Nutwell v. County Commissioners

73 A. 710, 110 Md. 667, 1909 Md. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 73 A. 710 (Nutwell v. County Commissioners) 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
Nutwell v. County Commissioners, 73 A. 710, 110 Md. 667, 1909 Md. LEXIS 89 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The County Commissioners of Anne Aründel County, under the authority supposed to have been conferred upon them by the Act of 1908, Chapter 672, struck from the tax books of that county certain vehicles the owners of which had taken out a license as provided by that Act. The appellant, a resident and tax payer of Anne Arundel County, filed a petition for a mandamus in the Circuit Court for that county in which he alleged that the striking of this large amount of persona] property from the tax books of the county would materially lessen the taxable basis, and greatly increase the amounnt of taxes to be paid by the petitioner and other tax payers of the County, as the fund arising from the licenses issued to owners of vehicles is to be applied under the .Act exclusively to the road tax, and the vehicles so licensed are exempt by the Act from taxation for County, State and School purposes. The petition prayed that a writ of mandamus might be issued directed to the County Commissioners directing them to restore to the assessment books of the tax payer's named in the petition the specific property which they had stricken therefrom. The ground upon which the petitioner rests his right to mandamus is that the Act of Assembly is unconstitutional.

The defendants answered the petition and admitted that they had stricken from the tax books the property specified, and asserted the validity of the Act of 1908, Chapter 672, under which they acted. They further averred in their *669 answer that the appellant refused to take out the license required by the Act, and was arrested; that he prayed a jury trial, and that thereafter he made a motion in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County to quash the writ; that the Court held the Act valid and dismissed the motion to quash.

It is contended that as no appeal was taken by the appellant from the decision dismissing the motion to quash which was based upon the alleged unconstitutionality of the Act, the question as to the validity of the Act, so far as the petitioner is concerned, is res adjudicatet. It is maintained that it was the duty of the petitioner, if he decided to have the constitutionality of the Act passed upon by this Court to have presented the question here on appeal from the refusal of the Court to grant the motion to quash, and inasmuch as he failed to appeal within the time allowed by law, he is now concluded by the judgment of the lower Court. But this Court would have had no jurisdiction to determine the constitutionality of the Act on an appeal from that judgment. Rayner v. State, 52 Md. 368; Judefind v. The State, 78 Md. 510; Roth v. The State, 89 Md. 524. In Judefind’s Gase, supra, the plaintiff in error had been tried, convicted, and fined by a Justice of the Peace for violating the provisions of the law prohibiting working on Sunday. He appealed to the Circuit Court for Kent County, and was convicted and fined five dollars and costs by that Court. Erom that judgment he appealed to this Court upon the ground that the law under which he was convicted was unconstitutional. A motion was made by the Attorney-General to dismiss the appeal, because no writ of error lies to this Court from the decision of the Circuit Court on an appeal to it from a judgment of a Justice of the Peace. The Court speaking through Judge Boyd said: “That motion must prevail. It is well settled in this State that when the Circuit Court has jurisdiction to hear and decide an appeal from.a Justice of the Peace its decision is final, and an appeal or a writ of error to this Court will not lie, unless of course the statute authorizes such an appeal or writ of error to this Court. If the traverser desired to con *670 test the constitutionality of the law under which he was arrested, and have that question propertly presented for the consideration of this Court, he could have applied for the writ of certiorari upon the specific ground of the unconstitutionality of the law, and the consequent want of power and jurisdiction of the Justice of the Peace to proceed under it. This Court could then have reviewed the judgment of the Circuit Court on an appeal or writ of error. Nor can we review the decision of the Circuit Court on the question of the alleged defects on the face of the warrant-and bond.”

While the decision of the Circuit Court upon the motion to quash is final and conclusive upon the appellant so far as the proceedings in that matter are concerned, because that Court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the questions raised by the motion, and whether it .decided rightly or wrongly its judgment could not be reviewed by this Court upon appeal; but any decision as to the validity of the Act cannot deprive this Court of the jurisdiction to decide upon the constitutionality of the Act in a civil case properly before us in which other parties are concerned.

We will now consider the main question in the case, which is this: Does the title of the Act of 1908, Chapter 672, sufficiently describe its subject-matter as required by section 29, Article 3 of the Constitution of the State? The title of the Act is: “An Act to add two new sections to Article 2 of the Code of Public Local Laws, title ‘Anne Arundel County,’ sub-title ‘Hoads,’ so as to require all owners of vehicles using public streets and roads in Anne Arundel County to have a license therefor.” Section 1 adds two new sections to Article 2 of the Code of Public Local Laws, title Anne Arundel County, to follow immediately after section 203 x tobe known as sections 203 y and 203 z. Section 203 y declares that it shall not be lawful to run, or suffer to be run upon any of the streets and roads in Anne Arundel Counnty a vehicle of any description whatsoever, except Ox Carts, Horse Carts, Farm Wagons, and Milk Wagons, without first having obtained from the Clerk of the County Commissioners, of Anne *671 Arundel County a license at the rates fixed. It then provides that the money collected from such licenses, and from fines paid for violation of the Act, shall he expended upon the public roads and streets in the district in which the owner of the vehicle resides. Section 203 z, after making certain provisions requiring the license to he attached to the vehicle and conferring the power to transfer the license, exempts the owner of >the vehicle so licensed from the payment of any other tax upon the same. It makes the violation of the Act a misdemeanor, and upon a conviction therefor directs that a fine not exceeding five dollars and costs of prosecution shall be imposed.

The object of the constitutional provision to which we have referred has been frequently considered by this Court.

Cases are só numerous and a number of them so recent that it is unnecessary to discuss them in this opinion. We will rest our decision in this case upon the cases of Kafka v. Wilkinson, 99 Md. 238, and Baltimore City v. Flack, 104 Md. 107. In Kafka’s Case, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 A. 710, 110 Md. 667, 1909 Md. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nutwell-v-county-commissioners-md-1909.