United Railways & Electric Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore

73 A. 633, 111 Md. 264, 1909 Md. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 A. 633 (United Railways & Electric 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
United Railways & Electric Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 73 A. 633, 111 Md. 264, 1909 Md. LEXIS 97 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Worthington, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The principal question presented by this appeal is, whether the street easements used and occupied by the appellant in the City of Baltimore are subject to valuation and assessment, by the Appeal Tax Court of that city, for the purposes of taxation, under the existing laws of this State.

A somewhat similar question was before this Court in the case of Consolidated Gas Company v. Baltimore City, reported in 101 Md. 541, and again on a second appeal in a case between the same parties involving the same question reported in 105 Md. 43. In both these cases this Court held that whilst the easements enjoyed by the Gas Company, in the highways of Baltimore City, were taxable, yet that the *266 method pursued in valuing them was improper and the assessment therefore invalid-

In the present case the appellant does not dispute the right of the Appeal Tax Court to value and assess the easements enjoyed by public service corporations generally, in the streets of Baltimore City, but contends that the tax' of nine per cent, on its gross receipts imposed by the Act of 1882, Chapter 279, is in lieu of and in substitution for any other tax on its intangible property, whether it be termed franchise or easement.

There was much discussion at bar, as there is also in the briefs of counsel, as to the exact signification of the words “franchise,” and “easement”’ and there is no doubt some confusion of thought, in regard thereto, arising from the occasional want of precision in the use of these terms, by persons dealing with the subject. But we think that in this State, the confusion no longer exists, the two words having been clearly distinguished by the opinion of this Court in the Gas Co.’s Case, 101 Md., supra, where McSherry, C. J., said: “The right to occupy the streets with gas mains is a franchise, the actual occupation of them in that way pursuant to the franchise, is the acquisition of an easement.” In other words, as defined by this Court, the right to use the streets for some special purpose, is a franchise, and the actual user of them for that purpose is an easement.

If the appellant obtain from the City of Baltimore the privilege, or right of putting down its tracks, and running its cars over and upon a certain street in that city, hut does not for a while exercise such privilege, or right, by laying its tracks and' running its cars thereon, it would possess “the naked, slumbering unused franchise,” merely, which separately considered, is not property in the sense that it is of substantial value for the purposes of direct taxation. Whenever the appellant should exercise that right or privilege, however, by laying its tracks and operating its cars thereon, (hen there would spring into existence the easement, which is now generally recognized as property. A new kind of *267 property, it is true, invisible, intangible and elusive, yet of substantial value and amenable to taxation.

On June 20, 1908, this intangible property of the appellant was assessed by Appeal Tax Court for the purposes of taxation at $11,214,460. Upon appeal to the Baltimore City Court under section 170 of the Baltimore City Charter, the amount of the assessment was redticed to $2,611,925.81.

The Railway Company has brought this appeal, conceding, as we have said, that under tEe decisions of this Court, such property is subject to taxation, but claiming that in this case the tax on gross receipts, above mentioned, known as the Park Tax (because the proceeds are required to be applied to the maintenance of the public parks of the City), is itself a complete and adequate tax on the easements enjoyed by the Railway Company in the highways of Baltimore, and that these easements are thereby exonerated from any further taxation under the existing laws of the State.

The answer of the City to this connection may be divided into three principal heads:

First, they cite the language of this Court in Sindall's Case, 93 Md. 536, where it was said: “The taxing power is never to be presumed to be surrendered, and therefore every assertion that it has been relinquished must, to be efficacious,be distinctly supported bv clear and unambiguous legislative enactment. To doubt is to deny exemption.”

We do not think, however, that this is a satisfactory answer to the appellant’s contention. What appellant claims is not exémption, but exoneration. It does not contend that the State has surrended its. right to further tax the easements in question, but that having taxed them in the manner prescribed by Act of 1882, Chapter 279, further legislative action is necessary before an additional burden of taxation can be lawfully imposed upon them.

Second, on the part of the City it is further said that the Park Tax is a tax upon the special franchise to use the streets merely, and is not a tax upon the actual user of them. La other words, that the Park Tax is in fact only an annual *268 rental paid for the exercise of the franchise, and not a property tax at all. The three Park Tax Cases reported in 71 Md. 405; 84 Md. 16, and 107 Md. 250, are cited in support of this proposition.

We, of course, affirm what was said in those cases, to the effect that the Park Tax was a franchise tax exacted in exchange for the privilege accorded the street railway companies to lay their rails and run their cars upon city streets. But the language of these cases must he considered with reference to the questions then before the Court. In none of them was any question concerning the separate taxation of easements as distinguished from franchises presented.

In fact, so closely related are special franchises and easements, the one to the other, that until easements came recently, within a few years past, to be recognized as a distinct species of property subject to taxation, these terms were frequently used as synonymous. Indeed, in the New York statute which was passed in 1899, expressly authorizing the taxation of this new kind of property, by amending its tax laws, what this Court has defined to be an “easement” is termed (in the statute) a “special franchise.” In construing that statute the Court of Appeals of New York, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Vann, speaks of this property as newly discovered property, consisting of “special franchises” or privileges, unseen, without form or substance, and for that reason never before brought under the taxing power. People v. Tax Commissioners, 174 N. Y. 441.

Besides this, Judge Boyd, in 107 Md., supra, speaking for this Court, says: “The real consideration for the (park) tax is the use of the streets, and not merely the right to use them, which may never be exercised.”

We do not think therefore that the three Park Tax Cases can fairly be said to deny the contention that the nine per cent, tax on gross receipts did include as an element thereof a tax upon the easements enjoyed by the appellant in the highways of Baltimore City.

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Bluebook (online)
73 A. 633, 111 Md. 264, 1909 Md. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-railways-electric-co-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1909.