Hiss v. Mayor of Baltimore

64 A. 52 | Md. | 1906

This is a bill for an injunction to restrain the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore from levying and collecting taxes for municipal purposes for the year 1905, at a rate in excess of sixty cents per $100 of the assessed value thereof, on certain property situate in that part of Baltimore City formerly Baltimore County, which was annexed to the city, under the Act of 1888, ch. 98.

A demurrer to the bill was sustained and the bill dismissed by the Court below, upon the ground that the property in question was not landed property within the meaning of chap. 130 of the Acts of 1902, but was liable to taxation, at the full city rate after 1900, under sec. 19, ch. 98 of the Acts of 1888.

There are two questions thus presented by the record and the decision of them will depend upon the construction to be given to sec. 19 of the Acts of 1888, ch. 98, known as the Annexation Act, and chapter 130 of the Acts of 1902. It will be seen that sec. 19 of the Acts of 1888, provides in part that from and after the year 1900 the property real and personal, in the territory so annexed, shall be liable to taxation and assessment therefor in the same manner and form as similar property within the present limits of the city, may be liable, provided, however, that after the year 1900, the present Baltimore County rate of taxation shall not be increased for city purposes on any landed property within the territory, until avenues, streets or alleys shall have been opened and constructed through the same, nor until there shall be upon every block of ground so to be formed, at least six dwellings or store-houses ready for occupation.

And by ch. 131 of the Acts of 1902, sec. 4A, was added to the Code of Public Local Laws and it was provided as follows: "Landed property," property shall be construed to mean real estate whether in fee-simple or leasehold and whether improved or unimproved until avenues, streets or alleys shall have been opened and constructed shall be construed to mean until avenues, streets or alleys shall have been opened, graded, *622 kerbed and otherwise improved from kerb to kerb by pavement, macadam, gravel or other substantial material; the words "avenues," "streets" and "alleys," being used interchangeably; block of ground shall be construed to mean an area of ground not exceeding two hundred thousand superficial square feet, formed and bounded on all sides by intersecting avenues, streets or alleys opened, graded, kerbed and otherwise improved from kerb to kerb by pavement, macadam, gravel or other substantial material, as above provided.

It is admitted that the property involved in this controversy is located within the limits of the territory annexed to the city of Baltimore under what is called the Annexation Act of 1888, and is situate in a block of ground bounded on the south by North avenue, on the east by St. Paul street, on the north by Twentieth street and on the west by Charles street; and that the block so bounded contains one hundred and twenty thousand superficial square feet or thereabouts. The bill avers that there is located within the block the following buildings and improvements, towit: One dwelling-house at the northeast corner of Charles street and North avenue, a fee-simple lot, improved by a one-story factory, fronting on North avenue and extending back to Twentieth street, the property of the appellant, at the northwest corner of St. Paul street and North avenue, the Immanuel Baptist Church; at the southwest corner of St. Paul and Twentieth street there is another church, the rear portion is used and occupied as a parsonage; fronting on Charles street is a one-story, one-room wooden shanty, sixteen feet by ten, occupied by a cobbler as a workshop; between North avenue and Twentieth street there is a three-story dwelling-house owned by the American Ice Company and at the southeast corner of Twentieth and Charles streets there is a lot improved by a shed, used for protecting wood and lumber from rain.

The bill further avers that the block of ground is surrounded by streets, avenues, etc., paved, macadamized, etc., or otherwise improved, and inasmuch as it does not, nor ever did contain six dwellings or store-houses within its boundaries *623 he is not liable to pay taxes for city purposes at a higher or greater rate than 60c. per $100 of the assessed value of the property.

It is clear, we think from the facts of this case, that the property in question, is not landed property, within the meaning of either the "Foutz Act," or the proviso in sec. 19 of the Annexation Act of 1888. It is improved city property; similar to other property within the old city limits and by the express terms of the Act, "from and after the year 1900, the property real and personal, in the territory annexed, shall be liable to taxation and assessment, in the same manner and form as similar property within the present limits of the city may be liable.

In Sindall v. Balto. City, 93 Md. 534, this Court held that the term "landed property," as used in the section and in the proviso, meant rural property as contradistinguished from real estate which for all practical purposes was city property because actually laid out in city lots on which dwellings were constructed that abutted on proposed or projected streets or subsisting highways to be converted into regular graded streets or avenues. By the Act of 1902, ch. 130, landed property was construed to mean real estate, whether in fee-simple or leasehold and whether improved or unimproved.

We fully agree with the contention of the appellee as stated in its brief, that this latter Act was passed to prevent property which was in no sense city property from being subject to the full city tax rate until certain things were done by the city. It certainly was never intended to affect property which at the time of its passage was not only not landed property but not even suburban property, but in the fullest sense of the term city property, bounded by the streets, and enjoying every advantage and facility that attaches to similar property, within the old city limits.

To sustain the appellants contention in this case, would not only give to the Act of 1902, chap. 130, a retroactive effect, but would practically annul and destroy the meaning of the words "similar property" in sec. 19, ch. 68 of the Annexation *624 Act of 1888. Brooks v. Chilton, 71 Md. 445; M. and C. ofBalto. v. Rosenthal, 102 Md. 298.

We, therefore, hold in this case, that the property in controversy is not landed property, within the Act of 1902, but it is improved city property and is liable to taxation according to the provisions of sec. 19 of chap. 98 of the Act of 1888, "as similar property within the limits of the city."

The decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, dated the 19th day of February, 1906 sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the plaintiff's bill will be affirmed.

Decree affirmed with costs.

(Decided June 15th, 1906.)

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