St. Clair v. Colonial Pipeline Co.

202 A.2d 376, 235 Md. 578
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 6, 1964
Docket[No. 422, September Term, 1963.]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 202 A.2d 376 (St. Clair v. Colonial Pipeline Co.) 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
St. Clair v. Colonial Pipeline Co., 202 A.2d 376, 235 Md. 578 (Md. 1964).

Opinion

Horney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this zoning case, the primary question is whether the “delivery” or “tank farm” facilities of a pipeline company for the above ground storage of petroleum products constitute such “public utility structures” as are permissible in an agricultural district under the zoning ordinance of Harford County. C. Albert St. Clair and others (protestants) are the appellants and the Colonial Pipeline Company (Colonial or pipeline company) is the appellee.

Colonial, a Delaware corporation owned by nine oil com *580 panies, is engaged in transporting refined petroleum products by pipeline, which, when completed, will extend from Houston, Texas, to Linden, New Jersey. The main line crosses twelve states, of which Maryland is one. Lateral or spur lines to service communities along the route of the pipeline system will connect with the main line at various intervals. There are two such connecting points in Maryland. One at Finksburg to service the Curtis Bay area, and the proposed one on the Berry farm near Forest Hill to service a lateral line terminating in the North Baltimore area.

The protestants are property owners who adjoin or are in close proximity to the proposed location of the tank farm or delivery facilities which are the subject of this controversy. Most of the protestants own attractive homes, costing in excess of $30,000, in what has been developing from a sparsely populated agricultural area into spacious residential homesites.

When the pipeline company made application for a zoning certificate to construct the delivery facilities in the center of the 300 acre Berry farm on which it has an option to buy, the zoning inspector disapproved the application and referred it to the board of appeals. On referral to it, the board, in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, ordered the issuance of the zoning certificate applied for subject to certain conditional uses, and the protestants appealed to the circuit court. The appeal to this Court is from the order of the lower court affirming the decision of the board of appeals.

The pipeline company proposes to erect five floating roof petroleum storage tanks, with a combined capacity of 382,000 barrels, as well as a thirty by sixty foot pumping station and smaller buildings. The proposed tanks average fifty feet in height with diameters ranging from eighty to one hundred and fifty feet, and, since the tanks will be lighted as a safety measure, they will be visible from adjoining properties both day and night. Such tank farm or delivery facilities constitute an integral part of the pipeline system and are required at “break-out” points or “take-off” stations. Their purpose is to slow down the movement of petroleum products in the larger main line so that they can be transferred or routed into a smaller lateral line. In negotiating the purchase of the farm for a take-off station provided rezoning or a certificate for conditional use was *581 granted, it is not disclosed whether or not the pipeline company-considered the possibility that the erection thereon of the requisite facilities might violate the provisions of the county zoning ordinance. Rather, the record shows that only the practicality of the location, the availability of the property, the hydraulics of the pipeline system and the economics in operating from that particular point were given consideration.

The protestants, besides contending that the tank farm or delivery facilities are not such “public utility structures” as are conditionally permissible in an agricultural district, further contend, among other things, that the pipeline company is neither a common carrier nor a public utility; that the company as an optionee lacked capacity to apply for conditional use of the optioned property; and that the action taken by the board of appeals was arbitrary and capricious in a legal sense in that there was no substantial evidence to support the authorization of a conditional use.

As we see it, the first contention is the only one that must be considered on this appeal. For, even if it is assumed, without deciding, that the pipeline company is a common carrier and a public utility, it is clear to us that the tank farm or delivery facilities are not such “public utility structures” as may be erected or installed in an agricultural district under the county zoning ordinance.

Under the ordinance, the county is divided into districts ranging from A-l (agricultural) districts to M-2 (general industrial) districts. 1 Among those principal uses which are permitted in an agricultural district by § 7.0111 of Article 7 of the ordinance are “electric, communication, water, sewer, gas, and *582 fuel lines and necessary equipment incident thereto; but not administration, construction, maintenance, storage [italics ours] or sewage disposal facilities.” Listed as a conditional use, 2 requiring board of appeals authorization, § 7.027 permits “public utility structures and properties” in an A-l or agricultural district. But “petroleum or petroleum products refining or storage above growl'd [italics ours],” are allowed by § 15.02 as a restricted conditional use only in an M-2 or general industrial district. We also note (though we express no opinion as to the meaning of the clause) that “public utility yards for construction, maintenance or storage [italics ours] ” are permitted in an M-l (light industrial) district by § 14.0112 of Article 14 when located more than two hundred feet from any “R” district.

The pipeline company, relying on Cassidy v. Baltimore County Board of Appeals, 218 Md. 418, 146 A. 2d 896 (1958), contends that the facilities to be constructed on the Berry farm are “public utility structures” and therefore permissible as a conditional use in an agricultural district. We think not. That case is clearly distinguishable from this. It is true that in Cassidy we affirmed the granting of a special exception to a public utility company for the construction and operation of a steam generating plant and related facilities in a residential zone. There, the zoning regulations, in express terms, authorized the granting of special exceptions in R.6 zones for “public utility uses” other than those (such as telephone and telegraph lines and electric light and power lines) permitted in all residential zones without special exception. Here, however, the use of fuel line storage facilities are specifically prohibited as a permissive use in an agricultural district by § 7.0111, supra, and are not permitted in any other zoning district except an M-2 industrial district where aboveground storage of petroleum products is allowed by § 15.02, supra, on a restricted conditional basis. The zoning ordinance does not specify the type of buildings classifiable as “public utility structures,” but whatever the *583 term was intended to embrace, it clearly does not include above-ground petroleum storage facilities, and we so hold.

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Related

Klein v. Colonial Pipeline Co.
462 A.2d 546 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1983)
Smith v. Miller
239 A.2d 900 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
202 A.2d 376, 235 Md. 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-clair-v-colonial-pipeline-co-md-1964.