Tyler v. City of College Park

3 A.3d 421, 415 Md. 475, 2010 Md. LEXIS 343
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 25, 2010
Docket126, September Term, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 3 A.3d 421 (Tyler v. City of College Park) 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
Tyler v. City of College Park, 3 A.3d 421, 415 Md. 475, 2010 Md. LEXIS 343 (Md. 2010).

Opinions

HARRELL, J.

Appellants, four owners of affected rental properties in the City of College Park1 *and one student renter, contend that [482]*482Appellees, the Mayor and Council of the City of College Park,2 enacted a novel (and apparently unprecedented) rent control program for the explicit purposes of discouraging in the City the rental property market in so-called “single-family” neighborhoods and nudging renters to nearby apartment buildings or future apartment complexes, rather than for the primary purpose of protecting tenants from exorbitant rental rates, the traditional rationale underlying rent control legislation. According to Appellants, the City’s rent control program will impair the rental property market for the most affordable housing in the City, namely, rentals of rooms and common areas in single-family detached homes, while encouraging the rise of rents in the sector of the rental market already containing the most expensive housing, medium-rise and highrise apartments, by exempting those properties from the rent control restrictions. On these grounds, Appellants charge principally that the City’s rent control program violates Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights and the anti-discrimination provisions of the State of Maryland and Prince George’s County Fair Housing Acts, and constitutes impermissible de facto zoning by a legislative body without zoning power. For reasons we shall explain, we disagree with Appellants’ contentions and affirm the grant by the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County of summary judgment to the City on Appellants’ claims, thereby upholding the validity of the City’s unique rent control program.

FACTS

Two years prior to the enactment of the City’s rent control program in 2005, following discussions about using rent stabilization as a response to public concerns of rising rental costs, neighborhood deterioration, and inflated purchase prices for homes due to the increasing number of rental conversions in the City’s traditional “single-family” neighborhoods, the City [483]*483Council drafted a comprehensive Housing Plan. The Housing Plan included a “neighborhood revitalization” component, which stated that “[t]he quality of life in the city can and should be raised____” In order to remedy this perceived “quality of life” problem, the Housing Plan recommended enactment of a rent control program in the City to be used as a “regulatory tool” to impair the profitability of rental conversions in so-called “single-family” neighborhoods. Specifically, the Housing Plan noted:

Rent stabilization is one tool that can be used to ensure that rental units are available/maintained as affordable housing units. Rent stabilization limits what landlords can charge tenants. The effect on single-family homes converted to rentals will be to make it less profitable to make these conversions.
If legally feasible, rent stabilization could be considered as a regulatory tool to deter future conversions in residential areas which are primarily owner occupied. Assuming this, geographic boundaries can be drawn to include the areas that need to be protected.

In April 2004, City Councilmember Robert Catlin, a retired economist, submitted a proposed ordinance which sought to implement the rent control concept outlined in the Housing Plan. Catlin’s proposal provided that a rent ceiling would apply to all single-family, duplex, triplex, and quadraplex rental properties, but that larger multi-unit apartment buildings would be exempt. In Catlin’s view, such a plan would decrease the number of “single-family” properties that are rental units while encouraging construction of new apartment buildings which, in turn, would improve the balance between rental supply and demand in the City. Upon Catlin’s request for a review of the legality of the proposal, the City Attorney, in a memorandum, expressed concern over the validity of the proposed rent control program, stating:

[W]e embarked upon drafting a rent stabilization ordinance in accordance with the parameters requested by Councilman [484]*484Catlin. Some of the provisions requested, such as exempting apartment buildings, establishing a rent ceiling based upon an amount certain, and using the protection of the City’s stock of single family owner occupied housing as a purpose for enacting such an ordinance, have not been tested in Court. Accordingly, we cannot guarantee that the City would prevail in a challenge of the proposed ordinance. We have attempted to address all of the concerns raised by the Courts that have addressed rent control issues; however, some of the elements of the requested legislation are novel.

Despite the concerns of the City Attorney, Catlin pressed forward with the rent control proposal.

Prior to voting on Councilmember Catlin’s proposed rent control ordinance, the City commissioned Anirban Basu, a policy analyst from the Sage Policy Group (a private consultant), to produce a report (hereinafter “the Sage Report”) addressing the question of whether the City’s stated policy objectives could be addressed reasonably through a rent stabilization program. The report, released in April 2005 and entitled “There is a Rational Basis for Rent Stabilization in College Park, Maryland,” analyzed the available literature on rent control and City-specific data concerning the rental market. The report confirmed the City’s beliefs regarding the pattern of declining home ownership, increasing rental conversions, diminished housing affordability, and code violations in the City. The Sage Report concluded that rent stabilization “is likely to be conducive” not just to stabilizing rents for affected properties, but also to enhancing home ownership and decreasing violations of the City code by reducing future rental conversions of single-family homes.

One month after the Sage Report was released, on 24 May 2005, the Mayor and City Council adopted, by a 7-1 vote, Ordinance 05-2-02 (hereinafter “the Ordinance”), which, according to its title, established a rent stabilization program in the City, set forth the fees and penalties associated with the program, and created a Rent Stabilization Board to administer [485]*485the program.3 The Ordinance’s Preamble set forth the basic legislative facts as found by the City Council and explicated the general rationale underlying the City’s adoption of the Ordinance, providing in pertinent part:4

WHEREAS, on June 10, 2003, the Mayor and City Council of the City of College Park approved the City of College Park Housing Plan (the “Housing Plan”); and
WHEREAS, according to the Housing Plan, the City of College Park had a total of 6,245 housing units in 2000 (not including 8,420 beds in University of Maryland dormitories, another 1,740 beds in public/private partnership housing on University of Maryland owned land, and 1,386 beds in fraternity and sorority houses); and
WHEREAS, 4,204 of those units, or 67.3%, are single-family detached homes, while 152 units or 2.4% are single-family attached houses (townhouses), 268 units, or 4.2%, are located within structures containing 2-4 units, and 1,613 units, or 25.8%, are within structures containing 5 units or more; and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 A.3d 421, 415 Md. 475, 2010 Md. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-city-of-college-park-md-2010.