Mayor of Baltimore v. Gorter

48 A. 445, 93 Md. 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 48 A. 445 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Gorter) 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. Gorter, 48 A. 445, 93 Md. 1 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case brings before this Court for construction certain features of the present Charter of the City of Baltimore. This Charter is the scheme of municipal government provided for the City by the Act of Assembly of 1898, chapter 123. Prior to this Act, Article 4 of the Code of Public Local Laws, title, “City of Baltimore,” contained the body of laws which prescribed and regulated the powers possessed by the City for the purposes of its government as a public municipal corporation. The Constitution of the State, Article 11, recognizes the City as a municipality, and, for its purposes as such, provides for the constitution of a Mayor and Common Council as governing agencies. In section 7 of this Article the City is prohibited from creating any debt except under the conditions therein prescribed. “All laws and ordinances,” then in force applicable to the City, and “not inconsistent with this Article,” are continued in force “until changed in due course of law.” The Article then concludes with a section which is as follows : “The General Assembly may make such changes in this Article, except in section seventh thereof, as it may deem best; and this Article shall not be so construed, or taken, as to make the political corporation of Baltimore independent of, or free from the control which, the General Assembly of Maryland has over all such corporations in this State.” As respects constitutional restriction, therefore, our Legislature is *6 left free, with the single exception named, as to its control over the public Corporation whose powers are here the subject of judicial scrutiny—as much so as it is with respect to all corporations existing for like purposes in the State.

The full and ample powers possessed by the Legislature over public corporations created and existing as agencies of government have repeatedly been declared by judicial decision. The effect of these, it is believed, is well stated by Chief Justice LeGrand, in the course of his opinion in the case of Mayor & C. C. of Balto. v. State ex rel. of Board of Police, 15 Md. at page 491, where he says : “Under the Constitution of Maryland the City of Baltimore is recognized as a public corporation, established for public purposes, and in this character it is in no wise distinguished from that of the several counties; and except in so far as may be forbidden by the Constitution, like them it is liable to the control of the Legislature. Were this not so, civil government would be an impossibility, because of conflicting claims to the supreme power urged by the different geographical departments into which the State is separated. The power * * * which creates, can revise, modify, annihilate; it can change, not only the limit, but the nature of the power, and also the depository of it.”

We are not confronted in this case with any constitutional question. We understand the power of the Legislature as affecting any question we are to decide is not called in question ; and what has been said merely evolves the initial proposition lying at the base of the inquiry we are called upon to make. This is that in pursuing this inquiry the will of the Legislature, as it may be found expressed or as indicated by fair and proper inference, is to be the dominating factor in determining the meaning and effect of its work or any part of it, in conferring the chartered powers that the Court is called upon to construe. In construing these powers and determining their extent and effect, reference must be had not only to the grant of power, but to the restrictions and limitations that may be found imposed upon its exercise; for the restrictions and limitations imposed are as much the expression of the legislative *7 will as is the grant of power. The power actually possessed, however general the terms in which it may be granted, standing alone, may be, is that which will appear when read in the light of, and subjected to, the limitations intended to abridge and control it. These general observations express the rule by which the powers of the corporation are to be construed when it is considered in its aggregate capacity. The rule applies with the same force in the construction of power conferred upon any one of its constituent parts or upon any of the agencies provided for the execution of its purposes.

The Charter in question, provided by the Act of 1898, creates “ The inhabitants of the City of Baltimore,” a corporation, “ by the name of the ‘Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.’ ” In section 6 of the Charter, “The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore” are clothed with numerous powers—among them the power “to levy annually upon the assessable property of the City, by direct tax, with full power to provide by ordinance for collection of the same, such sum of money as may be necessary, in its judgment, for the purpose of defraying the expenses of said city over and exclusive of all expenses, charges and sums of money which it is, or shall be, required by law to collect for other purposes subject to the provisions and limitations herein contained.” This power is conferred upon the corporation as a whole, and not upon anyone constituent part or any department thereof; and it is to be exercised by the corporation acting through all the corporate agencies that under the law of its being are concerned with duties in regard to it. It was in the attempted exercise of this power that the conditions transpired out of which arise the questions now presented for determination here. These conditions are due to the conflicting claims as to their respective powers and duties in respect to levying the necessary taxes for the purposes indicated in the quotation from section 6 of the Charter, between the Department of the City government denominated in the Charter as the City Council and the body denominated therein as “The Board of Estimates.” This brings us to an inquiry into these respective powers and duties. The Charter *8 provides that the Legislative Department of the City government “shall be vested in the City Council which shall consist of two branches, one of which shall be the First Branch, and the other the Second Branch.” . It then provides for the election of the respective branches by the people and for their organization into legislative bodies, (secs. 209 to 222 inclusive of the Charter.) Section 218 provides that “The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore shall have power to pass all ordinances necessary to give effect and operation to all powers vested in the Corporation of the City of Baltimore.” It may be conceded that the City Council, being the Department of the City government nearest to the source of power, was intended -to be the chief depository of power ; yet, as has been seen, this power must be taken as subject to the limitations and restrictions imposed by the law which brings the corporation of which it is but an agency, into being. Its chief function is municipal legislation in the way of passing ordinances for the various purposes of municipal government. It appears, however, from section 218 just quoted, that the power to pass ordinances is not the function of the City Council as a separate and distinct department of the City government, but it is the corporation “ The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore” that “shall have power to pass all ordinances,” &c.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 445, 93 Md. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-gorter-md-1901.