88 A. 263 | Md. | 1913
The Acts of 1910, Ch. 110, p. 639, authorized and empowered the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to open, construct and establish a public highway in the city along or over the bed of Jones' Falls, and "to delegate to the Commission known as the `Commission on City Plan' the duty and power of opening, constructing and establishing" the highway, and to confer by ordinance on the Commission the power to acquire by purchase or condemnation the property to be used in connection with the improvement, and such other powers possessed by the City in relation to the opening and construction of highways and acquiring property therefor as it might deem proper to be so delegated. It was enacted that "for the purpose of providing the moneys requisite for opening, constructing and establishing said highway, and purchasing or acquiring said property, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore is hereby authorized to issue the stock of the said corporation to an amount not exceeding one million dollars ($1,000,000.00)." The Act required that the question of issuing the stock should be first submitted to the voters of the City, and it directed that before the City should proceed to open and construct the new thoroughfare, an ordinance for that purpose should be passed and the property to be acquired should be designated upon a plat. The approval of the voters having been given to the project, in the manner contemplated by the Act, and by section 7 of Article 11 of the *507 Constitution of the State, the Mayor and City Council passed an ordinance (No. 70, approved February 9, 1912) authorizing theCommissioners for Opening Streets to condemn and open in pursuance of Chapter 110 of the Acts of 1910 the proposed highway over and along Jones' Falls, to be known as the "Fallsway," in accordance with a detailed description, and a plat duly prepared and filed, indicating the outlines of the improvement and condemnation. A supplemental ordinance (No. 114, approved May 28, 1912) conferred upon the same Commissioners authority to acquire property for the highway by purchase or other voluntary method.
In the course of their proceedings for the opening of the Fallsway the Commissioners for Opening Streets assessed certain sums as benefits against property belonging to the appellant. The present suit was then instituted with a view to having the City restrained from collecting the assessments on the ground that they were illegal and void. The specific points of objection were: first, that the cost of the highway was intended by the Act of 1910 to be paid out of the proceeds of the stock for which it made provision, and that consequently the City had no power to impose any part of the cost upon property owners by way of assessments for benefits; and, secondly, that the only body, to which the powers granted by the Act were authorized to be delegated, was the Commission on City Plan, and that the ordinances attempting to make such a delegation to the Commissioners for Opening Streets were, therefore, invalid and the proceedings of the Commissioners ineffective. These questions, after the filing of the answer and general replication in the Court below, were proposed by the complainant and adopted by the Court as preliminary questions of law which it was convenient to have determined before the trial of any issue of fact in the case, as permitted by section 205 of Article 16 of the Code. The appeal is from an order sustaining the validity of the assessments as against each of the contentions thus submitted.
The objection that benefits are not assessable on account of the improvements because a special fund has been appropriated *508
for that object is fully met by the decision of this Court inLauer v. Baltimore,
The Commissioners for Opening Streets being thus required by the City Charter to assess for benefits whenever they were directed by ordinance to act in connection with street projects, and having been charged in the Lauer case with the duty of following the procedure prescribed by law, it was held that they had full power to make the assessments there in controversy, and that the exercise of the authority thus expressly conferred should not be denied merely because of the creation of a special fund "for the purpose of providing the costs and expenses" of the improvement. This conclusion was predicated upon the general rule that exemptions from taxation are to be strictly construed; and since the charter expressly provided for such assessments, and the Act creating the special fund made no reference to the subject, there was found to be no support for the contention that the property affected by the proceedings before the Court was exempt from liability to be assessed on account of the resulting benefits.
The present case is controlled by the same considerations. There is nothing in the Act relating to the Fallsway to qualify or restrict the Charter power of the city or of the Commissioners for Opening Streets as a duly constituted municipal agency, to assess property benefited by such an undertaking, and the ordinance empowering the Commissioners to "condemn and open" this thoroughfare expressly directed that their procedure should be in accordance with the Act of 1910, Ch. 110, and such provisions of the City Charter as might be applicable. The assessments in this case have, therefore, been made under an authority which the Commissioners clearly possessed and were required to exercise, and upon the principle applied in the Lauer case we can have no hesitation in holding that the mere creation by statute of a fund to meet the costs and expenses of the improvement does not affect the efficiency of this power of assessment or relieve the appellant's property of a charge to which it is subject under the general and affirmative terms of the law.
It is argued that the Lauer case is distinguishable from the one now being considered in the fact that the street improvements *511 anticipated for the Annex were so extensive as to justify the view that the Legislature could not have expected the proceeds of the two million dollar loan to cover the costs and expenses, while in the present instance the fund provided may be regarded as adequate for the object to which it is to be applied. The decision in the Lauer case did not proceed upon such a theory, and we have been unable to accept the distinction thus suggested. The Act of 1910, in reference to the Fallsway, authorized stock to be issued "for the purpose of providing the moneys requisite" for the project, and the Act of 1904, relating to the Annex, directed the proceeds of the loan to "be used only for the purpose of providing the costs and expenses" of the improvements there specified. These provisions are substantially similar, and neither Act purports to deprive the City of the power to assess for benefits or to make its exercise depend upon the insufficiency of the fund intended to meet the expenditures with which the municipality is primarily chargeable.
There was another ground suggested for distinguishing theLauer case from the present. The Act of 1904 authorized the City to confer upon the Commissioners not only the powers granted by the Act, but also such further powers as the Mayor and City Council might deem necessary for the proper execution of the improvement, and the ordinance passed in pursuance of this authority, having imposed upon the Commissioners the duties prescribed by the general provisions of the Charter, including that of making assessments for benefits, it is urged that the situation was entirely different from the one here shown where, it is said, the City had no authority to exercise or delegate any powers beyond those expressly given by the Act of 1910, which did not in terms provide for such assessments. The question whether the City had the right to delegate to the Commissioners for Opening Streets the power and duty to open the Fallsway is one of the issues of law raised in this case, and is yet to be determined, but assuming that the City could legally make such a delegation *512 there can be no doubt, in the absence of any provision to the contrary in the Act of 1910, that the Commissioners in the execution of this work are subject to the requirements already quoted from the Charter as to the procedure to be followed by them whenever they are directed by ordinance to open any highway within the limits of the City, and this procedure, as already shown, involves the ascertainment and assessment of benefits.
It is insisted that authority to proceed under the provisions of the Act of 1910 could not be validly conferred by ordinance upon the Commissioners for Opening Streets. The argument is that this statute gives to the City the power of acquiring, in connection with the opening of the Fallsway, and of selling after its completion, the land adjacent to, but not included within, the proposed highway, and that as the acquisition and re-sale of property so located could not be accomplished independently of the Act of 1910, the execution of its purposes could not have been intended to be delegated to any agency other than the Commission on City Plan, to which the duty was expressly authorized to be committed. In Bond v. Baltimore,
In our opinion the Court below correctly determined the questions of law presented by the record.
Order affirmed, with costs and cause remanded. *515