Browne v. Mayor of Baltimore

161 A. 24, 163 Md. 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1932
Docket[Nos. 9, 10, April Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 161 A. 24 (Browne 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
Browne v. Mayor of Baltimore, 161 A. 24, 163 Md. 212 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants as taxpayers contest the validity of an act of assembly and two ordinances, and of proceedings under them, looking to the building of a wide highway and viaduct in Baltimore City across the valley of Jones Falls, from St. Paul Street on the west to Forrest Street on the east. Following the line from west to east, it has been planned to build the way from St. Paul Street in the neighborhood of Mulberry and Franklin Streets, across the public gardens and ways known as' Preston Gardens, to Courtland Street, thence across Courtland Street and over the site of private buildings to Calvert Street, then on the line of Bath Street, but with greater width, to the property and yards of the Western Maryland Railway Company at Front Street, then across the railway property and across streets and private property sites, and over a westward extension of Orleans Street to meet it, to Forrest Street. Am act of assembly, passed in 1924, chapter 229, had authorized the incurring of a municipal debt for the construction of a crossing from one part of the city to the other, somewhere between North Avenue on the north and Pratt Street on the south, and added, in terms, a power to condemn, close, open, widen, straighten, grade and pave for the purpose. The constitutionality of that act is denied because of supposed defects in its title, and because of a supposed violation of the Home Rule Amendment of the Constitution, article 11 A, and usurpation of the charter powers of the city under that amendment. The ordinances are attacked mainly on the ground that the public notices required by section 828 of the Charter, as prerequisites to the city’s rearrangement of streets, and the incidental dealing with private property, have not been complied with.

The two ordinances constituted successive steps in the preparation of the one project. The first, Ordinance No. 902, approved December 23rd, 1929, was passed before many of the details of the construction, and more particularly before the exact location of the western outlet, had been de *215 cided upon. And it was immediately concerned only with the outlining and clearing of the surface of the land to be crossed. Its title and its first section both declared that it was in part furtherance of what it called the “Orleans Street Viaduct,” and described as extending from the east side of St. Paul Place to the southwest side of Forrest Street, but it also' expressly confined its undertaking to the opening and grading of two parts only, the section from St. Paul Place easterly to Front Street and the railway tracks, and the section from the ®ther side of the railway tracks, at Hillen Street, to the eastern terminus at Eorrest Street. The advertised notice for this ordinance was thus limited to so much of the undertaking, and the preliminary survey or map filed for inspection before the adoption of the ordinance, in compliance with section 828 of the Charter, merely outlined the two portions or strips to he crossed. The measurements of the two strips were given. This earlier ordinance seems to have contemplated an exercise of only the power over the subject of highways which is contained in section 6 (26) of the Charter. Its final section provides that proceedings under the ordinance shall be regulated by the charter provisions. And it was in conformity with these provisions that there was a preliminary notice of the ordinance published, and a survey or map filed for inspection, to comply with the regulations for the exercise of that power, in section 828. The second ordinance, Bo. 1206, approved a year later, December 20th, 1930, was the ordinance which covered the plans of the viaduct, then more fully worked out-. It professed to be passed, not in the exercise of the charter power over highways, but in the exercise of a power supposed to be contained in the loan act (1921, ch. 229), which, as has been stated, did in terms provide for the condemning and opening of the highway. In the bill of complaint demurred to it is averred that there was no preliminary publication of notice of this ordinance to meet the requirements of section 828 of the Charter, and we must, in considering the sufficiency of the bill, assume that averment to' be susceptible of proof.

*216 The bill of complaint seeking an injunction against proceeding under the first ordinance was filed before the second ordinance was passed; and an answer and a stipulation of facts were filed, and testimony of city officials on their plans was taken. The court denied the injunction, and dismissed the bill; and the first appeal has been taken from that action. Before the decision of that case, the second ordinance was passed, and a bill of complaint attacking proceedings under it was filed in the same court. A demurrer to- that second bill was filed and sustained, and the second appeal has been taken from that action. The court dealt with the ordinances in the two eases separately, and rendered a decision on the sufficiency of each by itself, and the problems' of each case have been argued separately in this court. Section 828 of the Charter, on which the objections are mainly grounded, provides that, before any ordinance dealing with street changes shall be passed, notice shall be published giving “the length or width of such street, square, lane or alley, or part thereof to be laid out, opened or extended, and, in the case of the widening or straightening shall set forth clearly both the present and the intended width and also the length of .any street, lane or alley, or part thereof, intended to be widened or straightened, and in case of closing shall set forth clearly the length and width of the street, lane or alley, or any part thereof, intended to be closed,” and that- .the map “shall show the course and the lines of the projected improvement, and also the lots and buildings thereon which shall be taken or destroyed, in whole or in part, and which, in the case of closing shall show the street, lane or alley, or part thereof intended to be closed, and also the abutting lots and improvements thereon.” And it is objected that many of these- specifications have been omitted from the published notice and map accompanying the first ordinance; and, as has been stated, it appears that there has been no further publication of details preceding the subsequent ordinance, ETo. 1206, although a detailed map was filed for inspection in the- usual way.

The act and the- ordinances do not present separate, unre *217 lated problems for solution. The object sought in both bills of complaint is to enjoin the prosecution of the one project, for lack of some of the requisite legal foundation in the act' of assembly or in the ordinances. And, if the project has all the requisite foundation in the act or in either ordinance, the court could not enjoin its prosecution because of any legal shortcomings in one ordinance, for it could not enjoin a work for which full legal authority existed in any enactment or enactments brought to its notice. Ches. & O. Canal Co. v. Western Maryland M. Co., 99 Md. 570, 575, 58 A. 34. As the two cases on the ordinances were before the court below at the same time, before decision of the first, and both have been argued together in this court, both the ordinances and the act of assembly involved may be noticed by the courts in either case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 A. 24, 163 Md. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browne-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1932.