Geisendaffer v. Mayor & City Council

3 A.2d 860, 176 Md. 150, 1939 Md. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 1, 1939
Docket[No. 38, January Term, 1939.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 A.2d 860 (Geisendaffer v. Mayor & City Council) 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
Geisendaffer v. Mayor & City Council, 3 A.2d 860, 176 Md. 150, 1939 Md. LEXIS 165 (Md. 1939).

Opinion

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A taxpayer’s bill in equity questions the validity of an issue of certificates of indebtedness by Baltimore City without the regular submission to popular vote of an *152 ordinance for contracting a debt. The City contends that there was an emergency that dispensed with the submission. The chancellor held the issue valid, denied an injunction prayer, and dismissed the bill of complaint. The complainant appeals.

The provision in the Constitution of the State, article 11, section 7, prohibiting the creation of a municipal debt without the submission, makes the exceptions that “the Mayor and City Council may, temporarily, borrow any amount of money to meet any deficiency in the City Treasury, and may borrow any amount at any time to provide for any emergency arising from the necessity of maintaining the police, or preserving the health, safety and sanitary condition of the city.” And an ordinance declaring, in its title, its preamble, and its first section, the existence of an emergency so arising from the need of making provision for the relief of the destitute unemployed and unemployable in the city during the present economic depression, directed the issue of $4,025,000 of certificates, payable in five successive instalments beginning on December 1st, 1941. The purpose was that all the proceeds of the borrowing on the certificates, except so much as was needed for relief in the months of Novem and December, 1938, after passage of the ordinance, should be applied to replacement of money received from taxes during 1936, 1937, and 1938, and required by the City Charter to be expended on ordinary municipal functions, but which, because of failure of an assurance of funds for the purpose from the State, was spent by the City in the relief of the destitute, and not reimbursed.

It is this replacement of funds so spent in the past which is the subject of controversy. Does the need of making it present an emergency within the meaning of the constitutional clause? Or, more accurately, could it be regarded as presenting such an emergency ? “Whether an emergency exists is a question of fact. Primarily a legislative finding is sufficient but, except where the power to .determine the question is specifically granted * * * by no means conclusive proof that an emergency *153 exists. * * * Such a finding is, however, always entitled to great weight and will not be set aside or annulled unless it clearly and unmistakably appears that it is erroneous. * * * Delegates representing in its legislative body the City of Baltimore have united in the finding of such an emergency, and the conclusion resulting from their independent deliberations should not be set aside except upon convincing evidence that their findings are erroneous.” Norris v. Baltimore, 172 Md. 667, 693, 695, 192 A. 531, 543.

There is no dispute of what occurred. As is well known, the need for relief of the destitute had called for outlays of public money at an earlier date during the depression. Private charities had become incapable of meeting it, and since 1932 Baltimore City had been meeting it by disbursing from week to week funds made up by means of temporary loans. A bond issue of $12,000,000 under an Act of 1933, chapter 254, had secured repayment of those loans. On September 1st, 1933, the federal and state governments took over the burden and administered relief through local agencies, the agency in Baltimore having been the Baltimore Emergency Relief Commission. In March of 1936, however, the federal government abandoned the plan of distributing funds for relief directly, and turned to that of providing work and wages for the unemployed, together with assistance in the payment of old age pensions by the states. From its gross receipts tax (Act of 1935, ch. 188), the State of Maryland had funds for relief during the months of January, February and March, 1936, but by March, the same month in which the federal government changed its plans, these funds were exhausted, and the state officials were unable to continue the aid. Yet there were 10,110 families, or between 35,000 and 40,000 persons, in the city destitute and to be supplied with their daily necessities.

The Governor called a special session of the Assembly to meet the emergency thus presented, but the city officials were warned that time would be needed to raise the money, and meanwhile the City must meet the demand. *154 The Senate Finance Committee and the Ways and Means Committee of the House of Delegates united in a resolution that they would recommend legislation for reimbursement of any money borrowed or advanced for relief by the City or any county. And shortly after this the City began meeting the calls. As the budget of taxes for the year had been made up in the preceding year, there was no possibility of providing for the outlays by new taxes, and resort was had to funds which were in the city treasury and not then required for other purposes, funds which under the charter (Charter and Pub. Loc. Laws [1938], section 41), should, if not used up in ordinary municipal expenditures by the end of the year, have been carried over for such expenditures in 1937. In chapters 3 and 10 of the Acts of 1936,1st Ex. Sess., emergency measures were adopted by the State for raising the money for relief, and for reimbursing the City and the counties for the previous diversions of ordinary funds, and chapter 5 added a sub-section to section 6 of the City Charter to authorize emergency borrowing and debts without further legislative action, and restoration by that means of funds previously spent for relief.

The state taxes failed to bring the amounts required, and by the end of that year, 1936, the City had given relief to the extent of $1,000,000 more than it received from the State. The board of state aids and charities, in conjunction with city and county officials, then prepared for another effort, to raise by state taxes both the money which would be needed for relief in the years 1937 and 1938, and that needed to make the reimbursement of diverted local funds previously attempted. The General Assembly of 1937, Ex. Sess., adopted revenue measures, chapter 11, for these purposes, including the income tax to become payable in 1938. But again the expectations were disappointed, and relief expenditures by the City during 1937 amounted, in the end, to $1,097,041.91, and during 1938 to $1,550,190.98, in excess of the money received from the State. And, again, the excess expenditures, not having been provided for in the annual budget, *155 could be made by the City only from money dedicated by the Charter to other, ordinary purposes, or from borrowings. Borrowing was resorted to in June of 1938. The City is now confronted with the necessity of providing from its own resources payments of sums of money diverted from their ordinary uses.

The choice of the measures adopted to meet the emergencies in the three years past has been a subject of argument. It has been contended that more borrowing, or the levy of more taxes, would have provided an alternative to resort to the general cash account of the City, in contravention of the law of the Charter as it was.

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.2d 860, 176 Md. 150, 1939 Md. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geisendaffer-v-mayor-city-council-md-1939.