Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority v. One Parcel of Land

413 F. Supp. 102
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 19, 1976
DocketCiv. A. M-74-1326
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 413 F. Supp. 102 (Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority v. One Parcel of Land) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority v. One Parcel of Land, 413 F. Supp. 102 (D. Md. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES R. MILLER, Jr., District Judge.

The plaintiff, Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), has sued in this action to acquire by eminent domain 3,367 square feet of land in Montgomery County to be used in the construction, maintenance, and operation of a rapid rail transit system for the Washington Metropolitan Area, commonly called “Metro.” The property is sought to be acquired in fee simple absolute.

The land lies within the bed of a “paper street,” known as Selim Road which was dedicated to public use as a road by a plat recorded among the Land Records of Montgomery County, Maryland on June 7, 1922, in Plat Book 3 at Plat No. 229, being a plat of “BLAIR, Section 1.” The segment of Selim Road in which the property in issue lies has never been constructed nor used as a public street and has not been accepted for maintenance by Montgomery County.

Abutting the subject portion of the road bed of Selim Road on the west is the right-of-way of the B & 0 Railroad. Abutting it on the east is Lot 16, Block I, “BLAIR, Section 1” which is owned by the defendants, Florence W. Pratt and Charles Thomas Pratt, her son. It has been stipulated by the parties hereto that Florence W. Pratt and Charles Thomas Pratt, as the owners of Lot 16, are the owners of the underlying fee simple absolute title to that portion of the road bed of Selim Road which abuts Lot 16 for the entire width of Selim Road.

By agreement of the parties, this case was tried to the court without a jury. The facts are essentially undisputed.

The parties agree that the property condemned is to be valued as of September 1, *104 1973, the date upon which the plaintiff took possession. The condemned property has not been assessed for real estate tax purposes since 1922 when the original plat dedicating it to highway use was recorded.

It is agreed that, under the law in effect in Montgomery County on September 1, 1973, the subject portion of the bed of Selim Road would have been governed by the zoning regulations applicable to Lot 16 in the event that a petition had been granted for the abandonment of the public right-of-way over said road bed. Lot 16 at that time was classified in the 1-1 (light industrial) Zone under the Zoning Ordinance of Montgomery County, Maryland.

On September 1, 1973, and prior thereto, there were no existing or proposed water or sewer facilities in the subject part of the road bed of Selim Road. Neither the Washington Oas Light Company nor the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company had any facilities in the subject road bed of Selim Road. The Potomac Electric Power Company had an electric pole line along the edge of Selim Road, but, in the past, the presence of such a line has never prevented the abandonment of a “paper street,” the problem generally being resolved by the fee simple owner giving the electric company a pole line easement.

It has been stipulated that Section 50-15, Montgomery County Code 1972, is a statutory authority which would have been applicable to the petition for abandonment of the subject portion of the bed of Selim Road if such petition had been filed on or prior to the date of taking, September 1, 1973. That statute provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

“. . . the maker of any such plat, his heirs or assigns, shall have the right to apply by petition to the circuit court for the county for the leave to abandon the subdivision of lands so made by him, or any part thereof . . .; provided the area to be abandoned has not been used by the general public or accepted for maintenance by the county and the court, if convinced upon such proof . that no damage can be in anywise sustained by the general public or persons other than the petitioners, shall have power to pass an order authorizing and empowering such petitioner to abandon such subdivision either in whole or in part

The statute goes on to provide that upon the filing of such a petition, the petitioner shall serve a copy thereof upon the Montgomery County Executive, upon the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission or the County Planning Board, upon the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, and upon certain public utility companies and that the court, in arriving at its decision on the petition of abandonment, shall consider any recommendation filed by those agencies or utility companies.

From all the evidence in the case the court finds as a fact, indeed it is not seriously disputed, that no public agency, or public utility, or private adjacent or abutting neighboring property owners would have objected to the abandonment of the subject portion of the road bed of Selim Road on or about September 1,1973, but for the desire and plan of WMATA to utilize part of said property in connection with the construction of the Metro. The court finds, however, that one or more of the public agencies involved would have been virtually certain to have objected to the abandonment of the subject portion of the road bed of Selim Road in any abandonment proceeding instituted by a private party in 1973. The objection would have been based upon the ground that WMATA planned to acquire and utilize said property in conjunction with the construction of Metro, and that abandonment of the street dedication would increase the cost of acquisition of the property for said purpose.

The function of this court is to value the underlying fee simple absolute interest which the defendants, Florence Pratt and her son, had in the aforesaid property on September 1, 1973. If the easement for Selim Road over the subject property must be considered for the purposes of this case as being incapable of being abandoned, then the value of that interest is nominal. If, on *105 the other hand, there were a reasonable possibility on September 1, 1978, that the abandonment could have been achieved, such possibility must be considered in arriving at the value of the underlying fee simple absolute interest.

The Court of Appeals of Maryland, in Maryland-Nat. Capital Park and Planning Commission v. McCaw, 246 Md. 662, 229 A.2d 584 (1967), enunciated the effect of the operative language of a statute which was essentially identical with the relevant parts of section 50-15 of the Montgomery County Code. In that case, the court concluded that the abandonment of “paper streets” could not be granted where the possibility existed that taxes might be increased by virtue of the increased cost of the later acquisition of the land in a subsequent condemnation proceeding for a different public purpose from that for which the property was originally dedicated. Noting that the statute provided that abandonment could be ordered only if “no damage can be in anywise sustained by the general public” and that the property, on which the “paper streets” in that case were located, was proposed to be acquired for public use by the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission for a proposed regional park, the court stated as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
413 F. Supp. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-metropolitan-area-transit-authority-v-one-parcel-of-land-mdd-1976.