Remes v. Montgomery County

874 A.2d 470, 387 Md. 52, 2005 Md. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 12, 2005
Docket122, September Term, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 874 A.2d 470 (Remes v. Montgomery County) 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
Remes v. Montgomery County, 874 A.2d 470, 387 Md. 52, 2005 Md. LEXIS 260 (Md. 2005).

Opinion

CATHELL, Judge.

In this case, David H. Remes, petitioner, owner of a home located in Silver Spring, seeks to establish whether directly-adjacent property, which formerly was owned by Jonathan C. Duffie, and was later transferred by Mr. Duffie to Design-Tech Builders, Inc. (“Design-Tech”), respondent, is deemed to have merged for zoning purposes under the common-law *56 principles described in Friends of the Ridge v. Baltimore Gas & Elec. Go., 352 Md. 645, 724 A.2d 34 (1999).

Under the circumstances of this case, the Court is called upon to determine if Design-Tech was properly granted a building permit by the Montgomery County Division of Permitting Services (“DPS”) and whether the Montgomery County Board of Appeals (“the Board” or “the County”), respondent, properly interpreted the relevant provisions of the Montgomery County Code, Subdivision Regulations, and Zoning Ordinance in respect to the issuance of a building permit. Our review shall address the following questions:

1. Did the Montgomery County Board of Appeals correctly rule that two contiguous lots had not undergone a zoning merger and a building permit for one of the lots was, therefore, properly issued?
2. Did the Montgomery County Board of Appeals correctly find that a single-family dwelling proposed to be built on one lot did not exceed the height requirements of the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance? 1

We hold that the Board of Appeals incorrectly failed to find that Lot 11 and Lot 12 had merged for zoning purposes. Because we hold that there occurred a zoning merger of Lot 11 and Lot 12 notwithstanding the provisions of Montgomery County Code § 50-8, it is unnecessary to reach a determination whether the Board properly approved a cellar as a non-counting story in calculating the permissible height of the applicant’s proposed single-family dwelling. 2

*57 I. Facts and Procedural History

This case involves property in the Woodside Park neighborhood of Silver Spring, Maryland, consisting of several parcels created by a 1945 subdivision and located in an R-60 zone which allows single-family detached residential homes. The primary parcels at issue, as originally laid out in the subdivision, are Lot 12, a corner lot with access both to Noyes Drive toward the north and to Fairview Road toward the east, acquired by husband and wife, Ralph J. Duffie and Violette P. Duffie (“elder Duffies”) in 1951 on which they constructed their home, and its westerly adjacent neighboring lot, Lot 11, acquired by the elder Duffies in 1954. A semi-circular driveway serving the home on Lot 12 was constructed by the Duffies over and through both Lot 11 and Lot 12. A Montgomery County Department of Permitting Services permit card, found among DPS’ records, indicates that a building permit was also issued in June 1959 to the elder Duffies, for construction of a swimming pool 3 on Lot 11 as an accessory use to their home on Lot 12, and a building permit was issued to the Duffies in October 1963, presumably for the construction of an addition to the Lot 12 home. At the time of its original construction around 1951, the Lot 12 home had the required seven-foot 4 side yard setback and twenty-foot rear yard setback. The 1963 addition extended thirteen feet into the twenty-foot rear setback. This construction changed the *58 side and rear yards of Lot 12, resulting in encroachments into the setback requirements on the Lot 11 side of the house.

Following the deaths of Violette Duffie in 1988 and Ralph Duffie in 1999, their son, Jonathan C. Duffie, (“Mr. Duffie”), as Personal Representative of the latter’s estate, deeded the property to himself. This “Personal Representative’s Deed,” dated August 31, 2001, describes the subject property, in relevant part, as follows:

“Lot numbered eleven (11) and twelve (12) of a resubdivision of original Lot numbered two (2) in Block lettered ‘A-2’ of the subdivision known as ‘Woodside Park’, as per plat of said resubdivision recorded in Plat Book 26, folio 1614, in the Land Records of Montgomery County, Maryland.

“The improvements thereon being known as 8920 Fair-view Road.”

Apparently, up until the 2003 request to separate Lot 11 and Lot 12 for tax assessment purposes, both lots had been assessed as one lot under the single address of 8920 Fairview Road. More important even is that the use of the swimming pool on subdivision Lot 11 was initially described as an accessory structure to the house on Lot 12, and remained in that status at least through the 2001 reassessment. Accordingly, at least in 1959, the relevant governmental officials considered the swimming pool on Lot 11 as an accessory use to the structure on Lot 12. At that time the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance defined accessory use as “a use of a building, lot, or portion thereof, which is customarily incidental and subordinate to the principal use of the main building or lot.” See Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance (1958) § 107-2, Definitions. In 1960, and since, the definition was changed to read “building lot, or portion thereof.” Even after the 1960 amendment, which deleted the comma between building and lot, the relevant governmental officials continued to treat the swimming pool as an accessory use to the home on Lot 12.

*59 On December 10, 2002, DPS, the agency, one of whose functions is to determine whether a proposed development complies with the zoning ordinance, 5 issued to Design-Tech Builders, Inc., respondent, a building permit for construction of a single-family dwelling on Lot 11, Block A-2, Woodside Park, 1102 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring. At that time Design-Tech was not the owner of the lot. On January 8, 2003, petitioner noted an “Appeal Charging Error in Administrative Action or Determination” to respondent Montgomery County Board of Appeals asserting that DPS had issued erroneously a building permit for 1102 Noyes Drive/8920 Fairview Road for the following reasons:

“1. The permit authorizes construction of a second building on a single lot, in violation of Code § 59-A-5.2.
2. The permit authorizes construction of a building that violates the building height limitation of Code § 59-C-1.327(a), in that (a) the height is greater than 35' when measured along the average elevation of the front of the building; and (b) the height exceeds 2/6 stories, in that the lowest level is a basement (and therefore a story), not a cellar, as those terms are defined in the Code, § 59-A-2.1.”

Mr. Duffie executed a deed dated January 15, 2003, to convey Lot 11 to Design-Tech and this transfer was recorded in the Land Records of Montgomery County on January 30, 2003.

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Bluebook (online)
874 A.2d 470, 387 Md. 52, 2005 Md. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remes-v-montgomery-county-md-2005.