Property Owners Ass'n of Baltimore City, Inc. v. Mayor of Baltimore

299 A.2d 824, 268 Md. 194, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1098
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 9, 1973
DocketNo. 166
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 299 A.2d 824 (Property Owners Ass'n of Baltimore City, Inc. 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
Property Owners Ass'n of Baltimore City, Inc. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 299 A.2d 824, 268 Md. 194, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1098 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This dispute about water arises out of the conflicting interests of natural adversaries, the landlord and the tenant. The appellee (City), caught between Scylla and Charybdis or, to use the vulgate, between a rock and a hard place, chose not to serve the interests of the landlord, whereupon the landlord, aided and abetted by other landlords, sued to compel a change of heart. The facts require attentive consideration.

The property in the eye of the controversy is in the northernmost part of Baltimore. Known as 1322 Meridene Drive, it is owned by the appellant Piccinini. On 6 September 1971 he leased the property to Paul Frangione who agreed “to pay when due all charges for gas, electricity and water . . . .” (Emphasis added.) On 15 September Leader Realty Company, of which Piccinini is president, sent a letter to the Bureau of Water Supply instructing it to bill Frangione the next time the property was billed for water. A photocopy of the lease was enclosed. The lease was returned to Leader Realty with a notice advising “Dear Consumer” that on 25 August 1971 the Board of Estimates had “ruled that the tenant’s name would not be placed on the water accounts.” Only the property owners’ names, the notice added, would appear on the water accounts and the water bills.

There is in the record an excerpt from the minutes of the 25 August meeting of the Board of Estimates indicat[196]*196ing that representatives of the appellee Northeast Community Organization (NCO) had been given a hearing. They sought “a moratorium on water service cut offs,” a discussion of who has “the responsibility for payment of water bills” and some explanation of “the City’s policy in mailing water bills to tenants” when the payment thereof is the landlord’s responsibility. It was said by Mr. Parrish, who heads the Consumer Services Division, that for many years bills had been sent to tenants upon the mere oral request of landlords but that since December (1970) written requests had been required. It seems that the installation of water meters had ehabled the City to discard the flat rate charge and to collect for the amount of water actually used. Almost at once, it was said, the landlords tried, by various means, to shift the responsibility for payment to the tenants. Similarly aroused the tenants descended upon City Hall. At the conclusion of the hearing the Board of Estimates directed that, effective immediately, “all bills are to be mailed out in the landlord’s name only . . . .”

On 14 October the appellants Piccinini and Property Owner’s Association of Baltimore City, Inc. (POA) “representing all persons similarly situated to” Piccinini filed a bill of complaint seeking a declaratory judgment and a writ of mandamus. The lease to Frangione, the request to the Bureau of Water Supply to bill Frangione, and the denial of that request were recited and attached to the bill as exhibits. We have set out in full the appellants’ prayer for relief:

“A. A declaratory judgment that:
“(1) Where there is an agreement between the tenant and the landlord (owner) of property in the City of Baltimore, by which agreement the tenant covenants to pay to the City of Baltimore, directly, all charges imposed for water consumption and the availability of water, and where, by proper request, the existence of [197]*197said covenant is made known to the Department of Public Works, the said Department of Public Works is required to place the tenant’s name on the water account and to mail the bills in the name of the tenant to the address furnished by the party giving notice of said covenant.
“(2) Or, in the alternative, that the action of the Board of Estimates, on August 25, 1971, ruling that the tenant’s name would not be placed on water accounts, was arbitrary and capricious and without basis in law.
“B. That a Writ of Mandamus be issued to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, Bureau of Consumer Services, directing that, where there is an agreement between the tenant and landlord (owner) of property in the City of Baltimore, by which agreement the tenant covenants to pay to the City of Baltimore, directly, all charges imposed for water consumption and the availability of water, and where, by proper request, the existence of said covenant is made known to the Department of Public Works, the said Department of Public Works is required to place the tenant’s name on the water account and to mail the bills in the name of the tenant to the address furnished by the party giving notice of said covenant.”

The City and NCO, which was permitted to intervene, both answered the bill of complaint and the case came on to be heard before the chancellor, Prendergast, J., on 19 June 1972. The stipulation which follows was offered by counsel for the appellants and it was received without objection.

“(Mr. Sachs) I would like to proffer or state the facts upon which we have agreed. If the Court accepts that statement of facts, our purpose here today will be primarily argument.
[198]*198“The case arises from an action of the Board of Estimates on August 25,1971. The intervenor defendant has subpoenaed a copy of the minutes of that meeting and they make up part of the file in this case.
“The issue, very simply stated, is this. Where there is a contractual agreement between the landlord and the tenant, with respect to residential property, that the tenants pay the water bill. Up until August of 1971, upon notice from the landlord, the Bureau of Consumer Services of the city, would send the water bill to the tenant in the mail. Since the meeting of August 25, 1971, the Consumer Services Division has been directed, and has implemented this policy, that no water bills are sent to anybody but the owner of the property, so that in all cases, the water bills are sent to the owner, notwithstanding the fact there is, at least in the cases on the factual situations which are here, notwithstanding the fact there is a written agreement between the landlord and the tenant for the tenant to pay the water bill, and the bill of complaint has certain exhibits attached to it which was in effect a test case wherein a lease was signed between landlord and tenant, and the landlord wrote to the Department of Consumer Services asking the bills be sent to the tenant, as has been the policy for as many years as we can determine, prior to August of 1971, and a response was received, saying that the Board of Estimates had instructed them not to send any bills other than to the landlord. So, that is the issue on which we are before the court and it has been as to the facts stipulated to by the counsel for the defendant, and the intervenor defendant.”

The City introduced in evidence a printed form en[199]*199titled “Application for Water Supply Service.” It provides, in part:

“To: City of Baltimore
Bureau of Water Supply
“Subject to all the rules and regulations of the Bureau of Water Supply and the Board of Estimates and to the ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City, and particularly relating to water services, the undersigned hereby make application for the installation of . . . water supply service (s) to
“The undersigned owner

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 A.2d 824, 268 Md. 194, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/property-owners-assn-of-baltimore-city-inc-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1973.