Bennett v. Harford County

485 Md. 461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 30, 2023
Docket38/22
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 485 Md. 461 (Bennett v. Harford County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Harford County, 485 Md. 461 (Md. 2023).

Opinion

Jacob Bennett v. Harford County, Maryland, No. 38, September Term, 2022.

STATUTORY INTERPRETATION – ELIGIBILITY TO BE A HARFORD COUNTY COUNCIL MEMBER

Section 207 of the Harford County Charter, which prevents a Council member from holding employment in the government of the State, Harford County, or any municipality within Harford County, does not preclude a teacher employed by the Harford County Board of Education from simultaneously serving as a member of the Harford County Council. Finding Charter § 207 ambiguous concerning whether it applies to employees of the Board, the Court applied a canon of construction favoring candidate eligibility to resolve the ambiguity.

PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT – INCOMPATIBLE POSITIONS

The doctrine of incompatible positions does not preclude a teacher employed by the Harford County Board of Education from simultaneously serving as a member of the Harford County Council. Circuit Court for Harford County Case No. C-12-CV-22-000857 IN THE SUPREME COURT Argued: April 4, 2023 OF MARYLAND*

No. 38

September Term, 2022

______________________________________

JACOB BENNETT

v.

HARFORD COUNTY, MARYLAND

Fader, C.J., Watts, Hotten, Booth, Biran, Gould, Eaves,

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Fader, C.J. Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Gould, J., dissents. Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State ______________________________________ Government Article) this document is authentic.

2024.04.26 Filed: August 30, 2023 11:49:00 -04'00'

Gregory Hilton, Clerk * At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to the Supreme Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022. Jacob Bennett, the appellant, and Harford County, Maryland (the “County”), the

appellee, dispute whether Mr. Bennett is barred from serving as a member of the Harford

County Council (the “Council”) because of his employment as a schoolteacher by the

Harford County Board of Education (the “Board”). In the November 2022 general election,

Mr. Bennett was elected to the Council. Soon after, a dispute arose between Mr. Bennett

and the County concerning whether he is precluded from serving simultaneously as a

member of the Council and as an employee of the Board by either: (1) Section 207 of the

Harford County Charter (the “Charter”), which prohibits a Council member from holding,

among other things, “employment in the government of the State of Maryland[ or] Harford

County”; or (2) the common law doctrine of incompatible positions. We hold that neither

Charter § 207 nor the doctrine of incompatible positions bars Mr. Bennett from

simultaneously serving as a member of the Council and an employee of the Board.

First, Charter § 207 does not preclude Mr. Bennett from serving on the Council

because his employer, the Board, does not have the character of either a State or County

government entity in the context presented. County boards of education can have the

character of State, county, hybrid, or independent entities. Which character applies to a

particular situation depends on context and applicable statutory and regulatory provisions.

As applied in the context of Charter § 207, a county board of education does not have a

particular character as State, county, hybrid, or independent entity. We therefore turn to

our canons of statutory interpretation to discern the legislative intent underlying the

provision. Because the language of § 207 is ambiguous and legislative history clarifies

only part of that ambiguity, we employ a canon of statutory interpretation favoring candidate eligibility. We ultimately conclude that, for purposes of the applicability of

§ 207, the Board is an independent entity, neither State nor County, and that § 207 therefore

does not preclude Mr. Bennett from simultaneously serving as a member of the Council

and an employee of the Board.

Second, the doctrine of incompatible positions does not preclude Mr. Bennett’s

simultaneous service on the Council and as an employee of the Board because there is no

present or prospective conflict of interest between the positions; neither position has a level

of supervisory power over the other or the ability to hire, fire, or set the salary of the other;

and none of the functions of the offices are “inherently inconsistent and repugnant.”

Hetrich v. County Comm’rs of Anne Arundel County, 222 Md. 304, 308 (1960) (quoting

Lilly v. Jones, 158 Md. 260, 266 (1930)). The Council’s limited roles with respect to the

budget and membership of the Board are too attenuated from Mr. Bennett’s position as a

teacher to implicate the doctrine.

For those reasons, in a per curiam order issued following oral argument, we held

that Mr. Bennett was not barred from serving on the Council while remaining a

schoolteacher employed by the Board, reversed the contrary order and declaratory

judgment of the Circuit Court for Harford County, and remanded the case with instructions

to that court to enter a declaratory judgment in accord with our order. Bennett v. Harford

County, 483 Md. 414 (2023) (per curiam). We now explain the basis for that order.

2 BACKGROUND

A. The Harford County Charter and the Council

Harford County is governed by the terms of a charter adopted by the eligible voters

of the County in November 1972. See Maryland Manual 1973-1974, at 589 (Morris L.

Radoff & Frank F. White, Jr., eds., 1974). The legislative branch of the County government

is the seven-member Council. Harford County Charter § 201. Six members of the Council

must, at the time of their elections, reside in one of the County’s six Council districts. Id.

§ 204. The seventh, who serves as Council President, is elected at large. Id. Members are

elected for four-year terms on the same schedule as the election of state officers. Id. §§ 204,

206.

To be qualified to serve as a Council member, a candidate must “have been a

resident and a qualified voter of the County for at least two years immediately preceding

election or appointment,” and (other than the Council President) “a resident of the Council

district from which elected or appointed.” Id. § 207.

While serving on the Council, a “member shall not hold any other office of profit or

employment in the government of the State of Maryland, Harford County, or any

municipality within Harford County, except a position held by virtue of being a Council

member.” Id. Members are further ineligible during their term “for appointment to any

County office or position carrying compensation” other than Council member or the

County Executive. Id.

3 This dispute centers on the prohibition in Charter § 207 against a member holding

“employment in the government of the State of Maryland[ or] Harford County” while

serving on the Council.1

B. Factual Background

Before the circuit court, the parties stipulated to the following facts, among others.

Mr. Bennett is a teacher in the Harford County Public Schools, employed by the

Board. For the 2022-2023 school year, Mr. Bennett was under contract with the Board to

teach wherever the Superintendent of the Harford County Public Schools assigned him.

In the November 2022 General Election, the voters of Harford County Council

District F elected Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 Md. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-harford-county-md-2023.