Owners' Realty Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore

76 A. 575, 112 Md. 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 A. 575 (Owners' Realty Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore) 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
Owners' Realty Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 76 A. 575, 112 Md. 477 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal fx’om a decree of the Oix’cuit Coux*t No 2 of Baltimore City, dismissing the bill of the appellant, in *479 which it is sought to restrain the Oity of Baltimore from collecting a paving assessment against the property of the appellant, abutting upon a private alley in the City of Baltimore.

The assessment was made under and by authority of an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, known as‘Ordinance No. 13, approved October 23rd, 1905, and passed pursuant to sections 486 to 492, inclusive, of the City Charter.

This assessment was placed in the hands of the City Collector, for collection, and the plaintiff was notified, that if the assessment was not paid within the time named in the notice, that the Collector would thereafter proceed to advertise for sale the property of the appellant for the payment of the assessment.

The plaintiff alleged in its bill that it would be highly inequitable and unjust, as well as illegal, for the defendant, to sell its property for the payment of the alleged assessment, and among other things prayed that the defendant, be restrained from further proceeding to sell its property for the payment of such assessment or any part thereof.

- The ordinance referred to, in the first section thereof, provides : “That whenever any nuisance dangerous to the health of the inhabitants of Baltimore Oity shall exist in any private street, lane or alley of the City of Baltimore, and it shall be considered necessary, in the opinion of the Commissioner of Health, in order to remove the same, to have such street, lane or .alley paved or repaved, the said Commissioner of Health shall issue a certificate to that effect to the City Engineer, who shall thereupon proceed to pave or re-pave the same; and the amount expended in paving or repaving the same and the expenses of collection shall be recovered from the owner or owners of the property fronting thei'eon in proportion to the amount expended in front of said property, by suit against the owner or otherwise, as provided by this ordinance.”

*480 And by the succeeding section of this ordinance the city engineer is directed before proceeding to pave or repave any such street, lane or alley, to give ten days’ notice in two newspapers published in the City of Baltimore, that on the day and at the place therein named, he will proceed to ascertain and determine the amount tó be assessed upon all the property binding on said street, lane or alley, and that at such time and place an opportunity will be given to all persons interested to show cause, if any they have, why said street, lane or alley shall not be paved; and it is, in the ordinance, further provided, that thereafter all the proceedings in connection with the paving of such street, lane or alley, shall be those set forth in certain sections, therein named, of Article 48 of the Baltimore City Code.

The appellant, contends:

1st. That the acts of the city officials in paving.the alley and assessing the appellant’s property therefor, under the circumstances, were ultra vires and void.

2nd. That if it be considered that the acts of the city officials in paving the alley, under the facts -shown in the record, were within the provisions of Ordinance No. 13, and not ultra vires, that the said ordinance is void, being unreasonable.

3rd. That the advertised notice of the city register was'not merely incomplete and defective, but so far as (the plaintiff) and its property was concerned, was no notice whatever, and that such total failure of notice renders the acts of the city officials, under the circumstances, coram non judice and void.

The evidence in this case, which consists exclusively of the testimony of the defendant, the plaintiff having declined to offer any testimony in support of the allegation of the bill, discloses, that the appellant company is the owner of a lot of land in the City of Baltimore,- situated on the east side of a private'alley located between Thomas avenue on the west and Warwick avenue on the east, that this lot of land at the time of the trial of the case in the lower Court, was vacant and unimproved, except for a few dwelling houses then in *481 the course of construction. That in September, 1906, and prior thereto, the kitchen and waste water from the houses fronting on Thomas avenue, drained into the alley, and it not being properly graded or paved, and the surface .thereof beng irregular, with ruts, holes and depressions therein, the water could not run off, but accumulated in the alley, where it remained, and became stagnant and offensive. That while the alley was in this condition, in September, 1906, an in-' vestigation of its condition was instituted by the Health Department of the city, which resulted in the Commissioner of Health reaching the conclusion that, the condition there found existing in the alley, was a nuisance dangerous to the health of the inhabitants of the city, and that -in order to remove the nuisance, it was necessary, in his opinion, to grade and pave the alley. Notices were sent to the property owners on the alley, calling their attention to its condition, and asking them to abate the nuisance, by grading and paving the alley. Some of them paved, while others did not, whereupon the Commissioner of Health on the 14th day of September, 1906, issued to the city engineer of Baltimore, the following certificate: “I hereby certify that a nuisance, dangerous to the health of the inhabitants of Baltimore City, exists in an alley known as rear 1701 Thomas avenue, and that in my opinion it is necessary, in order to remove the same, to grade and pave said alley in accordance with Ordinance No. 13, of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, approved October 23rd, 1905.” Hpon the receipt of this certificate, the city engineer, with other city officials, investigated the condition of the alley and found the nuisance therein existing, arid determined that in order to abate it, that it was not only necessary to grade and pave the alley, but that it was also necessary to build a sewer in the bed of the alley, to take off the water that in times of heavy rains and storms flowed into the alley from points to the northward of it, for without this sewer, this large quantity of water flowing over the surface of the alley would undermine the pavement when laid. So *482 having decided that the sewer was necessary, it was then determined to build it before laying the pavement. Accordingly the city engineer proceeded to obtain from the land owners abutting on the alley, the rights of way necessary for building the sewer. Months were consumed in obtaining these rights •of way, the last of which was not obtained until the' spring or summer of 1907. The sewer was then built at the expense of the city, being completed in December, 1907, at which time, the evidence discloses the nuisance still existed. After the sewer was completed, in fact before it was fully finished, the ■pavement was commenced, and was finished in a few weeks thereafter, in the latter part of Dec., 1907.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A. 575, 112 Md. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owners-realty-co-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1910.