Hooper v. New

37 A. 424, 85 Md. 565, 1897 Md. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 A. 424 (Hooper v. New) 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
Hooper v. New, 37 A. 424, 85 Md. 565, 1897 Md. LEXIS 81 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee was appointed by a joint convention of the two branches of the City Council, one of the School Commissioners of Baltimore City, pursuant to the provisions of Art. ‡‡ of the City Code of i8gj. The ordinance therein contained makes provision for the appointment of School Commissioners of the city by a joint convention of the two branches of the Council. When the appellee presented himself to the Mayor to have the oath of office administered by the Mayor, the latter refused to administer the oath and [572]*572placed his refusal on the ground that the appellee had not been legally appointed. The Mayor maintained that the appointment was illegal because the ordinance under which it had been made was ultra vires and void. And it was insisted that the ordinance was ultra vires and void because it is in conflict with section jo of Art. 4 of the Code of Local Laws. That section is in these words : “ They (the Mayor and City Council) may pass ordinances regulating the manner of appointing persons to office under the corporation, which they are or may be authorized by law to appoint, but unless such ordinance be passed the Mayor shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of a convention of the two. branches-of the City Council, shall appoint all officers under the corporation, except the Register of the city and the clerks employed by the city or under its authority, &c.” Upon the refusal of the Mayor to administer the oath of office to the appellee, he made application by petition to the City Court for a writ of mandamus to compel the Mayor to administer the oath. To this petition the Mayor filed an answer relying upon the alleged illegality of the appellee’s appointment by reason of the asserted invalidity of the ordinance. To this answer the appellee demurred ; the Court sustained the demurrer and ordered the writ to issue. From that order this appeal was taken by the Mayor.

The paramount question involved is whether the ordinance under which the appellee was appointed a School Commissioner of Baltimore City is valid or ultra vires and void; and this question is presented and brought up directly on the face of the record.

The question at issue arises, it is claimed, under the same section of the Code of Local Laws that was before us in the Hooper and Creager case recently decided by this Court (84 Md. 19S). There is, however, a clearly defined line of distinction between that case and many other cases that might arise under the same section, and which, if they did arise, it has been supposed, would be covered and controlled by [573]*573that decision ; but in spite of this distinction there appears to be some misunderstanding as to the scope and effect of the Court’s opinion in that case, and there also exists an impression that it is conclusive of the issue here involved. In Hooper and Creager we were dealing with the case of a municipal officer, distinctively and confessedly such, the method of whose appointment was prescribed -by a designated section of the Local Code, and with that section the ordinance under which Mr. Creager had been appointed was asserted to be in conflict. We did not have before us and therefore did not pass upon the case of a subordinate employee or laborer or other like inferior servant, whose selection, in the very nature of things, was never designed or intended to be, and in fact is not, embraced within the terms of the statutes embodied in sec. jo of Art. 4 of the Local Code. And as we had no such question to decide we deemed it wholly unnecessary to step aside a single pace from the straight path before us, and declare what particular appointments were not included within the scope of our decision. The duty of a Court is done, as we apprehend, when it decides the case before it, and it is obviously no part of that duty to declare that the Court has not decided something wholly different; or to enumerate, in anticipation of possible future contests the instances in which, by reason of a difference of facts, the opinion would not be applicable. The language which a Court employs, the reasoning which it resorts to for the purpose of disposing of a particular question ought not to be wrested from the context and the occasion, and strained so as to be made pertinent or seemingly pertinent to some other distinct and dissimilar question. But this is frequently done incautiously, and some persons are by that erroneous process led to suppose that results are established by a judicial opinion, though those results do not logically follow from it at all. There may be sometimes an apparent similarity between cases; but .it ought not to be forgotten' that mere similarity is not identity. It is a common fallacy, this inference that a conclu[574]*574sion is universally and under all conditions, sound, because it is sound in a particular instance and under peculiar circumstances. It does not follow that a conclusion which is true secundum quid, or in a certain respect, is also true simpliciter, or simply and absolutely.

In the Creager case we were dealing with an ordinance regulating or attempting to regulate the manner of appointing persons to office ” — to a municipal office — and not with an ordinance regulating the method of employing or appointing servants or laborers and kindred subordinates, who are in no .sense officers of the municipality at all, but are merely and essentially employees. Consequently the language used in the opinion in that case must be understood as applicable to municipal officers — the class of persons designated in sec. 30 of Art. 4 — as contradistinguished from mere employees. Nor does the • Creager case touch upon or involve the specific point now presented. If the School Commissioners are municipal officers, and if there had not been any legally prescribed mode provided for their appointment other than that contained in sec. 30, Art. 4, which applied to Mr. Creager’s appointment, then, undoubtedly the mode of selecting School Commissioners would be within the reason, and, therefore, within the effect and operation of the decision in the Creager case. But it is right here that the Creager case and this case diverge. It is precisely because sec. 30 of Art. 4 does not apply to School Commissioners any more — though for a different reason — that it applies to a bailiff in the Tax Collector’s office, an employee under the City Commissioner or hundreds of other subordinates in the service of the city, that wffiat was said in Creager and Hooper can have no influence upon the decision of this case.

If it be assumed, though it is by no means conceded (and certainly it is not now decided), that the School Commissioners are municipal officers, as contradistinguished from agents of the State selected by the municipality under power delegated by the State, to carry on within the limits [575]*575of the city the beneficent purposes of the general school system of the commonwealth — just as a State Tax Collector in a county is an officer of the State, though selected by the County Commissioners — still the predominant proposition that their appointment does not fall within the terms of section 30 of Art. ‡ of the Local Code, remains to be demonstrated. If their appointment does not fall within that section we have no further need or occasion to allude to the Creager case hereafter in this opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A. 424, 85 Md. 565, 1897 Md. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-new-md-1897.