Marchant v. Mayor of Baltimore

126 A. 884, 146 Md. 513, 1924 Md. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 126 A. 884 (Marchant 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
Marchant v. Mayor of Baltimore, 126 A. 884, 146 Md. 513, 1924 Md. LEXIS 159 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

UrNER, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In a condemnation proceeding by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, the Port Development Commission, and the Public Improvement Commission of that city, the appellants were awarded $64,120 for approximately five and three-quarters acres of land, with appurtenant riparian rights, situated on the southwest shore of the Patapsoo River within the city limits. The land was condemned for the purposes of a comprehensive plan of harbor development for which provision has been made by the general assembly.

*517 The first of the questions to be considered is whether this proceeding for the condemnation of the property was didy authorized. A motion to quash asserted the contrary. The contention is that no ord inance was passed for the acquisition of the land by the direct exercise of the city’s general charter power of eminent domain, and that neither of the commissions uniting in the petition to condemn was empowered to take such action.

The City of Baltimore has the power under its charter h> acquire by purchase or condemnation any land which it may need for “any public or municipal purpose.” Charter (1915) sec. 6 (4). One of its most important purposes is the care and improvement of its harbor, including the erection and maintenance of wharves and piers. Charter, sec. 6 (8).

The Port Development Commission was created under the terms of chapter 560 of the Acts of 1920, which authorized the city, with the approval of its voters, to borrow fifty million dollars “for developing, extending and improving the harbor of Baltimore and its facilities,” and which provided that the fund so obtained should be administered and expended, and its “entire disposition” supervised, by a commission appointed by ordinance of the Mayor and City Council. The commission was invested by the act with the right and power on behalf of the municipality “to acquire from time to time by gift, purchase, lease or other method of acquisition, or by condemnation, any lands or property * * * which may be proper or desirable in connection with the objects” which the act specified. Ordinance No. 377 of the Mayor and City Council, approved July 2, 1920, appointed the commission and defined its powers in conformity with the provisions of the statute. A resolution of the commission, passed April 8, 1924, declared the acquisition of the property involved in this proceeding to be desirable and necessary for the accomplishment of the harbor development objects mentioned in Ordinance No. 377 and in chapter 560 of the Acts of 1920.

*518 The Public Improvement Commission was appointed in pursuance of chapter 373 of the Acts of 1920, which provided for a loan of twenty-six million dollars for various municipal improvements. It Was directed that $2,500,000 of the fund should be used for developing and improving the harbor of Baltimore1, including the acquisition of sites and the construction of wharves, docks, piers and warehouses. Provision was1 made 'by the act for the creation by ordinance of a commission with full power to administer the improvement fund, to provide for its expenditure, and to supervise its entire disposition. Ordinance No. 376, approved July 2, 1920, appointed the commission in compliance with the statutory direction. By a subsequent ordinance, No. 576, approved April 14, 1921, it was enacted that the Commission should have power to acquire by condemnation any property needed in its judgment for any of the purposes contemplated by Ordinance No. 376. The necessity for the acquisition of the land now in process of condemnation was formally stated in a resolution of the commission passed February 12, 1923.

By the "General Condemnation Law (Code, art. 33A), under which the present case has been conducted, it is provided that “any municipal or other corporation, commission, board, body, or person, which under the laws of this State, has the right to acquire property by condemnation, shall acquire such property if condemnation proceedings be resorted to, in pursuance of, and under the provisions of this article, anything in any other Public General Law,, or Public Local Law, or private or special statute, to the contrary notwithstanding * *

While the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore apparently passed no ordinance providing specifically for the condemnation of the property with which this case is concerned, there are duly enacted ordinances effectuating the intention of the Legislature that full power to administer the funds appropriated, under the statutes to which we have referred, for harbor improvement purposes, should be vested in the two commissions which they require to be created, and each of *519 those commissions has passed a resolution declaring the necessity for the acquisition of the land embraced in the pending' condemnation. The authority of the commissions does not rest upon a mere delegation of right and duty from the municipality, but is supported by specific statutory provisions. The resolutions passed by the commissions, in the exercise of the powers conferred by statute and ordinance, are sufficiently authoritative to- obviate any occasion, which might otherwise exist, for an ordinance directed to the particular condemnation now being considered.

It appears that the resolution of the Port Development Commission was passed after the institution of this proceeding, and wo are, therefore, asked to disregard that resolution in deciding whether the condemnation is valid. The original petition in the case was filed only in the name of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, but it was later amended by rhe joinder of the two commissions with the city as petitioners. Before this amendment was made, the Port Development Commission passed its resolution as to the necessity for condemning the land which the petition describes. It was upon the basis of the amended petition, and of the answers thereto, that the issues in the case were tried and determined. The proceeding originated for the Port Development Commission when it was made a party, and its prior resolution should be considered as reflecting upon the validity of its action in participating in the suit. It is not essential to decide whether the petitioners would have- had an equal right to maintain the proceeding separately under the conditions shown by the record. There can be no doubt that they collectively represent all of the ample power conferred by the General Assembly for the acquisition of property to improve and enlarge the port facilities upon which the prosperity of Baltimore is vitally dependent. While it- may have been unnecessary for all of the petitioners to unite in the action, yet as their joinder could not prejudice the- defendants, and as the effect of any condemnation for the objects therein contemplated is to vest in the municipality itself the title to the *520 property condemned, we see no reason to bold tbe proceeding invalid on the ground of a misjoinder of parties.

Tbe motion to quash further asserts that tbe petition for the condemnation does not sufficiently indicate tbe riparian rights to be acquired as appurtenant to tbe land area which it mentions. As stated in the petition, it is the purpose of the proceeding to condemn the river shore land particularly described, together with “all riparian and aquatic rights of the party or

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Bluebook (online)
126 A. 884, 146 Md. 513, 1924 Md. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marchant-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1924.