Comptroller of the State v. Klein

138 A.2d 648, 215 Md. 427
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 1, 1989
Docket[No. 89, September Term, 1957.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 138 A.2d 648 (Comptroller of the State v. Klein) 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
Comptroller of the State v. Klein, 138 A.2d 648, 215 Md. 427 (Md. 1989).

Opinion

Gray, J.,

by special assignment, delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal presents for consideration the construction of Article 3, Section 35, of the Constitution of Maryland. It involves the right of a public officer, who was appointed to fill out an unexpired term, to receive an increase in the salary of that office provided for after the appointment of his predecessor but before the present incumbent was appointed. While this Section of the Constitution has heretofore received interpretation by this Court, 1 the specific question now presented comes for determination for the first time.

The facts are simple and undisputed. On June 1, 1949, *429 Mr. William Mahaney was appointed Chairman of the Employment Security Board for a six-year term expiring on June 1, 1955. At that time his salary was fixed at $7,500. Thereafter, by Chapter 617 of the Acts of 1951, the power to fix the salary of the Chairman was vested in the Standard Salary Board. In June, 1951, this Board fixed the salary of the Chairman at $10,000. However, Mr. Mahaney continued to receive his original salary until his resignation on July 20, 1953. After Mr. Mahaney resigned, the Governor appointed Daniel E. Klein, the appellee, to fill the remainder of Mr. Mahaney’s unexpired six-year term, effective on or about November 2, 1953. Thereafter and until his resignation on April 15, 1955, the appellee received as his salary $10,000 per annum, which included the increase of June, 1951. During the course of a routine audit of the fiscal affairs of the Employment Security Board, the propriety of paying the appellee the increased salary was raised. In due course, the Comptroller of the State of Maryland called upon the appellee to return the funds paid to him by way of salary in excess of the rate of $7,500, which was the salary established by law when his predecessor, Mr. Mahaney, was originally appointed for the six-year term. Thereupon the appellee brought suit in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, seeking a declaratory decree establishing his right to the funds in question. These proceedings resulted in a decree of that Court establishing the right of the appellee to the full salary actually received by him. From this decree, the Comptroller has taken the present appeal.

Some collateral issues were originally raised in the nisi prius court, but they seem to have been abandoned there and were not argued or otherwise urged in this Court. Counsel for both sides concede that the sole question for determination in this appeal is whether or not the appellee, while serving the unexpired term to which Mr. Mahaney had been originally appointed, was prohibited from accepting the increase in salary by the concluding clause of Section 35, Article 3, of the Constitution. The relevant clause reads: “nor shall the salary or compensation of any public officer be increased or diminished during his term of office.” The appellant con *430 tends that this clause should be interpreted as though it reads “Nor shall the salary or compensation with respect to any public office be increased or diminished during any term thereof.” The appellee contends that the clause should be-construed as though it read as follows: “Nor shall the salary or compensation of any public officer be increased or diminished during his term of office, while he shall be an incumbent thereof.”

It is apparent that the question raised for determination is a narrow one, but it has given rise to a wide difference of opinion and is not free from difficulty. Contrary interpretations have been reached by different attorneys general. 2 In the pending case the full salary was first paid to the appellee, and now the State demands a refund of the increase. An examination of the authorities in other states discloses a wide difference of opinion among them. Some of this difference stems from the fact that most of the State Constitutions contain a clause prohibiting certain increases or decreases of compensation, or both, but the phraseology in the several instruments is quite different. Some of the decisions adopt a construction which the Court concerned deems to effectuate the general object of the prohibition while others result from a study and application of the phrase involved. Generally, the decisions fall into two categories: (a) Those which hold that the prohibition relates to the term and therefore prevents any person serving during that term, whether an original incumbent or one filling an unexpired term, from receiving an increase or being subjected to a decrease in compensation; and (b) Those which hold that the prohibition is intended to relate to the individual who may for the time being hold the particular office. This group of cases generally holds that the prohibition affects only the incumbent who may occupy the office at the time of the increase or diminution.

The appellant relies upon Wyrick v. Ritzville, 16 Wash. 2d 36, 132 P. 2d 737, 144 A. L. R. 681, which relates to *431 municipal officials, one of whom sought a per diem which had been authorized before he accepted appointment to an unexpired term. As pointed out by the appellant, Article- II, Section 25 of the Washington Constitution is substantially identical with Article III, Section 35 of the Maryland Constitution. However, the Court appears to have applied Article XI, Section 8 of the Washington Constitution which provided that, “The salary of any county, city, town or municipal officers shall not be increased or decreased after his election or during his term of office * * This provision of the Washington Constitution is materially different from ours. In view of this difference and of the reasoning of the Court we do not regard the precedent as persuasive. Somewhat similar decisions were rendered in the following cases: Bosworth v. Ellison, 148 Ky. 708 (1912), 147 S. W. 400. (This case had to do with an increase of a jailer’s compensation for keeping and feeding prisoners, and the Court reached a conclusion contrary to that of this Court in Bowman v. Harford County, 166 Md. 296.) Clark v. Frohmiller, 53 Ariz. 286 (1939), 88 P. 2d 542, involves the right of a judge elected to fill an unexpired term to an increase provided before his election. The constitutional limitation is not dissimilar to ours. The Court reviewed various decisions on both sides of the question and held that the increase was prohibited. In Foreman v. People, 209 Ill. 567 (1904), 71 N. E. 35, the Court construed three quite different constitutional provisions to mean the same thing and that all prohibit any increase during the term.

In Wilson v. Shaw, 194 Iowa 28 (1922), 188 N. W. 940, the Court was dealing with a constitutional limitation affecting compensation “during the term for which he shall have been elected.” By a divided Court, increased compensation to one filling an unexpired term was denied.

The case of State v. Yelle, 12 Wash. 2d 434 (1942), 121 P. 2d 948, cited by the appellant, is not in point, for it has to do with the question of whether an incumbent, re-elected for a new term, may be subjected to a decrease effected before his re-election; but see State v. Clausen, 117 Wash.

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138 A.2d 648, 215 Md. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comptroller-of-the-state-v-klein-md-1989.