United Railways & Electric Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore

88 A. 617, 121 Md. 552, 1913 Md. LEXIS 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 A. 617 (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, 88 A. 617, 121 Md. 552, 1913 Md. LEXIS 77 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Constable, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment in favor of the City of Baltimore for the cost of repaving the track area— between the tracks and two feet on each side — of appellant’s street railway, on Linden avenue between Dolphin street and XSTorth avenue.

The case is in the nature of a test one, and, under agreement of counsel filed in the case, it is admitted that the ultimate liability of the appellant, if the contention of the city should be deemed correct, will exceed the sum of one million *554 and a half dollars exclusive of the expense of adapting their track conditions to the new plan of paving, and which was admitted in proof would amount to an approximately equal sum. It is therefore seen that the case, in a monetary sense, is an important one to both parties.

By ordinance of the Mayor and City Council, Ho. 153, approved August 16, 1912, passed in pursuance of the Act of 1906, Chapter 401, section 8, it was provided by section 1 thereof as follows: “Be it ordained by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore that there is hereby imposed upon all street railway companies occupying with their tracks parts of the beds of streets, avenues or other highways in the City of Baltimore upon which work shall have been done or shall hereafter be done under the Act of 1906, Chapter 401 of the General Assembly of Maryland, and any amendment or amendments thereof, the obligation to pay for said work so far as the same shall have been done or shall be done between the rails of their said tracks, and for a space of two feet on either side thereof.”

The Act of 1906, Chapter 401, mentioned in the above ordinance, was the Act providing for the appointment of a Paving Commission for Baltimore, and authorizing the borrowing of five million dollars for the purposes of the work contemplated by the city in the matter of improved paving. Section 8, which is the only section involved in this appeal, is as follows:

“Seo. 8. And be it further enacted, That the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore be and it is hereby likewise authorized to impose upon all street railway companies occupying with their tracks parts of the beds of the streets, avenues or other highways in the City of Baltimore upon which work should be done under this Act, of the obligation to pay for said work so far as the same shall be done between the rails of their said tracks, and for a space of two feet on either side thereof, and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore is further authorized to enforce said obligation *555 by all such appropriate agencies, means, processes, proceedings and remedies as it may ordain for the purpose; but nothing in this Act shall be taken as in any wise relieving any such company or any other corporation or person from any obligation in its or his relations to the public highways of the City of Baltimore now cast upon it or him by law.”

The original tracks on Linden avenue between Dolphin and McMechen streets were laid by the Baltimore, Peabody Heights and Waverly Passenger Eailway Co., a corporation incorporated by Act of 1872, Chapter 369. The tracks were laid under authority of Ordinance No. 36, approved April 28th, 1879. The name of this company by Act of 1880, Chapter 488, was changed to North Baltimore Passenger Eailway Company. The tracks from McMechen street to. North avenue were laid by the said North Baltimore Passenger Eailway Company under authority of Ordinance No. 54, approved April 21, 188.1. The original charter provided that it should have the power to lay its tracks on such streets and under such terms as might be designated by ordinance, and further as to all matters not therein provided for, its rights should be the same as provided in the charter of the Baltimore City Passenger Eailway Company. One of the sections .of that charter not expressly provided for in the Peabody Heights charter is, “that the General Assembly hereby expressly reserves the power at all times to repeal, alter or amend this charter.”

The appellant company succeeded to, and now has, all the rights and obligations of the company which laid the tracks, including the duty provided by ordinance by virtue of charter provisions, to “keep the streets covered by said tracks, and extending two feet from the outer limits on either side of said track, in thorough repair at their own expense.”

Prior to 1897, the obligation to both repair and repave was assumed by a few of the companies, but on the 9th day *556 of December of that year, an ordinance was approved, whereby-it was provided that all street railways to which thereafter the right of using the streets should be granted, should not only maintain the track area, but should pay the cost of new and improved pavements, whenever an ordinance should be passed providing for the paving or repaving of streets used by them. In all instances coming under these provisions, the appellant makes no contention, but confines its opposition to the operation of the Acts and ordinance to .those companies occupying streets before 1891 and whose obligation was confined to repair only.

The city’s contention is that by reasonable construction the obligation in the original ordinances to keep the track area in repair, means that the railway company shall keep the area in repair and proper condition to correspond with the rest of the street. In other words, that the true meaning is, that it is hot only to actually keep it in repair, as that term is usually used, but that the term also embraces the duty to repave with any material the city sees proper to place on the rest of the street. If the city wishes to take up a cobblestone street and lay in its place an improved character of street, such as asphalt or Belgian blocks, that under the contract to keep in repair the railway must take up the cobbles in the track area and put down the asphalt or Belgian blocks. And the city further contends that even though the obligation to repair imposed by the original ordinances does not compel the railway company to pay for the cost of repaving, that still the Legislature had the power to impose upon the appellant occupying the streets, the obligation to repave, in addition to the original obligation to repair only. The contention is made that section 8 of the Act of 1906, Chapter 401, and the ordinance passed in pursuance, thereof, should be sustained, either as a valid exercise of the police power, or of the reserved power of the Legislature to alter, repeal or amend the charter of the railway companies which originally *557 laid the tracks on Linden avenue, and to whose rights and obligations the appellant succeeded.

The case was tried before the Court, without a jury, and the exceptions reserved were upon the action of the Court in striking out certain testimony, and the refusal to rule as a matter of law, in separate prayers, that there was no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover; that section 8 of Chapter 401 of the Acts of 1906 and Ordinance Eo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 617, 121 Md. 552, 1913 Md. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-railways-electric-co-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1913.