delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this zoning case from Anne Arundel County, the Chancellor reversed the action of the County Commissioners, in granting a rezoning from Agricultural to Heavy and Light Commercial to permit the construction of a small shopping center, on the ground that a debatable question was not presented.
The appellants raised a preliminary question as to whether the Chancellor erred in overruling their demurrer on the ground that the Fairwinds Beach Club, Inc., was not a proper party, citing
Windsor Hills Imp. Ass’n v. Baltimore,
The appellees contend that since the rezoning was approved by only a majority vote of 5 to 3 the application failed. The argument is based on the fact that Code (1957), Art. 66B, sec. 21 (e) requires a favorable vote of three-fourths of a zoning board where there is a protest from the owners of 20% or more “either of the area of the lots included in such proposed change or of those immediately adjacent in the rear thereof extending 175 feet therefrom, or of those directly opposite thereto extending 175 feet from the street frontage of such opposite lots * * *." The property in question is a corner lot, and there was testimony that it “fronts” on Jumpers Hole Road, and not on Benfield Road. The property of the protestant, the Board of Education, is adjacent to the property in question on Jumpers Hole Road. The appellants contend that it is neither adjacent in the rear nor directly opposite and hence the statute is inapplicable. The Chancellor did not find it necessary to rule on the point, nor do we.
*572
We think the Chancellor was correct in holding that the rezoning was not supportable on the record. The neighborhood is almost solidly residential. There is a tavern on one corner and a filling station on another, apparently both non-conforming uses. The lot in question abuts a proposed elementary school of 24 rooms and is directly across the road from a country club. There was no evidence at all of mistake in the original zoning in the comprehensive plan adopted in July 1952. The change sought to be established in order to justify rezoning to permit the shopping center, was that in recent years some property, formerly farm land, had been utilized for the building of residences, with a consequent increase in the population. But as the Chancellor pointed out, a mere increase in population does not prove a change in the character of the neighborhood to justify another type of zoning. See
Didlake v.
Poteet,
In
West
Ridge,
Inc. v.
McNamara,
Decree affirmed, with costs.
