delivered the opinion of the Court.
In our decision in O.
T. Beauchamp, Jr., Post No. 94, American Legion Department of Maryland, Inc. v. Somerset County Sanitary Commission, 243 Md.
98, 220 A.
There is no dispute in regard to the facts, the parties having submitted the case to us upon an agreed statement of facts.
The American Legion Post No. 94 owns two parcels of land in the Sanitary District. These are (1) Parcel No. 426 containing 130 acres of land on the north side of West Post Office Eoad, and (2) Parcel No. 427, a tri
By the Act of 1957, Chap. 782 a new subtitle “Sanitary Districts” was added to Code (1957), Art.' 43, title “Health.” This new subtitle now consists of §§ 645 to 673 (1965 Replacement Volume). We have heretofore
It is in this statutory setting that the Act was introduced and enacted. The Act is as follows:
“AN ACT to add new Section 657A to Article 43 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1965 Replacement Volume), title ‘Health,’ subtitle ‘Sanitary Districts,’ to follow immediately after Section 657 thereof, to provide for an exemption in Somerset County of the property of any incorporated American Legion Post from the levy of any taxes, charges or assessments of whatever kind against the property by the Somerset County Sanitary District.
“SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the General As sernbly of Maryland, The new Section 657A beand it is hereby added to Article 43 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1965 Replacement Volume), title ‘Health,’ subtitle ‘Sanitary Districts,’ to follow immediately after Section 657 thereof, and to read as follows:
“657A.
“Notwithstanding any requirements of this subtitle to the contrary, in Somerset County, any incorporated American Legion Post is exempted from payment of any taxes, charges or assessments of whatever hind levied against the property of any such Post by the Somerset County Sanitary District, Inc. under the provisions of this subtitle.
“SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That this Act shall take effect June 1,1966.
“Approved May 6,1966.”
The Sanitary Commission in the lower court and before us attacked the constitutionality of the Act upon two somewhat related grounds: (1) it violates Article III, Section 33 of the Constitution of Maryland prohibiting the General Assembly from passing a “special Law, for any case, for which provision has been made, by an existing General Law” and (2) it violates Article 15 of the Declaration of Rights of the Maryland Constitution which provides that “the General Assembly shall, by uniform rules, provide for the separate assessment, classification and sub-classification of land, improvements on land and personal property, as it may deem proper; and all taxes thereafter provided to be levied by the State for the support of the general State Government, and by the Counties and by the City of Baltimore for their respective purposes, shall be uniform within each class or subclass of land, improvements on land and personal property which the respective taxing powers may have directed to be subjected to the tax levy; * *
Inasmuch as we are of the opinion that the Act is unconstitutional as a “special law”, we do not find it neces
We observe,
in limine,
as argued by the appellant in its brief and at the argument, that a statute is presumptively constitutional and the courts are reluctant to declare a statute unconstitutional if, by any construction, it can be sustained. As Judge (later Chief Judge) Henderson aptly stated for the Court in
Pitts v. State Board of Examiners of Psychologists,
“* * * [T]here is a strong presumption in favor of constitutionality. Reasonable doubt in its favor is enough to sustain it.”
See also
Magruder v. Hall of Records Commission,
Where, however, an Act of the General Assembly violates a mandatory provision of the Maryland Constitution, we are required to declare such an act unconstitutional and void. As we stated in
Cohen v. Governor of Maryland,
“We regret the necessity of holding an Act of the General Assembly unconstitutional, but our duty is plain when such an act violates the mandatory provisions of the Constitution. As Judge Delaplaine stated for the Court, in Johnson v. Duke,180 Md. 434 , 442,24 A. 2d 304 , 308 (1942) :
“ Tt is the sacred duty of the courts to preserve inviolate the integrity of the Constitution. Hence it would be a violation of their duty to treat the fundamental law as subject to modification except in conformance with constitutional methods.’ ”
The definitions of “public general laws”, “public local laws” and “special laws” have been considered in many cases, but, in our opinion, the best statement of our predecessors in regard to these definitions appears in
Norris v. Mayor & C. C. of Baltimore,
“While it is difficult to formulate a comprehensive definition of the distinction between a public local law and a public general law, it may be said that a ‘public local law’ is a statute dealing with some matter of governmental administration peculiarly local in character, in which persons outside of that locality have no direct interest, and a ‘public general law’ is one which deals with a subject in which all the citizens of the state are interested alike, and the fact that it permits or directs differences in matters of mere administrative detail suited to the peculiar needs of localities does not make it any the less a public general law. . . . the term ‘special law’ has. . .uniformly been interpreted to mean a special law for a special case.”
In
Montague v. State,
“The provision immediately following in the same section, that ‘the General Assembly shall pass no special law for any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law,’ has been construed as intended to preventspecial legislation in special cases, (McGrath v. State, 46 Md. 631 ,) and we think it very clear from the enumeration made that the object of the preceding provisions was to prevent or restrict the passage of special, or what are more commonly called private Acts, for the relief of particular named parties, or providing for individual cases.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Act, in the light of these definitions, is a “special act”—a special law for a special case and an Act providing for an individual case—in a statutory plan which is already covered by a public general law. The facts in this case, already stated, indicate that although the Sanitary Commission has county-wide authority, it has established only one sub-district known as the Princess Anne sub-district in which the lands of American Legion Post No. 94 are located and it is the only American Legion Post in the sub-district. There are two other incorporated American Legion Posts located elsewhere in Somerset County beyond the territorial limits of the Princess Anne sub-district, but these other two Posts are neither served by the Sanitary Commission nor assessed by it. It is thus seen that the practical effect and the effect intended by the sponsors of the Act was to exempt American Legion Post No. 94 from any assessment or charge by the Sanitary Commission. The Act thus, in effect, applies to one taxpayer only and to the lands of that one taxpayer. In our opinion, it is a “special” act which is unconstitutional under the provisions of Article III, Section 33 of the Maryland Constitution.
The present case is quite similar in many ways to the situation involved in
Mayor & C. C. of Baltimore v. Starr Methodist Protestant Church,
“Again we think this act is invalid because in conflict with Art. 3, Sec. 33 of the Constitution of Maryland, which provides that ‘the General Assembly shall pass no special law for any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law.’
“Sec. 4, Art. 81 of the Code, title Exemptions, specifies several different classes of property which shall be exempt from taxation, viz. ‘to houses or buildings used exclusively for public worship, nor to the furniture contained therein, nor to the parsonage connected there with, nor to the ground appurtenant to such houses, nor to buildings so exclusively used for public worship or as parsonages which are necessary for the respective uses thereof.’ All property of the kind thus described is exempt from taxation. Here then is a general laio declaring in what cases the property of religious bodies shall be exempt, and specifying in detail just what kinds of such property shall enjoy exemption. But the Act of 1904, Chap. 263 is a special law providing exemption for the property of a religious body. When the cases in which the property of religious bodies shall have exemption are already covered by a general law. It is a special law for a case for which provision has been madeby an existing general law, and as such is void because in contravention of Art. 3 sec. 33 of the Constitution.
“We think in the present case that this is a special law exempting the wharf property of the appellee from municipal taxation and is void, because it relates to the exemption from taxation of the property of a religious body, and this is a subject for which provision has already been made by an existing general law, namely Art. 81, sec. 4 of the code. The special laws contemplated by the Constitution, are those that provide for individual cases.”
(106 Md. at 288-89 ,67 A. at 264-65 ).
In our opinion, the holding in Starr Church correctly expresses the Maryland law and we shall follow it in the present case.
Order affirmed, the appellant to pay the costs.
