Waterman Family Limited Partnership, et al v. Kathleen B. Boomer, et al.
No. 18, September Term 2017
Local Government Law – Code Home Rule Counties – Repeal or Rescission of
Previously Enacted Measure. Under Maryland Code, Local Government Article §4-416,
a municipality that annexes land may not allow development of that land for a use
“substantially different” than permitted by the previous county zoning for a period of five
years, unless the county expressly approves the rezoning. A code home rule county has
authority to repeal a resolution that gave the county’s assent, for purposes of §4-416, to a
municipality’s rezoning of recently annexed land, unless third party rights in the rezoning
have already vested.
Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County
Case Nos. 17-C-15-019608, 17-C-15-019683
Argument: October 11, 2017
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 18
September Term, 2017
WATERMAN FAMILY LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP, ET AL.
V.
KATHLEEN B. BOOMER, ET AL.
_____________________________________
Barbera, C.J.,
Greene
Adkins
McDonald
Watts
Hotten
Rodowsky, Lawrence F.
(Senior Judge, Specially
Assigned),
JJ.
______________________________________
Opinion by McDonald, J.
______________________________________
Filed: November 20, 2017
Among the powers conferred on a Maryland municipality by the General Assembly
pursuant to the State Constitution are the power to zone land within the municipality’s
boundaries and the power to enlarge those boundaries by annexing contiguous land.
However, when a municipality exercises those powers together, there is a constraint. A
State statute delays for five years the rezoning of annexed land for a use “substantially
different” from that allowed by the land’s prior county zoning classification – unless the
county approves the municipality’s reclassification of the annexed property before the
expiration of the five-year period.
Petitioner Waterman Family Limited Partnership (“Waterman”) asked the Town
Commissioners of Queenstown (“the Town”), also a Petitioner, to annex farm land owned
by Waterman adjacent to Queenstown in Queen Anne’s County. At the same time,
Waterman asked the Town to rezone the annexed land for purposes of a long planned
development. The Town acceded to those requests. In order to make the new zoning
effective sooner rather than later, the Town sought the County’s approval of the new zoning
classification. Certain nearby property owners, including Respondents Kathleen B.
Boomer, Marie J. McNurlan, Paul A. McNurlan, Stacy L. Swartwood, and the Queen
Anne’s Conservation Association (collectively “QACA”), opposed the effort to obtain the
County’s approval of the new zoning.
At the same time, the County government happened to be in a period of transition
as a result of the November 2014 election. The outgoing Board of County Commissioners
– the County’s governing body – narrowly approved the Town’s rezoning in late November
2014. Two weeks later, the newly installed Board of County Commissioners rescinded
that approval.
Disappointed, Waterman and the Town instituted legal action against the County.
QACA joined the fray in defense of the County’s rescission of its initial approval.
Waterman’s challenge raised a question of first impression: May a county rescind its
approval of a municipality’s rezoning of annexed land?
The Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County said “no.” The Court of Special
Appeals said “yes.” For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we agree with the Court of
Special Appeals.
I
Background
A. Rezoning Land After Municipal Annexation
1. Municipal Zoning
The General Assembly has authorized municipalities in Maryland to exercise
zoning authority over land within their respective jurisdictions. Maryland Code, Local
Government Article (“LG”) §5-213; see also Maryland Code, Land Use Article (“LU”),
§1-101(g) (definition of “legislative body” includes governing body of municipality), §4-
101 et seq. (authorizing legislative body to exercise zoning powers).
2. Municipal Annexation
State law allows a municipality to annex unincorporated land contiguous to the
municipality’s boundaries if certain procedures are followed. LG §4-401 et seq. A
2
proposal to annex land may be initiated by the legislative body of the municipality or by
residents or owners of the land in question. LG §§4-403, 4-404.
3. Rezoning of Annexed Land
It is generally the case that unincorporated land annexed by a municipality will
already have been subject to county zoning. State law temporarily limits the rezoning and
development of such land after annexation by a municipality. In particular, for a period of
time the county retains some say over whether and when the land may be rezoned or
developed in a way that allows for a substantially higher density or different use than that
allowed by the county zoning classification that applied to the land prior to annexation.
That constraint is set forth in LG §4-416, which provides in pertinent part:
(a) Existing municipal authority. – (1) Notwithstanding [a provision of the
Local Government Article that limits the extent of municipal authority
over planning, subdivision, and zoning] . . . if an area is annexed to a
municipality that has planning and zoning authority at the time of
annexation, the municipality shall have exclusive jurisdiction over
planning, subdivision control, and zoning in the area annexed.
* * * *
(b) Different land use or density. – Without the express approval of the
county commissioners or county council of the county in which the
municipality is located, for 5 years after an annexation by a
municipality, the municipality may not allow development of the
annexed land for land uses substantially different than the authorized
use, or at a substantially higher density, not exceeding 50%, than could
be granted for the proposed development, in accordance with the
zoning classification of the county applicable at the time of the
annexation.
(c) County approval of zoning classification. – Notwithstanding [a
provision of the Land Use Article concerning amendment or repeal of
a zoning classification] and if the county expressly approves, the
municipality may place the annexed land in a zoning classification that
3
allows a land use or density different from the land use or density
specified in the zoning classification of the county or agency with
planning and zoning jurisdiction over the land prior to its annexation
applicable at the time of the annexation.
4. Summary
The principles incorporated in the statute can be summarized as follows:
● Municipality’s exclusive jurisdiction – As a general rule, a municipality that has
planning and zoning authority has exclusive jurisdiction over planning, zoning and
subdivision control in any area that the municipality annexes.
● Five-year delay of rezoning – The exclusive authority of the municipality is
subject to the proviso that, for a period of five years after annexation, the municipality may
not allow development of the annexed land for uses “substantially different” from that
authorized under the county zoning applicable to the property prior to annexation. In sum,
municipal rezoning of annexed land may be subject to a five-year delay.
● County waiver of delay – That proviso, however, is subject to a further proviso.
The county – i.e., the county commissioners or the county council, as the case may be –
may give “express approval” for the new municipal zoning before the five-year period
expires. This approval is sometimes referred to as a county “waiver” of the five-year delay.
This case raises the question whether a county that waives the five-year delay by
giving express approval may rescind that waiver before any development has been
undertaken in the annexed area.
4
B. Facts and Legal Proceedings
1. The Property
Waterman owns approximately 148 acres of land, known as Wheatlands Farm,
located immediately south of Route 50 in Queen Anne’s County. The property is across
Route 50 from a commercial development known as the Queenstown Outlets. Before the
events that gave rise to this case, the property was zoned CS (“Countryside”) by the County
– a designation that permits agricultural and low density residential uses.
2. Annexation and Town Rezoning of the Property
On June 25, 2014, Waterman submitted a petition to the Town to annex the
Wheatlands Farm property to the Town. At the same time, Waterman asked the Town to
zone the property PRC (“Planned Regional Commercial”) under the Town zoning
ordinance. A month later, on July 23, 2014, a proposed annexation resolution and a
proposed zoning ordinance were introduced before the Town Commissioners. The
Commissioners referred both proposals to the Town’s Planning Commission for its
recommendations.
The Town Planning Commission held two public hearings, concluded that the
annexation and proposed zoning were consistent with the Town plan, and recommended
approval to the Town Commissioners.1
1
The annexation of this property to the Town and the PRC zoning classification
were contemplated in the comprehensive plans of both the Town and the County.
5
Following a public hearing on the proposals on September 24, 2014, the Town
Commissioners voted unanimously to annex the property. A month later, on October 22,
2014, they held a second hearing on the rezoning proposal. On November 12, 2014, the
Town Commissioners approved the rezoning.
It is undisputed that the Town’s PRC zoning classification is “substantially
different” from the County CS classification and allows for a “substantially higher density”
than the CS classification. Accordingly, under LG §4-416(b), the property could not be
developed with that higher density within five years after annexation, unless the County
gave its express approval to the new zoning classification. In light of this requirement, the
Town Commissioners made the effectiveness of the rezoning ordinance contingent in part
on the County’s approval of the rezoning.2
3. County Resolutions Related to the Rezoning
During the summer of 2014, while the annexation and rezoning proposals were
pending in the Town, the Town Commissioners asked the County Commissioners to grant
express approval of the Town’s rezoning of the property upon annexation. The County
Commissioners referred the request to the County Planning Commission, which
recommended approval.
2
The ordinance provided that the PRC zoning designation of the Waterman property
would become effective as of the earlier of (1) the County’s approval of the rezoning or (2)
five years from the date of the Town’s annexation of the property.
6
In the meantime, as a result of the election held on November 4, 2014, there was a
significant turnover in the composition of the County governing body, with four of the five
seats to be occupied by new Commissioners.
On November 25, 2014, the outgoing County Commissioners conducted a brief
hearing and passed, by a 3-2 vote, County Resolution 14-31, which gave express approval
for the Town’s rezoning of the annexed Waterman property.
On December 2, 2014, the newly elected County Commissioners took office. One
week later, on December 9, the newly elected County Commissioners conducted a hearing
and passed County Resolution 14-33, rescinding the resolution that their predecessors had
passed two weeks earlier to approve the rezoning. The rescinding resolution noted that no
site plan or other indication of the intended development had been provided to the County
and stated that the County Commissioners wished to review the planned development of
the property and its impact “in terms of traffic, population growth, infrastructure, schools,
and the environment….”
4. Litigation over County Resolution 14-33
One month later, on January 7, 2015, in response to County Resolution 14-33
rescinding the County’s approval of the rezoning, Waterman filed an action styled as a
“Petition for Judicial Review and Writ of Administrative Mandamus” in the Circuit Court
for Queen Anne’s County. Waterman thus invoked alternative routes of judicial review of
administrative action pursuant to Maryland Rule 7-201 et seq. and Maryland Rule 7-401 et
seq. The Town subsequently joined that petition. QACA filed a notice of its intention to
7
participate in the judicial review proceeding.3 Waterman later also filed a declaratory
judgment action against the County in which it asked the Circuit Court to declare County
Resolution 14-33 – the resolution rescinding approval – to be void. Waterman’s two
actions were consolidated in the Circuit Court.
Waterman, the Town, and the County pursued an effort to settle the case without
success (QACA was apparently excluded from those discussions). The parties then filed
cross motions for summary judgment.
After hearing legal argument, the Circuit Court held that the County Commissioners
had “no statutory right of reconsideration” once the County had granted express approval
waiving the five-year delay under LG §4-416. On July 23, 2015, the Circuit Court issued
a declaratory judgment that County Resolution 14-33 – the resolution rescinding approval
– had “no legal force and effect.”4 The Circuit Court denied the County’s motion for
reconsideration, which QACA had joined.
3
In the Circuit Court, QACA indicated that it had planned to file an action
challenging the County Resolution 14-31 – the first resolution approving the rezoning –
but decided not to pursue such an action after the newly elected County Commissioners
rescinded that resolution before the deadline for QACA to file such an action had expired.
4
The Circuit Court ultimately also issued an order granting the relief sought in
Waterman’s petition for judicial review and administrative mandamus and denying the
contrary requests for relief made by QACA. In its opinion, the Circuit Court noted that the
parties disputed whether the court had authority to resolve the case as a matter of judicial
review of administrative action, but opined that it clearly had authority to assess the validity
of the second County resolution under the Declaratory Judgments Act, Maryland Code,
Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article, §3-401 et seq. Before us, the parties have treated
the matter as a declaratory judgment action rather than as judicial review of administrative
action. We shall do the same.
8
QACA and the County appealed.5 The Court of Special Appeals reversed the
Circuit Court’s judgment. Boomer v. Waterman Family LP, 232 Md. App. 1 (2017). The
intermediate appellate court held that, while LG §4-416 itself does not explicitly provide
that a county may rescind approval of a new zoning classification of land recently annexed
by a municipality, the Maryland Constitution generally authorizes the county
commissioners of a code home rule county to repeal a public local law by resolution, as
occurred here, and that a county ordinarily has inherent authority to rescind a measure,
absent the vesting of rights based on that measure.
Waterman and the Town filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which we granted
to consider whether the County had authority to rescind the initial resolution approving the
rezoning.
II
Discussion
A. Standard of Review
The Circuit Court issued its decision on the basis of cross motions for summary
judgment. A case may be resolved on summary judgment when there is no dispute of
material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Maryland
Rule 2-501(f). There is general agreement in this case that no material facts are in dispute
and that the issue before us is purely legal. Accordingly, we review that legal issue without
5
The County later dismissed its own appeal.
9
according any special deference to the conclusions of the Circuit Court or the Court of
Special Appeals. See Mathews v. Cassidy Turley Maryland, Inc., 435 Md. 584, 598 (2013).
B. Whether a County May Rescind a Resolution Approving Municipal Rezoning of
Annexed Land
Waterman and the Town contend that the County, having given its express approval
to the rezoning of the tract in County Resolution 14-31 on November 25, 2014, lacked
authority to rescind that approval two weeks later. There is no contention that Waterman
or the Town took any action in reliance on County Resolution 14-31 during the two week
interval before the new Board of County Commissioners rescinded it. Thus, the question
is whether the County generally has the power to rescind such an action.6
LG §4-416
As Waterman and the Town point out, nothing in LG §4-416 authorizes a county to
rescind its approval once it is given. It is true that the statute does not explicitly address
whether a county may withdraw its approval of a municipal rezoning of recently-annexed
land. It is equally true, however, that the statute does not address whether a county that
initially denies approval may later reverse that determination and grant approval.
Waterman and the Town take the position that a county may do the latter – that is, approve
6
If Waterman had taken action to develop the property in accordance with the new
zoning classification during the interval between the approving resolution (County
Resolution 14-31) and the rescinding resolution (County Resolution 14-33) there might be
an issue as to whether Waterman had acquired vested rights in the new zoning classification
and whether the County would be constitutionally barred from rescinding its approval. See
Prince George’s County v. Sunrise Development Limited Partnership, 330 Md. 297 (1993).
That question is not before us.
10
a rezoning after initially declining to do so. In their view, the statute is a one-way ratchet:
Approval, once given, may not be withdrawn. Once denied, however, it may later be given.
But the text of the statute provides no support for this view.7 It is simply silent.
A review of the extant legislative history of the statute is unenlightening on this
question. The key provisions of the statute were enacted before the General Assembly
began to retain bill files in 1976 and thus we do not have the benefit of the types of
legislative materials that are available for more recent legislation. In Mayor and Council
of Rockville v. Rylyns Enterprises, Inc., 372 Md. 514, 548-61 (2002), Judge Harrell
provided a comprehensive history of the enactment of the key provisions that now make
up LG §4-416, prior to their 2013 recodification in the Local Government Article. We
need not repeat all of that analysis, but note only the critical junctures in the development
of the statute that relate to the question before us.
7
Waterman and the Town argue that allowing a County to rescind approval of a
rezoning would offend the “exclusive jurisdiction” over planning, subdivision control, and
zoning that subsection (a) of the statute confers on the municipality. They suggest that
such exclusive jurisdiction is triggered by county approval of the rezoning and, once
triggered, cannot be retracted. This is a misreading of the statute. Under the statute, the
“exclusive jurisdiction” of the municipality is not activated by county action. Rather, it is
a consequence of the municipality’s action in annexing the land. But it is also qualified by
subsections (b) and (c) of the statute for a five-year period following annexation.
Waterman and the Town suggest that allowing a County to rescind approval is an
“illogical” reading of the statute because rescission could effectively change the zoning of
the property after a developer had obtained certain approvals for the development (but
presumably before acquiring vested rights in the zoning classification). But it is no more
illogical than the authority that the Town itself has to change the zoning classification
before the developer has acquired a vested right in the zoning.
11
In 1954, the State Constitution was amended to provide for municipal home rule.
Chapter 53, Laws of Maryland 1954, ratified November 2, 1954 (adding Article XI-E to
the Maryland Constitution). To implement municipal home rule, the General Assembly
enacted various provisions the following year that were codified in Article 23A of the
Maryland Code. Chapter 423, Laws of Maryland 1955. Included among those enactments
were certain provisions concerning annexation and municipal zoning that appeared in §§9
and 19 of Article 23A. Two years later, the General Assembly provided that if a
municipality had zoning power – not all municipalities had such power at that time – the
municipality would have exclusive zoning authority over land that it annexed. Chapter
197, Laws of Maryland 1957. In Rylyns, Judge Harrell referred to this as the “highwater
mark” of municipal power “with respect to the initial zoning of annexed lands.” Rylyns,
372 Md. at 557; see also Prince George’s County v. Mayor and City Council of Laurel,
262 Md. 171, 182-83 (1971); Beshore v. Town of Bel Air, 237 Md. 398, 410-11 (1965).
The tide receded from that highwater mark 14 years later when the Legislature
decided that a municipality should temporarily share with the county its otherwise
exclusive zoning authority over annexed land. In 1971, the General Assembly amended
Article 23A, §9(c) to delay the effectiveness of municipal rezoning of annexed land for a
period of five years when the new zoning classification would permit a land use
“substantially different” from that specified in the county plan prior to annexation. Chapter
116, Laws of Maryland 1971. As a result, municipal “autonomy [with respect to the initial
zoning of annexed land] ceased.” Rylyns, 372 Md. at 557; see also Northeast Plaza
Associates v. Town of North East, 310 Md. 20, 28-29 (1987). A major objective of this
12
provision was to “preserve the integrity” of the county master plan by delaying a substantial
change in zoning for the annexed area that “might well be disruptive to the planning for
the surrounding areas.” Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission v.
Mayor and Council of Rockville, 272 Md. 550, 561 (1974) (upholding constitutionality of
law enacting the five-year delay).
Four years later, the Legislature decided to add some flexibility to the statute. In
1975, the General Assembly again amended Article 23A, §9(c), this time to allow the five-
year delay to be truncated with the county’s assent. The amendment provided that a county
could waive the five-year delay by expressly approving the new municipal zoning before
the expiration of the five-year period. Chapter 613, Laws of Maryland 1975.
The Legislature subsequently modified these provisions in various respects, but the
key components of the statute for our purposes – placing exclusive zoning power in the
municipality, making new zoning that allows a substantially different use subject to a five-
year delay, and allowing for a county waiver of that delay – have remained essentially
unchanged since the mid-1970s. As is evident, this history does not reveal a legislative
intent as to whether or not county approval, once given, may be rescinded.8 In 2013, these
8
Waterman and the Town argue that a 2006 amendment of the predecessor statute
somehow supports their view of LG §4-416. Chapter 381, Laws of Maryland 2006.
Among other things, the 2006 amendment amended Article 23A, §9(c) to provide a more
specific description of the kind of “substantially different use” permitted by a new
municipal zoning classification that would trigger the five-year delay under the statute.
Nothing in that amendment, or its legislative history, supports the idea that the statute
operates as a one-way ratchet under which a county may grant approval previously
withheld, but not rescind approval previously given.
13
provisions were recodified without substantive change as §4-416 of the new Local
Government Article. Chapter 119, Laws of Maryland 2013.
Thus, neither the text of LG §4-416, nor its legislative history, indicates that the
General Assembly intended to preclude a county from exercising whatever authority the
county may have under existing law to rescind an action taken by its governing body. To
decide whether a county may withdraw approval of municipal rezoning of annexed land,
we thus consider the general authority of a county governing body to reconsider its actions.
Common Law Authority
As a general rule, the governing body of a local government “has the right to
reconsider its actions and ordinances, and adopt a measure or ordinance that has previously
been defeated or rescind one that has been previously adopted before the rights of third
parties have vested.” Del Maso v. Board of County Commissioners, 182 Md. 200, 206-7
(1943);9 see also 4 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations, §§13.70, 13.72. This general
principle is related to the idea that a legislative body ordinarily lacks authority to restrict
the legislative activities of its successors. State v. Fisher, 204 Md. 307, 315 (1953) (“One
legislature cannot prohibit repeal or modification by its successors, even where it purports
to do so”); see also Nordheimer v. Montgomery County, 307 Md. 85, 101 (1986). Were it
9
Waterman and the Town attempt to distinguish Dal Maso, arguing that it
concerned a “zoning action” by a local government while, in their view, the County
resolutions in this case do not. However, as noted in the text, the principle stated in Dal
Maso is longstanding and widely applicable in the law regardless of whether or not the
particular legislative action is called a “zoning action.”
14
otherwise, legislative action would be frozen in time with local officials unable to react to
changed circumstances or to pursue policies presently preferred over those previously
adopted. The general power of a governing body to rescind a prior law or policy on a
matter subject to its jurisdiction may be constrained in particular circumstances, as when a
party has acquired a vested right in the governing body’s prior policy decision. 10 Absent
such circumstances, the governing body retains the option of changing its mind.
Thus, a county would ordinarily have authority to rescind its action giving assent –
or one denying assent – for a municipality’s rezoning of recently annexed land. That is
true regardless of whether that authority is explicitly reiterated in LG §4-416. As indicated
above, there is no indication in the statute that the General Assembly intended to trump the
general principle that a county governing body may rescind a prior action.
Article XI-F of the Maryland Constitution
The parties have focused much of their attention in this case on certain provisions
of Article XI-F of the Maryland Constitution, which authorizes counties to adopt code
home rule. Those provisions authorize a code home rule county, such as Queen Anne’s
County, to “enact, amend, or repeal a public local law of that county by a resolution of the
board of county commissioners.” Maryland Constitution, Article XI-F, §6;11 see also
10
See footnote 6 above.
11
That section further authorizes the General Assembly to “amplify [its] provisions
by general law in any manner not inconsistent with … Article [XI-F].” Maryland
Constitution, Article XI-F, §6. None of the parties has suggested that the General
15
Article XI-F, §3 (“a code county may enact, amend, or repeal a public local law of that
county…”); §10 (later enacted public local law prevails over previously enacted public
local law). To the extent that they concern amendment or repeal of a public local law, these
provisions simply reiterate the common law principle described in the previous section in
the particular context of a county that has transitioned to code home rule. In doing so, these
provisions of the State Constitution make clear that the governing body of a county that
has adopted code home rule has authority not only to repeal or amend its own enactments,
but also to modify or repeal public local laws enacted for that county prior to adoption of
home rule by a different legislative body – the General Assembly. See 62 Opinions of the
Attorney General 275 (1977).
Much of the debate in this case has focused on whether County Resolution 14-31
granting express approval to the rezoning was a “public local law” of Queen Anne’s
County that falls within the purview of Article XI-F, §6. In distinguishing public local
laws of a county from public general laws, this Court has focused on the substance of the
law more than its form. Cole v. Secretary of State, 249 Md. 425, 433 (1968). Necessarily,
a public local law of a county applies only in that county, although the fact that a measure
applies only in a single county is not by itself determinative; a law that applies in a single
county may nonetheless be a public general law when it “affects the interests of the whole
state.” Tyma v. Montgomery County, 369 Md. 497, 507 (2002); see also Kent Island
Assembly has “amplified” the procedures for rescission by a code county in a way pertinent
to this case.
16
Defense League, LLC v. Queen Anne’s County Board of Elections, 145 Md. App. 684, 693-
94 (2002) (county ordinance classifying areas for purposes of State Chesapeake Bay
Critical Area Law was not a public local law as its actions “were affected by, and had an
effect on, the entire State Critical Area Program.”). The distinction between a public local
law and a public general law is based on whether the provision “pertains only to a subject
of local import” or rather deals with a subject “of significant interest not just to any one
county, but rather to more than one geographical subdivision, or even to the entire state.”
Tyma, 369 Md. at 507-8 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Waterman and the Town suggest that the two resolutions do not qualify as public
local laws because they affect more than one political subdivision – i.e., the County and
the Town. 12 However, in distinguishing public local laws of a county from public general
laws, the State Constitution generally regards counties (and Baltimore City) as the relevant
local jurisdictions. Cf. Maryland Constitution, Article XI-A, §4 (distinguishing “public
local law” of charter home rule county from a public general law and defining
“geographical sub-division” to mean a county or Baltimore City). Moreover, in this
particular context, the General Assembly has, by means of LG §4-416, made the timing
12
In their brief, Waterman and the Town also argue that the two resolutions do not
qualify as public local laws because the County failed to follow certain procedures set forth
in LG §9-301 et seq. As best we can tell, this argument was not raised before either of the
courts below and the record does not otherwise address this issue. We decline to attempt
to resolve this question at this juncture.
17
and effectiveness of a municipal zoning classification explicitly contingent on the assent
of the county within which the annexed land lies.
Finally, Waterman and the Town argue that we should interpret “public local law”
for purposes of Article XI-F differently from other contexts because Article XI-F contains
its own definition of that phrase. “Public local law” is defined as “a law applicable to the
incorporation, organization, or government of a code county and contained in the county’s
code of public local laws.” Article XI-F, §1.13 While this has been characterized as a
“unique” definition of “public local law,” detailed examinations of the history of the code
home rule provisions of the Constitution have concluded that those provisions were
designed to provide a broad grant of legislative power to code home rule counties
concerning all matters of local concern. See 62 Opinions of the Attorney General, 275,
277, 290-94 (1977); M. Peter Moser, County Home Rule – Sharing the State’s Legislative
Power with Maryland Counties, 28 Md. L. Rev. 327, 336-38 & n. 34 (1968).
Resolution 14-31 applied to Wheatlands Farm, land wholly within Queen Anne’s
County; the resolution did not concern any other county. As a law concerning the timetable
for a change of zoning of that land, Resolution 14-31 concerned a matter of local import to
Queen Anne’s County. Thus, were it necessary to decide this question to resolve this case,
13
Specifically excluded from this definition are “(i) the charters of municipal
corporations under Article 11E of this Constitution, (ii) the laws or charters of counties
under Article 11A of this Constitution, (iii) laws, whether or not Statewide in application,
in the code of public general laws, (iv) laws which apply to more than one county, and (v)
ordinances and resolutions of the county government enacted under public local laws.”
Article XI-F, §1. No contention is made that any of these specific exclusions apply here.
18
we would be inclined to agree with the Court of Special Appeals that County Resolution
14-31 was a public local law of Queen Anne’s County.
In any event, whether or not the resolutions fit the definition of “public local law”
under Article XI-F, the County Commissioners had common law authority to rescind
County Resolution 14-31. Moreover, nothing in the State Constitution precludes the
County Commissioners from rescinding a resolution previously adopted by that body or
abrogates the common law principle.
Summary
Under the common law, the County Commissioners had authority to rescind their
resolution assenting to the Town’s rezoning of the recently annexed land before rights
vested in that zoning classification. Nothing in LG §4-416 abrogated that authority.
Moreover, consistent with this common law authority, the Maryland Constitution explicitly
confers authority on a code home rule county like Queen Anne’s County to repeal a public
local law.
III
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the County had authority to rescind its assent to the
Town’s rezoning of Wheatlands Farm in conjunction with the Town’s annexation of that
property. Accordingly, under LG §4-416(b), as well as the Town rezoning ordinance itself,
the new zoning classification will not become effective until five years after annexation,
unless the County should approve the rezoning in the interim.
19
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
AFFIRMED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH
DIRECTIONS TO REMAND THE CASE TO THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF QUEEN ANNE’S COUNTY FOR ENTRY OF A
DECLARATORY JUDGMENT CONSISTENT WITH THIS
OPINION. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONERS.
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