WILSON ET AL. v. BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF ELECTIONS OF BALTIMORE CITY ET AL.
No. 177, September Term, 1974
Court of Appeals of Maryland
December 4, 1974
Per Curiam Order October 24, 1974. Opinion Filed December 4, 1974.
For reasons to be stated in an opinion to be filed later, it is this 24th day of October, 1974
ORDERED, by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, a majority of the Court concurring, that the judgment of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, denying the injunctive relief prayed in the bill of complaint be, and it is hereby, affirmed with costs; and it is further
ORDERED, that the mandate be issued forthwith.
The cause was argued before MURPHY, C. J., and SINGLEY, SMITH, DIGGES, LEVINE and O‘DONNELL, JJ., and CHARLES E. ORTH, JR., Chief Judge of the Court of Special Appeals, specially assigned.
Daniel B. Leonard and Benjamin C. Howard for William H. C. Wilson, part of appellants. Michael J. Milton, Special Assistant Attorney General, for other appellant.
Michael A. Pretl for the Memorial Stadium Task Force, Inc., et al., part of appellees. No brief filed on behalf of Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City, other appellee.
SMITH, J., delivered the opinion of the Court. MURPHY, C. J., and ORTH, J., dissent and MURPHY, C. J., filed a dissenting opinion in which ORTH, J., concurs at page 304 infra.
We shall here give our reasons for our affirmance by a per curiam order on October 24, 1974, of a trial judge‘s denial of the request of appellants, William H. C. Wilson et al.
What was proposed was the addition of a new section to Art. I of the Charter, to be known as § 9, to read as follows:
“9. STADIUM. The Memorial Stadium on 33rd Street shall be a memorial in tribute to the Veterans of our nation‘s wars. In order to perpetuate this memorial as well as to protect the taxpayers’ interests, no other stadium for professional football, professional soccer and/or prоfessional baseball shall be constructed in the City of Baltimore with the use of public funds, public credit or public guarantee for the financing thereof in whole or in part.”
This proposed amendment was certified to the Board of Election Supervisors by the Deputy Treasurer of Baltimore City on July 22, 1974, having been filed by petition of certain voters. Wilson filed his suit August 16, 1974, in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City as “a resident, taxpayer and qualified voter of Baltimore City,” saying he was “interested in the economic well-being, culture and vitality of Baltimore City, deriv[ing] enjoyment and recreation from watching professional football, baseball and other professional sports, and [that] these sports contribute[d] to the рromotion of tourism and the increase of business and employment opportunities in Baltimore City.” The bill of complaint claimed that the proposed charter amendment was in conflict with
The defendants named in the bill of complaint were the individual members of the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City. Ten days after the filing of the bill of complaint, leave was sought by and granted to the Memoriаl Stadium Task Force, Inc., and Hyman Aaron Pressman and Charles F. Rose to intervene as parties defendant.1 Their petition alleged that Memorial Stadium Task Force, Inc., “is a non-profit corporation of the State of Maryland, the primary and stated purpose of which is ‘to endeavor by all legitimate and available means to retain and enhance the property and institution of Memorial Stadium on 33rd Street, and the environs thereof.‘” Subsequently, leave was granted to the Maryland Sports Complex Authority, created by the Act, to intervene as a party plaintiff.
The parties agreed that there was no dispute as to facts, that no testimony was required, and that the chancellor should finally dispose of the matter, after argument, on the pleadings. In a comprehensive and well-reasoned opinion the chancellor (Howard, J.) held that “if a majority of the voters of the City of Baltimore wish to limit the expenditure of public funds for recreational facilities to those existing on 33rd Street, there seems to be no valid rеason in law to forbid them through referendum from so doing.” He then signed an order sustaining the demurrer of the intervening defendants without leave to the plaintiffs to amend. The
After the filing of separate appeals to the Court of Special Appeals by Wilson and the Sports Complex Authority, the parties jointly petitioned this Court for the writ of certiorari and for advancement of the case for argument to the end that there might be a final determination of the matter prior to the general election on November 5, 1974. We concluded that it was in the public interest that this be done. Therefore, we granted the writ and advanced the case for argument.
The parties are in agreement that the sole question presented here is whether the proposed amendment to the Charter is in irreconcilаble conflict with the Act.2
It may be well at the outset to set forth the law applicable in a review such as this. This Court has previously entertained taxpayers’ suits challenging the validity of proposed amendments to the Charter in which cases our predecessors determined that the submission of such amendments to the voters of Baltimore City should be enjoined. Williams v. Broening, Mayor, 135 Md. 226, 108 A. 781 (1919), and Jones v. Broening, Mayor, 135 Md. 237, 108 A. 785 (1919). In Schneider v. Lansdale, 191 Md. 317, 61 A. 2d 671 (1948), the Court considered and held valid, in the face of attack from certain Montgomery County taxpayers, a proposed charter for that county which was slated to be voted upon at the coming general election. A statute is presumed to be valid and one attacking its validity has the burden of affirmatively and clearly estаblishing its invalidity. Salisbury Beauty Schools v. St. Bd., 268 Md. 32, 48, 300 A. 2d 367 (1973). A charter provision is entitled to the same presumption of validity applicable to any regularly adopted law. Connor v. Board of Supervisors, 212 Md. 379, 383, 129 A. 2d 396 (1957), and County Commissioners v.
“A distillation of the opinions we have cited leaves the residual thought that a political subdivision may not prohibit what the State by general public law has permitted, but it may prohibit what the State has not expressly permitted. Stated another way, unless a general public law contains an express denial of the right to act by local authority, the State‘s prohibition of
certain activity in a field does not impliedly guarantee that all other activity shall be free from local regulation and in such a situation the same field may thus be opened to supplemental local regulation.” Id. at 317. (Emphasis in original.)
We now proceed to apply that law to the case at hand. In so doing we point out that although the contention of Wilson is that the charter amendment is “invalid” and we have referred to “validity,” actually the proper terminology would be that if there is a conflict between a charter provision and a public general law the charter provision would be inoperative. See Northampton, supra, and Prince George‘s County v. Maryland-Nat‘l Cap., 269 Md. 202, 226, 306 A. 2d 223, cert. denied, 414 U. S. 1068 (1973). A charter provision which is otherwise valid, but inoperative because of such a conflict, would become operative if the conflict were eliminated by the repeal of the public general law. Likewise, a chаrter provision otherwise valid and operative, because of lack of conflict, would become inoperative if a later public general law created a conflict, since the public general law is to prevail over charters.
In applying the law to this case we take cognizance of the fact that there has been some suggestion that the proposed amendment forbids the construction of any stadium for professional sports in the City of Baltimore. Obviously, such an interpretation of the charter amendment would render the amendment inoperative as in conflict with the Act. The ordinary meaning of the words used in the amendment compels an interpretation that its only restriction is the construction of a stadium with public funds. In that regard there are two constructions that can be placed upon the amendment. The first is that it forbids erection of a stadium for professional sports in the City of Baltimore with any public funds. This would run directly contrary to the Act and would be unconstitutional as beyond the powers оf the City of Baltimore. The other construction is that it forbids erection of such a stadium with public funds of the City of Baltimore. Subsections (m) and (n) of
“(m) To borrow money from any person, governmental entity or private entity, and to pay interest thereon if borrowed from the State of Maryland, and to mortgage or otherwise encumber its property for such loans;
“(n) To receive and accept from any source, private or public (except the State of Maryland), contributions, gifts or grants of money or property . . . .”
It is contended by Wilson that “[t]he amendment would prohibit the use of any such [public] funds for the construction of another stadium for professional sports in Baltimore City.” The powers оf the City in this regard, and thus of this amendment, can go no further than to prohibit the expenditure of funds of the City of Baltimore.
We see no difference between the situation that would prevail without this charter amendment if the representatives of the people of Baltimore City, the City Council, determined that no funds of the City of Baltimore should be spent on а relocated stadium and the situation which would prevail if this amendment were adopted, in which case the people of the City of Baltimore, the final masters, would be making a similar declaration. Therefore, applying the doctrine that if it is possible to construe this charter provision so as to avoid conflict with the Constitution or any рublic general law we should do so, we hold that the effect of this amendment is only to prohibit construction in the City of Baltimore of such a stadium with funds of the City of Baltimore and it is thus valid and operative.
We are not to be understood in this opinion as holding in any way that this amendment forbids construction of a sports stadium in Baltimore City other than at the site of the present Memorial Stadium, nor are we holding that this amendment has any applicability to the expenditure of any public funds other than those of the City of Baltimore.
Even if the majority‘s construction of the charter amendment as prohibiting only the use of Baltimore City public funds and credit in the construction of a new stadium in the city is accepted, an irrеconcilable conflict nevertheless exists between the amendment and the Maryland Sports Complex Authority Act (the Act),
The Act, a public general law, establishes a state agency known as the Maryland Sports Complex Authority.
From the foregoing provisions, it is wholly apparent that the Legislature contemplated in particular that political subdivisions comprising the Greater Baltimore Region would be empowered, and would retain the authority, to participate financially in the construction of a sports comрlex. It is true, of course, that Baltimore City would not be required to give, lend or invest funds for that purpose, but the Act plainly invests the City with discretion to do so. The charter amendment totally circumscribes — indeed cancels — the City‘s authority in this respect. At the same time, the amendment diminishes the Authority‘s powers. In effect, the charter provision amends the Act sо that the Authority cannot borrow from any governmental entity or accept gifts from any public source or issue bonds and notes in which any public agency can invest. Indeed, the prime source — Baltimore City — is eliminated. Thus, the charter amendment prohibits what the public general law has permitted, City of Baltimore v. Sitnick, 254 Md. 303, 317, 255 A. 2d 376, 382 (1969), and must fall as in direct conflict with State law in violatiоn of
Under the majority‘s opinion, each of the home rule counties, which along with Baltimore City, comprise the area in which the sports complex is to be constructed, would be permitted to enact similar amendments to their charters and thus assure the destruction of a public general law enacted by the General Assembly for the benеfit of all the people of the State. Such a result is completely at odds with the Constitution of Maryland.
I am authorized to say that Judge Orth concurs in this dissent.
Notes
“Where the public general law and the public local law of any county, city, town or district are in conflict, the public local law shall prevail.”
