Westminster Water Co. v. Mayor of Westminster

56 A. 990, 98 Md. 551, 1904 Md. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 20, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 56 A. 990 (Westminster Water Co. v. Mayor of Westminster) 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
Westminster Water Co. v. Mayor of Westminster, 56 A. 990, 98 Md. 551, 1904 Md. LEXIS 26 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court for Carroll County and was taken from an order refusing to grant a writ of man- *553 damns, which had been asked for by the appellant against the appellee. The facts which are necessary to be stated are as follows. By ch. 88 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1876, it was provided that the Mayor and Common Council of Westminster may levy annually a tax not exceeding five cents on every $100 to be used and applied to the payment of water rents for the use of water for the public uses of said city, that is to say; for use on the public streets of said city and for the suppression of fires, to any incorporate company which may be organized for the introduction" of a supply of water into said city; and the said Mayor and Common Council may contract with any such incorporated or to be incorporated company for the introduction of water into the said city, to pay such company annually in such sum not exceeding the proceeds of said levy of five cents as aforesaid, as the said Mayor and Common Council may deem proper, provided that no such payment shall be made until water shall have been actually introduced into said city by such company; and provided further that said levy of five cents, as aforesaid, shall not be made or used and applied for any other purposes whatsoever. On May 12th, 1883, the Mayor and Council of Westminster passed an ordinance known as No. 62, wherein, amongst other things, it was provided that when mains of the size and length described in the ordinance shall be laid through the streets and alleys of the city of Westminster with water therein suitable and sufficient for fire extinguishing, street sprinkling and domestic purposes, by the Westminster Water Company, a body corporate of Carroll County, then and in that event the Mayor and Common Council of Westminster shall annually levy and pay to the said Water Company the sum of five cents on each $100 of the assessed value of all property within the limits of the said city subject to the levy and taxation by said city whatever the sum may be, less one-third of the expenses of collecting said water taxes each year. Provided that the amount of the said tax to be paid said company in any one year shall not be lower than that produced by the valuation or assessment of the year 1883. On the *554 faith of the aforegoing and other terms of the ordinance, all of which were accepted by the Water Company, the latter ex-pende^ large sums of money in erecting a plant, building reservoirs, laying mains, and erecting fire plugs in accordance with the provisions of the ordinance just named. The ordinance thus became the cpntract between the company and the city. On June 29th, 1885, a supplemental agreement was entered into between the Water Company and the Mayor and Common Council of Westminster whereby some of the provisions of the contract made by Ordinance 62 were modified, but the terms of that supplemental agreement need not be stated further than the one we shall now quote, namely, “Now, therefore, for the purpose of rendering said ordinance clearer and to avoid any future misunderstanding concerning it, this agreement is now entered into by the said contracting parties to bind them and their successors in office forever, as follows.” There are further provisions which we have said it was unnecessary to quote in this opinion. The tax was levied annually and paid to the Water Company under the provisions of Ordinance 62 and the supplemental agreement just alluded to, until the year 1902, when the Mayor and Common Council passed an Ordinance No. 145, repealing Ordinance No. 62, and declaring that the contract in said ordinance with the Westminster Water Company is hereby repealed and terminated and in making the levy for the year 1902, the Mayor and Common Council omitted to levy for the use of the Westminster Water Company the sum of five cents on each $100 of the assessed value of the property within the limits of the city as previously levied under the Ordinance No. 62 and the supplemental agreement referred to. Thereupon, the pending petition for a mandamus requiring the Mayor and Council of Westminster to make the levy of five cents for the use of the Westminster Water Company was filed. Upon the coming in of the answer an agreed statement of facts was entered into and the case was heard. The application was denied upon the' ground that the writ of mandamus could not be applied as an appropriate remedy for such wrongs as are alleged in the pe *555 tition of the relator. The appeal now before us brings up that order for review.

It ought to be stated, though not as tending to influence the decision of this case, that the Act of 1876 which gave the city of Westminster authority to contract for a supply of water for the purposes heretofore named, was repealed by the Act of 1882, ch. 295, but the repealing Act failed to take effect by reason of an omission to hold an election upon the result of which its becoming operative depended. But the Local Code of 1888, Art. 7, secs. 238 to 247, incorporated the provisions of the Act of 1882 and omitted the Act of 1876. The result is that the Act of 1876 is no longer in force. By the Local Code a totally different system for levying the water tax and contracting with a Water Company is provided. A specific sum not exceeding eighteen hundred dollars is required to be levied annually and under certain conditions a portion of that sum must be paid back by the Water Company to the City.

It has been more than once held by this Court, following the English doctrine, that the writ of mandamus is not one which is granted ex debito justitice. State v. Latrobe, 81 Md. 222. There must be a clear and unequivocal legal right to be enforced and there must not be any adequate remedy other than mandamus for its enforcement. Brown v. Bragunier, 79 Md. 234. If the right be doubtful, mandamus will not lie. If the right be clear and there be some other adequate remedy, that remedy and not mandamus must be invoked. Obviously then the inquiry at the threshold of the case is: Is the right which the Water Company sets up and seeks to have enforced such a clear legal and unequivocal right as can be enforced by this process.

Under the supplemental agreement it will be borne in mind that the contract of 1883 distinctly and unequivocally purports to bind both the municipality and the Water Company forever. The municipality is obligated to levy each year in perpetuity five cents on the $100 of the assessed value of the property within the city and to pay the proceeds of the levy *556 to the Water Company- in consideration for the latter’s supplying from.its works, water for public use. There are two difficulties in the path of the enforcement of that contract by mandamus. First, it has been, as it must be, conceded, that no municipality, without express legislative sanction, has authority to bind itself to levy taxes for the payment of money for all time to come when the taxes, if thus levied, are to be applied as are those we are dealing with. Secondly,

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Bluebook (online)
56 A. 990, 98 Md. 551, 1904 Md. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westminster-water-co-v-mayor-of-westminster-md-1904.