Fairmount Land Corp. v. Mayor of Baltimore

125 A. 796, 145 Md. 391, 1924 Md. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 A. 796 (Fairmount Land Corp. 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
Fairmount Land Corp. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 125 A. 796, 145 Md. 391, 1924 Md. LEXIS 93 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

*393 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from the decree of the court below sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing the bill of complaint of the Fairmount Land Corporation against the ATay or and City Council of Baltimore.

The bill alleges that the plaintiff was incorporated for the purpose of developing a tract of land in the City of Baltimore lying south of Clifton Avenue and Gwynn’s Falls Park and knowm as Fairmount; that said tract had a frontage of over three hundred feet on said park, and that the plaintiff consulted with the “Topographical Survey Commission” of the city and at great cost to itself secured the services of eminent landscape architects in order that the development of said tract might not detract from the beauty of said park, and from time to time filed with said commission plans of its development; that said commission approved of the “layout” of the streets shown on said plans, and the water board of the city from time to time laid pipes in said streets; that the plaintiff induced the Consolidated Gas Electric Light and Power Company of Baltimore to lay gas pipes in the bed of said streets, proceeded to grade and pave the same, and to provide for a, drainage and sewerage system; that on the 28th of February, 1910, the plaintiff deeded to the city the beds of parts of Chelsea Road, Chestnut Road, and Cedar Road, and the deed therefor was accompanied by a plat showing said roads and the remaining roads and streets then in process of development; that on the 5th of December, 1910, the plaintiff sold a lot in Fairmount to Mary T. Lawton, and caused to be recorded with the deed for said lot a plat of said tract showing the subdivision of the property into streets and building lots; that from time to time, prior to the 1st of July, 1913, the plaintiff conveyed certain other lots in Fairmount to various purchasers by deeds recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore City; that on the 1st of April, 1911, the plaintiff and Mary T. Lawton conveyed to the city an easement for a water pipe in the bed of North Road, and on the 20th of November, *394 1911, the plaintiff conveyed to the city the bed of North Boad from Gwynn’s Falls Park to Cedar Boad; that the defendant, by Ordinance No. 678, approved April 25th, 1911, authorized and directed the Commissioners for Opening Streets to condemn and open a street known as Gwynn’s Falls Parkway in accordance with the courses and distances set out in said ordinance; that at the time of the passage of said ordinance the city had approved of the layout of the streets in Fairmount, had received, through-the plat filed with the Topographical Survey Commission, through the deed to Mary T. Lawton and the plat filed therewith., and through said deed from the plaintiff and Mary T. Lawton to the,city, notice of the location of said streets and of the subdivision of Fairmount into' building lots; that said Gwynn’s Falls Parkway as proposed to be opened was a broad avenue or boulevard from Druid Hill Park to' Gwynn’s Falls Park, and if completed as planned would have been of great benefit and value to the plaintiff in the development of Fairmount; that on the 18th of August, 1913, the Commissioners for Opening Streets caused to be inserted in the “Baltimore American” and the “German Correspondent,” two newspapers, an advertisement giving notice that they “had caused to be made out a detailed statement of all damages awarded, expenses incurred, and benefits assessed, together with an explanatory map thereof, in connection with the condemnation and opening of said Gwynn’s Falls Parkway under said ordinance of April 25th, 1911”; that included in the property to be condemned were two parcels of land belonging to the plaintiff and designated on said map as “L6 and N6,” which were fully and properly located on the map’ (except that lot N6 included a small area which did not belong to the plaintiff), and the plaintiff was awarded as damages for said land the sum of $1,256; that there were also two lots on said map, lot No. 265 and lot No. 267, “together with the name of the” plaintiff, “but that the limits or boundaries of said lots were not shown on said plat”; that said descriptions do not contain a description of each *395 separate lot deemed to be benefited, with its dimensions, the name of the street on which it bounds and the name or names of such person or persons as may be supposed to have any estate or interest therein, as required by section 177 of the charter of the city, and that the one dimension given for the second of said lots extends beyond the property owned by the plaintiff into the property theretofore deeded by the plaintiff to the city; that the Commissioners for Opening Streets entirely ignored as lot boundaries the roads acquired by the city by the deed of 1910, the subdivision of the plaintiff’s tract into lots, the sale of one of said lots to Mary T. Lawton, the deed from her and the plaintiff to the city, and the sale of other lots in Fairmount, and that through the failure of said commissioners to determine the dimensions of said lots Nos. 265 and 267 by the said plat and descriptions, and their failure to> recognize on said plat the existence of North Road, Cedar Road, Chestnut Road, and Chelsea Road, the subdivision of said tract into' lots, and the sales of lots recorded, it has been impossible for either the plaintiff or the defendant- to determine wha:t land or lands are subject to the lien of said assessments, or how the same, if valid, shall be apportioned between the land of the plaintiff and the land conveyed by it to the defendant and other persons before the lien of said assessments attached; that the corrected return of the Commissioners for Opening Streets in connection with Gwynn’s Falls Parkway under the ordinance of 1911 was made on the 22nd of January, 1914, and notice thereof was published by the City Register on the 23rd of January, 1914, and that thereupon certain appeals were filed in the Baltimore City Court; that the last of said appeals was finally determined on the 28th of November, 1916, and that the return of the Commissioners for Opening Streets was not transferred to the City Collector within ten days from the determination of the last of said appeals “as required by Article 181 of the City Code,” and that said return was not transferred to the City Collector until the 16th of June, 1921; that the City *396 Collector “did not forthwith notify the plaintiff by bills specifying the several sums so assessed upon lots Nos. 265 and 267, warning' it that if the same be not paid within three months from the date of said transfer of said commissioners’ return he would proceed to sell the specific pieces or parts of property on which said unpaid sum or sums of money

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Bluebook (online)
125 A. 796, 145 Md. 391, 1924 Md. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairmount-land-corp-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1924.