Steel v. Cape Corp.

677 A.2d 634, 111 Md. App. 1, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 4, 1996
Docket1541, Sept. Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 677 A.2d 634 (Steel v. Cape Corp.) 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
Steel v. Cape Corp., 677 A.2d 634, 111 Md. App. 1, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 94 (Md. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

CATHELL, Judge.

Robin S. Steel and other owners of property in Cape St. Claire appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County (Williams, J., presiding) that reversed the decision of the Anne Arundel County Board of Appeals (the Board), remanded the matter to the Board, and ordered the Board to grant a request to rezone the subject property owned by Cape Corporation, appellee, from OS (Open Space) 1 to R5 (Residential).

Appellants pose two issues for our consideration:

1. Whether the Board of Appeals’[s] finding that the OS zoning within the Cape Corporation’s Lot constitutes a mistake left the Board with no discretion and required it to grant the Cape Corporation’s rezoning application without regard to issues concerning public health, safety and welfare such as the inadequacy of public schools, etc.[ ]
2. Even assuming that the Board of Appeals correctly exercised its discretion in denying the Cape Corporation’s rezoning application based upon circumstances relating to the public welfare, must its decision be reversed because the decision results in an unconstitutional taking of the Cape Corporation’s property[.]

Initially, we note that it is apparent that neither appellee nor the trial court (and certainly not appellants or the Board) took the position that, once a zoning mistake was found, 2 the Board lacked discretion regarding whether it had to grant the rezoning based purely upon that mistake. From our reading *4 of the entire record, all parties and determinative entities recognized that the finding of mistake merely opened the door to a consideration of rezoning—i.e., that the finding of mistake did not mandate rezoning. See White v. Spring, 109 Md.App. 692, 675 A.2d 1023 (1996). Consequently, we do not perceive that a resolution of appellants’ first issue is necessary for our resolution of the case. Moreover, the trial judge, perceiving no issue in respect to the allegations of mistake and the Board’s discretion to rezone, explicitly limited his ruling to the second issue. 3

The Relevant Facts

From our review of the proceedings before the hearing examiner, the Board, and the trial court, we perceive that the site in question was first rezoned from CR (Cottage Residential), permitting up to 7.2 residential units per acre, to OS (Open Space), apparently permitting no residential units, about 1971. 4 At that time, the Cape St. Claire Improvement Association’s lease for the subject property had just expired. In the 1971 Anne Arundel County Comprehensive Rezoning, the Association, nevertheless, asserted that it had an ownership interest therein and, unknown to the property’s owner, appellee here, requested that the property'be rezoned to OS. Thereafter, still unknown to appellee, the County, apparently believing the Association to be the owner of the subject property, rezoned it as requested". It was not until 1978 that appellee learned that its property had been downzoned at the request of an entity improperly asserting an ownership interest in the property. 5 Appellee was allegedly informed that the *5 property would be rezoned R5, effectively curing the 1973 mistake, in a 1987 comprehensive rezoning, but this was not done.

In the 1990s (perhaps beginning in the late 1980s), appellee entered into negotiations, and, ultimately, litigation, in respect to verifying its ownership of the subject property. The dispute was resolved in appellee’s favor in 1993, when this Court rendered an opinion affirming appellee’s ownership of the property. Appellee then initiated the rezoning request that resulted in the circuit court decision now on appeal. We have capsulized the early history of the property in order to demonstrate how it was inappropriately downzoned initially to an open space classification. As we shall indicate, an OS (Open Space) classification was obviously intended for public property or private property whose owners seek to preserve their property’s open space characteristics.

Article 28 of the Anne Arundel County Code (1967) 6 specifies:

§ 6-204. Land included.
Open Space Districts shall include:
(1) lands in the natural drainage system, including wetlands, marshlands, swamplands, and lands in the floodplain;
(2) private and public land used or proposed to be used for passive or active subdivision recreation, community recreation, or regional recreation; and
(3) lands designated as structural open space in the General Development Plan or detail plan of open space.
§ 6-205. Permitted uses.
(a) The following uses are permitted as permitted uses in Open Space Districts subject to the approval, where applica *6 ble, of the State Department of Natural Resources, the Soil Conservation Service, the Department of Public Works, the Department of Utilities, the Health Department, and the Department of Recreation and Parks:
(1) alcoholic beverage uses as ancillary to permitted uses in accordance with the provisions of § 10-118 of this article;
(2) conservation uses, practices, and structures for the maintenance of the natural environment;
(3) existing residential uses;
(4) farming or nurseries, including truck gardening, grazing of livestock, and other similar activities if:
(i) the use does not change the stability of the land; and
(ii) with the exception of grazing, the use is not located in the natural drainage system;[ 7 ]
(5) nonresidential structures, including barns, stables, and kennels, for the sheltering, breeding, boarding, hiring, or selling of an animal and for storage of crops raised on the premises, provided that the use is not permitted in the natural drainage system;
(6) nonprofit camps, including dormitories, cabins, and structures for administrative, maintenance, and custodial activities of the camp, if the structures are not located in the natural drainage system;
(7) public beaches;
(8) rights-of-way or easements to provide for access to inaccessible areas;[ 8 ]
*7 (9) structures for administrative and custodial uses of the principal use of the site, if:

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Bluebook (online)
677 A.2d 634, 111 Md. App. 1, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steel-v-cape-corp-mdctspecapp-1996.