Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc. v. Harford County
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Full Opinion
MARYLAND RECLAMATION ASSOCIATES, INC.
v.
HARFORD COUNTY, Maryland, et al.
Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc.
v.
Harford County, Maryland, et al.
Court of Appeals of Maryland.
*845 Susan T. Ford (James P. Nolan of Council, Baradel, Kosmerl & Nolan, P.A., Annapolis, MD; William D. Hooper of Hooper & Jacobs, L.L.C., Bel Air, MD), on brief for Appellant.
Jennifer M. Schwartzott (Miles & Stockbridge, P.C., Baltimore, MD; Nancy Giorno of Harford County Dept. of Law, Bel Air, MD; Sherrilyn Ifill of University of Maryland School of Law, Baltimore, MD; and Lisa Sheehan of People's Counsel, Forest Hill, MD), all on brief for appellee.
Nancy Giorno (Harford County Dept. of Law, Bel Air, MD; Sherrilyn Ifill of University of Maryland School of Law, Baltimore, MD; Lisa Sheehan of People's Counsel, Forest Hill, MD; and Jennifer M. Schwartzott of Miles & Stockbrigge, P.C., Baltimore, MD), all on brief for Appellee.
ARGUED BEFORE BELL, C.J., HARRELL, BATTAGLIA, GREENE, MURPHY, ADKINS and BARBERA, JJ.
ADKINS, Judge.
In this opinion we address two appeals filed by Appellant Maryland Reclamation *846 Associates ("MRA") involving a sixty-eight acre agriculturally zoned property located in Harford County Maryland ("Property") on which MRA seeks to construct and operate a rubble landfill. This rubble landfill has been highly controversial and the litigation involving this Property has spanned over ten years. It now reaches this Court for the third time.[1] Among other contentions, MRA asks this Court to adopt the doctrine of zoning estoppel, and hold that Harford County is estopped from applying an amendment to its zoning code that would render the Property ineligible for use as a rubble landfill.
The two appeals include: (1) Case No. 143, an appeal from a September 3, 2008 judgment of the Circuit Court for Harford County affirming the Harford County Board of Appeals's ("Board") denial of MRA's request for several variances from applicable zoning regulations that will allow it to build a rubble landfill, and (2) Case No. 144, an appeal from an October 22, 2003 judgment of the Circuit Court for Harford County affirming the Harford County Board of Appeals's interpretation of various zoning provisions applicable to MRA. The Appellees are Harford County as well as a group of individuals, represented by People's Counsel, who live in the neighborhood surrounding the proposed rubble landfill and are opposed to its development ("Protestants").
In order to resolve the issues in these appeals, we must understand the history of the various administrative proceedings and earlier appeals. Knowing this task is decidedly tedious, we have done our best to be concise. Judge Eldridge, formerly an active member of this Court, helps us with this task.
FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
In MRA II, Judge Eldridge detailed the following history:
In August 1989, the plaintiff-appellant, Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc., contracted to purchase property located adjacent to Gravel Hill Road in Harford County, Maryland. Maryland Reclamation intended to construct and operate a rubble landfill on this property; thus, it began the process of obtaining a rubble landfill permit from the Maryland Department of the Environment pursuant to Maryland Code (1982, 1996 Repl. Vol), §§ 9-204 through 9-210, §§ 9-501 through 9-521 of the Environment Article, and COMAR 26.03 through 26.04.
Maryland Reclamation first requested that Harford County include the Gravel Hill Road property in Harford County's Solid Waste Management Plan as a rubble landfill. Thereafter, Harford County amended its Solid Waste Management Plan to include Maryland Reclamation's Gravel Hill Road site as a rubble landfill. The property's inclusion in the Harford County Solid Waste Management Plan, however, was made subject to twenty-seven conditions, including a minimum landscape buffer of 200 feet. On November 16, 1989, Harford County advised the Maryland Department of the Environment that Maryland Reclamation's Gravel Hill Road property had been included in the *847 County's Solid Waste Management Plan as a rubble landfill site.
Maryland Reclamation next sought approval at the state government level from the Department of the Environment. On November 20, 1989, Maryland Reclamation received Phase I permit approval from the Department of the Environment. Maryland Reclamation then filed with the Department the necessary reports and studies for Phase II and Phase III approvals.
[M]aryland Reclamation had entered into a contract to purchase the property located adjacent to Gravel Hill Road in August 1989, before its inclusion in Harford County's Solid Waste Management Plan. Allegedly relying on the property's inclusion in Harford County's Solid Waste Management Plan and on the Department of the Environment's Phase I approval, Maryland Reclamation consummated the purchase of the Gravel Hill Road property on February 9, 1990, for $732,500. The settlement occurred on the last possible day under the terms of the contract of sale.
Four days after the settlement date, newly appointed Harford County Council President Jeffrey D. Wilson and Council Member Joanne Parrott introduced in the County Council Resolution 4-90, which provided for the removal of Maryland Reclamation's property from the County's Solid Waste Management Plan. [Footnote 1 omitted] In the litigation that ensued over this resolution,[2] the Court of Special Appeals held that Resolution 4-90 was invalid because it was preempted by the State's authority over solid waste management plans and the issuance of rubble landfill permits. [MRA I], 90 Md.App. 120, 600 A.2d 864, cert. dismissed sub nom. County Council v. Md. Reclamation, 328 Md. 229, 614 A.2d 78 (1992). [Footnote 2 omitted.] While the litigation over Resolution 4-90 was pending, Bill 91-10 was introduced in the Harford County Council, on February 12, 1991, as an emergency bill. Bill 91-10 proposed to amend the requirements for a rubble landfill by increasing the minimum acreage requirements, buffer requirements, and height requirements. The bill, inter alia, would establish a minimum rubble fill size of 100 acres and a buffer zone of 1000 feet. After public hearings, the County Council passed the bill on March 19, 1991, and the County Executive signed the bill into law on March 27, 1991. [Footnote 3 omitted.]
On April 2, 1991, Bill 91-16 was introduced in the Harford County Council. This bill would authorize the County Council to remove a specific site from the County's Solid Waste Management Plan if the site does not comply with certain zoning ordinances, if a permit has not been issued by the State Department of the Environment within eighteen months of the site being placed in the County's Solid Waste Management Plan, or if the owner of the site has not placed the site in operation within the same eighteen month period. Bill 91-16 was passed by the County Council, signed into law by the County Executive on June 10, 1991, and is codified as § 109-8.4 of the Harford County Code. [Footnote 4 omitted.]
The President of the Harford County Council, on April 25, 1991, sent a letter to the State Department of the Environment, enclosing a copy of enacted Bill 91-10, and advising the Department that the provisions of the bill could call into question the status of sites which were in the process of obtaining rubble landfill *848 permits. On May 2, 1991, the Department of the Environment advised the County Council that if a permit were to be issued to Maryland Reclamation, such issuance would not authorize Maryland Reclamation to violate any local zoning or land-use requirements.
Also on May 2, 1991, the County's Director of Planning sent a letter to Maryland Reclamation informing it of Bill 91-10, indicating that Maryland Reclamation's property would apparently fail to meet the requirements of Bill 91-10, stating that Maryland Reclamation should submit documentation showing that the Gravel Hill Road site could meet the requirements of the zoning ordinances, and stating that, if the site could not meet such requirements, Maryland Reclamation would need a variance to operate a rubble landfill on the property. Maryland Reclamation did not submit any documents pursuant to the May 2, 1991, letter and did not file an application for a variance. [Footnote 5 omitted.] Maryland Reclamation did file on May 21, 1991, an "appeal" to the Harford County Board of Appeals from the "administrative decision pursuant to Section 267-7 E in a letter dated 5/2/91," requesting that the Board "review and reverse the decision of the Zoning Administrator interpreting that the standards of Council Bill 91-10 apply to the Applicant." The "application" to the Board of Appeals asserted that Bill 91-10 was inapplicable to the property and that, if it was applicable, it was invalid. [Footnote 6 omitted.]
On May 14, 1991, Resolution 15-91 was introduced in the Harford County Council. This resolution purported to interpret Harford County law and determine that the Gravel Hill Road site was not in compliance with county law; the resolution went on to remove the site from the County's Solid Waste Management Plan. The County Council passed Resolution 15-91 on June 11, 1991. The resolution was apparently not submitted to the County Executive for his approval.
Maryland Reclamation on June 20, 1991, filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Harford County, seeking a Declaratory Judgment and Injunctive Relief against Harford County and the Harford "County Council." Maryland Reclamation requested, inter alia, the following: (1) a declaration that Bills 91-10 and 91-16, as well as Resolution 15-91, are "null and void as to the Gravel Hill Site;" (2) an injunction preventing the County from enforcing Bills 91-10 and 91-16 and Resolution 15-91 against Maryland Reclamation; and (3) an injunction staying all further action on Maryland Reclamation's "appeal" to the Board of Appeals. Maryland Reclamation advanced numerous legal theories to support its complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief.
The circuit court on June 28, 1991, issued an interlocutory injunction preventing enforcement of Bills 91-10, 91-16, and Resolution 15-91 against Maryland Reclamation. The order expressly allowed the Department of the Environment to continue its processing of Maryland Reclamation's pending permit application. The order also stayed the processing of Maryland Reclamation's administrative "appeal" from the Director of Planning's "decision" contained in the Director's May 2, 1991, letter. Finally, the interlocutory order prohibited Maryland Reclamation from starting any construction without court approval.
On February 28, 1992, the State Department of the Environment issued to Maryland Reclamation a permit to operate a rubble landfill on its property. The Department expressly conditioned *849 the permit upon Maryland Reclamation's compliance with all local land-use requirements. [Footnote 7 omitted.]
Upon cross-motions for summary judgment, the circuit court on May 19, 1994, filed an opinion and judgment, declaring that Harford County was entitled to enact new zoning laws that may prevent Maryland Reclamation from operating a rubble landfill, and that Bills 91-10 and 91-16 were not invalid on the grounds asserted by the plaintiff. The court, however, declared that Resolution 15-91 was invalid on its face. According to the circuit court, the Harford County Council was acting as a legislative body when it passed the resolution, and the passage of the resolution constituted an illegal attempt to interpret and apply the laws which the Council had previously enacted.
Maryland Reclamation appealed to the Court of Special Appeals with respect to the circuit court's declaration that Bills 91-10 and 91-16 were not invalid. The County did not cross-appeal from the circuit court's declaration that Resolution 15-91 was invalid. Before any further proceedings in the intermediate appellate court, this Court issued a writ of certiorari.
MRA II, 342 Md. at 480-86, 677 A.2d at 569-72 (footnote added). We held that MRA had not exhausted its administrative remedies, including appealing the Zoning Administrator's ruling to the Board of Appeals, and applying to the Zoning Administrator for variances. Id. at 496-97, 505-06, 677 A.2d at 577.
Thereafter MRA filed requests for interpretation with the Zoning Administrator, presenting nine issues. After receiving unfavorable rulings, MRA appealed to the Board of Appeals. The Board, through its Zoning Hearing Examiner, conducted a hearing and issued a decision dated April 2, 2002 that the application of Bill 91-10 to the proposed rubble landfill did not violate federal, state, or local laws. As summarized by Judge Harrell in MRA III, the Hearing Examiner's findings and conclusions underlying this decision were as follows:
1. Bill 91-10 applies to MRA's property on Gravel Hill Road.
2. The requirements of Bill 91-10 can be validly applied to MRA's property on Gravel Hill road under the circumstances of this case and in light of the Environmental Article of the Maryland Code as well as other principles of Maryland law.
3. MRA's operation of a rubble landfill on its property at Gravel Hill Road pursuant to its state permit will violate applicable Harford County Zoning law, particularly Harford County Code §§ 267-40.1, 267-28C, 267-28D(4) and 267-41. Moreover, the Hearing Examiner questions whether the permit issued to MRA by MDE is validly issued as it was based on misinformation provided to the State by MRA regarding the conformance of the property and use with Harford County Zoning law.
4. MRA cannot obtain a grading permit unless it can meet the requirements of Harford County Zoning law. To the extent MRA does not meet specific standards it must seek a variance and obtain a variance from provisions with which it cannot comply. MRA's reliance on site plan approvals that pre-date the enactment of Bill 91-10 is without merit.
5. MRA's operation of a rubble landfill on its property at Gravel Hill Road pursuant to its State-issued Refuse Disposal Permit No. 91-12-35-10-D and as renewed by Refuse Disposal *850 Permit 1996-WRF-0517 will violate applicable Harford County zoning law.
6. Harford County is not prohibited by the principles of estoppel from applying the provisions of Harford County Bill 91-10 (section 267-40.1 of the Harford County Code) to MRA's property and specifically, to MRA's operation of a rubble landfill on its property.
7. MRA's rubble landfill did not acquire vested rights in its use that would insulate it from the application of Bill 91-10 to that use. It is the vested rights doctrine itself that allows a landowner to rais[e] issues of constitutional protections. There is no constitutional infringement on the rights of MRA because a vested right was not established. Applying the provisions of Bill 91-10 to MRA's Gravel Hill Road property is, therefore, not prohibited by the United State's Constitution and/or the Maryland Declaration of Rights.
8. Harford County is not preempted by the Environmental Article of the Maryland Code, particularly sections 9-201 et seq. and 9-501 et seq., from applying Bill 91-10 to MRA's Gravel Hill Road property.
9. MRA's operation of a rubble landfill on its Gravel Hill Road property is not a valid non-conforming use pursuant to Harford County Zoning Code.
MRA III, 382 Md. at 359-60, 855 A.2d at 357-58. After the issuance of the Hearing Examiner's decision, the following transpired:
On 11 June 2002, the County Council, sitting as the Board of Appeals, adopted the Zoning Hearing Examiner's decision. Harford County, therefore, refused to issue to MRA a grading permit or zoning certificate for the proposed rubble landfill because of the strictures of Bill 91-10. Neither in response to the Board of Appeals's final decision, nor on a parallel course to its requests for interpretation or a zoning certificate, did MRA seek variances for relief from the requirements of Bill 91-10.
On 21 June 2002, MRA . . . petition[ed] the Circuit Court for Harford County for judicial review of the Board of Appeals's decision. The Circuit Court affirmed the decision of the Board of Appeals on 22 October 2003. It concluded that "all nine requests for interpretation were answered correctly . . . in accordance with the law, and based on substantial evidence, and the decision was also correct when it upheld the zoning administrator's denial of Maryland Reclamations request for a zoning certificate."
MRA III, 382 Md. at 360-61, 855 A.2d at 358. On appeal to this Court, we held that MRA again had failed to exhaust its available administrative remedies because it had not requested variances from the Code requirements at issue. Id. at 363, 855 A.2d at 359-60.
On May 12, 2005 MRA requested the following variances to provisions of the Harford County Zoning Code ("HCC") before the zoning hearing examiner for Harford County ("Hearing Examiner"):
Variance pursuant to Section 267-28C to permit the disturbance of the 30 foot buffer yard.
Variance pursuant to Section 267-28D(4) to permit disturbance within the 200 foot buffer from adjoining property lines.
Variance to Section 267-40.1 A, B, C, and D to permit the operation of a rubble landfill on less than 100 acres.
*851 Variance to Section 267-40.1A, B, C and D to permit the operation of a landfill without satisfying the buffer requirement.
Variance to Section 267-40.1 A, B, C, and D to permit the deposit of solid waste less than 500 feet from the flood plain district.
Variance to Section 267-40.1 A, B, C, and D to permit the disturbance of the 1,000 foot buffer from a residential or institutional building.
Variances to Section 267-41D(2)(c); (3)(b); (5)(e); and (6) to permit the use of a landfill within a Natural Resource District, to permit the disturbance of the Natural resources District buffer, and to disturb the minimum 75 foot wetlands buffer in the Agricultural District.
Over a span of 10 months, the Hearing Examiner, Robert F. Kahoe, Jr., presided over 17 nights of hearings, during which he heard testimony from 11 witnesses produced by MRA (eight of whom were experts); six experts offered by the Protestants; 16 residents from the community and members of St. James parish; and the acting director of the Harford County Department of Planning and Zoning. The Hearing Examiner issued a decision dated February 28, 2007 that denied several of MRA's requests. His findings of fact and conclusions of law included the following:
[V]ARIANCES REQUIRING AN APPLICATION OF SECTION 267-11
The requested variances which require the application of the standard contained in Section 267-11, are discussed as follows.
Variance to Permit Disturbance of 30 foot Buffer
* * *
[T]he Applicant also requests a variance to disturb the 30 foot buffer in certain locations along Gravel Hill Road. The County's and the opponents' position is that such a variance should be denied as the purpose of a buffer, and this buffer in particular, is to help protect adjoining properties from the impact of a proposed use.
The proposed rubble landfill has the potential of causing a great impact on the neighbors who reside on Gravel Hill Road, and on users of Gravel Hill Road.
* * *
[T]he Applicant has made no good showing for a grant of the variance. Indeed, its witness Jacqueline Seneschal testified that the variance may not actually be necessary. The Applicant argues that the buffer can be disturbed by the rubble fill operation with the buffer then reinstalled after the fill operation is complete. If the Applicant suggests that a removal and reinstallation of a required buffer after the disturbance is complete is somehow allowed by Code, the Applicant is mistaken. A buffer is not only required to the final use, i.e., a capped and stable rubble-fill site, but is also required to the actual rubble-fill activity itself.
A fair reading of the Harford County Development Regulations, particularly Section 267-28, requires a buffer to be maintained, improved or installed at the very beginning of the operation, and throughout the operation to final completion. [Footnote 2 omitted.] It may not be removed, and reinstalled, at the discretion of the Applicant. The 30 foot buffer must remain from the beginning of the operation, through completion and thereafter. No good reason has been suggested by the Applicant for modification of this variance requirement, except for the installation of an access road. No unique topographical characteristic of the site has been identified that would *852 create a hardship or practical difficulty which would require relief by the granting of a variance. An adverse impact to neighbors would result if a reduction in the buffer were allowed. The Applicant's request for a variance to the 30 foot buffer yard requirement, except for its access road, is recommended to be denied.
Variance to Allow Disturbance of the 200 foot Buffer
The Applicant requests a variance to the requirements of Section 267-28D(4), that a 200 foot undisturbed buffer area be maintained between the fill area and adjoining properties. [This requirement is repeated at Section 267-40.1(B).].
It would appear that the Applicant proposes to disturb the 200 foot buffer area in most locations around the rubble-fill. The Applicant argues, however, that much of the 200 foot buffer has already been disturbed by prior mining activities and that the maintenance of the 200 foot buffer would;
". . . have the effect of leaving a 200 foot trough with no noise or visual shields from the landfill activities." (See Applicant's Brief, page 16.)
* * *
The Applicant makes no argument that its property is somehow unique which causes a resulting hardship if the 200 foot buffer yard is required. Even if such an argument were made, however, it is herein found that the property has no unique characteristic or topographical condition which would create a hardship to the Applicant so as to justify a relaxation of the 200 foot buffer yard requirement as requested by the Applicant.
* * *
The Applicant[,] . . . primarily through its witness Jacqueline Seneschal, asserts that the topography of the site is unique compared to other properties in the neighborhood. This suggestion was refuted by Anthony McClune of the Harford County Department of Planning and Zoning. In truth, nothing distinguishes the subject property from other lands in the area except for disturbance due to past mining activity. While the extent of disturbance on the property may set it apart from other properties, this feature has nothing to do with an application of pertinent development standards. The suggested "uniqueness" of the property, to the extent it exists, does not cause a disproportionate impact of use restrictions and, accordingly, is not a cause of "practical difficulty" or "unreasonable hardship".
As a result of these findings it cannot be concluded that the existing 200 foot buffer would serve no purpose in helping to lessen the impact of the proposed use onto adjoining properties. Indeed, the opposite conclusion can readily be reached, which is that the disturbance of the 200 foot buffer during the rubble landfill operation would increase the disturbance to be seen and experienced by adjoining owners and residents. As a result, they would suffer an adverse impact.
The true hardship of the Applicant is that it would lose area within which to place its rubble-fill if the 200 foot buffer is required. The argument that a rebuilt buffer would be better for the neighbors is not a practical difficulty.. . . Simply being unable to do what one wants to do with [one's] property is not a hardship related to a underlying unique characteristic of the property or its topography.
* * *
*853 Accordingly, it is recommended that the variance to the 200 foot buffer yard requirement be denied.
The Hearing Examiner also recommended denial of four other variances requested by MRA. These variances and the Examiner's response are as follows:
(1) Variance to Allow Deposit of Solid Waste Within 500 feet of a Flood Plain District
[EXAMINER:] MRA argues that the Flood plain buffer is not scientifically based, but is, in fact, a "political boundary." MRA suggests, through its witnesses, that a 350 foot to 400 foot Flood plain buffer would be as protective of the Flood plain as would a 500 foot buffer. In other words, a granting of this variance would make no difference to the Flood plain.
. . . [No] unique feature of the property or topographical condition is identified by the Applicant in support of this request. It merely states that the 500 foot setback request is not necessary. . . . [W]ithout a finding of uniqueness and resulting practical difficulty, the variance cannot be granted. Accordingly, it is recommended that the requested variance to the 500 foot buffer to the Flood Plain District be denied.
(2) Variance to the 75 foot Historic District Buffer
[EXAMINER:] There was much testimony concerning the historic significance of St. James AME Church not only to its congregants, but also to its larger neighborhood and to the history of the African American life within Harford County and the State of Maryland.
Testimony of Mr. Westmoreland was persuasive that the Church and its graveyard be preserved, that its significance to the African American community is pronounced. Being the final resting place of African American soldiers who fought in the Civil War is itself a factor sufficient to mandate that the Church and its graveyard be given all possible protections to help preserve their historical significance and the prominent place they continue to play in the history of our County and State.[3] Harford County Development Regulations at Section 267-28E require that a use have a
". . buffer and landscaping between 10 feet and 75 feet from any historic landmark as designated by the Historic Preservation commission[.]"
The St. James AME Church graveyard is such [a] historic landmark. In determining the extent of this "buffer and landscaping", the Department of Planning and Zoning is to have the recommendation of the Historic Preservation Commission. The Department is to then require a buffer yard as determined by the Historic Preservation Commission, unless the Commission's decision is determined to be "arbitrary and capricious". . . . [N]o basis exists for requesting a variance to this process. In effect, the Applicant is requesting an interpretation of the application of the Code, not a variance. The proper procedure would be for the Applicant to appeal an interpretation of the Zoning Administrator once that interpretation is made. . . . [T]he requested variance to Section 267-28(E) cannot be granted.
*854 (3) Variance to the Code Requirement that the Rubble-Fill be Located on Not Less Than 100 Acres
[EXAMINER:] MRA's parcel is 55 acres in size. Section 267-40.1(A) requires that the site be at least 100 acres. Obviously, the Applicant will not have a rubble-fill regardless of the finding on the other variances, unless it is granted a variance to the 100 acre requirement. The variance requested is substantial, with the Applicant suggesting that an area of just slightly more than one-half of the minimum acreage requirement is sufficient for approval.
Again, the Applicant's argument in favor of this argument is that;
"Enlarging the site to 100 acres would serve no purpose and would be a practical difficulty."
Again, no statutory or case authority exists which would justify the granting of a variance based on a perceived lack of need for the requirement for which the variance is requested. 80' rear yard setbacks may not, in property owners' opinions, be necessary, but they are nevertheless required in certain districts. . . . The decision on whether a property is `unique' has literally nothing to do with a subjective perception of the need for the requirement for which a variance is sought. . . . "Need" is a concept related to adverse impact, not to unique characteristics or practical difficulty.
Furthermore, the Applicant cannot allege a disproportionate impact of the 100 acre requirement upon it. All properties of less than 100 acres in size are similarly impacted by the prohibition against rubble-fills on parcels of less than that size. The Applicant is treated no differently than any other similarly situated property owner.
Accordingly, it is recommended that the requested variance to the 100 acre minimum lot size requirement be denied.
(4) Variance to Allow the Disturbance of the 1,000 foot Buffer for Residential or Institutional Building
[EXAMINER:] Quite plainly, the Applicant cannot meet this requirement as the nearest residences, and St. James AME Church, are located on Gravel Hill Road, and well within the required buffer. The Applicant suggests, and its suggestion is accepted as correct, that the imposition of this buffer requirement would preclude its use of the site for a rubble fill.
* * *
Again, without being unnecessarily redundant, the requirement that one conform [one's] use to the requirements of the Code is not a practical difficulty sufficient to justify the granting of a variance. MRA says, in effect, that it cannot operate its rubble fill if it is required to conform with the 1,000 foot buffer. No other suggestion is made that the property is somehow otherwise unique, or has topographical conditions which cause a practical difficulty. Indeed, the difficulty arises from the application of the Development Regulations, not from any characteristic inherent to the property itself.
Furthermore, MRA suggests that if granted the variance the resulting impact would not be adverse to the surrounding neighbors as the rubble fill use would be similar to those uses allowed as of right in the agricultural district. While this argument has [a] patina of persuasiveness, such a suggestion is, at heart, simply incorrect. *855 Certainly, some, perhaps all, of the equipment which will be operating on the MRA property is, at least occasionally, also used in agricultural operations. . . . However, those vehicles are not, generally, operated five ½ days a week, eight hours per day, as they are proposed to be used on the MRA property. . . . [T]he scope, intensity, duration and scale of the proposed use greatly exceeds almost any conceivable agricultural operation.
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth earlier in this opinion, it is found that a relaxation of the buffer, even if the Applicant can show a practical difficulty resulting in some unique feature of the property or its topography, would have an adverse impact which would be detrimental to the neighbors and their property.
Furthermore, a discussion of the Applicant's request to relax the 1,000 foot buffer requirement, as well as the other buffer requirements, cannot be concluded without note [being] made of the severe impact such relaxation would impose upon St. James AME Church and its congregation. For reasons clearly set forth in the testimony of Mr. Westmoreland, the St. James AME Church, and its graveyard, occupy a significant historical position in the Havre de Grace area and within Harford County and the State of Maryland in general. Mr. Westmoreland was eloquent in his description of the Church and its place in our history and culture. . . .
* * *
MRA has certain rights to use its property. However, it cannot use its property in derogation of the rights of other residents, and of adjoining institutions, to exist, thrive and continue to contribute to their community without unnecessary adverse impact. A relaxation of the 1,000 foot buffer, or for that matter a relaxation of any of the other non-NRD buffer requirements would cause harm to those residents and the institution of St. James AME Church.
It is accordingly recommended that the variance to the 1,000 foot buffer requirement be denied.
(Footnote added).
MRA appealed the Hearing Examiner's decision to the Board. On June 5, 2007, the Board voted 7-0 to deny the requested variances to these sections of the Code, and adopted the Hearing Examiner's decision. MRA then noted an appeal to the Circuit Court for Harford County. The Circuit Court affirmed the findings of the Board of Appeals in an order filed on July 11, 2008.
Because MRA had, at that point, sought and been denied variances, as required by our decision in MRA III, it renewed its 2003 appeal in the Circuit Court for Harford County. On September 3, 2008, the Circuit Court affirmed its October 2003 decision. MRA appealed its variance denials and the Circuit Court's affirmation of its previous decision, to the Court of Special Appeals ("CSA"). On our own initiative, we granted certiorari in both matters and shall address them both in this opinion. See Maryland Reclamation Assocs. v. Harford County, 406 Md. 744, 962 A.2d 370 (2008).
I.
Case No. 143 Issues
Regarding the denial of its request for variances, MRA presents the following questions on appeal, which we have rephrased and reordered:
1. Was there substantial evidence and/or did the Harford County Board of *856 Appeals ("Board") correctly apply the applicable law in finding that granting the requested variances would be substantially detrimental to adjacent properties and/or the public safety and welfare?
2. Was there substantial evidence and/or did the Board correctly apply applicable law in finding MRA's property is not "unique" or subject to "topographical" conditions which make the application of certain setback and minimum lot size requirements to it a practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship?
3. Did the Board correctly apply the legal "practical difficulty" and/or "unreasonable hardship" variance standards set forth in the Harford County Zoning Ordinance when it refused to grant requested variances?
Harford County Zoning Code Section 267-11(A) provides that a variance may be granted if the Board finds that both of the following requirements are met:
(1) By reason of the uniqueness of the property or topographical conditions, the literal enforcement of this Part 1 would result in practical difficulty or unreasonable hardship.
(2) The variance will not be substantially detrimental to adjacent properties or will not materially impair the purpose of this Part 1 or the public interest.
In answer to the first question, we shall hold that the Board did not err in finding that the requested variances would be substantially detrimental to adjacent properties. Such a holding precludes the granting of the variances under HCC Section 267-11(A)(2). Because of this holding, we need not reach the second or third questions presented.
Standard Of Review
We recently articulated the narrow standard of review we apply in zoning cases:
When we review the final decision of an administrative agency, such as the Board of Appeals, we look through the circuit court's and intermediate appellate court's decisions, although applying the same standards of review, and evaluate[] the decision of the agency. Judicial review of administrative agency action is narrow. The court's task on review is not to substitute its judgment for the expertise of those persons who constitute the administrative agency[.] In our review, we inquire whether the zoning body's determination was supported by such evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion[.] As we have frequently indicated, the order of an administrative agency, such as a county zoning board, must be upheld on review if it is not premised upon an error of law and if the agency's conclusions reasonably may be based upon the facts proven.
People's Counsel for Balt. County v. Loyola College in Md., 406 Md. 54, 66-67, 956 A.2d 166, 173-74 (2008) (citations and quotations omitted).
As we stated in Lanzaron v. Anne Arundel County, 402 Md. 140, 147, 935 A.2d 689, 693 (2007), in reviewing challenges to zoning variance decisions, "[a] court's role is limited to determining if there is substantial evidence in the record as a whole to support the agency's findings and conclusions, and to determine if the administrative decision is premised upon an erroneous conclusion of law." (Citation and quotations omitted).
Detrimental Effect Of Rubble Landfill On Adjacent Properties
The Board's denial of MRA's requested variances shall be upheld if the proposed rubble landfill will be "substantially detrimental" to adjacent properties. See HCC *857 § 267-11(A)(2). We conclude that the Board did not err in denying the requested variances because there was sufficient evidence that MRA's proposed rubble landfill will "adversely affect the public health, safety, and general welfare," will "jeopardize the lives or property of people living" and result "dangerous traffic conditions" in the Gravel Hill and St. James communities.
The Proposed Rubble Landfill Will Adversely Affect St. James And Its Historic Graveyard
Testimony presented during the hearing established that St. James is a vibrant, active 103-member congregation. Reverend Violet Hopkins-Tann has served as pastor of the St. James church for 23 years and provided testimony about the events and activities that take place at the church. These activities included Bible study, cooking and baking, choir rehearsals, board meetings, weddings and funerals, and took place both during the week and on weekends. Although MRA proposed an arrangement in which truck activity would not take place during funerals, no such concession was made with regard to rubble landfill operation during other church activities.
MRA's property surrounds St. James's property and according to the joint stipulation of facts, "[t]he outer boundary of `the property' lies within 25 feet from St. James[.]" Edward Serp, an environmental engineer, testified on behalf of MRA that the following equipment would be used at the rubble landfill between the hours of 7:00 A.M. and 5:00 p.m.: bulldozers, front end loaders, water trucks, power broom sweeper, self-loading earth moving pans, hydroseeder, and mulcher. Serp also testified that there would be noise from the "back-up alarms" that results from the use of these machines. It is easy to envision how this kind of machinery could obstreperously interfere with church activities occurring at St. James.
A major point of discussion during the course of the hearings was the historical significance of the church, which would be adversely impacted if MRA is permitted to operate a rubble landfill on its Property. Appellees provided Carl Westmoreland, an expert in the preservation of historic African-American sites, to discuss this topic. When asked about the effect the rubble landfill would have on the historic preservation of the St. James site, Westmoreland testified that:
The imposition or the activation of a dump site would create an industrial environment that would be in conflict with the 18th and 19th century environment that predominates at this point and would compromise the historical integrity and the cultural legitimacy of this community that has existed for over 150 years and that has attempted to function within the mores and the cultural traditions of Maryland.
To me, when you arrive there, if you didn't know that it was a black church, it's just a little modest church. When you see the Civil War monuments, the only reason you know they're black is because it says USCT, but it's typical of what you would see in the Maryland landscape. And I think that's what people in Havre de Grace and in Gravel Hill have struggled for, to become a part of the American mainstream and this documents their efforts. . . .
MRA does not challenge the specific proposition that the rubble fill activities will interfere with church activities or diminish the historical ambiance of the church. Instead, MRA attempts to discredit Westmoreland's testimony. They argue:
*858 [Westmoreland claimed] that MRA's property should remain undeveloped because he concluded a landfill would create an "industrial" environment, but later contradicted himself stating the one closed rubble landfill he had seen was a golf course. (Mr. Westmoreland was the only expert witness introduced by Protestants whose testimony was discussed in the "Findings of Fact" portion of the Board's opinion denying variances.) Reliance upon Mr. Westmoreland's generalized conclusions of adverse impact, which were clearly not based upon any review of the technical record presented by MRA in the case, or any applicable regulatory standards, was erroneous as a matter of law.
This argument reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of Westmoreland's testimony, which was not at all technical in nature. Rather, Westmoreland offered perspective on the general atmosphere at St. James and the impact that rubble landfill activity would have on it. We are not convinced that Westmoreland's lack of technical expertise diminishes the value of his opinion.
Appellees also presented the testimony of an expert archaeologist, Dr. James Gibb, as further evidence of the fact that operating a rubble landfill on the Property will adversely affect the Church. Gibb holds a doctorate in anthropology, has been an instructor in anthropology and archaeology, and specializes in surveying properties for archaeological sites and collecting data that can be used to identify historical significance. Gibb testified that the Church is historically significant, a "central institution" that the African-American community built. Appellees specifically rely on Gibb's testimony that the Church represents "the history of that community," and his opinion that operating a rubble landfill in the immediate vicinity will adversely affect the Church both atmospherically and physically. MRA challenges Gibb's testimony because in forming his opinion, he said he did not conduct the level of research for this case that he would have were he operating under a "normal contract." When we examine the nature of Gibb's testimony, it becomes clear that the level of research he did doreviewing tax records, examining the original deeds available from the Maryland State Archives, and the work of a local historianis commensurate with the portion of his opinion on which the Appellees rely: the church's historic atmosphere.
Gibb's testimony regarding the impact of MRA's proposed rubble landfill on the historic graveyard that surrounds the Church was also challenged by MRA. The graveyard is designated as a Harford County historic place because buried therein are the remains of soldiers who served in the United States Colored Infantry during the Civil War. MRA and the Appellees disagree about whether the rubble landfill will adversely impact the graves, which resulted in a credibility contest between their experts. Gibb testified that dust will be permitted to blow onto the cemetery, which will destroy the historic setting of the cemetery. Gibb also testified that the slopes around the existing graves are stabilized with vegetation and that destabilizing the vegetation could be detrimental to the graves. MRA argues that Gibb's opinion is not sufficiently supported by a technical analysis.
MRA's archeological expert, Michael Clem, opined that the proposed rubble fill would not adversely affect the historic cemetery located on the Church property and that "the graves will actually be better protected from erosional forces by filling." Appellees point out that Clem has not yet obtained his Ph.D. and works for the same company as all of MRA's other experts. *859 The Appellees contend that "Mr. Clem's opinion is not only completely unfounded, it was undermined by Dr. Gibb, who has substantial experience excavating cemeteries." Appellees also point out that Mr. Clem admitted that he could not testify to the impact that the operation of the rubble landfill may have on the graves during its operation.
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