68 A. 6 | Md. | 1907
The appellant owns several lots of ground in the city of Baltimore, which bound on the north side of the main branch of the Patapsco river, together with the riparian rights appurtenant thereto. It constructed what are spoken of in the record as a freight pier and a coal pier. The former is about 840 feet long and 120 feet wide and consists of a wooden platform resting upon piles, with a steel shed, one story high for freight purposes. The latter is 729 feet on one side and 700 on the other, and is a wooden structure which also rests upon piles. They were projected from the bulkhead line into the water to the pierhead line, and the water flows under them. The Patapsco is a navigable river at the place in controversy, in which the tide ebbs and flows. The eastern and *563 southern boundaries of the city are those fixed by the Act of 1816, ch. 209. After describing the northern and eastern boundaries the Act describes the southern boundary as follows: "on the south by a line drawn from the Patapsco river, at the termination of the last mentioned line" (which is the last one on the east), "to the most southern part of Whetstone Point, on the main branch of the Patapsco river, and running with and boundingon the said main branch, excluding the land ceded to the United States on Whetstone Point, for the uses of a fort, to the place called the Ferry Point, being the junction of the said main branch with the middle branch aforesaid," etc. These piers project from the boundary of the city which is included in the description "running with and bounding on the said mainbranch," and it is conceded that they are for the most part constructed in a portion of the river, which was originally outside of and beyond the limits of the city. The evidence tends to show that including the boiler-room, engine, machinery, etc., the cost connected with the coal pier within the bulkhead line was about $35,000 and the whole cost of the two piers was about $400,000. The petition for appeal of the appellant states that it is properly assessable for $35,000 in the city, but that the rest is illegal and void because the property on which the assessment is made is not within the city, or within the assessing powers of the Appeal Tax Court. The contention of the appellee is that inasmuch as the piers are attached to and project from the land of the appellant, which borders on this navigable river, and are immovable structures, permanent in their character, they are taxable by the city of Baltimore.
It is well settled that the same rules of construction will be applied to the boundaries of a municipality, bordering on navigable or non-navigable water, as will be to a description in a grant to an individual for land so situated. Fort Smith VanBuren Bridge Co. v. Hawkins,
The Legislature in 1862 passed an Act which is embraced in secs. 47, 48 and 49 of Art. 54 of the Code, by which it greatly enlarged and defined the rights of proprietors of lands bordering on any of the navigable waters of this State. Sec. 47 enacted that such a proprietor "shall be entitled to all accretions to said land by the recession of said water, whether heretofore or hereafter formed or made by natural causes or otherwise, in like manner and to like extent as such right may or can be claimed by the proprietor of land binding on water not navigable," and sec. 48 provided that such proprietor "shall be entitled to the exclusive right of making improvements into the waters in front of his said land; such improvements and other accretions as above provided for shall pass to the successive owners of the land to which they are attached, as incident to their respective estates. But no such improvement shall be so made as to interfere with the navigation of the stream of water into which the said improvement is made." Sec. 49 provides that "No patent hereafter issued out of the land office shall impair or affect the rights of riparian proprietors, as explained and declared in the two preceding sections; and no patent shall hereafter issue for land covered by navigable waters." JUDGE ALVEY said, in a concurring opinion inHess v. Muir,
That brings us to the consideration of the first prayer, which asked the Court to rule that such portions of the property of the appellant as are located beyond the bulkhead line, established by the city, are not subject to taxation by it, or to assessment by the Appeal Tax Court. There can be no doubt that the right of the appellant to construct the piers dependent upon its ownership of the contiguous land, which we have said was within the city limits, and, under sec. 48 above quoted, "such improvements and other accretions as above provided for shall pass to the successive owners of the land to which they are attached, asincident to their respective estates." Because the appellant owned this land, which was in the city, it had the "exclusive right" to make these improvements, and there would seem therefore to be at least very strong equity in favor of the contention of the city. If instead of making *567
piers such as those described in this case the appellant had filled out from the shore with earth, stone or other solid material, and reclaimed the land over which the piers are, and had then erected valuable improvements upon them, there would seem to be no doubt that the city limits would have been extended so as to include that property. If that be not so, then if every owner of land bordering on the river, in that neighborhood, reclaimed the land in front of his lot, the city would be cut off from the water, which manifestly was not contemplated by the Legislature. It should not be forgotten that although the riparian owner has the right to reclaim the land, and to make improvements into the water in front of his original land, yet until he does so, the title to the land under the water is in the State, and hence is not subject to taxation. Baltimore County will not therefore be deprived of property on which it has been collecting taxes by treating the limits of Baltimore City as including these piers. It was decided in Giraud v. Hughes, 1 G. J. 249, and Casey v. Inloes, 1 Gill 430, "that the right to make improvements in navigable waters granted by the Act of 1745, ch. 9, sec. 10, was a mere privilege of acquiring property by reclaiming it from the water, and that until the improvement was completed, no title was acquired by the adjacent owner,"Linthicum v. Coan,
In Horner v. Pleasants,
It would seem therefore to be perfectly clear that the Legislature never intended that such improvements as these should, for the purposes of taxation, be cut in two at the point of high water mark on the bank of the river when they were made, and part be taxed by the city and the rest by the county. Without the right to use the land, which is in Baltimore city, the improvements would be useless and, as they are incident to that land and dependent upon it for their existence, it would be an anomalous condition of affairs if they were to be thus divided. They are so situated as to be dependent upon the city for police and fire protection and if the appellant's theory be correct they would practically have neither, as this water is separated from Baltimore County and it would be impossible to furnish the appellant with proper fire or police protection on these piers, unless the county made special provision for them, which would practically be impossible without the assistance of the city. Of course we are aware that this is not conclusive of the question before us, and that if in point of fact the piers are beyond the limits of the city they cannot be taxed by it without special authority from the Legislature, if it be conceded that it could then be done which we need not discuss, but such considerations are very apposite in ascertaining the intention of the Legislature, and in determining how far the boundaries of a municipality on navigable water follow *570 those of the proprietors of land originally within the municipality, but extended under the provisions of the statute.
We understand the learned counsel for Baltimore County, who also appeared in this case, to admit that a city's boundaries may be extended by natural accretion and that they "should be construed to embrace what is actually made land, wharves, permanently filled in with earth, and the like," to use the language of his brief, and we are of the opinion that such is the law, unless of course the provisions of a particular charter clearly prohibit such extension. That being so, why should a distinction be made between such piers as are herein involved, and made land or wharves permanently filled in with earth. The piles on which the piers rest are from 50 to 85 feet long and are about eight feet apart. The water was from twelve to twenty feet deep and the piles are driven into the ground "to resistance" and extend about eight feet above mean low water. The pile work cost about $120,000 and as the total costs of the piers, including the piles, was $400,000, it can be seen that they make what should certainly be regarded as permanent structures. "A pier is defined as a projecting wharf or landing place." 22 Am. Eng. Ency. ofLaw, 812. In The Haxby, 94 Fed. Rep. 1016, it was said that "The Century Dictionary defines a pier to be `projecting quay, wharf, or other landing place;' and, without some qualifying adjective this is the ordinary meaning of the word. It may be a solid stone structure, or an outer shell of stone or wood filled in with earth; or it may be a frame work formed by fastening a platform of planks upon piles driven into the soil at the bottom of the water. In either event, it is a projection of the land,and for purposes of jurisdiction it should be so treated." The opinion then goes on to distinguish between a floating pier and an immovable one.
The mere fact that these piers are built upon piles instead of on solid ground ought not to make any difference. They are permanent structures and as effectually monopolize the use of the land under them as if they were built in one of the other ways mentioned "The Haxby." They were probably *571
built so as to let the water pass under them by requirement of the city, as in one of the cases we have examined such an ordinance is referred to, and they are structures of the character that this Court has said was meant by the Legislature by the term improvements referred to in sec. 48 of Art. 54, and so far as the riparian owner is concerned he has precisely the same rights in a pier as he has in a wharf. It has been suggested, as one reason why the contention of the appellee should not prevail, that the law did not intend to give owners of property the power to extend the limits of the city by their acts, but it certainly did not intend that such owner could determine whether the limits should be extended either by building a pier such as these, and thereby not extend the limits, according to the appellant's contention, or by building a solid wharf, and thereby extend them. Our conclusion is that the city's jurisdiction extends over piers constructed and located as these are for the purposes of taxation, police and fire protection, etc. There are a number of cases in New York, in which State there is, as in Maryland, a great deal of navigable water, which have in effect adopted that view. Udall v. Brooklyn, 19 Johnson, 175; Bechtel v. Edgewater, 45 Hun. 240 (affirmed in
The only remaining question we will discuss is the effect of the case of Raab v. State,
Order affirmed, the appellant to pay the costs. *574