Trail v. Terrapin Run, LLC

943 A.2d 1192, 403 Md. 523, 2008 Md. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 11, 2008
Docket44, Sept. Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 943 A.2d 1192 (Trail v. Terrapin Run, LLC) 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
Trail v. Terrapin Run, LLC, 943 A.2d 1192, 403 Md. 523, 2008 Md. LEXIS 112 (Md. 2008).

Opinion

DALE R. CATHELL, Judge,

retired, specially assigned.

With the inclusion of certain of the amici (via their briefs), this case, in one sense is a continuation of legislative battles that began in the early 1990s, where representatives of the environmental protection and professional land planning interests attempted to establish that the State, or State planners, should exercise greater control than theretofore enjoyed over most aspects of land use decision-making that then reposed in the local jurisdictions. 1

*526 David Trail, et al., petitioners, presented only one question in their Petition for Certiorari:

“May a board of appeals deriving zoning authority under Article 66B grant a special exception, in the absence of an affirmative finding that the proposed use conforms to the jurisdiction’s comprehensive plan?” 2

We presume that petitioners are asserting that the administrative entity making the decision must mention the term “conform,” because it now appears in the relevant section of the State statute, Article 66B, 3 and then explain its decision in relation to petitioners’ (and some of the amici’s) versions of the definition of the term “conform” as it relates to the local jurisdiction’s plans. 4 We hold that the agency did that which *527 the statute required it to do. We believe that the term “conform,” standing alone, as first used by the Legislature in 1970, is the semantical equivalent of the phrase “in harmony with” which has long been the standard utilized in Maryland land use administrative practice. 5 We shall attempt later in our opinion to explain the history of the “local control/state control via mandates” issue from an examination of the legislative actions over the years. 6

*528 Facts

The site at issue is located in the A and C zones in Allegany County. In those zones planned unit developments, such as that in the case at bar, are permitted as special exceptions to the provisions of the zoning code. The site had been expressly designated for urban development as far back as 1995 and that designation continued through the 2002 version of the County Comprehensive Plan. The site was not included under the County’s master plans as a “sensitive area.” There is nothing we have found in the record of this case indicating that the Maryland Department of State Planning prior to this action ever objected to the inclusion of this site as suitable for urban development in the County’s Master Plans.

Prior to the application at issue here, the Allegany Planning Commission had visited the site and determined that the proposed development then contemplated, that later was the subject of the application and of the grant of the special exception at issue, was consistent with the Comprehensive Plan.

In August 2005, Terrapin Run, LLC (“respondent”) applied to the Board of Appeals of Allegany County (the “Board”) for a special exception provided for in the local zoning code to establish a planned residential development (the “development”). The development was to be located on 935 acres of *529 land, primarily zoned as District “A” (Agricultural, Forestry and Mining), with a portion of the tract located in District “C” (Conservation). The 935-acre tract of land abuts Route 40 and Shipley Road on the east side, and Green Ridge Road on the west. Green Ridge State Forest is located to the east of the tract, and there are also forested lands south of the tract. 7 The development would consist of 4,300 residential units, an equestrian center, a community building and a 125,000 square foot shopping center. Additionally, the development would require a sewage treatment plant, to be located along Route 40. The Board noted that the project would take twenty years to complete and during that time, 150 to 200 separate permits and approvals would be required for its completion.

As relevant to the case at bar, after eight sessions in which the Board heard from 11 experts (nine for the applicants and two for the protestants), and received more than 80 exhibits, the Board, in a lengthy finding of facts, found that the proposed development would be in harmony with the Allegany County Comprehensive Plan, 2002 Update (the “Plan”). The Board opined that the Plan was advisory in nature, rather than regulatory, and that strict conformance with the plan was not required. Included in its findings were the following “conclusions,” as stated in Respondent’s brief to the Court of Special Appeals: 8

“• There is a specific statement in the Allegany County Plan stating that it is the function of the Plan to serve as a guide;
• It is commonly understood that Master Plans are guides in the development process, which guidelines are mandatory only if an Ordinance so provides;
*530 • The Allegany County Ordinance contains no requirement of strict adherence to the Plan and affords it no regulatory authority;
• That conformity to the Plan is not required; and
• That the proper issue to be decided by the Zoning Board is ‘whether the use in the particular case is in harmony with the general purpose and intent of the Plan’.” (Internal citations omitted.)

Consistent with Article 66B’s requirement that if some jurisdiction desires to exercise zoning power, it must first develop a Master or other Comprehensive Plan, Allegany County, as we have indicated, had adopted such a Plan. Included in that Plan at the relevant time were the “vision” statements which were required to be included. Additionally, the Plan included a sensitive areas compilation as required by Article 66B. As previously indicated, the subject site was not included as a sensitive area in the Comprehensive Plan and was indicated for future Urban Development. 9 The Plan describes that its purpose or intent is as a “guide” in respect to the issue of land use. The Maryland Department of Planning 10 was privy to the County’s actions in adopting its Master Plan and there is nothing in the record before us to which our attention has been directed indicating that the Department made any objection at the time in respect to the inclusion of the subject site as an area for urban development.

The request for a special exception was eventually approved by the Board using the traditional “in harmony with” stan *531 dard.

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Bluebook (online)
943 A.2d 1192, 403 Md. 523, 2008 Md. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trail-v-terrapin-run-llc-md-2008.