Surkovich v. Doub

265 A.2d 447, 258 Md. 263, 1970 Md. LEXIS 997
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 14, 1970
Docket[No. 365, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 265 A.2d 447 (Surkovich v. Doub) 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
Surkovich v. Doub, 265 A.2d 447, 258 Md. 263, 1970 Md. LEXIS 997 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case might well be entitled “Agneslane Ee-visited”, since the land sought to be rezoned is immediately adjacent to that involved in Agneslane, Inc. v. Lucas, 247 Md. 612, 233 A. 2d 757 (1967), is a part of the same tract, one of the principal expert witnesses for the landowner in that case appeared for the landowner here, and that case has a direct bearing on our decision here. We shall reverse the action of the trial court which approved the rezoning.

One of the appellees, Eagan M. Doub (Doub), back in 1943, whether fortuitously or through foresight does not appear and is unimportant to our decision, made an extremely advantageous purchase of 333 acres of farmland at what is now the intersection of the Baltimore Beltway *265 and Route 1-70-N. The State Roads Commission by condemnation took 184 acres of that land for the interchanges constructed at that location, described as “one of the largest in the entire country.”

The land here in question was zoned R-6 when the Western Area Land Use Map was adopted by the Baltimore County Council on November 15, 1862. The 61.2 acre tract here under consideration may be described as lying in the southeast quadrant of the Beltway and Interstate Route I-70-N. The Baltimore County Board of Appeals described it as “shaped somewhat like the wedge of a pie”, saying “the entire west, northwest and north sides of the property [are] bounded by the Baltimore County Beltway, a ramp from the Beltway to 1-70, and 1-70, both six lane dual highways.” The east side of the property is bounded by Woodlawn Drive which extends from Johnnycake Road northerly under I-70-N through the Industrial Park to the north, and thence to Security Boulevard and the Beltway. Johnnycake Road is the boundary on the south.

Doub sought M.L. zoning for 56.5 acres of the tract and M.L.R. zoning on the 4.7 acres located on the northeast side of Johnnycake Road.

Woodlawn Drive was formerly known as Clarke Boulevard. The land under consideration in Agneslane, supra, was immediately across Woodlawn Drive or Clarke Boulevard from the subject property and was bounded by Route I-70-N on the north and the Johnnycake Junior High School on the south. That school lies immediately across Woodlawn Drive from the subject property. In a corner of this land is the new firehouse which this Court mentioned at p. 617 of Agneslane, supra, as “not amountpng] to a change in the neighborhood.”

The property here under consideration is currently being used as farmland and is improved by three or four buildings among which is a farmhouse. Doub was a technical party to Agneslane, being the owner of the reversionary interest in the tract which was subject to a ten year ground lease in favor of the corporate lessee, Agnes- *266 lane, Inc., with the further power in that corporation to convert the whole or part of the tract into a 99 yean ground rent status. Doub owns in fee simple the tract here under consideration.

As in Agneslcme, the deputy zoning commissioner approved the reclassification. The petition for reclassification in this case was filed on November 14, 1967, just over a month after the decision of this Court on October 12, 1967, in Agneslcme. The Baltimore County Board of Appeals approved reclassification of the 56.5 acre tract from R-6 to M-L and denied the reclassification of the 4.7 acre tract from R-6 to M.L.R., stating on the latter point:

“The Board feels, however, that the portion of the property for which the petitioner requested M.L.R.; that is, the 4.7 acres on the north side of Johnnycake Road opposite the Westview Park development, should be retained as R-6 so that houses can be built on the portion of the property to face the existing houses on the south side of Johnnycake Road, which should reduce to a minimum any possible impact on the existing residential development.”

The M.L.R. classification apparently was desired to provide some buffer between the major portion of the tract and the R-6 development known as “Westview Park” which is across Johnnycake Road to the southwest. Doub and the protesting property owners each appealed the action of the Board of Appeals to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. The two appeals were consolidated and considered as one by the circuit court, which affirmed the action of the Board of Appeals. Both sides appeal that decision.

In presenting his case to the Board of Appeals Doub proceeded both on the theory of error in the original zoning and change in the character of the neighborhood sufficient to justify his request for reclassification. It does *267 not clearly appear upon which ground the board and the court rested their respective opinions.

In Agneslane, supra, the requested rezoning was from R-6 (one or two-family residential use) to R-A (residential use apartment). That case was heard before the same individuals constituting the Board of Appeals who sat in this case. A divided board there rejected the claim of error in the map as well as the allegation of change in the character of the neighborhood. In Agneslane the contentions relative to error in the map centered around the claim that the County Council underestimated the number of people who would be occupying the area embraced within the “Western Planning Area” of the county and, therefore, had provided insufficient R-A zoned acreage to house the unexpected influx. It was claimed that the change in the character of the neighborhood consisted in the actual construction (as opposed to the planning of) Clarke Boulevard or Woodlawn Drive and Route I-70-N, the expansion of the Social Security complex which had purchased 53 additional acres, the rapid growth of the Meadows Industrial Park, and the construction of the new firehouse. Mr. Bernard Willemain was one of the principal witnesses in that case.

The principal witness for Doub in this case was the same Mr. Willemain, “a consultant in the fields of city planning, site planning, and zoning”, who frequently appears in cases of this kind. He said the present R-6 classification is erroneous. This time he based his opinion on the fact that it “is one of the few vacant tracts of land left in this part of Baltimore County” and “is ideally suited for more intensive use, in terms of public facilities, such as sewer and water, roads that will carry heavy traffic, good topography, a good relationship to other community facilities, that would serve the tract, affording retail services to the users of the tract, and in this particular case, a very close relationship to the well established and mostly improved Meadows industrial tract, and the Social Security installation.” He said that the property should be “devoted to its highest and best use” and *268 he was of the opinion “that the light industrial classification, as requested by Mr. Doub, represents the highest and best use for the property.” He also testified to change in the immediate neighborhood which he thought justified the requested reclassification.

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Bluebook (online)
265 A.2d 447, 258 Md. 263, 1970 Md. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surkovich-v-doub-md-1970.