Textor v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

68 A. 493, 107 Md. 221, 1908 Md. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 7, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 A. 493 (Textor v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) 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
Textor v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 68 A. 493, 107 Md. 221, 1908 Md. LEXIS 5 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee instituted proceedings to condemn certain properties of the appellant, Anton Textor, in the city of Baltimore, which were stated in the applications tobe wanted and necessary for the construction of its railroad yard. There were two cases, as the proceedings included different lots of ground, but the same questions being involved they were argued together and will be disposed of in one opinion. We' will only refer to the record in the first case on the docket, as the facts in the other case are similar, so far as they affect the questions before us.

In May, 1906, an inquisition, which had been taken and returned to the Superior Court of Baltimore City, was set aside by an order of that Court, which directed that “a new inquisition be taken in the manner prescribed by the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland of 1826, ch. 123, and that the Sheriff summon a jury of twenty inhabitants of the said city of Baltimore above the age of twenty-one years, and qualified to act as jurors under the laws of this State, not related nor in anywise interested, to meet on the land described in the original application and warrant there:o attached on the 29th day of May, 1906.” The order then went on to direct the Sheriff how to act in case any of those summoned did not attend, as to striking the list, administering the oath, the execution of the inquisition and the return of it to the Clerk of that Court. *223 The Act of 1826 referred to is the charter of the appellee. The Sheriff gave notice to the appellants of the proceeding, the railroad company made application to Wilmer Emory, a Justice of the Peace, to issue his warrant to the Sheriff, directing him to summon a jury, etc., and the Justice issued his warrant requiring the Sheriff to proceed just as the order of the Court directed — using substantially the language of that order.

The inquisition recites that it was taken “on the application of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company to Wilmer Emory, Justice of the Peace,” &c., and the return of the Sheriff certified that “in obedience to theforegoing warrant” he summoned the jurors, &c. ' The appellants filed a number of exceptions to the confirmation of the inquisition, which were overruled, and they appealed from the order confirming the inquisition. They base their right of appeal upon the alleged, want of jurisdiction in the lower Court to confirm the inquisition, because the Sherriff proceeded under the warrant from the Justice of the Peace, and not under the order of Court, as shown by the inquisition and return, and that hence, as stated in their brief, the “Sheriff’s whole proceedings (were) null and void, and lower Court (was) without power and jurisdiction to validate said proceedings by confirming said inquisition.” The appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that this Court is without jurisdiction to entertain it.

Inasmnch as no appeal to this Court is given by the charter of the appellee, or by any Public General Law, from such condemnation proceedings, the learned counsel for the appellants concedes that if the lower Court had jurisdiction to pass the order cofirming the inquisition, no appeal lies to this Court from such order. That rule has been announced so frequently that it is useless to cite authorities to sustain it, but there have been many cases before this Court wherein it has been called upon to determine whether the lower Courts had exceeded their jurisdiction, by reason of the particular facts and circumstances involved in them. The principle, which had *224 often been previously announced, was thus clearly stated by Chief Judge McSherry in New York Mining Co. v. Midland Co., 99 Md. 512: “Whatever subject matter in the controversy, the Court below had the right to decide was necessarily a subject-manner within the jurisdiction of that tribunal. Accordingly the inquiry here is, not whether the trial Court rightly decided but whether it had the right to decide, what it did decide. If it had the right to decide what it did decide then, though its decision be, in point of fact or of law, erroneous it cannot be reviewed, because the statute has conferred no power upon this Court to sit in review of such a judgment. So the ultimate question is, were the things complained of and decided below, things which the Court had jurisdiction to decide?”

If we apply that rule to the facts of this case, can there be any doubt that the Superior Court had the right to decide whether the Justice of the Peace had the authority to issue the warrant, whether the Sheriff had jurisdiction to act under it, and whether the inquisition was in reality taken under it, or under the order of the Court? All of those questions, together with others, were raised by the exceptions of the appellants, which the Superior Court was called upon to pass on. Of course, we must bear in mind that the Court must have the right to decide the question — and that if it has no jurisdiction to do so, an appeal will lie from its decision. For example, if the Sheriff had had no warrant before the first inquisition was taken, there would have been no legal foundation for the condemnation proceedings, because he was not authorized to act without a warrant, or if he had then acted under a warrant from some one other than a Justiceof the Peace, it might be conceded that all subsequent proceedings under it would have been without authority, but such instances are altogether different from what we have before us. There is no suggestion that the original warrant'was not properly-issued, and it is not even in the record, which begins with the order of Court setting aside the inquisition taken under that warrant. The charter of the appellee provides for an application to a Justice *225 of the Peace, who is required to issue his warrant to the Sheriff, directing him to summon and empanel the jury, take the inquisition and return it to the clerk of the Court. All of those things were apparently done, and the Court by the appellee’s charter is directed to confirm the inquisition at its next session, if no sufficient cause to the contrary be shown, “but if set aside, the said Court may direct another inquisition to be taken in the manner above prescribed." The Court did therefore, have jurisdiction originally, after the inquisition was returned to it, and it did retain jurisdiction directing another inquisition to be taken and returned to its clerk. In passing we might say that the General Coporation Laws, applicable to railroad companies, are substantially the same in reference to condemnation proceedings as the provisions in the appellee’s charter — such differences as do exist not being involved in this case and hence unnecessary to discuss. The record does not contain any bill of exceptions or state the facts very fully, but the exceptions filed by the appellants to the inquisition state, that the order of the Court was delivered to the Sheriff, and it is marked filed as of the same date the return of the Sheriff, the inquisition, &c., were.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 493, 107 Md. 221, 1908 Md. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/textor-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-md-1908.