131 A. 776 | Md. | 1926
The appellants contend that an order of the Circuit Court of Garrett County, closing two portions of a road in that county, under the provisions of article 25, sections 142, et seq., of the Code of Public General Laws, is invalid because, in the original proceedings before the county commissioners, it was not made to appear that the persons who gave the public notice, and filed the originating petition, were citizens of the county. Section 143 of article 25 provides that, "whenever any citizen of any county intends to petition the county commissioners for opening, altering or closing any road, he shall give thirty days' notice thereof in one or more of the newspapers published in the county." And taking the effect of this to be that the right of petitioning is restricted to citizens of the county, it is contended that a showing of citizenship on the record is essential to the validity of an order closing a road, under the rule that all facts essential to the valid exercise of a special, limited jurisdiction must be made to appear on the face of the proceedings. Smith v. Goldsborough,
The Youghiogheny Hydro-Electric Corporation, incorporated under the laws of this State, is developing the water *464 power of the Youghiogheny River and its tributaries in Garrett County, to generate electricity for public use; and as the impounded water would flood portions of several roads, including the one in question, notice was given by the corporation of intention to make application for the closing of all the roads to be flooded, and, in due course, a petition was prepared and filed with the county commissioners. The notice was signed "Youghiogheny Hydro-Electric Corporation, a Maryland corporation," and the petition was signed by twelve individuals, and in the name of the corporation; but neither the notice nor the petition contained any statement of citizenship. Counter petitions were filed by the appellants and, after a hearing, the county commissioners ordered the road closed as prayed, and executed an agreement with the Youghiogheny Corporation, which required the company to construct substitute ways. At the hearing, to meet an objection to the signature of the corporation, F.R. Corliss, an agent, added to the corporate signature on the petition: "By F.R. Corliss, Agent." On appeal to the circuit court, the appellants filed a motion to quash the proceedings, and after a verdict of a jury for the closing of the road, filed a motion in arrest of judgment. The court overruled both motions and finally ordered the parts of the road in question closed. The appeal is grounded on error in the overruling of the motions. Both motions raise the one question of jurisdiction already stated.
The county commissioners attached to the record of their proceedings, and transmitted to the circuit court, the agreement executed by themselves and by the corporation. It recites the whole proceeding, and declares that, in consideration of the closing of the portions of the various roads, the corporation agrees with the county commissioners to construct the substitute ways as specified. The agreement and the order seem clearly to form one transaction, each essential to the other, and inseparable from the other; and the agreement, in our opinion, was properly attached to the order, and formed a proper part of the record of the proceeding. *465
And any facts shown in the agreement would be shown on the record of the proceeding. It recites that the corporation is formed under the laws of Maryland, and is engaged in the work of constructing the dam in Garrett County to impound water for development of electric energy for public use, that it has purchased several thousand acres of land for impounding the water, and that for the same purpose it is necessary to close specified portions of county roads. In Baltimore and YorkTurnpike Co. v. Crowther,
The mere use of the word cannot be taken as determinative, because the word has more than one meaning. "The word `citizen' has various meanings," said this Court in Risewick v. Davis,
The word is found used in many clauses, statutory and constitutional, especially those of earlier years, which have established general rights and obligations. For instance, the clause in the Bill of Rights of Maryland concerning liberty of the press (article 40) provides, "that every citizen of the State ought to be allowed to speak, write and publish *467
his sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that privilege." The Compact of 1785 between Virginia and Maryland, with which the Court has had to deal in another case at this term, secures to "citizens" of the two states rights in the ownership of property on the shores of the Potomac River. Articles in the Code pertaining to rights in ferries and fisheries provide, in words, for "citizens," "residents," or "inhabitants." Article 37, § 1; article 39, section 19; article 72, section 111; article 92, section 4. The Court has never been called upon to construe the words in any of these clauses. But the expression in the Bill of Rights, which, taken alone, is even more restrictive, "that no man ought to be taken or imprisoned or disseized * * * or deprived of his life, liberty or property, but by the judgment of his peers, or by the Law of the Land," has been treated as including corporations. Regentsof Univ. of Md. v. Williams, 9 G. J. 365, 412. And the same breadth has been given it in other provisions. Laurel CanningCompany v. Baltimore Ohio Railroad Company,
Corporations organized under the laws of the several states have been held to be included within the phrase "citizens of the United States," in an Act of Congress concerning claims arising from Indian depredations, and within "citizens of the United States and those who have declared their intention to become such," in a statute giving a right to purchase mineral deposits in the public lands. The Baltimore *468
Insurance Company was included in the benefits provided by the French Spoliation Act of January 20, 1885, for "citizens of the United States or their legal representatives." And the same comprehensive effect has been given to similar expressions in treaties. United States v. Northwestern Express Co.,
In State v. Trustees, 11 Ohio, 24, it was held that, as used in an act relating to the acquisition of public lands by religious societies, requiring such societies to furnish a list of the names of their members, specifying that they were citizens of the particular township, the word "citizen" was synonymous with resident. "It can hardly be believed," said the court, "that the Legislature, in using the word `citizen,' in this statute, intended to make a distinction between native or naturalized citizens, and resident aliens. Why should such a distinction be made? Is there not as much need of religious instruction in the one case as the other?" And in McKenzie v. Murphy, supra, a statutory reservation of a homestead exemption to "every free white citizen of this state, male or female, being a householder or head of a family," was held to include aliens domiciled in the state. In Attorney-General v. Police Commissioners,
What the word comprehends in particular statutes must be sought, then, in the purpose and intent underlying each. *469 "These considerations," said Mr. Justice White, in United Statesv. Northwestern Express Co., supra, "give rise to an ambiguity which we must solve, not by reference to a mere abstract technicality, but by that cardinal rule which commands that we seek out and apply the evident purpose intended to be accomplished by the law-making power." And this purpose must be found by ascertaining the nature of the private interests to be affected, and for which it may be assumed the Legislature intended to provide, and the nature of the public interest which it may be assumed the Legislature intended to protect and promote.
The opening or closing of a road would seem to be a matter affecting all residents of the county alike, all those, that is, who may be entitled to have their convenience considered and promoted by the local government, and appears to have no especial relation to the political rights of individuals in the county. Outside of political rights, corporations in the county stand on substantially the same footing as individuals. They own property, pay taxes, and share proportionately in all the burdens of government; engage in the business activities of the county, and are entitled to have their convenience given equal consideration. From the side of the private interests to be affected, there would seem, then, to be no reason for excluding corporations from making the application to the county commissioners, and inaugurating the proceeding in which the wisdom and propriety of opening or closing a road is to be determined. And there would seem to be no public interest to require it. To construe it that way would be to suppose that in this day of widespread use of the corporate form of organization, notwithstanding the general equality of corporations in respect to rights not political, if the land to be affected is owned by corporations, or if the activities to be served, however beneficial they may be to the people of the county, are to be conducted by corporations, the county commissioners are not to receive applications in the corporate name. Practically, it would be to suppose that the Legislature intended, in such cases, to insist upon application under the borrowed names of individuals. *470 And it seems to us unreasonable to suppose that the Legislature meant to require such a profitless formality.
Our opinion is that the purpose and intention of the Legislature is not to be so narrowly construed, and that the Youghiogheny Corporation was, on the record before the county commissioners, entitled to make, in its own name, the application on which the commissioners proceeded. The delay in adding the name of the agent signing, so far as that may have been necessary, was immaterial. The rule which requires the jurisdictional facts to appear is not a rule of pleading or one concerned with particular documents, at particular stages of the proceedings; the requirement is merely that somewhere in the record the courts shall find assurance that the action taken was in a proceeding in which such action was authorized by law.Smith v. Goldsborough, supra; Cumberland Valley Railroad Companyv. Martin, supra.
Order affirmed, with costs to the appellee.