Whittington v. Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church

202 A.2d 751, 236 Md. 185
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 17, 1964
Docket[No. 404, September Term, 1963.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 202 A.2d 751 (Whittington v. Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church) 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
Whittington v. Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church, 202 A.2d 751, 236 Md. 185 (Md. 1964).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

by special assignment, delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case involves the question of whether an alleged street was dedicated to public use, and, if it was dedicated, whether the trial court should have permitted an abandonment of the same.

The evidence discloses that Henry J. Knott and Marion I. Knott, his wife, acquired title to a certain tract of land in Prince George’s County, by deed dated June 27, 1957, and recorded among the Land Records of said County in Liber 2117, Folio 485, known as Palmer Park. Subsequently, the Knotts placed on record a plat of subdivision of part of the above de *188 scribed land, being designated as Plat No. 3, Part of Blocks 2, 4, 6, 7 and 8, Section Two, Palmer Park, Prince George’s County. The owners’ dedication, which appears on the plat, recites: “We, Henry J. Knott and Marion I. Knott, his wife, owners of the property shown and described hereon, hereby adopt this plan of subdivision, establish the minimum building restriction lines and dedicate the streets and paths to public use.” The date of dedication as shown on the plat was November 1, 1957. The plat was approved by The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, Prince George’s County Planning Board, and recorded in Plat Book W.W.W. 31, Plat 80.

The appellants, Harold F. Whittington and Jean T. Whittington, his wife, are the owners of a leasehold interest in Lot No. 54, Block 8, as shown on said plat in the lower left corner. The area in dispute bounds Lot 54 on the west, the land of the appellee, Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church of Palmer Park, hereinafter called “Church,” on the east, and Allen-dale Drive on the north. It is referred to and known as 82nd Place. As shown on the above mentioned plat, it is designated as a street leading off of Allendale Drive, adjacent to both the property of the appellants and appellee.

After the plat was recorded, grading plans were filed with the Department of Public Works in March of 1958 by the owners and subdividers Knott, and, as a result a paved road known as Allendale Drive was constructed at a time when the appellee was the owner of the Church property. It was the original intention of the Knotts to build a street known as 82nd Place, extending from Allendale Drive along Lot 54, Block 8, and the Church property, and continuing a total distance of 616 feet to Sheriff Road. Thereafter, because of certain grading problems, it became impossible for them to build the said street as planned, and they requested and were granted permission by the Department of Public Works to delete 82nd Place from the said grading and paving plans.

Thereafter, Henry J. Knott and wife conveyed a substantial portion of the land they acquired under the original deed of June 27, 1957, to the Severn River Construction Company, a company controlled by Knott, and said Company recorded a *189 fourth section plat on November 3, 1959, in Plat Book, W.W.W. 36, Plat 31, of the County Land Records, with approval of the Park and Planning Commission and the Planning Board, and showing parts of Block 8-A, 8-B and 8-C, Section Two, Palmer Park, which was the land extending in the rear of the land embraced in Plat Book W.W.W. 31, Plat 80.

The plat showed the major portion of the area which was to constitute 82nd Place, as shown on the original grading plans and which was to extend from Allendale Drive to Sheriff Road, had been laid out as Lots 16-27, Block 8-A, to be used and occupied by the owners of the aforesaid lots, together with a path 20 feet wide in the rear of said lots. There is no dedication shown on this plat of any extension of the unmarked street shown as a dedicated street knowm as 82nd Place on the plat recorded in Plat Book W.W.W. 31, Plat 80.

The evidence discloses that at the time Allendale Drive was graded and paved, the grade for the street was considerably below the grade of the Church property of the appellee. Access to the Church was by way of a flight of steps leading up from the street to the front entrance. At first vehicular traffic was by a roadway on the Church property from Allendale Drive, but this was discontinued when it was discovered that in the construction of Allendale Drive the subdivider had left a strip of land between the street, as paved, and the Church property. The Church discontinued this means of access and began using 82nd Place as a means of ingress and egress to the Church property and it has been in continuous use since that date.

The appellants desired to secure the abandonment of 82nd Place, as shown on Plat Book W.W.W. 31, Plat 80, and at their instigation the Board of County Commissioners of Prince George’s County passed a Resolution on November 14, 1961, that “82nd Place, Palmer Park, be abandoned.” On that date a letter was written by the President of the Board to Mr. Whittington advising him that the Board had approved the abandonment of 82nd Place between Allendale Drive and Lot 16, Block 8-A, Section 2, Palmer Park, as per Plat W.W.W. 36, Plat 31. Mr. Whittington was further advised that he could deliver this letter to his attorney in order that he might proceed to accomplish the abandonment under the provisions of the law.

*190 On January 30, 1962, the appellants received a deed from Henry J. Knott, et al., purporting to convey the area shown in Plat Book W.W.W. 31, Plat 80, as 82nd Place, containing 5,000 square feet, more or less.

Thereafter, on August 23, 1963, the appellants filed a bill in equity in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County for the abandonment of 82nd Place, shown as a dedicated street on the plat recorded in Plat Book W.W.W. 31, Plat 80, and described in the deed from Henry J. Knott, et al., to Harold F. Whittington, et ux., dated January 30, 1962, and recorded in Liber 2647, Folio 26. The bill prayed that the Court pass an order in accordance with the provisions of the Code of Prince George’s County, Art. 17, § 308 (1953 Ed.), as amended by the Laws of Maryland (1957), Ch. 693.

The appellee, owner of the land adjacent to 82nd Place, filed a petition in opposition to abandonment of the street in question.

The trial court found that the property referred to as 82nd Place, located in Kent Forest Addition to Palmer Park, Section Two, extending from Allendale Drive along Lot 54, Block 8, as shown on plat recorded in Plat W.W.W. 31, Plat 80, as described in petition to abandon street, is dedicated to public use and that this property is used by various members of the public and that members of the public would be damaged by removal of the property from dedication. The relief sought in the petition to abandon was denied and the bill dismissed. From this decree the appellants have appealed.

We believe Art. 17, § 308, of the Code of Prince George’s County, as repealed and re-enacted in Ch. 693 of the Laws of Maryland (1957), is controlling in this case. Section 308 reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
202 A.2d 751, 236 Md. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittington-v-good-shepherd-evangelical-lutheran-church-md-1964.