Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 093

CourtMaryland Attorney General Reports
DecidedNovember 16, 2011
Docket96 OAG 093
StatusPublished

This text of Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 093 (Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 093) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Maryland Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 093, (Md. 2011).

Opinion

Gen. 93] 93

COUNTIES

CODE REVISION – WHETHER REPEAL OF STATUTORY PROVISIONS ALLOWING CITIZENS TO APPEAL COUNTY BRIDGE WORK DECISIONS WOULD EFFECT A SUBSTANTIVE CHANGE IN THE LAW

November 16, 2011

Kelly G. Dincau Department of Legislative Services Office of Policy Analysis

In connection with the ongoing code revision process, you have requested our opinion whether Article 25, §§46 and 47 of the Annotated Code of Maryland, which grant citizens the right to appeal a decision of county commissioners to build or repair a bridge, may be repealed without effecting a substantive change in the law. Specifically, you are concerned that these two sections may assign a nonjudicial function to the court, in violation of the separation of powers doctrine expressed in Article 8 of the Declaration of Rights, and that they would therefore be unenforceable.

In our opinion, a repeal of these statutes would effect a substantive change in the law. Sections 46 and 47 grant a remedy to citizens who might otherwise lack standing to appeal a particular bridge decision and trigger procedures under the Maryland Rules that would not otherwise apply to such appeals. While an argument can be made that the statutory language invites a circuit court to exceed its judicial function, we cannot say with certainty that such an argument would either apply or prevail in every case. We therefore recommend that these sections not be repealed through the code revision process.1

1 You also asked whether, if the portions of §§46 and 47 are unconstitutional, they could be severed from the remainder of the bridge provisions of Article 25. In light of our conclusion that the sections are not clearly unconstitutional, we do not address this question. 94 [96 Op. Att’y

I

Article 25 Bridge Provisions

The two provisions that are the subject of your inquiry govern a citizen’s appeal of a decision by county commissioners whether to build or repair a bridge. These appeal provisions are best understood in the context of the statutory scheme of which they are a part. Under the Article 25 bridge statutes, the Legislature granted county commissioners the power – now extended to all forms of county government – to build and repair bridges, levy property taxes to cover the expenses, and conduct proceedings on citizen applications for the performance of those bridge works. The Legislature also subjected these decisions concerning bridges to judicial review upon an appeal by “any citizen.”

A. Origin

The General Assembly originally enacted the predecessor of the Article 25 bridge provisions in 1856. Chapter 308, Laws of Maryland 1856. Although that act has been recodified a number of times in various sections of Article 25 of the Annotated Code of Maryland, the statutory scheme, and particularly the appeal provisions, have changed little in substance.2 See Annotated Code of Maryland, Article 25, §§34 - 50A. These provisions apply in every county, regardless of the form of local government.3

2 Chapter 308 included the general power to build or repair bridges, now codified at Article 25, §26 for most counties. The rest of Chapter 308 has been divided into the 21 separate sections now appearing at Article 25, §34 et seq. In 1962, the Legislature enacted two changes to the appeal procedures, neither of which is pertinent to this opinion. Chapter 36, Laws of Maryland 1962. 3 As originally enacted, the statute applied to the “commissioners of the several counties of this State.” Chapter 308, §1, Laws of Maryland 1856. Subsequent recodifications of the statute, enacted after the creation of the two home rule methods of county government, retained the reference to “county commissioners.” In 2010, the General Assembly made §§34 through 37 and §§38 through 49 explicitly applicable to the code home rule counties and every charter county, except Baltimore City. Chapter 699, §2, Laws of Maryland 2010. Two sections omitted from that law – §§37A and 37B – apply only to Cecil County and Dorchester County. Other county-specific bridge provisions appear elsewhere in (continued...) Gen. 93] 95

B. Application to Construct or Repair a Bridge

The Article 25 bridge provisions set forth a procedure under which a person may apply for the construction or repair of a bridge. Article 25, §§34 - 45. An application for building or repairing a bridge is to be made by petition to the governing body of a county. §34. The applicant is to give public notice “in the same manner and for the same length of time prescribed for applications for opening roads.” §35.4 The county commissioners, after “they have heard the reasons and evidences for and against the application” are to decide the “case” under a standard of promoting the public convenience. Id. If the commissioners grant the application, they “shall, at their usual time for levying taxes, levy on the assessable property of the county a sum sufficient to pay for the bridge and its embankment and abutments.” §36. Sections 37 through 39 set forth procurement, inspection, and payment procedures.

Special procedures apply to applications for the construction or repair of a bridge over a geographical feature that divides adjacent counties. Article 25, §§40 - 45. If both boards of commissioners deem the petition “reasonable,” each board appoints three “disinterested and discreet examiners.” §40. The examiners are then to meet and determine such matters as “the expediency of building or repairing the bridge, the place where, the plan, material and relative portion of the cost each of the adjoining counties should pay.” §41. If the examiners report the proposed bridge work “as proper and expedient” to their respective county commissioners, the commissioners are to direct the examiners to advertise for sealed proposals to perform the work. §42. Sections 43 through 45 elaborate on procurement and cost allocation procedures.

3 (...continued) Article 25. See, e.g., Article 25, §§10B and 10I, respectively addressing the powers of Carroll County and St. Mary’s County. 4 The Legislature had enacted similar provisions with respect to roads in 1853. Chapter 220, Laws of Maryland 1853; see also 93 Opinions of the Attorney General 103, 104-05 (2008) (summarizing Article 25 roads provisions). The 1856 bridge statutes incorporated some of those provisions by reference. When the Laws of Maryland were codified in 1888, both sets of laws were placed in Article 25 along with other statutes granting powers to county commissioners. 96 [96 Op. Att’y

C. Appeal under Sections 46 and 47

The appeal provisions of §§46 - 47 apply to a county bridge work decision, regardless of whether the bridge is located in a single county or links two counties.5 Section 46 confers on citizens of an affected county the right to appeal the county’s decision and sets a deadline for filing an appeal:

In all cases, upon representation in writing of any citizen or citizens of any county in which the county commissioners may determine to build or repair any bridge or unite with an adjoining county to build or repair any bridge between the said adjoining counties filed before a contract for building or repairing has been made that the said determination of the county commissioners is inexpedient, and desiring an appeal from such determination, the county commissioners shall grant such appeal.

Article 25, §46.6

Section 47 allows the appellant access to county records relating to the bridge work decision, provides for jurisdiction in the circuit court, and states a standard of review:

Upon such appeal being taken, the county commissioners shall afford the appellant, or his counsel, with full opportunity to examine the books and papers of the commissioners relative to the matter. The circuit court shall

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Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-attorney-general-opinion-96-oag-093-mdag-2011.