Templeton v. County Council

321 A.2d 778, 21 Md. App. 636, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 436
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 19, 1974
Docket696, September Term, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 321 A.2d 778 (Templeton v. County Council) 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
Templeton v. County Council, 321 A.2d 778, 21 Md. App. 636, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 436 (Md. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

*638 Moore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In June 1970 appellant was cited by the zoning authorities of Prince George’s County for conducting a commercial roofing business in a residential zone. On July 31, 1970 she filed an application for a map amendment to reclassify her property in the Town of Brentwood consisting of 25,000 square feet, from the R-55 (residential) to C-2 (commercial) zone. The matter, for reasons not apparent, did not proceed expeditiously to public hearing and final decision. In May 1971, the technical staff of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission recommended denial of the application and in July 1971 the Prince George’s County Planning Board adopted a resolution of disapproval. In May and September 1972 public hearings were held before the zoning hearing examiner whose findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed on November 27, 1972. On February 28, 1973 the County Council for Prince George’s County met as the District Council, seven of the eleven members being present, and adopted a resolution of disapproval in accordance with the zoning hearing examiner’s findings, the full text of which was incorporated in the Council’s resolution.

The Circuit Court (Meloy, J.) affirmed the District Council in an oral opinion on September 26,1973 and in her appeal to this Court the judgment of the Circuit Court is assailed on three grounds: (1) that the District Council’s decision should not have been affirmed because it failed to make its own findings of fact and because there was no finding whatsoever as to what reasonably constituted the neighborhood of the subject property; (2) that because it was necessary for appellant to receive the affirmative vote of eight members of the eleven member council for approval and only seven members were present when the resolution of disapproval was adopted, appellant was denied due process; (3) that appellant was denied the opportunity for consideration of “conditional zoning” prohibited by the Prince George’s County Charter, a restriction held inapplicable to the Regional District within Prince George’s County in a case decided by the Court of Appeals of *639 Maryland while her appeal was pending before the Circuit Court. 1

We conclude that the assignments of error are without foundation and affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court.

The factual background, essentially undisputed, reflects that zoning was first applied in Prince George’s County in 1927 and appellant’s property, located at 3500 Varnum Street, Brentwood, was then classified residential. Appellant and her husband, now deceased, acquired the property in the late 30’s and, in 1939, established a roofing business on the rear of their lot, a business which was operated by them uninterruptedly until Mr. Templeton’s demise in 1969 and was thereafter continued by his widow. In the 1949 amendment to the Prince George’s County Zoning .Ordinance, the property was classified R-55 (residential). It comprises approximately one-half acre located on the north side of Varnum Street, improved by two dwellings and several sheds as well as a large enclosed work and storage area in the rear. On the west side of the property is an unpaved alley which intersects Webster Street, one block to the north. Varnum Street, a residential thoroughfare, intersects 37th Street on the east but dead-ends short of 34th Street on the west, with no turn-around. The Templeton property is surrounded by private residences. Photographs received in evidence depict them as modest but attractively and neatly maintained. Two blocks to the north there is an area of commercial (C-2) activity and to the west along 34th Street are scattered multi-family dwellings in the R-18 and R-35 (higher-density residential) classifications.

During the course of the proceedings before the zoning hearing examiner, the appellant was afforded an opportunity to establish a non-conforming use of the property by filing a use and occupancy application with the Park and Planning Commission. This application was made on June 1,1972 and denied on July 8,1972.

It thus appears that the commercial use of the property *640 has been in violation of the Prince George’s County zoning laws for approximately thirty-five years. 2

I

Appellant’s first contention is based upon Chapter 426, § 59-104 of the 1966 Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland which was interpreted by the Court of Appeals in Montgomery, et al. v. Board of County Commissioners for Prince George’s County, et al., 256 Md. 597 (1970). The statute reads as follows: 3

“59-104. In Prince George’s County, no application for a map amendment or special exception, which is contested, shall be granted or denied except upon written findings of basic facts and written conclusions.”

The basic facts and conclusions which the District Council must find and set forth in writing in connection with the grant or denial of a map amendment based upon “change” were listed by Judge Barnes in the Montgomery case as follows: (a) what area reasonably constituted the “neighborhood” of the subject property; (2) the changes which occurred in that neighborhood since the comprehensive rezoning; and (c) that these changes resulted in a change in the character of the neighborhood.

In the proceedings below, the technical staff in its report to the Planning Board defined the “neighborhood” as the area bounded by 37th Street on the east, Upshur Street on the south, 34th Street to the west and, to the north, the rear lot lines of the property fronting on the north side of *641 Webster Street. The appellant agreed with the staffs definition except for the northern boundary. 4 The latter, she claimed, should not stop at Webster Street but should be extended to include all of the area up to Windom Road containing C-2 and R-18 zoning and development. 5

The staffs justification for its definition of “neighborhood” was based upon a sharp change in topography on Yarnum Street east of 34th Street and the enclave of C-2 and higher density residential activity to the north of appellant’s property. The opposition to the application 6 agreed with the staffs definition of the neighborhood and maintained that the “neighborhood” had always been residential in character.

Curiously, the zoning hearing examiner made no factual determination as to the area that reasonably constituted the neighborhood but found rather that the issue of “change in the character of the neighborhood is fairly debatable.”

“In the assessment of the record we believe that there is sufficient evidence which a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support either definition [of neighborhood]. Cf. Board of County Commissioners v. Brown, 253 Md. 632. Hence, we conclude that this issue is fairly debatable.”

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Bluebook (online)
321 A.2d 778, 21 Md. App. 636, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/templeton-v-county-council-mdctspecapp-1974.