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Benton v. Prince George's Cnty. Dist. Council
Wells, Gould, Zarnoch, Robert A. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned), JJ.
*This is an unreported opinion, and it may not be cited in any paper, brief, motion, or other document filed in this Court or any other Maryland Court as either precedent within the rule of stare decisis or as persuasive authority. Md. Rule 1-104.
In September 2019, the Prince George's County District Council ("the District Council"), appellee, issued a final decision adopting the planning board's approval of Detailed Site Plan Application Number 18024 ("DSP-18024"). Pursuant to §4-401 and §22-407 of the Land Use Article, LaRay J. Benton, appellant, petitioned for judicial review of the District Council's final decision in the Circuit Court for Prince George's County. The District Council, thereafter, moved to dismiss Mr. Benton's petition,1 contending, in pertinent part, that he did not have standing to seek judicial review of its final decision.2 In response, Mr. Benton made several filings including a written opposition to the motion to dismiss, a motion for summary judgment, and a motion for default judgment. Ultimately, the circuit court granted the District Council's motion, dismissing the action on the basis that Mr. Benton lacked standing. The following day, Mr. Benton sought reconsideration of the dismissal, but his request was ultimately denied.
Mr. Benton noted a timely appeal to this Court. On appeal, he raises twenty-one questions for our consideration, which we consolidate, reorder, and rephrase for clarity:
For the following reasons, we shall affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
We will first address the issue of standing because "standing is a threshold issue; a party may proceed only if [he or she] demonstrates that he has a real and justiciable interest that is capable of being resolved through litigation." Patel v. Bd. of License Commissioners for Somerset Cty., 230 Md. App. 195, 205 (2016) (internal citation omitted). This issue of Mr. Benton's standing to appeal "either to this Court or to a circuit court from the decision of [an administrative agency] is a question of law, which we decide de novo." Id.
In this matter challenging a quasi-judicial land-use decision, the circuit court was permitted to exercise judicial review, but only if Mr. Benton satisfied the standing requirements set forth in §22-407 of the Land Use Article, which states:
Upon review of the record, we hold that Mr. Benton did not satisfy the aggrievement requirement necessary for establishing standing. Though he asserts that the site plan applicant, Woodmore Overlook, fraudulently used his personal and intellectual property, including his "name, liking, and several engineering documents," without his consent for the purposes of acquiring zoning approval, these assertions are not sufficient to establish the kind of aggrievement specified in §22-407 of the Land Use Article.
The statute specifies that the person seeking review must be "aggrieved by the decision of the district council." However, in its decision, the District Council explicitly declined to make any determination regarding Mr. Benton's claims of "aggrievement," specifying that "it [had] no jurisdiction to resolve state or federal allegations concerning 1) evidence of fraud by misrepresentation, 2) evidence [of] bank fraud and breach of contract, 3) evidence by fraud by conversion, and 4) failure to properly register property as a security." These kinds of claims are, indeed, tortious in nature and outside of the jurisdiction of the District Council to decide. The powers of the District Council, as set out in § 22-104 and §21-201 of the Land Use Article, do not vest the District Council with the authority to resolve issues of fraud, conversion, and/or theft of intellectual property. To be sure, if true, Mr. Benton has cause to be disgruntled by the actions of Woodmore Overlook and the other applicants, but these types of claims are more appropriately resolved by the courts.
Moreover, Mr. Benton has failed to raise the type of "aggrievement" that this Court has recognized in the past as...
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