Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission v. Scrivener

137 A. 492, 153 Md. 68, 1927 Md. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 A. 492 (Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission v. Scrivener) 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
Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission v. Scrivener, 137 A. 492, 153 Md. 68, 1927 Md. LEXIS 21 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees are the owners in fee of a parcel of land, with a frontage of seventy-eight feet on a public street in the town of Kensington, Montgomery County, and within that portion of Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties which comprises the Washington Sanitary District. An assessment for water and sewerage systems was imposed in 1923 by the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission at the rate of nine cents for the former and of seven cents for the latter, to continue throughout a period of fifty years, for every foot of this frontage. In 1925, this front foot rate of assessment was increased to twelve cents for the water system and nine cents for the sewer. The appellees admit that the first assessment is valid, and tendered themselves ready and willing to pay it. Their objection is to the increase, on various grounds, but it will be not required to consider any but the one involving the correct construction of the statutory law in force throughout the sanitary district. For the purpose of compelling the commission to rescind its action in increasing these two rates against *70 their property, the appellees filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County a petition for mandamus against the commission. This petition was answered, and appellee’s demurrer to the answer was sustained, whereupon, as appears from a stipulation of the parties filed in this Court, the appellant submitted to a judgment on demurrer, a writ of mandamus went forth, and this appeal was taken. The facts, therefore, are not in dispute.

The town of Kensington had constructed water and sewerage systems for the use of the properties and of those living within its limits, and had operated and maintained these systems until October 30th, 1922, when they were duly acquired by the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission at a purchase price representing the construction cost of the systems to the town. Tfie commission assumed the outstanding bonds which had been issued by the town on account of these public works; and relieved the appellees as abutting land-owners (a) from paying their front foot proportionate share of two-thirds of the whole yearly interest charge and the annual cost of redemption of one thousand dollars of a bond issue which was not to exceed fifty thousand dollars, and which was to be paid at the rate of one thousand dollars yearly, beginning for the first of said payments at the end of three years from the date of the bond issue; and (b) from paying, along with all the other taxpayers of the town, the remaining one-third. Acts of 1914, ch. 829, secs. 1, 2, 7, 8; Acts of 1916, ch. 241.

The commission was fully authorized to acquire these municipal water and sewerage systems, and in the concession by the appellees that the original assessment of benefits against their property is valid and operative was involved an admission that all the necessary preliminary acts for the legality of the first rates of assessment had been duly done. So it must be accepted that the levy on July 1st, 1923, of the special assessment, was after the commission had caused surveys, plans, specifications, and estimates to have been made for the water supply and sewerage *71 system in the particular sub-district in which Kensington was situated, after the commission had completed the plans for the projected public works, and after the commission had given the prescribed notice by publication of the contemplated improvements and their probable cost, and that their plans might be seen, and that at a time specified any person interested in the matter would be heard. These provisions for notice to those persons interested in the proposed improvements and for a hearing of them at a specified time were mandatory provisions of the Acts of 1918, ch. 122, secs. 4 and 7, and conditions precedent to the undertaking by the commission of any projected general plan. They afforded to the landed property owners of the sub-district the only opportunity for discussion, suggestion, or objection, with a view to the modification, revision, or rejection by the commission of the plans submitted. The measures proposed were authorized on the theory that they would subserve the general welfare of the residents of that sub-district and so it was of the utmost importance that the wisdom, utility, and financial practicability of the project, as tentatively adopted, should be first submitted to the test of a public hearing, at which those who would have to bear the cost could search the soundness, completeness, and practical utility of the plans, expose their financial inexpediency, or urge any ground of opposition. The. imperative form of section 4, with the details directed to be included in the notice, and the plain command of section 7, that the commission is not to decide to proceed with the construction until “after opportunity for a hearing has been given,” prevent a construction that the provision for a hearing, after notice, was merely directory. Aor is it tenable that the necessity of a hearing, after notice, is dispensed with by the repeal and re-enactment of section 4 by the Acts of 1924, ch. 189, sec. 4. As thus amended, section 4 no longer prescribes the method of notice and its contents, nor uses the imperative form of “shall give notice,” but requires “that wherever such construction is upon the motion of the *72 commission, without petition or request from any party interested, said commission may give such reasonable notice as it deems advisable.”

If this language stood alone it would present some difficulty, but it must be read in connection with the remaining provisions of the statute, and a construction made which will give, if possible, harmonious effect to all the terms. Section 7 remains unchanged in its requirement that, before the commission make a decision to proceed with any of the authorized p-ublic improvements, it shall be “after opportunity for á hearing to be given.” See section 7 of chapter 518 of Acts of 1920. So, a reasonable conclusion from the language of the amended section 4, and of the unchanged section 7, is that prior notice and a hearing must be given of the projected construction of a water supply, sewerage, or drainage system, to all those interested who have not petitioned or requested the commission to- construct the public work contemplated. This construction is not only consistent with the terms of the statute as amended, but also gratifies a legislative intent, sufficiently expressed, that costly and extensive public improvements by a centralized and bureaucratic commission shall-not be undertaken until its contemplated 'action may become the subject of investigation and public hearing.

This conclusion, however, is confined by the text of the statute to the adopted originating surveys, plans, specifications, and estimates of the particular system when first projected. The requirement of a prior notice and hearing is accordingly limited to the occasion when the commission, intending to initiate an authorized system, has adopted the tentative general plan for that system. After the notice and hearing and the final adoption of the plan, changes in the specifications, subsequent modifications and alterations of the first plan, later additions supplementary or complementary to the original system, are within the exercise by the commission of a reasonable discretion necessarily committed, and may be undertaken by the commission without a prior notice and hearing.

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Related

Murphy v. Montgomery County
297 A.2d 249 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1972)
Milestone v. Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission
260 A.2d 43 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1969)
Morris v. Ehlers
124 A.2d 776 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1956)
Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission v. Noel
142 A. 634 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 492, 153 Md. 68, 1927 Md. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-suburban-sanitary-commission-v-scrivener-md-1927.