This сase recalls the admonition that an appellate court should use great caution in exercising its discretion to comment gratuitously on issues beyond those necessary to be decided. Heeding that principle, we shall decide only the questions of law integral to the necessary holdings in the instant case, based on the questions properly presented in the successful petition for certiorari.
On 24 September 2002, Washington Management and Development Company, Inc., 1 applied to the Prince George’s County Planning Board of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (the “Commission”) for approval of a preliminary plan of subdivision (the “Preliminary Plan”) for 47 residential lots 2 in Prince George’s County. 3 *47 The proposed subdivision (the “Property”) consisted of 236.45 acres along Bald Eagle Road and is located in the so-called planned Rural Tier of Prince George’s County, as defined by the 2002 Prince George’s County Approved General Plan (the “General Plan”). 4 , 5 The Planning Board approved the Prelimi-
*48 nary Plan at a hearing on 20 February 2003, subject to certain conditions not relevant here. The Planning Board expressed its approval and the bases therefore in a Resolution adopted on 27 March 2003.
A group of areа residents, individually and collectively referred to as the Greater Baden Aquasco Citizens Association (collectively, “Petitioners”), filed, in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, a petition for judicial review of the Commission’s action. The Circuit Court affirmed the decision of the Planning Board. Petitioners appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. In an unreported opinion (hereinafter referred to as Archers Glen I, for convenience), a panel of the intermediate appellate court held that the Planning Board *49 failed to articulate sufficiently the findings in support of its conclusion that the Preliminary Plan conformed to the recommendations of the Master Plan. The Court of Special Appeals vacated the Circuit Court’s judgment and directed that the case be remanded to the Planning Board for further proceedings. Although “[rjesolving [the] issue [was] unnecessary” to the intermediate appellate court’s holding, the court chose to comment on the parties’ dispute regarding “whether the Planning Board was required to consider the subdivisiones] compliance with both the General Plan and the Master Plan, or only the Master Plan.”
In an attempt to avoid the expense and delay of additional appeals, we offer the following guidance for the parties to the action on remand. See Md. Rule 8-131(a). 6 We first address whether the subdivision plan must comply with both the General Plan and Master Plan, or only the Master Plan.
In Prince George’s County, development is guided by a county-wide General Plan, which operates in concert with several subregion-specific Master Plans. In land use cases generally, neither type of plan imposes mandatory criteria with which plans such as the Developer’s must comply, but in Prince George’s County, § 24-121(a)(5) of the County Code’s Subdivision Regulations requires subdivision plans to “conform to the area master plan.” See Coffey v. Md.-Nat’l Capital Park & Planning Comm’n,293 Md. 24 [,441 A.2d 1041 ] (1982). That section of the code, however, does not expressly state that subdivision plans must conform to the General Plan, as opposed to the Master Plan. On the basis of that omission, appellees argue that subdivision plans need not conform to the General Plan. Appellants present no *50 counter-argument, but they argue that appellees’ theory amounts to an after-the-fact rationalization that did not form the basis of the Planning Board’s decision.
Section 24-103(a) of the Subdivision Regulations declares, “It is ... the policy of Prince George’s County to consider the subdivision of land ... as subject to the control of the County, pursuant to the General Plan, for the orderly, planned, efficient, and economical development of the County.” (Emphasis added.) Section 24-104(a)(2) then states that one of the purposes of the Subdivision Regulations is “[t]o guide development according to the General Plan, area master plans, and their amendments.” Clearly, the General Plan was intended, in some way, to guide the subdivision of land in Prince George’s County, notwithstanding the absence of the phrase “General Plаn” from § 24-121(a)(5).
The Master Plan, which all parties agree does apply to this subdivision, provides, “The Subregion YI Study Area Master Plan is in accordance with the General Plan, with the exception of the following which constitute amendments thereto.” Thus, the Master Plan accepts the planning policies of the General Plan as being appropriate guides to development in the particular subregion, and to the extent that the General Plan’s guidance is inappropriate for a locality, the Master Plan rejects and amends the General Plan.
Given the policies and purposes of the Subdivision Regulations, as stated in §§ 24-103(a) and 24-104(a)(2), that subdivision developments in Prince George’s County be guided by the General Plan, it would make little sense if, under § 24-121(a)(5), compliance with the General Plan were not a prerequisite to subdividing land.
Under appellees’ theory, those portions of the General Plan with which the Master Plans did not disagree (i.e., those portions that were appropriate for the subregion), and therefore did not amend, would not be applied to subdivision plans. This nonsensical result is eliminated by the explanatory language in the Master Plan: “The ... Master Plan is in accordаnce with the General Plan, with the exception *51 of the following which constitute amendments thereto.” (Emphasis added.) By that statement, the Master Plan expressly incorporates into itself the substance of the General Plan (except as amended by the Master Plan), thereby retaining, for application to subdivisions under § 24-121(a)(5), those portions of the General Plan deemed appropriate to the subregion.
The parties apparently did not litigate this issue before the Planning Board, and the Board did not expressly decide the issue in its decision. Because we are vacating the judgment and remanding the case, ultimately, to the Planning Board, and given the fact that the issue was not litigated within the Planning Board, we find it unnecessary, and inappropriate under the circumstances, to definitively resolve how the General Plan should apply under the Subdivision Regulations. Pursuant to our remand, the parties will ham an opportunity to revisit this issue in light of the above comments. (Emphasis added).
On remand, the Planning Board held another public hearing, on 23 June 2005, regarding the Preliminary Plan. Following the hearing, the Planning Board approved the Preliminary Plan anew, again with certain conditions not relevant here. On 29 September 2005, the Planning Board adopted an Amended Resolution evidencing the reasons for its approval of the Preliminary Plan.
Petitioners filed a second petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court. The Developer and the Commission responded to the petition, indicating their intent to participate in the litigation. On 2 June 2006, the Circuit Court remanded the case to the Planning Board for “further specific and factually supported consideration^] and findings” regarding the Preliminary Plan’s conformance to the recommendations of the General Plan as “incorporated in the Master Plan when not thereby сontradicted or amended.” Specifically, the Circuit Court held that the Planning Board needed to make specific findings regarding the “number of new dwelling units constructed and projected to be constructed between 2000 and 2025 in the whole of Prince George’s County; the number of *52 dwelling units already approved for construction in the Rural tier of Prince George’s County; and whether the addition of 46 new dwelling units in the Rural Tier will cause growth in the Rural Tier since 2000 to exceed 0.75-1.00% of overall projected dwelling unit growth.” The Developer and the Commission jointly filed a timely Notice of Appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.
A panel of the Court of Special Appeals different than the one that decided
Archers Glen I
reversed the judgment of the Circuit Court, in a reported opinion.
Archers Glen Partners, Inc. v. Garner,
Petitioners also contended that the Court of Special Appeals’s unreported opinion in
Archers Glen I
discussing the potential legal effect to be accorded the General Plan in the subdivision process
(supra
at 50-51,
We granted Petitioners’ petition for a Writ of Certiorari to consider only two questions, which we rephrase slightly:
1. May the Prince George’s County Planning Board participate as a party in a judicial review of its decision approving a Preliminary Plan for a residential development?
*53 2. Does the law of the case doctrine apply to a Court of Special Appeals’s opinion in the same proceeding which addresses a legal question pursuant to Md. Rule 8-131(a) in order to provide “guidance” and “to avoid the expense and delay of additional appeals”?
Garner v. Archers Glen,
Standing of the Commission
The issue of the Commission’s standing has not been preserved. Petitioners did not raise the issue of standing in the Circuit Court, either in
Archers Glen I
or
Archers Glen II.
7
Maryland Rule 8-131(a) provides that “[o]rdinarily, the appellate court will not decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court, but the Court may decide such an issue if necessary or desirable to guide the trial court or to avoid the expense and delay of another appeal.”
See Dorsey v. Bethel A.M.E. Church,
Petitioners conceded at oral argument before us that a challenge to the standing of the Commission was not raised in the Circuit Court, but argued that the Developer and the Commission had not asserted Petitioners’ waiver of the standing challenge in the Court of Special Appeals in Archers Glen II. In essence, according to Petitioners, the Commission and the Developer waived their right to assert Petitioners’ waiver as a defense to the Commission’s lack of standing.
It “is a settled principle of Maryland law that, ‘where there exists a party having standing to bring an action ... we shall not ordinarily inquire as to whether another party on the same side also has standing.’ ”
Sugarloaf Citizens’ Ass’n v. Dep’t of Env’t,
In the present case, Petitioners concede that “the Developer has standing to appeal.” We ordinarily do not decide issues of standing not raised in the trial court. Similarly, we ordinarily do not decide issues of standing where it is undisputed that one party on each side of the litigation has standing. Thus, we decline Petitioner’s invitation to address the issue of standing where unnecessary to do so in order to decide the outcome of the case.
The Law of The Case
Petitioners contend that the noted portion from the Court оf Special Appeals’s unreported opinion in
Archers Glen I, supra
at 4-6, directed to the legal effect of the General Plan in the subdivision review process, established the “law of the case” and bound the Commission on remand. The “ ‘law of the case doctrine is one of appellate procedure.’ ”
Scott v. State,
“Once this Court has ruled upon a question properly presented on an appeаl, or, if the ruling be contrary to a question that could have been raised and argued in that appeal on the then state of the record, as aforesaid, such a ruling becomes the ‘law of the case’ and is binding on the litigants and courts alike, unless changed or modified after reargument, and neither the question decided nor the ones that could have been raised and decided are available to be raised in a subsequent appeal.”
Loveday v. State,
In Archers Glen I, however, the Court of Special Appeals did not decide the issue of whether the General Plan was a binding document in the subdivision review process in Prince George’s County. Archers Glen I is clear that its limited reflection on the role of the General Plan is not binding on the parties.
Because we are vacating the judgment and remanding the case, ultimately, to the Plаnning Board, and given the fact that the issue [of whether the General Plan’s recommendations were binding] was not litigated within the Planning Board, we find it unnecessary, and inappropriate under the circumstances, to definitively resolve how the General Plan should apply under the Subdivision Regulations. Pursuant to our remand, the parties will have an opportunity to revisit this issue in light of the above comments.
The panel of the Court of Special Appeals in
Archers Glen I
self-described its discussion of the General Plan as “the above comments
[i.e.,
dicta],” stating that the parties could litigate the issue on remand, and noted that the issue was not “definitively resolve[d].” Petitioners ask us to hold, contrary to the express language in
Archers Glen I,
that
Archers Glen I
definitively resolved the issue and that the Commission and Developer were precluded from litigating the issue administratively or judicially on remand thereafter.
See Hagez v. State,
*57
Even if Petitioners’ application of the “law of the case” doctrine in the circumstances of this case were correct (which we do not concede it would be), it is clear that, in Maryland, dicta not adopted as a final determination may not serve as the binding law of the case.
See NCAA v. Johns Hopkins Univ.,
This distinction, in some form or another, is followed in most jurisdictions.
See Carson Harbor Vill., Ltd. v. Unocal Corp.,
Thus, we hold that the discussion of the legal role of the recommendations of the General Plan in the subdivision approval process in Prince George’s County in Archers Glen I did not resolve finally the issue or preclude the parties from litigating the issue on remand. As such, it could not have been the law of the case, nor was it intended to be so by the panel that decided Archers Glen I. 8
*60 We conclude by noting that Petitioners presented but two questions in their successful Petition for Writ of Certiorari. All parties, however, devoted substantial portions of their briefs to arguing whether the General Plan’s Growth Objectives are binding on the Commission and applicants in the subdivision review process. Neither question in Petitioners’ petition fairly embraced this disputation. 9 That issue is not properly before us and we shall not address it. Mаryland Rule 8-131(b), provides, in pertinent part:
Unless otherwise provided by the order granting the writ of certiorari, in reviewing a decision rendered by the Court of Special Appeals or by a circuit court acting in an appellate capacity, the Court of Appeals ordinarily will consider only an issue that has been raised in the petition for certiorari or any cross-petition and that has been preserved for review by the Court of Appeals.
It is of no consequence that the issue was briefed fully by all sides.
Renbaum v. Custom Holding, Inc.,
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONERS.
Notes
. Although it is somewhat unclear from the record before us, it appears that Archers Glen Partners, Inc., owned the land for which a subdivision application was filed that triggered this litigation. Archers Glen subsequently acquired Washington Management and Dеvelopment Company's interest in the project. Archers Glen Partners is the party of record in this appeal and will be referred to as the "Developer” in this opinion.
. The Preliminary Plan provides for the creation of 46 undeveloped residential lots and one lot to support an existing dwelling.
. Maryland Code, (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.) Article 28, § 7-115(a) requires that any proposed subdivision of land within the "regional district,” as defined by Article 28, § 7-103, must be approved by the Commission. The Commission, in making its determinations, applies the subdivision
*47
regulalions of Prince George's County for subdivision proposals in that County. Maryland Code, (1957, 2003 Repl.Vol.) Article 28, §§ 7 -116, 7-117;
see also Coffey v. Md.-Nat’l Capital Park & Planning Comm’n,
. The current General Plan parses the land mass of Prince George's County into three tiers: the Developed Tier; the Developing Tier; and the Rural Tier.
. Although we shall not decide here any issue regarding the legal effect of the recommendations of the General Plan in the subdivision review process, the parties’ apparent dispute over that point lоoms in the background. In an effort to address its "Smart Growth” policies, the Prince George's County Council, sitting as the District Council for that part of the regional district in the County, in 1998, created "Commission 2000,” a 53-member panel, to study and recommend a new comprehensive growth management plan. The final product of the work of Commission 2000, the Biennial Growth Policy Plan, served as an interim planning document until the former General Plan could be amended companionably. "The approved General Plan builds on recommendations of the Biennial Growth Policy Plan adopted by the Prince George’s County Council in November 2000 and prepared with the assistance of Commission 2000.... The preliminary General Plan was released in February 2002, adopted by the Planning Board in May 2002, and approved by the Prince George’s County Council, sitting as the District Council, in October 2002.” Foreword, 2002 Prince George’s County Approved General Plan.
An "area master plan” differs from the General Plan. Master plans govern a specific, smaller portion of the County and are often more detailed in their recommendations than the countywide General Plan as to that same area. In the present case, the Propеrty lies in Planning Area 87A, addressed by the Subregion VI Study Area Approved Master Plan (1993) (the “Master Plan”). Prince George's County Code § 27-684.
The relationship between the various levels of planning and regulation-the subdivision regulations, the Master Plan, the General Plan, and the Biennial Growth Policy Plan-is disputed by the parties. Petitioners contend that the General Plan imposed binding requirements which must be complied with if the Preliminary Plan is to be approved. The Developer and the Commission see it otherwise. Prince George’s *48 County Code § 24-121(a)(5) states that a proposed subdivision "plat shall conform to the area master plan, including maps and text, unless the Planning Board finds that events have occurred to render the relevant plan recommendations no longer appropriate or the District Council has not imposed the recommended zoning." Thus, it is clear that the Preliminary Plan must conform to the recommendations in the Master Plan. That section, however, does not expressly require conformance to the General Plan. Prince George’s County Code § 24-104(a)(2) notes, perhaps in contrast to § 24-121(a)(5), that the purposes of the subdivision regulations are to "guide development according to ike General Plan, area master plans, and their amendments." (emphasis added). Furthermore, the Master Plan states that, with certain exceptions not applicable here, the “Subregion VI Study Area Master Plan is in accordance with the General Plan.”
The relationship between the various planning and regulatory documents is not without practical significance. Most relevant to the present case, the various plans potentially conflict on the amount of growth that should be permitted in the Rural Tier designated areas of Prince George’s County. The Biennial Growth Policy Plan states as a "Growth Objective” that Prince George’s County should "[sjlow dwelling unit growth within the Rural Tier to 0.75 percent of total Countywide dwelling unit growth over the next 20 years.” (emphasis added). By contrast the "growth objective of the [General Plan] is that 33 percent of the county’s residential growth over the next 25 years is to be located in the Developed Tier, 66 percent in the Developing Tier, and one percent in the Rural Tier.” (emphasis added) Executive Summary, 2002 Prince George’s County Approved General Plan. The Subregion VI Study Area Approved Master Plan contains no objective or requirement regarding the percentage of countywide growth that should take place in the Rural Tiеr within its portion of the County. Nonetheless, the Master Plan notes that it "is in accordance with the General Plan.”
. Maryland Rule 8-131(a) states:
The issues of jurisdiction of the trial court over the subject matter and, unless waived under Rule 2-322, over a person may be raised in and decided by the appellate court whether or not raised in and decided by the trial court. Ordinarily, the appellate court will not decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court, but the Court may decide such an issue if necessary or desirable to guide the trial court or to avoid the expense and delay of another appeal.
. We need not decide whether the Petitioners failure to raise the standing claim in
Archers Glen I
became the law of the case for present purposes.
See Reier v. State Dept. of Assessments & Taxation,
. Petitioners’ claim at oral argument before us that the Court of Special Appeals’s discussion of the question in Archers Glen I misled them, to their detriment, into believing the issue was decided in their favor is patently disingenuous.
. Petitioners noted at oral argument that the law of the case will not apply where the underlying "decision was clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice.”
Turner v. Hous. Auth. of Balt.,
