DELBROOK HOMES, INC. v. MAYERS, ET AL.
No. 648, September Term, 1966.
Court of Appeals of Maryland
November 15, 1967
Motion for rehearing filed on December 14, 1967; denied on January 4, 1968.
FINAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court. BARNES, J., dissents.
Since the law with respect to the impeachment of witnesses is well settled—see the cases collected in
Judgment reversed and case remanded for a new trial; the appellees to pay the costs.
Malcolm B. Smith, with whom were Smith & Wholgemuth on the brief, for appellees.
FINAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court. BARNES, J., dissents. Dissenting opinion at page 85, infra.
The question presented in this appeal is quite narrow, involving only the legal definition of the term “private community beaches” as appears in the Anne Arundel County zoning ordinance. More precisely, the question is whether such a private community beach must be located within the perimeter of, or contiguous to, the community which it serves.
The appellant‘s beach property, located along the Severn River, is zoned agricultural, a classification of which one of the permitted uses is “private community beaches.”
On September 19, 1962, Mayers, his wife and the Lakeland Area Civic Association filed a Bill of Complaint in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, seeking both a declaration that use of the beach property by residents of another community amounted to a violation of the County ordinances, and an injunction prohibiting such a use. The lower court sustained respondent‘s demurrer against the Lakeland Area Civic Association. After an open hearing on the matter, the court filed an Opinion on July 24, 1966, in favor of appellee-complainants, and on September 28 of that year issued a decree which adjudicated the appellant‘s use of the property to be violative of the zoning ordinance, and enjoined appellant from using the property as a community beach and boating facility for the benefit of Chartwell. We affirm the opinion of the lower court.
Support for the construction adopted may be found in
The Court finds no evidence in favor of appellant‘s contention that appellees did not show special damages and therefore lacked standing to sue. After purchasing the property in 1947, the Mayers expended capital in converting the summer home into a year-round home which Mr Mayers estimates is now worth between $25,000 and $30,000. Activity on the beach property commenced in the summer of 1961, creating traffic problems, noise and various encroachments upon the appellees’ property from parked cars and trespassing individuals. Mr. Mayers testified that his property became both a telephone booth and
Nor can it be argued that such a construction of the ordinance discriminates against appellant‘s use of the premises. Although it is true that zoning must be directed toward use rather than location or ownership of property, we have on occasion permitted a commercial rеclassification within a residential zone when convinced by the evidence that such use was for the accommodation and convenience of the neighborhood residents and therefore in the public interest. See MacDonald v. Board of County Commissioners, 238 Md. 549, 557, 210 A. 2d 325 (1965); Hewitt v. Baltimore County, 220 Md. 48, 58, 151 A. 2d 144 (1959). Cf. Temmink v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 205 Md. 489, 495, 109 A. 2d 85 (1954); Cassel v. City of Baltimore, supra. As Judge Macgill indicated below, a necessary corollary to the above rule is that such a commercial use may not be established when it is not for the accommodation and convenience of the residents. In such a case, as in the instant appeal, the requisite element of local public interest is absent.
The Planning and Zоning Commission, in approving the subdivision plat of Chartwell, permitted the beach property consisting of a little over an acre to be used together with approximately four acres abutting the Chartwell subdivision (which is about one mile from the beach property) to satisfy the statutory five-percent recreational use requirement. The appellant argues that such action amounted to an administrative interpretation of
“Your letters of April 3rd, 13th, and May 22nd, were referred to our legal department. In conversing with them, I have been given no opinion tо indicate that the subject property in the Lakeland area is not a private community beach, or that such a use could be prohibited in an Agricultural zone. Consequently I feel that I am given no choice but to rule that the subject use is a valid one.”
No further elucidation as to the definition of a “private community beach” was given.
An administrative interpretation of an ordinance by the officer whose duty it is to execute it is entitled to consideration and this is particularly so when the meaning of the language is ambiguous; however a court is not bound by such an interprеtation. McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3rd ed.) § 20.45, and cases cited therein. In the instant case as noted, we are persuaded that the definition of a private community beach, as used in
Nor does the record reveal any actions on the part of the Anne Arundel Zoning and Planning officials which would enable the appellant to avail itself of the doctrine of equitable estoppel. Kent County v. Abel, 246 Md. 395, 399-402, 228 A. 2d 247 (1967) and cases cited therein.
Decree affirmed, with costs.
BARNES, J., dissenting:
I dissent because, in my opinion,
A complete analysis of the whole zoning ordinance and particularly section 35-38 also indicates that this is the proper construction. The established zone is “agricultural” which has far more extensive uses than are permitted in the detached dwelling districts, with two subdistricts: (1) manor type districts (2) cottage type districts. In the agricultural district, the following uses are permitted:
- Farms and farming uses.
- One-family or two-family dwellings.
- Commercial riding stables with minimum distance requirements as proposed under
section 35-43 of the Anne Arundel Code . (Section 35-43 provides, in effect, that when a building or use is required by the zoning law to have a minimum distance, that building or use “shall be distant at least two hundred feet from any lot in any residence district, or any lot occupied by a dwelling, or by a school, church or institution for human care;” but small animals, including poultry not exceeding fifty in number “may be kept in structures located fifty feet or more from the lot line.“) - Trailer coach parks, subject to the approval required by the trailer park ordinance.
- “Public and semipublic buildings and uses of the cultural, administrative or public-service type, including schools, churches, fire halls, hospitals, except as regulated under sections 35-113 to 35-115 of this Code, utility lines on stations,
public parks and playgrounds, golf courses, private community beaches, fish and game association preserves and similar conservation areas, but not including such uses as storage yards, warehouses, garages or similar uses.” - Nursing or convalescent homes.
- Accessory buildings or uses to the above uses such as:
- Signs showing name of farm, owner or tenant; name of institution or establishment; name of breeds of livestock or other products “raised on the farm” and professions; bulletin boards of churches and other public or semi-public buildings; roadside stands or signs advertising “a product legally produced, or signs indicating a service rendered on the premises“; certain temporary unlighted signs in subdivisions which must be “located therein” and not “within two hundred feet of any dwelling.”
- Farming structures, provided that barns, chicken houses, etc. shall conform to the minimum distance requirements of section 35-43.
- Garages for private or farm vehicles.
- Piers or wharves for private use.
- Home occupations, as defined in section 35-2 of the Code including, among other things:
- Kindergartens.
- Sale of home-grown produce or preserves.
- Sale of professional services.
- Taking of fish, crabs, oysters, shrimp, muskrats, etc., and their sale.
- Operation of a tourist home as defined in section 2 of the Anne Arundel County Code, including serving of meals to boarders.
- Use of premises as offices for contractors or agents, but not including storagе yards in connection therewith.
- Roadside stands; “providing, that they are used solely for the sale of produce grown on the farm or property on which located; * * *”
- Commercial or industrial uses or structures “where such can be shown to be solely for the purpose of handling
the produce of the property on which such a use is located, such as plant nurseries or greenhouses, stock farms or breeding kennels, subject to the requirements of section 35-43 of this Code, sawmills for harvesting lumber from property on which located, abattoirs or slaughterhouses, subject tо the requirements of sections 35-113 to 35-115 of this Code.” (Sections 35-113 to 35-115 provide for special exceptions for abattoirs or slaughter-houses). (Emphasis supplied throughout).
It is thus seen that when the question of location of the use or distances is important, the legislative body carefully provided for these restrictions in the uses permitted in the agricultural district. The absence of any restriction as to location or distance in regard to the permitted “private community beach” indicates to me that no such restriction was intended. The words “private community beach” established in section 35-38 would have the same meaning when later used in the zоning ordinance as a permitted use in detached dwelling districts.
We have frequently held, that the legislative intent is to be determined, in the first instance, by the words used by the legislative body and if these words, given their ordinary meaning, indicate the legislative intent, our quest for determining that intent is over. Pineland Lumber Co. v. Miles, 228 Md. 584, 180 A. 2d 870 (1962) and cases cited in the opinion in that case. Our judicial duty is to give effect to the legislative intent as thus disclosed, even if we might think that the intent was a most unfortunate one, and one which we would never have had, if we had been legislators. See Smith v. Higinbothom, 187 Md. 115, 48 A. 2d 754 (1946). The plain fact is that we are not legislators and are forbidden by Article 8 of the Declaration of Rights of the Maryland Constitution from acting as such. As I see it, the majority of the Court has in effect amended section 35-38(e) of the zoning ordinance to add by construction the words necessary to reflect an intent not disclosed by the ordinary and usual meaning of the words themselves. This is not a judicial function. As Chief Judge Prescott aptly stated, for the Court, in Amalgamated Casualty Ins. Co. v. Helms, 239 Md. 529, 534-35, 212 A. 2d 311, 315 (1965):
“However, construing a statute liberally and adding to it, by judicial fiat, a provision which the Legislature did not see fit to include are not one and the same thing. As stated by Justice Brandeis, for the Court, in Iselin v. United States, 270 U. S. 245, 251: ‘What the Government asks is not a cоnstruction of a statute, but, in effect, an enlargement of it by the court, so that what was omitted, presumably by inadvertance (in that case), may be included within its scope. To supply omissions transcends the judicial function.‘”
The majority indicates that it finds support for its construction of the words “private community beaches” used in
In the first place, I do not, as the majority appears to do, equate “community” with “subdivision.” This seems to be the principal basis of the holding in the majority opinion, which overlooks the use of “private community beaches” in section 35-38(e) and “subdivision” in 35-38(g) (1) where it is stated that certain signs must be “located therein.” Clearly, if the meaning were the same the language would be the same.
Secondly, it is clear that a community beach located in the usual subdivision involving a parcel of land within one specific area would usually be “in and for” that type of subdivision. (Emphasis supplied). The case before us involves a private community beach which is not in the Chartwell subdivision if the word “subdivision” is limited to mean a tract with сontiguous or adjacent lots. It is clear that private community beaches in an agricultural district are not the subject of any special exception but such use is directly permitted by the zoning ordinance. See
Thirdly, if the legislative body had intended to limit the lan-
Fourthly, if one assumes, arguendo, that the meaning of the words “community” and “subdivision” must be equated, it seems quite clear to me when one considers the provisions of
Section 32-23 in regard to reservations of recreational space provides, in relevant part, as follows:
“Where held appropriate by the planning and zoning commission, open spaces suitably located and of adequate size for parks, playgrounds or other recreational purposes for local or neighborhood use shall be provided for in the design of the proposed subdivision; and, if not dedicated to the public * * * shall be reserved for the common use of all property owners in the proposed subdivision by covenant in the deeds. This shall normally be considered to be about five per cent of the gross area of the subdivision. Streams, lakes and other watercourse areas may be considered as part of the five per cent.” (Emphasis supplied).
Nor does the definition in
“The division of any tract or parcel of land, including frontage along an existing street or highway, into two or more lots, plots or other divisions of land for the purpose, whether immediate or future, of building
development for rental or sale, and including all changes in street or lot lines; provided, however, that this definition of a development shall not include the divisions of land for agricultural purposes.”
There is an almost identical definition of “subdivision” in section 32-1, used in the ordinance of July 14, 1953 in regаrd to subdivisions.
It will be observed that there is no requirement that the lots in a development or subdivision be contiguous or adjacent to other lots.
The record in the present case establishes that the Planning and Zoning Commission did consider the subject property as “suitably located” and of “adequate size for recreational purposes for local or neighborhood use“; did use the area of the subject property as part of the five per cent “normal gross area of the subdivision” and approved the subdivision plan of Chartwell on this basis. The action of the Commission is in exact compliance with the terms of section 32-23 and in no way is violative of its provisions or intention. Surely, it cannot be said that Chartwell is not in the “neighborhood” of the subject property and indeed, it can well be said that the subject property is “in” the Chartwell subdivision as defined in the Anne Arundel County Code and as recognized by the Commission.
If it be assumed, arguendo, that the caveat at the end of section 35-115(g) (3) could possibly indicate a restricted construction of the unlimited words “private community beach” in section 35-38 when the original zoning ordinance was passed on July 1, 1952, it would seem clear that the provisions of section 32-23 which were originally added by the ordinance оf July 14, 1953, would make such assumed original construction ineffective as the broader definition of “subdivisions” would be clearly applicable after the passage of the ordinance of July 14, 1953. See Boyer v. Thurston, 247 Md. 279, 292-93, 231 A. 2d 50, 57 (1967).
The majority states that the language at the end of section 35-115(g) suggests that the legislative body by use of this language “intended private community beaches and swimming pools to be located within or adjacent to the subdivisions which they
Nor is the alleged policy of “community control” by property owners adjacent to the beach as opposed to such control by those somewhat removed from the beach, but within the general neighborhood, an important consideration in view of the other
Gilbert v. Town of Hamden, 135 Conn. 630, 68 A. 2d 157 (1949) is clearly distinguishable from the situation in the case at bar. In Gilbert the zoning ordinance of the Town of Hamden, Connecticut in a single-family residence zoning permitted a “community house or club, exсept where the principal activity is one customarily carried on as a business.” The Gilbert Company, a corporation having a factory and place of business
I am not impressed by the observation that unless the language is construed as has been done by the majority, a large community removed by many miles from the beach property сould use the property as a private community beach. In the first place, this is not the situation in the present case (and it would not be the case if “community” was equated with the broader view of “subdivision” since the beach would have to be “suitably located.“) The word “community” has as one of its definitions in Webster‘s New Collegiate Dictionary, 1961 Edition (the Anne Arundel County Code establishes as a source of definitions not specifically provided in the Code the 1949 Edition which is not readily available): “Society at large; the people in general; restrictively, the people of a particular region or the region itself.” (Emphasis supplied). This definition could possibly limit to a degree the scope of the user to persons reasonably near the subject property as part of the general neighborhood. If this were the proper construction, the administrative officials could—as they have in this case—determine that the residents of Chartwell are within the scope of the word “community” as so defined. The alleged difficulty suggested would thus disappear.
Secondly, Webster‘s also gives as one of the definitions of “community” the following: “A body of people having common organization or interests or living in the same place under the same laws; * * *.” If such a community is established without regard to its location so far as the subject property is concerned,
It must be constantly kept in mind that the normal legal situation permits the free use of private fee simple property, rather than the restriction of that free use. There may only be governmental restriction of this free use if there is a reasonable connection between the restriction and the protection of the рublic health, safety, security, morals and general welfare. The restriction on the free use of private property is in derogation of the common law right to use private property so as to realize its highest utility, and such restrictions are not to be extended by implication to cases not clearly within the scope of the purpose and intent manifested by the language of the ordinance. Our predecessors have so held. Landay v. Zoning Appeals Board, 173 Md. 460, 466, 196 A. 293, 114 A.L.R. 984 (1938). To me, the language is clear, but, when a strict construction is required, it is entirely and abundantly clear that the language does not prohibit the Chartwell community‘s use of the subject property.
But even if it be assumed arguendo, that the words were ambiguous it seems clear to me that the construction of the words by the zoning administrative authorities of Anne Arundel County, a construction long continued and without exception, that the use by the Chartwell community is not prohibited, should lead us to follow that construction. This is a well established course of conduct when language is considered to be ambiguous. Department of Tidewater Fisheries v. Sollers, 201 Md. 603, 615, 95 A. 2d 306, 311 (1953). See Shapiro v. City of Baltimore, 230 Md. 199, 216, 186 A. 2d 605, 614 (1962).
My views in other situations involving the construction of statutes have been previously expressed. See my dissenting
I would reverse the order of the Circuit Court.
Notes
“The construction contended for by the Defendant might, not implausibly, be extended to permit a community such as ‘Columbia‘, in Howard County, with a projected population of one hundred thousand, to buy and utilize, for the benefit of its members, a beach front in a quiet Anne Arundel County development.”
