44 Md. 598 | Md. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 18th of March, 1872, an Ordinance was passed hy the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, providing for the condemnation and opening of Laurens street from Pennsylvania avenue to Madison avenue. The appellants were the owners of a vacant lot through which this improvement extended, hut the whole of it was not needed for the bed of the proposed street. In this state of case the owners surrendered the whole lot to the Commissioners for opening streets, and claimed compensation for the whole of it, as they had a right to do under the existing Ordinances of the City. Baltimore City Code of 1869, Art. 43, sec. 7, page 831. The Commissioners then proceeded to value the lot and assess the damages, and from their, assessment the owners took an appeal to the City Court, and upon trial, the jury, on the 22nd of January, 1874, found an inquisition assessing the damages for the lot at $22,567.50. From this no appeal was taken hy either party to this Court. This amount was paid hy the City to the owners on the 4th of December, 1874. At the tim.e of this payment the owners claimed interest on this sum from the 22nd of January to the 4th of December, 1874, which the City refused to pay, and the questions now arising and to he decided are,
2nd. If so entitled can they enforce its payment by mandamus, the process they have resorted to in this case ?
It is insisted on the part of the appellants, that interest in such a case .when payment is thus delayed, is a necessary ingredient of the “just compensation ” provided by the Constitution for taking private property for public use.
We cannot, however, so regard it. It has long been the settled law of Maryland, that both private and municipal corporations, when authorized to exercise the power of eminent domain, have the right to renounce the inquisition and select a more eligible route, or to wholly abandon the improvement or enterprise, at any time before actual payment of the amount assessed, either by commissioners or jury, and until that time no title to the property condemned vests in the corporations. Balto. & Susq. R. R. Co., vs. Nesbitt, 10 How., 395 ; Graff vs. Mayor & C. C. of Balt., 10 Md., 544; State, ex rel. of McClellan vs. Graves, 19 Md., 351 ; and Merrick, Adm’r of Warfield vs. Mayor & C. C. of Balt., 43 Md., 219.
But when this sum is paid or tendered, the title vests, and the constitutional requirement is gratified. Nothing more than this sum can, in any case, be demanded by the property owner, as and for the compensation which the Constitution secures to him. This we consider to be the firmly established law of this State. No other answer than this need therefore be made to the very able argument of the appellants' counsel, as to what constitutes a taking of property under this provision. We may remark, however, that we have seen no case, a.nd think none can be found, which has- gone to the extent of deciding that the mere assessment of damages by commissioners or a jury constitutes such taking. Such assessment is simply a mode prescribed by law, for ascertaining the value of the property
Order affirmed.