Sycamore Realty Co., Inc. v. PEOPLE'S COUNSEL OF BALTIMORE CTY.

684 A.2d 1331, 344 Md. 57, 1996 Md. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 21, 1996
Docket130, Sept. Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 684 A.2d 1331 (Sycamore Realty Co., Inc. v. PEOPLE'S COUNSEL OF BALTIMORE CTY.) 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
Sycamore Realty Co., Inc. v. PEOPLE'S COUNSEL OF BALTIMORE CTY., 684 A.2d 1331, 344 Md. 57, 1996 Md. LEXIS 121 (Md. 1996).

Opinion

CHASANOW, Judge.

In this case, we are called upon to decide whether Baltimore County should be estopped from enforcing a new zoning scheme, enacted during the County’s quadrennial rezoning process, against a property owner whose property was under reservation for potential acquisition by the County at the time it was downzoned. For the following reasons we hold that the County should not be estopped.

*59 I.

The facts in this case are simply stated. Petitioner, Sycamore Realty Co., Inc., is the owner of Hilltop Place, a 24.37 acre parcel of land in Baltimore County. On December 4, 1990, Petitioner filed a development plan with the Baltimore County Review Group (the “CRG”) seeking permission to erect a 220-unit townhome complex on the site. At the time the development plan was filed, 18.21 acres of the site were zoned density residential (DR) 10.5, and 6.16 acres of the site were zoned DR 5.5. The 220-unit townhome complex would have been compatible with this zoning scheme.

Obtaining the approval of the CRG was only the first requirement that Petitioner had to fulfill in order to begin its project. Petitioner would then have had to apply for and receive a building permit authorizing Petitioner to proceed with the project. A site planning and engineering expert estimated that, in the usual course of events, it takes up to 3 months to obtain CRG approval, and approximately 12 months for a project to move from CRG approval to the beginning of construction.

This project, however, did not proceed in the usual fashion. On July 1, 1991, while the CRG was considering the merits of Petitioner’s development plan, the Baltimore County Council reserved the 24.37 acre parcel, pursuant to Baltimore County Code § 26-66, for potential future acquisition by the Baltimore County Department of Recreation and Parks. Section 26-66 allows the County to reserve property for up to eighteen months for potential acquisition or condemnation. Baltimore County Code § 26-66(b), (c), (g) (1988). No structure may be erected on the property while it is under reservation. Baltimore County Code § 26-66(e). If, at the end of the reservation period, the property has not been acquired, or if condemnation proceedings have not been instituted, § 26-66 allows any aggrieved person to recover “actual damages sustained ... by reason of the ... reservation, together with reasonable attorney’s fees and expert witness fees as may be approved by the court.” Baltimore County Code § 26-66(h).

*60 II is undisputed that Baltimore County followed all the proper procedures concerning the reservation of the property, 1 and that Petitioner’s taxes were abated throughout the reservation period pursuant to Baltimore County Code § 26—66(f). During the time that the property was under reservation, Petitioner did not ever request that the property be released, perhaps, in part, because of the abatement of taxes.

Even before the property was reserved, representatives of Baltimore County had been engaged in negotiations with Petitioner to purchase the parcel. Two independent appraisers, working on the County’s behalf, valued the land at $560,000. Representatives of Baltimore County made one offer to purchase the land at that price. Petitioner’s asking price for the property, however, was between $4,000,000 and $8,000,000. No agreement was ever reached concerning the sale of the parcel, partly because the parties disagreed on the price, and partly because representatives of Baltimore County learned that they could not afford to purchase the parcel, even at the price of $560,000. By December 31, 1991, representatives of Baltimore County knew that they would not be able to acquire the property. Nevertheless, the property was not released from reservation until November 19, 1992, nearly a year later.

On October 15, 1992, while the property was still under reservation, the parcel was downzoned to entirely DR 5.5 as a result of Baltimore County’s quadrennial, county-wide rezoning process. 2 The 198-unit 3 townhome complex that Petition *61 er wished to build was not compatible with this zoning scheme. The new zoning, which went into effect December 1, 1992, would allow Petitioner to construct only a 132-unit complex on the parcel.

The CRG approved Petitioner’s development plan on July 8, 1993. Although the approval was granted more than eight months after the new, lower density scheme became effective, the CRG approved the Petitioner’s plan under the higher density zoning scheme that had been in effect during 1990. The CRG’s approval was based on a letter from Arnold Jablon, the Director of Zoning Administration and Development Management. The letter, dated December 3, 1992, stated that Petitioner “had been prejudiced by the County’s use of the reservation process and subsequent rezoning,” and that Petitioner should be allowed to proceed under the higher density, 1990 zoning scheme for an additional eighteen months.

The People’s Counsel of Baltimore County (“People’s Counsel”) 4 appealed the CRG’s decision to the County Board of Appeals (the “CBA”) and argued that the appropriate zoning scheme for Petitioner’s townhome complex was the new, lower density scheme. The CBA stated: “It is the opinion of this Board that Baltimore County’s actions in holding the Sycamore property in reservation for almost a year, at the least, when it clearly knew it had no funds to purchase it, and when it knew the property was in the process of being downzoned, bordered upon being arbitrary and capricious.” On February *62 16, 1994, the CBA “affirm[ed] the CRG’s approval of the Hilltop Place plan under the original 10.5 zoning because the County was estopped from enforcing the new zoning.” The CBA relied on Offen v. County Council, 96 Md.App. 526, 625 A.2d 424 (1993), rev’d 334 Md. 499, 639 A.2d 1070 (1994), the first reported opinion in Maryland to apply the doctrine of zoning estoppel.

People’s Counsel petitioned the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for review of the CBA decision, arguing that zoning estoppel was not recognized in Maryland and that the CRG plan should be denied. On November 18, 1994, Judge J. William Hinkel affirmed the decision of the CBA. By that date, this Court had reversed the Court of Special Appeals’s decision in Offen. Judge Hinkel, nevertheless, based his decision on the theory of zoning estoppel. Judge Hinkel found that the Court of Appeals reversed Offen “because the issue of zoning estoppel was not properly briefed nor argued, and was beyond the Court of Special Appeals’[s] scope of review,” but that “the Court of Appeals in that decision did not preclude the future consideration and use of the concept of zoning estoppel in Maryland.” He then stated: “the CBA properly applied the doctrine of zoning estoppel as it is to be applied in Maryland; [and] ...

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Bluebook (online)
684 A.2d 1331, 344 Md. 57, 1996 Md. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sycamore-realty-co-inc-v-peoples-counsel-of-baltimore-cty-md-1996.