Mayor of Baltimore v. Hettleman

37 A.2d 335, 183 Md. 204, 1944 Md. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 3, 1944
Docket[No. 2, April Term, 1944.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 335 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Hettleman) 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. Hettleman, 37 A.2d 335, 183 Md. 204, 1944 Md. LEXIS 152 (Md. 1944).

Opinion

Grason, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court!

On May 14, 1926, Ordinance No. 664 was passed'by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore. At that tibie Russell Street, from Stockholm Street to Maryland Avenue, was sixty-six feet wide.’ This ordinance provided for the widening of Russell Street, on the west side thereof, thirty-four feet, from Stockholm Street to Maryland Avenue, in Westport, an approximate distance of;.6.0Q0 feet, making Russell Street, between these two streets, one hundred feet wide. The Commissioners for Opening Streets .proceeded under this ordinance, prepared, a plat showing the properties affected, awarded, compensation to property holders for damages resulting from the baking of their property for that purpose,, and assessed, benefits to properties that, would be benefitted by the widening of Russell Street.

The appellees’ property shown' on the plat prepared by the. Commissioners is Lot No.. 109 .and the benefits resulting to this lot by the widening of Russell:. Street were assessed by the Commissioners to be $220. This lot is located on Warner Street, between Alluvian Street on the-north and Wooster Street on the south, as shown by the plat exhibited, and Warner Street is one block east of Russell Street. From the intersection of Alluvian and Russell Streets to Stockholm Street is a distance of 270.76 feet. The proceedings by the Commissioners were finally completed and a certification of the same duly made on the 9th day of October, 1930. Russell Street was widened under this ordinance from 66 feet to 100 feet, from Maryland Avenue to Bush Street, a distance of approximately 3580 feet, and from Bush Street- to *207 Stockholm Street, a distance of 1700 feet, it has not been widened. It thus appears that for nearly one-third of the distance ■ within which Russell Street was to be widened under this ordinance Russell Street remains only S@ feet wide,, or the same width it was before, the passage of the ordinance. It appears that for twelve years before the filing of the Amended Bill of Complaint in this case (now. going on fourteen years) no part of Russell Street from Stockholm Street to Bush Street has been physically widened as provided in this ordinance. .

On July 29, 1930, the Mayor and City Council passed Ordinance No. 1123. The title to this ordinance is, as follows :

“An ordinance to condemn and close in two parts, 34 feet of Russell Street as condemned and opened under Ordinance No. 664, approved May 14, 1926, along the northwest side thereof, from Bayard Street southwesterly 210 feet, in accordance with a plat thereof filed- in the Office of the Commissioners for Opening Streets, on the twenty-eighth (28th) day of May, 1930, and now on file in said Office.”. . .

Section two of this ordinance provides;

“That when said highway shall be closed under, the provisions of this Ordinance, all subsurface structure's and appurtenances now owned by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, shall be and continue to. be the property of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore in fee simple, and In the event that any person, firm or corporation shall desire to remove, alter or interfere therewith, such person, firm or corporation shall first obtain permission and permits therefor from the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and shall in the application for such permission and permits agree to pay all costs and charges of every kind and nature made necessary by such removal, alteration or interference.”

Section three of said ordinance provides :

“That no structure or structures of any kind shall be constructed or erected in said portion of said highway *208 after the same shall have been closed until the subsurface structures and appurtenances shall have been removed and relaid in accordance with the specifications and under the direction of the Highways Engineer of Baltimore City and at the expense of the person or persons or body corporate desiring to erect such structure or structures.”

On October 20, 1932, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore passed Ordinance No. 291. The title to this ordinance is:

“An ordinance to condemn and close a portion, 34 feet wide, of Russell Street as condemned and opened under ordinance No. 664, approved May 14, 1926, along the northwest side thereof from Alluvian Street northeasterly 270.76 feet, in accordance with a plat thereof filed in the Office of the Commissioners for Opening Streets, on the Twenty-fourth (24th) day of September, 1931, and now on file in said office.”

Sections two and three of this ordinance are the same as sections two and three of Ordinance No. 1123.

In the Amended Bill of Complaint all of the facts above stated are averred and in addition thereto it is charged that by reason of the closing of Russell Street by the ordinances mentioned, from Stockholm Street to Bush Street, Russell Street cannot be widened as provided in Ordinance No. 664 unless and until ordinances are passed opening and widening Russell Street to the extent that the same was closed under the above ordinances ; that no ordinances have been passed or are pending for the opening and widening of these portions of Russell Street which were closed by the ordinances above named. It is further charged that no appropriations have been made by the City and no appropriations are pending to defray the costs of the physical widening of Russell Street from Stockholm Street to Bush Street, as provided in Ordinance No. 664. It is further charged that Russell Street, from Bush Street to Maryland Avenuej has been physically widened as provided in Ordinance No. 664 and that such physical widening has re- *209 suited in no benefit whatsoever .to the property of the complainants; that the abandonment of the widening of Russell Street from Stockholm Street to Bush Street has deprived the property of the complainants of all benefits which would have inured to it had Russell Street been physically widened as provided for in Ordinance No.- 664. It is charged, notwithstanding. the property of • the complainants ■ has derived no benefits from the partial widening of Russell Street, the City has asserted said assessments for benefits is a valid lien .against the property of the plaintiffs and bears interest from December 27, 1930; that the City has, from time to time, threatened to enforce said lien by the sale of said property. ' It is averred the lien so asserted constitutes a cloud on the title of the complainants’ property and the complainants have no adequate remedy at law. The Amended Bill prays:

1. '• That defendant may be declared to have abandoned the widening of Russell Street from Stockholm Street to Bush Street, as contemplated under the provisions of said- Ordinance No. 664.

2: That the assessment of benefits against the property of your complainants arising out of the proposed widening of Russell Street as provided under-the provisions of Ordinance No. 664 and the lien thereof against said: property, may be declared-null and void and of no effect; And

■3. A prayer for' general relief.

To this Bill the City demurred, which the Court overruled and the appellant appealed therefrom. Two questions áre raised by the appellant in its brief: 1.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 335, 183 Md. 204, 1944 Md. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-hettleman-md-1944.