Havre De Grace Real Estate & Power Co. v. Mayor of Havre De Grace

61 A. 662, 102 Md. 33, 1905 Md. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 A. 662 (Havre De Grace Real Estate & Power Co. v. Mayor of Havre De Grace) 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
Havre De Grace Real Estate & Power Co. v. Mayor of Havre De Grace, 61 A. 662, 102 Md. 33, 1905 Md. LEXIS 131 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

*35 Schmucker, J.;

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court for Harford County, in equity, dissolving a preliminary injunction and dismissing the bill upon which it had been granted. The material facts alleged in the bill are as follows:

On August the 14th, 1889, a contract was made between the Mayor and City Council of Havre de Grace of the first part, and John Faust & Son of the second part, by which Faust & Son, who were manufacturers of shoes in Baltimore; agreed to remove their business to Havre de Grace and establish and maintain in that place a shoe factory of certain dimensions within a prescribed time in consideration of the gift to them of certain land and money toward the erection of the factory, and the exemption of the factory when erected with its stock, plant and buildings, from city taxation for fifty years. The contract in addition to reciting the agreement of Faust & Son to erect and equip the factory building, contains these provisions, “They (Faust & Son) further agree that said shoe factory shall be continuously operated to its full capacity for a period of ten years from the date hereof; intending by full capacity to mean that said factory shall run as shoe factories of its size and capacity are ordinarily run, taking into consideration dull seasons, in the shoe trade, repairs to engine, boilers and machinery, strikes, fires or other unforseen and unavoidable causes. They further agree that they will give to said party of the first part ample and satisfactory security in the penalty of twenty-five thousand dollars to faithfully carry out all the provisions of their contract on their part contained.”

“The said party of the first part on its part covenants and agrees to pay to said parties of the second part the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars iñ cash, said cash to be deposited on or before the 15th day of September, 1889, in the First National Bank of Havre de Grace and to be used for the construction of the aforesaid buildings and improvements, to exempt said factory plant and stock, including the real estate used in connection therewith from all city taxes for fifty years; *36 to have at once conveyed to said parties of the second part in fee-simple and without cost to them all that lot designated upon the plat of said city of Havre de Grace as Square No. One Hundred and Ninety-Seven, to open, grade and pave as the other streets in said city are now improved, the streets bounding on the lot above described; to guarantee that bonds Of said party of the second part secured by a first mortgage upon the aforesaid lot and improvements proposed to be by them erected thereon to the extent of fifteen thousand dollars, bearing four per cent interest, will be negotiated at par on or before the first day of December, 1889.”

“It is further agreed between the parties hereto that the security agreed upon to be given by said parties of the second part for the faithful performance of their part of this contract shall be an indemnifying non-interest bearing mortgage upon the lot above described and the improvements thereon; the indemnifying mortgage it is understood shall be subject to the fifteen thousand dollar mortgage above referred to.”

The bill further alleged that the shoe factory was erected and continuously operated for ten years as provided for in the contract and that the city of Havre dc Grace procured the loan of $15,000 on behalf of Faust & Son, who executed a.mortgage on the factory and its plant to John G. Johnson in trust to secure the repayment of the loan according to the contract. Faust & Son subsequently formed a corporation called the Faust Schocke Shoe Manufacturing Company and transferred to it all of their shoe business with its real estate, factory and plant and the rights and choses in action set forth in their contract with the city.

The said shoe company made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors on May 9th, 1896, to A. P. McCombs and C. H. Faust, who filed a bill in the Circuit Court for Harford County for the administration of the trust under its supervision. Default having occurred under the $15,000 mortgage of Faust & Son, J. G. Johnson, the trustee therein named, instituted proceedings in the nature of a foreclosure in the same Court and the two suits were consolidated. The shoe *37 factory with its equipment and contents were sold under the decree in the consolidated cases to S. J. Seneca, who sold and conveyed them to the appellant corporation.

The bill then alleged that the appellant and its predecessors in title had fully complied with the contract between Faust & Son and the city of Havre de Grace, but the latter had levied taxes upon the shoe factory and was about to sell it for their non-payment and prayed for an injunction to prevent the sale and for further relief. A preliminary injunction was granted on the bill.

The city answered the bill admitting that it had attempted to make the alleged contract with Faust & Son, but denying its power to do so and also denying that the contract had been complied with by them or their assigns in that the shoe factory had not been constantly operated to its full capacity for ten years and that Faust & Son had never executed and delivered the indemnifying mortgage provided for by the contract and that the city had thereby suffered great loss. The answer also denied that the plaintiff was an assignee for value of any of the rights or choses in action of Faust & Son or of the Shoe Manufacturing Company or of J. G. Johnson mortgagee, and further denied that the contract, between the city and Faust & Son had ever received the requisite municipal ratification required by .the Act of 1890, ch. 180, to make it valid and binding. The answer insisted that even if the alleged contract had been valid the failure of Faust & Son and their successors in the ownership of the shoe factory to perform it on their part had disentitled the plaintiff which claimed under them to maintain this suit.

After testimony had been taken by both parties and the case had been heard in due course the Circuit Court by the decree appealed from dissolved the preliminary injunction and dismissed the bill.

The Circuit Court in our opinion correctly disposed of the case as the evidence in the record does not show the appellant to be entitled to the relief prayed for in the bill. At the time of making the contract of August 14th, 1889, the only au *38 thority possessed by the city to exempt property from taxation was that conferred upon it by the Act of 1880, ch. 169 (Local Code, Art. 13, sec. 183), which authorized it to abate by general ordinance any or all taxes levied by its authority for corporate uses upon, machinery, &c., owned by any individual or corporation in the city and “actually employed and used in the business of manufacturing in said city” or upon the raw material used, in or the produce manufactured by such individuals or corporations. That Act evidently conferred no power upon the city to make the Faust contract.

The Act of 1890, ch. 180, was then passed so amending sec.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 662, 102 Md. 33, 1905 Md. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/havre-de-grace-real-estate-power-co-v-mayor-of-havre-de-grace-md-1905.