White v. North

708 A.2d 1093, 121 Md. App. 196, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 30, 1998
Docket981, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 708 A.2d 1093 (White v. North) 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
White v. North, 708 A.2d 1093, 121 Md. App. 196, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 95 (Md. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

HARRELL, Judge.

Anne Marie and Richard D. White, III, appellants, seek restoration of an area variance to construct a swimming pool adjacent to their home in Annapolis that had been granted by the County Board of Appeals of Anne Arundel County (the Board), only to be snatched away by the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County (Robert H. Heller, Jr., J.) based on a petition for judicial review filed by John C. North, II, Chair, Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Commission, appellee. 1 We shall affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

*201 Although appellants frame two questions on appeal, we have condensed them into the following question:

If there was substantial evidence before the Board to support its findings as to each of the ordinance requirements for the grant of the variance, was it arbitrary and capricious for the circuit court to substitute its judgment for that of the Board?

The Factual Record and Legal Background

Apparently sometime in 1996 2 appellants applied for certain variances to enable them to construct decks 3 on their existing house at 1913 Martins Cove Court in Annapolis and a swimming pool in the rear yard of the 1.52 acre lot. The apparent variances sought were from the requirements of Anne Arundel County Code 1993, Article 28, Section 1A-I04(a)(l) and (c)(H): 4

§ 1A-104. Plan requirements.

(a) All development plans in the critical area shall contain notations of the following criteria that shall be a condition of development on the property:
(1) There shall be a minimum, 100-foot buffer landward from the mean high-water line of tidal waters, *202 tributary streams, and tidal wetlands. The buffer shall be expanded ... to include any contiguous, sensitive areas such as steep slopes ... and shall include all land within 50 feet of the top of the bank of steep slopes. There shall be a minimum 25-foot buffer surrounding all nontidal wetlands;
* * * * *
(c) Within limited development areas and resource conservation areas the following additional criteria shall apply:
(12) Within limited development areas, new development activities are not permitted in the buffer except water-dependent facilities[.]

The parties do not contest the fact that appellants’ lot, to a substantial degree, and the proposed pool site, in particular, presently fall within the designation of a limited development area (LDA) and the extended critical area buffer for purposes of Maryland Code (1974, 1990 Repl.Vol., 1997 Supp.), Natural Resources Article, §§ 8-1801 to 8-1813 (“Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Protection Program”); Title 27 of COMAR (“Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Commission”); and Articles 28 (“Zoning”) and 26 (“Subdivision”) of the Anne Arundel County Code. The parties also do not dispute that the proposed swimming pool, for purposes of applicable critical areas laws and regulations, constitutes an “impervious area” 5 and is not a “water-dependent facility.” 6 Thus, the effect of the *203 critical areas regulatory scheme is to prohibit the construction of the pool within the extended critical area buffer unless a variance is obtained. The Whites suggest that the origin of their problem is the nonserendipitous timing of the full legal effective of the critical areas regulatory scheme vis á vis the Whites’ intended development of their lot.

The Whites purchased their previously subdivided lot (Lot 16, Martin’s Cove Farm subdivision) in 1983. Ms. White testified at the Board’s 9 September 1996 variance hearing that she and Mr. White “spent several years planning the house.” Although apparently aided by various professionals, such as Mr. Daniel J. Werner, a registered professional engineer with Anarex, Inc., Ms. White stated she and Mr. White “drew the plans ourselves and submitted them ourselves” 7 and “began initial construction, lot clearing, and so forth in 1987.” Construction of their home, however, did not begin until 1990.

During the “lot clearing” phase, the Whites not only “cleared the site,” but performed site grading. The site grading included excavation of the home site and deposit of the excavated and disturbed earth elsewhere on the lot. Ms. White testified, with regard to the site grading, that “[i]t was a gradual slope [referring to the pre-grading conditions on the lot], but it wasn’t —this 15 percent slope is created by the excavation.”

*204 Mr. Werner, testifying before the Board as part of appellants’ case, stated with regard to the effect and extent of the site grading that preceded the commencement of house construction that

the whole site is created, by the way. It’s completely cleared____ And the soils around the house and in the disturbed area were changed during the construction of the house.

Thus, the area where the pool was proposed ultimately was “disturbed [built-up] and created by the grading [for] the house.”

Describing the soil that existed on the lot in its pre-graded state, Mr. Werner referred to it as a “Esboro loamy sand,” generally with a clay layer somewhere beneath. In the course of the grading activity, however, sandy clay soil became the dominant soil in the area where the pool is proposed now. Moreover, the redistribution of earth created a steeper slope than had previously existed in the same area. Mr. Werner described the pre-grading soil condition as “more permeable” than the “relatively impervious” post-grading condition. 8

Ms. White stated that she and Mr. White had intended from the beginning of their house planning efforts to include tiers of decking on the exterior of the home and a swimming pool at some undefined location on the lot. Although some decking was shown on the approved home construction plan, no decking was actually constructed at that time. No swimming pool was depicted on any house or site plan submitted by the Whites at that time. Ms. White attributed this omission from the 1990 house plans to “probably just an oversight.” 9 Explaining why she now wanted to construct a pool, she stated:

*205 [T]o enjoy it. Several of my Mends have pools on waterfront properties[ 10 ] And, since we’re not even near the waterfront, I never anticipated this to be such an issue.

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Bluebook (online)
708 A.2d 1093, 121 Md. App. 196, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-north-mdctspecapp-1998.