DocketNumber: [No. 112, October Term, 1945.]
Judges: Marbury, Delaplaine, Collins, Grason, Henderson
Filed Date: 4/12/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On May 7, 1945, a petition for a writ of mandamus was filed against the appellants in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, alleging that the appellee was the owner of two lots in a subdivision of Bay Ridge, having a frontage of 200 feet on Bay Drive and 243 feet on Upsher Ave.; that he made application on April 28, 1945 for a building permit to erect on the rear of his lots five rustic, 16' x 16' cabins at a cost of $300 per cabin, and one rustic central service building, 16' x 32', to cost $600; that the permit was refused on May 1, 1945; that the refusal was "arbitrary, unlawful and unjust and in violation of the plaintiff's rights."
An answer was filed to the petition setting up certain zoning regulations, adopted by the County Board on January 30, 1945, pursuant to authority conferred by *Page 332
chapter
It is conceded that the application for permit complied in all respects with the building Code then in force, but it is also conceded that it violated the applicable zoning regulations, which called for "one-family residences; no apartments", not more "than one residence on a lot with a fifty (50) foot front", and no house "to contain less than 3,200 cubic feet" or "cost less than $2,500."
Bay Ridge is a peninsula located at the mouth of the Severn River, about four miles by road from Annapolis. Where not surrounded by water, or bordered by water, the area is bordered by privately owned farm land. The area contains about 300 acres and was surveyed and laid out in building lots about 1920; since that time it has been maintained as a residential community, with the exception of about 12 acres developed as a bathing beach and summer resort. Most of this acreage is covered with timber and unimproved. There are about 200 private residences, most of which are suitable for year-round habitation. Building restrictions substantially identical with the zoning restrictions were incorporated in the original deeds, but these expired in 1935. The petitioner purchased his lots subsequent to 1935. The proposal to zone was presented to the County Commissioners August 2, 1944, by Bay Ridge Civic Association, a body corporate. Several public hearings were held thereon, after due notice, and the regulations were finally adopted, with amendments, on January 30, 1945.
The enabling Act, chapter
"For all or any of said purposes the County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County may designate within the County certain residence districts or divisions of such number, shape and area as may be deemed best suited to carry out the purposes of this sub-title, and within such districts they may regulate and restrict the erection, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair and use of buildings, structures and land. All such regulations shall be uniform for each class or kind of building or structure throughout each district, but the regulations in one district may differ from those in other districts.
"517. The County Commissioners shall determine the manner in which regulations and restrictions, and the boundaries of such districts, shall be established and enforced, and from time to time amended, supplemented and changed. Before determining the boundaries of the proposed districts and the regulation to be enforced therein, they shall hold a public hearing or hearings thereon, giving at least fifteen days notice in a newspaper of general circulation throughout the County, of the place and time of the beginning of such hearing or hearings. The County Commissioners shall have power to *Page 334 amend, supplement or repeal the regulations or restrictions adopted by them, provided that before doing so they shall follow the same procedure with respect to notice and public hearings as is herein provided for the original regulations and restrictions.
"518. The County Commissioners are hereby vested with such duties and powers as may be necessary and advisable for the proper administration of this sub-title and of such zoning regulations as they may adopt under the provisions of this sub-title, including the power to make general exceptions to permit continuance of existing uses and to permit limited trade or commercial uses of designated streets or blocks within residence areas, and including the power to summon and compel the attendance of witnesses.
"519. Any person, persons, taxpayer, officer, department, board or bureau of the County, jointly or severally aggrieved by any decision of the County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County, may, within thirty days after the filing of such decision in the office of the County Commissioners, appeal to the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County.
"The said Court shall hear all such appeals de novo and shall have power to affrm the decision of the County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County, or reverse the same, in whole or in part, and may remand any case for the entering of a proper order or for further proceedings, as the Court shall determine.
"All issues in any proceeding under this sub-title shall have preference over all other civil actions and proceedings.
"520. The County Commissioners shall keep in a separate book all rules, regulations and restrictions adopted by them from time to time under the authority of this sub-title, and any amendments or supplements thereto, and shall cause copies to be printed and made available for general distribution. Any such printed copy, together with any amendments and supplements, when certified as accurate by the Chief Clerk of the County *Page 335 Commissioners, shall be deemed prima facie evidence thereof in any judicial proceeding in the State.
"521. Any violation of regulations and restrictions adopted pursuant to this sub-title shall be a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine not to exceed One Hundred Dollars ($100.00), or by imprisonment not to exceed thirty days, or both fine and imprisonment. Any person who shall violate such regulations and restrictions shall be deemed guilty of a separate offense for every day that such violation shall continue. Any person whose property is affected by any violation, including abutting and adjacent property owners, whether specially damaged or not, may maintain an action in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County for an injunction, enjoining the erection, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair or use of buildings, structures and land in violation of regulations and restrictions adopted pursuant to this sub-title.
"522. The County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County are hereby vested with full authority and power to levy on the assessable property in each zone created under the provisions of this Act, such amounts as may be necessary to effect the proper administration of this Act."
The regulations adopted read as follows:
"1. The entire area of Bay Ridge is to be strictly residential as per the duly recorded plat of Bay Ridge. It shall be limited to one family residences; no apartments. This shall not apply to the erection of a Community Club House and Pier to be erected by the residents of Bay Ridge.
"2. No Building shall be erected in Bay Ridge nearer to the avenue, street or drive on which it fronts, as now laid out on the plats of Bay Ridge Realty Corporation, than forty (40) feet, measuring on the center of the front lot line, or five (5) feet from the rear or side line. Any separate garage shall be erected on the rear part of lots and not less than seventy five (75) feet from the front Building line. *Page 336
"3. There shall not at any time be more than one residence on a lot with a fifty (50) foot frontage. No building shall be erected on a lot having an average width of less than fifty (50) feet, or an area of less than 5,000 square feet.
"4. No house shall be constructed on any lot fronting the Severn River, the Chesapeake Bay, Sands Avenue, Lake Drive from Sands Avenue, to Decatur Avenue, Decatur Avenue, Barry Avenue and Farragut Road, to contain less than 5,000 cubic feet, and to cost less than $3,500. On all other lots no house shall be constructed to contain less than 3,200 cubic feet and cost less than $2,500. All buildings used as residences, or for business purposes in Bay Ridge shall conform to the Building Code and shall be provided with interior, sanitary plumbing.
"5. No wines, distilled, or fermented liquors, or intoxicating drinks of any kind shall be sold, or offered for sale in Bay Ridge.
"6. No hunting shall be permitted in the area zoned, and no poultry or animals except dogs and cats, and these not to be allowed to run at large shall be kept, nor any nuisance of any kind kept on property, which shall be dangerous to health or obnoxious.
"7. All wells shall be drilled and capped. (Artesian).
"8. All plumbing and septic tanks and disposal fields must be approved and passed by Anne Arundel County Board of Health. All residences built in Bay Ridge must be equipped with a bath tub or shower, lavatory, sink, flush toilet connected to septic tanks, grease trap and sub-soil drain.
"9. No commercial, manufacturing, industrial businesses of any kind, public bathing beaches, or places of public entertainment, shall be constructed, maintained or operated at any point within the zoning area, unless specifically permitted in covenant or deed executed prior to the adoption of these regulations, this shall not apply however, to a community house, or entertainment, which shall be conducted as a community enterprise. *Page 337
"10. No building with its accessory buildings, shall occupy in excess of forty (40) percent of an interior lot, nor in excess of fifty (50) percent of a corner lot.
"11. The lawful use of the buildings or premises, as existing and lawful at the time of the adoption of any regulation heretofore or hereafter adopted may be continued, although such does not conform to the provisions of such regulation, provided no structural alterations, except such as may be required by law or regulation, or no enlargement is made, or no new building is erected. Where structural alterations are made to a building of a non-conforming use, such use shall be changed to a use consistent with the provisions of these regulations for the district in which such building is located, only if the cost of such exceeds thirty (30) percent of the cost of the original building."
Three questions seem to be presented on this appeal: (1) the constitutional validity of the enabling act, (2) whether the regulations adopted are within the scope of the powers granted by the enabling act, and (3) whether the action of the Board of County Commissioners in refusing to issue a building permit was arbitrary, unlawful and in violation of the plaintiff's rights.
Of the constitutional validity of a comprehensive zoning ordinance there can be little question, since the decision of the Supreme Court in Euclid, Ohio, v. Ambler Realty Co.,
This court is fully committed to the proposition that zoning, in general, is a valid exercise of the police power. R.B.Construction Co. v. Jackson,
In State ex rel. Civello v. New Orleans, supra, the court said,
In Acker v. Baldwin, 1941,
We think there is no constitutional requirement that an entire municipality or county be zoned at one time, or that regulations be uniform throughout the county. The enabling act in the case at bar contemplates uniformity for each class or kind of building or structure in a particular district; it specifically recognizes that restrictions may vary as between districts. It is not beyond the power of the legislature to limit the authority conferred upon the local legislative body to one type of use regulation, leaving open other areas in which business or industrial uses are unregulated. And this is true even though writers upon the subject generally condemn "piece meal" zoning as undesirable and even hazardous, and refer to this method as "block" rather than "comprehensive" zoning. Bassett, Zoning (1940 Ed.) p. 90;Matzenbaum, Law of Zoning (1930) p. 20; Bettman,Constitutionality of Zoning, 37 Harv. L.R. 834, 842. The wisdom of the method followed is for the legislature, not the courts, to determine. *Page 340
The enabling act calls for a comprehensive plan, but we think such a requirement is met, if due consideration is given to the common needs of a particular district. No doubt such needs will vary with each area zoned. In the case at bar, the whole area of Bay Ridge appears to have been platted and developed originally for residential use, within well-defined natural boundaries. Up to this time it has contained no industrial and few commercial enterprises. Regulation 11 preserves the rights of non-conforming uses. It is not necessary in this case to approve or disapporve all of the regulations adopted; it may be questioned, for example, whether the limitations of cubic content and cost of improvements are valid. Bassett, Zoning (1940 Ed.) to p. 187;Senefsky v. Lawler, 1943,
The appellee concedes that the proposed structures would constitute a technical violation of the regulations, but contends that the Board should have exercised discretion in granting the permit, in view of the housing shortage, and that its action was unreasonable. The Board of County Commissioners, as an administrative body, was bound to follow the regulations it adopted, in the exercise of its delegated legislative power. SeeOppenheimer Administrative Law in Maryland, 2 Md. L.R. 185, 193. The fact that it might have re-zoned the area, upon due notice and after hearing, does not alter its obligation to adhere to existing regulations, or authorize it to make special exceptions in individual cases. Chayt v. Zoning Appeals Board,
The case of Potts v. Board of Adjustment, 1945,
For the reasons indicated, we think the refusal of the application was not arbitrary or unreasonable, and that the trial court should have dismissed the petition for mandamus. We express no opinion as to whether the petition would lie, in any event, in view of the provisions of sec. 519 of the enabling act, relating to appeals.
Order reversed, and petition dismissed, with costs. *Page 342
Board of Comrs. of Vanderburgh County v. Sanders ( 1940 )
Nectow v. City of Cambridge ( 1928 )
Chayt v. Board of Zoning Appeals ( 1939 )
Sugar v. North Baltimore Methodist Protestant Church ( 1933 )
R. B. Construction Co. v. Jackson ( 1927 )
Leventhal v. District of Columbia ( 1938 )
Rehfeld v. City & County of San Francisco ( 1933 )
County Commissioners v. Northwest Cemetery Co. ( 1931 )
Ellicott v. Mayor of Baltimore ( 1942 )
Gordon v. Commissioners of Montgomery County ( 1933 )
Potts v. Board of Adjustment of Princeton ( 1945 )
Brookdale Homes, Inc. v. Johnson ( 1940 )
Zahn v. Board of Public Works ( 1927 )
Heath v. M. C.C. of Baltimore ( 1946 )
Hoffman v. Mayor of Baltimore ( 1994 )
Mayor of Baltimore v. Biermann ( 1947 )
Northwest Merchants Terminal, Inc. v. O'Rourke ( 1948 )
Kahl v. Consolidated Gas, Electric Light & Power Co. ( 1948 )
American Oil Co. v. Miller ( 1987 )
Mayor of Bladensburg, Inc. v. Berg, Trading as Berg Bros. ( 1958 )
Eutaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Mayor of Baltimore ( 1966 )
Hewitt v. County Commissioners ( 1959 )
Delbrook Homes, Inc. v. Mayers ( 1967 )
Spaid v. Board of County Commissioners ( 1970 )
MacDonald v. Board of County Commissioners for Prince ... ( 1965 )
Nottingham Village, Inc. v. Baltimore County ( 1972 )
Krieger v. Planning Commission ( 1961 )
Margolin v. Public Mutual Fire Insurance ( 1972 )
Huff v. Board of Zoning Appeals ( 1957 )
Arnold v. Prince George's County ( 1973 )
Kansas City v. Wilhoit ( 1951 )