State Ex Rel. Matlack v. Oklahoma City

1913 OK 393, 134 P. 58, 38 Okla. 349, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1913
Docket4546
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1913 OK 393 (State Ex Rel. Matlack v. Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Matlack v. Oklahoma City, 1913 OK 393, 134 P. 58, 38 Okla. 349, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 374 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

From an order of the district court of Oklahoma county rendered and entered October 14, 1912, denying the prayer of plaintiff in error and refusing to issue a peremptory writ of mandamus against defendant in error, plaintiff brings the case here. The alternative writ and return thereto disclose the facts to be: That on July 15,'1911, plaintiff was duly elected assistant municipal counselor of the city of Oklahoma City, an office created 'by the city charter which, besides prescribing his duties, fixed his tenure of office; that prior to his election the salary of the office was by ordinance fixed at $200 a month payable monthly in warrants drawn upon the salary fund of the city; that he was the first person elected as such by the board of commissioners; that he qualified and served as such until July 22, 1912; that a short time prior thereto the mayor and commissioners of the city passed an emergency ordinance known as No. 1668, section 6 of which purported to change the salary from $200 a month to $1 a month beginning with the month of August; that after the passage of said ordinance plaintiff was ordered in writing by the mayor to discontinue his services, and was not permitted to perform the duties of said office during that'month; that a warrant for $1 was certified and issued in full of his salary for August, which he refused to accept, and then filed his *351 claim for $200, pursuant to tbe ordinance fixing his salary at said sum, which was rejected, whereupon he brought this suit, the object of which is to compel the issuance to him of a salary warrant for $200 for the month of August, 1912.

The charter provides:

“Sec. 15. The board of commissioners shall, at' their first meeting or as soon as practicable thereafter, elect by a majority vote the following officers: Municipal counselor, assistant municipal counselor. * * * The board of commissioners shall, by ordinance, fix and prescribe the salaries and duties of the several offices, officers, and employees by them created and appointed.
“Sec. 16. The first officers appointed in each department under this charter shall be nominated by the heads of each of the five departments, and confirmed by a majority vote of the board of commissioners. The board of commissioners may from time to time, by a majority vote, create or discontinue offices and municipal employments and prescribe and alter -the compensation of any officer or employee of the city, except members of the board. * * *
“Sec.' 17. All officers to be elected by the commissioners shall be selected in the following manner: The commissioner in whose department the duties of the officer are to be performed shall nominate him, and said nomination must be confirmed by the vote of at least three commissioners. Said appointees so elected by the commissioners shall hold their offices for a period of two years, but subject to removal at any time by a vote of four-fifths of all the commissioners."

Plaintiff’s contentions are, in effect, that section 6 of Ordinance 1668, which purports to change his salary from $200 per month to $1 per month is void, as in conflict with article 23, section 10, of the Constitution, which provides: “* * * in no eage shall the salary * * * of any public official be changed after his election or appointment, or during his> term of office, unless," etc., and that mandamus is his remedy to compel the payment of his salary as fixed by the prior ordinance.

Assuming that mandamus is the proper remedy, and that plaintiff, under his appointment, was a “public official,” within *352 the contemplation of said section, his' contention that he had a “term of office” cannot be sustained. This for the reason that the word “term” when used in this connection refers to a fixed and definite time and does not apply to an appointive office held at the pleasure of the appointing power. Speed et al. v. Crawford, 3 Metc. (Ky.) 207; People v. Tierney, 31 App. Div. 309, 52 N. Y. Supp. 871; Ida Co. Sav. Bk. v. Seidensticker (Iowa) 92 N. W. 862; Somers v. State, 5 S. D. 321, 58 N. W. 804.

Concerning his tenure of office, section 15 of the ordinance,. supra, vests the board of commissioners with power, at their first meeting, to elect an “assistant municipal counselor.” This section 16 directs to be done upon the nomination of the head of the department to which he will belong when elected, and his nomination, when confirmed by a majority vote of the board, will constitute his election, or rather -his appointment. After reiterating this as to “all officers to be elected by the commissioners,” section 17 provides:

“* * * .Said appointees so elected by the commissioners, shall hold their offices for a period of two years, but subject to removal at any time by a vote of four-fifths of all the commissioners.”

Being subject to removal at any time, with or without cause, the office, being appointive, was held at the pleasure of the appointing power and one without a “term” within the contemplation of the section of the Constitution relied upon.

In Speed et al. v. Crawford, supra, a statute which created' the office of commissioners of the police board of a city, and provided that they might be removed at the pleasure of the-chancellor and that they must be removed under certain circumstances, was assailed as unconstitutional. The court, in inquiring whether the act sufficiently or at all prescribed the term for which the officers in question were to hold their offices, said:

“Can it be said that the incumbents hold their offices for a term within the well-understood and plain import of all the provisions of the Constitution which prescribed the- *353 term of the various offices therein mentioned, and which authorize the Legislature to prescribe by law the terms of other offices? We think not. It is deemed unnecessary to refer specially to the numerous provisions alluded to for the purpose of demonstrating that the word Term’ is uniformly used to designate a fixed and definite period of time. Trustees of Owensboro v. Webb, supra, [3 Metc. (Ky.) 576], and Barbee v. Speed, MS. Opin., June Term, 1855.”

In State ex rel. v. Johnson (Mo.) 35 S. W. 855, an alternative writ of mandamus issued against the auditor of the city of St. Joseph to compel him to countersign relator’s salary warrant for services rendered as chief engineer of the fire department of the city. The facts disclose that - relator was duly appointed to that office in 1886 and had held it ever since; that at that time his salary was $1,300 a year, payable monthly, which had been increased by ordinance several times during the years intervening between his appointment and April, 1893; that at that time an ordinance was enacted increasing his salary from $1,800 to $3,100 a year, and another passed appropriating funds to pay the .increased salary; that in 1890 and 1893 the city fixed the salary of the chief of the fire department at $1,800 a year; that he' continued in office under his original appointment until July, 1893, when he was reappointed, and at the time of the suit was in office' by virtue of his last appointment.

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Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 393, 134 P. 58, 38 Okla. 349, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-matlack-v-oklahoma-city-okla-1913.