Abrams v. Lamone
This text of 919 A.2d 1223 (Abrams v. Lamone) 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.
Opinions
Plurality Opinion by BELL, C.J., which WILNER and CATHELL, JJ., join.
This case is the first of two pertaining to the eligibility requirements of a candidate for the office of the Attorney General of Maryland.1 The genesis of this case was the attempt by Mr. Thomas E. Perez (“Perez”), an attorney and law professor, one of the appellees, to run for the office of the [151]*151Attorney General of Maryland in the 2006 Gubernatorial Primary Election. Article V, Section 4 of the Maryland Constitution prescribes the qualifications for that office. It provides:
“No person shall be eligible to the office of Attorney-General, who is not a citizen of this State, and a qualified voter therein, and has not resided and practiced Law in this State for at least ten years.”
MD CONST, art. V, § 4 (emphasis added). Today, we address whether a combination of membership in the Maryland Bar for five years, fewer than the ten years prescribed, and the practice of law for more than ten years, much of it being done at the federal level, suffices to meet the constitutional requirements of Article Y, Section 4.2 In analyzing past and present bar admission requirements of this State, the historical role of the Attorney General, and other Constitutional provisions which were in existence at the time of Article V, Section 4’s adoption, we shall hold that a candidate for the office of the Attorney General must be a member of the Maryland Bar for at least ten years and must be a practitioner of law in Maryland for an identical requisite period.
I.
Perez announced his candidacy for the office of the Attorney General on May 23, 2006. Before doing so, recognizing that there was a potential question as to his eligibility, i.e. the sufficiency of his professional credentials, to serve as Attorney General, in a letter dated May 8, 2006 and “in the continued spirit of thoroughness and due diligence ... as to whether [he] met the eligibility requirements of [Article V,] Section 4 of the Maryland Constitution,”3 he requested an advisory opin[152]*152ion from the office of the Attorney General.4 In that letter, Perez related his career, as follows.
After graduating from Harvard Law School in 1987, Perez was admitted to the New York Bar in 1988 and clerked for a federal judge in Colorado until 1989. He moved to Maryland after the clerkship and accepted a position with the United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”), through its Attorney General’s Honors Program. He remained in that position, performing various functions within the Department, until 1999.
In his first position, as a federal prosecutor in the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division, which he held from 1989 to 1994, and which was based in the District of Columbia headquarters of the Department, Perez investigated and prosecuted criminal civil rights cases nationwide. In that capacity, he was “responsible for directing the investigation of the case, discussing the matter with the local Assistant United States Attorney, FBI agent or other investigator, making a determination of whether a case merited prosecution, and then prosecuting the case, if [it] merited prosecution.” Some of the cases on his docket were Maryland cases.
In 1994, Perez was promoted to the Deputy Chief of the Section. His responsibilities in that position included supervising all cases that occurred in Maryland. This required him to consult with “any attorney in the Section desiring to pursue an investigation or prosecution in Maryland[.]” He also reviewed briefs and discussed strategies with the attorneys he supervised.
In 1995, while remaining a DOJ employee, Perez was detailed from the Civil Rights Division to the minority staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee on a fluctuating basis, i.e. he worked in both positions, staying, on an alternating basis, a [153]*153few months in each. While with the Judiciary Committee, Perez worked on various bills that had widespread impact in areas such as juvenile crime, immigration, and civil rights.
In 1998, Perez was appointed the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division, one of the four highest ranking positions in the Division. In that position, he oversaw the Criminal, Education, and Employment Sections, which entailed roughly 30% of all litigation activities within the Division. Several of the cases had a geographic anchor in Maryland.
In 1999, Perez left the Justice Department and became the Director of the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In that capacity, Perez “led a 220 person agency whose mission was to enforce civil rights laws in the health and human service context across the country,” acting as a “legal strategist, case supervisor, manager, and policy maker.” His nationwide caseload included cases from Maryland involving Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. None of the Maryland cases involved litigation.
Perez left federal service in January, 2001. He joined the faculty of the University of Maryland School of Law as an Assistant Professor of Law and Director of Clinical Law Programs in April 2001. Also in that year, Perez took the Maryland lawyer’s bar examination and was admitted to practice in Maryland.5
As Director of Clinical Law Programs, Perez supervised students who handled real cases and were permitted to appear in court pursuant to Maryland’s student practice rule (Rule 16).6 He supervised those programs from 2001 until 2003.
[154]*154When, in 2003, Perez was elected to the Montgomery County Council, he resigned his position of Clinic Director, although he remained a member of the faculty. Perez recently was promoted from Assistant Professor of Law to Associate Professor of Law.
Based on the information provided by Perez,7 the Attorney General, on May 19, 2006, issued an opinion, 91 Opinions of the Attorney General 99 (2006), concluding that Perez was qualified to hold the office of the Attorney General. Attorney General Curran reasoned:
‘While the State Constitution explicitly requires that a candidate for Attorney General have practiced law in the State for 10 years and implicitly requires that the candidate be admitted to the State bar, it neither explicitly nor [155]*155implicitly requires that a candidate have accumulated all of that experience while a member of the State bar. Practice in Maryland authorized by federal and State law counts toward the durational experience requirement in the Maryland Constitution, even if that work was performed while the attorney was not a member of the Maryland bar.”
Id. at 116.
Relying on this opinion, Perez, as we have seen, announced his candidacy for the office of the Attorney General and, on June 19,2006, formally registered his candidacy with the State Board of Elections (“the State Board”). By filing, pursuant to § 5-301(a)(l)8 of the Election Law Article, a certificate of candidacy, he certified, under oath,9 that, among other things, he was “a registered voter and a citizen of Maryland and [met] all other [constitutional] requirements for the ...
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Plurality Opinion by BELL, C.J., which WILNER and CATHELL, JJ., join.
This case is the first of two pertaining to the eligibility requirements of a candidate for the office of the Attorney General of Maryland.1 The genesis of this case was the attempt by Mr. Thomas E. Perez (“Perez”), an attorney and law professor, one of the appellees, to run for the office of the [151]*151Attorney General of Maryland in the 2006 Gubernatorial Primary Election. Article V, Section 4 of the Maryland Constitution prescribes the qualifications for that office. It provides:
“No person shall be eligible to the office of Attorney-General, who is not a citizen of this State, and a qualified voter therein, and has not resided and practiced Law in this State for at least ten years.”
MD CONST, art. V, § 4 (emphasis added). Today, we address whether a combination of membership in the Maryland Bar for five years, fewer than the ten years prescribed, and the practice of law for more than ten years, much of it being done at the federal level, suffices to meet the constitutional requirements of Article Y, Section 4.2 In analyzing past and present bar admission requirements of this State, the historical role of the Attorney General, and other Constitutional provisions which were in existence at the time of Article V, Section 4’s adoption, we shall hold that a candidate for the office of the Attorney General must be a member of the Maryland Bar for at least ten years and must be a practitioner of law in Maryland for an identical requisite period.
I.
Perez announced his candidacy for the office of the Attorney General on May 23, 2006. Before doing so, recognizing that there was a potential question as to his eligibility, i.e. the sufficiency of his professional credentials, to serve as Attorney General, in a letter dated May 8, 2006 and “in the continued spirit of thoroughness and due diligence ... as to whether [he] met the eligibility requirements of [Article V,] Section 4 of the Maryland Constitution,”3 he requested an advisory opin[152]*152ion from the office of the Attorney General.4 In that letter, Perez related his career, as follows.
After graduating from Harvard Law School in 1987, Perez was admitted to the New York Bar in 1988 and clerked for a federal judge in Colorado until 1989. He moved to Maryland after the clerkship and accepted a position with the United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”), through its Attorney General’s Honors Program. He remained in that position, performing various functions within the Department, until 1999.
In his first position, as a federal prosecutor in the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division, which he held from 1989 to 1994, and which was based in the District of Columbia headquarters of the Department, Perez investigated and prosecuted criminal civil rights cases nationwide. In that capacity, he was “responsible for directing the investigation of the case, discussing the matter with the local Assistant United States Attorney, FBI agent or other investigator, making a determination of whether a case merited prosecution, and then prosecuting the case, if [it] merited prosecution.” Some of the cases on his docket were Maryland cases.
In 1994, Perez was promoted to the Deputy Chief of the Section. His responsibilities in that position included supervising all cases that occurred in Maryland. This required him to consult with “any attorney in the Section desiring to pursue an investigation or prosecution in Maryland[.]” He also reviewed briefs and discussed strategies with the attorneys he supervised.
In 1995, while remaining a DOJ employee, Perez was detailed from the Civil Rights Division to the minority staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee on a fluctuating basis, i.e. he worked in both positions, staying, on an alternating basis, a [153]*153few months in each. While with the Judiciary Committee, Perez worked on various bills that had widespread impact in areas such as juvenile crime, immigration, and civil rights.
In 1998, Perez was appointed the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division, one of the four highest ranking positions in the Division. In that position, he oversaw the Criminal, Education, and Employment Sections, which entailed roughly 30% of all litigation activities within the Division. Several of the cases had a geographic anchor in Maryland.
In 1999, Perez left the Justice Department and became the Director of the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In that capacity, Perez “led a 220 person agency whose mission was to enforce civil rights laws in the health and human service context across the country,” acting as a “legal strategist, case supervisor, manager, and policy maker.” His nationwide caseload included cases from Maryland involving Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. None of the Maryland cases involved litigation.
Perez left federal service in January, 2001. He joined the faculty of the University of Maryland School of Law as an Assistant Professor of Law and Director of Clinical Law Programs in April 2001. Also in that year, Perez took the Maryland lawyer’s bar examination and was admitted to practice in Maryland.5
As Director of Clinical Law Programs, Perez supervised students who handled real cases and were permitted to appear in court pursuant to Maryland’s student practice rule (Rule 16).6 He supervised those programs from 2001 until 2003.
[154]*154When, in 2003, Perez was elected to the Montgomery County Council, he resigned his position of Clinic Director, although he remained a member of the faculty. Perez recently was promoted from Assistant Professor of Law to Associate Professor of Law.
Based on the information provided by Perez,7 the Attorney General, on May 19, 2006, issued an opinion, 91 Opinions of the Attorney General 99 (2006), concluding that Perez was qualified to hold the office of the Attorney General. Attorney General Curran reasoned:
‘While the State Constitution explicitly requires that a candidate for Attorney General have practiced law in the State for 10 years and implicitly requires that the candidate be admitted to the State bar, it neither explicitly nor [155]*155implicitly requires that a candidate have accumulated all of that experience while a member of the State bar. Practice in Maryland authorized by federal and State law counts toward the durational experience requirement in the Maryland Constitution, even if that work was performed while the attorney was not a member of the Maryland bar.”
Id. at 116.
Relying on this opinion, Perez, as we have seen, announced his candidacy for the office of the Attorney General and, on June 19,2006, formally registered his candidacy with the State Board of Elections (“the State Board”). By filing, pursuant to § 5-301(a)(l)8 of the Election Law Article, a certificate of candidacy, he certified, under oath,9 that, among other things, he was “a registered voter and a citizen of Maryland and [met] all other [constitutional] requirements for the ... office [of the Attorney General].” The State Board accepted Perez’s certificate and, pursuant to § 5-601(1)10 of the Election Law Article, placed his name on the ballot for the 2006 Primary Election.
[156]*156On July 13, 2006, Mr. Stephen N. Abrams (“Abrams”), the appellant, a registered voter in Maryland and a Republican candidate for the office of Comptroller of Maryland,11 filed, in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, an action pursuant to §§ 9-209(b)12 and 12-202(b)13 of the Election Law [157]*157Article, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against Perez, Ms. Linda H. Lamone (“Lamone”), in her official capacity as the State Administrator of Elections, and the State Board, collectively, “the appellees.”14 Abrams sought an order declaring that Perez did not have the qualifications required for the office of the Attorney General, an injunction requiring Perez to withdraw his certificate of candidacy, and an injunction prohibiting Lamone and the State Board from placing Perez’s name on the ballot for Attorney General. He argued that, under § 5-301 (b)15 of the Election Law Article, it was the State Board’s duty to determine whether Perez met all of the qualifications prescribed by the election laws, including constitutional requirements as to his eligibility to run for, and, [158]*158thus, to hold the office of the Attorney General.16
[159]*159The appellees, defendants below, responded by filing dispositive motions. Perez filed a Motion to Dismiss and/or Motion for Summary Judgment, principally on the ground that he met the qualifications prescribed by Article V, § 4 of the Maryland Constitution. Lamone and the State Board filed a Motion to Dismiss and to Expedite Scheduling. They contended that Abrams’ action was barred by the applicable statute of limitations and by laches and that their sole interest in the action was in ensuring an orderly administration of the election process, the deadlines of which would be jeopardized if the action were not adjudicated expeditiously. The Circuit Court held a hearing on the motions, at the conclusion of which it issued its oral opinion.
The Circuit Court first addressed the issue of the timeliness of the appellant’s action under § 12-202(b) of the Election Law Article.17 The court rejected the appellees’ argument that the relevant “act or omission” in the case sub judice was Perez’s filing of his certificate of candidacy, which occurred on June 19, 2006, and their contention that the appellant should have known about that filing earlier. Instead, the Circuit Court concluded that the operative and critical date and, therefore, the relevant, statutory determinant was July 3, 2006, the filing deadline.18 It explained, “to the extent that [160]*160there may have been errors ... [the filing deadline] is sort of the closing bell, if you will.... ” There was, in the court’s opinion, no other more reliable measure of the appellant’s knowledge than the filing deadline itself, when the appellant would be charged with knowledge of Perez’s candidacy. Because, the court ruled, the appellant’s motion was filed on July 13, 2006, within ten days of the filing deadline, it was within the period prescribed for filing for judicial review, and, therefore, timely.
The Circuit Court also was not persuaded by the laches argument advanced by Lamone and the State Board. Noting that laches' would apply “if the claimant neglected to prosecute the matter in such a way that it cause[d]—as a result of [the] [161]*161passage of time ... the adversary to be prejudiced,” it was satisfied that the appellant was not, in any way, dilatory in his actions19 and, thus, that the State Board was not prejudiced. Accordingly, the Circuit Court denied the motion to dismiss for laches.
The Circuit Court, finally, addressed the constitutional issue of Perez’s eligibility to hold the office of the Attorney General, pursuant to Article V, § 4. Believing the question to be whether Perez has “practiced Law in this State for at least ten years,” more specifically: “[d]o you have to be a Maryland Bar member for at least 10 years because only a Maryland Bar member can practice law in the State of Maryland?,” the Circuit Court answered, “no.” It reasoned, relying on Kennedy v. Bar Ass’n of Montgomery County, 316 Md. 646, 561 A.2d 200 (1989), Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Bridges, 360 Md. 489, 759 A.2d 233 (2000) and In the Matter of R.G.S., 312 Md. 626, 637, 541 A.2d 977, 982 (1988), that one “can practice law in the State of Maryland without being a member of the Maryland Bar” and that Perez’s federal practice does, indeed, [162]*162satisfy the “practiced Law” requirement under Article V, § 4. Kennedy, it stated, stood for the proposition that one “can have essentially a federal practice in the State of Maryland even if [one] is not a member of the Maryland Bar,” while Bridges, citing, with approval, Sperry v. Florida, 373 U.S. 379, 83 S.Ct. 1322, 10 L.Ed.2d 428 (1963), recognized an attorney’s right to maintain a legal practice restricted to the federal courts prior to admission to that state’s bar. The Circuit Court concluded, as to R.G.S.:
“I also find it significant that the Court of Appeals in that case cited with approval an Attorney General’s opinion, '68 opinion/[20] And cited among other things the provision of that opinion that recognized that the phrase such as ‘practice of law’ may mean different things in different contexts and specifically as used in Article 5, Section 4 of the Constitution relating to the qualifications for the Office of the AG, the phrase ... ‘means something quite different and less restricted than the meaning of the phrase ‘practice of law1 for the purpose of Rule 14 or any unauthorized practice.”
The Circuit Court also observed that “the plain language [of Article V, § 4] says absolutely nothing about being a member of the bar because frankly that had a whole different import back in that day than it may have now.” Recalling the history of bar admissions in Maryland, the Circuit Court noted that there was no formal, state—wide bar admission process until 1898,21 that, at the time, there was no “federal law” as we know it today, and despite the fact that the framers of the [163]*163Maryland Constitution could not have contemplated a situation in which the phrase “practiced Law in this State” could have meant something other than what they intended it to mean— the practice of state law in Maryland, the Circuit Court concluded:
“[T]he plain language ... leads ... to the inescapable conclusion that it [the phrase “practiced Law in this State for at least ten years”] simply requires that someone have practiced for at least ten years in the State of Maryland, but that [it is] not tantamount to being a member of the Maryland Bar ... [and] that as a factual matter he [Perez] has practiced law. That as a legal matter that practice occurred in Maryland. And accordingly that under Section 4 of Article 5 of the Maryland Constitution he is eligible to stand for election as Attorney General.”
The court thus granted Perez’s Motion for Summary Judgment and denied the appellant’s cross-motion. In response to that ruling, the appellant noted an appeal both to this Court, pursuant to § 12-203(a)22 of the Election Law Article, and to the Court of Special Appeals. In addition, he filed, in this [164]*164Court, a Petition for Writ of Certiorari, which this Court granted. Abrams v. Lamone, 393 Md. 478, 903 A.2d 417 (2006). Oral argument was heard on August 25, 2006, and, on that same day, the Court issued its Order reversing the judgment of the Circuit Court. We now set forth the reasons for that Order.
IL
When the framers of the Maryland Constitution assembled in 1774 to formulate a response to the Boston Port Act,23 they did not contemplate that just two short years later they would meet again, this time to produce a Constitution, a document that would govern the citizens of the State of Maryland. The office of the Attorney General24 was established by constitutional provision at the 1776 Maryland Convention. Section 48 of the 1776 Maryland Constitution provided, as relevant:
“That the governor, for the time being, with the advice and consent of the council, may appoint the chancellor, and all judges and justices, the attorney general, naval officers, officers in the regular land and sea service, officers of the [165]*165militia, registers of the land office, surveyors, and all other civil officers of government ... and may also suspend or remove any civil officer who has not a commission during good behaviour____” (Emphasis added).
The office of the Attorney General was later abolished by Constitutional amendment25 proposed in 1816, Chapter 247, Acts of 1816, and ratified, February 5, 1817.26 It was reestablished in 1818, pursuant to Chapter 146, Acts of 1817.27 In 1821, the constitutional provision pertaining to the Attorney [166]*166General was repealed and reenacted. See Chapter 126, Acts of 1821 (ratified Jan. 7, 1822). Although very similar to the previous provision pertaining to the office, of. the Attorney General, the amendment, as proposed and ratified, outlined the duties of the Attorney General in greater detail and provided for the appointment of deputies, providing:
“[T]he governor shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the council, appoint and commission a person of sound legal knowledge, who shall be styled attorney general of Maryland, and who previous to, and during his acting as such, shall reside in this state; and it shall be the duty of the said attorney general, to prosecute and defend on the part of the state, all cases now depending, or which may hereafter be brought in, or removed to any of the counties of this state by or against the state, or wherein the state shall or may be interested, in the same manner, as the attorney general heretofore was accustomed to do or could do; and he shall have, exercise and use all and every the powers and authorities in and relating to the same, as the attorney general heretofore had used and exercised, or can have, use and exercise in similar cases; and he shall give his opinion and advice whenever he shall be required by the general assembly, or either branch thereof, by the [167]*167governor and council, or by the treasurer of the Eastern and Western Shore, or any deputy he may appoint, on any matter or subject depending before them.” (Emphasis added).
That provision remained unchanged for the next 30 years, until 1851, when, as a result of the Constitutional Convention of 1850,28 the office of the Attorney General once again was abolished.29 According to Article V, § 3 of the 1850 Constitution, the Attorney General’s duties were to be discharged by the state’s attorney in each county and in Baltimore City.30 It provided, as pertinent, that “[t]he State’s Attorney shall perform the duties and receive such fees and commissions as are now prescribed by law for the Attorney General and his Deputies.”
The office of the Attorney General was not reestablished as part of the Maryland Constitution until 1864 when, for the [168]*168first time in Maryland history, it was made an elective office.31 Moreover, Article V of the 1864 Constitution, captioned, “Attorney General and State’s Attorney,” provided a detailed statement of the duties of the office of the Attorney General, Article V, § 3, and, although prior provisions had required residency and, by implication, suggested that a candidate for Attorney General be skilled in the legal practice, as the duties included prosecuting and defending cases involving the State or in which the State had an interest, for the first time, the qualifications for the position were articulated.32
Article V, § 4 of the 1864 Constitution provided:
“No person shall be eligible to the office of attorney general who has not resided and practiced law in this State for at least seven years next preceding his election.” (Emphasis added).
The Maryland Constitution was revised once again, just three years later.33 Although the essence of Article V, § 4 [169]*169remained the same, the new provision changed the length of both the residency and practice of law requirements from seven to ten years, the length it has remained to this day. Article V, § 4 of the 1867 Constitution provided:
“No person shall be eligible to the office of Attorney-General, who is not a citizen of this State, and a qualified voter therein, and has not resided and practiced Law in this State for at least ten years.”
MD. CON ST. 1867 art. V, § 4 (emphasis added).
III.
The appellant asserts that the Circuit Court erred in applying a broad interpretation of Article V, § 4, to find Perez eligible to hold the office of the Attorney General. He first argues, as he did below, that, under the canons of constitutional interpretation there can be only one reading of the phrase “practiced Law in this State for at least ten years.” That is so, the appellant submits, because the phrase is clear and unambiguous; in order to be eligible to “practice Law in this State,” one necessarily must be admitted to the bar of the State. In sum, the appellant argues that Perez could not have been practicing law in Maryland when he was not admitted to its bar, because to have done so, he would have had to, in effect, engage in the unauthorized practice of law. The appellant, moreover, contends that the phrase should not only be given its plain, ordinary meaning but should not be liberally construed to mean anything else.
[170]*170The appellant next argues, alternatively, that, if Article V, § 4 is ambiguous, resort to its legislative history supports his contention that the framers intended the office to be held by a person admitted to the bar of the State. The historical role of the Attorney General, coupled with essential principles of bar admission in this State, confirm his position, he proffers. He asserts, further, that the 1867 Constitution, with its enumeration of the prerequisites for holding the office of the Attorney General, was clearly understood to pertain to a person admitted to practice in Maryland and, when considered in connection with the duties of the office it prescribes, to one who, due to experience, was competent to hold the office. Thus, he concludes, Article V, § 3,34 which outlined the duties of the [171]*171Attorney General, was explicit in its requirement that the Attorney General had to discharge all of the duties prescribed therein personally. It is logical, then, the appellant argues, that the General Assembly contemplated that the Attorney General be a member of the Maryland Bar, as such membership would have permitted him to appear in the courts of the State.
Moreover, the appellant argues that the framers of the Constitution were precise in their choice of language. Looking at other provisions of the Constitution, ie. Article V, § 10 and Article IV, § 2, pertaining respectively to the eligibility requirements for State’s Attorney and judicial candidates, he emphasizes the difference in the language of the provisions. In both latter instances, the provision specifies expressly bar membership as a prerequisite to running for, and holding, the office. In the case of the office of the Attorney General, however, instead of an express reference to bar membership, the provision specifies the practice of law in this State for a specified period of time. This, the appellant says, supports his position. The framers, he asserts, did not omit a bar admission requirement at all; rather, they understood that such a requirement necessarily is subsumed in the phrase, “practiced Law.”
[172]*172Finally, the appellant denies that Perez’s federal bar membership, and, ultimately, his practice of law as an official in the Justice Department and a member of the Maryland federal bar, even if done physically in Maryland, meet the eligibility requirements of Article V, § 4 and, therefore, makes him eligible to be Maryland’s Attorney General. Federal and state bar memberships are two very distinct privileges, he posits. Thus, the appellant urges that Perez can not be said to have practiced law in Maryland, within the contemplation of the constitutional provision, at least not until he became a member of the Maryland Bar in 2001. In sum, it is the appellant’s position that being a Justice Department official authorized to protect the interests of the United States throughout the country and, in that capacity and for that purpose, to appear in the state courts of Maryland, or being a member of the bar of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland does not authorize an individual not admitted to the bar of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to practice law in Maryland in the sense intended by Article V, § 4, the Supremacy Clause notwithstanding.
IV.
A.
Although Article V, § 4 has been considered in other contexts,35 the disputed question presented for our resolution, the meaning of “practiced Law in this State for at least ten years” has not been decided previously by this Court.
The general tenets of constitutional interpretation are well settled and frequently stated. “Generally speaking, the same rules that are applicable to the construction of statutory language are employed in interpreting constitutional ver[173]*173biagef.]” Brown v. Brown, 287 Md. 273, 277, 412 A.2d 396, 398 (1980). See also Davis v. Slater, 383 Md. 599, 604, 861 A.2d 78, 81 (2004) (“When interpreting constitutional provisions, we generally employ the same rules of construction that are applicable to the construction of statutory language”); Fish Market Nominee Corp. v. G.A.A., Inc., 337 Md. 1, 8, 650 A.2d 705, 708 (1994) (“Generally, we apply the same principles in construing constitutional provisions as we apply in construing statutory provisions”); New Central Coal Co. v. George’s Creek Coal & Iron Co., 37 Md. 537, 557 (1873) (“There can be no good reason suggested why this same general principle [for the construction of statutes], so wise and just, should not also apply as a rule of interpretation of the Constitution”).
We stated the general rule in Brown:
“[I]t is axiomatic that the words used in the enactment should be given the construction that effectuates the intent of its framers ... such intent is first sought from the terminology used in the provision, with each word being given its ordinary and popularly understood meaning ... and, if the words are not ambiguous, the inquiry is terminated....”
287 Md. at 277-78, 412 A.2d at 398-99 (citations omitted and emphasis added). See also Davis, 383 Md. 599 at 604, 861 A.2d 78 at 81 (“[T]o ascertain the meaning of a constitutional provision ... we first look to the normal, plain meaning of the language”); Fish Market Nominee Corp., 337 Md. 1 at 8, 650 A.2d 705 at 708 (“[W]e generally construe the provision to effectuate the clear meaning expressed by its words”); Rand v. Rand, 280 Md. 508, 511, 374 A.2d 900, 902 (1977) (“To ascertain the mandate of a constitutional [provision], we look first to the ‘natural and ordinary signification’ of its language”), quoting Balto. Gas & Elect. Co. v. Board of County Comm’rs of Calvert County, 278 Md. 26, 31, 358 A.2d, 241, 244 (1976).
We have further stated that “[w]here ‘the words of an [enactment], construed according to their common and everyday meaning, are clear and unambiguous and express a plain [174]*174meaning,’ [the Court] ‘will give effect to the [enactment] as it is written.’ ” Moore v. Miley, 372 Md. 663, 677, 814 A.2d 557, 566 (2003), quoting Jones v. State, 336 Md. 255, 261, 647 A.2d 1204, 1206-07. See also Bienkowski v. Brooks, 386 Md. 516, 536, 873 A.2d 1122, 1135 (2005) (“If th[e] language is clear and unambiguous, we need not look beyond the provision’s terms ----”), quoting Davis, 383 Md. at 604-05, 861 A.2d at 81; Arundel Corp. v. Marie, 383 Md. 489, 502, 860 A.2d 886, 894 (2004) (“If there is no ambiguity ... the inquiry as to legislative intent ends; we do not then need to resort to the various, and sometimes inconsistent, external rules of construction”). Thus, “[a] court may neither add nor delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain and unambiguous language of the statute; nor may it construe the statute with forced or subtle interpretations that limit or extend its application.” Price v. State, 378 Md. 378, 387, 835 A.2d 1221, 1226 (2003). See also Condon v. State of Maryland-University of Maryland, 332 Md. 481, 491, 632 A.2d 753, 758 (1993) (“[w]here the language is clear and unambiguous, a court may not add or delete words to make a statute reflect an intent not evidenced in that language, ... [a] clearly worded statute must be construed without ‘forced or subtle interpretations’ that limit or extend its application”), quoting Tucker v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 308 Md. 69, 73, 517 A.2d 730, 732 (1986) (citations omitted).
We, thus, begin our analysis by looking at the plain language of Article V, § 4 to determine what it means to have “practiced law in this State for at least ten years.” Although this Court has generally refused to adopt a precise definition of the term “practice law,” see In re Application of Mark W., 303 Md. 1, 6-9, 491 A.2d 576, 578-81 (1985) (recognizing that in determining whether a state bar applicant’s activities constitute the “practice of law” ... “the more practical approach is to consider each state of facts and determine whether it falls within the fair intendment of the term”), quoting Grievance Committee v. Payne, 128 Conn. 325, 22 A.2d 623, 625 (1941), we read “practiced law in this State for at least ten years,” as used in Article V, § 4, to mean that one who seeks to hold the [175]*175office of the Attorney General must have practiced law for ten years, in Maryland, as a member of the Maryland Bar.
The practice requirement, we hold, relates not solely to the practice of law in Maryland, but to its practice in Maryland as a member of the Maryland Bar. This is consistent with “the context within which [the language of this constitutional provision] was adopted,” Motor Vehicle Administration v. Mohler, 318 Md. 219, 225, 567 A.2d 929, 932 (1990), quoting Rucker v. Comptroller of Treasury, 315 Md. 559, 565, 555 A.2d 1060, 1063 (1989), and comes from reading it as a whole. Kushell v. Dep’t of Natural Resources, 385 Md. 563, 577, 870 A.2d, 186, 193 (2005) (“The plain language of a [constitutional] provision is not interpreted in isolation. Rather, [the Court] analyze[s] the provision as a whole”); Blondell v. Baltimore City Police Dep’t, 341 Md. 680, 691, 672 A.2d 639, 645 (1996) (noting that the Court construes a constitutional provision as a whole, interpreting each part of the provision in context); Outmezguine v. State, 335 Md. 20, 41, 641 A.2d 870, 880-81 (1994) (asserting that a constitutional provision can not be viewed in isolation, but rather must be analyzed as a whole); Wheeler v. State, 281 Md. 593, 596, 380 A.2d 1052, 1055 (1977) (“All parts of a [constitutional provision] are to be read together to find the intention as to any one part”).
Moreover, we decline to give the provision, and specifically the phrase at issue, a different meaning “on such theories that a different meaning would make [it] more workable, or more consistent with a litigant’s view of good public policy, or more in tune with modern times, or [on the theory] that the framers of the provision did not actually mean what they wrote.” Bienkowski, 386 Md. at 537, 873 A.2d at 1134. See, e.g., Montrose Christian School v. Walsh, 363 Md. 565, 595, 770 A.2d 111, 129 (2001) (The “phrase ... clearly does not mean what is suggested... .We decline to construe ‘purely’ as if it were ‘primarily’ or ‘some’ ”); Davis v. State, 294 Md. 370, 378, 451 A.2d 107, 111 (1982) (refusing to construe the phrase “his religious beliefs” in favor of the petitioner’s view, as such an action would be tantamount to re-drafting the statute under [176]*176the guise of construction); Mauzy v. Hornbeck, 285 Md. 84, 93, 400 A.2d 1091, 1096 (1979) (declining to construe the phrase “all professional employees” as “only certain types of’ professional employees).
On this point, we agree with the appellant. There can be no meaning attached to this phrase, as used in the context of Article V, § 4, other than that practicing law in Maryland requires admission to the bar of this State. The practice of law in Maryland and Maryland bar admission are coterminous; one follows from and, indeed, is dependent on the other. This has long been the case in this State. The first formal bar admission in Maryland took place in 1666 when William Calvert, Daniel Jenifer, and John Morecroft were accepted to practice by the Provincial Court. That court, formed in 1637 and consisting of the Governor and his council, was the highest court of common law in the colony, having both original and appellate jurisdiction. See, e.g., J. Hall Pleasants, Ed. “Early Maryland County Courts” Proceedings of the County Court of Charles County, 1658-1666 (Baltimore, 1936) at xliii (“In the Provincial Court, beginning in the sixties, are to be found a few ‘sworn attorneys’ of the court,’ men trained in their profession, who were formally admitted to practice, and enrolled as such in the court records”). See generally Act of April, 1715, ch. 48, §§ 12, 13 (Maxcy ed., vol. 1, p. 132 (1811)) which provided, as relevant:
“And be it further enacted, by the authority advice and consent aforesaid, That from and after the end of this present session of assembly, no attorney, or other person whatsoever, shall practise the law in any of the courts of this province, without being admitted thereto by the justices of the several courts, who are hereby empowered to admit and suspend them (salvo jure coronae) until his majesty’s pleasure shall be known therein ... Provided always, That nothing in this act shall extend, or b e construed to extend, to give right to any courts of this province to admit any attorney, or other person practising the law, to practise in any court that has been already refused so to do by his [177]*177excellency, and his majesty’s honourable council.... ” (Emphasis added).
This State has had formal state—-wide bar admission requirements dating back to the early 19th century. On March 10, 1833, the General Assembly enacted Laws of Maryland, Chapter 268 entitled “An act regulating the admission of Attorneys to practice law in the several Courts of this state.” Chapter 268 provided, as relevant:
“WHEREAS, under the existing laws of this state, it is in the power of the several courts of law and equity, to regulate the admission of attorneys according to their discretion, by which different rules prevail in different courts; and it is proper and right, that the mode and terms of admission should be uniform throughout this state:—Therefore,
Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland, That all applications for admission as attorney, to practice the law in this state, shall be made to some one of the county courts, courts of equity or courts of appeals thereof in open court.
Sec. 2. And be it enacted, That upon every such application for admission to practice law as aforesaid ... it shall be the duty of the court to whom such application shall be made, to examine said applicant upon some day during the regular session thereof, touching his qualification for admission as an attorney, and they shall also require and receive evidence of his probity and general character, and if upon such actual examination, and being satisfied that he has been a student of law, at least two years as aforesaid, and having heard evidence as to his probity and general character, the said court shall be of opinion that said applicant is qualified to discharge the duties of an attorney and worthy to be admitted, they shall admit him.
Sec. 3. And be it enacted, That upon the admission of any applicant to practice law in any of the courts of record in this state as aforesaid, it shall be the duty of the court so admitting him, to certify the same with their own proper [178]*178signatures, which certificate shall be recorded, and a copy thereof authenticated with the county seal of the county in which the party shall be admitted, shall be available and sufficient to entitle said applicant so admitted, to practice in any of the courts of this state.”
Chapter 268, Acts of 1831 (ratified March 10, 1833) (emphasis added).36
Bar membership, thus, has been, and remains, a threshold requirement for the authorized practice of law in Maryland. Although, the process by which one is “admitted to the Bar” has changed over time,37 the requirement of bar membership [179]*179never has. Accordingly, beginning with its adoption in 1864, and continuing to today, the phrase “practiced Law in this State” has required that a person seeking to practice law in Maryland lawfully be admitted to the Maryland Bar. We, thus, reject the Circuit Court’s rationale that it was not until 1898 that any uniform standards for bar admissions existed, and, accordingly, when the 1867 Constitution was adopted, the framers could not have intended that an individual who was not admitted to the bar could hold the office of the Attorney General.
We also reject Perez’s argument that this Court should construe the eligibility requirements for a candidate seeking to hold the office of the Attorney General liberally merely because Article V, § 4 of the Maryland Constitution does not expressly require that a candidate for that office be “admitted to” or be “a member of’ the Maryland Bar. In support of his argument, Perez relies on authority from other jurisdictions. See State ex rel. Kelly v. Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, 70 Ohio St.3d 413, 639 N.E.2d 78, 79 (1994) (“Words limiting the right of a person to hold office are to be given a liberal construction in favor of those seeking to hold office, in order that the public may have the benefit of choice from all those who are in fact and in law qualified”), quoting State ex rel. Schenck v. Shattuck, 1 Ohio St.3d 272, 439 N.E.2d 891, 893 (1982); Sears v. Bayoud, 786 S.W.2d 248, 251 (Tex.1990) (“We have repeatedly recognized the principle that constitutional provisions which restrict the right to hold public office should be strictly construed against ineligibility”). See also 91 Opin[180]*180ions of the Attorney General at 103 (stating that language should be resolved in favor of eligibility).
This Court is not persuaded that a liberal construction of Article V, § 4 is appropriate. Indeed, we have construed eligibility requirements strictly, where the language of the constitutional provision is clear. In Oglesby v. Williams, 372 Md. 360, 812 A.2d 1061 (2002), for example, we held that a candidate for State’s Attorney did not meet the residency requirement prescribed by Article V, § 10 of the Maryland Constitution. That provision required that a candidate for State’s Attorney have “resided for at least two years, in the county, or city, in which he may be elected.” MD CONST, art. V, § 10. In concluding that the candidate had “resided’ in Worcester County for less than the constitutionally prescribed residency period, approximately one year and eleven months, this Court rejected Mr. Oglesby’s argument that his intent should be the determining factor. We instead applied the plain meaning of the constitutional language itself. We were clear in our holding, moreover, that “[t]he words reside or resident mean domicile unless a contrary intent is shown,” 372 Md. at 373, 812 A.2d at 1068, quoting Roberts v. Lakin, 340 Md. 147, 153, 665 A.2d 1024, 1027 (1995), giving a strict interpretation to the terms, “reside” and “domiciled,” as it pertained to the residency requirement. Similarly, in the case sub judice, we shall interpret the phrase, “practiced Law,” consistent with its plain meaning; we refuse to interpret it otherwise as there is no semblance of any contrary intent.
Perez nevertheless contends that this Court’s historically broad interpretation of what it means to practice law supports his argument and his position. Furthermore, he says, that, because the meaning of “practice of law” has evolved over time, this Court should apply the current usage of the term, which, in his view, is that bar membership is not required under Article V, § 4. We do not agree.
To be sure, this Court has held that a variety of activities may very well constitute the “practice of law,” but we have never suggested, much less held, that those activities were so [181]*181constituted in this context. On the contrary, we have addressed this issue only in the context of attorney discipline, see, e.g., Attorney Grievance Comm’n of Maryland v. Hallmon, 343 Md. 390, 397-98, 681 A.2d 510, 514 (1996) (“[T]he preparation of legal documents, their interpretation, the giving of legal advice, or the application of legal principles to problems of any complexity are considered the practice of law”), quoting Lukas v. Bar Ass’n of Montgomery County, 35 Md. App. 442, 448, 371 A.2d 669, 673 (1977) cert. denied, 280 Md. 733 (1977), quoting F.T. vom Baur, Administrative Agencies and Unauthorized Practice of Law, 48 A.B.A. J. 715, 716 (1962); Attorney Grievance Comm’n of Maryland v. James, 340 Md. 318, 324, 666 A.2d 1246, 1248 (1995) (recognizing that meeting with prospective clients may, depending on the circumstances, constitute the practice of law); Kennedy v. Bar Ass’n of Montgomery County, Inc., 316 Md. 646, 666, 561 A.2d 200, 210 (1989) (holding that interviewing, analyzing, and explaining legal rights constitute “practicing law”). See also 68 Opinions of the Attorney General at 65 (concluding that Dean of law school had “practiced Law”), and determining the eligibility of an out-of-state attorney to take the Maryland attorneys’ examination. See R.G.S., supra, 312 Md. at 637-41, 541 A.2d at 982-84. But we have held expressly that, in order for one to practice law in this State, one must be authorized to do so. See, e.g., Attorney Grievance Comm’n of Maryland v. Alsafty, 379 Md. 1, 838 A.2d 1213 (2003) (attorney was engaged in the unauthorized practice of law when he practiced in both state and federal courts in Maryland before being admitted to the bar of either court); Attorney Grievance Comm’n of Maryland v. Barneys, 370 Md. 566, 805 A.2d 1040 (2002) (attorney admitted to the practice of law in the District of Columbia was engaged in the unauthorized practice of law when he represented multiple clients in Maryland state courts); Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Briscoe, 357 Md. 554, 745 A.2d 1037 (2000) (appearing in court representing a client in a criminal matter after having been decertified constituted the unauthorized practice of law). See Ginn v. Farley, 43 Md.App. 229, 403 A.2d 858 (1979) (lay person, who was not an [182]*182aggrieved party but who prepared notice of appeal, memorandum of law, argued case before Circuit Court, and noted appeal to the Court of Special Appeals, preparing the necessary brief and record extract, was engaged in the unauthorized practice of law).
Perez, as had the Circuit Court, relies on R.G.S. for the proposition that Perez indeed could have been practicing law in Maryland without being engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. We do not agree.
In R.G.S., this Court was asked to determine whether an attorney admitted to practice in North Carolina was eligible, pursuant to former Rule 14,38 to take the abbreviated Mary[183]*183land bar examination for lawyers. We drew a distinction between “practice of law,” as used in that Rule and as it pertains to the unauthorized practice of law, proscribed by Maryland Code (1989, Repl.Vol.2004, 2006 Cum.Supp.) § 10-601 39 of the Business Occupations and Professions Article. We explained:
[184]*184“We are persuaded that “practice of law” as used in the unauthorized practice statutes need not be read as synonymous with “practice of law” as used in Rule 14. The question is the goal or objective of each enactment and the context within which the words are used. The goal of the prohibition against unauthorized practice is to protect the public from being preyed upon by those not competent to practice law-from incompetent, unethical, or irresponsible representation. The purpose of the practice requirement in Rule 14, as we have seen, is to assure a minimum degree of legal competence: to support a presumption ... that ... [the] applicant is competent in the law on the basis of his experience in practice as well as his success in another State’s full bar examination.”
312 Md. at 638, 541 A.2d at 983 (citations and internal quotations omitted) (emphasis added).
That “minimum degree of legal competence” did not suffice, we were clear, to admit the out-of-state lawyer to the bar of this State, just to allow him or her to avoid having to take the full bar examination in this State. In R.G.S., the question before this Court was not whether the attorney was practicing law in this State; it was simply whether his legal experience was such, of a caliber, that he was eligible to take the abbreviated lawyers’ bar examination.
[185]*185Perez also relies on Norris v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 172 Md. 667, 192 A. 531 (1937) in support of his argument. In Norris, this Court examined whether voting machines lawfully could be used in State elections, when Article 1, § 1 of the Maryland Constitution required that all elections shall be by ballot. The opponents of voting machines contended that it was impossible for the term “ballot” to include voting machines, as such machines did not exist when Article 1, § 1 was adopted. We do not disagree with the theory upon which Perez bases this argument. We do not agree, however, with the result he reaches. Our analysis causes us to reach a different conclusion.
In Norris, we opined:
“[W]hile the principles of the constitution are unchangeable, in interpreting the language by which they are expressed, it will be given a meaning which will permit the application of those principles to changes in the economic, social, and political life of the people, which the framers did not and could not foresee .... In determining the true meaning of the language used, the courts may consider the mischief at which the provision was aimed, the remedy, the temper and spirit of the people at the time it was framed, the common usage well known to the people, and the history of the growth or evolution ... [and the] long continued contemporaneous construction by officials charged with the administration of the government, and especially by the Legislature.”
Id. at 675-76, 192 A. at 535 (citations omitted); Benson v. State, 389 Md. 615, 633, 887 A.2d 525, 535 (2005); Boyer v. Thurston, 247 Md. 279, 292, 231 A.2d 50, 57 (1967); Johns Hopkins University v. Williams, 199 Md. 382, 386, 86 A.2d 892, 894 (1952). This Court further asserted:
“[W]here the meaning of the words employed is susceptible of expansion so as to include a significance in complete harmony with the spirit and purpose of the instrument [186]*186which will gratify a legislative intent or serve a present need, they may be so interpreted.... ”
172 Md. at 676, 192 A. at 535.40
Nor is this case at all analogous to Norris. Although correct in his assertion that the meaning of “practice of law” has evolved, the case sub judice does not involve a “change” in the “practice of law.” What it means to “practice law in this State” has remained consistent. As noted earlier, albeit the process by which one becomes authorized to practice law and the authorizing authority may have been different when the Maryland Constitution was adopted, nonetheless, there were some formal admission requirements for an individual to practice law in the State.41 Someone, anyone could not simply walk into a court of law and try a case. His or her qualification to do so had to be evaluated by a judge. It would be illogical, therefore, for this Court to hold, as Perez and the Circuit Court contend the case to be, that the evolution of the law thus far lends credence to the proposition that one who seeks to hold the office of the Attorney General need not be a member of the Maryland bar at all. This “logic” would, in effect, undermine, and ultimately change, the basic principle of construction as we knew it in 1867 and as we know it today.
This Court is not averse to looking at the evolution in circumstances as they relate to the practice of law. Having done so, however, we cannot, and will not, simply by reference [187]*187to those circumstances, and in complete disregard of the constitutional language, expand, or restrict, the requirements for the practice of law. To this extent, we agree with the appellant that the Circuit Court’s interpretation of Article V, § 4 is too broad. It is true that the Norris court cautioned that we are not to be too restrictive in our interpretation of statutes or constitutional provisions; however, neither it nor logic demands that we so broadly interpret a constitutional provision as to make that provision “absurd or unworkable.” See Montgomery County Comm’rs v. Supervisors of Elections of Montgomery County, 192 Md. 196, 208, 63 A.2d 735, 740 (1948). See also Bienkowski, 386 Md. at 548, 873 A.2d at 1141 (“[I]t is a well settled principle of statutory or constitutional construction that a provision should not be construed so as to render it nugatory”); Comptroller of Treasury v. John C. Louis Co., Inc., 285 Md. 527, 539, 404 A.2d 1045, 1053 (1979) (“Results that are unreasonable, illogical or inconsistent with common sense should be avoided and an interpretation should be given which will not lead to absurd or anomalous results”). We reject Perez’s argument that this Court should take a liberal view of what it means to “practice law” as this would go against the intent of the framers and the purpose of the provision as a whole.
Thus, the Circuit Court correctly observed that Perez was not engaged in the unauthorized practice of law when he was performing his duties as a Justice Department lawyer. It does not follow, however, that, as that court concluded, merely because the practice was authorized by another licensing authority and then for a limited purpose and the practice occurs physically within the confines of the State, that that practice suffices as the “practice of law in this State,” as the term is used in Article V, § 4. As we have concluded, such practice, by its plain meaning, implies actual bar membership in the Maryland Bar.
B.
The appellant’s next argument relies on the legislative history of Article V, § 4. This Court has held that, when [188]*188attempting to discern the intention of the Legislature in proposing a particular constitutional provision, “it is permissible to inquire into the prior state of the law, the previous and contemporary history of the people, the circumstances attending the adoption of the organic law, as well as broad considerations of expediency.” Brown 287 Md. at 278, 412 A.2d at 399.42 See, e.g., Luppino v. Gray, 336 Md. 194, 204 n. 8, 647 A.2d 429, 434 n. 8 (1994) (“One of the sources to which the court may look to discern the framers’ purpose in enacting the [constitutional] provision is the proceedings of the constitutional convention”), citing Reed v. McKeldin, 207 Md. 553, 561, 115 A.2d 281, 285 (1955); Cohen v. Governor of Maryland, 255 Md. 5, 16, 255 A.2d 320, 325 (“The intention [of a constitutional provision] “is primarily discovered by considering the words used by the draftsmen”); McMullen v. Shepherd, 133 Md. 157, 160, 104 A. 424, 425 (1918) (“In construing the Constitution we are to consider the circumstances attending its adoption and what appears to have been the understanding of the people when they adopted it, and one of the useful and most helpful sources is the debates of the Convention”). Accordingly, we look, now, to the history and purpose of Article V, § 4 in an attempt to determine the scope and applicability the framers and the people intended it to have to this case.
The appellant argues that the Attorney General could not discharge the duties of the position, as outlined in Article V, § 3, unless he were a member of the Maryland Bar, as [189]*189appearance in the courts of the state and the ability to practice law without restriction are necessary to being able to do so. Consequently, he contends that the framers must have intended for the Attorney General to be admitted to practice in the State. Perez, on the other hand, argues that the language of Article V, § 3, in fact, granted the Attorney General the power to appear in state courts, thus, allowing him to do so under constitutional mandate, rather than through the traditional bar admission process.
There is no conflict between Article V, § 3 and Article V, § 4. The appellant correctly asserts that, when the constitutional provisions pertaining to the office of the Attorney General were adopted, the Attorney General was required to appear personally in the courts o f this State and that he could not have done so unless he were a member of the Maryland Bar. Perez’s contention, on the other hand, that Article V, § 3 was intended to circumvent the bar admission procedures simply is unpersuasive. Article Y, § 3, enumerating the duties of the Attorney General, does not address and, indeed, is irrelevant to the qualifications of a candidate to contest for the office of the Attorney General; it has no application until a candidate has been declared the winner and, as a result, assumes the office. That is to say, Section 3 does not come into play until one actually becomes the Attorney General. Thus, contrary to Perez’s argument, the qualification requirements of the Attorney General, as prescribed by Article V, § 4, are not superseded by the duties that are outlined in Article V, § 3. Reading Article V, § 4 in context with the historical role of the Attorney General leads to the consistent conclusion that the framers did, indeed, intend for the office to be held by one who is admitted to practice law in the State.
C.
In interpreting Article V, § 4, in addition to its current language, which is the reason for the dispute in the case sub judice, the parties examine the changes that language has undergone, over time, since its initial adoption.43 To be sure, [190]*190Article V, § 4 has undergone various changes. There was a very distinct difference between what was proposed with regard to Attorney General eligibility, in their several iterations, and what ultimately was adopted. As proposed, Article V, § 4 would have read:
“No person shall be eligible to the office of attorney general, who has not been admitted to practice the law in the State, and who has not practiced the law for_years, and who has not resided for at least _ years in the State.” (Emphasis added).
As adopted, the bar admission and length-of-practice provisions were merged into a single requirement, that the candidate have practiced law for the specified period. It is that merger which is the point of contention in the instant case.
Both sides offer justification for the Convention’s merger of qualifications. Viewing it as an apparent omission of the phrase “who has not been admitted to practice law in the State” from the final version of the enactment, the appellant argues that the framers did not mean to remove the bar admission requirement at all, but, instead, recognized that it was not necessary, that to provide explicitly that the Attorney General be admitted to the bar to practice law in Maryland would have been duplicitous. On the other hand, Perez, proceeding on the same premise, contends that the phrase was omitted because the framers did not intend that such a requirement apply to candidates for the office of the Attorney General. He asserts, relying on this Court’s holding in Kadan v. Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore County, 273 Md. 406, 329 A.2d 702 (1974), that, if the framers had intended to impose a bar membership requirement on Attorney General candidates, they, like the framers in numerous other states, would, and could, have retained that express language.44
[191]*191In Kadan, candidates for the office of judge of the Orphans’ Court, who were members of the Maryland Bar, brought an action against the State Board to prohibit it from placing on the ballot the names of candidates for that office who were not members of the Maryland Bar. The plaintiffs maintained that Article IV, § 4045 required judges of the Orphans’ Court to be members of the Maryland Bar. This Court did not agree. We held, instead, that candidates for judge of the Orphans’ Court were not required to be lawyers.
Perez argues that, as in Kadan, the lack of express language requiring bar membership as a prerequisite qualification is an indication that a candidate for the office of the Attorney General need not be a member of the Maryland Bar. We do not quarrel with, indeed, agree with, Perez’s analysis of Kadan. Kadan does not support his argument in this case, however. It is, in fact, distinguishable from the case sub judice. Article IV, § 40 does not make any reference whatever to the practice of law or, for that matter, to any indicia that would suggest, much less indicate, that bar membership is a prerequisite for being an Orphans’ Court judge. Thus, in [192]*192Kadan, there simply was nothing that could be inferred about the issue, from the constitutional provision, the words used or omitted, as there is in the instant case.
In Kadan, in other words, this Court was not faced with the interpretation of specific language pointing to a qualification, the perimeters of which are in dispute, as in this case. Rather, this Court had to discern the significance of the absence of any language tending to support the claimed qualification. Although the election was for a “judge,” the only qualifications enumerated were citizenship and residency. The provision did not refer at all to bar membership or law practice. Here, to the contrary, Section 4 explicitly provides that the candidate have “practiced Law in this State.” Consequently, given the law and rules pertaining to the practice of law, that provision reasonably may be construed expressly and clearly to contemplate, albeit perhaps by implication, bar admission. The láck of any express language at all with respect to bar admission or law practice, as in Kadan, simply can not be equated with the situation sub judice, where there is a clear requirement of the practice of law in the State, for some length, but no explicit requirement that the candidate be “admitted to the bar.” Article V, § 4, in other words, is not devoid of all language that would require a candidate for the Attorney General to be a lawyer, thus, arguably opening the position to non-lawyers. On the contrary, it reflects, we believe clearly, the purposeful merger of two requirements, which, taken together, make clear that being an attorney is a necessary requirement to being able to run for, and hold, the office of the Attorney General.
This Court interprets the framers’ actions as an attempt to avoid being repetitive. The rewording of the provision was not, as Perez claims, a result of an attempt to change the meaning of the. language or to change the eligibility requirements for the office of the Attorney General. Confirmation of our interpretation is provided by the proceedings of the debates. During the debates of the 1850 Constitutional Con[193]*193vention, Delegate Benjamin C. Howard46 of Baltimore County, albeit discussing the eligibility requirements of prosecuting attorneys, stated:
“In framing a Constitution ... it [is] altogether unnecessary to introduce all the matters of detail, when we ought to content ourselves with laying down certain general rules or principles for the guidance of the legislature. If we are to go on in this way, it will end in making a book which the people will no more understand than they do the old Constitution itself, and after all, it will be found impossible for us to provide for all contingencies. To specify that a man who is elected to the office of prosecuting attorney must be a practitioner of laws is entirely superfluous. It is preposterous to fill the Constitution with details of this sort ... it was generally understood that the applicant for the office must know something of the business, that he must be a practitioner of law. If we are apprehensive that the people may elect some one who is entirely incompetent to perform the duties of the office, it will be better that we should not give them the right to elect.”
Debates I at Vol. II, 14 (emphasis added). See also The Debates of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Maryland (“Debates II”), 369 (Annapolis, 1864) (Mr. DUVALL. “If it is correct to say ‘frequent, maintain, or contribute,’ then the ‘or’ between ‘frequent’ and ‘maintain’ is superfluous.”); Debates II at 1601 (Mr. SCHLEY said: I have no objection to the proposition as it stands; but deeming it superfluous, I vote “no”).
Perez also relies on Article IV, § 2 and Article V, § 10 of the Maryland Constitution, which, respectively, require judicial candidates to “have been admitted to practice law in this State” and candidates for the office of State’s Attorney to have “been admitted to practice law in this State.” His argument, [194]*194the framers’ use of express language requiring bar membership in these provisions is indicative that their intent, as expressed in Article V, § 4, was not to require it there.
Perez and the Circuit Court read Article IV, § 2 and Article V § 10 to mean that only candidates for state’s attorney and judge are required to be admitted to the bar and that is because the constitutional provisions governing each say so. On the other hand, he continues, the absence of the same or similar language in Article V, § 4 indicates that it is possible for the Attorney General candidate to practice law without ever having been admitted to the Maryland Bar. We decline to so interpret the framers’ intent. That would mean that state’s attorney and judicial candidates are required to be admitted to the bar, while the State’s lawyer, the “top” lawyer for the State—and at times the only lawyer for the State in civil, Federal, and appellate proceedings—need not be.
Moreover, the assumption underlying this argument may not be correct. It is not at all clear that requiring candidates for judge and state’s attorney to be members of the bar was imposed as a more stringent requirement than that for Attorney General. To this Court, it is far more likely that it was intended to be, rather, a more relaxed one. The framers’ intent was to require of candidates for State’s Attorney and judge solely that they be admitted to the bar. That is to say, they very deliberately did not impose on those seeking to be a state’s attorney or a judge the requirement of having actually “practiced law,” whether in Maryland or elsewhere, just that they be members of the bar. The opposite is true for the office of the Attorney General. Because the Attorney General was, and is, intended to be the foremost lawyer for the State, it is not surprising that a candidate for that office would be required to have more qualification than simply a bar membership, that it would be required that a person aspiring to that position would be required to be both learned in the law, as evidenced by his or her bar membership, and experienced in its practice, as reflected in his or her length of practice.
[195]*195As stated earlier, constitutional provisions need to be read in context and as a whole. See Mohler, supra, 318 Md. at 225, 567 A.2d at 932, quoting Rucker, supra, 315 Md. at 565, 555 A.2d at 1063; Wheeler, supra, 281 Md. at 596, 380 A.2d at 1055. The appellant concedes that a candidate for the office of the Attorney General need only be a member of the bar in order to be eligible and urges this Court to so hold. On the other hand, Perez urges this Court to hold that “practice” for the requisite time period is all that is required. Thus, the appellant reads out of Article V, § 4, the “practiced Law” language,47 and Perez reads that same language narrowly and in a constrained manner, refusing to give it its common and ordinary signification. Neither, in other words, reads Article V, § 4 as a whole.
Turning again to the debates of the Constitutional Convention of 1864, Delegate Archibald Stirling Jr. of Baltimore City, while discussing the salary of the Attorney General, stated that “[the citizens of Maryland] must have for the attorney general a man who is accustomed to trying cases, or he will not be fit for the office.” Debates II at 1461. During the same debate, Delegate Peter Negley of Washington County and Delegate John E. Smith of Carroll County also spoke to the “kind” of individual who should occupy the office of the Attorney General. Delegate Negley observed that “if [the framers] put in an insufficient salary, [they could] not get the services of a man whose services [would] be worth anything. And rather than have a second or third rate man in the office, [they should] strike out the provision entirely,” Debates II at 1460, while Delegate Smith stated:
[196]*196“I think a man who is called upon to fill this responsible position, ought to have practiced law for ten years at least. It is one of the most important and responsible positions in the State. And from the circumstances that now surround us, from the changes proposed to be made by this constitution, it is evident that we require in this position the services of one who has occupied a leading position, in the profession for ten years at least.” Debates II at 1465. (Emphasis added)
Delegate Smith stated further:
“I know there are instances of rather extraordinary men. But a gentleman may be learned in the law, and yet not knowing about the duties of attorney general. I think ten years is short enough time to require of one who will be called upon to apply himself to the practice of law in all its branches. ” Id.48
It is apparent that the framers, viewing the position of Attorney General as a highly important one, requiring the practice of law in all the government’s branches, desired to have an experienced attorney fill that role, measured by a term of ten years. A mere member of the bar for a few years would be insufficient—while they recognized that there may be instances of brilliant attorneys who could perform the duties of the Attorney General without ten years of bar membership, the framers felt secure in promoting a seasoned [197]*197practicing attorney for the position, one who was admitted to the Maryland Bar and had, in fact, practiced for the prescribed period.49 The framers did not ever contemplate that the office would be held by an individual who did not, at the least, possess a professional record of the length prescribed, upon which the voters could base their decision. Thus, we hold, a candidate for the office of the Attorney General must be both a member of the Maryland Bar for ten years and a practitioner of law in Maryland for ten years.50
[199]*199D.
The appellant’s final argument addresses Perez’s federal bar membership. Perez argues that, because he has practiced federal law in Maryland for over 20 years, he meets the “practiced Law in this State” requirement. That is so, Perez contends, because his federal bar membership and his position with the Justice Department authorized him to practice law in this State and that his oversight of cases involving Maryland and any appearances in the federal courts in Maryland was evidence that he has practiced law “in this State,” within the meaning of Article V, § 4. Again, we do not agree.
Perez bases his argument on 28 U.S.C. § 517 (2007) and Rule 701(l)(b) of the Local Rules of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland (2007). 28 U.S.C. § 517 provides:
“The Solicitor General, or any officer of the Department of Justice, may be sent by the Attorney General to any State or district in the United States to attend to the interests of the United States in a suit pending in a court of the United States, or in a court of a State, or to attend to any other interest of the United States.”
To be sure, Perez is correct that he was authorized, beginning in 1989 and continuing until he left federal government service, to appear in any State or in any federal court in which a suit affecting the interests of the United States was pending, even those to whose bar he had not been admitted to practice, “to attend to the interests of the United States.” That authorization, however, does not equate to the practice of law in this State, as contemplated by Article V, § 4. A member of the bar of any state may be admitted to the federal bar of any state, whether or not admitted to the bar of the state in which the federal court is located physically.51 Consequently, the [200]*200entry of appearance in a federal court located in this State by someone not admitted by this Court to practice here is not tantamount to practicing law in this State.52 Nor is the appearance in Maryland state courts “to attend to the interests of the United States” authorization to practice law in this State for purposes of Article V, § 4. As with Pro Hac Vice admissions, see Rule 14,53 its duration is fixed and its purpose [201]*201defined—it ordinarily is limited to the pending case. Until he became a member of the Maryland Bar in 2001, Perez simply did not have carte blanche authorization to practice law in the state of Maryland; he could practice only in federal court or in [202]*202state court in the interest of the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 517 does not obviate the Maryland requirement that one desiring to practice law in Maryland must be admitted to the Maryland Bar.
Perez fares no better under Rule 701(l)(b) of the Local Rules of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. Rule 701(l)(b) provides:
“An attorney who is a member of the Federal Public Defender’s Office, the Office of the United States Attorney for this District, or other federal government lawyer, is qualified for admission to the bar of this District if the attorney is a member in good standing of the highest court of any state.”
Rule 701(l)(b) outlines the qualifications an attorney who wishes to become a member of “the bar of this District,” must meet. It does not address the bar admission rules or requirements of Maryland, the State in which it is located.
Unlike 28 U.S.C. § 517, however, Rule 701(l)(b) draws expressly a distinction between federal bar admittance and state bar admittance. This is significant and consistent with our approach to the federal/state practice issue. This Court has held that a lawyer admitted to the federal bar in this State is not authorized to practice law in the State courts, unless also admitted to the Maryland Bar.
As the Circuit Court noted, Kennedy, supra, 316 Md. 646, 561 A.2d 200 and Bridges, supra, 360 Md. 489, 759 A.2d 233, permit a non-Maryland lawyer, admitted to the bar of another state and to the federal bar, to maintain a federal practice in this State. They do not stand for the proposition that the maintenance of such a practice satisfies the practice of law requirement of Article V, § 4, however. Kennedy and Bridges, in fact, illustrate the difference between maintaining a federal practice in this State and practicing law in this State.
In Kennedy, an attorney, who was a member of the federal bar and of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, but not a member of the Maryland bar, was determined to have engaged in the unauthorized practice of law in Maryland, [203]*203when he advised clients and prepared documents in connection with matters involving state law and state legal issues, in his principal office, located in Maryland. 316 Md. at 663, 561 A.2d at 208. In holding that the attorney’s argument “turn[ed] on the substantive law applicable or potentially applicable to the client’s matter,” Id. at 662, 561 A.2d at 208, we differentiated between the federal practice he was permitted to have and the state law practice, which was not permitted:
“Kennedy may not utilize his admission to the bar of the federal court in Maryland, or his admission in Washington, D.C., as a shield against injunctive relief by asserting that he will operate a triage. He is not permitted to sort through clients who may present themselves at his Maryland office and represent only those whose legal matters would require suit or defense in a Washington, D.C. court or in the federal court in Maryland because the very acts of interview, analysis and explanation of legal rights constitute practicing law in Maryland. For an unadmitted person to do so on a regular basis from a Maryland principal office is the unauthorized practice of law in Maryland.”
Id. at 666, 561 A.2d at 210.
Bridges was to like effect. In holding that an attorney admitted to practice in a number of jurisdictions, other than Maryland, including the Maryland federal bar, did not engage in the unauthorized practice of law in Maryland before his admission to the Maryland Bar, this Court examined the substance of Bridges’ activities. 360 Md. at 511, 759 A.2d at 245. We concluded that, rather than engaging in the unauthorized practice of law, he limited his practice in this State very specifically to federal court and federal law. Id. See also Harris-Smith, supra, 356 Md. at 83-84, 737 A.2d at 573 (holding that an attorney admitted to the federal district court in the State, but not to the State bar, engaged in the unauthorized practice of law when she screened her firm’s clients for her bankruptcy practice and held herself out to the public as a general practitioner); Johnson, supra, 363 Md. at 628, 770 A.2d at 148 (holding that an attorney admitted to the federal bar engaged in the unauthorized practice of law when he met [204]*204with, and advised, clients in a Maryland office, made telephone calls to clients from his Maryland home, executed retainer agreements in Maryland and did not include his jurisdictional limitations on the firm’s letterhead, which bore only a Maryland address).
Perez, finally, relies on Sperry, supra, 373 U.S. 379, 83 S.Ct. 1322, 10 L.Ed.2d 428, to support his argument that his federal bar membership allowed him to practice law in this State and that practice counts toward his eligibility to be the Attorney General. In Sperry, the Supreme Court of Florida held that the petitioner, a non-lawyer registered to practice before the United States Patent Office, had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by maintaining an office in the State, preparing legal documents, and by holding himself out to the public as a Patent Attorney. The Supreme Court of the United States reversed, holding:
“A State may not enforce licensing requirements which, though valid in the absence of federal regulation, give ‘the State’s licensing board a virtual power of review over the federal determination’ that a person or agency is qualified and entitled to perform certain functions, or which impose upon the performance of activity sanctioned by federal license additional conditions not contemplated by Congress. ‘No State law can hinder or obstruct the free use of a license granted under an act of Congress.’ ”
373 U.S. at 385, 83 S.Ct. at 1326, 10 L.Ed.2d at 432-33, quoting Pennsylvania v. Wheeling & Belmont Bridge Co., 54 U.S. 518, 566, 13 How. 518, 566, 14 L.Ed. 249, 269 (1851).
Perez’s reliance on Sperry, and, in effect, on the Supremacy Clause, is misplaced. While we agree with the principles enunciated in Sperry, in context, the case simply is inapposite. It is true that a non-lawyer was authorized to practice law in Florida pursuant to federal law and regulations; however, that practice was limited to a specialized federal practice and federal law. What the Florida Supreme Court did, which the Supremacy Clause did not permit, was to prohibit what federal law allowed; it denied Sperry the right to do in Florida [205]*205what federal law permitted him to do there. On the other hand, the federal law that permitted Sperry to practice patent law, even though he was a non-lawyer, did not, and did not purport to, authorize Sperry to engage in a State law practice in Florida or to enable him to avoid the State bar admission requirements.
The statute relevant to this case, 28 U.S.C. 517, and Local Rule 701(l)(b), as in Sperry, authorized Perez to “practice” in Maryland, but only to protect the interests of the United States or, in the case of the rule, in federal court; neither authorized, or purported to, the unrestricted practice of law or, more to the point, a Maryland State law practice. Unlike in Sperry, therefore, not construing Perez’s federal practice, even that which occurred in Maryland and that may have involved Maryland issues, as the practice of law in this State for purposes of his qualifying to be the Attorney General of this State in no way denied Perez the rights the federal statute and the local rule gave him. Just as the ruling in Sperry did not give the petitioner more rights than those that were already conferred upon him, our ruling simply does not confer on Perez rights to which he is not entitled by virtue of the federal statute and rule.
To be clear, it is not this Court’s holding that Perez has not practiced law for the requisite ten year period. Indeed, we agree that he has continuously been practicing law since his admission to the New York Bar in 1988. Rather, we decline to construe Article V, § 4 so as to credit all of that “practice” as complying with the provision’s “practiced Law in this State” requirement.
On this point, Perez contends that the framers were not concerned with the person occupying the office of the Attorney General having sufficient legal experience in connection with Maryland, but, instead, that he or she were “merely steeped in the law, of sufficient legal maturity to undertake the duties of the office.” See 68 Opinions of the Attorney General at 54. He argues, moreover, that because his federal [206]*206practice took place in Maryland, he has, in fact, been practicing law “in this State.”
We reject this argument. Article V, § 4, read in conjunction with the duties delineated in Article V, § 3, clearly reflects the intent of the framers that the Attorney General be a Maryland lawyer, with a specified amount of experience. The Attorney General’s first and foremost duty is to “prosecute and defend on the part of the State all cases in the appellate courts of the State, in the Supreme Court of the United States or the inferior Federal Courts, by or against the State, or in which the State may be interested .... ” MD CON ST. art. V, § 3(a)(1) (emphasis added). In addition, the Attorney General is required to:
“(2) Investigate, commence, and prosecute or defend any civil or criminal suit or action or category of such suits or actions in any of the Federal Courts or in any Court of this State, or before administrative agencies and quasi legislative bodies, on the part of the State or in which the State may be interested, which the General Assembly by law or joint resolution, or the Governor, shall have directed or shall direct to be investigated, commenced and prosecuted or defended.
“(3) When required by the General Assembly by law or joint resolution, or by the Governor, aid any State’s Attorney or other authorized prosecuting officer in investigating, commencing, and prosecuting any criminal suit or action or category of such suits or actions brought by the State in any Court of this State.
“(4) Give his opinion in writing whenever required by the General Assembly or either branch thereof, the Governor, the Comptroller, the Treasurer or any State’s Attorney on any legal matter or subject.”
MD CONST, art. V, § 3(a)(2)-(4) (emphasis added). In order for the Attorney General to discharge the various duties prescribed by Article V, § 3, he or she would have to be not merely steeped in the law, generally, but steeped in Maryland law, both as a member of its bar and as an active practitioner, [207]*207who, as a result, has acquired a familiarity with the relevant procedures enveloped therein. Given the Attorney General’s responsibility for litigation and transactions on behalf of the State in state courts, coupled with his or her administrative duties, it was quite logical for the framers to require that candidates for the office of the Attorney General to have practiced law in the State for ten years, thereby ensuring that they are conversant and familiar with Maryland law and its practice.
The critical holding in this case is that the relevant condition of eligibility set forth in Article V, § 4, that the person have “practiced law in this State for at least ten years,” is not satisfied unless the person (1) has been admitted by this Court to practice law in Maryland for that period, and (2) pursuant to that admission, has, in fact, practiced here for that period. We do not mean, in this Opinion, to determine, in any categorical sense, what activity does or does not constitute practicing law in this State for purposes of Article V, § 4. Two things are important to note, however.
The first is to make clear that we are not creating a Federal-State dichotomy. We are not holding that a person who has been admitted by this Court to practice in Maryland does not, in fact, practice here simply because he or she practices mostly, or even only, in the Federal courts or devotes his or her practice to matters involving Federal law. The practice of law in Maryland does include practice in Federal court and before Federal agencies. Many cases in Federal court, and especially in the Bankruptcy courts, involve Maryland law. Lawyers admitted by this Court to practice in Maryland who are employed by Federal agencies in the State, such as the United States Attorney’s Office or the Federal Public Defender’s Office, do indeed practice law in Maryland for purposes of Article, V, § 4. A lawyer who works for a Federal agency outside of Maryland, however, will not be regarded as practicing law in this State simply because he or she is authorized by Federal law to represent the Government in litigation in any State, including Maryland, and may, on a [208]*208few isolated occasions over an extended period, have some involvement in a case here.
The second point is that a person may be regarded as practicing law even if the person never appears in any court. Lawyers do not have to be litigators, and many are not. It is not the kind of law or the nature of the practice that counts, but only that the person, for at least ten years, have been admitted by this Court to practice law in Maryland and that he or she, for that period of time, has, on a regular basis, done so.
The problem for Mr. Perez, first, is that he was not admitted by this Court to practice in Maryland for ten years. Second, and equally significant, his work, in Washington, for the Department of Justice from 1989 to 1999 and, on a part-time basis, for the Senate Judiciary Committee, though it included an occasional involvement over that 10-year period with an unquantified but apparently small number of cases in Maryland, does not qualify as practicing law in this State for that period, within the contemplation o f Article V, § 4.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Circuit Court’s ruling that Perez has, in fact, “practiced Law in this State for ten years,” thereby making him eligible to run for the office of the Attorney General of Maryland. Perez’s admission to the Maryland Bar in 2001, coupled with his lengthy, but primarily, federal practice of law is not sufficient to meet the requirements of the office of the Attorney General as prescribed in Article V, § 4 of the Maryland Constitution. We, thus, hold Perez ineligible as a candidate for Attorney General of Maryland in the 2006 Gubernatorial Primary Election.54
[212]*212Concurring Opinion by ELDRIDGE, J., which RAKER, J., joins; HARRELL and GREENE, JJ., join in Parts I and II only.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
919 A.2d 1223, 398 Md. 146, 2007 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abrams-v-lamone-md-2007.