Opinion No. 76-168 (1976) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedApril 29, 1976
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 76-168 (1976) Ag (Opinion No. 76-168 (1976) Ag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 76-168 (1976) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

POSTAL SERVICE EMPLOYEES — SERVICE ON BOARD OF EDUCATION Those officers and employees of the United States Postal Service, other than those persons occupying the positions of member of the Board of Governors and Advisory Council appointed by the President, do not exercise any portion of the sovereign power of the United States, and accordingly, do not hold any office of trust or profit under the laws of the United States. Therefore, only those persons appointed by the President to positions on the Board of Governors and Advisory Council of the United States Postal Service are prohibited by Article II, Section 12 of the Oklahoma Constitution from being a member of a school board in Oklahoma. This opinion does not consider whether an officer or employee of the United States Postal Service is prohibited by federal law or regulation (i.e., the Hatch Political Authority Act) from being a member of a local school board. The Attorney General has considered your request for an opinion wherein you refer to the previous Attorney General opinions that certain members of the United States Postal Department are prohibited by the Oklahoma Constitution from being a member of a local school board, and, calling attention to the Postal Reorganization Act of 1971, ask the following question: "Is any member of the United States Postal Service expressly prohibited from being a member of a local school board in Oklahoma?" The Attorney General's office has previously issued opinions regarding the constitutional proscription of persons holding various positions with the United States Postal Department, from simultaneously serving on local school boards. However, the enactment of the Postal Reorganization Act, which became effective July 1, 1971, requires a reexamination of the basis for the conclusions of said opinions, and their present applicability. The said Act abolished the Post Office Department and created the Postal Service, the latter being established as an independent establishment of the executive branch of the United States Government. 39 U.S.C.A., Supp. 1975, 201. Said reorganization was accompanied by a change in the employment procedures in the Postal Service, which, in the previous Attorney General's opinions, was the factor determinative of constitutional ineligibility to hold an office of trust or profit under the laws of the State. The previous Attorney General opinions have considered whether persons holding various positions with the United States Postal Department and with the United States Postal Service hold such offices of trust or profit referred to in Article II, Section 12 of the Oklahoma Constitution, and are thereby precluded from simultaneously serving as members of local school boards. Article II, Section 12 of the Oklahoma Constitution provides as follows: "No member of Congress from this State, or person holding any office of trust or profit under the laws of any other State, or of the United States, shall hold any office of trust or profit under the laws of this State." This constitutional provision was construed by the Court in Wimberly v. Deacon,193 Okl. 561, 144 P.2d 447 (1944), wherein it stated: ". . . No doubt the purpose of such provision is to protect the public interest so that an officer holding an office of profit or trust under the state laws may give his undivided attention to the duties of his office without being hampered by an official allegiance to any other state or the United States." (p. 452) This follows the holding of the various courts regarding the purpose of similar provisions in the Constitutions of other states. In Martin v. Smith, 239 Wis. 314, 1 N.W.2d 163 (1941), the Court considered the purpose of such a provision of the Wisconsin Constitution, stating that it does not deal with incompatibility of offices which invokes the common law rule (63 Am. Jur.2d, Public Officers and Employees, 62, p. 668 1972), but that: "The apparent purpose was to prevent persons holding federal offices from holding at the same time any office of trust, profit or honor under the laws of this state. This was no doubt intended to protect the state in the exercise of its sovereign power." (p. 169) (Emphasis added.) Groves v. Barden, 169 N.C. 8,84 S.E. 1042 (1915), determined whether a rural mail carrier appointed by the Postmaster General came within the classification of officers within the meaning of a constitutional provision similar to the above-quoted provision of the Oklahoma Constitution. The court quoted with approval as follows: "`. . . . The manifest intent is to prevent double office-holding — that offices and places of public trust should not accumulate in a single person — and the super added words of "places of trust or profit" were put there to avoid evasions in giving too technical a meaning to the preceding words."' (p. 1042) A board of education being a public office (Barnhill v. Thompson, 122 N.C. 493, 29 S.E. 720, 721 1898; 78 C.J.S., Schools and School Districts, 106a), therefore, requires the determination of whether a position with the United States Postal Service is an office that comes within the purview of Article II, Section 12 of the Oklahoma Constitution. The question of whether a position was a public office, or an employment, or under contract was considered in Guthrie Daily Leader v. Cameron, 3 Okl. 677,41 P. 635, 636 (1895), wherein the following was quoted with approval: "'A public office is the right, authority, and duty created and conferred by law, by which, for a given period, either fixed by law or enduring at the pleasure of the creating power, an individual is invested with some portion of the sovereign functions of the government, to be exercised for the benefit of the public. The individual so invested is a public officer . . . The most important characteristic which distinguishes an office from an employment or contract is that the creation and conferring of an office involves a delegation to the individual of some of the sovereign functions of government, to be exercised by him for the benefit of the public; that some portion of the sovereignty of the country, either legislative, executive, or judicial, attaches for the time being, to be exercised for the public benefit. Unless the powers conferred are of this nature, the individual is not a public officer.' . . ." State v. Sowards, 64 Okl. Cr. 43, 82 P.2d 324 (1938), follows this reasoning in distinguishing an office from an employment. Such distinction is more clearly set out in Maddox v. State, 249 S.W.2d 972 (Ark. 1952), wherein it is stated: "Since the distinction between a public officer and a public employee tends to become indistinct when the position in dispute has some of the characteristics of each, we have never attempted to frame an inflexible definition of either. Yet the governing principles are well established. A public officer ordinarily exercises some part of the State's sovereign power. His tenure of office, his compensation, and his duties are usually fixed by law.

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Lasher v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Matthews
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Groves v. . Barden
84 S.E. 1042 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
State Ex Rel. Barnhill v. Thompson
29 S.E. 720 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1898)
Wimberly v. Deacon
1943 OK 432 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
Jones v. Freeman
1943 OK 322 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
Daily Leader v. Cameron, Auditor
1895 OK 71 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1895)
State v. Sowards
1938 OK CR 75 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1938)
Martin v. Smith
1 N.W.2d 163 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1941)
Commonwealth ex rel. Hancock v. Clark
506 S.W.2d 503 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1974)
Groves v. Barden
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Maddox v. State
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Opinion No. 76-168 (1976) Ag, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-76-168-1976-ag-oklaag-1976.