ZONING BD. OF HOWARD CTY. v. Kanode

267 A.2d 138, 258 Md. 586, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1032
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 7, 1970
Docket[No. 419, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 267 A.2d 138 (ZONING BD. OF HOWARD CTY. v. Kanode) 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
ZONING BD. OF HOWARD CTY. v. Kanode, 267 A.2d 138, 258 Md. 586, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1032 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The zoning pains of Howard County have often required our attention during the past decade. 1 Although the instant case is scarcely more than a twinge it must nevertheless be dealt with. The Planning Board recommended denial of the petition for reclassification. The Zoning Board, after a hearing, denied the petition. The circuit court reversed the Zoning Board. We shall reverse the decision of the circuit court.

The tract of land with a part of which we shall be concerned adjoins the town of Elkridge. It consists of 36 acres fronting 616 feet on the south side of Old Washington Boulevard (Md. Rte. 447) and extending in a generally southerly direction a half mile or so to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, upon which it bounds for a distance of 1,300 feet. Augustine Avenue extends south from Old Washington Boulevard along the western boundary for about 1,000 feet. From elevation 138 (feet above sea level) at Old Washington Boulevard the ground drops to elevation 114 in the first 150 feet and then rises gradually to elevation 198 in the next 1,200 feet. Continuing *588 in a southerly direction it runs gradually downhill to the railroad’s right of way to elevation 60 at the southeast corner and elevation 75 at the southwest corner, which is crossed by a 150 foot electric transmission line right of way.

In 1957 Charles Shaab, who at that time owned the tract, sought, unsuccessfully, to have it, or some part of it, reclassified from a residential use to a commercial use. John Hirsch acquired it from Shaab in February 1962. Three months later the petition of Arthur McGinnis (apparently Hirsch’s purchaser under a contingent contract) to have the tract reclassified from R-20 (Residential, one and two family detached) to R-A-l (garden apartments) was denied. In January 1964, upon the petition of the Howard County Planning Commission, the tract was reclassified from R-20 to R-12 (Residential, one family semi-detached). In 1966 Hirsch sold it to Allan Berman whose petition for reclassification from R-12 to R-A-l, following disapproval by the Planning Commission, was denied by the Board of County Commissioners on 27 September 1966. On 20 November 1967 Berman sold the tract to Area Realty, Inc., for $150,000.

We note that the president and ostensible owner of Area Realty, Inc., is Bernard F. Goldberg, Esq., a member of the Maryland bar, whose office is in Howard County. He was the attorney of record for Allan Berman in the matter of the 1966 petition for reclassification. Mr. Goldberg was familiar with the tract and he was “perfectly aware” of the fact that its zoning classification was R-12. Richard Smith, the assistant project engineer for Matz, Childs & Associates, civil engineers, testified he had been associated with the tract “since about the middle of 1967 when Mr. Goldberg brought the property to us and asked us because of our previous familiarity with the site to proceed with .a schematic diagram for an R-12 layout. * * * In the meantime [between the middle of 1967 and 9 November 1967] Mr. Goldberg advised us to go ahead since he was purchasing the property to proceed with a boundary survey and also with the topo *589 graphic survey * * *.” Upon the completion, in March 1968, of the topographic survey and after further study Smith said they advised Mr. Goldberg that “the plan was not reasonable to be developed as an R-12 subdivision.” They concluded that “the site would be best developed as R-A.”

Mr. Goldberg said he tried, without success, “to sell it [the tract] one way or the other” to various individuals and organizations. He did not say upon what terms. In the fall of 1968 he was able to arouse some interest on the part of Robert Kanode, a local contractor. Before they could come to an agreement, however, the voters had adopted a new charter for Howard County. One of the side effects of the election of 5 November 1968 was the prohibition of final action on any zoning until 28 January 1969, the effective date of the new government. Bowie v. Board of County Comm’rs, 253 Md. 602, 615 (1969). Eventually Kanode agreed to buy the back 26 acres of the tract (which we shall now call “the property”) subject to its being reclassified from R-12 to R-A-l. He (Kanode) testified it would not be “practical or economical” to attempt an R-12 development of the property. He conceded, however, that he had “done a real good job” in another development where the topography was not much different. While it is not altogether clear from the record it is our understanding that Area Realty, Inc., has retained the 10 acre portion fronting on Old Washington Boulevard and that it is content for it to remain in the R-12 classification.

Kanode’s petition, filed not long after the new government assumed office, was considered by the new Howard County Planning Board on 21 May 1969. The Board found, in substance, as follows:

1. The proposal is not in accordance with the General Plan adopted 20 July 1960.
2. Public water is available.
3. The existing sewer in Augustine Avenue cannot be utilized. The system to be constructed would have to be connected to the “Deep Run Interceptor” (south of the B & 0 Railroad).
*590 4. A new school unit would be required.
5. R-A-l zoning would require two more classrooms than R-12.
6. “Zoning Case No. 453 granted on December 27, 1966, includes 57.25 acres of R-A-l which has not been developed as of this date. This area is located north of Harwood Park and is within a 1% mile radius from the subject property. The 57.25 acres could accommodate 855 apartment units.”
7. “The General Plan for Howard County proposed nine separate apartment areas totaling over 800 acres to be used for apartment development. These planned apartment sections were designed in clusters near shopping and commercial centers where transportation facilities and other public services are or will be provided. The subject property is some distance from commercial services.”
8. “Less than a mile from the subject property, on U.S. Route One at Montgomery Road, are approximately 94 acres of land designated for apartment development in the General Plan which are still undeveloped. The designated 94 acres are capable of accommodating about 1420 apartment units in accordance with the Zoning Regulations of Howard County. Six (6) of the 94 acres are presently zoned (BCC Case 415) in the R-A-l District and are undeveloped. In comparison, the applicant’s request could create an additional 390 apartment units.”
9. Dangerous traffic conditions would ensue.

The Planning Board’s conclusions, in substance, are as follows:

1. “[A] very definite traffic problem” would be created.
2. There is no need for apartments in the area.
*591 3.

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Bluebook (online)
267 A.2d 138, 258 Md. 586, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zoning-bd-of-howard-cty-v-kanode-md-1970.