Mayor of Baltimore v. Howard

6 H. & J. 383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 6 H. & J. 383 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Howard) 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. Howard, 6 H. & J. 383 (Md. 1824).

Opinion

Buchanan, Ch. J.

at this term, delivered the opinion of the court. This case difters essentially from the case of The Mayor, &c. of Baltimore, vs. Moore and Johnson, (ante 375.) In. that case the streets were . directed to be paved, and the taxes imposed by special ordinances passed for that purpose. And in this case the paving, For which the aiaouht of the tax sued for was imposed, was determined on by the city commissioners, under the audiority of the ordinance of the 9th of March 1807, “to appoint city Commissioners, and prescribing their duties;” and it is objected, on the part of the appellee, that no such authority could, under the charter, be conferred upon them, and therefore, that the ordinance itself is void, and the proceedings of the commissioners nugatory; which maíces it necessary to inquire into the powers of the corporation in that respect.

By the ninth section of tlie charter, (1796, ch. 68,) it is enacted, “that the powers and authority vested in the town commissioners, special commissioners, and port wardens, heretofore appointed by law for Baltimore-town, except the authority of the town commissioners to hold elections ágreeably tó the constitution and form of1’government, shall cease and determine as Soon as this act shall be in forcé and operation; and the corporation of the city of Baltimore are hereby declared to possess, and may provide for the exercise of all powers and authorities now vested in thé ’said town commissioners, special commissioners, and port wardens, except' the holding elections for delegates to the general assembly.5* Now, by the sixth section of the act of 1782, ch. 17, the special commissioners of Baltimore were, or a majority of them, directed ánd empowered “from time to time, as often ás theré might be occasion, to meet and consult together respecting what streets, or parts of streets, and what lanes or alleys, were to be paved;” <'°ntract for all the materials for the purpose, and fq [387]*387employ such aiid as many workmen as they should judge accessary,” &c. By that act unlimited discretionary power was. vested in the special commissioners of Baltimore, to determine what streets should be paved, &c. By. the ninth section of the charter, the corporation is authorised “to provide for the exercise” of the same power. Provide for the exercise, how? Why, if necessary, by some other person or persons, and not exclusively by themselves; the very conferring of - the power upon them, being of itself a provision for the exercise of it by them, and' rendering the express authority “to provide for.the exercise of them” unnecessary, if, by it the exercise of it by themselves is meant. The eighth section of the charter also gives “full power and authority to the corporation to, pass all ordinances necessary, to give effect and operation, to all the powers vested in them,.’?, which surely was suffient authority to them to pass any ordinances necessary to the exercise of the powers conferred by the ninth, section, no matter what these powers might he, The provision- of the mní/i-section» therefore, authorising the corporation to provide for the exercise of them, was wholly unnecessary, unless it. was intended to give them the. power to provide, for the exercise of, them by some other persons .or agents. The possessing a power, and. having authority.to exercise., a power, are one and the.same; and- the vesting in the. corporation all the, powers and authorities of the special; commissioners, was an ample provision by the legislature, for the exercise of-those,powers by the corporation, and. full authority, for'them, to do so. But “the giving a pow-, er,” and the giving authority, “to provide for the exercise., of a power,” are not.the same, but different — the authority to provide for the exercise..of a power., not being, the possession of the power itself, but a right,only tó confer it, or to authorise the exercise of it. Ip this case the intention of the legislature was not to authorise the corporation to, provide for the exercise of the powers of. the, special commissioners, by, passing ordinances giving.authority,to themselves to exercise .these powers, that authority being before fully vested, but having so clothed them with these powers, to give them the further power “to provide.for the exercise” of them, by their authorised agents, in such manner as in their judgment might be best. The exercise ofa power, and providing for the exercise of a power, are very [388]*388different things. The passing an ordinance directing any P^r^cu^r street to be' paved, would be an exercise by the corporation of the power and authority transferred to them from the special commissioners, to determine what streets, shall be paved. But the passing an, ordinance, as in this case, authorising the city commissioners to meet and determine what streets shall be paved, would be a, providing, ‘-‘for the exercise,” by the city commissioners, ofthatpower originally confined t.o,, the special'.commissioners. If-the corporation hag np. right “to provide fop the exercise,” by the city commissioners or others, of the powers formerly possessed by the special commissioners, that clause of the. ninth, section of the chapter, authorising.them “to provide, for the. exercise” of these powers,' is-perfectly -nugatory, since, without it they possessed all- the powers of the special commissioners, with authority to exercise, them themselves-, (which, is the same thing, there being no difference, between the power to, do a thing, and authority to exercise the power of doing it,) and- also in the 1 anguage of the eighth. section off the charter, “full power and authority to pass all ordinances necessary to give effect, and operation, to those, powers,” and ' consequently to' make any provision, by ordinance, necessary to, their due exercise of them. The words and meaning of one, part of a statute may sometimes lgad to and furnish an. explanation of the sense of-another; and; it is a rule in th„e exposition of statutes, that one part should- be taken with another, and-the whole be, considered, together,, and so construed.as that no, clause,sentence or word, shall if it can be.avoided, be superfluous, or insignificant. The clause in question,of,. th,e ninth section of-the chapter, was intended to have gome, meaning; tp construe it to, mean, that the. corporation shall have authority to provide, for thq, exercise by themselves only of the “powers and,authority” before confided in the.special commissioners, would be to render it superfluous, provision for the exercise, of them, by the, corporation, being before made by the same section, ip conferring upon the corporation all those powers and authorities; and also the right to; provide for the exercise, of them? by the general and full power and authority given to the corporation, by the eighth section, “to pass all ordinances necessary, to give effect and operation to all the powers vegted in them.” And it cannot be falten to have been used- without meaning, but was. [389]*389intended by the legislature to perform some oillcp, and by construing it to mean that the corporation may provide for the exercise of those powers by their authorised agents, or jn any manner best suited in their judgment to the end intended, it will be rendered neither superfluous, nor in.signiñean!, but a sensible effect and operation will he given to, it, not inconsistent with any of the. provisions of the charter. And other clauses of the, charter show that, to be the. sense in which it was used, by showing that it would be superfluous if dil&rently construed.

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Bluebook (online)
6 H. & J. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-howard-md-1824.