Mayor of Baltimore v. Flack

64 A. 702, 104 Md. 107, 1906 Md. LEXIS 164
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 4, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 64 A. 702 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Flack) 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. Flack, 64 A. 702, 104 Md. 107, 1906 Md. LEXIS 164 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1904 the General Assembly of Maryland adopted an Act known as Chapter 274. The title of that Act is in the words following:

“An Act to authorize the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to issue its certificate of stock to an amount not exceeding two million dollars for the purpose of providing the money to pay the costs and expenses of condemning, opening, grading, paving and curbing the streets, avenues, lanes and alleys of the annex portion of Baltimore City; and to authorize the appointment of a commission, to be known as the ‘Annex Improvement Commission,’ and to define the duties of said commission.'” Section one provides for the issue of certificates of city stock to the extent of two millions of dollars, out of the.proceeds of which are to be defrayed the costs and expenses incurred in “condemning, opening, grading, paving and curbing the streets, avenues, lanes and alleys of the annex portion of Baltimore City.” By section two the Mayor of Baltimore City is authorized to appoint four persons who with certain designated city officials were to constitute a commission to be known as the “Annex Improvement Commission,” and the duties of that commission, in so far as they concern the pending litigation, are defined in sections three, five and seven of the statute. Section three enacts, “That said Commission shall have the right and power to condemn, layout, open, extend, widen, straighten, close, grade and pave any street, avenue, lane, or alley or any part thereof, from curb to curb; and to establish and fix the building line and the width of the sidewalks on any street, avenue, lane or alley now existing or to be laid out, opened, extended, widened, *111 straightened, graded or paved in the annex portion of the city of Baltimore. That said commission shall have full powers necessary and proper in the exercise of said powers; and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore are hereby authorized and empowered to grant by ordinance any further powers and duties it shall deem necessary for the proper execution of the improvements intended to be made by this Act.” Section five constitutes the commission the agent of the Mayor and City Council for the acquisition of property required to open, widen * * * grade or pave any street; whilst section seven authorizes and empowers the commission to contract with any person, company or corporation for the work of opening, grading, curbing and paving the streets, avenues, lanes and alleys of the annex as intended by the Act, or to employ the necessary laborers, help and assistance, skilled and unskilled, and perform the work under their own supervision. Section ten, which is especially assailed in these proceedings, is in these words: “Provided, however, in lieu of said commission hereinbefore provided for in section 2 of this Act, the Mayor and City Council may by ordinance authorize and empower the Commissioners for Opening Streets of Baltimore City to perform the duties and functions in this bill heretofore provided for the said commission.”

This Act gives rise to some of the questions with which we are required to deal, and they will be stated and discussed later on.

In execution of the power conferred on the city by the above-mentioned Act of Assembly, the Mayor and City Council adopted an ordinance known as Ordinance No. 216, approved March 6th, 1905. By that ordinance sundry provisions were made, but we are concerned only with those contained in sections six and seven. By section six it was ordained by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore: “Pursuant to the powers conferred upon it by sec. 10 of ch. 274 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland in the year 1904, that the Commissioners for Opening Streets be and they are hereby authorized and empowered and directed, * * * ■ *112 to perform the duties and functions in said Act provided for the Annex Improvement Commission.” Section seven, amongst other things declares, “that in grading, paving and curbing streets, avenues, lanes, alleys, or parts therof * * * the proceedure of said Commissioners for Opening Streets shall be that now or hereafter prescribed by law in relation to the respective duties and powers of the same nature with which the City Engineer and other officers of the city are now respectively clothed.” These two sections of the ordinance are alleged to be invalid; and they give rise to some of the other questions involved.

Acting under ch. 274 and Ordinance 216 the Commissioners for Opening Streets advertised in the month of April, 1906, for separate sealed proposals to be addressed to the Board of Awards, to curb, gutter and pave with asphalt block, bitulithic or vitrified brick pavement, Twenty-fifth street from the York Turnpike Road to Oak street, in accordance with separate specifications, plans and profiles drawn for each of the three kinds of pavement, and then on file in the office of the Commissioners for Opening Streets. Twenty-fifth street is in the annex portion of Baltimore City. Bids were submitted by different parties for doing the work with each of the specified materials. When the bids were opened the bid of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company was rejected because it was not framed in accordance with the prescribed specifications, and thereupon the Commissioners for Opening Streets selected bitulithic as the material with which the paving was to be done; and then the Board of Awards awarded the contract to Warren Brothers Company at the price of two dollars and eighteen cents per square yard of bitulithic pavement, that being the lowest price bid on that material, although the lowest price bid on vitrified brick was two dollars and nine cents per square yard. The bid on the asphalt block pavement was two dollars and sixty-five cents per square yard. A contract was then entered into between the Warren Brothers Company and the city for the laying of a bitulithic pavement on the street named at the price bid. by that company. After

*113 the work under the contract had been commenced two bills in equity were filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City by certain taxpayers of the city to procure a decree annulling the contract which had been entered into, and to obtain an injunction restraining the city, its officers and agents and the Warren Brothers Company from proceeding to lay the pavement under the contract. Both of those bills attacked the constitutionality of the Act of 1904,' and assailed the validity of secs. 6 and 7 of Ordinance No. 216. The bills also, by way of an alternative ground of relief, asserted that under secs. 14. and 15 of the Charter of Baltimore City which will be fully stated later on (Act of 1898, ch. 123), the commissioners had no authority to put different paving materials in competition with each other and no power after the bids on those materials had been opened, to select one of those materials for the paving, unless they selected the one upon which the lowest price of all the prices submitted, was bid. The Circuit Court upheld the Act of 1904 and Ordinance 216 but decided that secs. 14 and 15. of the City Charter had not been complied with in awarding the contract, and, consequently, decreed that the contract with the Warren Brothers Company was invalid because their’s was not the lowest of all the submitted bids.

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

Related

State v. Holton
997 A.2d 828 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Ritchmount Partnership v. Board of Supervisors of Elections
388 A.2d 523 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1978)
Rofra, Inc. v. Board of Education
346 A.2d 458 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Hylton v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore
300 A.2d 656 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
Allied American Mutual Fire Insurance v. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles
150 A.2d 421 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1959)
Pressman v. D'Alesandro
69 A.2d 452 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1949)
Hitchins v. Mayor of Cumberland
8 A.2d 626 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Brutsche v. Coon Rapids
272 N.W. 624 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1937)
Vilbig Bros. v. City of Dallas
96 S.W.2d 229 (Texas Supreme Court, 1936)
Vilbig Bros. v. City of Dallas
91 S.W.2d 336 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1936)
Eckerle v. Ferris
1935 OK 1038 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Stoll v. Mayor of Baltimore
162 A. 267 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)
Brener v. Philadelphia
157 A. 466 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
George A. Fuller Co. v. Elderkin
154 A. 548 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1931)
Hoffman v. City of Muscatine
232 N.W. 430 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
Duncan v. Graham
4 Balt. C. Rep. 678 (Baltimore City Circuit Court, 1928)
Braun, Bryant & Austin v. McGuire
255 P. 808 (California Supreme Court, 1927)
Hodges v. City of Roswell
247 P. 310 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1926)
Litchfield v. City of Bridgeport
131 A. 560 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
De Neffe v. Duby
239 P. 109 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 702, 104 Md. 107, 1906 Md. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-flack-md-1906.