Board of Street Commissioners v. Williams

53 A. 923, 96 Md. 232, 1903 Md. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 53 A. 923 (Board of Street Commissioners v. Williams) 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
Board of Street Commissioners v. Williams, 53 A. 923, 96 Md. 232, 1903 Md. LEXIS 68 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By the Act of 1898, ch. 192, relating to Hagerstown it is among other things provided that the Board of Street Commissioners “shall appoint regular policemen, not exceeding ten, to serve under such regulations and for such compensation as they (the Street Commissioners) may direct, such compensation not, however, to exceed forty dollars per month, and said policemen shall be subject to removal for cause.” Sec. 192 was amended in 1900, by ch. 391, of the Acts of that session, but not in such a way as to affect the question involved in this controversy. In February, 1900, and therefdre whilst the Act of 1898 quoted from above was in force, the appellee, Williams, was appointed by the Board of Street Commissioners then in authority, a regular policeman and he duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties. He continued to perform those duties until April the sixteenth, nineteen hun *235 dred and two, when he was discharged by the Street Commissioners without notice that any charge had been preferred against him and without an opportunity to be heard in his own defense. He then made application to the Circuit Court for Washington County for a writ of mandamus requiring the Street Commissioners to restore him to his office. In the answer of the respondents it is admitted that the action of the majority of the board in discharging the appellee was taken “ without notice or citation to the said petitioner to appear before said board at said particular meeting” (that is, the meeting of April the sixteenth), “ and without notice to the said petitioner that any charge had been made against him for failure or neglect of duty or official misconduct, or any notice to the said petitioner of the action contemplated.” In their answer the respondents further insisted that they were entrusted by the statute with the sole power to determine whether the appellee should remain on the police force; that their judgment in the matter was final and conclusive; and that inasmuch as they had exercised their discretion, had removed the appellee and had appointed another person in his place, the Court was without jurisdiction to review their action. To the answer, only parts of which have been cited, the appellee filed fifteen pleas and joinders of issue. Several of the pleas were demurred to, but as the case now stands it will not be necessary to allude to any but the fifteenth plea. By that plea it was averred that under the section heretofore quoted from the statute, and under the rules and regulations adopted by the Street Commissioners, the appellee was entitled to have due and proper notice of any charge or charges made against him and that he was entitled to an opportunity to be heard in his own defense, but that he did not have either notice or an opportunity to be heard. The demurrer to that plea raises the only question before us. And that is the only question before us, because though the record contains considerable evidence on the issues of fact there is no bill of exceptions, no agreement of counsel or no certificate of the trial Judge from which this Court can know or be apprised that what is in the record *236 was, in fact, the evidence considered by the Court below. Without some such authentication of the testimony we are not at liberty to consider it. Davis v. O'Berry, 93 Md. 751. In Creager v. Hooper, 83 Md. 501, the question decided arose on a demurrer. In Manger v. Board of Examiners, &c., 90 Md. 672, there was a bill of exceptions.

From the order directing the writ of mandamus to issue the Street Commissioners have appealed.

The single question for decision on that part of the record which is properly before us arises on the demurrer to the fifteenth plea ; and that question is, was the appellee, under the terms of the Act of 18p8 heretofore transcribed, entitled to notice that charges had been preferred against him and further entitled to a hearing before being removed ?

There have been many cases decided by this Court on the subject of official tenures and relating to the right of removal from office ; but the precise situation here presented does not seem to have arisen heretofore. In State, ex rel. O'Neill v. Register et al., 59 Md. 283, the statute under which the relator was appointed provided that the appointees of the Fire Department of Baltimore City “shall be of good character and * * * * shall be appointed by the Fire Commissioners and shall be entitled to retain their respective positions for such time as they evince willingness and capacity to discharge the duties pertaining thereto efficiently, harmoniously with their associates, and satisfactorily to the Fire Commissioners.” The relator having been discharged from his position of foreman of an engine company applied to the Court of Common Pleas for a writ of mandamus to require the Fire Commissioners to restore him to his former place. The writ was refused and this Court held that under the statute just quoted “the Fire Commissioners were solely invested with the power of determining whether their appointees were persons of good character as by law required to be, whether they were efficient in the service, and whether they evinced proper willingness to discharge their duty ‘harmoniously with their associates,’ and the judgment and discretion exercised in the *237 matter by the Fire Commissioners are not subject to the revision of another tribunal.” It was further held that when the power of removal from office vests by statute in the discretion of any person, or body of persons, or depends upon the exercise of personal j udgment as to whether the cause for removal be sufficiently good, mandamus will not lie. In Miles et al. v. Stevenson, 80 Md. 358, it was held where the term was for a definite and prescribed period and where the causes justifying a removal were specified, that a removal for some other and different cause was illegal; and that an incumbent could not be discharged even for the designated causes unless he had notice of the charge against him and an opportunity to be heard. In Townsend v. Kurtz, 83 Md. 331, it was- decided that when an office is created by statute and it is provided that the incumbent shall hold the same for a fixed term unless sooner removed by the appointing power, such general power to remove carries with it the right to remove an incumbent before the expiration of his term without notice and without charges of misconduct. In Field v. Malster, 88 Md. 691, it was ruled that an officer appointed for a fixed and definite term could not be summarily removed without cause unless there is some express provision of law authorizing such a removal during the term.

In the case at bar we have a statute authorizing the appointment of regular policemen who “shall be subject to removal for causeand the questions are, first, what is the extent or limit of their tenure when appointed; and, secondly,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 923, 96 Md. 232, 1903 Md. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-street-commissioners-v-williams-md-1903.