McMahon v. Thompson

4 Balt. C. Rep. 33
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 33 (McMahon v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMahon v. Thompson, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 33 (Md. Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

GORTER, J. (Orally)

This case has been argued with great ability, mo-re ably argued, I think, than any case that T have heard since I have been in this court, and I am now about to state the conclusions that I have reached, although those conclusions are not very fixed.

The case is one in which the Assistant. Superintendent of Public Buildings asks me to enjoin a gentleman who has been appointed by the Mayor, Superintendent of Public Buildings from interfering with the Assistant Superintendent of Public Buildings, who, in the bill, claims that he is the- Superintendent of Public Buildings, and, if not, at least has been performing the duties of the Superintendent of Public Buildings. As I say, he asks me to enjoin the defendant, who has been appointed by the.Mayor, from interfering with him in the discharge of his duties, and to restrain the defendant, who has been appointed by the Mayor, from taking charge of all of the property -of the city that he, the plaintiff, claims he is the custodian of.

1 have been referred to the case of the County Commissioners of Washington County in 77th Maryland, as a case, the law of which is conceded to be correct by the counsel on both sides. The counsel for the plaintiff contends that is the law that is applicable to his case because he says that Mr. Mcmalion, who was the Assistant Superintendent of Public Buildings, is the Superintendent of Public Buildings. Therefore, the law, as set forth in 77th Maryland which says that an incumbent in office, whether lie be en-tiled to that office or not, ho being an incumbent de facto, has a right to restrain anyone who claims to be the holder of the office de jure from interfering with him in the administration of the office until the claimant established his rights by legal proceedings.

That, unquestionably, is the law, and we have not much trouble with the law. it is always with the application of the facts to the law that the embarrassment that the courts have to contend with presents itself.

[34]*34I think that Mr. McMahon is not the Superintendent of Public Buildings, which, to my mind, at once takes me away from the authority of the case, but I do think Mr. McMahon has taken charge, and the bill so alleges, of the property of the city and has administered the duties of the office of Superintendent of Public Buildings. That is all that he could administer. I might call them the physical duties. And he is still doing that. I conceive that at the present time he and all those associated with him in administering the duties of that department of the city government would be extremely embarrassed if they did not know whether the person who claims to be appointed to that office was the one legally qualified to hold the office, and then, therefore, the one that they should obey and the one in whose hands their tenure of office is.

I have read, I think, all of the cases to which I have been referred, referred to in 77th Maryland, and by the attorneys. These cases, without exception, are cases in which the incumbent has resisted the person who was seeking to obtain the office, and, therefore, I have not found any authority, either one way or the other, where a person in the position of Mr. McMahon, as I think he is, has asked for an injunction to restrain a person who would be his superior in office, who would have a right to dismiss him and the many people associated with him in carrying out the duties of a very important branch of the city government. I say I have not found a case of that character.

Then, that at once puts me to the question of what I ought to do. And the thought came to my mind that if I thought that Mr. Thompson had been appointed legally to the office that I ought not to restrain him from taking charge of it. But, on the other hand, if I thought that he had not been legally appointed to the office, I ought to restrain him from taking charge of it, because if he were not — I am not talking about Mr. Thompson, but any one in his position, — he would have the power to cause a great deal of confusion if he attempted to dismiss the many people who held positions in that department of the city government. That then brought me to the question of whether or not Mr. Thompson had been legally appointed, and I say with considerable hesitation and doubt, with the study that I have been able to give to the question up to the present time, and I think the question admits of more study. I have reached the conclusion that Mr. Thompson has not been legally appointed to that office, and I give my reasons, because, if they are correct, they may recommend themselves to you, and if there is any fallacy in them, you, of. course, will be able to detect it.

The appointment of Mr. Thompson was made under Section 25 of the Charter. It was made — while the bill does not say so, but the fact must be admitted and I shall require them to be put in the bill — on the 18th of November. The City Council adjourned the day before, on the 17th day of November, to reassemble on the 1st of December, and the appointment was made under the provision of the Charter, as I have said, contained in Section 25. I will not read all of the preceding part, with which you gentlemen are familiar, but when it comes to vacancies in the offices which the Mayor is called upon to fill, it says: “All vacancies occurring in any of the offices which the Mayor is empowered to fill during the recess of the Second Branch, unless otherwise provided in this Charter, shall be filled by the Mayor until the next regular meeting of the Second Branch, at which meeting the Mayor shall present the name of a person for confirmation to fill said vacancy, and the mode and manner of procedure in such a case shall be the same as provided for in this section for other appointments by the Mayor and confirmation by the Second Branch.”

The counsel for the plaintiff contends, first, that there was no recess, or the period lapsing between the adjournment of the Council and its meeting again was not the recess spoken of in this clause in the Charter; and, secondly, if it were the recess spoken of in this clause of the Charter, the Mayor was only allowed to appoint where a vacancy occurred in a particular recess, or in the particular recess that he was called upon to appoint, and if the vacancy occurred in some prior recess, then, as he had had an opportunity to consult with or submit his appointment to the Council, he was not authorized by this provision to appoint him, although, for the sake of the argument, the two weeks would constitute a recess.

The first question which I had to decide was whether or not these two [35]*35weeks would be a recess, such as is spoken of in tills provision of .the Charter. In doing that, I undertook to go back and look at the old law. I do not know whether T am stating it correctly, because I did not have all of the books. I did not have them here yesterday at my disposal, as the Bar Library was closed and I only had such hooks as I was able to find, but I find that in the Code of 1860, and you find the same provision in the Constitution of the State, this provision : “The regular sessions of the City Council of Baltimore, which shall be annually” — I am reading from Section 4 of Article XI of the Constitution — “shall commence on the third Monday of January of each year and shall not continue more than 90 days, exclusive of Sundays, but the Mayor may convene the Council in extra session whenever, and as often, as it may appear to him that the public good may require, hut no call of extra session shall last longer than 20 days, exclusive of Sundays.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmahon-v-thompson-mdcirctctbalt-1919.