Mayor of Baltimore v. Board of Health

115 A. 43, 139 Md. 210, 1921 Md. LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 115 A. 43 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Board of Health) 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 of Baltimore v. Board of Health, 115 A. 43, 139 Md. 210, 1921 Md. LEXIS 158 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J..

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This i • an appeal from a do.too of the Circuit Court for Baltimore- County overruling demurrers to a hill in equity, and directing- the issuance of an injunction against the Mayor and City County of Baltimore and William F. Iluso, a resi *212 dent of Baltimore City. The plaintiffs are the Board of County Commissioners of Baltimore County and ex officio the Board of Health for that county, in which last named capacity the bill was filed. It alleges that “the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore and AVilliam F. Huse have entered into a contract whereby for a period of ninety days from January 5th, 1921, or thereabouts (the exact date not being known to the plaintiffs) all garbage collected in the City of Baltimore will be loaded on scows and said scows hauled or towed to Huse’s wharves on Bear Creek in Baltimore County, where said garbage will be unloaded” — the city having reserved the right to terminate the contract on fifteen days’ notice. It is further alleged that the garbage “is the refuse from the kitchens of Baltimore City and consists of animal and vegetable matter in various stages of decay and putre-faction”; that the garbage to be collected and sent by scows to the wharves under- said ocntract will average at least 128 tons per -day, or a total during the ninety days of at least 1.1,520 tons; that the said Huse has not any means or machinery whatsoever for the scientific or other reduction of said garbage or for its sanitary disposal, and that this fact was well known, to the city at the time of entering into the contract; that “it is proposed by the said Huse, with the assent of the said Mayor and City Council to spread said garbage or to sell as much as he can for spreading, over the territory and land of Baltimore County, adjacent and near his said wharves for fertilizer purposes.”

It is also alleged that the said wharves are well within nine miles'from Lazaretto Lighthouse on the P’atapsco River, and are located about two miles from the eastern city limits of Baltimore and about two and a half miles from the village of Dundalk and about the- same distance from the village of Sparrows Point; that Dundalk is an unincorporated village in Baltimore County of a population of approximately fifteen hundred, is a modern town with concrete. streets and public water and sewerage systems; that Sparrows Point is *213 an unincorporated village in said county, having a population of approximately ten thousand, with improved streets and sewerage system; that about the wharves are small and large truck farms, shore-houses and bungalows; that the small village in Baltimore County known as Edgemere is less than two miles away and near said wharves are modern and improved highways, much frequented by the public.

It is further alleged that in the summer time especially,, and during the colder weather also, many persons, men, women and children, visit the numerous shores and private pleasure resorts along Bear Greek and other creeks making off from it and the Patapsco River in the vicinity of these wharves, and the wharves and the farm lands adjacent and near them, over which it is proposed to spread the garbage, are not isolated, but, are in a more or less thickly settled, thriving and prosperous community, close to several villages in Baltimore County and various shore properties and private pleasure resorts.

Strong allegations are made in considerable detail as to the effect that the garbage will have on the comfort and health of the people, some of which will he referred to later, hut the substance of them is, that it will result in being a great nuisance, likely to produce diseases, and causing great discomfort.

The two defendants filed separate but similar demurrers to the bill. The first reason assigned is that it appears on the face of the bill that neither of the defendants is resident of Baltimore County, and no facts arc shown which give the court jurisdiction over them.

In the case of Baltimore City v. Sackett, 135 Md. 56, the plaintiffs were property owners and residents of Anne Arundel County and the defendants were non-residents of that county. The object of that bill was to restrain the defendants by injunction from disposing of the garbage from the City of Baltimore on a farm known as the Jubb farm, owned by the city in Anne Arundel County. The demurrer to the- *214 bill by the city was substantially the same as in this case, and, as here, the demurrers of the other defendants were similar, and the case came before us on an appeal from an order overruling them. It was averred in that bill that the removal and transporting' by the city to the Jubb farm of the garbage of the city, and then causing it to be reduced in a temporary reduction plant, or fed to pigs, would result in a nuisance and destroy the value of property holdings in that section, and render the property unmarketable, etc. It was there held by us that “the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County had jurisdiction to1 entertain a bill for an injunction to restrain a nuisance, or a threatened nuisance, directly affecting property in that county, although the defendants are non-residents of the county.”

While that case differs from this in tire fact that there were property rights of the plaintiffs involved, which under the authorities established the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, it would seem to be an illogical distinction to make, to hold that, although a court of equity could give relief by injunction to property owners whose property is or may be affected by a nuisance, it cannot give it to a public body seeking to protect and guard the public health from a nuisance committed, or about to be committed, within the jurisdiction of that court. It is true that an injunction operates in personam, but it did in the Sackett Case, and the jurisdiction was sustained — not because it was a proceeding in rem, but because1 the res which the alleged nuisance would affect was within the jurisdiction of the court, and entitled to the protection of that court. Can it be said that the health of the community is of less importance and should not have as much protection as the property of its residents ? In addition to the many provisions intended to preserve and protect the health of the people, as found in article 43 of the Code of Public General Laws, and the amendments thereto, article 3 of the Code of Public Local Laws, entitled “Baltimore County,” has nearly fifty sections *215 under the sub-title “Health and Sanitation.” Section 217 of the latter provides that the Board of County Commissioners of .Baltimore County shall ex officio constitute a local board of health for that county, and large and important powers are conferred on it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Bowie v. Board of County Commissioners
271 A.2d 657 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1970)
Myers v. City of Hagerstown
135 A.2d 147 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 A. 43, 139 Md. 210, 1921 Md. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-board-of-health-md-1921.