Alexander v. Mayor of Baltimore

53 Md. 100, 1880 Md. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 9, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 Md. 100 (Alexander v. Mayor of Baltimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Mayor of Baltimore, 53 Md. 100, 1880 Md. LEXIS 10 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

George’s Oreelc Coal and Iron Company, is a mining-company, incorporated by chapters. 328 and 382 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland, passed at December session, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, and conducts its business in Allegany County, in this State. The appellant, owning one hundred and eighty-one shares of that company’s stock, of the par value of one hundred dollars, and living in Baltimore City, was by the proper authorities of the city assessed therewith, and taxes thereon for the year eighteen hundred and seventy-seven, were levied, amounting to the sum of three hundred and sixteen dollars and seventy-five cents, for municipal purposes.

The appellant having neglected to pay these taxes, the Mayor and City Council brought . an action of assumpsit in the Court of Common Pleas to recover them. The case was submitted to the Court, without the intervention of a jury, on an agreed statement of facts so as to raise the question whether section one hundred and sixty of Art. 1 of the Local Code for Allegany County, on which the appellant based his defence, was or was not repealed by legislation subsequent to the adoption of the Code.

The appellant insists that by section one hundred and sixty of the Local Code for Allegany County, the taxes on the stock which he owns are to be levied in Allegany County, according to its rate of levy, and are made payable in Allegany County to the authorities of that county, and are made payable by the company direct, on behalf of the stockholders wherever they may reside. The appel[103]*103lant also contends that the question of his liability individually has already been decided, in a suit in Allegany County, brought by the Commissioners of that County against the George’s Creek Coal and Iron Company, wherein it was decided by the Circuit Court of that county, that the local law referred to, was still in existence, and operated to relieve the company from the liability set up in that suit. The appellee holds the local law of Allegany County on that subject to be repealed, and denies that the decision of the Court in Allegany County is any bar to this suit, or affects the question in any way, except in so far as it may be cited as a. judicial opinion on the questions involved in this case.

Differing in opinion from them as we do, upon the questions discussed by that learned Court, in the opinion accompanying the record of that case, which has been, by consent, made a part of the record in this case, we can see no reason why we are bound thereby in the decision of this case. That suit was for an entirely different subject-matter, and between different parties. The County Commissioners of Allegany County sued the George’s Creek Coal and Iron Company, for the penalty alleged to be incurred by the company, through the neglect of its officers to make the report to the County Commissioners of Allegany County as required by the sixteenth section of the Acts bf 1876, ch. 260, of the names of the stockholders in the company residing in that County, and of such who were not residents of the State. It is true, that the Court determined that by reason of the local law of Allegany County, section (160) one hundred and sixty, the company was not bound to comply with the provisions of the Act of eighteen hundred and seventy-six, and thereby virtually decided the question here involved, so far as they could do so; and it is also true, that no appeal having been taken, quoad that claim for the period indicated in the proceedings recited, it is conclusive between the parties; [104]*104but it in no way bound the City of Baltimore, which, so far as the matter then in controversy was concerned, had no interest whatever, and is here suing for taxes due to the city, as is claimed, from a stockholder in that company residing in Baltimore, subject to its municipal jurisdiction and liable for his proportion of municipal expenses. The fact that there was no appeal from that judgment makes no difference, for Baltimore City was not a party to the suit, and could not appeal, and could not by any process have compelled the County Commissioners of Allegany County to appeal. That judgment, therefore, interposes no obstacle to this suit.

We cannot accord to section 11, Art. 1, of the Code of 'Public (General Laws, the effect which is claimed for it by the appellant, and which was accorded to it by the Circuit Court for Allegany County. The adoption of a whole system of laws, general and local, at one time and by one Act of the Legislature, made it necessary that some imperative rule of interpretation should at the same time be enacted, by which the possible conflict between general and local laws thus enacted could be solved. Being enacted simultaneously there would be no opportunity of applying the common law rule, that in cases of repugnancy which could not be reconciled between two statutes, the later in date should operate to repeal the earlier law, by implication ; hence it was declared that in cases o‘f conflict between public and local laws thus enacted, the local law should prevail. That rule was never intended, and has never been held by this Court, to remove local laws from the effect and operation of the ordinary rules of construction derived from the common law, when applied to subsequent legislation. If the intention of the Legislature in the passage of later laws, by its language clearly indicates, either expressly or by necessary implication, a purpose to substitute a new scheme of laws for the preexisting law, general and local, or to repeal the local by [105]*105the adoption of a new general law, clearly intended to operate equally throughout the State, the local law must yield to that intention thus ascertained. As respects the general and local laws adopted by the'Code, it declares the intention to be, that the local law shall have precedence. As respects subsequent legislation, the rule becomes but the declaration of the common law rule, that local laws or special laws shall not be held repealed except by clearly indicated purpose on the part of the Legislature. This is settled by the case of Willing & Mezick vs. Bozman, 52 Md., 44. It was there decided that the local law of Wicomico County on the subject of oysters and dredging, passed in 1872, was repealed by the general law, passed in 1874, on the same subject. In the Act of 1874, there was no express repeal of the local statute, but the provisions of the general law of 1874, were held irreconcilably repugnant to the local law of Wicomico and the latter was held repealed by it. Having determined what is the true construction ■and effect of sec. 11, of the Rules of Interpretation, we -will proceed with the inquiry whether section 160, of the local laws of Allegany County, was in force when the appellee’s suit was brought, or the taxes were levied. That section reads thus: The incorporated institutions and companies in said county, whether they shall, or shall not have declared any dividends or earned any profits, shall pay the State and county taxes levied upon the assessed value of their capital stock held by stockholders, resident or non-resident of said county; but the holders of said stock shall not be liable to taxation upon the stock held by them.” The effect of this provision is to make the company liable to pay all the taxes which the stock in the hands of the individual owners would be charged with; so that the State would get its taxes all at once, and Allegany would get all the county taxes, which would otherwise be distributed among the various counties or cities where the stockholders lived.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Md. 100, 1880 Md. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1880.