WV Dia Westminster, LLC v. Mayor & Common Council of Westminster

200 A.3d 334, 462 Md. 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 2019
Docket22/18
StatusPublished

This text of 200 A.3d 334 (WV Dia Westminster, LLC v. Mayor & Common Council of Westminster) 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
WV Dia Westminster, LLC v. Mayor & Common Council of Westminster, 200 A.3d 334, 462 Md. 369 (Md. 2019).

Opinion

Watts, J.

This case arises from the denial of an application to amend the General Development Plan for Wakefield Valley ("the Wakefield Valley GDP"), located in the City of Westminster in Carroll County, Maryland. In July 2016, WV DIA Westminster, LLC ("Developer"), Petitioner, filed an application to amend the Wakefield Valley GDP to permit construction of fifty-three homes on what is designated as "Parcel W" of a former golf course ("the Application"). In December 2016, the Mayor and Common Council of Westminster ("the Council"), 1 Respondent, held a public hearing on the Application. In January 2017, the Council held another public hearing to consider whether to approve the Application; at the end of the hearing, the Council voted to deny the Application, and the president of the Council directed staff to prepare a written decision to that effect. In February 2017, Developer filed in the Circuit Court for Carroll County a petition for judicial review. In March 2017, the Council adopted Ordinance No. 876, denying the Application and incorporating an attached written decision, which set forth findings. Developer then filed an amended petition for judicial review.

In July 2017, the circuit court heard argument on the amended petition for judicial review, and held the matter sub curia for review of the record. In November 2017, the circuit court issued a memorandum opinion and order, affirming the Council's decision as set forth in Ordinance No. 876. In December 2017, Developer filed a notice of appeal. While this case was pending in the Court of Special Appeals, Developer filed in this Court a petition for a writ of certiorari , which we granted. See WV DIA Westminster v. Mayor & Common Council of Westminster , 459 Md. 401 , 187 A.3d 36 (2018).

Against this backdrop, we decide: (I) whether the Council's decision denying the Application was quasi-judicial or legislative in nature; (II) whether the Council erred in considering the zonal classification of Parcel W in evaluating the Application; (III) whether there is substantial evidence in the record as a whole to support the Council's decision; and (IV) if the Council's decision was premised upon an error of law or lacked substantial evidence, whether the appropriate remedy is to reverse and remand the matter with instructions to approve the Application or simply to remand the matter to the Council for further proceedings.

We hold that: (I) the Council's decision denying the Application was a quasi-judicial act, not a legislative act, because the decision was reached on individual grounds involving one parcel through a deliberative fact-finding process involving testimony and the weighing of evidence; accordingly, the decision is subject to judicial review to determine whether substantial evidence in the record as a whole supports the Council's findings and conclusions and to determine whether the Council's decision is premised upon an error of law; (II) the Council was not prohibited from considering, among other things, the zonal classification of Parcel W when determining whether to grant the Application; (III) substantial evidence in the record as a whole supports the Council's denial of the Application; and (IV) because we affirm, holding that there is substantial evidence in the record as a whole to support the Council's findings and conclusions and that the Council's decision is not premised upon an error of law, we need not determine whether a remand or a reversal is the proper remedy, as neither remedy is applicable.

BACKGROUND

The Application for amendment of the Wakefield Valley GDP sought to add fifty-three new houses on what is now designated as Parcel W on the Special Purpose Plat Resubdivision of "P" and "Q" Wakefield Valley, recorded in Plat Book 54 on Page 127 among the Land Records of Carroll County. Parcel W comprises 38.2934 acres and is zoned C-Conservation; it is located along the southeastern side of Bell Road, across from Chadwick Drive, with part of the property abutting Fenby Farm Road. The property is part of the Wakefield Valley GDP, approved by the Council in 1978, which addressed the overall development of a number of parcels collectively called Wakefield Valley. With this background in mind, we trace the history of the approval of the Wakefield Valley GDP and subsequent amendments, as well as the adoption of a Zoning Ordinance.

As of 1978, Westminster did not have a Zoning Ordinance. In 1978, the Council approved "[t]he Wakefield Valley/Fenby Farm General Development Plan" for "734.56± acres of land ... on the western edge of" Westminster, i.e. , the Wakefield Valley GDP. The Wakefield Valley GDP consisted of three categories of land use-residential, commercial, and open space-with the "major open space use within the community [to be] a championship golf course." According to the Wakefield Valley GDP, "[a]pproximately 483 ± acres or 66% of the site is devoted to residential, 20± acres or 3% to commercial, and 228± or 31% to open space use." The Wakefield Valley GDP emphasized, however, that "[t]he [c]entral spine of the combined properties is formed by a flood plain area and a new nine[-]hole golf course[,] which [would] be completed in the early summer of 1978." The Wakefield Valley GDP stated that plans were "underway for the completion of the remaining nine holes" and that "construction of the second nine [would] be based on increased demand and continued development of the residential component of the project." As originally approved, the Wakefield Valley GDP area included twenty-one parcels, designated alphabetically from "A" to "U." According to the Wakefield Valley GDP, the overall gross density was to be 1.6 units per acre, with 31% of open space. And, as originally approved, the Wakefield Valley GDP envisioned a mixed-use development consisting of 670 to 768 residential units on approximately 734 acres, with 20 acres devoted to commercial use.

The following year, in 1979, the Council adopted a Zoning Ordinance, now codified as Chapter 164 of the Code of the City of Westminster ("Westminster Code"). Because a variety of plans were in place before the adoption of the Zoning Ordinance-including the Wakefield Valley GDP-the Zoning Ordinance included a section expressly permitting development to occur based on the existing plans already approved by the Council and providing for amendments to those plans using the process described in an identified provision of the Zoning Ordinance. That section-now codified as Westminster Code § 164-133B-provides, in pertinent part:

All preliminary plans, final plans, revised preliminary or final plans and all development plans of any type which have been approved by the Mayor and Common Council and/or the Commission prior to November 5, 1979, shall continue to be approved and valid after said date, regardless of the zonal classification of the real property as to which such plans pertain, and said real property shall be developed in accordance with the provisions of such plans.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A.3d 334, 462 Md. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wv-dia-westminster-llc-v-mayor-common-council-of-westminster-md-2019.