Renshaw v. Grace

142 A. 99, 155 Md. 294
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 5, 1928
Docket[Nos. 2, 3, April Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 142 A. 99 (Renshaw v. Grace) 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
Renshaw v. Grace, 142 A. 99, 155 Md. 294 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Pabke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By chapter 227 of the Acts of 1927 the municipality of Easton was empowered to acquire additional equipment for fire protection and a mrmieipal building for an engine house and public offices. The act conferred upon the mayor and council of Easton power “to purchase such additional fire equipment and appliances as they may deem necessary for the use of the said town, and h> purchase land and erect thereon such building, or otherwise provide such land and building as in their judgment shall be suitable to house and take proper care of the property and equipment of the Easton fire department, and to supply the offices) necessary for the use and needs of the town government and the several departments thereof”; and to issue the bonds of the municipality to the extent of $30,000, to pay therefor, with the usual provisions for the mayor and council of Easton to levy a tax to pay the interest and the principal of the bonds, for the mayor and council to keep at separate account of the proceeds of the tax to' be levied to meet the town’s obligation, and for the proceeds of the sale of the bonds by the major and council and of the tax to be used only for the purposes for which they were authorized. iSections 1, 2, 3. In brief, the statute gave full and complete power to the mayor and council of Easton, to begin, carry on, and complete everything in connection with the powers conferred. However, after bestowing this express and complete power, the statute in a subsequent section named five persons, who, together with the mayor of Easton, were “appointed a commission who shall have charge *297 of the purchase of such fire equipment as the mayor and council shall deem necessary, aaid also1 of the purchase of the land and of the erection of the building thereon, as is provided in section 2 hereof, and shall have power to advertise for bids for work, labor, and material, and make contracts therefor, or any part thereof; and to appoint such assistants as may he required, and to do all other acts and things which may be deemed necessary to be done to' properly perform the duties for which said commission is appointed.” Section 4. It is this section which gave rise to the pending controversy over the respective powers of the mayor and council and of the commission. In the resolution of this question it is the primary duty of the court to give effect to the intention as indicated by the language of the entire act, and, in the course of this construction, to reject none of the provisions which are susceptible of inclusion as a part of the whole legislative scheme.

In the delegation of power to the two* bodies, there is a significant difference. The mayor and council is “authorized and empowered to purchase” (a) the fire equipment and appliances, as it may deem necessary; (b) and the land; and, if without a building, to erect a building thereon, according to its judgment of which choice will best subserve the municipal purpose. Section 1. The language used and the power conferred are, with respect to the mayor and council and the things which it is authorized to do; immediate, and therefore negative the notion that any principal actor is to intervene so as to reduce the mayor and council to a subordinate capacity or to deprive it of its power in the purchase of the authorized things. On the other hand, the commission “shall have charge of the purchase of such fire equipment as the mayor and council shall deem necessary, and also' of the purchase of the land and of the erection of the building thereon, as is provided in section 2 hereof.” Section 4. The reference to section 2 is a mistake, as it is only in section 1 that power is given for the purchase of the objects authorized. Section 2 is devoted exclusively to providing for the amount, form, issue, and sale of the bonds. Unless section 2 is read section *298 1, the reference in section 4 to section 2 is meaningless. It is therefore manifest that, while the delegation of power from the General Assembly to the mayor and council is direct and immediate, the delegation of power to the commission is mediate, and depends and is -consequent upon the primary power of the mayor and council to- purchase. In other word's, the power of the commission is secondary and not to be used independently of the mayor and council. When the mayor and council determines upon a purchase of fire equipment and makes a single or alternarte choice of land or land and building, it is then the office and the duty of the commission to take charge of the proposed purchase, and, in the capacity of agent for a principal, conduct the negotiations for the purchase and. agree on the amount and terms, subject to the acceptance of the mayor and council. The change in the terms, whereby power is conferred with respect to1 the things to be purchased, is a clear indication that the Legislature had this object in view. If this were not true, the terms delegating power to the commission must be enlarged by interpretation to signify the same thing as those in which power was delegated to the mayor and council, and then, by an arbitrary process of construction, the explicit delegation of power to the mayor and council must be deleted from the statute or reduced to- a meaningless formula, with the result that the natural and customary depositary of the power is stripped of authority in order to eliminate the irreconcilable conflict otherwise remaining. Such a tortuous construction will not prevail when all the provisions of the statute may be accorded their appropriate part in a sensible and harmonious operation of the whole body of the enactment. By committing to the management of the commission the negotiations and preliminary steps leading to the purchase to be made, the commission is given charge of what may reasonably be said to be in accordance with the expressed legislative intention and the ordinary meaning of the language employed. This conclusion is somewhat strengthened by the consideration that the only direct power conferred upon the commission is that, after the purchase has been made, the commission is empow *299 ered specifically “to. advertise for bids for work, labor, and material, and make contracts therefor or any part thereof; to appoint such assistants as. may he required; and to do all other acts and things which may he deemed necessary to ha done to properly perform the duties for which said commission was appointed.” In none, of these matters; is there involved. any conflict with the powers, granted the mayor and council by the statute.

It is the preferable view to ascribe to the Legislature tho design to have the party to he bound by the obligations, eoneludo the contracts of purchase rather than a temporary commission created for a special purpose. A contrary holding would bind the municipality to a contract without the consent of its constituted officers, which the Legislature would probably have the power to authorize, hut which is so improbable as to require such an intention to he expressed or necessarily inferred from the language used.

The proceeds of the bonds should be in tbe custody and under the control of the mayor and council of Easton. This follows from our construction of the act, and from the fact that the mayor and council make the sale of the bonds, receive the proceeds thereof, and are responsible for the application of tho fund to the purpose prescribed by the enactment. Section 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 A. 99, 155 Md. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renshaw-v-grace-md-1928.