Church Home & Infirmary v. Mayor of Baltimore

13 A.2d 596, 178 Md. 326, 1940 Md. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 23, 1940
Docket[No. 30, April Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 A.2d 596 (Church Home & Infirmary 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
Church Home & Infirmary v. Mayor of Baltimore, 13 A.2d 596, 178 Md. 326, 1940 Md. LEXIS 184 (Md. 1940).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Church Home and Infirmary of the City of Baltimore is a charitable corporation by virtue of the laws of the State of Maryland, and owns and operates in the City of Baltimore a general hospital for the sick and a home for aged women. Its hospital and home are built on a tract of land which is bounded on three sides by the public streets of the municipality. For the purpose of widening one of these highways, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore passed, on April 13th, 1935, an ordinance under which the municipality acquired the requisite land adjacent to the opposite side of one of these boundary streets, but took no land of the charitable corporation. The street was thereafter widened, improved, and repaved, and, upon the conception of the benefits to its property conferred by this public betterment, an assessment of $1,148 was made for the opening, grading, and paving of the widened street.

The charity protested in vain against the imposition and proposed collection of this assessment, on the ground that the assessment is forbidden by chapter 354 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland of 1931, which is subsection (33) of section 7 of article 81 of the Annotated Code of Public General Laws, 1935 Supplement. Finally, when the charity was notified that the collection of the amount of the assessment, interest, and penalties would be enforced by a sale of its property, a suit was begun by the charity to enjoin the municipality, its officers and agents, from proceeding to collect the sum claimed on account of the assessment, and to have declared that, by virtue of the statute named, the charity is entitled to an exemption from the assessment.

The municipal corporation and its collector of taxes were made the defendants, and their answer admitted all of the material allegations of fact of the plaintiff’s bill of complaint, but. claimed that chapter 354 of the *329 Acts of the General Assembly of 1931, now codified as subsection (33) of section 7 of article 81 of the Annotated Code, is unconstitutional and void, and so afforded the plaintiff no exemption. The chancellor adopted the position of the defendants, that chapter 354 of the Acts of 1931 is invalid and unconstitutional, and dismissed the bill of complaint. The appeal comes from this decree.

The defendants support the conclusion that chapter 354 of the Acts of 1931 is unconstitutional on two grounds. The first is that the statute is in violation of the Home Rule Amendment to the Maryland Constitution, as embodied in article XIA, since the legislation is a local law, applicable only to Baltimore City, in respect of a subject matter which is embraced within express powers granted to Baltimore City by its Charter. The second is that the title of the Act does not meet the conditions of section 29 of article III of the Maryland Constitution.

The title and body of the Act are of this tenor:

“An Act to add a new paragraph to Section 7 of Article 81 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1929 Supplement), title ‘Revenue and Taxes/ sub-title ‘Ordinary Taxes/ sub-heading ‘What Shall Be Taxed and Where/ said new paragraph to be known as Paragraph (32) and to follow immediately after Paragraph (31) of said section, exempting the building, equipment and furniture of hospitals, asylums, churches, places of worship, charitable and benevolent institutions, or the grounds appurtenant thereto, from the payment of any assessment for the opening, grading and paving of any road or street and to cancel any such existing but uncollected assessments.
“Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland, That a new paragraph be and it is hereby added to Section 7 of Article 81 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1929 Supplement), title ‘Revenue and Taxes/ sub-title ‘Ordinary Taxes/ sub-heading ‘What Shall Be Taxed and Where,’ said new paragraph to be known as Paragraph (32), to follow immediately after Paragraph (31) of said section, and to read as follows:
*330 “(32) All buildings, equipment and furniture of hospitals, asylums, churches, places of worship, charitable and benevolent institutions, or the grounds appurtenant thereto, in any county, city or incorporated town of this State, shall be exempted from the payment of any assessment for the opening, grading, macadamizing and paving of any road or street in said county, city or incorporated town; and any such assessment now levied against any such property, and not collected, is hereby cancelled. Provided thát this section shall only apply to Baltimore City.
“Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That this Act shall take effect June 1, 1931.”

Under the provisions of article XIA of the Constitution of Maryland, which is popularly known as the “Home Rule Amendment,” a charter for Baltimore City was validly adopted in November, 1918. Williams v. Broening, 135 Md. 226, 108 A. 781.

By the provisions of this article XIA, the powers granted to the City of Baltimore, as set forth in article 4, section 6, of the Public Local Laws, were not to be enlarged or extended by any charter formed under its authorization,, but such powers might be extended, modified, amended or repealed by the General Assembly. Article XIA, section 5, Code, pp. 151-153.

After the adoption of its charter by the City of Baltimore, the municipality was empowered, subject to the Constitution and Public General Laws of the State, to enact local laws, and to repeal or amend local laws which were enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland upon all matters covered by the express powers granted the municipality by the Public Local Laws of Maryland. All the local laws duly enacted under its charter by the City of Baltimore are made subject to the rule that, in case of any conflict between such local law and any present or future public general law, the latter shall control. Article XIA, section 3, Code, p. 152.

After the Charter was adopted in November, 1918, the General Assembly of Maryland can enact no public *331 local laws with respect to the City of Baltimore on any subject covered by the express powers granted to the municipality. By definition, a law which is so drawn as to apply to two or more geographical sub-divisions of the state is not a local law within the meaning of the article. Either any county or the City of Baltimore is declared to be such a sub-division. Article XIA, section 4, Code, p. 152.

As chapter 354 of the Acts of 1931 (article 81, section 7, subsection (33) of 1935 Supplement to the Annotated Code of Maryland) is confined territorially by its specific terms exclusively to the City of Baltimore, it is a local act within the meaning of article XIA, and, consequently, the only question is whether the subject matter of chapter 354 is covered by the express powers granted to the municipality by its Charter.

The municipality maintains that its express power to grant an exemption from an assessment imposed for a street improvement is conferred by the legislation with reference to the opening, extending, widening, straightening or closing of its public streets.

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Bluebook (online)
13 A.2d 596, 178 Md. 326, 1940 Md. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-home-infirmary-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1940.