delivered the opinion of the Court.
We shall here hold that limitations do not run against the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission because it is an agency of the State. Hence, we shall reverse the holding of the Court of Special Appeals in
Wash. Sub. San. Comm’n v. Pride Homes,
*538 Pride Homes, Inc., granted an easement to the Commission in 1968 "for the installation, construction, reconstruction, maintenance, repair, operation and inspection of a sanitary sewer and a water main and appurtenances thereto, including service connections within said easement,” etc. The Commission sued Pride. It alleged that "subsequent to the construction of the Plaintiffs sewer line, but prior to February, 1975, the Defendant and its agents, servants and employees, did trespass and continues [sic] to trespass upon said right of way,” that they "place[d] thereon vast quantities of earth to the depth of approximately 20 feet,” and that these "deposits of earth caused the sewer line to buckle, deflect, fracture and collapse creating a stoppage causing sewage to overflow into [certain] residences ... on or about February 1,1975.” An amended declaration was filed against Pride and certain individuals, who were officers of Pride, possibly as a result of extensive discovery.
The trial court and the Court of Special Appeals held that the Commission’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations. The Commission contends that limitations do not run against it since it is an agency of the State.
The Commission was created by Chapter 122 of the Acts of 1918. It is charged with the duty of providing water and sewer service in the Washington Suburban Sanitary District, which comprises most of Prince George’s and Montgomery Counties, the Maryland counties contiguous to the District of Columbia. We have taken pains to point out that it was created by a public general law.
See, e.g., Katz v. Washington Sub. San. Comm’n,
*539
In
Katz,
Although now somewhat modified since passage of Chapter 450, Acts of 1976, as to contracts, the doctrine of sovereign immunity prevails in Maryland.
3
Katz,
In
Central Coll. Unit v. Atl. Con. Line,
Pride has seized upon certain of our language in
Goldberg.
We there said, "We have no intention in this opinion of
*541
reviewing all possible contingencies which may arise wherein limitations may or may not validly be interposed as a defense in a suit brought by a governmental agency or municipality.”
It is suggested that
Central Collection
"does not aid [the Commission] because this Court later held in
Katz...
that the ... Commission had waived sovereign immunity.” We did not hold that the
Commission
had waived sovereign immunity. In fact, it is doubtful whether the Commission as such could waive such immunity.
See, e.g., Bd. of Education v. Alcrymat Corp.,
As far back as
State v. Baltimore & O.R.R.,
As we have indicated, the doctrine that limitations do not run against the State stems from the theory of sovereign immunity. Nowhere in the waiver, which we found in the statute in
Katz,
is there an indication of an intent to waive
*545
the attribute of sovereignty relative to limitations. Although provision is made relative to judgment, it is a far cry from that in Code (1957, 1978 Repl. Vol.) Art. 41, § 10A (a), waiving the defense as to the State "and every officer, department, agency, board, commission, or other unit of State government” as to matters of contract. There, § 10A (d) provides that to implement the section "the Governor annually shall provide in the State budget adequate funds for the satisfaction of any final judgment ....” As we recognized in
Katz,
an individual may recover a judgment against the Commission but not be able to collect upon it because the county council may not see fit to put the funds in the budget. We said in
Montgomery Co. v. Met. District,
We have examined the out-of-state cases cited by Pride and find them inapposite. We hold that limitations are not a bar to a claim brought by the Commission.
Judgment of the Court of Special Appeals reversed and case remanded to that court for passage ofan order reversing thejudgmen t of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County; costs to abide the final result.
Notes
. The Court of Special Appeals referred to the enactment by the General Assembly of "its local laws creating the WSSC from the counties involved ....”
"Judge Bowen rejected the basic premise of Prince George’s County that the Washington Suburban Sanitary District law is a local law, ruling it to be a public general law. Under the flat holding in Bowie *539 v. Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission,249 Md. 611 , and Prince George’s County v. Laurel,262 Md. 171 , 188-90, he hardly could have ruled otherwise.” Id. at 567.
. The Commission in its brief refers to
Neuenschwander
as having been "legislatively overruled by the enactment of what is now codified as Chapter 1, Sec. 1 (h) of the WSSD Code providing that the Commission is
not
a municipal corporation under Article XI-E of the Constitution of Maryland.” (Emphasis in original.) That statement is in error. The WSSC could not be a municipal corporation under Constitution, Article XI-E, which was adopted subsequent to
Neuenschwander.
As pointed out for the Court by Judge Levine in
Md.-Nat’l Cap. P. & P. v. Mont. Co.,
"Article XI-E of the Constitution is entitled 'Municipal Corporations,’ and it suffices to say, without quoting its many provisions, that, as used therein, the term 'municipal corporations’ has a geographical connotation with a political body representative of and governing its inhabitants, and that it does not mean a governmental agency or commission, no matter how powerful or broad its functions may happen to be, and even though it is endowed with corporate status that generally permits it to sue or be sued.” Id. at 89-90.
WSSC has never had power to govern.
. Regardless of what it may be in other states, the doctrine of sovereign immunity is not judge-made law in this State. See
Austin v. City of
*540
Baltimore,
. The Court of Special Appeals said in this case:
"[The Commission] is a hybrid body corporate conceived as a result of a ménage á trois and derived primarily from the legislative loins of Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties. See Montgomery County, Md., Code ch. 86 (1972, 1977 Repl. Vol.) and Prince George’s County, Md., Code App. I (1975 ed.). See, also, Washington Suburban Sanitary District (WSSD) Code (1970). It was not until 1971 that it was given the imprimatur of sovereign legitimacy when the WSSC Code was legalized by the General Assembly in 1971 Md. Laws, Ch. 115.”47 Md. App. at 392 .
Chapter 115 of the Acts of 1971 did, indeed, provide that "the Washington Suburban Sanitary District Code, 1969 Edition, with the 1970 Supplement,
*543
published under the direction of the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission by the Michie City Publications Company, Incorporated” should "be deemed and taken in all courts of the State, by the justices of the peace and trial magistrates of the State, and by all other public officials of the State and of its several political subdivisions, to be evidence of those public local laws in effect at the time of compilation of the Code or any supplement thereto.” It made the enactments, erroneously labeled by the General Assembly as "public local laws,” no different from what they had otherwise been. The enactments contained in the various volumes of the session laws are the law. Beginning in 1888, the only codes enacted as law have been the Code of Public General Laws of that year and the more recent editions of the code such as the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article. Code (1974) § 10-201, Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article provides, "The 1957 Edition of the Annotated Code of Maryland, prepared and published by the Editorial Staff of The Michie Company, Charlottesville, Virginia, is adopted and made evidence of the Public General Laws of the State of Maryland” and is to "be considered as the evidence of the law in all courts of this state and by all public offices and officers of the state and its political subdivisions.” That section further provides that the various replacement volumes and Docket suDDlements are to be considered as evidence of the law. Previously, it was customary, when a supplement to the Code was issued, to pass an act specifying that it was to be taken as evidence of the law.
See, e.g.,
Chapter 71 of the Acts of 1956 legalizing the 1956 Supplement to the 1951 edition of the Annotated Code.
See
also the discussion in
Brenner v. Plitt,
