Gomeringer v. McAbee

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City overruling certain exceptions to the ratification of an auditor's account distributing the proceeds of sale under a decree for a sale of mortgaged premises. *Page 559

The exceptions are based upon the allowance of a lien claim by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore for money paid by it, with interest and penalties, in connecting the property described in the mortgage with the Sanitary Sewerage System of the city.

The lien claim allowed by the auditor for the sewer connections put in by the city amounted to the sum of $116.55, and was allowed as a preferred claim in the auditor's account stated in the case.

It appears from the auditor's account that the amount received from the sale of the mortgaged premises amounted to the sum of $1,000, but this sum, after the payment of the costs of sale and the prior liens of two hundred and eighty-three dollars and sixty-six cents, left the sum of $49.61 still due by the mortgagor on the mortgage debt, which debt and interest amounted to $654.20.

The principal contention of the appellant is that the mortgage debt is a prior lien to the city's claim, and it was error to allow this claim as a preferred lien over the mortgage debt.

The lien of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore for connecting the owner's property in question with the Sanitary Sewerage System of the city is based and claimed under the provisions of Ordinance No. 58 of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, approved December 28th, 1911. The mortgage to the appellant Gomeringer is dated June 1st, 1912, and the second mortgage to the appellant, The Equitable Mortgage Company, is dated July 1st, 1912.

The ordinance, it will be seen, giving the lien to the city for the cost of the work in connecting the property, was approved December 28th, 1911, prior in date to the mortgages and before they were placed upon the owner's property.

The title of Ordinance No. 58, approved December 28th, 1911, is as follows: "An Ordinance to effectuate the purposes of Section 7, of Chapter 349 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland of 1904, relating to the New Municipal Sewerage System; and to provide penalties for *Page 560 the failure or refusal of the owners of property to make connections with said sewerage system; and to provide for the making of such connections by its City Engineer, in the event of such failure or refusal, and to provide for making such penalty and the costs of making such connections a lien on such properties, and for the collection thereof, and to provide penalties for violations of the provision of this ordinance."

The ordinance, then, provides, that the city is to put in the sewer connections if the property owner fails to do so, and to appoint a day for the property owner to show cause, why charges should not be made against him, and with a right of appeal to the City Court as in case of new assessment. It also provides, as follows: "If such party shall fail to appear within the time limited, or fail to show any just reason why said charge should not be made the Appeal Tax Court shall cause such charge to be entered in a book to be provided for that purpose and kept in the office of the Collector of Taxes, similar to that which is now kept for charges for street assessment. Said entry shall show the amount of the expense for making the sewer connection and the date when said expense was incurred by the City Engineer and said administrative charge or penalty and shall contain the further statement that one-fifth of said total expense shall be added to the tax bills on said property for each of the next succeeding five years with interest on each said one-fifth from the date when said expense was incurred by the City Engineer, and thereupon it shall be the duty of the City Collector in preparing the tax bills for each of the next succeeding five years, to add the amount of one-fifth of said whole charge with interest from the date when said expense was incurred by the City Engineer to the tax bill upon said property. And the said one-fifth so added and interest thereon shall be a lien on the property to the same extent and be collectible in the same manner, as the city taxes thereon."

This ordinance was passed in pursuance of the power conferred upon the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore by the *Page 561 Act of 1904, Chapter 349, establishing a sewerage system for the City of Baltimore and the terms of this ordinance was subsequently ratified and confirmed, by the Act of 1912, Chapter 24.

By section 2 of the last named Act, it is provided, that "Ordinance No. 58 of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, approved December 28th, 1911, be and it is hereby ratified and confirmed, and every indebtedness accruing to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore from any property owner in said city under and in pursuance of the terms of said ordinance is hereby declared to be a lien upon the property of such property owner as in said ordinance declared, and collectible as therein provided."

The language of this ordinance, it will be seen, is clear and certain, that the city shall have a lien upon the property for the work done, in connecting the premises with the sewerage system, and as in this case, the legislative authority and the ordinance itself, are prior in date to the mortgages, we have no hesitation in holding that the city's lien was prior to that of the appellants. The lien related back and applied from the date of the Act providing for it.

It is well settled that an ordinance passed by legislative authority is a law within the meaning of that term, as used in constitutions. Gould v. Baltimore, 120 Md. 540; New OrleansWater Co. v. New Orleans, 164 U.S. 471; Walla Walla v.Water Co., 172 U.S. 1.

In Provident Institution v. Mayor and Alderman of JerseyCity, 113 U.S. 506, the Supreme Court of the United States in dealing with similar objections, as those raised in this case, said: The mortgages of the complainant were not created prior to that statute, but long subsequent thereto. When the complainant took its mortgages, it knew what the law was; it knew that, by the law, if the mortgaged lot should be supplied with Passaic water by the city authorities, the rent of that water, as regulated and exacted by them, would be a first lien on the lot. It chose to take its mortgages subject to this law; and it is idle to contend that a postponement *Page 562 of its lien to that of the water rents, whether after accruing or not, is a deprivation of its property without due process of law. Its own voluntary act, its own consent, is an element in the transaction. The cases referred to by counsel to the contrary, holding void a consent exacted contrary to the Constitution, have no bearing on the present cases.

And upon the question of the imposition of a penalty and a rate of interest in addition to the charges and costs, said: But we look upon these provisions as merely intended to enforce prompt payment, and as incidental regulations appropriate to the subject. The law which authorized these coercive measures gave to mortgagees and judgment creditors the right to pay the rents and to have the benefit of the lien thereof; so that it was in their own power to protect themselves from any such penalties and accumulations of interest. They are analogous to the costs incurred in the foreclosure of the first mortgage, which have the same priority as the mortgage itself over subsequent encumbrances. Vreeland v. O'Neil, 36 N.J. Eq. 399; Dressman v. Bank, 100 Ky. 571.

The manifest object and purpose of the Acts of 1904, Chapter 349, and of 1912, Chapter 24, and of Ordinance No. 58, passed in pursuance of these Acts, was to preserve and protect the sanitary condition of the City, and to establish a sewerage system for the City. Full power was conferred upon the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to pass any ordinance, to provide for any remedial proceedings or processes or for any penalty that may be necessary in its judgment to properly and effectively carry out the purposes of this legislation. It was also provided, under the power conferred "to do any and all things reasonably necessary to be done to compel the owners of property to place and maintain the same in relations of full co-operation with the sewerage system."

The Ordinance, here in question, we think, is directly within the power conferred by the two Acts of the General *Page 563 Assembly of Maryland, referred to herein and is free from the constitutional objections urged against it. Taylor v.Baltimore (No. 26, Oct. T., 1916, decided Jan. 12, 1917);Balto. v. Clunet, 23 Md. 449; Rossberg v. State,111 Md. 394; Balto. v. Reitz, 50 Md. 574; Calvert Co. v. Hellen,72 Md. 606.

But it is contended upon the part of the appellants, that other work was done, not required under the ordinance and this was included in the sum paid by the City.

It will be seen, from the contract set out in the Record, that the agreement between the owner of the property, the party of the first part, the contractor, the party of the second part, and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, the party of the third part, was to do all the work necessary and required by the Act of 1904, Chapter 349, and Ordinance No. 58, approved December 28th, 1911, upon the property of the owner, at and for the sum of $100, and that the owner was to repay the amount of such expense plus five dollars in five equal instalments, with interest, and that such instalments and debt shall be a lien on the property and shall be added to the tax bills for such years and collected in the same manner as other taxes on the property. The work was done according to the contract and the sum of $105 was paid by the City. The instalments for the sewer loan were entered by the Appeal Tax Court and properly billed, as required by the Ordinance. The State and City taxes for the years 1913, 1914 and 1915 were due and unpaid, at the date of the sale, and the City filed its lien claim with the auditor in this case. Code ofP.G.L., Art. 81, § 68; Blackistone v. State, 117 Md. 237.

The witness McAbee, the owner of the property, testified that the following work was done by the contractor under the contract, to wit, he made connection with the street and back through the cellar up to the bath room, and placed therein a bath tub, a wash bowl and a flush closet and an enameled sink in the kitchen. If the installation of the fixtures mentioned by the witness were necessary for a proper *Page 564 disposal of the sewerage and drainage and to connect the house drains with the sewerage system then they were clearly within section 7 of the Act of 1904, and Ordinance 58, passed December 28th, 1911. The City paid the money for the work agreed to be done by the owner of the property and the contractor for the sewer connection as required by the Act and the Ordinance referred to, and assuming there was other work done, the mortgagees received the benefit of it in the improvement of the property. The taxes were allowed to remain unpaid until they amounted to $82.13/100 and the accrued interest on the mortgage amounted to $26.20/100. The sewer connections undoubtedly enhanced the value of the property, and the mortgagee received the benefit of this in the price at the sale. We find no merit in the appellants' contention on this branch of the case.

For the reasons stated, the order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, dated the 1st of March, 1916, will be affirmed.

Order affirmed, with costs. *Page 565