Duer v. Dashiell

47 A. 1040, 91 Md. 660, 1900 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 47 A. 1040 (Duer v. Dashiell) 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
Duer v. Dashiell, 47 A. 1040, 91 Md. 660, 1900 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Somerset County, directing a mandamus to issue requiring the appellant, who had been the secretary, treasurer and examiner of the former Board of County School Commissioners, to deliver the books and papers of the office to the appellee, who was elected to the same office by the present board.

Sec. 6, of Art. 77, of the Code, as it stood in the year 1898, directed the Governor by and with the advice and consent of the Senate to appoint a Board of School Commissioners for each county in the State. Sec. 18 of the same Article, directs every such board to meet for organi *666 •zation on the first Tuesday in August next succeeding their appointment and elect a person not a member of the board to serve as its secretary, treasurer and examiner, but is silent as to his tenure of office.

• On August 2nd, 1898, the Board of School Commissioners of Somerset County, then in office, elected the appellant as- their secretary, treasurer and examiner, and undertook to fix the duration of his term of office in the definite period of two years. He accepted the office and duly qualified by filing his bond as required by law and 'continued to discharge his official duties until that board of commissioners were legislated out of office by the Act of T900, ch. 29. That Act repealed sec. 6, of Article 77, of the Code, under which the commissioners held office at the time of the appointment of the appellant to the office in ■question, and re-enacted it in- such form as to require the Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate if in session, to appoint a new Board of School Commissioners, for each county in the State, to go into office 'on the 1st Monday in May next, succeeding their appoint'ment.

A new Board of School Commissioners for Somerset County were promptly appointed and confirmed under the Act of 1900, ch. 29. At their first meeting, which was held on the xst Monday in May, 1900, they elected the appellee as their secretary, treasurer and examiner. He duly qualified and then demanded of the appellant the books-, vouchers and other papers in his possession relating to the office, but the latter refused to deliver them, claiming that he was:'still in office and therefore entitled to their possession.

The appellee thereupon filed his petition in the Circuit Court setting out his eléction and qualification, the demand made by him upon the appellant for the books, vouchers hnd - other papers relating to the office and the refusal by the appellant to comply with the demand, and praying for a mandamus to compel the delivery to be made to him! *667 The appellant answered the petition admitting the demand and refusal, denying the title of the appellee to the office and insisting that his own election to the office on August 2nd, 1898, and his acceptance thereof and qualification constituted a contract between him and the Board of School Commissioners by virtue of which he was entitled to hold the office and receive its emoluments for the full term of two years, ending on August 2nd, 1900. The appellee demurred to the answer of the appellant and the Court sustained the demurrer and passed the order, from which this appeal was taken, directing the mandamus to issue.

Neither the former board of commissioners nor the present one, ever made any removal of the appellant from the office in question, but the present board treated the position as vacant when they came into office and they elected the appellee to fill it.

The first and fundamental question presented by this record is, did the appointment of the appellant as secretary, treasurer and examiner on the 2nd of August, 1898, by the Board of School Commissioners then in office and his acceptance thereof and qualification, give him a contractual right to hold the office for the full term of two years ?

We have no hesitation in answering this question in the negative. It has long been settled that public officials are merely agents of the State for the carrying out of public purposes and that their selection and the fixing of the length of time for which they shall serve are matters of public convenience or necessity, and do not fall within the scope of the term contract as applied to transactions between individuals out of which definite and vested rights of property arise. Crenshaw v. U. S., 134 U. S. 99; Newton v. Mahoning County Commrs., 100 U. S. 548; Hall v. Wisconsin, 103 U. S. 5; Regents v. Williams, 9 G. & J. 635; Davis v. State, 7 Md. 150; Warfield v. County Commrs., 28 Md. 84.

. The Boards of School Commissioners for the several counties of this State are quasi corporations of a public *668 nature charged by law with “ the general supervision and control of all schools in their respective counties,” and are required “to build, repair and furnish the school houses,” “pay the salaries of teachers,” “purchase and distribute text-books,” and generally secure an efficient administration of the public school system. It is requisite for the effectual discharge of this important public duty that, except in so far as restrained by law, each board of commissioners should have the power to select the agents designated by the statute for doing its work. This essential independence of action on the part of an incoming board composed, as in the present case, of entirely different persons from their predecessors would be unreasonably restrained and its usefulness greatly impaired if it were compelled to accept for the important office of secretary, treasurer and examiner a person not of its own selection who had been appointed by the outgoing board for such term of office as it saw fit to adopt.

We think it clear in this case first, that the former Board of School Commissioners who elected the appellant in August, 1898, had no power to fix the duration of his office for an indefeasible term of two years, secondly, that when the term of office of the former board was itsel vacated and destroyed by the Act of 1900, ch. 29, the appellant’s term of office also came to an end except to the extent of his right to hold over until the appointment of his successor, and thirdly that his holding over ceased on May 6th, 1900, when the appellee was elected as his successor by the present board of commissioners and had duly .qualified.

There having been no direct attempt by either the former or the present board of commissioners to remove the appellant from his office, the question of the nature and extent of the right, of County School Commissioners to remove their secretary, treasurer and examiner, which was much discussed upon the briefs and in the argument of counsel, is not presented by the record in this case. His term of *669

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Bluebook (online)
47 A. 1040, 91 Md. 660, 1900 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duer-v-dashiell-md-1900.