Baltzell v. Baltimore Belt Railroad

1 Balt. C. Rep. 187
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJune 24, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 187 (Baltzell v. Baltimore Belt Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltzell v. Baltimore Belt Railroad, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 187 (Md. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

While it is not uncommon to hear cases spoken of as involving questions of great magnitude and importance, [188]*188scarcely once in a generation can it be said with truth of a particular decision that it marks a crisis in the jurisprudence of a State. Such a decision has been recently pronounced by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, in the case of Ulman vs. the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 72 Md. 587, expressly overruling four rent adjudications of the same Court, viz: Johns Hopkins Hospital case, 56 Md. 1; Scharf case, on a rehearing, 56 Md. 50, which itself overruled the same case as first decided, 54 Md. 499; Moale case, 61 Md. 224; Alberger case, 64 Md. 1. The new departure was put upon the absolute rights of man, as guaranteed by Magna Charta, the Maryland Declaration of Rights, and the Constitution of the United States. A more far-reaching judgment has seldom been recorded anywhere. The present case is its first revelation.

For, notwithstanding the extraordinary vigor of the effort on the part of the defendant’s counsel to wrest this case from the grasp of that adjudication, the result of careful examination has been to show that, while there are marked differences of detail, there is no substantial distinction of principle.

The leading case referred to was the case of a municipal assessment levied upon the property of a taxpayer under a street paving ordinance. The ordinance made no provision for notice to and hearing of any proprietor for whose land adjoined the street, upon the question what proportion of the tax should be assessed upon his land. This municipal legislation was held repugnant to organic law, because it resulted in the imposition of a lien, and therefore in effect took the property of the individual without due process of law, without giving him an opportunity to be heard. In other words, that case decides that an indirect taking of private property for a public use, under the taxing power, in order to be due process of law and therefore valid, must be by virtue of a law requiring notice to be given to the owner.

The case in hand is not a case of an indirect taking under the taxing power but it is a case of a direct taking without circuity of intervening lien under the power of eminent domain. The same principle held applicable to an indirect taking would seem to be even more plainly and more forcibly applicable to a direct taking. If the statute under which the condemnation is sought to be effected altogether fails to prescribe notice to the owner and to give him opportunity to be heard, it would seem impossible to escape the conclusion that the process is not due process of law, and that the statute is for that reason repugnant to organic law.

It therefore becomes necessary to determine at the outset precisely the character of the statute in controversy. Code, Article 23, Section 167. It is the more necessary, since there runs through much of the argument in its support a thread of suggestion or assumption that the statute does in effect provide a notice, reasonable under the circumstances, and does in effect provide all the opportunity to be heard that should in reason be expected. Two features of the process are relied upon in this connection, the preliminary treaty with failure to agree, and the actual entry of the sheriff’s jury upon the very land. It is claimed, and claimed with truth, that no such features are to be found in the process found objectionable in the tax assessment cases. In those cases, it is said, the whole process is done on payer, in an office. Here, there must first be the actual approach to the owner, and a failure to agree equivalent to a warning of what is going to be done. And next we have the entry on the land as public and notorious as livery of seizing at common law.

Does this reasoning bear investigation? To begin with, it loses sight entirely of the infant, the feme covert, the non compos, the non-resident or the owner who for any cause may be legally incapable of contracting. It loses sight also of the owner, actually competent and resident, who may be temporarily absent “when such property may be wanted.” The act requires no attempt at axx agreement with the guardian, the husband or trustee, the committee, the agent or the representative. So far as the rights of all helpless and ixxcapacitated persons are concerned there is absolutely no attempt at their recognition, in any way, by any wox’d.

In the next place, as to the competent persons who are actually to be negotiated with, and who are thus supposed to be sufficiently warned, let us see what may, by the authority of the statute, be done under it in practice. [189]*189The railroad agent sees the owner and makes him an offer, which is declined. The agent, or at all events the law itself then informs him that the proper steps may be taken to condemn. The owner asks, “When?” The agent says, “That is our business.” The owner wants to know how he is to be notified. "You will see the jury on the land.” The owner suggests the personal inconvenience to himself of ificketing the particular locality for an indefinite period, with all the chances of the company changing the route. He also suggests the importance of his knowing a day or two beforehand of the precise time appointed for the meeting of the jury on the land, so that he can be there himself and have a few witnesses on hand. The agent then replies to him and says with truth, if this statute be valid, “The laiv gives you no such right.”

It is urged that whether there be due notice or not, there is at all events the opportune y to be heard. So far as the express terms of the act reach, the party, if present, is permitted to strike four jurors from the panel of twenty. It is to be implied that the owner may except to the confirmation of the inquisition in Court. No notice is required to be given of the inquisition in railroad cases, although such notice is required in all other cases. Code, Art,. 23, Sec. 251. Whether there be fair opportunity to be heard depends upon the sufficiency of the notice.

It should in fairness be admitted that the actual practice under this class of statutes has generally been more liberal than their terms require. To a thoroughbred lawyer nothing is more tlistastelul than an ex parte trial, and great corporations are compelled by their own interest to take their counsel from that class. It is believed that as a rule, corporation attorneys, true to their professional instincts, have observed the obvious requirements of justice and decency, and the constitutional right of the parties interested, and thus voluntarily and as a matter of grace, supplemented the law. To such an extent has this been true that the giving of notice has become a recognized rule of practice in such cases.

2 Poe, gee. 769.

Mayor vs. Ritchie, 51 Md. 243, 4.

But the question is not what is done outside of the statute, but by it. “The constitutional validity of law is to be tested, not by what has been done under it, but by what may by its authority be done.”

72 Md. 590, citing from the opinion of Earl, ,T., in Stuart vs. Palmer, 74 N. Y.:

“It is not enough that the owners may by chance have notice, or that they may, as a matter of favor, have a hearing. The law must require notice to them, and give them a right to a hearing and an opportunity to be heard.”

Stuart vs. Palmer, 74 N. Y. 183. Cited in Scharf case, 54 Md. 518.

“Much of the opinion in that case (Stuart vs. Palmer, 74 N.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltzell-v-baltimore-belt-railroad-mdcirctctbalt-1891.