
    MARY G. TIGHE v. CHARLES H. OSBORNE, Inspector of Buildings.
    
      Zoning Ordinance■ — Validity—Discretion of Administrative Officer — Provision for Appeal.
    
    Baltimore City having, under its charter, the right to exercise within the limits of the municipality the full police power of the State, it can pass an ordinance prohibiting the erection of buildings or any use of them which would create hazards from fire or disease, or would menace the public security, health, or morals.
    The delegation, by the revised zoning ordinance of Baltimore City, to the zoning commissioner, of the power to determine, as a prerequisite to the issue of building permits, whether the buildings or the proposed uses of them would menace the public security, health, or morals, is valid, his discretion in the matter being limited both by provisions in the ordinance itself as to what he shall consider in passing on permits, and by numerous decisions of the Court of Appeals as to what does and what does not bear a substantial relation to the public security, health,, and morals.
    The mere possibility that the zoning commissioner might disregard the limitations upon his discretion contained in the ordinance and the decisions is not ground for declaring the ordinance invalid, since it is not to be presumed that he will do so, and in case he should do so. the injured party has a remedy by appeal.
    
      With the increased tendency to provide in laws and ordinances general rules and standards, leaving to administrative boards and agencies the task of acquiring information, working out the details, and applying these rules and standards to specific cases, the courts have relaxed to some extent the particularity with which they formerly required the laws and ordinances to set out the rules and standards by which the delegated power was to be limited.
    
      Since Constitution, art. 4, sec. 28, gives the Baltimore City Court exclusive jurisdiction of ajipeals arising under Baltimore City ordinances, the provisions in the revised zoning ordinance for appeals from the board of zoning appeals to that court are valid.
    That the revised zoning ordinance of Baltimore City fails to provide for an appeal to the Court of Appeals does not render the ordinance invalid, there being nothing in the Constitution requiring such a provision.
    
      Decided April 8th, 1926.
    
    Appeal from the Baltimore City Court (Prank, J.).
    Mandamus proceeding by Mary G. Tighe against Charles H. Osborne, Inspector of Buildings for Baltimore City. Prom a judgment for defendant, the petitioner appeals.
    Affirmed.
    The cause was argued before Bob®, C. J., Pattison, Urner, Adkins, Offtttt, Digges, Parke, and Walsi-t, JJ.
    
      C. Arthur Eby and James E. Tippett, for the appellant.
    
      Philip B. Perlman, City Solicitor, and Wirt A. Duvall, Jr., Deputy City Solicitor, with whom was George E. Kieffner, Assistant City Solicitor, on the brief, for the appellee.
   Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the question of the constitutionality of Ordinance Ho. 522 of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, which ordinance undertakes to regulate the issuance of “use” permits in Baltimore City for structures to be used for other than residential purposes.

A case between the same parties was before this Court at the October Term (see Tighe v. Osborne, 149 Md. 349), and we then decided that the ordinance involved in that case, which dealt with the same matter, was unconstitutional, and the case was remanded for further proceedings. Mrs. Tighe, the appellant in both cases, thereupon renewed her application for a building permit to erect a stable for thirty horses on Cokesbury Avenue in Baltimore, and upon her application being refused because of her failure to apply for and secure a “use” permit, she again filed a petition in the Baltimore City Court asking that a mandamus issue compelling the inspector of buildings for Baltimore City, the appellee, to give her a building permit. The answer of the inspector set up as a defense the failure of Mrs. Tighe to comply with the provisions of Ordinance Ho. 522, regulating “use” permits, which was approved by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore on December 14, 1925, just four days after the first case of Tighe v. Osborne, supra, was decided, and to this answer the petitioner demurred on the ground that the ordinance was unconstitutional and void. The lower court overruled the demurrer, and, upon Mrs. Tighe declining to plead further, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, the inspector of buildings, and from this judgment the petitioner has appealed. As the only difference between the present case and the first case between these parties is to be found in the two ordinances, we think the foregoing statement of the facts and circumstances sufficient, and we will accordingly proceed to a consideration of these ordinances.

The ordinance in the first case was known as Ordinance Ho. 334, and its chief provisions will be found set out in the opinion in that case, Tighe. v. Osborne, supra. It was held invalid because of the provisions attempting to give the zoning commissioner the power to refuse to grant a permit for a building to be used for any purpose other than a residence where, in his judgment, the use to which such building was to be put or its location “would, in any way, menace the public welfare.” In the' course of the opinion, which was delivered bv Judge Offutt, the Court, after discussing generally the police power and calling' attention to the use of the phrase “general welfare” in many definitions of the power, said: “But the police power even as thus defined, vague and vast as it is, has its limitations, and it cannot justify any act which violates the prohibitions, express or implied, of the State or Federal Constitutions. Byrne v. Md. Realty Co., 129 Md. 210 ; Goldman v. Crowther, 147 Md. 293. If this were not so and if the police power were superior to the constitution and if it extended to all objects which could be embraced within the meaning of the words ‘general welfare’ as defined by the lexicographers, the constitutions would be so much waste paper, because no right of the individual would be beyond its reach, and every property right and personal privilege and immunity of the citizen could be invaded at the will of the State whenever in its judgment the convenience, prosperity, or mental or physical comfort of the public required.” And further on it was said that: “Such a grant of power is in our opinion arbitrary and in conflict with both of the constitutional guaranties referred to above (article 23, Bill of Rights, and section 40 of article 4 of the Constitution of Maryland), because it commits to the arbitrary discretion of subordinate officials the power of depriving' the citizen of his property without compensation by taking from him the beneficial use thereof, regardless of whether such deprivation is required for the protection of the public order, security, health or morals.”

It was accordingly decided in that case that Ordinance Ho. 334, under which the zoning commissioner could refuse to issue permits if “in his judgment, after investigation, the proposed buildings or structures, use or changes of use, would create hazards from fire or disease, or would in any way menace the public welfare, security, health or morals,” was invalid because the attempted delegation of the power to determine what structures or uses of them might affect the “public welfare” was, standing by itself, too broad and indefinite.

The ordinance in the present case contains no reference to “public welfare,” it omits entirely sub-section E of section 3, to which special objection was found by the Oourt in the previous case, and there are several other changes which will be adverted to later on in this opinion. The part with which we are now concerned provides that the zoning commissioner can refuse to issue permits if “the proposed buildings or structures, use or changes of use, would create hazards from fire or disease, or would menace the public security, health or morals,” and the chief question to be determined on this appeal is whether this delegation of power by the Mayor and Oity Council of Baltimore to the zoning commissioner is valid.

In Tighe v. Osborne, supra, after discussing generally the police power and the frequency with which the courts have had to deal with it, we said: “"While that mass of litigation has resulted in no single comprehensive definition of the power so far as it is applicable to cases like this one, which has been universally accepted, by the weight of authority it has been given a meaning narrower than that first stated, which we think fairly expressed by the following formula, which is that the police power is the power inherent in the state to prescribe within the limits of the federal and state constitutions reasonable regulations necessary to preserve the public order, health, safety or morals.”

Applying this formula to the delegation of power contained in the ordinance now before us, we find that we are not required to pass upon any novel or doubtful application of the police power. In fact, the language of this part of the ordinance (aside from the words “hazards from fire or disease” which are really covered by the terms “public security” and “health”), is almost identical with the language of the formula, and it cannot now be doubted that this language correctly designates objects to which it is universally conceded the police power applies. Boehm v. Baltimore, 61 Md. 259 ; Deems v. Baltimore, 80 Md. 164 ; State v. Broadbelt, 89 Md. 565 ; State v. Hyman, 98 Md. 596 ; Bostock v. Sams, 95 Md. 400 ; Brown v. Stubbs, 128 Md. 129 ; Byrne v. Md. Realty Co., 129 Md. 210 ; Goldman v. Crowther, 147 Md. 282 ; Tighe v. Osborne, supra, 12 C. J. 913, 916, 918. And as Baltimore City, under its charter, has the right to exercise within the limits of the municipality the full police power of the State, no doubt can he entertained as to the authority of the city to pass an ordinance prohibiting the erection of buildings or any use of them which “would create hazards from fire or disease, or would menace the public security, health or morals.” Charter of Baltimore, art. 1, sec. 18; Tighe v. Osborne, supra ; Osborne v. Grauel, 136 Md. 88 ; Brown v. Stubbs, supra ; Rossburg v. State, 111 Md. 394.

The real question in the case then is not whether the City of Baltimore had the power to pass an ordinance protecting the public security, health or morals, but whether it had the right to delegate to the zoning commissioner the power to determine, in the manner prescribed by Ordinance Mo. 522, whether buildings or the proposed use of them would menace the public security, health or morals. If this was a question of first impression there might be considerable difficulty in determining it, but the past decisions of this Court, as well as the prevailing trend of authority elsewhere, seem to us to have settled the matter. An examination of the opinion in Tighe v. Osborne, supra, shows that the chief difficulty with the ordinance in that case was caused by the phrase “public welfare,” and all that was there decided was that the city could not delegate to any one the power to decide what was detrimental to the “public welfare.” In the present case there is no such delegation. Here the authority of the zoning commissioner is limited to prohibiting structures or uses of them which would menace the public «^curity, health or morals. These things, as we have seen, are proper objects of the police power, and many of the matters which can legitimately be said to affect any of them, as well as many matters which cannot be properly said to affect them, have been passed upon in previous decisions of this Oourt. These decisions are binding on the zoning commissioner, and in addition, the ordinance itself provides in section 3 that in passing on permits the commissioner shall give consideration to:

“(a) The character and use of buildings and structures adjoining or in the vicinity of the property mentioned in the application; (b) The number of persons residing, studying, working in or otherwise occupying buildings adjoining or in the vicinity of the projierty mentioned in tbe application; (c) The location, kind and size of surface and sub-surface structures in the vicinity of the property mentioned in the application, such as water mains, sewers and other utilities; (d) Traffic conditions in so far as they or any of them relate to hazards from fire or disease, or to the public security, health, or morals.”

It is thus apparent that the ordinance does not vest an unlimited discretion in the zoning commissioner. He can not refuse a permit unless the building or its proposed use would menace the public security, health or morals; he is required to secure information about and give consideration to all the matters just enumerated in reaching a decision; and finally, he is bound by numerous decisions of this Oourt as to what does and what does not bear a: substantial relation to the public security, health or morals. Among these decisions are Cochrane v. Preston, 108 Md. 220, holding that a limitation on the height of buildings was valid; Byrne v. Md. Realty Co., supra, holding that ah act prohibiting the erection of dwelling houses in a certain part of Baltimore City unless of brick, semi-detached and at least ten feet apart, or if of frame, twenty feet apart, is invalid; Brown v. Stubbs, supra, holding that an ordinance requiring the assent of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to the licensing" of building's for moving picture shows was valid; State v. Hyman, supra, holding that an act requiring, inter alia, a permit to manufacture coats, etc., in a tenement, and authorizing an inspector to revoke the permit at any time the health of the community required it, was valid; Goldman v. Crowther, supra, holding that certain provisions in the ordinance in that case attempting to regulate the use of property were void; Bostock v. Sams, supra, holding that a municipal ordinance providing that no building could be erected without securing a permit from the appeal tax court and that “no such permit shall be granted unless in the judgment of the judges of the appeal tax court or a majority of them, the size, general character and appearance of the building to be erected will conform to the general character of the building previously erected in the same locality and will not in any way tend to depreciate the value of the surrounding improved or unimproved property” was void; and Stubbs v. Scott, supra, in which it was held that the building inspector of Baltimore City could not, under the ordinances then existing, lawfully refuse to issue a building permit for a building to be erected in a residential neighborhood simply because the proposed structure was to be used for store purposes. The foregoing considerations make it abundantly evident that the ordinance before us contains many limitations on the powers of the zoning commissioner, and while he could disregard these limitations, it is not to be presumed that he will do so, nor is such a possibility a proper ground for declaring the ordinance invalid. State v. Hyman, supra. And should these limitations be disregarded the party injured thereby has a right of appeal to the board of zoning appeals, and thence to the Baltimore City Court, under section 2 of the ordinance.

And finally, there is ample authority to sustain even broader delegations of power to administrative boards or subordinate officials. It was strongly intimated throughout the majority opinion in Tighe v. Osborne, supra, that the delegation of power contained in the ordinance involved in that case would have been valid had the phrase “public welfare” been omitted from the ordinance. Not only has that phrase been eliminated from the ordinance we are now considering, but, in addition, the provision in the first ordinance authorizing the commissioner to refuse a permit if the building or its use would “in his judgment * * * in any way menace the public welfare,” etc., has been changed, and in the present ordinance the commissioner is authorized to refuse a permit only when the building or its use “would menace the public security,” etc. In State v. Hyman, supra, the delegation by the Legislature to an inspector of the power to determine when the manufacture of clothing in a tenement was detrimental to the health of the community was upheld as valid; in Smith v. Standard Oil Co. of N. J. 149 Md. 61, we held valid two ordinances of Baltimore City requiring any one who desired to erect a livery stable, junk shop, garage, gasoline service station, etc., to first secure a permit from the Mayor; and in the very recent case of Baltimore v. Bloecher & Schaaf et al., 149 Md. 648, we sustained an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore which authorized the health commissioner or his inspectors to condemn meat which was found to be intrinsically unsound, unhealthful, unwholesome or otherwise unfit for' human food, and which further authorized the condemnation of meat products prepared under conditions so im clean or unsanitary as to induce a reasonable belief that they had thereby been rendered unsound, unclean, unwholesome and unfit for human food. This ordinance did not provide any more definite formula' than that contained in the phrase “unfit for human food” by which the wholesomeness of meat could be determined, but on the contrary it directed the health commissioner to have inspections made bv experts in sanitation, so that he could acquire the necessary information about the places in which meat was prepared or offered for sale, and it amounted in effect to delegating to the health commissioner the power to condemn and prohibit the sale of meat or meat products which would injure the public health. The inspectors are specifically directed to consider whether the meats contain dyes, chemicals, preservatives or other injurious ingredients, just as in the ordinance now before us the zoning commissioner is required to consider the matters set out in section 3, but general authority to condemn meats found to be “unfit for human food” (that is, “detrimental to the public health”) is given in the meat ordinance, just as authority is given in Ordinance No. 552 to prohibit tbe erection of buildings or uses of them which would menace the public security, health or morals.

In Osborne v. Grauel, supra, the Court declined to compel by mandamus the issuing by the building inspector of a permit for a garage, it appearing that the permit had been disapproved by the Mayor under the authority of an ordinance of Baltimore City requiring him to investigate all applications for garages and to approve them, before a permit could be granted. The validity of this delegation of power to the Mayor seems to have been conceded in the case, the chief point raised being as to the validity of the reasons assigned by him in disapproving the permit. In Creaghan v. Baltimore, 132 Md. 442, this Court sustained as valid an ordinance authorizing the commissioner of health of Baltimore City to prohibit the sale of milk within the city if the producers' of the milk did not store, keep and distribute it in accordance with such regulations as the commissioner might adopt to insure its being safe for human consumption, and also authorizing him, to prohibit its sale if in his “opinion” it was kept, stored or distributed under such conditions as to render it unsuitable for human food.

In Mutual Film Corporation v. Ohio Industrial Com., 236 U. S. 230, the Supreme Court upheld as valid a statute ■which delegated to the board of moving picture censors the power to prohibit the exhibition of moving picture films which were not “in the judgment and discretion of the board of censors of a moral, educational or amusing or harmless character.”

In United States v. Grimaud, 220 U. S. 506, an Act of Congress giving the Secretary of Agriculture the power to provide rules governing forest reservations, and mating the violation of such rules a criminal offense, was held valid.

In Wilson v. Eureka City, 173 U. S. 32, an ordinance requiring the written permission of the Mayor of a town before any person was allowed to move a building along the streets was upheld.

In Blue v. Beach, 155 Ind. 121, it was held that, under a general statutory authority to prevent the spread of contagious and infectious diseases, a rule of the state board of health upon the subject of vaccination was not legislative.

And to -the same general effect see Boehm v. Baltimore, supra ; Downs v. Swann, 111 Md. 53 ; State v. Loden, 117 Md. 384 ; Scholle v. State, 90 Md. 729 ; State v. Broadbelt, supra ; Deems v. Baltimore, supra ; Isenhour v. State, 157 Ind. 517 ; State v. Normand, 76 N. H. 541 ; Train v. Boston Disinfecting Co., 144 Mass. 523 ; Newark Horse Car Rwy. Co. v. Hunt, 50 N. J. Law, 308 ; Mahler v. Eby, 264 U. S. 32, 40 ; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 387 ; Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649 ; Buttfield v. Stranahan, 192 U. S. 470 ; Philadelphia Co. v. Stimson, 223 U. S. 605.

The foregoing authorities seem to us to establish conclusively the validity of the delegation of power contained in Ordinance Bo. 522. It may be that the language used in some of the earlier decisions of this and other American courts is at variance with this conclusion, but certainly the more modern decisions amply and specifically sustain it. The change, if there has been any, is due to the constantly increasing complexity of modern society and the consequent multiplicity of matters which require the state’s attention.

The field has become so vast, and the things to be considered so enlarged in number and so interrelated with one another, that it has been found practically impossible to provide in laws and ordinances specific rules and standards by which every conceivable situation can be measured and determined. The result has been that we have turned more and more to the plan of providing in our laws and ordinances general rules and standards, and leaving to administrative boards and agencies the task of acquiring information, working out the details, and applying these rules and standards to specific cases. This is not considered a delegation of legislative authority, though it probably does represent an expansion of administrative power. We think the ordinance now under consideration is one of this class, and that the rules and standards which it provides for the regulation of the zoning commissioner furnish a sufficient limitation upon the discretion it vests in him.

Such ordinances represent no change in principle; they merely indicate that the courts, faced by at least an apparent necessity, have relaxed to some extent the particularity with which they formerly required the laws and ordinances-to set out the rules and standards by which the delegated power was to be limited, and whatever may be said of the' wisdom of this relaxation, no doubt can now be entertained as to its sanction by the great weight of authority in this country. See cases cited supra,.

The cases of Baltimore v. Radecke, 49 Md. 230, and Hagerstown v. Baltimore and Ohio R. Co., 107 Md. 178, have been so often explained and distinguished in prior decisions from cases like the present one that we do not think it would serve any useful purpose to again discuss them, and so we will not do so. And because of a similar frequency of. discussion and citation, we have also refrained from commenting on the cases of Easton v. Covey, 74 Md. 262, and Farmers and Planters’ Company v. Salisbury, 136 Md. 617.

This brings ns to a consideration of that part of Ordinance Eo. 522 which provides for an appeal from the zoning commissioner to the board of zoning appeals, and from that body to the Baltimore City Court. The ordinance provides that on this last-mentioned appeal “The court shall decide whether the order, decision or determination complained of is arbitrary, unreasonable, unwarranted, or unlawful,” and the court is also given authority to remand the case for the taking of additional testimony. Section 28 of article 4 of the Maryland Constitution gives the Baltimore City Court exclusive jurisdiction of .appeals arising under the ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and, so far as we are advised, no one has ever seriously questioned the right of the city, under this constitutional provision, to provide in its ordinances for appeals to the Baltimore City Court, and such provisions have been made in numerous instances. See Ordinances of Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.

In State v. Rutherford, 145 Md. 363, 369, the provisions for an appeal from the board of zoning appeals to the Baltimore City Court in Ordinance No. 922 of Baltimore City (subsequently held void on other grounds in Goldman v. Crowther, supra,) were apparently conceded to be valid and were so treated by the Court. In the case last mentioned the Court again intimated, though it expressly refrained from deciding, that these same provisions were valid. And in Baltimore v. Bloecher & Schaaf, Inc., supra, we expressly held that the provisions for an appeal from the health commissioner to the Baltimore City Court contained in Ordinance Eo. 431 of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (commonly called the “Meat Ordinance”), were valid, the Court saying’: “Tha Baltimore City Court, having been designated by the Constitution as the tribunal to hear all appeals, arising' under the ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, it was within the power of that municipality, in order to secure uniformity in the administration of the law, to provide for an appeal from the determination by administrative or executive agencies of • questions of law to that court and we do not understand that in doing that it enlarged or changed its jurisdiction. And •while it provides for no appeal from the decisions of such agencies upon issues of facts, nevertheless persons aggrieved thereby would not be injured because, if such decisions were unreasonable, arbitrary or oppressive, they could be reviewed and corrected upon application to a, court of chancery.”

We think these authorities amply sustain the validity of the provision for an appeal to the 'Baltimore City Court contained in the ordinance now before us. Under these provisions the board of zoning appeals must furnish the court with “all papers, documents and memoranda” relating to {lie case appealed; the court is authorized to determine whether the action appealed from was “arbitrary, unreasonable, unwarranted or unlawful”; it is given “power to remand the case * * * for the taking of additional testimony, and to pass any order which it may deem proper in the premises”; and finally it is authorized “to reverse, affirm or modify the order, decision or determination complained of.” These provisions are more ample than the appeal provisions contained in the ordinance approved in Baltimore v. Bloecher & Schaff, Inc., supra, and apparently confer a wider jurisdiction than do those provisions. In fact, they seem practically to amount to authorizing a trial ¿fe novo on appeal, as did the ordinance considered in State v. Ruther ford, supra, and, in our opinion, there is nothing in them which could in any way be held to render Ordinance Eo. 522 invalid.

Kor does the failure of the ordinance to provide for an appeal to this Court render it invalid. There is nothing; in the Constitution requiring such a provision, and there is ample authority sustaining the validity of laws under which there is no appeal to the Court of Appeals, but which nevertheless concern rights j ust as well established and important as are those involved in this ordinance. Dolfield v. West. Md. R. Co., 107 Md. 584 ; New York Mining Co. v. Midland Co., 99 Md. 506 ; Hopkins v. Phila., W. & P. R. Co., 94 Md. 263 ; Moores v. Bel Air Water and Light Co., 79 Md. 391 ; Francis v. Weaver, 76 Md. 457 ; Greenland v. County Commissioners, 68 Md. 59 ; Hendrick v. State, 115 Md. 552 ; Rayner v. State, 52 Md. 368 ; Judefind v. State, 78 Md. 510 ; Green v. State, 113 Md. 451.

Without further prolonging this opinion it is sufficient to say that for the reasons heretofore given, we think Ordinance No. 522 of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore is valid, and we will accordingly affirm the action of the learned court below in overruling the petitioner’s demurrer to the defendant’s answer, and rendering a judgment for the defendant.

Judgment affirmed, ivith costs.

Digges and Pakke, JJ., dissent.  