Thе Town of Forest Heights v. The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, et al.
No. 21
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND
April 5, 2019
Opinion by Getty, J.
September Term, 2018; Argued: October 4, 2018; Case No. CAL16-29110 (Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County)
[MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — CREATION, ALTERATION, EXISTENCE, AND DISSOLUTION — TERRITORIAL EXTENT AND SUBDIVISIONS, ANNEXATION, CONSOLIDATION, AND DIVISION — ANNEXATION OR DETACHMENT OF TERRITORY FOR SPECIAL PURPOSES]
The Court of Appeals held a municipal corporation‘s legislative body is not required to obtain consent from owners of tax-exempt property within a proposed annexation area to effectuate such an annexation pursuant to the 25% consent requirement of
[MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — CREATION, ALTERATION, EXISTENCE, AND DISSOLUTION — TERRITORIAL EXTENT AND SUBDIVISIONS, ANNEXATION, CONSOLIDATION, AND DIVISION — ANNEXATION OR DETACHMENT OF TERRITORY FOR SPECIAL PURPOSES]
The Court of Appeals held the circuit court erred in determining that an annexation plan attempted to usurp law enforcement jurisdiction over certain lands owned and managed by Maryland—National Capital Park and Planning Commission where the annexation plan indicated that policing of the land would be performed “as permitted by law.”
Opinion by Getty, J. Adkins, Watts, and Hotten, JJ., dissent.
Filed: April 5, 2019
*Adkins, J., now retired, participated in the hearing and conference of this case while an active member of this Court; after being recalled pursuant to
In its writ of certiorari, the Town of Forest Heights prеsents us with the following questions for review:
- Did the circuit court err when it invalidated two resolutions of the Town of Forest Heights that, collectively, annexed into the Town approximately 737 acres of land without the consent of the owners of 25% of the assessed value of the lands annexed by each resolution, where all the annexed lands were tax-exempt, and where, consistent with City of Salisbury v. Banker‘s Life, 21 Md. App. 396 (1974), the owners of the lands were not required to provide their consents to the annexation?
- Did the circuit court err when it determined that a portion of the Town‘s Annexation Plan violates
Md. Code, Local Gov‘t § 4-104(b) andLand Use § 17-303(a) , and, as a result, ordered that the Town may not exercise law enforcement on any land owned by Maryland-National Park and Planning Commission?
We answer both questions in the affirmative, finding first that the 25% property owner consent requirement of
BACKGROUND
Petitioner, Forest Heights is a municipal corporation located within Prince George‘s County that spans 306 acres of land southeast of Maryland‘s border with the District of Columbia. In terms of municipal services, the Town provides road maintenance, street lighting, garbage collection, police, and code enforcement to its residents. Within the borders of Forest Heights are two public parks owned and maintained by Respondent, MNCPPC.
Since its incorporation in 1949, Forest Heights has extended its corporate limits five times excluding the annexations at issue within this appeal. On April 20, 2016, the Town Council of Forest Heights introduced two annexation resolutions titled annexation resolutions No. 01-2016 and 02-2016.1 The proposed extensions are comprised of several tax-еxempt properties owned by MNCPPC, Prince George‘s County, the Board of Education of Prince George‘s County, the State of Maryland, the United States, and the Oxon Hill Methodist Church.2
Annexation resolution No. 01-2016 encompasses 446.88 acres of land located west of Forest Heights that extends to the boundary line of Washington, D.C. The proposed annexation area of resolution No. 01-2016 includes land owned by the federal government,
Annexation resolution 02-2016 encompasses 289.97 acres of land located to the south of Forest Heights. The land falling within the proposed annexation area is owned by Prince George‘s County, the Board of Education of Prince George‘s County, MNCPPC, the State of Maryland, the federal government, and the Oxon Hill Methodist Church. Specifically, the annexation includes Oxon Hill Manor, the Potomac Vista Recreational Area, Betty Blume Neighborhood Park, Southlawn Local Park, John Hanson Montessori School, Oxon Hill High School, several undeveloped lots, and portions of the Washington Circumferential Highway, commonly known as the Capital Beltway (i.e. Interstates 95 and 495).
Together, the two annexation resolutions encompass an area of 736.85 acres which would more than double the corporate limits of Forest Heights. The proposed annexation area contains no residential properties and no registered voters reside therein. Forest Heights did not obtain consent from any of the property owners because the Town believed that — pursuant to
In 2014, Forest Heights attempted to annex the same properties at issue within the instant appeal. Although the State and federal governments did not object to the prior annexation attempt, Prince George‘s County (“the County“) and MNCPPC opposed the annexation and spearheaded a judicial challenge in response. In that case, the attempted annexation was invalidated due to certain procedural deficiencies.5
On April 20, 2016, Forest Heights adopted annexation plans for annexation resolutions No. 01-2016 and 02-2016. A public hearing regarding the two annexation resolutions was held on June 6, 2016, and the resolutions were passed. On the same day,
Over a month later, MNCPPC and the County filed a complaint for declaratory judgment in the Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County challenging both annexations and seeking a declaratory judgment that the annexation resolutions were a nullity. The complaint against Forest Heights joined as parties the State of Maryland and the federal government. On August 25, the State of Maryland filed a notice of voluntary dismissal pursuant to
Forest Heights filed a Motion to Dismiss or for Summary Judgment on October 31, 2016 and renewed this Motion on April 10, 2017. Nine days later, MNCPPC filed a response to Forest Heights’ motion accompanied by its own motion for summary judgment. After a hearing held on June 21, 2017, the circuit court issued a written opinion and order dated January 29, 2018, in which it found the annexation rеsolutions to be null and void. Specifically, the court found the Town‘s failure to obtain consent from the property owners
A notice of appeal of the circuit court‘s judgment was filed on February 23, 2018, by Forest Heights. While the appeal was pending before the Court of Special Appeals, Forest Heights filed a petition for writ of certiorari with this Court, which we granted on June 1, 2018. Town of Forest Heights v. Md.—National Capital Park and Planning Comm‘n, 459 Md. 400 (2018). Additional facts will be provided throughout our analysis.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In cases where the focus is statutory interpretation, this Court‘s primary goal is to ascertain the purpose and intention of the General Assembly when they enacted the statutory provisions. Washington Gas Light Co. v. Maryland Pub. Serv. Comm‘n, 460 Md. 667, 682 (2018) (citing Shealer v. Straka, 459 Md. 68, 84 (2018)). We have previously commented that within the context of statutory interpretation
[t]his Court provides judicial deference to the policy decisions enacted into law by the General Assembly. We assume that the legislature‘s intent is expressed in the statutory language and thus our statutory interpretation focuses primarily on the language of the statute to determine the purpose and intent of the General Assembly. We begin our analysis by first looking to the normal, plain meaning of the language of the statute, reading the statute as a whole to ensure that no word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory. If the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous, we need not look beyond the statute‘s provisions and our analysis ends. Occasionally we see fit to examine extrinsic sources of legislative intent merely as a check of our reading of a statute‘s plain language. In such instances, we may find useful the context of a statute, the overall statutory scheme, and archival legislative history of relevant enactments.
Brown v. State, 454 Md. 546, 550–51 (2017) (citing Phillips v. State, 451 Md. 180, 196-197 (2017)). Additionally, we have indicatеd that, in situations where “the plain
[w]here the words of a statute are ambiguous and subject to more than one reasonable interpretation, or where the words are clear and unambiguous when viewed in isolation, but become ambiguous when read as part of a larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the ambiguity by searching for legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation or other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process.
Gardner v. State, 420 Md. 1, 9 (2011) (quoting State v. Johnson, 415 Md. 413, 421-22 (2010)).
In addition, this Court‘s inquiry is not limited to the particular statutory provisions at issue on appeal. Rather, as we have recently noted, “[t]his Court may also analyze the statute‘s ‘relationship to earlier and subsequent legislation, and other material that fairly bears on the fundamental issue of legislative purpose or goal, which becomes the context within which we read the particular language before us in a given case.‘” Blackstone v. Sharma, 461 Md. 86, 114 (2018) (quoting Kaczorowski v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore, 309 Md. 505, 515 (1987)).
DISCUSSION
Article 11E of the Maryland Constitution, commonly referred to as the “Municipal Home Rule Amendment” was enacted by act of the General Assembly and ratified by voters in November 1954.
In 1955, the General Assembly enacted the predecessor to the current Subtitle 4 of the Local Government Article.
Primarily, there are two ways through which a municipality may initiate an annexation — by petition or through municipal legislative enactment.
The second method, which was used by Forest Heights in the present appeal, commences with an annexation resolution introduced before the appropriate municipal
be some new procedure set up.” Legis. Council of Md., Report to the General Assembly of 1955, 308. The Council further noted that if procedures regulating such issues were not codified into statute promptly, the authority to draft procedures relating to these areas of municipal governance would fall to municipal corporations themselves. Id. at 355.
A. The 25% Consent Requirement of LG § 4-403(b)(2) Does Not Require Consent from the Owners of Tax-Exempt Property.
While
(b) Before an annexation resolution is introduced, the legislative body shall obtain consent from:
- at least 25% of the registered voters who are residents in the area to be annexed; and
- the owners of at least 25% of the assessed valuation of the real property in the area to be annexed.
Prior to 1971, tax-exempt property was not assessed for taxation. Lеgis. Council of Md., Report to the General Assembly of 1955, at 209-10 (1954); City of Salisbury v. Banker‘s Life, 21 Md. App. 396, 404 (1974). Consequently, tax-exempt property included within an area that a municipality intended to annex prior to 1971 did not have an “assessed valuation” and, therefore, municipalities were not required to obtain consent from such property owners.
In 1971, the General Assembly enacted a statute that requires that tax-exempt property be assessed.
(a) Except for real property owned by the federal government, real property that is exempt by law from the property tax shall be assessed under this article and in the manner required by the Director.
(b) The assessments of exempt real property shall be maintained in the records of the Department and of the supervisor in each county in which the exempt property is located.
(c) For the purpose of distributing State funds, the assessments of exempt property may not be included in the total assessment of all property.9
On the other hand, MNCPPC asserts that the statute is not ambiguous and, under its plain language, municipalities must obtain consent from the owners of tax-exempt properties. In contrast, Forest Heights and MML rely upon the Court of Special Appeals’ decision in Banker‘s Life which held that, pursuant to
located in the State and exempted from the payment of any ordinary taxes on July 1, 1971 or becoming exempt at any time thereafter by any provisions of law shall be valued and assessed from time to time as may be necessary and as directed by the Director of the Department according to the method prescribed by this article by persons authorized by the Director to perform such valuations. These valuations shall be maintained in the records of the Department and of each county and Baltimore City in which exempt property is located, in the manner required by the Director. None of such valuations shall be included in the total assessment of all property subject to State, county or city ordinary taxation for the purpose of distribution of State moneys under any provision of law.
In accordance with the principles of statutory interpretation mentioned above, we begin our inquiry by looking to the plain language of the statute to discern whether any ambiguity exists. On its face,
There are potentially two different interpretations of the provision at issue. Forest Heights and MML interpret the term “assessed valuation” as excluding tax-exempt property and, therefore, contend that the consent of tax-exempt property owners is not required under the statute. Conversely, MNCPPC argues that the statutory language is clear on its face and “assessed valuation” encompasses tax-exempt property and therefore mandates that an annexation requires consent from such property owners.
Ambiguity is present in situations where there are multiple reasonable, yet differing, interpretations of the same statutory provision. Koste, 431 Md. at 29. See also Gardner, 420 Md. at 9. In terms of the provision at issue, no statutory definitions within the Local Government Article aid in determining the meaning of “assessed valuation.” As previously
While the words “assess(ed)” and “valuation” are not defined within the Local Government Article, the Tax — Property Article does contain definitions for the terms “assess” and “assessment.” See
Based on these statutory definitions, it is evident that the word “assessment” is an estimate of the value of a property which is then used to determine the overall tax liability due on that particular property. Tax-exempt property is assessed but not taxed. Forest Heights notes that tax-exempt property is “not subject to... the burdens of supporting a municipal government,” and, therefore, does not appear on the tax roll. See
As defined by the Tax — Property Article, an “assessment roll” is “the official listing of assessments of property required under § 2-202(3) of this article.”
Therefore, these two distinct types of rolls exist that reinforce the distinction between assessment and taxation. The assessment rolls contain the list of all properties that are assessed; in contrast, tax rolls are a specific type of assessment roll — one to which the tax rate is applied to calculate the tax burden associated with a particular property. Tax-exempt properties are assessed and appear on an assessment roll yet do not appear on a tax roll. Prior to the enactment of
The Legislative Council‘s Report to the General Assembly of 1971 provides the following explanation for the adoption of
This legislation offered by the Committee on Taxation and Fiscal Matters is related to the property tax rearrangement legislation. Although it arose from 1970 bills requiring the making of payments-in-lieu of taxes for some kinds of tax exempt property, the Committee found that it was impossible to consider those bills properly because tax exempt property is not valued and assessed. The Committee feels that
the lack of any valuation for tax exempt property is an oversight in the State‘s property and assessment laws which needs to be corrected. This information will provide a basis for consideration of payments-in-lieu proposals and also for evaluation of property tax exemptions.
The bill below provides that exempt property will be valued, as the Department of Assessments and Taxation directs, by teams of assessors and completed by January 1, 1973. The valuations will be maintained separately and will not affect any assessable base on which State aid is computed.
Legis. Council of Md., Report to the General Assembly of 1971, 253 (emphasis added). Clearly, in drafting
Accordingly, the Legislative Council‘s Report of 1971 indicates that the policy supporting the assessment of tax-exempt properties is to “provide a basis for consideration of payments-in-lieu proposals and also for evaluation of property tax exemptions.” Id. Although payments in lieu of taxes (“PILOTs“) have been broadly expanded in present times,11 they were historically interrelated to attempts to reduce the financial impact of State or federal tax exemptions on localities. For example, in thе 1960s, the statute governing the enumeration of taxable property, e.g.
The General Assembly did not express an intention to modify the statutory framework surrounding municipal annexations because it never referenced the relevant statutory provisions regarding municipal home rule. Accordingly, we conclude that the General Assembly‘s introduction and enactment of
Although counties and certain planning agencies do not have a statutory right to veto municipal annexations, the General Assembly has provided to them certain procedural leverage over the annexation process. The relevant statute was enacted in 1975, (
Both Forest Heights and MML argue that even though counties enjoy the right to petition a proposed annexation to referendum, the legislative history of H.B. 534 indicates that the General Assembly did not intend to grant counties the authority or ability to veto a proposed municipal annexation. When attempting to ascertain legislative intent, this Court focuses on the specific intent of the General Assembly and not the intent of witnesses supporting or opposing a particular piece of proposed legislation. Anne Arundel County v. City of Annapolis, 352 Md. 117, 128 n.4 (1998).
would give assurance to the county government that, if they felt a rеferendum was not held because of lack of sufficient knowledge of [the effects] of annexation or because the petition fell just short of the requisite number of signatures, they then would have a remedy to force a referendum in the area to be annexed while drawing attention to their reasons for defeating the proposed annexation.
Id.
In addition to the above testimony, the Attorney General has issued several opinions regarding the interplay between a property‘s tax-exempt status and municipal annexation. Although opinions by the Attorney General are merely persuasive and not binding upon this Court, they are afforded considerable weight within the context of statutory interpretation. State v. Crescent Cities Jaycees Foundation, Inc., 330 Md. 460, 470 (1993); Read Drug & Chem. Co. v. Claypoole, 165 Md. 250, 257 (1933). In considering opinions by the Attorney General, this Court has previously commented that “[t]he Legislature is presumed to be aware of the Attorney General‘s statutory interpretation and, in the absence of enacting any change to the statutory language, to acquiesce in the Attorney General‘s construction.” Chesek v. Jones, 406 Md. 446, 463 (2008) (citing Read Drug & Chemical Co., 165 Md. at 257-58); Crescent Cities Jaycees Foundation, Inc., 330 Md. at 470.
In 1981, the Attorney General provided an unpublished opinion to Lawrence E. Speelman, the county attorney for Frederick County, regarding a county‘s ability to veto a proposed municipal annexation.15 66 Op. Att‘y Gen. Md. 267 (1981). The synopsis
Under Article 23A, § 19, counties do not have the power to consent to or to veto a municipal annexation of territory, even where county-owned land is located in that territory. However, counties do have the right to be notified of the proceedings, to be heard first at a public hearing, to receive an outline for the extension of services and public facilities to the territory to be annexed, and to petition the annexation resolution to a public referendum of the residents in that territory.
Id.
A subsequent opinion by the Attorney General considered whether the City of Havre de Grace could annex an uninhabited island located in the Susquehanna River. 87 Md. Att‘y Gen. Op. 161 (2002). In a footnote, the Attorney General indicated that Maryland has “a policy against a county referendum or veto.” Id. Further, in distinguishing between a county‘s ability to veto by forcing an annexation to a county-wide referendum, the Attorney General opined, “[t]his amendment was the result of deliberations by representatives of the Maryland Municipal League and the Maryland Association of Counties. The purpose of the legislation was to enhance the role of the counties without abandoning the policy against a county-wide referendum or county government approval requirement.” Id.
The policy underlying this enactment, as explained by the Attorney General, largely mirrors that advanced by Forest Heights and MML in this case. In sum, this policy
Both parties in this case urge this Court to turn to the decision in Banker‘s Life for guidance. Forest Heights and MML argue that Banker‘s Life was correct and, although not binding upon this Court, should guide our analysis because it properly ascertained the legislative intent behind the pertinent statutes that have been followed for over forty years in shaping Maryland‘s procedure for municipal annexations. In contrast, MNCPPC responds that Banker‘s Life is distinguishable from the instant appeal or was incorrectly decided, because the controlling statutory authority is clear and unambiguous.
In Banker‘s Life, the Court of Special Appeals considered a proposed annexation by the City of Salisbury that encompassed both publicly and privately-owned lands. Banker‘s Life, 21 Md. App. at 400. Of primary import, the decision in Banker‘s Life considered the first question presented before this Court, i.e. whether the present day 25% consent
One such publicly-owned property that the City of Salisbury attempted to annex was owned by the Wicomico County Board of Education and was tax-exempt due to its status as an educational property. Id. at 399-400. In contrast to the instant appeal, the City of Salisbury obtained consent from the Wicomico County Board of Education and counted the Board‘s consent towards the 25% property owner consent threshold of Art. 23A, § 19(b). Id. at 400-01. In response, four property owners challenged the annexation on the basis that the Wicomico County Board of Education‘s property was tax-exempt and should not be included in a determination of whether the City of Salisbury had satisfied the 25% property owner consent threshold. Id. at 400. Without the consent of the Wicomico County Board of Education, the City of Salisbury‘s proposed annexation fell short of the 25% consent requirement. Id. at 401.
Ultimately, after determining that Art. 81, § 232B (currently
Overall, we find MNCPPC‘s arguments to overturn the policy articulated in Banker‘s Life unavailing. Although MNCPPC avers that there is no ambiguity and the plain language оf
Although MNCPPC argues that the instant case is distinguishable from Banker‘s Life, we do not find these arguments persuasive. MNCPPC contends that, if correctly decided, Banker‘s Life is distinguishable because the Court of Special Appeals merely determined that the consent of a tax-exempt property owner such as the Wicomico County Board of Education should not contribute towards the 25% consent requirement. MNCPPC also contends that the procedural posture is different in the present case because the tax-exempt property owners are not attempting to consent to municipal annexation. Here, the tax-exempt property owners are attempting to prohibit a municipal annexation by withholding consent. However, our independent review of the legislative intent for both
Additionally, MNCPPC contends that Banker‘s Life is distinguishable because it did not address situations in which proposed annexation areas consist of entirely tax-exempt properties. However, on prior occasions, this Court has considered cases concerning annexations consisting of entirely tax-exempt land without noting or invoking a prohibition against the annexation of entirely tax-exempt property. See Koste, 431 Md. at 19-21. Therefore, proposed annexation areas consisting of entirely tax-exempt properties have previously succeeded and this fact has not historically been detrimental to municipal annexations and should not stand to undermine the municipal annexation underlying the instant appeal. In addition to the above considerations, a holding requiring the consent of tax-exempt property owners to permit a municipal annexation would create the potential of gross inequities between the State, federal, and county governments and their authority to block or veto municipal annexation proceedings.19
As noted by Judge Hotten‘s Dissent, MNCPPC occupies a unique statutory role that distinguishes it from the Wicomico County Board of Education, the entity involved in Banker‘s Life. Dissenting Opinion at 14-16 (Hotten, J. dissenting). This necessitates a brief discussion of MNCPPC, its role, and its associated powers.20 MNCPPC is a state
Further, we note that after the Banker‘s Life decision, the Attorney General‘s Office reaffirmed its prior opinions stating that consent from the owners of tax-exempt property is not required under municipal annexation statutes. In 1986, former Assistant Attorney General Richard E. Israel replied to an inquiry from Elroy G. Boyer, the town attorney for the Town of Betterton. Letter from Richard E. Israel, Assistant Attorney General, to Mr. Elroy Boyer, Town Attorney for Betterton, (Apr. 10, 1986). The Town of Betterton had
In summation, our review of the statute‘s legislative history and relevant sources clearly reveals that the General Assembly did not intend
B. Forest Heights’ Annexation Plan Does Not Attempt to Divest, Usurp, or Duplicate Law Enforcement Jurisdiction over Lands Owned and Managed by MNCPPC.
The circuit court found certain provisions of Forest Heights’ annexation plan invalid as an improper usurpation of MNCPPC‘s law enforcement jurisdiction over lands that it owns and operates. Specifically, the circuit court concluded that if Forest Heights were to exercise police jurisdiction over MNCPPC property it would contravene both
Forest Heights contends such findings are an erroneous interpretation of the annexation plan for resolution No. 01-2016. Alternatively, Forest Heights asserts that the circuit court lacked a present justiciable controversy to support its conclusion on this point because the court had already invalidated its annexation resolutions and, therefore, a determination based upon its annexation plan was unnecessary. MNCPPC responds that the circuit court properly precluded Forest Heights from exercising law enforcement jurisdiction on MNCPPC property.
Under the statutes controlling municipal annexations, a municipal corporation must devise an annexation plan and adopt such plan through an annexation resolution. See generally
Several statutory provisions regulate and limit shared law enforcement jurisdiction between MNCPPC, counties, and municipalities. First,
Fourth, a municipality cannot “exercise its powers of annexation or incorporation as to affect the power of . . . [MNCPPC] relating to zoning[.]”
Overall, the circuit court erred in determining that Forest Heights’ annexation plan attempted to divest or duplicate law enforcement jurisdiction from MNCPPC. The annexation plan for annexation resolution No. 01-2016, which the circuit court invalidated, includes the following provision:
Police Service. The Annexation property is served by the U.S. Park Police and Maryland National Capital Park Police, and also, as permitted by law, may be further served by the Forest Heights Police Department on a limited basis for purposes of police protection. Certain services may also be provided by the Prince George‘s County Police Department pursuant to a Memorandum of Understanding regarding jurisdictional police services entered into between the Town and the County governments. Such services may commence after annexation, using existing personnel and equipment, at the same time or similar level of service now being provided to the Town in areas where police protective services are provided on a concurrent basis with another police agency.
(Emphasis added).
The annexation plan‘s language is hypothetical, indefinite, and narrowly tailored. The plan indicates the proposed annexation area is currently policed by U.S. Park Police and Maryland National Capital Park Police. However, it provides that Forest Heights may
Therefore, the annexation plan does not expressly indicate that Forest Heights intends to exercise law enforcement jurisdiction on the lands in question. Quite simply, the annexation plan tentatively indicates that Forest Heights may exercise law enforcement jurisdiction on the properties to the extent cognizable under the law. A mutual aid agreement is the appropriate avenue through which this end may be achieved. Thus, the circuit court‘s conclusion that the annexation would, in fact, usurp law enforcement jurisdiction from MNCPPC was unduly speculative and erroneous.
Indeed, the annexation plan does not purport to grant to Forest Heights immediate unilateral authority to police land owned by MNCPPC. Interpreted fairly, the plain language of the annexation plan suggests that Forest Heights would likely acquire a mutual aid agreement setting forth an agreement between the Town and MNCPPC with respect to policing the proposed annexation area.26 It is quite clear that this is the only method
While annexation plans must be devised alongside annexation resolutions, they are separate documents and distinct from annexation resolutions. See
In short, annexation resolutions and annexation plans are distinct and separate documents with distinct and separate effects. The circuit court‘s decision fails to recognize this distinction in two respects. First, assuming arguendo that Forest Heights’ annexation plan impermissibly attempted to divest or duplicate law enforcement jurisdiction from MNCPPC, this would not constitute independent grounds upon which to invalidate Forest Heights’ annexation resolution. See
In sum, we conclude that Forest Heights’ annexation plan did not attempt to divest or duplicate law enforcement jurisdiction over lands owned and managed by MNCPPC. Our conclusion is based on the language of Forest Heights’ annexation plan which only specified the exercise law enforcement jurisdiction over the lands “as permitted by law”
CONCLUSION
The General Assembly intended to exclude the consent of tax-exempt property owners from the 25% requirement of
In addition, the circuit court erred in its determination that Forest Heights’ annexation plan attempted to usurp law enforcement jurisdiction from MNCPPC. The annexation plan is a separate document to the underlying annexation resolution and thus should not affect the validity of an annexation resolution itself. Moreover, the language contained within the annexation plan indicating that Forest Heights would exercise law enforcement jurisdiction “as permitted by law” is appropriately conditioned and therefore too speculative to constitute any form of usurpation of MNCPPC‘s law enforcement jurisdiction over certain properties it owns and manages.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT REVERSED, AND THE CASE IS REMANDED TO THAT COURT FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS IN THIS COURT AND THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID BY RESPONDENT.
THE TOWN OF FOREST HEIGHTS v. THE MARYLAND-NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION, ET AL.
No. 21 September Term, 2018
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND
Filed: April 5, 2019
Barbera, C.J., Greene, *Adkins, McDonald, Watts, Hotten, Getty, JJ.
Dissenting Opinion by Watts, J., which Adkins, J., joins.
*Adkins, J., now retired, participated in the hearing and conference of this case while an active member of this Court; after being recalled pursuant to
Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County Case No. CAL16-29110 Argued: October 4, 2018
The phrase “assessed valuation of the real property in the area to be annexed” in
THE TOWN OF FOREST HEIGHTS v. THE MARYLAND-NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION, ET AL.
No. 21
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND
Filed: April 5, 2019
Barbera, C.J., Greene, *Adkins, McDonald, Watts, Hotten, Getty, JJ. Dissenting Opinion by Hotten, J. *Adkins, J., now retired, participated in the hearing and conference of this case while an active member of this Court; after being recalled pursuant to the MD. Constitution, Article IV, Section 3A, she also participated in the decision and adoption of this opinion.
Respectfully, I dissent and would affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County.
At issue is whether the two annexation Resolutions by the town of Forest Heights (the Town) to enlarge its boundaries by annexing approximately 736.85 acres of real property, without the consent of the owners of 25% of the assessed value of that property, resulted in a legal nullity that was not consistent with the relevant provisions of the Maryland Code, Local Government Article or Land Use Article, or otherwise consistent with the case of Salisbury v. Banker‘s Life, 21 Md.App. 396, 319 A.2d 865 (1974). I shall explain.
ANNEXATION RESOLUTIONS 01-2016 AND 02-2016
Annexation Resolutions 01-2016 and 02-2016 (2016 Resolutions) are substantially similar to the Town‘s Annexation Resolutions 01-2014 and 02-2014 (2014 Resolutions). The 2014 Resolutions similarly sought to annex what the Town refers to as the Sixth and Seventh Extensions of the corporate boundaries of Forest Heights.
The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (MNCPPC) and Prince George‘s County (the County) challenged the 2014 Resolutions and on January 29, 2016, the Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County determined that the 2014 Resolutions were a legal nullity and void for several procedural errors. The Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission v. The Town of Forest Heights, Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County, Case No.: CAL15-04255; Opinion and Order of the Court dated January 29, 2016 (Forest Heights I). On or about February 16, 2016, the
The 2016 Resolutions at issue sought to annex tax-exempt property owned by six different entities: MNCPPC, the County, the State of Maryland, the United States of America, the Prince George‘s County Board of Education, and the Oxon Hill Methodist Church (cumulatively, Plaintiff-Appellees).1 The Sixth Extension encompasses 446.88 acres,2 while the Seventh Extension encompasses 289.97 acres.3 In total, the 2016 Resolutions sought to annex 736.85 acres, which would more than double the land area of the Town. All of the annexation properties are situated within two different special districts created by the General Assembly. One district was created for planning and zoning and is denominated as the Maryland-Washington Regional District. All of the subject properties are also situated in a second, largely overlapping special district for managing park land and public recreation and is denominated as the Maryland-Washington Metropolitan District. There are no registered voters in the areas sought to be annexed.
CIRCUIT COURT PROCEEDING AND BANKER‘S LIFE PRECEDENT
After the Town enacted the 2016 Resolutions, MNCPPC and the County filed a Complaint for Declaratory Relief, seeking to nullify the resolutions.
Before the circuit court, MNCPPC and the County contended that thе Town failed to seek or obtain the consent of property owners of 25% of the assessed value of real property in the area to be annexed, in violation of
(b) Before an annexation resolution is introduced, the legislative body shall obtain consent from:
(1) at least 25% of the registered voters who are residents in the area to be annexed; and
(2) the owners of at least 25% of the assessed valuation of the real property in the area to be annexed.
Because both parties agreed that there are no registered voters in the area to be annexed under the 2016 Resolutions,
The circuit court wrote:
Normally, the court would look to the language of the statute as instructed by the Court of Appeals. The Court of Special Appeals has already looked at the annexation statutes and their relationship to the requirement that property be valued, even if exempt from taxation, and therefore, this court will need to analyze this case in light of the opinion in Banker‘s Life.
The Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission v. The Town of Forest Heights, Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County, Case No.: CAL16-29110; Opinion and Order of the Court dated January 31, 2018 (Forest Heights II) (footnote omitted).
In Banker‘s Life, the Council for the City of Salisbury introduced an annexation resolution to enlarge its corporate boundaries. 21 Md.App. at 400, 319 A.2d at 867. Several private property owners in the annexed area attacked the validity of the resolution, contending that it was invalid because the [city] [c]ouncil had not obtained the consent of the owners of 25% of the assessed valuation of the real property in the annexed area. Forest Heights II at 4 (citing 21 Md.App. at 400, 319 A.2d at 867). The property owners asserted that the city council should not have included the Wicomico County Board of Education (Board) as a party for the requisite consent because the Board was exempt from assessment and ordinary taxation. Banker‘s Life, 21 Md.App. at 400, 319 A.2d at 867.
The Court of Special Appeals conced[ed] that the court normally looks to the plain meaning rule in construing statutes, [but] found the need to look to the legislative intent. . . . due to the enactment of Article 81, § 232B, discussed infra. Forest Heights II at 5 (quoting Banker‘s Life, 21 Md.App. at 402, 319 A.2d at 868).
The Court of Special Appeals noted that, at the time municipalities were granted the right to annex property, there was no requirement that property exempt from taxation be valued or assessed. Banker‘s Life, 21 Md.App. at 402-03, 319 A.2d at 868. Therefore, tax-exempt properties were not considered in the requisite 25% mandated by
The [Court of Special Appeals] disagreed with the City, finding that the legislative history showed
that the General Assembly had no intention whatsoever that the Act in any way alter the requirements for the annexation of real property by a municipal corporation. Before passage of [§] 232B, qualification to give consent was limited to owners of property subject to
taxation in the area proposed to be annexed. We believe[ ] that [§] 232B did not change this.
Forest Heights II at 5 (quoting Banker‘s Life, 21 Md.App. at 404, 319 A.2d at 869). Thus, the Court of Special Appeals held that the Board should not be included in determining the requisite consent for annexation.
The circuit court distinguished the case at bar from Banker‘s Life, writing:
Since it was issued on May 24, 1974, Banker‘s Life has never been cited by either the Court of Appeals or the Court of Special Appeals in any reported decision. The decision is very fact-specific—it involved a proposed annexation of both taxable and tax-exempt property and it holds only that the consent of the Wicomico County Board of Education was not to be included in determining whether the owners of 25% of the assessed valuation of the real property had consented to the annexation. The Court of Special Appeals never expressly addressed whether or not State property could be annexed without consent —it simply stated in dicta that only those who were to bear the financial burdens of a city government by the payment of real property taxes were to be allowed a voice in the annexation of real property to the municipal corporation. [21 Md.App. at 404, 319 A.2d at 869].
Banker‘s Life . . . does not . . . answer the question of what the court is to do where all the annexed property [Extension Six] or almost all the annexed property [Extension Seven, which also contains a private church] is owned by a county or state planning agency. Banker‘s Life served as a shield to keep municipalities from expanding their boundaries; here the Town attempts to use it as a sword to gain more land.
Forest Heights II at 5-6 (emphasis added). As a result of the distinct facts of Banker‘s Life, the circuit court held that the Town had not annexed property in accordance with
DISCUSSION
I agree with the rationale advanced by the circuit court, finding that the Town‘s annexation was unlawful, based on several statutory provisions and the distinct facts of Banker‘s Life.
A. Statutory Authority
1. MD Code, Local Government Article § 4-403, Proposal for Annexation.
2. Article 81, § 232B, Assessment of Exempt Properties.
The Town contends that a plain-meaning approach is not applicable to the case at bar, because the General Assembly‘s passage of Article 81, § 232B in 1971, now codified as
Tenets of statutory construction require reading beyond a plain meaning approach when terminology in the statute is unclear or ambiguous, or if the intention of the General Assembly is doubtful. Giant v. State‘s Attorney, 267 Md. 501, 511, 298 A.2d 427, 433 (1973) ([W]e cannot disregard the natural import of statutory language unless some
Note that even though the terms assess and assessment associate value with taxation, it is undisputed that MNCPPC lands are assessed. As such, any argument that the tax-exempt status of MNCPPC lands implicate their assessment is meritless. Rather, the definitions of assess and assessment reveal that the properties at issue have value. Per
The majority‘s distinction between tax rolls and assessment rolls does not detract from the contention that tax-exempt lands have assessed valuation. See slip op. at 14-15.
Article 81, § 232B, as amended, provided in pertinent part:
Notwithstanding the provisions of s 9 [of chapter 350]5 of this article excluding exempt property from assessment for purposes of ordinary taxation and excepting the property of the United States from this section all real property and any improvements thereon located in the State and exempted from the payment of any ordinary taxes on July 1, 1971 or becoming exempt at any time thereafter by any provisions of law shall be valued and assessed from time to time as may be necessary and as directed by the Director of the Department according to the method prescribed by this article by persons authorized by the Director to perform such valuations. These valuations shall be maintained in the records of the Department and of each county and Baltimore City in which exempt property is located, in the manner required by the Director. None of such valuations shall be included in the total assessment of all property subject to State, county or city ordinary taxation for the purpose of distribution of State moneys under any provision of law. . . .
Banker‘s Life, 21 Md.App. at 399-400, 319 A.2d at 866-67 (emphasis added). According to the Court in Banker‘s Life, prior to passage of Article 81, § 232B, tax exempt properties,
Based on its analysis of legislative intent, the Banker‘s Life Court concluded that the General Assembly‘s amendment to the Tax Code, via passage of § 232B, had no bearing on the Annexation Statute. The Court asserted that:
The only conclusion reasonably to be drawn from the language of [§] 232B and its history is that the General Assembly had no intention whatsoever that the Act in any way alter the requirements for the annexation of real property by a municipal corporation. Before the passage of [§] 232B, qualification to give consent was limited to owners of property subject to taxation in the area proposеd to be annexed. We believed that [§] 232B did not change this. Looking to the consequences, we believe that the [General Assembly] never departed from an intent that only those who were to bear the financial burdens of a city government by the payment of real property taxes were to be allowed a voice in the annexation of real property to the municipal corporation.
21 Md.App. at 404, 319 A.2d at 869 (emphasis added). Somehow, the Banker‘s Life Court determined that only those property owners subject to taxation could fall within the category of people required to provide consent to annexation pursuant to
3. House Bill (HB) 534, Annexation by Municipаl Corporations.
The Majority contends that HB 534, enacted in 1975, provides greater support for its argument that tax-exempt entities are not a consideration for the requisite 25% consent under
This expansion of county annexation rights implies the General Assembly‘s intent
The Town‘s analysis of HB 534 neglects to consider the inherent right of governmental, tax-exempt owners to participate in municipal annexations.
Beyond the statutory analysis of
B. Distinctions from Banker‘s Life
1. MNCPPC, as opposed to the Board in Banker‘s Life, is a unique entity with specified roles and responsibilities as evidenced by a designated portion of the Maryland Code.
The Maryland Code has a designated portion specifically related to MNCPPC, which is codified in Titles 14-27 of the Land Use Article (Land Use). MNCPPC is an agency and representative of this State for purposes designated by statute and was created by chapter 448 of the laws of Mаryland of 1927.
MNCPPC has the authority to procure property for public recreation and to acquire property in the metropolitan district for purposes of establishing parks, forests, roads and other public ways, grounds, and spaces.
In addition, MNCPPC is responsible for protecting lands under the Capper-Cramton Act, which was enacted by Congress in 1930 to protect land on both sides of the Potomac River as an integrated park and parkway system known as the George Washington Memorial Parkway. Surina Singh, Protecting Capper-
The Town has strategically crafted its annexations to bypass seeking consent from any registered voters (
2. Banker‘s Life addressed a tax-exempt entity‘s acceptance of annexation, as opposed to a tax-exempt entity‘s opposition to annexation.
In Banker‘s Life, the Court of Special Appeals held that the Board‘s acceptance of the city council‘s plan to annex property did not apply as part of the requisite 25% of
Further, Banker‘s Life considered the annexation of both taxable and tax-exempt property, so there was some measure of landowner‘s consent that resulted in accepting the annexation. In contrast, the Town‘s annexations are in areas without voters, so the Town‘s reading of the annexation statutes would enable annexation with the consent of absolutely no one.10 Surely Banker‘s Life did not intend to establish the dangerous precedent of completely abolishing the right to voice opposition to an annexation for tax-exempt entities.
I conclude that Banker‘s Life is not the antidote for this occasion. I am not persuaded that the General Assembly expressly intended to exclude the consent of tax-
Notes
(b) Assess means:
(1) for real property, to determine the phased-in full cash value or use value to which the property tax rate may be applied; and
(2) for personal property, to determine the value to which the property tax rate may be applied.
(c) Assessment means:
(1) for real property, the phased-in full cash value or use value to which the property tax rate may be applied; and
(2) for personal property, the value to which the property tax rate may be applied.
Notice to county and planning agencies
(c) Immediately after the first publication of the public notice [for annexation], the municipality shall provide a сopy of the public notice to:
(1) the governing body of the county in which the municipality is located; and
(2) any regional or State planning agency with jurisdiction in the county.
First right to be heard
(d) The county and any regional or State planning agency with jurisdiction in the county has the right to be heard before the public at the hearing on the proposed annexation.
(emphasis in original).
(a) At any time within 45 days after enactment of an annexation resolution, the governing body of the county or counties in which the municipality is located, by at least a two-thirds majority vote, may petition the chief executive and administrative officer of the municipality for a referendum on the resolution.
Notwithstanding the provisions of § 9 of this article excluding exempt property from assessment for purposes of ordinary taxation and excepting the property of the United States from this section, all real property and any improvements thereon
The area in Montgomery County and Prince George‘s County within the boundaries specified in this title is known as the Maryland-Washington Metropolitan District.
The boundaries of the metropolitan district are the same as existed on October 1, 2012, with the exclusion of:
(1) any property annexed into the City of Rockville, the City of Gaithersburg, or the Town of Washington Grove under Chapter 429 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 2007; and
(2) the City of Greenbelt as it existed on July 1, 2016.
[t]he governing body of a county or municipal corporation or the Maryland—National Capital Park and Planning Commission may make a reciprocal agreement for the period that it considers advisable with the District of Columbia or a county,
municipal corporation, or the Maryland—National Capital Park and Planning Commission, within or outside the State, and establish and carry out a plan to provide mutual aid by providing its police officers and other officers, employees, and agents[.]
