Mta v. Balto. Cty. Revenue Auth.

298 A.2d 413, 267 Md. 687
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1973
Docket[No. 143, September Term, 1972.]
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 298 A.2d 413 (Mta v. Balto. Cty. Revenue Auth.) 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
Mta v. Balto. Cty. Revenue Auth., 298 A.2d 413, 267 Md. 687 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

267 Md. 687 (1973)
298 A.2d 413

MASS TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION
v.
BALTIMORE COUNTY REVENUE AUTHORITY ET AL.

[No. 143, September Term, 1972.]

Court of Appeals of Maryland.

Decided January 11, 1973.

*688 The cause was argued before MURPHY, C.J., and BARNES, McWILLIAMS, SINGLEY, SMITH, DIGGES and LEVINE, JJ.

Joseph S. Kaufman for appellant.

R. Taylor McLean, with whom were Margaret P. Mahoney and Royston, Mueller, Thomas & McLean on the brief, for Baltimore County Revenue Authority, part of appellees, and Southey F. Miles, Jr., on the brief, for The Equitable Trust Company, Trustee, other appellee.

MURPHY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County (MacDaniel, J.), dated June 13, 1972, declaring that the Mass Transit Administration (MTA), formerly the Metropolitan Transit Authority, is required to pay the tolls charged by the Baltimore County Revenue Authority (Revenue Authority) for the use by the MTA buses of two bridges owned by the Revenue Authority, spanning the Bear Creek in Baltimore County.

The Revenue Authority was created a public body corporate and an instrumentality of Baltimore County by the General Assembly of Maryland by its enactment of Chapter 126 of the Acts of 1955, now codified as Title 29, §§ 29-1 to 29-18 of the Baltimore County Code (1968 Ed.). The Act empowered the Revenue Authority, among other things, to acquire, construct, and operate toll bridges; to fix, charge, and collect tolls for the use of any such facility at reasonable rates; to borrow money and issue negotiable revenue bonds; and to secure the payment of such bonds by pledge or indenture of trust of all or any part of its revenues. These powers were secured *689 by the further provision, contained in § 29-11, that the State

"... does hereby pledge to and agree with any person ... subscribing to or acquiring the revenue bonds to be issued by the authority for the construction, extension, improvement, equipping, furnishing or enlargement of any project or part thereof, that the state will not limit or alter the rights hereby vested in the authority until all such bonds at any time issued to provide funds for such project or part thereof, together with the interest thereon, are fully met and discharged, it being the intent of this title that the authority shall continue to have and may exercise all powers herein granted, so long as the same shall be necessary or desirable for the carrying out of the purposes of this title."

In 1958, pursuant to the authority vested in it, the Revenue Authority authorized the sale of $5,400,000 of its revenue bonds and entered into an Indenture of Trust with the Equitable Trust Company to protect and enforce the rights and remedies of the bondholders. The Indenture directed that the bond proceeds were to be used to the extent of $946,200 (together with other funds available to the Revenue Authority) toward the refunding of bonds issued by the Revenue Authority in February, 1957, for the purchase and repair of Bear Creek Bridge I, and the remaining proceeds to be used for the cost of constructing, erecting and maintaining proposed Bear Creek Bridge II. The Indenture provided that "... the Authority has pledged and does hereby pledge to the Trustee the tolls and other revenues of Bear Creek Bridge I and Bear Creek Bridge II to the extent provided in this Indenture as security for the payment of the bonds and the interest thereon...." § 502 of the Indenture provided:

"The Authority covenants ... that no free vehicular passage will be permitted on Bear *690 Creek Bridge I or the bridge constituting a part of Bear Creek Bridge II except to officials or employees of the Authority and of the executive and administrative departments of Baltimore County, official vehicles of the police and fire departments of said County, and of the State Police of Maryland."

Subsequent to the execution of the Indenture, the Revenue Authority sold its bonds in the amount of $5,400,000; with the proceeds it financed the acquisition, construction and maintenance of the two Bear Creek bridges. Thereafter the Revenue Authority charged tolls to all users of the bridges except those specifically exempted under § 502 of the Indenture agreement.

The Metropolitan Transit Authority, a body corporate and an instrumentality of the State of Maryland, was empowered by the provisions of Maryland Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Vol.), Article 64B, to provide improved and expanded transit facilities and service in the Metropolitan Transit District, comprising the territory lying in the boundaries of the City of Baltimore, and the Counties of Baltimore and Anne Arundel. Its buses regularly utilized the two Bear Creek bridges, and it paid the toll of thirty cents per bus per crossing charged by the Revenue Authority until January 1971 when, on advice of counsel, it discontinued paying the tolls, claiming exemption under Article 64B, § 48. That section, as it then stood, read as follows:

"It is hereby declared that the creation of the [Metropolitan Transit] Authority and the carrying out of the corporate purposes of the Authority is in all respects for the benefit of the people of the State and of the District and is for a public purpose and that the Authority and the board will be performing an essential governmental function. Accordingly, any and all real and personal property (both tangible *691 and intangible) and any and all right, title and interest therein, gross receipts, gross or net income, purchases, sales, franchises, licenses, operations, activities and functions, owned or controlled, or received, or made, or performed or carried on, by the Authority shall be and remain totally exempt from any and all taxes, assessments, charges and fees of every kind, now or hereafter in effect, imposed, levied or made by the State of Maryland or any political subdivision, or any agency or instrumentality of any of them." (Emphasis added.)

§ 48 was amended by Chapter 526 of the Acts of 1970, approved May 5, 1970, to become effective July 1, 1971; as amended, the exemption contained in the section was changed from that above italicized to one exempting the Metropolitan Transit Authority from "any and all ordinary or special taxes, assessments, and charges except water and sewer charges...." In April 1971, the Revenue Authority advised the Metropolitan Transit Authority that it was not exempt under Article 64B, § 48 from paying the toll charges; that even if that section did purport to grant an exemption from the payment of such charges, it would be invalid in view of the earlier provisions of § 29-11 of the Baltimore County Code (supra) whereby the State "formally agreed not to limit or alter the obligation of the Revenue Authority"; and that, consequently, "any interference with the vested rights of the bondholders would be a violation of the United States Constitution."

In May 1971, the Metropolitan Transit Authority (later renamed Mass Transit Administration) filed its Bill of Complaint for Declaratory Relief claiming exemption from payment of the tolls by reason of the provisions of Article 64B, § 48.

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