Keyser v. Upshur

48 A. 399, 92 Md. 726, 1901 Md. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 A. 399 (Keyser v. Upshur) 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
Keyser v. Upshur, 48 A. 399, 92 Md. 726, 1901 Md. LEXIS 127 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Recent legislation adopted by the General Assembly of this State during the session of nineteen hundred, and relating to the police system of Baltimore City, gives rise to the pending controversy. By the Act of ipoo, ch. 15, the method of selecting Police Commissioners of Baltimore City was changed from an election by the two Houses of the General Assembly to an appointment by the Governor with the advice and con *728 sent of the Senate. In the oath which this Act requires the Police Commissioners to take it is declared that the commissioners shall in no case and under no pretext appoint, promote, reduce in rank or remove, any policeman or officer of police or detective or any other person under them for or on account of the political opinions or affiliations of such policeman, officer, detective or other person or for any other cause or reason than the fitness or unfitness of such person in the best judgment of said Commissioners, for the place to which he shall be appointed or from which he shall be removed. Whilst this oath cannot be prescribed under sec. 6, Art. i of the State Constitution as a qualification for holding the office of Police Commissioner, because no oath other than the one set forth in the Constitution itself can be imposed by the Legislature for such a purpose — Davidson’s case, 91 Md. 681 — still the terms of the oath may well be treated as defining some of the duties of the office. Though a refusal to take this statutory oath would not deprive the Police Commissioner of the office if he qualified by subscribing to the oath prescribed by sec. 6, Art. 1 of the Constitution, the things which the statutory oath undertakes to require him to swear that he will do or will refrain from doing may be regarded as part of his duty when he has qualified by taking the Constitutional oath. The relevancy of these observations will become apparent when we come to the consideration of some of the questions at issue in the cause.

By the Act of iyoo, ch. 16, a board of Police Examiners was created. This board is charged, amongst other things, with the duty to inquire into the mental, moral and physical fitness of all applicants for appointment to or promotion in the police force of Baltimore City. The same board is likewise required to report to the Police Commissioners “ graded lists of those persons whom they may deem qualified for such appointment or promotion, from which graded lists -all nominations for, appointments to, or promotions in said police force shall hereafter be made ■’’ and the nominations must be made in the order in which the names of the nominees appear upon *729 such graded lists. By a singular omission^ sec. JfáD. is made to read that the nominations for appointment or promotion shall be made by the Police Commissioners, instead of by the Board of Police Examiners to the Board of Police Commissioners. This error is so obvious when other parts of the statute and the whole scheme and purpose of the legislation are considered that in disposing of the case before us we will read the enactment as it ought to have been written and we will supply the missing words as was done by the counsel on both sides during the oral argument. In preparing these graded lists the Board of Examiners is required to ascertain by open competitive examinations the relative qualifications of the respective candidates for appointment or promotion, and it is also required to place the names of. the accepted candidates upon the graded lists in the order of their relative qualifications as ascertained by such competitive examinations. By sec. 4.75F, it is enacted, “that the said Board of Police Commissioners for the city of Baltimore shall confirm or reject all nominations for appointment or promotion of police-officers * * * made to it as hereinbefore provided by the Board of Police Examiners of the city of Baltimore. The said Board of Police Commissioners shall not confirm the nomination or make the appointment or promotion of any police officer * * * * whose name does not appear upon the graded lists to be furnished said Board of Police Commissioners by said Board of Police Examiners for the city of Baltimore.”

Under this legislation the Board of Examiners inquired into the fitness of quite a number of applicants and a list of two hundred and ninety names of persons eligible for the grade of probationary officers arranged in the order of merit as disclosed by the examinations, was furnished by the Board of Examiners to the Board of Commissioners. The exhibits filed with the bill of complaint show that this graded list made by the examiners was in the possession of the commissioners and that it was taken up and considered by the latter. From this list the Police Commissioners selected twenty persons to *730 be probationary officers, but the selections were not made in the order in which the names appeared upon the list of eligibles. The selections were made indiscriminately, that is promiscuously from the list. Thereupon the appellants who are tax-payers in the city of Baltimore and also members of an unincorporated association known as the Reform League, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City against the Board of Police Commissioners, in the tenth paragraph whereof it is alleged : “ That the said attempted appointment of the said twenty persons above named to the positions of probationary officers was * * * * * in violation of the requirements of said chapters 15 and 16 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1900 * * * especially in that, among other things, the said persons so attempted to be appointed were not nominated by the Board of Police Examiners to the said Board of Commissioners, and by the latter confirmed as.is by said Act required, but the said defendants undertook to appoint them without such nominations, and that neither the nominations for such attempted appointments nor the said attempted appointments were made or undertaken to be made from said graded list in the order in which the names of the nominees appear thereon ; wherefore and for other good and sufficient reasons, * * * * your orators aver that the said attempted appointment of the said twenty persons was illegal and void,” etc. The relief prayed is that the Police Commissioners be restrained from paying to the probationary officers so appointed any salary, and' that they be required to recall and cancel the.commissions heretofore issued to these twenty officers. A pro forma order was passed refusing to grant an injunction and the plaintiffs appealed.

There are two predominant propositions in the case, and these involve in their consideration a discussion of the powers and duties of the two Boards. The two propositions for which the appellants contend are, first, that the twenty probationary officers were not nominated by the Board of Examiners to the Board of Commissioners ; and secondly, that the appointments of the twenty officers were not made by the Board of Com *731 missioners from the graded list in the order in which the names of the nominees appear thereon, and therefore that the appointments were illegal.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shub v. Simpson
76 A.2d 332 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 399, 92 Md. 726, 1901 Md. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyser-v-upshur-md-1901.