County Commissioners v. United Railways & Electric Co.

72 A. 542, 109 Md. 377, 1909 Md. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 72 A. 542 (County Commissioners v. United Railways & Electric Co.) 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
County Commissioners v. United Railways & Electric Co., 72 A. 542, 109 Md. 377, 1909 Md. LEXIS 30 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeals in this case are from an order of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County overruling the appellants’ demurrers to the appellee’s bill for an injunction. The bill had been filed by the complainant in its two-fold capacity of a State and County taxpayer and the owner of property especially affected by the proceeding, which it sought to enjoin.

*380 The main purpose of the injunction, asked for by the bill, was to restrain the defendants from proceeding with the execution or performance of a contract for the repaving of First street, commonly known as Light street No. 2, in the village of Brooklyn, purporting to have been made in accordance with a plan and specifications prepared under the supervsion of the State Geological and Economic Survey for such repaving. The bill of complaint also prayed that sec. 196 of chaj). 654 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1908 be declared void in so far as it purports to authorize the County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County to compel the appellee to remove and relocate its existing tracks and' overhead work on First street and repave certain portions of the street with vitrified brick, and that the County Commissioners be restrained from proceeding thereunder.

Both defendants demurred to the bill, but their demurrers were overruled by the order appealed from which directed the injunction to issue as prayed. Before the hearing of the demurrers the bill was amended by consent by adding thereto certain additional allegations of fact 1o be treated as if they had formed part of the bill when it was filed. Those allegations will be treated as part of the bill for the purposes of this opinion.

The principal allegations of the bill, as amended, are:

That the complainant, as successor of 1he Baltimore and Curtis Bay Railway Company, owns -and operates a double track electric railway over the portion of First street sought to be repaved which extends about 1600 feet southerly from the county terminus of the long bridge.

That the tracks on First street were laid by its predecessor in strict conformity with the provisions of its charter (chap. 505 of Acts of 1890) which required them to be laid on the margin of the streets or roads occupied by them so as to leave a width of at least fourteen feet for vehicular traffic “unoccupied and undisturbed by said track or tracks.”

That at the time the tracks were laid First street was private property and had not become a public road or street *381 of Anne Arundel County, and therefore the complainant had acquired a private right of way over it by a deed, from its owner, the South Baltimore Harbor and Improvement Co., of which a copy is filed with the bill as an exhibit. At the time the charter of complainant’s predecessor was granted and when, the tracks were laid on First street and ever since then sec. 344 of Art. 23 of the Public General Laws of Maryland has provided, that: “In all cases where any passenger railway company uses the road bed or any portion thereof of any turnpike, street or road in any county of this St ate, it shall at all times keep in good and proper repair not only the portions of said turnpike, street or road which may be embraced between the rails of its track but also that part which shall extend for a distance of two feet on either side of said rails.” That the complainant has fully complied with not only the requirements of its charier as to the location of its tracks but also with the, provisions of the law in reference to keeping in repair the streets and roads on which they are located, and it is willing to continue to do so.

The bill further alleges that the defendants the County Commissioners and Walter W. Crosby as Chief Engineer of the State Geological and Economic Survey have entered into an arrangement for paving the portion of First street, traversed by the complainant’s railway tracks, which is now an unpaved country road, with vitrified brick and the County Commissioners have awarded the contract therefor to H. E. Gray in pretended but not real conformity with the provisions of chap. 225 of the Acts of 1904, commonly known as the Shoemaker Boad Law. That the said arrangement for so repaving First street is illegal and void because, the Shoemaker Boad Law contemplates the construction or improving of public roads and highways at the joint expense of the State and County with macadamized or telford or other stone road or a road constructed of gravel or other good material, but it neither contemplates nor authorizes the paving of roads with vitrified brick which is far more expensive than either “telford” or “macadam” systems of road construction, which *382 use broken stone and are similar in character, and that a brick pavement would not be suitable for a road like Eirst street.

It is further alleged that even if an arrangement for the paving of First street with vitrified brick could be made under the provisions of the Shoemaker Road Law the defendants in their attempted arrangement to utilize that law have failed to comply with its material provisions in that:

(а) No written notice was given to the Chief Engineer of the Survey on or before the 1st of March, 1908, of the intention of the County Commissioners to improve Eirst street under the provisions of the Act as required by its first section.

(б) Nor do the records of the Survey show that there, was ever any application made to it for or any consideration or approval by it of the paving or macadamizing of said street as required by section 2 of the Act.

(c) The advertisement for bids for the paving having run for but twelve days was not made in conformity with the provisions of section 6 of the Act which required it to be published for two consecutive weeks.

(d) The contract for said paving was awarded by the Commissioners at the price of $12,100.00 (being $506.00 in excess of' the estima'.e therefor of $11,591.00 made by the Chief Engineer of the Survey), in direct violation of section 1 of the Act which provides that “if all bids exceed the amount specified no contract shall be given.”

(e) That there is an agreement between the County Commissioners and the Chief Engineer of the State Geological and Economic Survey under which the County Commissioners are to receive from the State, not one-half of the cost of paving the street with vitrified brick, but one-half of what a macadam road would cost if it were to be constructed in place of the brick pavement and no more.

The bill further alleges that the County Commissioners, under the assumed authority of the Act of 1908, chapter 651, have served upon the complainant a written notice requir *383 ing it at its own expense to take up its tracks from the margin of said street and relay the same in the middle of the street with girder rails instead of the “T” rails now in use and to pave "between the tracks as relaid and for two feet on the outside of the outer rails with vitrified brick, all of which will involve the new construction of 1600 feet of the railroad at an expenditure of about $16,000 upon a line which is even now operated at a loss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 542, 109 Md. 377, 1909 Md. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-commissioners-v-united-railways-electric-co-md-1909.