Fowble v. Kemp

48 A. 379, 92 Md. 630, 1901 Md. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 48 A. 379 (Fowble v. Kemp) 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
Fowble v. Kemp, 48 A. 379, 92 Md. 630, 1901 Md. LEXIS 126 (Md. 1901).

Opinions

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

There are three questions raised by the record in this case. The first is whether the statute under which certain taxes levied by the County Commissioners of Baltimore County upon the appellees as the owners or custodians of distilled spirits, which either belonged to or were in the possession of the appellees, is valid and constitutional. The second is whether the method of procedure resorted to by the collector of taxes to enforce payment, is proper. And the third is whether the bill of complaint filed by the appellees and praying that the collection of those taxes be restrained by injunction is sufficiently verified to justify the granting of an injunction.

The taxes were levied under the Act of 1892, ch. 704, now, secs. 204 to 214 of Art. 81 of the Supplement to the Code. This same statute was before this Court for construction in the recent case of Monticello Co. v. Baltimore City, 90 Md. 416. That case arose in Baltimore City. Because the Act of 1892 contained no provision giving to the person charged with the duty to pay the tax an opportunity to be heard as to the valuation of the spirits before the taxes were levied ; and because the local law of Baltimore City afforded no appeal to any tribunal from the ex parte assessment made by the State Tax Commissioner, we held the Act of 1892 to be in this particular unconstitutional; but we added that the objection to its validity could be removed by appropriate legislation. This has been done by the Act of 1900, ch. 320, but its provisions are not applicable to the case at bar because the taxes here involved were levied before the Act of 1900 was adopted. The fundamental principal lying at the root of every judicial or executive procedure and affording a person affected an opportunity to be heard at some stage of the proceedings before a liability can be fastened upon him and before his property can be seized and sold under legal process for any purpose, was, and had long before been, distinctly recognized as appli *633 cable to assessments for taxation. It was not merely because the Act of i8p2 itself contained no provision giving the tax payer a day to be heard that it was declared invalid, but because the omission was not supplied by any other local legislation. Had there been some local law of Baltimore City which gave a right of appeal from the valuation made by the State Tax Commissioner to the Appeal Tax Court or to some other tribunal, the result of the, Monticello case would have been different. This being so we must now ascertain whether there was in force when the taxes here involved were levied, any local law of Baltimore County or any general law applicable to that county, under which the tax payer did have his day to-be heard. The Act of i8p8, ch. 275, contains in sec. ip2A, the following clause : “There shall always be an appeal to .the Board of County Commissioners from the acts of all assessors or agents appointed by them hereunder, or others authorized to act as assessors under the laws of this State.” This statute was relied on in the Monticello case, but we said in respect to it: “Whatever its scope, it, in explicit terms, is confined to the County Commissioners and has no relation to the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City.” The only thing decided in poth Md. in relation to the Act of 18p8 was that it did not apply to Baltimore City. Does it apply in Baltimore County to valuations made by the State Tax Commissioner upon distilled spirits located in that county ?

Obviously, its words are broad enough to make it applicable. The right of appeal to the County Commissioners is given by this statute, not only from the acts of all assessors or agents appointed by them, but from the acts, and therefore from the valuations .of others authorized to act as assessors under the laws of this State. Now, the State Tax Commissioner is in terms, express and unequivocal, authorized under the statute of 1892 to act as an assessor of distilled spirits, and no one else is authorized to value that class of property at all. He and he only is made the assessor to value it. He is not an assessor or an agent appointed by the County Commissioners, but he is clearly one of the “others,” that is to say, one of the *634 officers not appointed by the County Commissioners, but still authorized by law to act as an assessor. If he be authorized under the laws of this State to value particular property situated in Baltimore County, and if no one else have authority in the first instance to value that same property, he is manifestly clothed with the powers of an assessor, and why may no appeal be taken from his valuation to the County Commissioners, when appeals to them are permitted from the acts and consequently from the valuations of assessors and agents appointed by them, and from the acts and consequently from the valuations of all others authorized to act as assessors under the law ? The word “ others ” is not restricted or qualified and must be taken as including all other persons authorized to act as assessors, and hence the plain meaning of the provision is that an appeal will lie to the County Commissioners from the valuations made by assessors and agents appointed by the County Commissioners, and from the valuations made by all other persons authorized to act as assessors, unless, of course, in special instances a different method of proceeding or an appeal to a different tribunal be prescribed. But between the adoption of the Act of i8g8 and the passage of the Act of igoo a different method of proceeding did not prevail, or an appeal did not lie to a different tribunal in Baltimore County.

It is suggested that the proviso to sec. 2, Art. 81 of the Supplement to the Code, as that section was enacted by the Act of 1896, ch. 120 and ch. 143, prevents the Act ofi 898, ch. 275, from applying to the distilled spirits in question. The proviso, as contained in the Act of 1896, ch. 120, is in these words: "Provided nothing contained in this section or Act shall repeal, modify or affect sec. 86 and 86A of this Article, relating to taxation of savings banks, or the Act of 1892, ch. 70.7, relating to the taxation of distilled spirits.” The object of the proviso was to save from repeal or modification certain enactments relating to savings banks and the entire Act of 1892 relating to the valuation of distilled spirits for purposes of taxation. When the section to which this proviso is appended is examined, it will be found that it has reference to the assessment and valuation of *635 property for taxation. It declares what property shall be valued and assessed and defines how the valuation and assessment shall be made. When the proviso was added its effect was simply to prescribe that the method fixed by the Act of 1892 for valuing distilled spirits should not be disturbed by anything contained in the general assessment law of 1896.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 379, 92 Md. 630, 1901 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowble-v-kemp-md-1901.