107 A. 574 | Md. | 1919
On the 27th of January, 1913, the Maryland Trust Company appealed from the action of the Commissioners for Opening Streets in the matter of condemning and opening the Fallsway, and alleged in its petition that the benefits assessed against it in reference to its lot, designated as lot No. 1162, in the return of said Commissioners, was excessive, and that the Commissioners for Opening Streets had no authority to make any assessments in the matter (1) because under the Act of 1910, Chapter 110, (p. 639), all expenses in connection with the acquiring of land for said highway were to be paid out of the loan authorized by that Act. (2) Because the Commissioners for Opening Streets was not the *38 proper city agency for the condemnation of land, etc., for said highway, the same having been committed to the Commission on City Plan. (3) Because Ordinance No. 70, approved February 9th, 1912, specifically referred to Chapter 110 of the Act of 1910, which provides for the opening, etc., of said highway under the direction of the Commission on City Plan. (4) Because the damages and benefits awarded by the Commissioners for Opening Streets were illegally awarded, in that the property of the city within the assessed area, from which it derives revenue, was not assessed for benefits. The petition prayed the Court to review the decision and awards of the Commissioners for Opening Streets; to determine whether the Commissioners for Opening Streets had any authority in the matter, and whether all the expenses incident to the opening of said Fallsway were not to be paid out of the loan authorized by the Act of 1910. Thereafter, on the 15th of May, 1914, the Trust Company filed in said case a petition alleging that when the Commissioners for Opening Streets made their final return in the matter, their statement of damages awarded, expenses incurred and benefits assessed erroneously showed the aggregate amount of damages awarded and expenses incurred in said condemnation proceedings to be the sum of $434,943.89 and the total sum of benefits assessed to be $393,358.75, and that upon inspection it was discovered that the Commissioners had unlawfully and improperly included among the expenses of said proceedings the following items: "Expenses of Commission on City Plan, $6,108.75; estimated cost of Viaduct, $225,000.00; estimated cost of grading, $68,000.00"; that in the case of Brown, trustee, v. Mayor and City Council ofBaltimore, the Baltimore City Court had ordered those items to be stricken out of said return, and the calculations of the Commissioners altered accordingly; that when said items shall have been stricken out in accordance with said order the aggregate amount of damages and expenses will be reduced to the sum of $135,835.14; that the said amount of benefits assessed being largely in excess of the amount of damages and expenses, *39 the benefit assessments, to the extent of such excess, are illegal and void. The petition prayed the Court to decrease proportionately all assessments of benefits so that the total amount of benefit assessments would not exceed the aggregate amount of damages and expenses. In its answer to the petition of the Trust Company of May 15th, 1914, the city alleged that the report of the Commissioners for Opening Streets did not show the entire cost of opening the Fallsway because only nominal damages were allowed by the Commissioners for the bed of Jones' Falls, and that by adding the value of the bed of the Falls the real cost of the improvements would exceed the aggregate amount of benefits assessed; that a large number of appeals were then pending from damages as well as benefits, and that until they were disposed of no one could say what the entire damages and expenses will be; that the Commissioners allowed only nominal damages for the bed of the Falls on the theory that the bed belonged to the city, and that if the contrary should be determined in any of the appeals from damages, the damages and expenses would exceed the benefits assessed by the Commissioners, and that the total amount of damages and benefits was immaterial in this case because the sole question in the case is the amount that the appellant is actually benefited by the opening of the Fallsway.
For the purpose of having the Court below determine, without delay, "certain questions of law affecting the condemnation proceedings," the parties on May 28th, 1914, filed an agreement that the property of the Trust Company was benefited to the extent of the assessment of $94.00, and that no testimony as to the amount of benefits would be produced. The case was submitted to the Court, without a jury, and the Court signed an inquisition assessing the benefits against the Trust Company at $94.00. The Court also signed an order that the three items of expenses mentioned in the Trust Company's petition of May 15th, 1914, be stricken from the condemnation book for the opening of the Fallsway, and that the total damages and expenses shown by said book to be $434,943.14 *40 be changed to $135,835.14. At the hearing the Trust Company offered in evidence an agreement of counsel stating, among other things, that it appeared from the condemnation book returned by the Commissioners for Opening Streets that the damages awarded by the Commissioners amounted to $128,616.98, and that in the statement of expenses contained in said book, aggregating $306,326.91, were the three items referred to in the petition of the Trust Company of May 15th, 1914. The agreement further stated that the aggregate amount of benefits assessed was $393,358.75. The Trust Company also offered in evidence the proceedings in the appeal of Brown, trustee, to the Baltimore City Court from an assessment of benefits for the opening of the Fallsway, in which the Court passed the order referred to in the Trust Company's petition of May 15th, 1914, directing the Commissioners to strike from the list of expenses the three items mentioned in said petition and to make the corresponding change in the total. The city offered to prove that the value of 217 lots in the bed of the Fallsway (for which the Commissioners had allowed damages of $1.00 per lot), assuming the bed to be dry and at its original grade, would be $308,162.00, and that if filled up and brought to the grade of adjoining lots, the value of said lots would be $356,724.00. The Trust Company objected to the evidence, and the Court sustained the objection, whereupon the city moved the Court to correct the book of proceedings of the Commissioners by inserting therein "among the damages," "Value of the bed of Fallsway" $356,724.00, but the Court overruled the motion. The city proved that the Sewerage Commission had brought the bed of the Falls to grade by constructing concrete tubes which furnished the foundation upon which the Fallsway pavement was laid, and then offered to prove that the cost of the tubes, "which were constructed for the double purpose of carrying the water of Jones' Falls to the harbor and furnishing a base for a street over the Falls," was $1,059,771.55, but the Court, upon objection by the Trust Company, refused to admit the evidence. The city proved by Mr. Grannan, one *41 of the Commissioners, that the Commissioners made nominal awards of $1.00 for each lot in the bed of Fallsway believing that the Fallsway belonged to the city; that the Falls was divided into a large number of lots on the damage plat, and that he did not make any estimate of the actual value of the Fallsway.
It was admitted by the Trust Company that there were pending about one hundred and seventy appeals from the return of the Commissioners for Opening Streets, some of which related to awards of damages. The evidence being closed, the Court below refused to grant the prayer of the Trust Company in its petition of May 15th, 1914, and its action was made the subject of the first exception of the Trust Company. The second exception was to the rejection of the Trust Company's prayer, and to the granting of the following prayers of the city:
"The Court rules as a matter of law that it being admitted by agreement of counsel that the petitioner's property is actually benefited by the opening of the Fallsway to the amount of $94.00, the inquisition of the Court, sitting as a jury, should be for the sum of $94.00 benefits in this case."
"The Court rules as a matter of law that it is impossible now to ascertain the total damages and expenses of opening the Fallsway, and therefore the Court cannot cut down the benefits upon the petitioner, upon the contention that the aggregate benefits exceed the total damages and expenses."
On the 18th of June, 1915, the Trust Company entered an appeal from the "rulings, inquisition and judgment in" the case, and in disposing of that appeal, CHIEF JUDGE BOYD, speaking for this Court (in
"As it is impossible to tell in such a case as this whether the benefits will exceed the damages and expenses, and if so, to what extent, until all the cases are finally settled, we can *44
find no better way of disposing of the question. Section 179 certainly confers upon the Court large powers, and the object is to do justice to all. In addition to what we have already quoted, that section has the following important provision in it: `and the said Court shall not reject or set aside the record of the proceedings of the said Commissioners for any defect or omission in either form or substance, but shall amend or supply all such defects and omissions, and increase or reduce the amount of damages and benefits assessed, and alter, modify and correct the said return of proceedings in all or any of its parts, as the said Court shall deem just and proper.' As, then, in a case where the benefits materially exceed the damages and expenses, the Commissioners should make the reduction, upon their failure to do so, the Court can do so on appeals to it."
After the decision in
At the conclusion of the testimony, the Court below passed the following order:
*50"Ordered by the Court this fifth day of April, 1919, in conformity with the opinion filed herein on April 4th, 1919, that the benefit assessment of ninety-four dollars ($94.00) against the Maryland Trust Company in this case be and it is hereby reduced to forty-one dollars and sixty cents ($41.60), being 44.26% thereof; and
"It is further ordered that upon application made by any other party assessed with benefits for the opening of the Fallsway who duly took an appeal to this Court from such assessment and who has not settled with the City by actual payment of the benefits assessed, an order shall be entered reducing the benefits assessed to such party to a sum equal to 44.26 per cent. of the amount of such benefits as fixed by the inquisition in such case; but no abatement shall be made of any part of any benefit assessment upon any property from which no appeal was taken from the action of the Commissioners for Opening Streets within the time provided in Section 179 of the City Charter."
The two appeals in the present record are by the city and by the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore from the above order of the Court below.
We have set out at unusual length the record of the former appeal of the Maryland Trust Company and the record of the present appeals by the city and the Safe Deposit and Trust Company in order to clearly show what this Court decided in
Section 179 of the City Charter provides for appeals by the city, or by any person or corporation from the action of the Commissioners for Opening Streets in laying out, opening, extending, widening, etc., any street, square, lane or alley to the Baltimore City Court, and authorizes that Court, upon appeals to it, to "amend or supply all such defects" in the record of the proceedings of the Commissioners, and to "increase or reduce the amount of damages and benefits assessed, and alter, modify and correct said return of proceedings, in all or any of its parts, as the said Court shall deem just and proper." The jurisdiction thus conferred upon the Baltimore City Court is the jurisdiction to review the action of the Commissioners and to make such changes and corrections in the record of their proceedings as the Court shall deem just and proper. The appeal of the Maryland Trust Company to the Baltimore City Court was not from the failure or refusal of the Commissioners for Opening Streets to reduce the amount of benefit assessments to the amount of damages awarded and expenses, for at the time of said appeal the amount of benefits did not exceed the amount of damages and expenses, and we said in 125 Md. that it could not be determined until all the appeals were disposed of whether the benefits assessed would exceed the aggregate amount of damages and expenses. The last appeal from the return of the Commissioners was not disposed of until the 5th of February, 1919, and it is not alleged in the petition of the Trust Company, filed on the 6th of February, 1919, that the Commissioners had failed or refused to reduce the amount of benefits assessed to the aggregate amount of damages and expenses, or that the Commissioners had failed or refused to deduct from its assessment the proper proportion of the excess of benefits over the amount of damages and expenses. It is therefore clear that the Court below had no jurisdiction to entertain the petition of the Maryland Trust Company filed on the 6th day of February, 1919, or to grant the relief therein prayed, and that the motion of the city to dismiss that petition should have been granted. For the same reason the Court had no power to *52 grant the relief prayed in the petition of the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore.
The order of the Court below limited the right to a reduction of amount of benefits assessed to those who had appealed from the return of the Commissioners within the time allowed by the Charter, and who have not paid the assessments. But the appeal referred to in the Charter is from the original return of the Commissioners. The duty of the Commissioners to make the deduction we are here referring to does not arise until all such appeals have been disposed of, and there is no right of appeal in such cases until the Commissioners have failed or refused to discharge that duty, and hence the right of owners of lots assessed for benefits to have their proportion of the excess of benefits deducted from their assessments cannot be made to depend upon whether they appealed from the original return of the Commissioners. Nor is there any reason why the Commissioners should not make in their book the proper deduction from all assessments of benefits, regardless of whether the party assessed has paid the assessment, leaving it to the proper agent of the city to return the overpayment, and to the person assessed such remedy, if any, as he may have to recover it in the event it is not returned.
So far as the record of the former appeal and the record of the present appeals disclose there was no appeal from the order of JUDGE DUFFY striking out the three items of expenses allowed by the Commissioners in the list of expenses returned by them, and, even if we had any doubt about the propriety of said order, or the jurisdiction of the Court to pass it, his action cannot be reviewed in this case. Nor does it appear that there was any appeal by the city from the action of the Commissioners in awarding $1.00 for each of the lots owned by it in the bed of Jones' Falls or the Fallsway. And in the view we have taken of the present appeals, it is not necessary to determine whether in laying out, opening, etc., the Fallsway, under section 175 of the City Charter, as enacted by Chapter 123 of the Act of 1898, the Commissioners for *53 Opening Streets should have taken into consideration the cost to the city of the construction of the tubes in Jones' Falls.
As the Court below had no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed in the petitions of the Maryland Trust Company and the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, the evidence offered by the city to prove the value of the lots for which it was awarded $1.00 damages, and the cost of constructing the tubes in Jones' Falls was clearly inadmissible. And that is so regardless of the question whether the city, not having appealed within the time allowed from the award of the Commissioners, can now dispute the correctness of said awards (Timanus v. M. C.C. ofBaltimore,
It follows from what has been said that in No. 35 Appeals, the appeal of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, the order of the Court below, to the extent that it granted the relief prayed by the Maryland Trust Company, and attempts to limit the right to a reduction of the benefit assessments to those who have appealed and have not paid their assessments, must be reversed, and the petition of the Maryland Trust Company of February 6th, 1919, must be dismissed.
Order of Court below, to the extent of the relief granted theappellee, and it attempted to limit the right to a reduction ofbenefits to those who have appealed from the return of theCommissioners and have not paid their assessments, reversed, andpetition of the appellee of February 6th, 1919, dismissed,with costs to the appellant. *54