72 A. 902 | Md. | 1909
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County entering a judgment of non pros. and judgment for defendant for costs. The plaintiff, Aunie M. Phillips, sued the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, alleging in her declaration that her husband, Robert L. Phillips, was the owner of a lot of land and dwelling house thereon at the corner of Harwood and Pimlico avenues, in Baltimore County, bounding on the limits of Baltimore City, where the plaintiff resided with her husband and children, and that during the summer of 1905 the defendant permitted the surface water and drainage from that part of Pimlico avenue adjoining said residence to accumulate at the intersection of said two avenues within the limits of said city, so as to form a cesspool, emitting noxious odors and gases and causing the drainage from said cesspool to flow into the cellar of said residence, and from thence into a well on said premises used by her for drinking and other family and domestic purposes, and that the water of said well was thereby contaminated and poisoned, by reason of which the plaintiff was made ill and sick and was rendered unable to perform her household duties, of all of which the defendant had notice, but failed and refused to remedy said conditions or to abate the nuisance created thereby. *433
Upon return of the summons, the defendant, appearing specially, for that purpose and no other, moved for a judgment of nonpros. and for the quashing of the writ of summons and the Sheriff's return thereon, on the ground that the defendant is a municipal corporation, having within its own limits Courts to try causes in which it may be a party, and that as such corporation it can only be lawfully sued in that action in the Courts of Baltimore City. The defendant also filed a plea to the jurisdiction, appearing specially for that purpose, and without waiving its motion to quash setting up the same ground as in the motion, and averring that as a corporation it is a non-resident of Baltimore County and does not carry on any regular business or habitually engage in any avocation or employment in Baltimore County, and therefore cannot be sued therein. This plea was duly supported by affidavit. The plaintiff replied that the defendant is not a non-resident of Baltimore County within the meaning of the statutes of this State, and that it does carry on a regular business in Baltimore County, and is habitually engaged in an avocation or employment therein within the meaning of said statutes. Issue was joined, and testimony was taken, from which it appeared that the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, acting through the Water Department, owns and maintains certain water mains within the limits of Baltimore County, which were purchased from the Baltimore County Electric and Water Company, and by that means furnishes water to certain residents of Baltimore County around Westport, Highlandtown, West Arlington, York road and Belair road, and that the annual receipts from that source are about $10,000 out of $925,000 derived from sales of water in Baltimore City and Baltimore County.
This being a suit for injuries to the person, the action is confessedly transitory in its nature, Gunther v. Dranbauer,
In Crook v. Pitcher, the action was brought by the appellee in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City for obstructing a highway in Baltimore County, and the plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment. On appeal the judgment was reversed, the Court saying: "If the cause of action could only have arisen in a particular place, the action is local and the suit must be brought in the county or place in which it arose. Actions for damages to real property, actions on the case for nuisance or for the obstruction of one's right of way are, according to all the authorities, local."
In Ireton's Case, the plaintiff sued the City of Baltimore for damages to his mill property in Baltimore County in the Circuit Court for that county. The defendant, after appearing generally, moved to quash the summons on the ground that it could only be sued in its own Courts, and the motion was granted. On appeal this judgment was reversed, because the motion came too late; but the Court also declared that as "the injury sued for was to real estate, it was local, therefore, and not transitory," and cited Patterson v. Wilson, 6 G. J. 499, which is directly in point.
In Gunther v. Dranbauer, the appellee sued the appellant in the Superior Court of Baltimore City for personal injuries *435 sustained by him by reason of an unlighted obstruction placed by the defendant in a public highway of Baltimore County over which plaintiff drove in the night.
In that case JUDGE McSHERRY said: "It is undoubtedly true that local actions must be brought in the jurisdiction where they arise, * * *. But there must be a test by which it may be determined whether a particular cause of action sounding in damages is local or transitory; and an unerring one inheres in the nature of the subject of the injury as differing from themeans whereby, and the mere place at which, the injury was inflicted. If the subject of the injury be real estate or an easement, such as a right of way, whether private or public, obviously the action must be local for the reason that the injuryto that particular real estate or easement could not possibly have arisen anywhere else than where the thing injured actually was situated. But if the subject of the injury be an individual, then an injury to that individual's person, no matter by whatmeans occasioned, or where inflicted, is essentially an injury to a subject not having a fixed, immovable location, and an action to recover damages therefor would necessarily be transitory."
These three cases decide that local actions must be brought in the jurisdiction where they arise, and Ireton's Case practically and logically decides that this rule applies where a public municipal corporation is defendant, and has inflicted damages upon real property in the jurisdiction where the suit is brought. But they go no further.
The Meredith Ford Turnpike Co.'s Case, does expressly
decide, following the logical implication from Ireton's Case,
that such a municipal corporation can in this State be sued for a trespass upon real estate beyond its own territorial limits, in Courts other than its own, and that in such case it must be sued, in the jurisdiction where the real estate lies, but it leaves undetermined whether such a corporation can be sued in Courts other than those of its own territorial limits, upon a transitory cause of action. In view of the decision in theMeredith Ford Case which we adhere to, it would be *436
idle to review or consider the cases cited by the appellees here, such as Lehigh County v. Kleckner, 5 Watts Serg. 186 andNashville v. Webb,
Accepting as settled, and as properly settled, that in this State the rule requiring local actions to be brought in the jurisdiction where the cause of action arose, applies as well to public municipal corporations, as to all other corporations, we have only to inquire whether public municipal corporations can in this State be sued outside of their own Courts, upon transitory causes of action. It is not, and cannot be, pretended, that at common law they could be so sued, so that we need only to inquire whether the common law rule has been changed in that respect by any statute of Maryland.
The appellant maintains that the common law rule has been so changed in this State, and in support of this contention relies upon the following provisions of law: Code, 1904, Art. 1, sec. 14; Art. 23, § 410; and sec. 62, Chapter 240 of the Acts of 1908.
Art.
Art. 23, § 410, as amended by Ch. 21 of 1900, provided that any corporation formed under the general laws of this State, which should carry on any regular business, or habitually engage in any avocation or employment in another county than that in which its certificate of incorporation was required to be recorded, might be sued either in the county where its certificate was required to be, and was, recorded, or in the county where it transacted business; but except as above provided, all suits against the class of corporations above mentioned were required to be brought in the jurisdiction where their certificates were recorded. This provision could not by any possibility embrace municipal corporations, nor any others created by Act of Assembly, and the restrictive character of that provision, is significant of the purpose that the common law rule, should not be deemed to be abrogated thereby nor by the general rule of interpretation declared in Art.
Sec. 62 of Art. 23 as enacted by Ch. 240 of the Act of 1908, is the chief reliance of the appellant. That provides that: "Every corporation of this State may be sued in any county, or in the City of Baltimore, as the case may be, where its principal office is located, or where it regularly transacts business or exercises its franchises, or in any local action, where the subject-matter thereof lies, and process may be served as is hereinabove provided aginst such corporation," etc.
The inquiry is thus finally narrowed down to whether the term "every corporation of this State," as employed in sec. 62 of Art. 23, was designed by the Legislature to embrace municipal corporations. The language employed is that of universality, and if municipal corporations are to be excepted from its operation, it can only be upon the ground of some general and well recognized principle of public policy, which under the established rules of legislative interpretation, permits and requires such exception to be read into the statute, *438 and we think there is such a settled and dominant principle of public policy.
The general and fundamental division of all corporations is into public and private corporations; all belong to the one or the other of these two classes: "A corporation may be private, and yet the act or charter of incorporation contain provisions of a purely public character, introduced solely for the public good, and as a general police regulation of the State." Regents of theUniversity of Md. v. Williams, 9 G. J. 365. But "a public corporation, is one that is created for political purposes, with political powers, to be exercised for purposes connected with the public good, in the administration of civil government; an instrument of the government, subject to the control of the Legislature, and its members officers of the government, for the administration or discharge of public duties, as the case of cities, towns," etc., Idem, 258. "Public corporations are synonomous with municipal or political corporations." Words andPhrases, Vol. 6, page 5781. "Public corporations, commonly called municipal corporations, are not associations, but subdivisions of the State." Goodwin v. East Hartford,
The principle that is involved is that of inconvenience to the exercise of the sovereign authority delegated by the State to its municipal corporations, upon the ground that if they are to be subjected to suit in any and every part of the State, such suits must inevitably hinder and delay the successful conduct of the functions of government.
In State v. Boyd, 2 G. J. 374, it is said: `Statutes are sometimes extended to cases not within the letter of them, and cases are sometimes excluded from the operation of statutes, though within the letter; on the principle that what is within the intention of the makers of a statute, is within the *439 statute, though not within the letter; and that what is within the letter of the statute, but not within the intention of the makers, is not within the statute."
Sutherland, in his work on Construction of Statutes, Vol. 2, sec. 601, substantially adopts the language just quoted, and says, "municipal corporations, by reason of the purposes for which they are organized, and for which they raise money and possess property, are excepted, by implication from various statutes which apply to corporations generally."
In Roland Park Co. v. The State,
In Linehan v. Cambridge,
In State v. Narragansett Dist.,
In our own State the Act of 1825, Ch. 114, authorized attachments to be laid "in the hands of the plaintiff or of any other person or persons whatsoever, corporate or sole," and inMayor City Council of Balt. v. Rost,
For these reasons we think the ruling of the learned judge of the Circuit Court was correct, and the judgment should be affirmed.
It is unnecessary to consider whether the corporation was carrying on any regular business in Baltimore County, since even if it was, it could not be sued there in this action, if the Act of Assembly does not embrace municipal corporations.
Judgment affirmed with costs to the appellee above and below. *441