Mayor of Baltimore v. Gahan

64 A. 716, 104 Md. 145, 1906 Md. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 4, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 64 A. 716 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Gahan) 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. Gahan, 64 A. 716, 104 Md. 145, 1906 Md. LEXIS 165 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On June 15th, 1906, Ordinance No. 150 adopted by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore was approved. It is *147 known as the Bruce-Fendall ordinance. By its first section it provided for the paving of nineteen designated streets of the city, no one of which is situated in the annex. Seven were directed to be paved with prepared wood blocks, two, with asphalt blocks, one with Belgian blocks and nine with sheet asphalt, asphalt blocks or bitulithic, as under sec. j, might be determined by the Mayor, the President of the Second Branch of the City Council, the Comptroller, the City Register, and the City Solicitor, after the bids had been submitted and opened. All of this paving was required to be done in accordance with specifications to be prepared by the City Engineer, who was directed to advertise for proposals for performing the work on each of the named streets or parts of streets. By the fourth section it was ordained that if the bids for doing the work on any of the nine streets for which the paving material is prescribed by the first section in the alternative, shall in the judgment of the Board of Awards, be excessive, and if the board shall reject all the alternative bids, the City Engineer should do the paving with vitrified bricks; and if the bids for doing the work on the streets required to be paved with treated wood blocks, shall, in the judgment of the board, be excessive and shall be rejected by the board, then the City Engineer should pave those streets with treated wood blocks by day labor. By section five the whole cost of paving the.nineteen streets was limited to $214,500. Pursuant to this ordinance the City Engineer prepared and issued specifications for the laying of asphalt block, sheet asphalt and bitulithic pavements on Woodbrook avenue and on each of the other nine streets required to be paved with one of the three materials thus named in the alternative; each set of those specifications was complete and definite in itself, and each furnished the bidders on the respective materials to be used, with a common basis or standard upon which to submit their bids as to each of said kinds of pavements. The specifications are entirely different from each other and call respectively for pavements which are wholly dissimilar except in so far as they are all composition pavements. On the same day on which the ordi *148 nance was ápproved the City Engineer duly advertised that sealed proposals would be received until eleven A. M. of June 27th, to grade, curb and pave with-sheet asphalt, asphalt blocks or bitúlithic the nine streets required by the first section'of Ordinance 150 to be paved with such one of the three designated materials as the board named in the third section, might select. Woodbrook avenue is one of those nine streets, and when the bids referring to it were opened it was found that there were two bids on asphalt blocks, four on sheet asphalt, and two on bitúlithic. The lowest bid on the first named article was two dollars and ten cents, on the second it was one dollar and eighty-four cents, and on the third it was two dollars and fifteen cents per square yard. The board then selected asphalt blocks as the material with which to pave Woodbrook avenue and awarded the contract to the Maryland Pavement Company, its bid being lower than the' only other bid on the same material, but being higher than any of the bids on sheet asphalt. Two days later William H. Gahan, a taxpayer in the city filed a bill in 'equity in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City against the city and the successful bidder assailing Ordinance No. 150 as null and void and the proceedings taken thereunder as unlawful because, first, the ordinance attempts to delegate to the Mayor, the President of the.Second Branch of the City Council, the City Solicitor, the City Comptroller and the City Register, or a majority of them, the power to select which one of the alternative kinds of materials specified in the ordinance should be used in the paving of the nine streets named therein, which power, it is averred, can only be exercised lawfully by the Mayor and City Council acting in its legislative capacity by an ordinance duly passed and approved specifically prescribing the material with which the streets shall be paved. Secondly, because by the process of bidding on alternative materials secs. 14 and 15 of the charter were violated. And thirdly, because the fourth section of the ordinance requires the City Engineer, if all the alternative bids are rejected, to pave the streets with vitrified bricks by day labor; which provision is also alleged to be con- *149 trary to the same sections of the charter. An injunction to restrain the execution of the contract and to prohibit the doing of the work was prayed for. The city and the Maryland Pavement Company both demurred to the bill of complaint. The demurrers were overruled, and the defendants declining to answer, an injunction issued in accordance with the prayer of the bill. From that order this appeal was taken and the case was argued on August the eighth during a special session of this Court convened to hear this and the two preceding paving cases. On the ninth of August a decree was signed reversing the decretal order appealed against, and we now proceed to give our reasons in support of that action.

As the second of the three grounds upon which the BruceFendall ordinance is attacked is precisely the same proposition that we have just fully and at length considered in the case of Mayor, &c., Balto. v. Flack et al., we need say nothing further in regard to it than that for the reasons given in that case, it cannot be sustained in this; and we pass at once to the other grounds above indicated; and both of them, it seems to us, are founded upon a misconception of the meaning and effect of the ordinance.

Does the Bruce-Fendall ordinance delegate to the Board of Awards legislative authority which can only be lawfully exercised directly by the Mayor and City Council itself by ordinance? The Act of 1904, ch. 274, which was construed in the preceding cases has nothing to do with the question, since that Act relates solely to streets in the annex portion of the city and to the two million dollars loan with the avails of which those streets were to be paved; whilst the nine streets including Woodbrook avenue, designated in the first section of the ordinance now before us as those in respect to which alternative bids are to be and were asked for, are not within the annex, and the paving of them is to be paid for out of the two hundred and fourteen thousand and five hundred dollars included in the levy of 1906 made for that special purpose. Hence the charter of the city, and not the Act of 1904, must be looked to for the data needed to furnish ah answer to the *150 question. By sec. 6 of the City Charter, sub-division entitled “Streets, Bridges and Highways,” the Mayor and City Council are empowered “to provide by ordinance for grading, shelling, graveling, paving and curbing * * * of any lane, street or alley in said city.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A. 716, 104 Md. 145, 1906 Md. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-gahan-md-1906.