chipmunk226
Member
What is the name of your state? MD
Short Story: My lot should have never been approved by the County for residential development with a conventional septic.
Long Story:
I purchased a 2.5 acre lot located in Washington County, MD in early 2019 with the intent to build a home. The land that includes my lot was subdivided in 1990. There are a total of 15 lots over about 40 acres. Over the past 30 years the lots have been slowly developed. I purchased the last vacant lot in the subdivision. There is no public water or sewer, so a well and septic are needed. The land was platted and approved and recorded by my county in 1990 with proposed well and septic locations. All other lots have been able to build and install well and septic systems, the most recent home being completed in August of 2019.
Doing my due diligence, in Spring 2019, I contacted zoning and permitting and got a checklist of what I needed to do. They look at the plat of my lot, see the recorded perc, proposed septic and well locations. At this time I was not informed that a well would be needed prior to getting the building permit. I was also told, no perc test is needed as the lot has one recorded on plat, but we should order the records from health dept. since it was done some time ago. I did and health dept. gets back to me and says, we don't have detailed records of the perc test, but because it was recorded previously, you don't need to get a new one. This should have been my first red flag.
Fast forward: My builder contacts the zoning office in December 2019 and they say, hold on, there's no well? You need that first. In January 2019 the rules changed. Prior, you could get a building permit without a well or septic permit. Now, you must have a well installed first. However, throughout all my conversations I had over the course of 2019 with zoning, this was this ever mentioned to me. Fine. No worries. I move forward with getting the well installed out of pocket because the loan is still in underwriting. The health dept also said they wanted soil eval done prior to a approving the permit because there was no record of the previous perc test.
The county health dept. came out this past Thursday to do a soil eval of the proposed septic field before approving our permit to install the well. The excavator got no more than 18 inches down and hit rock. And now that it's winter and the grass is dormant, you can visibly see the outcropping of rock in the platted septic field. They did test digs all over the possible areas and all rock within 2 feet. They even dug where the proposed house is going and it was a little better, but still rock.
My Dilemma:
My lot is staked, my construction loan is about a week away from closing, I have a lot of money tied up in deposits and other pre-construction expenses, I am ready to break ground. The health inspector is saying, I don't know how this lot was recorded with this or apparently any area approved for a conventional septic field, because you have rock, everywhere. I would need to get a engineered septic system in order to build. That would quadruple, if not more, the budgeted amount for septic, possibly pushing the expense to 6 figures. Not only that, it now delays every other part of the construction process. I am going to have a construction loan with no construction going on, along with my current mortgage.
Do I have any legal recourse against the county? Or am I just SOL?
Thanks
Short Story: My lot should have never been approved by the County for residential development with a conventional septic.
Long Story:
I purchased a 2.5 acre lot located in Washington County, MD in early 2019 with the intent to build a home. The land that includes my lot was subdivided in 1990. There are a total of 15 lots over about 40 acres. Over the past 30 years the lots have been slowly developed. I purchased the last vacant lot in the subdivision. There is no public water or sewer, so a well and septic are needed. The land was platted and approved and recorded by my county in 1990 with proposed well and septic locations. All other lots have been able to build and install well and septic systems, the most recent home being completed in August of 2019.
Doing my due diligence, in Spring 2019, I contacted zoning and permitting and got a checklist of what I needed to do. They look at the plat of my lot, see the recorded perc, proposed septic and well locations. At this time I was not informed that a well would be needed prior to getting the building permit. I was also told, no perc test is needed as the lot has one recorded on plat, but we should order the records from health dept. since it was done some time ago. I did and health dept. gets back to me and says, we don't have detailed records of the perc test, but because it was recorded previously, you don't need to get a new one. This should have been my first red flag.
Fast forward: My builder contacts the zoning office in December 2019 and they say, hold on, there's no well? You need that first. In January 2019 the rules changed. Prior, you could get a building permit without a well or septic permit. Now, you must have a well installed first. However, throughout all my conversations I had over the course of 2019 with zoning, this was this ever mentioned to me. Fine. No worries. I move forward with getting the well installed out of pocket because the loan is still in underwriting. The health dept also said they wanted soil eval done prior to a approving the permit because there was no record of the previous perc test.
The county health dept. came out this past Thursday to do a soil eval of the proposed septic field before approving our permit to install the well. The excavator got no more than 18 inches down and hit rock. And now that it's winter and the grass is dormant, you can visibly see the outcropping of rock in the platted septic field. They did test digs all over the possible areas and all rock within 2 feet. They even dug where the proposed house is going and it was a little better, but still rock.
My Dilemma:
My lot is staked, my construction loan is about a week away from closing, I have a lot of money tied up in deposits and other pre-construction expenses, I am ready to break ground. The health inspector is saying, I don't know how this lot was recorded with this or apparently any area approved for a conventional septic field, because you have rock, everywhere. I would need to get a engineered septic system in order to build. That would quadruple, if not more, the budgeted amount for septic, possibly pushing the expense to 6 figures. Not only that, it now delays every other part of the construction process. I am going to have a construction loan with no construction going on, along with my current mortgage.
Do I have any legal recourse against the county? Or am I just SOL?
Thanks