Mayor of Baltimore v. Gail

68 A. 282, 106 Md. 684, 1907 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 A. 282 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Gail) 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. Gail, 68 A. 282, 106 Md. 684, 1907 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Burke J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees, as trustees under the will of George W. Gail, deceased, are the owners of two lots of ground situated within the territory annexed to Baltimore City under the Act of 1888, chapter 98. These lots will be designated in this opinion as Lot No. 1 and Lot No. 2. Lot No. 1 fronts about 600 feet on Eutaw place; 300 feet on Whitelock street; about 600 feet on Linden avenue, and 300 feet on Ducatel street. It is improved by two dwellings; a stable and carriage house combined; a green house for the culture of flowers, and a chicken house for raising chickens. The lot is not divided by either streets or alleys opened, or unopened, and about one-third of the lot is used as a vegetable garden, and a large part of the remainder is set out in shade and fruit trees and shrubbery. This property was the residence of the late Mr. Gail, and is in precisely the same condition now as it was at the time of the adoption of the annexation act, except that a conservatory has since been added. The streets surrounding this property are public highways of the city, paved, graded and curbed, except Linden avenue which is not entirely paved between Ducatel street and Whitelock street. It is located in a residential section, and the whole neighborhood immediately surrounding it is well built up and well improved. The property has the advantage of lighted streets at the expense of the city, and of police and fire protection, and is supplied with water furnished by the city, which must, however, be paid for by those who use it.

Lot No. 2 fronts on Eutaw place, and is wholly unimproved. It runs back from Eutaw place to Jordan alley. It has no street or alley bounding it on its south-eastern side, and on its north-west side it is contiguous to a large parcel of land, called Cloverdale, containing about 28 acres, and there is no physical boundary separating the two properties. Lot No. 2 is in the same condition now as it was when the Act of 1888 became operative.

*686 Down to, and including, the year 1906, both lots have been taxed for municipal purposes at the sixty-cent rate. But the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City, after due notice to the owners, listed, or classified the property at the full city rate for the year 1907. They determined that under section 19 of the Act of 1888, ch. 98, as amended by the Act of 1902, ch. •130, both lots were subject to the full city rate of taxation, and thereupon the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore levied taxes for municipal purposes upon these lots for the year 1907 at the rate of one dollar and ninety-seven and a half cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed value thereof — that being the full city rate for that year. The bill in this case was then filed, and the relief prayed for was two-fold; first, for a mandatory injunction directing the defendant to vacate said tax rolls to the extent that said property is taxed thereon for municipal purposes for the year 1907 at a greater rate than sixty cents on the one hundred dollars of its assessed value; second, for an injunction enjoining and restaining the defendant from collecting or attempting to collect taxes for municipal purposes for the year 1907 on said lots at a greater rate than sixty cents on the one hundred dollars on the assessed value thereof. The lower Court, after hearing, passed a decree enjoining and directing the defendants to vacate upon its tax rolls the taxes levied upon the two parcels of land, for municipal purposes for the year 1907, in excess of the rate of sixty cents upon the one hundred dollars of the assessed value thereof; and enjoining and strictly prohibiting the defendant, its officers, agents and attorneys from collecting, or attempting to collect taxes thereon for municipal purposes for the year 1907 at a greater rate than sixty cents on the one hundred dollars of their assessed value. From this decree the city has appealed.

The Acts above mentioned have been considered by this Court in a number of cases, but in none of them has the Court evinced the slightest purpose to weaken the force, or narrow the scope of their provisions. In all cases to which they are applicable both the city and the taxpayers of the annex will be *687 held to a compliance with their requirements. The Act of 1888, ch. 98, as amended by the Act of 1902, ch. 130, prescribes the conditions under which the full city rate may be imposed, and it can only be imposed upon the conditions therein expressed. . It would be not only a hardship upon the taxpayer of the annex to impose that rate upon other and different conditions, but to do so would be an unwarranted exercise of the taxing power by the city.

Section 19 of the Act of 1888, ch. 98, declares: “That from and after the year 1900, the property, real and personal, in the territory so annexed, shall be liable to taxation therefor, in the same manner and form as similar property within thé present limits of said city may be liable.” The word similar, as used in this clause of the section, does not refer to property improved in any particular way, or located in any particular locality in the city. It has reference to real and personal property within the then limits of the city, and had there been no proviso added to this section the clause quoted would have indicated clearly the intention of the Legislature to be that after the year 1900 all property in the annex, real and personal, should be liable to taxation at the full city rate in the same manner and form as other real and personal property in the city. As a great part of the land annexed was vacant, unimproved, rural property, it would have been unjust to have subjected it to the payment of the full city rate, and accordingly the following proviso was incorporated in section 19: “Provided, however, that after the year 1900 the present Baltimore County rate of taxation shall not be increased for city purposes on any landed property within the said territory until avenues, streets or alleys shall have been opened and constructed through the same, nor until there shall be upon every block of ground so to be formed at least six (6) dwellings, or store houses ready for occupation. ”

The validity of this partial exemption was sustained by this Court in Daly v. Morgan, 69 Md. 460, in which the object of this proviso, as well as the kind of property to which it applied, were stated by Judgk Robinson: “The larger part of *688 the territory annexed under the Act of 1888, embraces vacant outlying lots and farming lands, and the plainest principles of justice would seem to require a qualified exemption of such property for a limited period at least, from the heavy burden of city taxation. It must be some time before such property-can be available for building or business purposes, or can enjoy the full benefits and privileges of the city government. And if local taxation is founded on, or in any manner qualified by, the principles of local benefits, there ought to be in all fairness some apportionment in the rate of taxation between such property, and property more advantageously located.”

What was the meaning of landed property, as that term was employed in the Act of 1888, and what were the exact conditions under which the full city rate might be imposed were more certainly defined and specifically stated in the case of Sindall v. Baltimore City,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 282, 106 Md. 684, 1907 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-gail-md-1907.