Stitzel v. State

6 A.3d 935, 195 Md. App. 443, 2010 Md. App. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 5, 2010
DocketNo. 1017
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 A.3d 935 (Stitzel v. State) 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
Stitzel v. State, 6 A.3d 935, 195 Md. App. 443, 2010 Md. App. LEXIS 154 (Md. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MEREDITH, J.

In this appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Washington County, we review an agricultural land preservation easement that was granted pursuant to Maryland Code (1973, 1999 Repl.Vol.), Agriculture Article (“AG”), §§ 2-501, et seq. We shall affirm the circuit court’s conclusion that the landowner who had subjected 264 acres of his property to a preservation easement was prohibited from conveying, without the prior approval of the Maryland Agricultural Land Preservation Foundation (“MALPF” or “the Foundation”), a portion of the land that was encumbered by the preservation easement.

I.

Paul and Helen Stitzel (collectively referred to as “Stitzel” or “appellant”), own farmland located in Washington County. In 1999, Stitzel entered into an Agricultural Land Preserva[446]*446tion District Agreement (“the District Agreement”) with the Foundation, one of the appellees. Under the District Agreement, entered into pursuant to AG § 2-509(b), Stitzel agreed to keep approximately 264 acres of real property in agricultural use for a minimum of five years. The Foundation recognized the 264 acres of land as an Agricultural Preservation District.1

By Deed of Easement (“the Easement”) dated January 8, 2002, Stitzel granted to the Foundation an agricultural preservation easement that, in essence, obligated Stitzel and his successors in interest to use the 264 acres of land “solely for agricultural use in accordance with the provisions of the Agriculture Article, Title 2, Subtitle 5.” Among the covenants contained in the Easement was an agreement by Stitzel as follows: “The land subject to this Deed of Easement may not be subdivided for any purpose including subdivision, off conveyance and the movement of boundary lines unless written approval first has been obtained from the [Foundation].” To compensate Stitzel for subjecting the 264 acres of land to the Easement, the Foundation paid him $570,230.03.

In 2005, Stitzel purported to sell a 15.91 acre lot (“Lot 14”) that was part of the land encumbered by the Easement to Donald and Virginia Bowers (collectively “Bowers”), appellees and cross-appellants, for $370,000.00. Due to an unfortunate series of errors, Stitzel did not take any action to apprise Bowers of the agricultural preservation restrictions; nor did Stitzel seek the Foundation’s approval of the proposed sale and conveyance of Lot 14. The Easement was not discovered by Bowers’s title search because the Foundation’s title company had erroneously recorded the Easement in Frederick County. Nor did Bowers’s title company bring to Bowers’s attention the District Agreement that had been recorded in Washington County in 1999.

[447]*447After Bowers took possession of Lot 14 and began to explore subdivision of the parcel, the Foundation learned of the 2005 conveyance. The State of Maryland, to the use of the Maryland Department of Agriculture, on behalf of the Foundation, filed suit against Stitzel and Bowers in the Circuit Court for Washington County. For simplicity, we will refer to the complainant in the suit as the Foundation.

The Foundation’s complaint, as amended, alleged that Lot 14 was encumbered by the District Agreement and the Easement, and both of those documents included a covenant that the owner would not subdivide the land for any purpose without first obtaining the approval of the Foundation. The Foundation sought a declaratory judgment declaring the rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to the development restrictions upon Lot 14, and declaring the deed from Stitzel to Bowers null and void.

Stitzel filed a counter complaint against the Foundation, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Easement did not preclude his conveyance of a lot that had been legally subdivided prior to the time it was encumbered.

Bowers, too, filed a counter complaint, and Bowers also filed a cross-claim against Stitzel. Initially, Bowers sought a declaratory decree that they took Lot 14 free and clear of the agricultural preservation restrictions, but they subsequently sought a declaratory judgment declaring the conveyance of Lot 14 null and void. Bowers’s cross-claim against Stitzel sought monetary compensation upon a number of theories that will be discussed in more detail later in this opinion.2

II.

The parties each moved for summary judgment, and the circuit court ruled in favor of the Foundation and Bowers. The court rejected Stitzel’s contention that he had never [448]*448intended for Lot 14 to be included in the assemblage of property that was subject to the District Agreement and Easement; Stitzel does not challenge that ruling on appeal. With respect to whether the agreements with the Foundation and the regulations adopted to implement the agricultural land preservation program prohibited the conveyance of a portion of the land covered by the District Agreement and Easement, the circuit court was persuaded that such transfers require the prior approval of the Foundation.

The circuit court held that the conveyance of Lot 14 to Bowers violated covenants contained in the District Agreement and the Easement against subdividing the land. In the District Agreement, Stitzel had agreed:

[F]or so long as the [District Agreement] remains in effect:
(2) The landowner agrees neither to subdivide nor develop the land for residential, commercial or industrial purposes; [and]
(3) The landowner agrees not to subdivide the land for any purpose unless the Foundation first has approved the proposed subdivision____

Similarly, in the Easement, Stitzel “covenanted] and agree[d] as follows”:

(g) The land subject to this Deed of Easement may not be subdivided for any purpose including subdivision, off conveyance and the movement of boundary lines unless written approval first has been obtained from the [Foundation].

The circuit court noted that, although AG § 2-509(b)(7)(v) provides “[n]othing in this section shall preclude the landowner from selling his property,” the Foundation asserted that that provision is limited by other sections of the subtitle that restrict conveyances of portions of the land within an agricultural preservation district. With respect to a sale of less than the entire assemblage of property covered by the Easement, the Foundation asserted that the regulations in Code of [449]*449Maryland Regulations Title 15, Subtitle 15, Chapter 01 (“Guidelines for the Maryland Agricultural Land Preservation Program”) control.

In AG § 2-504(4), the legislature delegated to the Foundation the power “[t]o adopt ... regulations and procedures necessary to implement the provisions of this subtitle.” CO-MAR 15.15.01.17 H(l) states: “A landowner may not subdivide land subject to restrictions of an agricultural land preservation district or easement without written approval from the Foundation.” The term “subdivision” is defined as follows in COMAR 15.15.01.01-2B(7): “ ‘Subdivision’ means the division of land into two or more parts or parcels.”

Pointing to a different definition of “subdivision” in the statute regarding land use — Maryland Code (1957), Article 66B, § 1.00(() — Stitzel argued that the subdivision which created Lot 14 had taken place long before that parcel was subjected to the District Agreement and Easement. Art. 66B, § 1.00 states:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 A.3d 935, 195 Md. App. 443, 2010 Md. App. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stitzel-v-state-mdctspecapp-2010.