Rockshire Civic Ass'n v. Mayor of Rockville

358 A.2d 570, 32 Md. App. 22, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 398
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 9, 1976
Docket1094, 1096, September Term, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 358 A.2d 570 (Rockshire Civic Ass'n v. Mayor of Rockville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockshire Civic Ass'n v. Mayor of Rockville, 358 A.2d 570, 32 Md. App. 22, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 398 (Md. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This controversy stems from the development during the past decade of 286.6 acres of land as a Planned Residential Unit pursuant to the zoning laws of the City of Rockville. Under the ordinance which provides for planned residential units, preliminary approval of a development is required in two stages. The first, or Exploratory Stage, requires submission of a conceptual plan for approval by the Mayor and Council of Rockville showing the location, size and arrangement of residential, non-residential and recreational uses, traffic circulation and development schedule. Commercial uses, if not previously available, are permitted, with size limitations, only insofar as they will serve the convenience of the residents of the planned residential unit. If the Exploratory Application is approved by the Mayor and Council, the developer may seek the secondary approval by providing a Detailed Planning Application to the City Planning Commission. The Commission is charged with the responsibility of approving or disapproving the submitted documents in accordance with the objectives of the *25 ordinance and within the limitations of the approval of the Exploratory Application by the Mayor and Council, Rockville Zoning Ordinance § 5-423. 1

In the case at bar, the developer filed its Exploratory Application on October 15, 1965 and, following several revisions and a public hearing, the application was approved on March 7, 1966. Of particular significance, we note here that the application which the Mayor and Council approved provided for an area of 6.0 acres to be devoted to commercial use.

In May of 1967, the Rockville Planning Commission reviewed and approved a Detailed Planning Stage Application for the community which came to be known as Rockshire. Subsequent detailed plans for particular portions of Rockshire were submitted to the Commission and approved from time to time through June of 1970. As Rockshire matured physically, it seems also to have matured in sophistication, for there developed the Rockshire Civic Association, Inc., which, along with individual property owners, became the primary protagonist here.

This particular controversy developed as a result of the filing with the Commission of a Detailed Planning Stage Application for a shopping center on April 9, 1973. The application proposed that 10.23 acres of the 20 acres still undeveloped be committed to that commercial purpose with a proposed gross floor area of 103,600 square feet. Subsequently the applicant-developer reduced that request to an area of 6.5 acres with 65,000 square feet proposed gross floor area.

The Planning Commission conducted a public hearing on May 29,1974 at which substantial testimony was heard. The Commission denied the application on July 24, 1974. Applicant appealed the denial and the Mayor and Council remanded the application to the Planning Commission for the taking of further evidence. On February 19, 1975, *26 another public hearing was held by the Commission which again resulted in its disapproval of the proposed 65,000 square foot shopping center. Immediately thereafter, the applicant filed a new Detailed Planning Stage Application proposing a shopping center of 52,915 square feet, some 12,000 square feet less than previously requested in the rejected proposal. The Commission, presumably relying for its decision on the surfeit of testimony at the previous hearings and on studies which had been provided for those hearings, approved that application on June 10,1975.

The Rockshire Civic Association, Inc. and certain named residents of Rockshire appealed that administrative ruling to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County and also filed suit in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, In Equity, against the Mayor and Council of Rockville and the City Planning Commission, as well as the applicant-developer and a shopping center contract lessee. The purpose of this equity suit was to challenge and vacate both the resolution of the Mayor and Council of Rockville approving the Exploratory Application on March 7, 1966, and the June 10, 1975 approval of the shopping center by the Rockville Planning Commission. The suit also sought to enjoin all parties from using the property subject to the suit in any manner other than for single family residential development. A demurrer to the equity suit was sustained without leave to amend and the administrative appeal was dismissed, resulting in an affirmance of the Planning Commission’s action. The Rockshire Civic Association, Inc. and its associate parties, have appealed both decisions. The appeal to this Court from the equity action is numbered 1094 and the appeal from the dismissal of the administrative appeal is numbered 1096. We respond to both appeals in this opinion and will address them chronologically.

Having fully reviewed the voluminous records in light of appellants’ briefs and arguments, our own response need be but very brief. The issues raised on appeal are the same as those raised below. In both cases we find the comprehensive opinions of the trial judge, the Honorable John F. McAuliffe, not only to be correct but comprehensively so. We will, *27 therefore, affirm in both instances by adopting as our own the opinion of Judge McAuliffe in each case. We will comment only to the extent that we believe the issues need clarification.

No. 1094.

Opinion of McAuliffe, J.

“Rockshire Civic Association, Inc. and seven individuals have filed a ‘petition,’ challenging the validity of the action of the Mayor and Council of the City of Rockville in approving Exploratory Application No. PRU 4 on March 7, 1966, and also challenging the validity of the action of the Planning Commission of the City of Rockville in approving Detailed Planning Application No. PRU 4-H-75 on June 10,1975.
Each Defendant has filed a Demurrer, suggesting:
1. The Plaintiffs have not alleged, and under the facts of this case are unable to allege, that they were present at the public hearing which preceded the approval of Exploratory Application No. PRU 4 in 1966, or that they participated in anyway in those proceedings.
2. That it appears from the face of the Plaintiffs’ pleading that they are barred by laches.
3. That the exclusive remedy of the Plaintiffs to challenge the recent action of the City of Rockville Planning Commission is by administrative appeal to this Court, which has previously been taken.
For all of the reasons suggested by the Plaintiffs, we shall sustain each Demurrer, and prohibit amendment of the Bill of Complaint.
The principal thrust of the ‘petition’ is to challenge the action of the Mayor and Council of Rockville in approving Exploratory Application No. PRU 4. The Plaintiffs have not alleged that they were present at the public hearing, or participated *28 in any way in the proceedings before the Mayor and Council of Rockville, which involved this contested action.

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Bluebook (online)
358 A.2d 570, 32 Md. App. 22, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockshire-civic-assn-v-mayor-of-rockville-mdctspecapp-1976.