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In re Chernicoff
Circuit Court for Montgomery County Case No. 485741V
Arthur, Reed, Sharer, J. Frederick (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned), JJ.
Arthur, J Two homeowners obtained a building permit from the Montgomery County Department of Permitting Services ("DPS") to convert their detached garage into a living space for their elderly family members. Their neighbors appealed the issuance of the permit. The Montgomery County Board of Appeals affirmed the grant of the permit, and the Circuit Court for Montgomery County affirmed the Board's decision. The neighbors appealed.
For the reasons set forth below, we hold that the Board did not err in approving the permit. We affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
In 2011, Richard and Pavitra Bacon purchased a residential property in Silver Spring. The property is located in an R-60 (residential) zone.
When the Bacons purchased the property, it included a detached garage, consisting of approximately 808 square feet, which was set back five feet from the closest lot line. Because of its size and its distance from the lot line, the garage did not conform to the current requirements of the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance. Because the garage had been built before the Zoning Ordinance imposed those requirements, it was a lawful, nonconforming use.
In February of 2020, the Bacons applied for a building permit to convert the garage into an accessory dwelling unit ("ADU"). They proposed modifications to the garage, including the replacement of the roof, an increase in the height of the structure to accommodate an HVAC system, the addition of a second-floor "storage attic" above the first-floor living space, and a second-floor window. The changes in the roof structure (to add an HVAC system) were required for the proposed ADU to comply with the County building code.
DPS denied the permit because the proposed ADU did not comply with the R-60 zoning requirements pertaining to the required setback from the lot line, the proposed second-floor window, and the limits on the size of the structure.
In response to the denial of the permit, the Bacons applied to the Board for three variances:
Appellants William and Bruna Chernicoff own the property abutting the Bacons' property to the south. Appellants Ozan and Serpil Koknar own the property abutting the Bacons' property along the rear lot line. The Chernicoffs and the Koknars opposed the Bacons' variance requests.[1]
After a hearing in which the Chernicoffs and the Koknars participated, the Board granted the setback and size variances, but denied the window variance. In a written decision dated July 15, 2020, the Board evaluated each of the statutory criteria for the grant of a variance and concluded that the application for the setback and size variances met the criteria. Among other things, the Board found that the variances "were required to make the ADU code compliant." In addition, it remarked that "two-story accessory structures are allowed in the R-60 zone, and that the height of the proposed structure will not exceed the maximum allowable height for accessory structures in the R-60 zone." As a condition of the variances, the Board required that the Bacons submit as-built plans upon completion of the construction of the ADU.
The neighbors sought judicial review in circuit court. Although they had told the Board that the proposed ADU would "be adverse to the use and enjoyment" of their properties (a ground for denying a variance under § 59.7.3.2 of the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance), the neighbors told the circuit court that the Board lacked "jurisdiction" or "authority" to grant the variances.
In an order dated January 21, 2021, the circuit court ruled that the neighbors had not preserved their arguments. In a footnote, the court added:
Meanwhile, on August 18, 2020, the Bacons had applied to DPS for a building permit for the ADU. On November 20, 2020, DPS granted the permit under § 8-25 of the Montgomery County Code. The permit authorized the Bacons to convert the garage to an ADU.
The neighbors appealed the issuance of the permit to the Board. In their written argument, they began with the premise that the Bacons' garage was a lawful nonconforming structure. They cited § 59.7.7.1.A.1 of the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance, which prohibits any increase in the height or footprint of a lawful, nonconforming structure that existed as of October 31, 2014. Because the building permit allowed the Bacons to increase the height and gross floor area of the garage, the neighbors argued that it conflicted with the Zoning Ordinance.
At the outset of the hearing on the building permit, several Board members expressed their concern that the neighbors intended to relitigate the grant of the variances, which approved the structure that the building permit allowed the Bacons to build. The neighbors responded that they would limit their case to a single issue: "whether the permit was unlawfully issued because it authorize[d] an increase in the height and/or floor area of a lawful, nonconforming structure." They argued that "a building permit cannot be granted that authorizes an increase in the height or floor area of a lawful, nonconforming use." "That issue," they asserted, "was not before the Board when the variances were granted because there was no permit before the Board."
The Board issued an opinion denying the appeal. It observed the DPS had found a need for the variances, that the Board had granted the variances, and that the circuit court had approved the Board's decision. It concluded that because of "the grant of the variances, the nonconforming structure was made conforming, and thus DPS properly issued the permit for the Bacon's garage, based on the variances that the Board had previously granted."
The neighbors petitioned for judicial review.
At the hearing on the petition in the circuit court, the neighbors framed the question before the court as follows: "Can the Board of Appeals use its authority to grant variances to turn a lawful nonconforming structure into a conforming one?"
The court denied the petition, which it characterized as an attempt "to get a second bite at the apple" by challenging the variances. Those challenges, the court said, "should have been raised," and "could have been raised," but "were not raised" at the variance hearing.
This appeal followed.
The neighbors present the following question, which we have rephrased: Did the Board err in approving the building permit, which allowed for an increase in the height and floor area of an ADU, based upon the zoning variances approved by the Board?[2]
In reviewing an appeal from a circuit court's exercise of judicial review over an agency's ruling, "we look through the decision of the circuit court and review the agency's decision directly." West Montgomery Cty. Citizens Ass'n v. Montgomery Cty. Plan. Bd. of Md.-Nat'l Capital Park &Planning Comm'n, 248 Md.App. 314, 332-33 (2021). Our task is limited to deciding whether the agency's findings and conclusions are supported by substantial evidence in the record and whether the agency's decision is premised upon an error of law. I.B. v. Frederick Cty. Dep't of Soc. Servs., 239 Md.App. 556, 562 (2018) (citation omitted).
In this case, the neighbors contest the Board's conclusions of law, which we review de novo. See Mayor &Council of Rockville v. Pumphrey, 218 Md.App. 160, 194 (2014). Generally, an agency's decision, including that of a local zoning board, is not entitled to deference if the decision is based on erroneous conclusions of law. Montgomery Cty. v. Longo, 187 Md.App. 25, 49-50 (2009) (citations omitted).
The neighbors contend that the Board erred in affirming the issuance of the building permit, which, they claim, violated the height and floor area restrictions pertaining to nonconforming structures. They rely on § 59.7.7.1.A.1 of the Montgomery County Zoning Ordinance, which provides:
A legal structure or site design existing on October 30, 2014 that does not meet the zoning standards on or after October 30, 2014 is conforming and may be continued, renovated repaired, or reconstructed if the floor area, height, and footprint of the structure are not increased, except as provided for in Section 7.7.1.C for structures in Commercial/Residential, Employment, or Industrial zones, or Section 7.7.1.D.5 for structures in Residential Detached zones.
In the neighbors' view, the Board erroneously concluded that the variances transformed the Bacons' garage from a lawful nonconforming structure to a conforming structure. They contend that the garage remained a nonconforming structure subject to the restrictions of § 59.7.7.1.A.1. Thus, they conclude that the issuance of the permit was unlawful.
The Board and the Bacons respond that the challenge to...
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