Mayor C.C. of Balto. v. Park Corp.

95 A. 33, 126 Md. 358, 1915 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 95 A. 33 (Mayor C.C. of Balto. v. Park Corp.) 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
Mayor C.C. of Balto. v. Park Corp., 95 A. 33, 126 Md. 358, 1915 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

In tbe prosecution of tbe work of establishing a system of drainage for tbe City of Baltimore tbe Sewerage Commission laid out and installed a system of drains from Garrison avenue to and along Liberty Heights avenue, intended to afford a run-off for a drainage area of approximately one hundred and seventy acres. This drainage area lay immediately along the western boundary of tbe City of Baltimore, adjoining lands which bad been, or were in tbe process of development for suburban residences. This development had been undertaken by some of tbe defendant corporations, and for tbe purpose of rendering tbe land so developed more readily marketable, these corporations in connection with tbe Development Aid Corporation, constructed a drain or sewer (which will hereafter be spoken of as tbe Callaway drain) designed to carry off tbe rainfall and sewage from tbe land so developed, and ultimately to convey it into tbe natural water course of Gwynns Falls. Tbe conformation of tbe land also made this direction tbe natural flow for tbe water accumulating on and to be drained from tbe area intended to be provided for by tbe City.

The capacity of tbe drain or sewer installed by tbe City was 59 cubic feet per second; that of tbe defendant companies was of varying size, its smallest capacity being 308 *361 cubic feet, and its largest, at its point of outlet, 595 cubic feet. The run-off for the drain having a capacity of 308 cubic feet is estimated by the engineers at 188 cubic feet, and for the drain at the point where its capacity is 595 cubic feet, at 400 cubic feet, thus leaving a margin not required to carry the run-off from the respective areas of 120 and 190 cubic feet per second.

Under these conditions, the City instituted condemnation proceedings, the purpose of which was to enable it to connect its drain, of a maximum capacity of 59 cubic feet, with the Callaway drain, and a determination of the compensation due the companies for such connection. It is not a case where the whole of the interest of the defendant companies is sought to be taken, but only a portion of that interest. In this respect it differs materially from most of the condemnation cases where municipal corporations, railroads and others, enjoying the right of eminent domain, seek to acquire an exclusive use of land or property which is made the subject-matter of the proceedings. There is one additional fact to be noted before considering the law applicable to the case. I’lie Callaway drain or sewer has thus far been constructed to a length of about 2,000 feet, and there still remains to be constructed in order to effect a junction with Gwynn’s Falls about 1,335 feet.

The contention of the City is, that it is liable for nominal compensation only. This is upon the theory that the Calla-way drains have a capacity more than sufficient to take care of the run-off from the area for which those drains were constructed and the run-off from the city’s drainage area combined. This position is unsound. In all such cases the measure of compensation is not merely the injury or damage done to the party whose property is so taken, but that together with the benefit accruing to the concern or corporation benefited thereby. Drainage Comrs. v. Knox, 237 Ill. 148; Sutherland on Damages, 3rd Ed., sec. 1064; Taylor v. Baltimore, 45 Md. 576. For this reason the action of the City Court was correct in refusing the first, second, third, *362 fourth, seventh and tenth prayers offered on behalf of the City.

In cases dealing with the condemnation of land, the usual basis of damages or compensation to be awarded is the market value of the property taken, with due allowance for the consequential damages, if any, .to the remainder, together with any special value which, the property may have for the purposes for which it is to be used, or for which it is susceptible of being used: Brack v. Baltimore, 125 Md. 378, and the cases there cited. But this rule is not applicable in its full force in a case like the present, where there is no exclusive and complete ownership or use to be acquired, as was well illustrated in Taylor v. Baltimore, 45 Md. 576 The term market value has, with regards to many kinds of property, a definite, well understood meaning, some of the essentials for which are lacking in the present case. The witness Whitman testifies to a number of contracts which he says were made, under which the run-off from particular lots or tracts of land, and inchiding the house sewage, into the Callaway drain, were provided for. But he testifies only as to the amounts charged, not as to any conditions or agreements which may have been embodied in the contracts, nor does he pretend to ■say that the contracts so testified to were all of the contracts which Avere made, nor were the contracts themselves produced in evidence. Those which Mr. Whitman does testify to show a wide range in the amount paid for the sewer connection. Thus the Lentz contract was for $2.25; the Bond and Williams, $2.50, and the Forest Park, $2.85 per front foot, while the BroAvn and Megarv contracts were $50, and the Biddle contract $75 per house, flat. The absence of anything approaching a uniform standard of value is further emphasized by Mr. Whitman, when, in an endeavor to reduce to a common basis, he testifies that the value of the City’s run-off of 59 cubic feet on the basis of the Lentz contract would be $14,800; the West Forest Park, $20,620; the Brown, $23,600; the Bond and Williams, $36,600; the Bid- *363 die, $37,500, and the Meg ary, $53,000, or if the amounts be taken on the basis of the computed run-off per cubic foot, the Lentz contract has a value of $250, the West Forest Park of $350; the Brown of $400; the Megary of $625, and the Biddle of $635. These several figures have been given, not as tending to establish the value of the compensation to be paid by the City, but as showing the inadequacy of the data, for even approximating the market value, or even showing that there is any basis which can be regarded as tending to show a market price. It may have been that the contracts testified to contained different stipulations and conditions, which may have been important factors in determining the price and so explaining, in some measure at least, the manifest inequalities; but, if so, they were not before the jury to aid it in reaching a proper conclusion, and certainly there is nothing before this Court from which it can be said with regard to the kind of interest to be taken under this proceeding, that there was any legally sufficient evidence of an established market price. The jury might take the sums agreed to he paid under these agreements, to be considered in connection with their own view of the property, and the other evidence, for what the jury might consider them worth, but not as a controlling factor or establishing a definite market price. For these reasons no error can be ascribed to the trial Court for its refusal to grant the fifth, eighth and ninth prayers offered on behalf of the City

No error is perceived in the action of the Court in the granting of the defendant’s first and third prayers, or in overruling the City’s special exception to the third prayer, for reasons already sufficiently indicated.

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Bluebook (online)
95 A. 33, 126 Md. 358, 1915 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-cc-of-balto-v-park-corp-md-1915.