Mayor of Baltimore v. Hampton Court Co.

94 A. 1018, 126 Md. 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 A. 1018 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Hampton Court Co.) 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. Hampton Court Co., 94 A. 1018, 126 Md. 341 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Stockbridgé, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question presented in this case is the power of the Board of Estimates of the City of Baltimore by making an inadequate provision in the ordinance of estimates to render impossible in part the performance of a duty imposed by ordinance upon one of the departments of the 'City government.

As the result of a large number of successive ordinances, the history of which it is not necessary to repeat in detail, the duty is imposed upon the Commissioner of Street Cleaning of removing offal, coal and other ashes, and the collection and removal of “garbage, street and household refuse from the dwellings and other places in the City of Baltimore,” and also ice and snow from the gutters and street crossings, and from the front of the public schools, public buildings, bridges and public wharves belonging to the City, and the footways of the City springs and public squares. Baltimore City Code, 1893, Art. 48, secs. 187-8.

The terms in which this duty is placed upon the Commissioner of Street Cleaning are such as to make its discharge mandatory in character, under the uniform principles of construction frequently declared by this Court. For the purpose of performing this duty the Board of Estimates, in the preparation of the ordinance of estimates, has ever since the *344 creation of that board included an appropriation for the purposes enumerated. The amounts of those appropriations for a number of successive years are alleged in the supplemental bill of complaint, and practically admitted by the answers, in have' been as follows:

“To the Commissioner of Street Cleaning:

Removal of Garbage:—

1910. 1911. 1912. 1913. 1914.

$ 60,500. $ 62,500. $ 64,500.00 $ 66,500.00 $ 68,500.00

Collection of Ashes and Garbage:

$185,000. $210,000. $216,954.22 $227,483.22 $227,483.22”

It further appears in the evidence that in the ordinance of estimates for' the year 1915 appears an item for the “collection of garbage $227,483.22,” and it is further testified that this is the same appropriation as that made in the years 1913 and 1914, for the collection of ashes and garbage; Whether there was any appropriation for the year 1915 separate and distinct for the removal of garbage,' corresponding to the appropriation made of $66,500, in 1913, and $68,500 in 1Q14, does not clearly appear. -It will thus be observed that notwithstanding the steady growth in population of Baltimore, and the increased number of dwellings erected from year to year, the appropriation for the “collection of ashes and garbage” has remained constant at $227,-483.22 for the years 1913, 1914 and 1915. That the appropriations made for 1913 and 1914 were adequate for the purpose, and more than adequate, appears from the fact that at the end of 1913 there was covered back into the City Treasury an unexpended .balance of the appropriation, of $6,-368.45, and for the year 1914. a like surplus of $1,906.81; while from all the appropriations made for the work of the Commissioner of Street Cleaning, there was covered into the City Treasury unexpended balances, and sums received for work done, amounting in the aggregate to approximately $70,000.

*345 For sometime prior to the month of June, 1913, under the construction placed upon the ordinances, the Commissioner of Street Cleaning had removed at the City’s expense, the ashes and garbage and household refuse from the dwellings in said City, from the apartment houses and from a portion of the hotels. Under date of June 5th, 1913, a communication was sent to the Commissioner of Street Cleaning by the Board of Estimates which reads as follows:

“Commissioner of Street Cleaning:
“Dear Sir—The Board of Estimates at a special meeting, June 5th, again considered the question of removing ashes from buildings, and adopted the following ruling: Houses not more than four stories in height and not having an elevator, used for dwelling purposes, even though they may be occupied by more than one family, should be classed as dwellings, and the Commissioner of Street Cleaning should take the ashes therefrom. Houses more than four stories in height, used for dwelling purposes, occupied by more than one family, should be classed as apartment houses. The Board directs that you be governed accordingly.”

This letter or “ruling” was very ingeniously worded; it did not in terms direct the Commissioner of Street Cleaning to cease removing ashes from hotels, apartment houses, office buildings or other large buildings in the City of Baltimore, but merely to give a definition of “dwellings.” It was evidently intended, however, to be interpreted by the Commissioner of Street Cleaning in connection with section 188 of Article 48 of the Baltimore City Code, 1893, which made it the duty of the Commissioner of Street Cleaning to remove the “coal or other ashes from the dwellings and other places.” Acting upon this communication, the Commissioner of Street Cleaning discontinued and refused to remove ashes from certain apartment houses, from which he had theretofore been collecting and removing the same. The present bill is filed for a prohibitive injunction against the Commissioner *346 of Street Cleaning to enjoin him from refusing to remove such ashes, and for a - mandatory injunction requiring him so to remove them; also, for a prohibitive injunction against the Board of Estimates to restrain them from interfering with the Commissioner of Street Cleaning in the performance of a duty prescribed for him by ordinance.

While quite a number of actual or possible aspects of the case were argued before this Court, it is only necessary to consider one or two of them in order to reach a conclusion. Apparently it was the idea of the law officers of the City, that the adoption of the Charter, Chapter 123 of the Acts of 1898, by the large powers of control over the finances of the City which had been vested in the Board of Estimates, enabled that body indirectly to repeal or nullify antecedent ordinances of the Mayor and City Council. In Baltimore v. Gorter, 93 Md. 1, this Court fully reviewed the scheme contained in the City Charter for the administration of the City’s finances, which renders it unnecessary at this time to repeat them in detail. But in Bostock v. Sams, 95 Md. 400, this Court had to deal directly with the effect of the adoption of the Charter, on ordinances existing at the time of such adoption, and it was then said that the provisions of the Act of 1898 had “no reference to validating invalid ordinances and was not intended to have such operation- and effect. It was merely intended to preserve the municipal statutes as to all laws and ordinances that might be in force at the date of the adoption of the Charter and to continue them in force in the passing of the corporation from the control of the old Charter to that of the new with the same effect and no more as if the change in the charter had not been made.”

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Related

Mayor of Baltimore v. Eagers
173 A. 56 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Massolini v. Driscoll
159 A. 480 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
State v. Brown
119 A. 684 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1922)
Mayor of Baltimore v. Hampton Court Co.
113 A. 850 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1921)
Hampton Court Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore
4 Balt. C. Rep. 79 (Baltimore City Circuit Court, 1920)
Consolidated Apartment House Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore
102 A. 920 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A. 1018, 126 Md. 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-hampton-court-co-md-1915.