Park Land Corp. v. Mayor of Baltimore

98 A. 153, 128 Md. 611, 1916 Md. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 98 A. 153 (Park Land Corp. 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
Park Land Corp. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 98 A. 153, 128 Md. 611, 1916 Md. LEXIS 105 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the second appeal in this ease, the former decision being reported as Mayor, etc., of Balto. v. Park Corporation, in 126 Md. 358. The judgment was then reversed and the case remanded for a new trial. This proceeding was commenced by a petition filed in the Baltimore City Court by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore against the Park Land Corporation of Baltimore City, the West Forest Park Company and the 'Development Aid Corporation, to secure by condemnation the right to connect the portion of the City’s sewerage system constructed in the bed of Liberty Heights avenue “with the sewer or drain of the defendants at or near the point shown on the plat herewith exhibited and described in paragraph 2 hereof, with the right to discharge drainage into and through said sewer or sewers which the defendants own, or in which they have any interest,” etc. The sewer with which connection was desired to be made is described in paragraph 2 of the petition as follows:

“Said sewer being of masonry construction and beginning at a point located twelve and five-tenths (12.5) feet, more or less, northerly from the southerly building line of Liberty Heights avenue, and *614 three hundred and twenty-six (326) feet, more or less, westerly from the westerly curb line of Granada avenue, and running thence in a southwesterly direction along Granada Path. Connection for the Baltimore Sewerage Commission’s drain lying in the bed of Liberty Heights avenue is desired with the sewer of the West Forest Park Company and Park Land Company above described, at a point four and five-tenths (4.5) feet northerly along said drain from the south building line of Liberty Heights avenue.”

At the last trial the jury returned an inquisition whereby it determined “the value of the property, sewer connection and use described in the petition” to be the sum of $5,847. From a judgment entered by the lower court this appeal is taken on behalf of all the defendants. The rulings of that court were on a motion in arrest of judgment, a motion to strike out and set aside the inquisition, and a motion to dismiss the petition for condemnation, and there were ten bills of exception taken during the trial-—the first nine being as to the admissibility of evidence, and the tenth to granting the 12th prayer. All of the motions were overruled. They were based on the allegation that the property condemned was in Baltimore County and not in Baltimore City, and that consequently the lower court had no jurisdiction. It is also claimed that an inquisition was improper under the statute. We will first consider the question of jurisdiction.

The petition and answers of the three companies are in the record of the first appeal. It is sufficient to say that the answers show that the defendant companies have a sewer system running through their respective lands, in which all of them are interested. It may help to give us a better understanding of the case by describing at some length the conditions as they existed prior to and at the time this proceeding was instituted. The Forest Park Company of Baltimore City owned a residence development, consisting, of about 42 acres, bounded by Liberty Heights avenue on the *615 south and by Garrison avenue on the east, all of which was in the city, and being just east of the city’s western boundary line. That company has a sewor running near the northerly building line of Liberty Heights avenue, just under the sidewalk, which turns southerly and connects with what was known as the Callaway sewer (being" the one now owned by the defendant companies). That connection was made under an agreement between the Park Land Corporation, the West Forest Park Company and the Forest Park Company, dated June 1st, 1909, which is to he found in the record of the case of Mayor, etc., of Baltimore v. Forest Park Co., 123 Md. 290. The connection was at or about the intersection of Granada path with the western limits of the city. The record of the case in 123 Md. also shews that on March 25th, 1913, the city filed a petition against the Forest Park Company, the Park Land Corporation, the West Forest Park Company, the Development Aid Corporation and George E. Webb, for the purpose of condemning a connection with the sewer of the Forest Park Company which empties into the Callaway system. The proposed connection with that sewer was in the city, but near its western boundary line. Tho case reported in 123 Md. was instituted to enjoin the city from connecting its sewer with that of the Park Land Corporation, and the West Forest Park Company, or Development Aid Corporation, on the theory that under the agreement between the Forest Park Company and the others, that company had agreed not to allow any sewer to enter into its sewer excepting to drain its land and that of George E. Webb. The city relied on an agreement between it, tho State Eoads Commission, the Park Land Corporation and tho Development Aid Corporation, entered into September 9, 1913, under which the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore connected its sewer with that then belonging to the Park Land Corporation and the Development Aid Corporation, which then owned the system formerly belonging to the West Forest Park Corporation, and disposed of the drainage *616 into a stream which ultimately readies Gwynn’s Falls. It was agreed that in payment. of said connection those two corporations would accept therefor such sum as may he awarded by the appraisers therein provided for or by a jury in the condemnation proceedings theretofore brought by the city, or such other proceedings as may be properly brought to ascertain in that manner the value of such connection to the city.

The record does not show when the condemnation proceeding referred to in 123 Md. was disposed of, but we understood at the argument that it was dismissed and the one in 126 Md. was begun November 23, 1914. The jurisdiction of the court was not in terms attacked by the answers or otherwise, but the answer of the Park Land Corporation, after referring to the drainage system of itself and the De- ■ velopment Aid Corporation, and that it had been unable to agree with the city for the use of the drain, says: “Wherefore, your defendant, whose system lies entirely in Baltimore County, and to whom the city owes no obligation in the matter of taking care of its drainage, is compelled to treat the city as a stranger who desires to make the use of its property, which said use is more valuable than the city has been heretofore willing to admit”; and in the answer of the Development Aid Corporation it is said: “That all of the property of this defendant lies in Baltimore County, and therefore has no claim upon the city nor city agents to take care of the drainage necessities of its community, and this company was organized for the purpose of so doing,” etc. The petition does not allege that the connection is in Baltimore County, but the plat filed with it, upon a close inspection, looks as if the point of connection may be a few feet west of the line, if the plat is correct.

The day the jury was sworn on the former trial the parties entered into the following agreement:

“It is • understood and agreed that all errors in pleading are hereby waived, and the defendants afore *617

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 153, 128 Md. 611, 1916 Md. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-land-corp-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1916.