Montgomery Co. v. Bhatt , 446 Md. 79 ( 2016 )


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  •                                          Montgomery County, Maryland v. Ajay Bhatt,
    No. 36, September Term, 2015. Opinion by
    Harrell, J.
    RAILROADS - ADVERSE POSSESSION
    Adverse possession does not lie against lands devoted to public use and owned by State
    or local government, such as public highways. Because railroad lines, even if privately-
    owned, have been treated as equivalent to public highways, a railroad line reserved for
    public use is not subject to a claim of adverse possession, except where abandonment of
    the public use is clear.
    RAILROADS – ABANDONMENT OF RIGHT-OF-WAY
    Abandonment of a rail line requires both an intent to abandon and an act that
    demonstrates unequivocally that intent. The interim use of a former rail line’s right-of-
    way for a hiker/biker trail as an interim use, under the Federal National Trails System
    Act, does not demonstrate an intent to abandon the public use right-of-way, especially
    where a new ultimate use of the right-of-way as a commuter rail line is intended.
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County
    Civil Case No. 8929D
    Argued: December 3, 2015
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 36
    SEPTEMBER TERM, 2015
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND
    v.
    AJAY BHATT
    Battaglia,
    Greene,
    Adkins,
    McDonald,
    Watts,
    Rodowsky, Lawrence F., (Retired,
    Specially Assigned),
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr. (Retired, Specially
    Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Harrell, J.
    Filed: January 22, 2016
    Driving that train, high on cocaine,
    Casey Jones you better watch your speed.
    Trouble ahead, trouble behind,
    And you know that notion just crossed my mind.
    -The Grateful Dead, Casey Jones, on
    Workingman’s Dead (Warner Bros. Records 1970).
    Although the record of the present case does not reflect a comparable level of
    drama as captured by the refrain of “Casey Jones,” it hints at plenty of potential trouble,
    both ahead and behind, for a pair of public works projects (one in place and the other
    incipient) cherished by the government and some citizens of Montgomery County.
    The Capital Crescent Trail is a well-known hiker/biker route that runs between
    Georgetown in the District of Columbia and Silver Spring, Maryland. Its path was used
    formerly as the Georgetown Branch of the Baltimore & Ohio (B&O) Railroad.1 After the
    trains stopped running in 1985, the property was transferred in 1988 to the government of
    Montgomery County, Maryland, via a quit-claim deed for a consideration of $10 million.
    It is planned that the Maryland portion of the former rail line (and current interim
    hiker/biker trail) will become the proposed Purple Line, a commuter light rail project
    between Bethesda and Silver Spring. This case raises, among other questions, whether a
    private landowner adjacent to the rail line may acquire by adverse possession a portion of
    the right-of-way through erection of a fence and installation of a shed that encroached for
    1
    Montgomery Cnty Dep’t of Parks, Capital Crescent & Georgetown Branch
    Trails, http://www.montgomeryparks.org/PPSD/ParkTrails/trails_MAPS/Crescent.shtm
    [https://perma.cc/39HX-VGTM].
    more than twenty years upon the railroad right-of-way. Under the circumstances present
    here, we conclude that the private property owner cannot prevail.
    BACKGROUND
    Respondent Ajay Bhatt owns 3313 Coquelin Terrace (a subdivided, single-family
    residential lot – “Lot 8” – improved by a dwelling) in Chevy Chase, Montgomery
    County, Maryland. He purchased this property in 2006 from his aunt, who owned the
    property since at least the 1970s. The lot abuts the Georgetown Branch of the B&O
    Railroad/Capital Crescent Trail. In 1890, the right-of-way that was the rail line (and is
    today the hiker/biker trail) was conveyed in a fee-simple deed from George Dunlop,
    grantor, to the Metropolitan Southern Railroad Company (“the Railroad”), grantee. The
    1890 Deed conveyed to the Railroad a “strip, piece or parcel of land. . .Beginning at
    Station 59 plus 52, a point on the located centre line of the Metropolitan Southern
    Railroad, the same being in Rock Creek and on the line dividing the lands of Richard Ray
    and the said George Dunlop.” The Deed established a right-of-way 45 feet on either side
    of the center line of the tracks throughout the rail line. A freight-hauling operation was
    maintained thereafter on the rail line right-of-way until 1985.
    The right-of-way was obtained by the County via quitclaim deed in 1988 from the
    Railroad pursuant to the federal Rails-to-Trails Act.2      The right-of-way is held and
    2
    See National Trails System Act, 16 U.S.C § 1241, et seq.
    2
    maintained under a “Certificate of Interim Trail Use” pursuant to 49 CFR 1152.29. 3 This
    “Certificate” allows the County to preserve the land as a hiker/biker trail until the County
    chooses whether and when to restore a form of rail service within the right-of-way. Thus,
    the right-of-way is listed currently by federal regulators in a “rail bank” under a
    presumption that the railway may be restored for rail use in the future. It is the County’s
    intent to develop within the right-of-way the planned “Purple Line” commuter rail.
    3
    This section provides:
    If any state, political subdivision, or qualified private organization is
    interested in acquiring or using a right-of-way of a rail line proposed to be
    abandoned for interim trail use and rail banking pursuant to 16 U.S.C.
    1247(d), it must file a comment or otherwise include a request in its filing
    (in a regulated abandonment proceeding) or a petition (in an exemption
    proceeding) indicating that it would like to do so. The comment/request or
    petition must include:
    (1) A map depicting, and an accurate description of, the right-of-
    way, or portion thereof (including mileposts), proposed to be
    acquired or used;
    (2) A statement indicating the trail sponsor’s willingness to assume
    full responsibility for:
    (i) Managing the right-of-way;
    (ii) Any legal liability arising out of the transfer or use of the
    right-of-way (unless the user is immune from liability, in
    which case it need only indemnify the railroad against any
    potential liability); and
    (iii) The payment of any and all taxes that may be levied or
    assessed against the right-of-way; and
    (3) An acknowledgment that interim trail use is subject to the
    sponsor’s continuing to meet its responsibilities described in
    paragraph (a)(2) of this section, and subject to possible future
    reconstruction and reactivation of the right-of-way for rail service.
    49 C.F.R. § 1152.29(a).
    3
    On 18 October 2013, Montgomery County issued to Bhatt a civil citation asserting
    a violation of § 49-10(b) of the Montgomery County Code4, which prohibits a property
    owner from erecting or placing “any structure, fence, post, rock, or other object in [a
    public] right-of-way.” The factual predicate of the claimed violation was the placement
    and maintenance by Bhatt’s predecessors-in-interest of Lot 8 of a fence and shed within
    the former rail line (and current hiker/biker trail) right-of-way, without a permit. The civil
    citation case was heard originally on 21 January 2014 in the District Court of Maryland,
    sitting in Montgomery County. The District Court found Bhatt guilty of a violation of
    4
    The exact language of § 49-10 prohibits a person from doing the following
    within a public right-of-way:
    (a) do any reconstruction or maintenance work; or
    (b) erect or place any structure, fence, post, rock, or other object in the
    right-of-way, except:
    (1) mail boxes mounted on a support that will bend or break away
    on impact by a vehicle;
    (2) individual residential newspaper boxes mounted on a support
    that will bend or break away on impact by a vehicle;
    (3) street trees placed and maintained under Section 49-33(j);
    (4) ground cover placed and maintained under Section 49-33(k);
    (5) a temporary, removable obstruction or occupation of a right-of-
    way installed under a permit issued under Section 49-11; or
    (6) as otherwise permitted by law.
    Any object placed in the public right-of-way under this subsection must not
    unreasonably impede use of a sidewalk or other right-of-way by pedestrians
    or persons in wheelchairs, or impede or endanger automobiles or other
    vehicles.
    Mont. Cnty. Code 2007, § 49-10. The exceptions provided in § 49-11 apply only after an
    individual has received a permit from the Director of Permitting Services, but still do not
    allow a private citizen to place a permanent structure on the public right-of-way. See
    Mont. Cnty. Code § 49-11.
    4
    § 49-10(b) and ordered him to remove the fence and shed encroaching upon the County’s
    right-of-way.   The District Court required Bhatt to pay $5.00 in court costs, but
    suspended the $500 fine imposed previously by the County. Bhatt appealed timely to the
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County.
    The appeal was heard de novo by the Circuit Court on 28 August 2014. The
    County presented evidence establishing that its right-of-way lies immediately adjacent to
    the rear property line of Lot 8. Ralph Wolfe, a right-of-way inspector, and Thomas
    Yoakum, a certified land surveyor, relied on aerial photographs, the 1890 Dunlop Deed,
    Bhatt’s deed and subdivision plat, and geographical information system (“GIS”)
    photographs from which to conclude that Bhatt’s fence and shed were located on the
    County’s right-of-way. The parties stipulated that:
    [T]he fence goes beyond the lot line of the – what’s called Lot 8[the Bhatt
    lot], in the plat for the subdivision, that was created in 1946. We could
    stipulate to that. We cannot stipulate that the property beyond that lot line
    is owned by the county, or that it was owned by the railroad. We’re not
    going to do that. But we can stipulate the fence goes beyond the lot line
    that was established in the plat.
    With regard to the type of real property interest held by the County in the right-of-
    way, a Montgomery County real property attorney and expert accepted by the court in
    “real estate law and titles” was called by Bhatt to present his conclusions regarding the
    1890 Deed and the County’s interest. The expert testified that the County received from
    the Railroad “a deed of bargain and sale so it was a transfer of the fee interest in the
    property and the Railroad held title to that property until 1988.” Because the County
    5
    owned the right-of-way in fee simple, he believed it impossible, as a matter of law, for
    the County to have acquired a mere easement interest in the right-of-way.
    Bhatt’s defense to the charged violation of § 49-10(b) was that he owned the
    encroached-upon land by adverse possession established by his predecessors in interest,
    who erected the fence. From memories of his childhood visits to his aunt’s home on Lot
    8, Bhatt testified that the fence had been present, as far back as he could remember. He
    recalled specifically seeing the fence in 1977 when he was eight years old. Additional
    witnesses presented by Bhatt testified that the fence had been present since the 1960s.
    No evidence was presented as to when the fence was installed exactly or why it was
    placed beyond the rear lot line of Lot 8.5 The Circuit Court concluded that the fence had
    been present on Lot 8 since 1960.
    Bhatt argued that, because the fence had been located beyond the property line of
    Lot 8 since at least 1963, the Railroad was obliged to take action to remove it prior to the
    maturation of the twenty year period for adverse possession.6 Bhatt testified further that
    he applied for a permit to (and was granted by) the County in 2013 to repair and replace
    the fence. Without hiring a surveyor (and reportedly being himself unaware of the actual
    5
    The date of installation of the shed, which is also within the fenced-in
    encroachment area, was not established separately. This gap in proof is not material
    because the fence encircled the shed and delineated the boundaries of the greater
    encroachment.
    6
    Bhatt argued that the fence was erected initially in 1963, so the railroad company
    had until 1983 to take action to cause it to be removed before his predecessors-in-
    interest’s claim to the property ripened through adverse possession.
    6
    property lines of the subdivided Lot 8), Bhatt based his application on the belief that the
    original fence was located on or within the boundaries of Lot 8. He presented additional
    evidence that the County had installed chain link fences on the hiker/biker trail and
    performed maintenance on the property outside his fence, but that the County did not
    perform any maintenance within his fence line.
    On 31 December 2014, the Circuit Court vacated the District Court’s judgment
    and dismissed the violation citation issued by the County. Following post-trial motions,
    an amended memorandum opinion was filed by the Circuit Court on 2 March 2015. In
    that opinion, the Circuit Court concluded penultimately (on the strength largely of Bhatt’s
    real property attorney’s expert opinion testimony) that the County did not have a “right of
    way” easement over the former rail line, but rather had been conveyed a fee simple
    interest in 1988. The expert opined that the term “public right-of-way,” as used in the
    ordinance, referred solely to one held by easement. Because the County thus did not
    have a “right of way” over the property, Bhatt could not be considered in violation of
    § 49-10(b). As this reasoning continued, because the conveyance to the County did not
    result in the acquisition of a “right of way,” the Circuit Court concluded ultimately that
    Bhatt had a creditable claim for adverse possession. Moreover, the hearing judge did not
    feel obliged to conduct an abandonment analysis: “An abandonment analysis is
    unnecessary because the land was granted in fee simple, and cannot reasonably be
    defined as a right-of-way under federal, state, or local laws.” The Circuit Court made no
    final declaration or determination, however, as to who held title to the encroachment area
    7
    because it was not asked by the parties to decide that point conclusively in the context of
    the Code enforcement dispute that was at the heart of the litigation.
    The County petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari. On 17 June 2015, we
    granted the Petition, Montgomery County v. Ajay Bhatt, 
    443 Md. 234
    , 
    116 A.3d 474
    (2015), to consider the following questions:
    1) Did the lower court err in holding that the 1890 deed from George
    Dunlop to the Metropolitan Southern Railroad Company did not convey a
    right-of-way?
    2) Did the County prove that the Respondent’s fence and shed encroached
    upon the right-of-way that was originally purchased by the Metropolitan
    Southern Railroad Company and later conveyed to the county for the
    Georgetown Branch/Capital Crescent Trail?
    3) Is a railroad right-of-way susceptible to a private claim for adverse
    possession via an adjacent landowner’s encroachment when the right-of-
    way was actively used for a railway line and when there was no evidence of
    abandonment by the railroad?
    4) Did the lower court err in holding that the Respondent acquired title to a
    former railroad right-of-way by adverse possession?
    In order to resolve this case, we need answer only the last two questions. In so doing, the
    result is that we shall reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In reviewing an appeal from a judgment entered following a bench trial, under
    Maryland Rule 8-131(c), we “will review the case on both the law and the evidence [and]
    will not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly
    erroneous.” Factual findings will be reviewed for clear error, but questions of law
    “require our non-deferential review.” Breeding v. Koste, 
    443 Md. 15
    , 27, 
    115 A.3d 106
    ,
    8
    113 (2015). Here, we are asked to consider the Circuit Court’s interpretation of the 1890
    Deed and its conclusion that the County interest was subject to divestiture by adverse
    possession. Both questions, if needed to be answered, are legal ones subject to de novo
    scrutiny.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Contentions
    The County contends that the Circuit Court erred in concluding that the quality of the
    interest the County holds in the former rail line strip of land was not susceptible to being
    characterized as a “right of way.” The County maintains that “there is no exclusive
    manner in which the title to a right of way must be held.” The County contends further
    that, because this Court has considered previously a railroad line to be analogous to a
    public highway for most purposes, the land in question is not subject to an adverse
    possession claim.
    Bhatt responds that he proved sufficiently all of the required elements to sustain a
    colorable adverse possession claim to the encroached area within his fence. He argues
    that “the County has not cited a single Maryland decision holding that a privately-owned
    railway is immune to adverse possession.”         Furthermore, Bhatt rejects the public
    highway-railroad line analogy because the land was in private, not public, use during its
    operation as a rail line (when his adverse possession interest ripened assertedly to
    fruition).
    II. Analysis
    a. Railroads as Public Highways
    9
    “A railroad is in many essential respects a public highway, and the rules of law
    applicable to one are generally applicable to the other.” Read v. Montgomery Cnty., 
    101 Md. App. 62
    , 68, 
    643 A.2d 476
    , 478 (1994) (internal citation omitted). Railroads are
    owned frequently by private corporations, but this “has never been considered a matter of
    any importance that the road was built by the agency of a private corporation [because]
    the function performed is that of the State.” Olcott v. Fond du Lac Cty., 
    83 U.S. 678
    , 695
    (1872). Railroad companies operate as a public use and “are not viewed strictly as
    private corporations since they are publicly regulated common carriers. Essentially, a
    railroad is a highway dedicated to the public use [and is granted] the status of a quasi-
    public corporation.” Chevy Chase Land Co. v. United States, 
    355 Md. 110
    , 149, 
    733 A.2d 1055
    , 1076 (1999) (citing Marthens v. B & O R. Co., 
    289 S.E.2d 706
    , 711 (W. Va.
    1982)).
    Another well-cited example of this dedication to public use is the exercise by
    railroads of the power of eminent domain, “a power reserved only to the government and
    those the government has annointed.” Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 147
    , 733 A.2d
    at 1075; see also Riden v. Philadelphia, B. & W. R. Co., 
    182 Md. 336
    , 344, 
    35 A.2d 99
    ,
    102 (1943) (“By express provision of the Maryland Railroad Law, every railroad
    company incorporated under the laws of this State is empowered to acquire land either by
    purchase or condemnation for as many sets of tracks as are deemed necessary from time
    to time between its termini within the State”); see Md. Const. Art. III, § 40. The Supreme
    Court explained:
    10
    Very early the question arose whether a State’s right of eminent domain
    could be exercised by a private corporation created for the purpose of
    constructing a railroad. Clearly it could not, unless taking land for such a
    purpose by such an agency is taking land for public use. The right of
    eminent domain nowhere justifies taking property for a private use. Yet it
    is a doctrine universally accepted that a State legislature may authorize a
    private corporation to take land for the construction of such a road, making
    compensation to the owner. What else does this doctrine mean if not that
    building a railroad, though it be built by a private corporation, is an act
    done for a public use? And the reason why the use has always been held a
    public one is that such a road is a highway, whether made by the
    government itself or by the agency of corporate bodies, or even by
    individuals when they obtain their power to construct it from legislative
    grant.
    
    Olcott, 83 U.S. at 694-95
    . The Maryland courts “have long considered a railroad line as
    analogous to a public highway,” see Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 147
    , 733 A.2d at
    1075, and we have been offered no compelling reason in the present case to reject that
    analogy.
    b. May a public highway (or any portion of its right-of-way, no matter the type
    of real property interest by which it is held) be possessed adversely by an
    abutting private citizen?
    A claim for adverse possession requires the establishment of a very specific set of
    well-known elements7, but first the subject property must be subject to this type of claim
    before considering whether the elements may exist in a given case. The Circuit Court
    concluded that Bhatt touched all of the bases of a viable claim of adverse possession by
    7
    To state a claim for adverse possession: “[T]he claimant must show possession
    of the claimed property for the statutory period of [twenty] years.... Such possession must
    be actual, open, notorious, exclusive, hostile, under claim of title or ownership, and
    continuous or uninterrupted for the twenty-year period.” Breeding v. Koste, 
    443 Md. 15
    ,
    28, 
    115 A.3d 106
    , 113-14 (2015)(citing White v. Pines Cmty. Improvement Ass’n, Inc.,
    
    403 Md. 13
    , 36, 
    939 A.2d 165
    , 178 (2008)).
    11
    showing that his “possession of the property was actual, open, notorious and visible,
    exclusive, hostile, and continuous for the twenty-year statutory period.” We have held,
    however, that “nothing is more solidly established than the rule that title to property held
    by a municipal corporation in its governmental capacity, for a public use, cannot be
    acquired by adverse possession.” Seijack v. City of Baltimore, 
    270 Md. 640
    , 644, 
    313 A.2d 843
    , 846 (1974). Because a railroad is a quasi-public corporation under established
    Maryland law, it follows, to our thinking, that a railroad is counted among these
    municipal corporations and its real property is not subject to a claim of adverse
    possession under all but the most narrow circumstances.
    The seminal case in Maryland on the issue of the ability to possess adversely the
    property of a municipal corporation is Ulman v. Charles St. Avenue Co., 
    83 Md. 130
    ,
    144, 
    34 A. 366
    , 369 (1896), which decided that “an abutting owner cannot, by
    encroaching on a public road, acquire title adverse to the public rights therein.” “An
    encroachment on a highway is settled conclusively in Maryland to be a public nuisance,
    which can never grow by prescription into a private right.” Sieling v. Uhl, 
    160 Md. 407
    ,
    
    153 A. 614
    , 620 (1931). Thus, the “well-established rule of the common law is [ ] that
    ‘the common right of way’ cannot be lost by the attempted adverse possession of a
    private individual.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    In Ulman, a turnpike company (a State franchisee) acquired in 1854 rights to a strip of
    land of a width of 66 feet within which it was authorized to build a road. “Within a year
    or two thereafter, [the company] constructed a road of a width varying from 20 to 38 feet
    only.” 
    Ulman, 83 Md. at 140
    , 34 A. at 367. The company did not seek thereafter to
    12
    widen the road until over 40 years after the initial acquisition, at which time it sought to
    expand the width of the active road to the entire 66 feet. 
    Ulman, 83 Md. at 140
    -41, 34 A.
    at 367-68. Between the completion of the initial road construction, but prior to the
    company’s intended expansion, an adjacent landowner built a sidewalk, installed drains,
    and planted trees on 15 feet of land encroaching into the turnpike company’s strip.
    
    Ulman, 83 Md. at 139-40
    , 34 A. at 367. The landowner maintained these improvements
    for more than the statutory period for adverse possession and sought to claim title by
    adverse possession. 
    Id. Although the
    turnpike company had not made active use as a
    road of the disputed strip, this Court held that an adjacent landowner could not maintain
    an adverse possession claim to the land. 
    Ulman, 83 Md. at 143-44
    , 34 A. at 368.
    Because “time does not run against the state, or the public,”8 it followed that public
    highways are not subject to a claim for adverse possession, except in the limited
    circumstances of a clear abandonment by the State. By parity of reasoning applied to the
    present case, railway lines would also not be subject to a claim for adverse possession,
    without evidence of clear abandonment or a clear shift away from public use.
    c. Use of the right-of-way
    Bhatt relies on the “notion that municipal property not devoted to a public use can
    be so acquired” through adverse possession. 
    Seijack, 270 Md. at 644
    , 313 A.2d at 846
    8
    See 
    Ulman, 83 Md. at 145
    , 34 A. at 368 (“To protect highways from encroachments
    that it is the business of no one to resist, requires that the [company] be allowed to
    resume its rights at any distance of time, disregarding any loss to those who have
    appropriated and erected improvements on the public domain”).
    13
    (emphasis supplied). We do not disagree that property, at one time dedicated to the
    public use, but abandoned subsequently, may be possessed adversely. The general rule in
    Maryland has been:
    that the right and title to a mere easement in land acquired by a quasi-public
    corporation, either by purchase, condemnation or prescription, for a public
    purpose is dependent upon the continued use of the property for that
    purpose, and when such public use is abandoned the right to hold the land
    ceases, and the property reverts to its original owner or his successors in
    title.
    East Washington Ry. Co. v. Brooke, 
    244 Md. 287
    , 293, 
    223 A.2d 599
    , 603 (1966). We
    do not find in this record, however, that there is any evidence of abandonment by the rail
    line operator (or Montgomery County) or that the right-of-way was taken out of public
    use such that a claim for adverse possession could ripen within this right-of-way.
    In order to be considered “immune” from a claim for adverse possession, the right-
    of-way must remain in public use. There is “[n]o satisfactory single clear-cut rule
    regarding what is a public use, which can decide all cases, [that] has yet been
    formulated.” Prince George’s Cnty. v. Collington Crossroads, Inc., 
    275 Md. 171
    , 181,
    
    339 A.2d 278
    , 284 (1975). Public use does not require necessarily that the public must
    “literally or physically be permitted to use the property.” 
    Id. The meaning
    “under
    Article III, § 40, of the [Maryland] Constitution is broader than literal use by the
    members of the public, and . . . actual use of the condemned property by the general
    public is not necessary.” Green v. High Ridge Ass’n, Inc., 
    346 Md. 65
    , 74, 
    695 A.2d 125
    ,
    129 (1997).
    14
    Bhatt leans heavily on 
    Read, 101 Md. App. at 67
    , 643 A.2d at 478, to conclude
    that the right-of-way here was susceptible to an adverse possession claim because the
    right-of-way was no longer in public use. The intermediate appellate court’s opinion in
    Read is not persuasive because it focuses on the distinction “between property held by a
    railroad company as an easement and property held by a railroad company in fee simple,”
    id, a distinction we find not material in the context of the present case.9
    9
    Historically, a right-of-way “in its strict meaning, is ‘the right of passage over
    another man’s ground;’ and in its legal and generally accepted meaning, in reference to a
    railway, it is a mere easement in the lands of others, obtained by lawful condemnation to
    public use or by purchase.” Chevy Chase Land Co. v. United States, 
    355 Md. 110
    , 124,
    
    733 A.2d 1055
    , 1062 (1999) (citing 2 Elliott on Railroads § 1158, at 628 n. 77 (3d. ed.
    1907)). At that time, the term “right of way” was equated typically to an easement, rather
    than a fee-simple interest. Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 124-25
    , 733 A.2d at 1062
    (citing 2 Elliott on Railroads § 1158, at 628 n. 77 (3d. ed.1907)). We explained further
    that “[i]n railroad parlance, the term ‘right of way’ has two meanings: in one sense it is
    ‘the strip of land upon which the track is laid’; in the other sense it is ‘the legal right to
    use such strip,’ and in this sense it usually means the right of way easement.” Chevy
    Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 124
    , 733 A.2d at 1062 (citations omitted).
    The phrase “right of way” is more properly, however, a term of art, rather than a term
    of science or law: “Maryland courts have often construed deeds of ‘rights-of-way’ to
    railroads as easements or have used the terms ‘easement’ and ‘right-of-way’
    synonymously.” Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 125
    , 733 A.2d at 1063. It is well-
    settled “that a deed to a railroad, even though it characterizes the grant as conveying a
    right-of-way, may convey an estate in fee simple.” Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 128
    , 733 A.2d at 1064. Thus, for the purposes of this litigation (i.e., the scope and
    application of Montgomery County Code § 49-10(b)), it is immaterial whether the right-
    of-way in question was held in fee simple or by easement. Indeed, given the clear
    purpose of § 49-10 of the Montgomery County Code (see 
    n.4 supra
    ), it is apparent to us
    that it was not the intent of the County Council to draw a distinction between public
    rights-of-way held in fee simple and those by easement.
    It would be contrary to a cardinal tenet of legislative interpretation principles, i.e.,
    avoidance of a nonsensical construction, to conclude that the Council intended to restrict
    improvements only within public rights-of-way held in easement, but not those held in
    fee simple. The contretemps over whether the interest in land conveyed to the Railroad
    (Continued…)
    15
    In Read, the Court of Special Appeals drew a distinction between land granted to a
    railroad by Congress and land acquired privately in fee simple. 
    Read, 101 Md. App. at 72
    , 643 A.2d at 480. “If the land to which appellants claim title was not acquired by the
    Railroads through a public grant, then it must be determined whether those portions, in
    which the Railroads acquired an interest in fee simple, were devoted to a public use.” 
    Id. Because Read
    was a case reaching the intermediate appellate court upon the grant of
    summary judgment in the trial court, the Court of Special Appeals concluded, in
    remanding the matter, that the answer to this question was, in the first instance, reserved
    for the trier of fact:
    whether there was a bona fide intent to preserve the right of way for actual
    railroad use, and the court could properly conclude that the acts and
    conduct of defendant were incompatible with the continued exercise of the
    easement, that the discontinuance of the line was not merely temporary, and
    that the right of way was abandoned and the easement terminated.
    
    Read, 101 Md. App. at 72
    , 643 A.2d at 481 (citing Maryland & Pa. R.R. v. Mercantile-
    Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 
    224 Md. 34
    , 41, 
    166 A.2d 247
    , 251 (1962)). In the present
    case, there remains nothing more for the trier of fact to resolve.
    The 1890 Dunlop Deed shows that the purchase made by the Railroad was from a
    private landowner. There was no evidence adduced by Bhatt supporting a conclusion that
    (…continued)
    and the County as being fee-simple, not an easement, is but a “furiously-contested moot
    question,” to borrow a well-turned phrase coined by Judge Moylan of the Court of
    Special Appeals (in Holloway-Johnson v. Beall, 
    220 Md. App. 195
    , 206, 
    103 A.3d 720
    ,
    727 (2014) cert. granted, 
    442 Md. 194
    , 
    112 A.3d 373
    (2015)).
    16
    the right-of-way was abandoned and was not being used by the public, even during the
    period from 1985 when the freight service ended and 1988 when the property was
    conveyed to the County and became a hiker/biker trail as an interim public use. Rather,
    Read supports the County’s argument because the Court of Special Appeals in Read
    concluded essentially that the railroad there was acting “as a quasi-public corporation,
    functioning to promote the public welfare.” 
    Read, 101 Md. App. at 68
    , 643 A.2d at 479.
    Although the railroad in Read was no longer operating trains on the right-of-way, the
    Court of Special Appeals concluded nonetheless that it was possible for the property to be
    considered as coming within the definition of “public use.”
    Relevant also to this particular inquiry, in 1983, Congress enacted the Rails-to-
    Trails Act to provide a different avenue for railroads that had ceased to operate, but did
    not intend to abandon its right-of-way as a public use. Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 163
    , 733 A.2d at 1084. Subsection (d) of 16 U.S.C. § 124710 provides another option
    10
    The specific language of this section provides in relevant part:
    [I]n furtherance of the national policy to preserve established railroad
    rights-of-way for future reactivation of rail service, to protect rail
    transportation corridors, and to encourage energy efficient transportation
    use, in the case of interim use of any established railroad rights-of-way
    pursuant to donation, transfer, lease, sale, or otherwise in a manner
    consistent with this chapter, if such interim use is subject to restoration or
    reconstruction for railroad purposes, such interim use shall not be treated,
    for purposes of any law or rule of law, as an abandonment of the use of
    such rights-of-way for railroad purposes. If a State, political subdivision, or
    qualified private organization is prepared to assume full responsibility for
    management of such rights-of-way and for any legal liability arising out of
    such transfer or use, and for the payment of any and all taxes that may be
    (Continued…)
    17
    for railroad companies defending against potential contentions of abandonment.
    Recognizing that railroads held typically their rights-of-way under easements, “[b]y
    deeming interim trail use to be like discontinuance rather than abandonment, Congress
    prevented property interests from reverting under state law.” Preseault v. I.C.C., 
    494 U.S. 1
    , 8, 
    110 S. Ct. 914
    , 919-20 (1990) (internal citation omitted). When a railroad track
    is considered for interim trail use, “the rail corridor is held in a national ‘rail bank,’ over
    which federal regulators retain jurisdiction for the possibility of future rail use.” Chevy
    Chase Land 
    Co, 355 Md. at 166
    , 733 A.2d at 1085.
    To show abandonment, a claimant must show “an intention to abandon, and an overt
    act, or an omission to act, by which such intention is carried into effect.” Cooper v.
    Sanford Land Co., 
    224 Md. 263
    , 266, 
    167 A.2d 602
    , 604 (1961). To determine whether a
    party intended to abandon a rail line (and, therefore, the public use), the inquiry should
    be:
    If it were to be found that the contemplated use were within the scope of
    the easement this could be evidence of a lack of intention to abandon. If
    the contemplated use were not within the scope of the easement, then
    unless it be found that some other permitted use is being made, it is
    possible that an intention to abandon might be found, although if the
    (…continued)
    levied or assessed against such rights-of-way, then the Board shall impose
    such terms and conditions as a requirement of any transfer or conveyance
    for interim use in a manner consistent with this chapter, and shall not
    permit abandonment or discontinuance inconsistent or disruptive of such
    use.
    16 U.S.C § 1247(d) (emphasis added).
    18
    contemplated use is found not to be within the scope of the easement this
    would not necessarily establish an intention to abandon.
    Peck v. Baltimore Cnty., 
    286 Md. 368
    , 377-78, 
    410 A.2d 7
    , 11 (1979). Non-use alone is
    not sufficient to constitute abandonment. See Shuggars v. Brake, 
    248 Md. 38
    , 46, 
    234 A.2d 752
    , 758 (1967). Because the general rule requires that a right-of-way be used for
    the purpose for which it was granted, relevant to the determination of an intent to
    abandon is the nature of the grant:
    [I]f the scope of the easement were limited to railroad purposes, then an
    intent to abandon railroad use could indicate an intent to abandon the
    easement. However, the converse is also true. If the easement is not limited
    in its scope to railroad purposes, then, in order for there to be an
    abandonment, the party alleging abandonment must show more than an
    intent to abandon railroad service.
    Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 157-58
    , 733 A.2d at 1080.
    In East Washington Railway Co., 
    244 Md. 287
    , 
    223 A.2d 599
    (1966), our
    predecessors concluded that the right-of-way was subject to adverse possession due to
    abandonment. The conveyance from the private landowner to the railroad company
    granted plainly “an easement for railway purposes and use only.” East Washington Ry.
    
    Co., 244 Md. at 294
    , 223 A.2d at 603 (emphasis added). Any use other than for railroad
    purposes would be beyond the scope of the grant. The right-of-way “reverted to its
    original owners or their successors in title, because the railroad intentionally abandoned
    the present and future use of the contested strip for railroad purposes.” 
    Id. The specific
    nature of this conveyance showed an intent to abandon once it was no longer being used
    for railroad purposes, which allowed the property to be subject to adverse possession.
    19
    In Chevy Chase Land Co., the “grantee railroad [wa]s obligated under statutory and
    common law to operate and use its assets for the furtherance of the general public welfare
    [and we concluded that] the conversion of a railway used for freight to a footpath [wa]s
    consistent and compatible with the prior railway use.” Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 156
    , 733 A.2d at 1080. “Use of the right-of-way as a hiker/biker trail constitute[d] a
    change in instrumentality. . . from railcars to bikes and walking, [but] our highway cases
    make clear that changes in mode of use are presumed to be within the contemplation of
    the parties.” Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 151
    , 733 A.2d at 1077. Furthermore,
    with no limitations placed in the deed, the transition from railway to hiker/biker trail was
    not beyond the scope of the interest granted via the right-of-way in Chevy Chase Land
    Co.
    The same is true here and is what makes the present case differ from East
    Washington.    The right-of-way granted to the Railroad (and Montgomery County
    subsequently) by the 1890 Dunlop Deed was a general conveyance that placed no
    restriction on its use. Thus, the transition from railway to interim hiker/biker trail is a
    reasonable public use of the right-of-way and well within the County’s rights to establish.
    Under the Rails-to-Trails Act, this transition from rail travel to a footpath would not
    constitute abandonment.11 If an abandonment analysis were undertaken, Bhatt would
    11
    Railroads are subject to federal regulations because railroads operate in
    interstate commerce. Abandonment of railroad lines and service are also controlled by
    federal law. 49 U.S.C. § 10903. Under this specific federal provision, a rail carrier must
    file an application for abandonment and thus non-use would not be sufficient:
    (Continued…)
    20
    have to present specific evidence on this question, which he has failed to do before any
    court in this case.
    The right-of-way in question was subject to the rails-to-trails program, as it was
    located on the Georgetown Branch/Capital Crescent Trail and subject to a Certificate of
    Interim Trail Use. As we concluded in Chevy Chase Land Co., “when a railroad takes
    actions pursuant to federal regulation that are wholly consistent with an intent to retain
    the property interest, in this case in order to pursue an interim trail use agreement, those
    actions alone cannot supply the decisive and unequivocal act evidencing an intent to
    abandon.” Chevy Chase Land 
    Co., 355 Md. at 182
    , 733 A.2d at 1094. The conveyance
    accomplished by the 1890 Dunlop Deed to the Railroad did not restrict the use of the
    property to “railroad purposes.” Furthermore, it is apparent that the succeeding interim
    use as a hiker/biker trail is within the accepted definition of “public use” and within the
    scope of the grant to the Railroad and ultimately to the County. The inclusion of this
    portion of the Georgetown Branch in the Federal Rails-to-Trails “rail bank” is a further
    (…continued)
    (1) A rail carrier providing transportation subject to the jurisdiction of the
    Board under this part who intends to--
    (A) abandon any part of its railroad lines; or
    (B) discontinue the operation of all rail transportation over any part
    of its railroad lines,
    must file an application relating thereto with the Board. An abandonment or
    discontinuance may be carried out only as authorized under this chapter.
    49 U.S.C. § 10903(a). Because rail lines that are covered under a rails-to-trails
    agreement are subject to a future restoration of rail use, the right-of-way is not subject to
    a regulatory abandonment.
    21
    indication that there was no intent to abandon the right-of-way as a public use.
    Because no evidence was presented by Bhatt to show that the current use of the
    right-of-way by Montgomery County is unreasonable or that the Railroad or the County
    abandoned the right-of-way, no claim for adverse possession will lie. Accordingly, we
    shall reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court. Bhatt’s fence and shed encroached upon
    the right-of-way in violation of Montgomery County Code § 49-10(b).12 The District
    Court got it right.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    MONTGOMERY      COUNTY   REVERSED.   CASE
    REMANDED      TO   THAT    COURT     WITH
    INSTRUCTIONS TO AFFIRM THE JUDGMENT OF
    THE DISTRICT COURT OF MARYLAND, SITTING IN
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY. COSTS IN THIS COURT
    AND THE CIRCUIT COURT TO BE PAID BY
    RESPONDENT.
    12
    The County, in its Reply Brief filed with this Court, raised an argument not
    contained in its Petition for Writ of Certiorari nor raised or decided in the trial courts, to
    wit: the Circuit Court lacked jurisdiction to consider Bhatt’s adverse possession defense
    as it was preempted by federal law. See 49 U.S.C. § 10903. We do not recognize nor
    reach this jurisdictional argument because it was not raised and decided below, nor was it
    encompassed within our writ of certiorari. See Md. Rule 8-131(b)(1) (when reviewing a
    decision made by a circuit court acting in its appellate capacity, “the Court of Appeals
    ordinarily will consider only an issue that has been raised in the petition for certiorari or
    any cross-petition and that has been preserved for review by the Court of Appeals”). In
    any event, a failure to consider this argument is of no consequence, inasmuch as the
    County prevails on the merits.
    22