Whiteley v. Mayor of Baltimore

77 A. 882, 113 Md. 541, 1910 Md. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 77 A. 882 (Whiteley 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
Whiteley v. Mayor of Baltimore, 77 A. 882, 113 Md. 541, 1910 Md. LEXIS 66 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Oourt.

This is an appeal from an order of the Baltimore City Oourt overruling a motion to quash and set aside the proceedings to open Thirtieth street in the Oity of Baltimore through certain property in which the appellant has an interest. The appellant relies on three grounds in the motion, which we will consider in the order therein named.

1. The first reason assigned is that the ordinance under which the proceedings were taken is void, because the preliminary plat filed in the office of the Commissioners for Opening Streets prior to the passage of the ordinance did not have on it a schoolhouse which belonged to the city. Section 828 of Article 4 of Code of .Public Local Laws provides that before the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore shall pass *543 any ordinance under section 6 of that Article, paragraph “Streets, Bridges and Highways,” relating to laying out, opening, etc., any street, square, lane or alley, notice shall he given hy advertisement published once a week for six consecutive weeks in two daily newspapers in said city that application will be made for the passage of such ordinance; and notice shall also be given by filing in the office of the Commissioners for Opening Streets on or before the first day of such publication a map as described therein, “which, in case of laying out, opening, extending, widening or straightening, shall show the course and the lines of the projected improvement, and also the lots and buildings thereon which shall be taken or destroyed, in whole or in part.”

The plat in this case was filed on May 20th, 1907, and the first publication of the advertisement was on December 20th of that year. An agreed statement of facts filed in the case shows that the schoolhouse referred to “was not a permanent schoolhouse, that it was no part of the permanent improvement in the neighborhood of Thirtieth street, hut was a portable schoolhouse, movable from place to place as the exigencies of the School Board required.” It is admitted it was not near Thirtieth street on or before May 20th, 1907, but was moved partially on the bed of that street in the early part of December, 1907, and when the final, “damage and benefit plat” was prepared the schoolhouse was in place as shown on that plat. It is movable by taking it to pieces and moving it from place to place in sections, and then the sections are put together. It “simply rests upon the ground, and has no foundations whatever.”

Regardless of the fact that the schoolhouse belonged to the "city, such a building is not within the meaning of the charter. It was not to be, “taken or destroyed, in whole or in pai*t,” in the sense that provision is used. The agreed statement says: “Said schoolhouse is not to be taken in any way in connection with the Thirtieth street opening, hut when the work begins it will be moved elsewhere.” It is therefore admitted *544 that it was not to be “taken,” and it certainly will not be “destroyed,” in whole or part, when it is only to be taken apart and put together again, as such a building is intended to be. The only possible loss or inconvenience which the city might sustain would'be that it might be necessary to remove it sooner than it would have been moved if the street was not to be opened, but it can scarcely be contended that such expenses should be allowed in a proceeding of this character, where one department of the city government (Department of Education) placed the temporary structure there after the map had been filed with another department: The charter expressly recognizes the filing of the map as notice, and it must at least be held to be such notice to the city and its various departments as would deprive it, or any of them, of compensation for expenses incurred in moving it under the circumstances shown by this record.

But in addition to that, it could not have been intended that placing a temporary structure of such character as this is on the limits of a proposed street, after the map was filed, could invalidate the proceedings because that preliminary map did not contain the structure. It could not have shown it on May 20th, 1907, for the simple reason that it was not there to be shown. If such an omission could defeat proceedings of this character, the city authorities would be required to keep a lookout for portable buildings up to the very time the map is filed, and if placing such a structure there after the preliminary map had been filed would invalidate the proceedings, why would not placing it there after the publication of the notice in the newspaper, but before the assessment of damages and benefits? If such a construction' be given this requirement of the charter, it. would be an easy way for those, opposed to such improvements to obstruct and defeat them, for publishing the notice and filing the map are undoubtedly conditions precedent to passing a valid ordinance for the opening of a street. Baltimore v. Grand Lodge, 44 Md. 436; Burke v. Baltimore, 77 *545 Md. 469. So without giving other reasons, we cannot adopt the contention of the appellant as to that question.

2. The next ground relied on is that the Commissioners for Opening Streets did not give thirty days’ notice in-two daily newspapers published in the English language before the first meeting to execute the ordinance, hut only inserted it in one newspaper published' in the English language, and in one published in the German language.

Section 829 provides that: “Before any Commissioners appointed by any ordinance of said corporation under the two preceding sections shall proceed to the performance of their duty, they shall give notice in at least two of the daily newspapers in the City of Baltimore of the object of the ordinance under which they propose to act, at least thirty days before the time of their first meeting to execute the same.” This Court held in Bennett v. Baltimore, 106 Md. 484, that, “in the absence of a direction to the contrary the publication of a notice required by law to he made must he in the English language and in a newspaper printed in that language.” That has since been followed in Wannenwetsch v. Baltimore, 111 Md. 32. After the decision in the Bennett case the Act of 1908, Chapter 142, was passed which is entitled “An Act to authorize the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to. publish notices in German newspapers.”

It is contended that that Act is a nullity because the title-does not describe its subject, and is misleading. The body of the Act provides that whenever the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, “or any official, officer, employe, agent or agency thereof,” shall he required or authorized by any general or local law, or ordinance, to publish a notice of any description whatsoever in more than one newspaper, one of such newspapers, in the discretion of the said municipal corporation or of the said official, etc., may he one published in the German language, and such publication shall have the same validity in all respects as if such newspaper was published in the English language. It excepts from the operation *546 of the Act section 49 of Art.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 882, 113 Md. 541, 1910 Md. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiteley-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1910.