Mayor of Baltimore v. Latrobe

61 A. 203, 101 Md. 621
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 61 A. 203 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Latrobe) 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. Latrobe, 61 A. 203, 101 Md. 621 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are two appeals in this record—the one being by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. Ferdinand C. Latrobe et al., Trustees, and the other a cross-appeal by those trustees from the rulings of the Baltimore City Court. Under and by virtue of an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, passed in pursuance of an Act of the General Assem-, bly of Maryland, being ch. 87 of the Laws of 1904, what is known as “The Burnt District Commission” was authorized to acquire for the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, by various methods named in the Act, including that by condemnation, the necessary property for the purposes mentioned —one being to open public squares. Provision is made for notice to those assessed for benefits or to whom damages are *626 awarded in the condemnation proceedings, and the right of appeal to the Baltimore City Court is given, where the right of a jury trial is secured, and “the damages and benefits assessed by the commission to the' appellant shall be open for review and correction by the said City Court.” The statute further provides for an appeal to this Court. Amongst other improvements proposed is a plaza along St. Paul street from Lexington to Fayette streets. Included in that territory is a lot fronting 28 feet on St. Paul street, and having a depth of 123 feet, in which the trustees have an irredeemable ground rent of $300 per annum, which we understand from the statements of counsel to be for 99 years, renewable forever, on the terms usual in such leases in the city of Baltimore and elsewhere in this State, although we do not find it so stated in the record. The Burnt District Commission condemned 28x90 feet of that lot, leaving in the rear of it 28x33 feet- It awarded to the trustees the sum of $8,000 and provided that the ground rent be reduced to the extent of $24o, leaving a rent of $60 per annum on the portion of the lot not taken. The city took an appeal and the case was submitted to the Court, without the. intervention of a jury, and it found that the trustees, as owners of the ground rent, were damaged to the amount of $2,500 by being restricted to the collection of the rent to the lot of 28x33 feet—that amount being the damage to the market value of their ground rent. The city offered three prayers and the trustees one. The first of the city asked the Court to declare that as the undisputed evidence shows that the lot of 28x33 feet is ample security for the $500 ground rent, the trustees are not entitled to recover any compensation. The second asked it to declare' that the $300 rent continues upon the lot 28x33 feet and the owners were not entitled to compensation, and the third that if the Court, sitting as a jury, should find that the rent of $300 is fully secured by the lot of 28x33 feet, the trustees are not entitled to any compensation. That of the trustees asked the Court to say that in estimating the damages to them the Court, sitting as a jury, was to bear in mind that the ground rent would be reduced *627 from $300 to $60, and that the rent of $60 would be confined to the portion of the lot not taken by the city. The Court rejected all of the prayers and each party entered an appeal to this Court.

The record does not show whether the interest of the owner of the leasehold was included in the same proceeding as this, as would seem to be proper in order that their respective rights should be properly determined and adjusted, but since the argument a petition was filed in this Court by James A. Whitcomb, which alleges he is the owner of the leasehold interest and asks the privilege of filing a brief. From what is stated in that petition we infer that the proceeding was against the trustees and the owner of the leasehold interest. The latter took an appeal from the award of the commission to the Baltimore City Court, and then removed it to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Maryland. According to the allegations of the petition, an appeal has been taken by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore from the action of that Court to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, which is still pending.

It is stated in the bills of exception that the evidence introduced in the lower Court tended to prove, amongst other things, that the value of the ground rent on the entire lot was ascertained by capitalizing the $300 at 3 per centum ($10,000) and that the value of the ground rent ($300) on the 28x33 feet could be ascertained by capitalizing it at 4 per centum ($7,S°o), thus lessening the market value to the amount of $2,500, and that the value of the remaining lot after the plaza is constructed will be $15,000. As indicated by our reference to the prayers, the contention of the city is that the owners of the ground rent are not entitled to any damages, because the remaining lot fully secures their rent, and that on the part of the trustees is that the award of the Burnt District Commission followed the correct way of compensating them. The contention of the city that no damages can be allowed because the rent is amply secured by the portion of the lot not taken cannot be sustained. Passing for the present the question *628 whether, when part of a lot is taken .under the power of eminent domain, on which there is a ground rent, there can be an apportionment or abatement of the rent, we cannot understand how it can be said that the owner of the ground rent is not injured by taking nearly three-fourths of the lot included in the lease. It cannot be denied that it is private property which cannot betaken for public use “without just compensation, as agreed upon between the parties, or awarded by a jury being first paid or tendered,” to use the language of sec. 40 of Art. 3 of our Constitution. The city so recognized it by the condemnation proceedings. It may be true, and the evidence tends to so show, that the portion of the lot not taken is sufficient to secure the $300 per annum, but that is not the question. It is possible that conditions may at sometime exist that will materially lessen the value of the remaining lot, and make it worth less than $15,000, but, if there be no danger of that, the evidence tends to prove that it is now what is called a 'three per centum ground rent—that is to say, by reason of the security which the lot in its entirety affords, it is worth in the market $10,000—while it will only be a four per centum ground rent after the portion condemned is taken, which is only worth $7,500. The record, which'is very meagre, does not show when the lease was made, but prior to the enactment of the statute prohibiting them, irredeemable ground rents were permitted in this State, and, as this is said to be one, the lease must have been executed before the statute referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 203, 101 Md. 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-latrobe-md-1905.