Mayor of Baltimore v. Williams

99 A. 362, 129 Md. 290, 1916 Md. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 99 A. 362 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Williams) 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. Williams, 99 A. 362, 129 Md. 290, 1916 Md. LEXIS 151 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When the General Assembly of 1910 met there was introduced a bill (Ch. 485, p. 630) having for its title the following:

“A Bill Entitled
An Act to authorize and empower the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to issue its stock to an amount not exceeding fifty million dollars ($50,-000,000) for the purpose of defraying the costs and expenses of laying out, projecting, constructing and establishing a comprehensive system for the improvement of the water front of, adjacent to and along the Patapsco Liver and its tributaries, both within and without the limits of the City of Baltimore, including therein the acquisition of property and streets, the alteration and construction of wharves, docks and piers, and of warehouses, sheds, structures and buildings, with the right to lease the same, the laying out, closing, grading and paving the streets, the fixing of building lines and the width of sidewalks, the enlarging or diminishing, and the cleaning, of the harbor or basin and the channels *292 and channel approaches, the fixing of buoys and the doing of all other germane things; to authorize the submission of ordinances to that end to the legal voters of the City of Baltimore; and to clothe the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore with full power and authority to carry into effect the improvements and public work above mentioned.”

In the course of its legislative journey the bill was amended in several particular's, both in the body and the title. The important amendments were the reduction of the proposed loan from $50,000,000 to $5,000,000, and the striking out of the authority conferred by the original bill to extend the system of improvement contemplated to points outside the limits of the City of Baltimore. While the Record does not show the reason for the modifications, an attempt has been made to do so in the brief and argument of the appellants. Without attempting to pass upon these reasons, it is sufficient to say, that the modifications made in the title restricting the scope of the bill were greater than those in the body of the Act as passed.

The first section of the Act provided for the issuance of $5,000,000 of city stock, the fund realized from the sale of which was to be treated as a special fund designated as “The Harbor Improvement Fund,” and which was to be exclusively applicable to the work and objects set out by the Act.

Section 2 of the Act defined the specific purposes to be accomplished, for which the loan was authorized to be made, and these were included in seven sub-sections, all of which had for their immediate object the “constructing and establishing of a comprehensive system for the improvement of the water front of, adjacent to and along the Patapsco River and its tributaries, both within the limits of the City of Baltimore.” The third and fifth of the sub-sections are those which are particularly involved in this case, and read as follows:

*293 “3. The acquisition, from time to time, by gift, "purchase, lease, whatever'the duration of the lease, or other methods of acquisition, or by condemnation, of any land or property whatsoever, including streets, avenues, lanes or alleys, and interests, franchises, easements, rights and privileges of any and every kind, whether within the limits of the City of Baltimore, which may he proper or desirable in connection with the objects of this Act; and no ordinance or ordinances shall, in any case, he necessary to the acceptance of any conveyance.”
“5. The laying out, opening, extending, widening, narrowing, straightening, closing, grading, paving and curbing of any streets, avenues, lanes and alleys, or parts thereof, adjacent to or leading to, or along, said water front, or leading, or adjacent to, or along or being upon, any of the public wharves, docks and piers now or hereafter to be constructed, -whether such streets, avenues, lanes or alleys, or parts thereof, may he within the limits of the City of Baltimore, and the establishment and fixing of the building lines thereon and the width of the sidewalks thereof, all as may he proper or desirable in connection with the objects of this Act.”

While the title of the bill as passed omitted the mention of the “fixing of building lines and tbe width of side-walks,” the power so to do was retained in tbe bill itself.

At the conclusion of the enumeration of purposes in the second section, was the following provisos

“Provided, however, that this enumeration of special objects and purposes shall not be taken or construed as restricting -or impairing, in any degree, the scope of the general objects and purposes hereinbefore mentioned as contemplated by this Act.”

By section 3 of the Act, it was still further provided, that the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore should be vested with full power and authority to execute and carry into effect *294 each and all of the objects contemplated by the Act, and to do any and all things which, by anything short of a palpably forced construction it might deem desirable, convenient or proper to further and accomplish the objects of the Act, or any of them.

By section 4, the execution of the various powers enumerated in section 2 were to be carried out by certain of the departments of the municipal government, acting under the general supervision of the Board of Estimates, and among the provisions in section 4, it was set out that when resort was necessary to “condemnation proceedings in connection with the laying out, opening, extending, widening, narrowing, straightening or closing of any streets, avenues, lanes and alleys or parts thereof,” such proceeding should be had and conducted by the Commissioners, for Opening Streets.

This bill was signed and became a law on April 11th, 1910. . '

By an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council, approved October 3rd, 1914, and numbered Ho. 518, provision was made for the issuance of $1,500,000 Baltimore City stock, as a part of the $5,000,000 authorized by the- Act of 1910. This ordinance made provision for its submission to the voters of this city on Hovember 3rd, 1914, in compliance with the constitutional requirement, and upon the last named date the loan was authorized. On the 13th March, 1915, an ordinance, Ho. 586, was passed by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore authorizing the Commissioners for the Opening of 'Streets, to condemn, open and widen St. Paul street, between Lexington street and Hamilton street, the cost of such opening to be taken from the loan made as previously mentioned. The Commissioners for Opening Streets proceeding under this power have expended $260,548.40, out of $350,000, which the Board of Estimates apportioned from the authorized loan to be utilized for the purpose of the widening of St. Paul street.

*295 On March 9th, 1916, the hill in the present case was hied by certain taxpayers, to enjoin the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore from any further expenditure of the proceeds of this loan for the purpose of the opening and widening of St.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 362, 129 Md. 290, 1916 Md. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-williams-md-1916.