private land for the public good. John F. Hart, Colonial Land Use Law and Its Significance for Modern Takings Doctrine, 109 Harv. L. Rev. 1252, 1285-86 (1996); see Charles II, 1666: An Act for rebuilding the Citty of London, reprinted in 5 Statutes of the Realm 1628-80, at 603-612 (John Raithby ed., 1819), http://www.british-history.ac.uk/statutes-realm/vol5/pp603-612 (establishing a building code to regulate construction of new dwellings in the aftermath of the Great Fire of London).

In modern times, this broad authority is referred to as the State’s “police power.” “In its broadest sense the police power is said to be the power of government inherent in every sovereignty.” Tighe v. Osborne, 149 Md. 349, 356, 131 A. 801, 803 (1925); see also Lawton v. Steele, 152 U.S. 133, (1894). Like the language of its primordial grant, such power is not absolute. As we have noted,

[i]n this state the courts have uniformly held that the police power is not unlimited, but that wherever it is invoked in aid of any purpose or legislation, such purpose or legislation must bear some definite and tangible relation to the health, (Continued…) 2 this authority was wrested from the Proprietor by the legislative assembly prior to the

colony achieving independence from Great Britain. See generally Albert J. Martinez, Jr.,

The Palatinate Clause of the Maryland Charter, 1632-1776: From Independent

Jurisdiction to Independence, 50 Am. J. Legal Hist. 305 (2008-2010). The State of

Maryland retains this broad authority to regulate land use (and to delegate powers to the

political subdivisions), subject only to the Federal and State constitutions.

(…continued) comfort, morals, welfare, or safety of the public, which must define the farthest boundaries of its territory.

Goldman v. Crowther, 147 Md. 282, 293, 128 A. 50, 54 (1925). 2 The colonial administration exercised its land use power. Maryland’s mill act, stating that most of the places fit for building watermills was owned by people who, on account of being underage or “willfully obstinate,” would not sell their property to those willing to construct mills, established a process by which an individual proposing to build a mill could condemn another’s property. Hart, Colonial Land Use Law and Its Significance for Modern Takings Doctrine, supra, at 1267 (1996) (quoting Act of May 8, 1669, 2 Archives of Maryland 211, 211-12 (William H. Browne ed., 1884)).

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