88 Md. 654 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A bill in equity was filed by the Mayor and Aldermen of Frederick to require the County Commissioners of Frederick County to account for and pay over a proportion of the taxes collected by them under and by virtue of section 201 of Article 81 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland, as enacted by chapter 143 of the Acts of the General Assembly passed at the session of 1896. The part of that section which presents
1. Is the appellee entitled to any portion of this tax levied and collected by the appellants from securities mentioned in section 201, which were owned by residents of Frederick City?
2. If so, what proportion is it entitled to?
3. Has a Court of Equity jurisdiction to grant the relief sought?
1. The Act referred to leaves no doubt as to the county, city or municipal purposes on thes’e securities, therein mentioned and that is therefore not involved in this case. Nor can there be any question as to the amount of tax that can be levied in addition to the State tax as the law says, “ there shall also be paid on such valuation thirty cents (and no more) on each one hundred dollars for county, city and municipal taxation.”
The power of the State through the Legislature to deprive an incorporated city or town of the right to levy taxes upon a particular class or classes of property within its corporate limits need not be discussed by us, as the question presented is not so much what the Legislature had the right to do as what it actually did and intended to do by the passage of this law. Article 81, title “Revenue and Taxes,” of the Code of Public General Laws, was in many respects materially amended by chapters 120, 141, 142, and 143 of the Acts of 1896 — all of which were approved by the Governor on the same day. By those
As the property is of the character that was originally assessable in this State, and was continued to be by chapter 120 of the Acts of 1896, although on a some
That the expression “ city and municipal taxation ” is not confined to Baltimore City alone may readily be seen by a careful study of the provisions of Article 81 of the Code and the amendments thereto. Under the rule of interpretation, as set forth in section n of Art. i of the Code, that “ the word county shall be construed to include the City of Baltimore unless such construction would be unreasonable,” it was not necessary to insert these words to enable the authorities of Baltimore City to impose such tax. But if it had been intended to use language that would in terms confine the tax to the counties and Baltimore City, it could have been easily so expressed by the Legislature, as it is in other places. Section i of Art. 81, as codified in the present and former codes, reads that “ all State and county taxes, and all taxes in the City of Baltimore, shall be levied upon the assessment heretofore made and such further assessments as may hereafter be made agreeably to law unless otherwise directed,” etc. As amended by chapter 120
There are many places in them where Baltimore City is named — thus showing that when the Legislature meant it alone, it used the name of Baltimore. In section 146 A, which provides for a tax of eight per centum upon the gross amount of interest covenanted to be paid on mortgages, of which one-fourth is payable to the State and the other three-fourths to the county wherein the mortgage is recorded, or to the City of Baltimore if recorded there, the Legislature left no question about it and used language that was only applicable to that city and not to other cities in the State. For example, it said “ to be collected by the authorities as other taxes for county and State purposes in the several counties and municipal and State taxes are collected in Baltimore City.” The whole of the tax thus collected is payable to the State and to the counties, or Baltimore City, as the case may be, but the Legislature was then dealing with securities that for years had been exempted from taxation in this State and not with those that many, if not all, of the cities and towns in' the State previously had authority to tax.
2. Under our construction of the statute the fund realized from this tax of thirty cents from the securities of residents of the taxable limits of Frederick City belonged to the city and county, and, as the statute does not fix the proportions they are entitled to, it must necessarily follow that each is entitled to one-half — just as when a fund is given to two persons or corporations and no provision is made for the proportions, each will take a moiety. It would be impossible under the circumstances to divide the fund in any other way. The assessable bases for the county and for the city, respec
3. The only remaining question we need consider is the jurisdiction of a Court of Equity to grant the relief sought. The defendant filed a plea denying the jurisdiction of the Court, a demurrer and answer to the whole bill at the same time. Under our equity rules a defendant may answer, plead or demur to a bill “ and he may plead or demur to the whole bill or a part thereof, and he may demur to part, plead to part and answer as to the residue.” Code, Art. 16, section 135. But we are not aware of any practice in this State which will permit him to plead or demur to the whole bill and also at the same time to file an answer to it. By his plea he prays judgment of the Court as to whether he shall be required to make further answer to the bill, and the demurrer, while admitting the facts properly stated in the bill, interposes an objection to the plaintiff’s further proceeding or requiring the defendant to answer. Hence if he answers to anything as to which he has pleaded, he
Having determined that the tax authorized by this statute for county, city and municipal purposes on the securities owned by residents of the city of Frederick belongs to the county and city, we think a bill in equity will lie to obtain the relief sought on several grounds. The bill alleges that the County Commissioners had levied the full rate of thirty cents on- each one hundred dollars of said securities, and had delivered the levy to the county treasurer, who was proceeding with the collections, that the appellee had completed its assessment which included the securities thus held by the residents of the city, and was about to make its levy; that the levying by it of its equitable proportion of said thirty cents would, in view of the previous levy of the County Commissioners of the full rate of thirty cents upon the same property, make an aggregate taxation in excess of the rate allowed by law and would produce a condition of great confusion and would impede the collection of taxes both by the appellants and the appellee, etc. Under our views of this law the appellants are only entitled to one-half of the amount so levied on these securities of residents of the city, and the city is entitled to the other half. If the city can sue at law for its share of the amounts collected by the county, it is apparent that a great number of suits would likely be required. In the action for money had and received, if that could be sustained, there could be no recovery
But under the circumstances could the city sue the county at law? The money was not collected under a joint levy by the two, but through the excessive and illegal (to the extent of one-lialf) levy of the county authorities. The county did not undertake to collect any part of the tax for the city, but claimed it all for. itself. The city has therefore no strictly legal claim against the county for its proportion of the fund, but it is merely an equitable claim which is worked out through the fact that the county is taking from the residents of the city what in equity belongs to the city by virtue of this statute, as construed by us. Although the city might proceed for its proportion against those who have paid the county the whole of the thirty cents, and they could probably recover it back from the county under sec. 9 of Art. 25 of the Code, as construed in the case of G. C. C. and I. Co. v. County Commissioners, 59 Md. 255, it would create great confusion and almost endless litigation. The agreed statement shows that the valuation of the securities is the same for the county and city purposes. In equity and on every principle of justice the money is due the city, and in order to get it, it should not be compelled to institute numerous suits against its citizens to recover what the county has illegally taken from them and thus compel them to sue the county, when by avoiding this circuity of actions a Court of Equity can require the county to account directly with the city, which is ultimately entitled to the money, which in our opinion can be done under the peculiar conditions existing, especially as the statute gives the fund in controversy to the county and city. Although we think the county and city authorities can each levy and collect one-half of the tax allowed by the statute which we think would be the proper course to pursue yet, if one does collect the whole, the fund thus collected might well be treated as if belonging to
A refusal by a Court of Equity to grant relief must not only involve the plaintiff in a multiplicity of suits, but subject many innocent persons to costs and the probable risk of paying the same tax twice, unless they engage in further litigation and possibly even then, and as the city is entitled to the proportion of the fund claimed, the case would seem to call with peculiar force for the interposition of a Court of Equity. So without prolonging this opinion by giving other reasons as grounds for that jurisdiction, some of which have been suggested, we must affirm the decree below.
Decree affirmed with costs above and below to be paid by the appellants.