Baltimore County v. Batza

507 A.2d 216, 67 Md. App. 282, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 309
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 10, 1986
Docket1089, September Term, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 507 A.2d 216 (Baltimore County v. Batza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore County v. Batza, 507 A.2d 216, 67 Md. App. 282, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 309 (Md. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

*285 WILNER, Judge.

We have before us in these cross-appeals a dispute between Baltimore County and some citizens of the county who reside in the Hampton community. The dispute arose from the county’s decision to extend public sewerage into part of the Hampton community under a composite of ordinances and executive policies that would have the property owners benefited by the extension ultimately pay for about 52% of its $2.77 million cost. Upon the property owners’ second amended complaint, the Circuit Court for Baltimore County declared the “legislative determination” that the owners bear 52% of the cost invalid and remanded the case to the County Council “for a redetermination of the proper amount of the assessment imposed upon the property owners.”

In its appeal, the county gives us seven reasons why it believes the court erred; some of them, we think, have merit. In their cross-appeal, the owners make two other complaints, neither of which, in our view, has merit.

BACKGROUND

In 1924, the General Assembly created the Baltimore County Metropolitan District for the purpose of providing adequate water, sewerage, and storm-water drainage systems to the populous areas of the county adjacent to Baltimore City. The Act—a comprehensive one—was described in some detail in Dinneen v. Rider, 152 Md. 343, 136 A. 754 (1927), where the Court upheld it against a multifaceted Constitutional attack. Essentially, the Act empowered the county commissioners—then the governing body of Baltimore County—to develop and implement a plan for constructing and extending water, sewer, and drainage systems in all those parts of the district “in which there is, in their judgment, a need for water supply, sewerage or drainage.” 1924 Md.Laws, ch. 539, § 4.

To finance these projects, the county commissioners were authorized to issue bonds secured by the faith and credit of *286 the county, and to meet the debt service requirements of those bonds, the commissioners were directed (1) to assess a reasonable connection charge against property owners who connect to the public system, (2) to levy an annual front-foot assessment on all properties bounding on a road or right-of-way in which a line has been built, whether or not the property owner actually chose to connect to the line, (3) if those sources proved insufficient, to levy an ad valorem tax on all property in the district, and (4) if that proved insufficient, to levy an ad valorem tax on all property in the county. 1

Notwithstanding the commissioners’ ability to levy against property not affected by a particular project, the Court in Dinneen construed the Act as making it “mandatory upon the commissioners to collect the entire cost less the relatively insignificant amount receivable on account of the connection charge, by the front-foot assessment.” 152 Md. at 361, 136 A. 754 (emphasis added).

The 1924 Act was amended a number of times by the General Assembly prior to the advent of charter government in Baltimore County in 1956. It now appears in § 307 of the County Charter and in §§ 34-11 through 34-78 of the County Code.

The charter provision merely allocates between the County Executive and the County Council the executive and legislative functions, insofar as governance of the district is concerned, that were formerly exercised by the county commissioners. It provides, in relevant part, that (1) the affairs of the district shall be administered as a division of the county department of public works, (2) the County Executive, or the chief engineer of the district acting under the authority of the County Executive and under the supervision of the county administrative officer, “in respect of the [district]” has “all duties and powers relating to the appointment and discharge of ... employees ..., the prepa *287 ration of all accounts and reports, the giving of notices, the fixing of special assessments and connection charges, and all other executive functions relating to day-to-day administration of the district...,” and (3) the County Council, “in respect of the [district]” has “all duties and powers relating to the approval of extensions to the boundaries of the [district], the issuance of bonds ... by the district, and all over [sic, overall] legislative functions which [formerly] were vested in the county commissioners____” (Emphasis added.)

Several provisions of the County Code are pertinent. We start with §§ 34-27 and 34-28, which deal with the county’s authority to undertake extensions that will not be self-supporting. Section 34-27 generally prohibits the extension of a water or sewer system unless the chief sanitary engineer of the district (who, on an ex officio basis, is the director of the county department of public works) determines that the project “will be financially self-supporting within a reasonable time after completion....” There are two exceptions to that requirement stated in § 34-27. One deals with extensions undertaken upon request of the property owners to be benefited by them. In such a case, the “property owners requesting [the extensions] shall finance their cost upon a basis that will make them a permanently self-supporting part of the [district].” The other proviso states that, where the county proceeds on its own initiative, the serf-supporting requirement will not apply if the chief sanitary engineer:

(1) finds that the cost involved in the exercise of that authority “is not readily or fairly susceptible of allocation among property owners in the affected area” through connection charges and normal front-foot assessments;

(2) finds further that the exercise of that authority “is for a purpose necessary and useful to the operation or maintenance” of a water or sewer system “constructed or to be constructed” in the district; and

*288 (3) “prepares a schedule of equitable apportionment of cost among the property owners in the drainage area benefited by such project in order that the difference between cost of such project and capitalized assessment may ultimately be recovered in lump sum payments from property owners as and when their lands are subdivided.”

With particular regard to this third condition, § 34-27 requires that all property owners benefited by the project must be notified of the proposed apportionment of cost contained in the schedule and that, after a hearing, the county may adopt the schedule as prepared or amended. In any event, no levy may be made against a property owner of the amount apportioned to his property until his lands are subdivided. 2

Section 34-28 provides another exception to the “self-supporting” requirement. It states:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
507 A.2d 216, 67 Md. App. 282, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-county-v-batza-mdctspecapp-1986.