R. B. Construction Co. v. Jackson

137 A. 278, 152 Md. 671, 1927 Md. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 137 A. 278 (R. B. Construction Co. v. Jackson) 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
R. B. Construction Co. v. Jackson, 137 A. 278, 152 Md. 671, 1927 Md. LEXIS 159 (Md. 1927).

Opinions

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant is the owner of a lot of ground fronting about three hundred and twenty-four feet on Granada Avenue in the City of Baltimore, and desires to erect on the lot sixteen two-story dwelling houses in a continuous row. The proposed dwellings would each have a width of approximately twenty feet, would stand forty-five feet back of the street line, and would have yards in the rear about sixty feet in depth. Permission to> erect the row of buildings was refused by the inspector of buildings of the city because the lot is located in a district within which the erection of solid rows of houses is prohibited by certain provisions of the city’s Zoning Ordinance. A petition was then filed in the Baltimore City Court by the appellant for a mandamus to compel the issuance, by the mayor and inspector of buildings, of a permit for the construction of the projected row of dwellings. The answer to the petition averred that the lot in question is included in an E area district designated in the Zoning Ordinance, which contains the following provision: “In an IE’ area district there shall be reserved on each lot at least one side yard not less than ten feet wide, except in cases where, because of the size and/or shape of any lot or tract, such requirement cannot be complied with or would render such lot or tract unfit for use, and in such cases the board of zoning appeals may *673 reduce the requirement as it may deem reasonable and proper.”

As explained in the answer, it was- because the appellant’s plans did not provide for the side yards required by the. provision just quoted that the permit applied for was refused. The effect of such a provision, as applicable to the prescribed zone areas, is said by the answer to he promotive of the public safety, health, and morals, by preventing an increase in the density of population and thereby reducing fire and traffic hazards, avoiding undue burden upon sewerage, transportation, and other public facilities, and improving, with reference to light and air, and in other respects, the living conditions of the people. A demurrer to the answer was overruled and, the petitioner having declined to plead further, a judgment was entered for the defendants. The appeal is. from that judgment.

The Zoning Ordinance of Baltimore was enacted, as it recites, for the purpose of establishing “a general zone plan which will insure a fair and adequate division of light and air among buildings, protect the residence districts, prevent congestion, lessen the fire hazard, increase industrial and commercial efficiency, conserve property values, and direct the building of the city in accordance with a comprehensive plan for the use and development of all parts of the city.” Three systems of zoning were created by the ordinance. One was made the basis of regulations as to- the uses- of property. Another was designed to serve the purposes of provisions as to the height of buildings thereafter erected. The third, which is the one involved in this proceeding, is intended to- be applied in the regulation of future building construction with respect to the lot -area to he occupied. There are six series of area districts, designated as A, B, C, D, E, and E, into which the -ordinance divides the- territory within the city’s boundaries. The proportion of the individual lot area allowed to be covered by subsequently erected buildings ranges from seventy per cent, for interior lots and eighty-five per cent, for comer lots in A area districts, to twenty-five- or *674 thirty per cent, in F areas. In the E areas thirty or forty per cent, of a lot may be covered by a building. Eo side yards are prescribed except in the E and F areas, which are located in the outlying sections of the city, as shown by the map used at the argument. A large part of the undeveloped land within the city limits appears to' be included in the E area districts. The map shows that the E areas form a zone which completely encircles the city except as to a part of its water front. One of the most important purposes of the Zoning Ordinance is to regulate building expansion of the city over the open area available for its development. The question is whether, in aid of such a purpose, the city could validly impose the building restriction of which the appellant complains.

It is clear that such a limitation cannot be placed upon the exercise of the property owner’s rights except for the protection or promotion of some public interest which justifies the exercise of the police power. In regard to any purpose within the proper scope of that power, the City of Baltimore has been invested with the full measure of the authority which the State itself could exert. Charter of Baltimore, art. 1, sec. 18. Rossberg v. State, 111 Md. 394; Osborne v. Grauel, 136 Md. 88. It is not essential to a decision sustaining the ordinance, as to its ’area provisions, that its necessity as a police measure shall be clearly demonstrated. Unless it can properly be held to have no reasonable tendency to serve any legitimate purpose of the police power, we cannot rightfully declare it void. Ches. & Pot. Tel. Co. v. Board of Forestry, 125 Md. 666; Cochran v. Preston, 108 Md. 220; State v. Hyman, 98 Md. 596.

In this case there is a conflict between a private property right and the desire of a great city to regulate its own growth. The property right should be protected against any unwarranted invasion, but it should not be permitted to defeat legislation enacted by the city within the limits of its police power for the general benefit of its inhabitants. The evident design of the provision for side yards in the outlying zone areas was to prevent the indefinite extension of the city in compact *675 'building formation. It was considered necessary from the standpoint of the public welfare that there should be some relief in the suburbs from the congested conditions existing in the sections of the city which have become densely populated. There could be no assurance of such an advantage to the people of the city if its building expansion must be continuously subject to the unregulated control of private individuals. In providing a comprehensive plan for the future growth of the city, the Zoning Ordinance presumably reflects the collective desire and judgment of the people of Baltimore with respect to that important public interest. The effort of the city to apply the limited measure of control specified in the ordinance, in regard to building areas, should be judicially sustained, if it bears a perceptible relation to any community interest for which the police power, delegated by the state to the city, can properly he invoked.

In the case of Goldman v. Crowther, 147 Md. 282, in which the provisions of the Baltimore Zoning Ordinance in reference to the use of property were held to be invalid, the decision reserved the question as to the constitutionality of the height and area provisions of the ordinance. Since that case was decided, the Supreme Court of the United States, in sustaining the general validity of the use, height, and area provisions of a zoning ordinance of the village of Euclid, in the State of Ohio, said, in the course of the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Sutherland in Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U. S.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 278, 152 Md. 671, 1927 Md. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-b-construction-co-v-jackson-md-1927.