Kroh v. Smoot

Alvey, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, Smoot, was appointed to the office in question by the Governor, in 1882, during the recess of *175the Senate, to fill a then existing vacancy. He was appointed simply to fill an unexpired term of two years, which commenced on the first Monday of March, 1882; and hy the terms of the Constitution (Art. 2, sec. 11), that appointment and the commission to the appointee continued in force “ until the end of the next session of the Legislature, or until some other person is appointed to the same office, whichever shall first occur.” This language plainly designates the term for which the appointment was made, and the period at which the right of the appointee to hold the office should terminate. There is no language employed in defining the term during which the commission shall remain in force, in cases of appointments to fill vacancies, under section 11, Article 2 of the Constitution, such as we find in section 13 of the same Article, in regard to original appointments for the full term. In cases of appointments to fill vacancies only, under section 11, the Constitution has fixed the period beyond which the commission shall not run or continue in force, and that period is the end of the Legislature next ensuing the appdintment.

It is contended, however, on the part of the appellee, that inasmuch as the Governor was required, within thirty days after the meeting of the next Legislature ensuing the appointment, to nominate to the Senate the person thus appointed during the recess, or some other person in his place, and such nomination of the appointee having been made accordingly, and confirmed hy the Senate, he is, therefore, entitled to hold until displaced by a successor appointed by the concurrent act of the Governor and Senate. The necessary consequence of which contention is, if maintained, that the appellee is entitled to hold the office not only for the time for which he was appointed and commissioned, but also for the next ensuing term of two years from the first Monday of March, 1884, or until the confirmation of a new nomination by a succeeding *176Senate. To this contention of the appellee we cannot accede. It leads to a result that could never have .been contemplated hy the framers of the Constitution, and certainly never intended hy the Governor in making the appointment simply to fill the vacancy. Section 11 of Article 2, has reference exclusively to the power and manner of filling vacancies in the offices therein referred to; and the appointment hy the Governor and the subsequent- nomination to and confirmation by the Senate, must have reference alone to the limitation of the right to hold as designated in that section, and not to any other or different term of office. And this, as we understand, has been the accepted construction and practice in the Executive Department, ever since the adoption of the Constitution of 1851, which contained the same provisions upon this subject as those contained in the present Constitution. The Governor, in the early part of each session of the Legislature, sends to the Senate the names of those appointed to office to fill vacancies during the preceding recess; and if the Senate approve, the nominations are confirmed; but the party appointed, whether approved or disapproved by the Senate, continues to hold, hy virtue of his commission, until some other person is appointed in his place, or until the end of the session of the Legislature, whichever may first occur. And it has never been understood or supposed, that, hy thus sending to the Senate the name of the- party appointed during the recess and the confirmation of such appointment, the party acquired a right to hold the office beyond the period for which he was originally appointed and commissioned. It is not pretended here that the nomination of the appellee to the Senate was, hy any terms used in such nomination, intended to refer to and embrace the ensuing term of the office of Tobacco Inspector- at Warehouse No. 2, commencing on the first Monday of March then next; nor is it pretended that any other commission issued to the ap*177pellee than that which issued upon his first appointment to fill the vacancy; which, by the express terms of the Constitution, it is declared “shall continue in force until the end of the next session of the Legislature, or until some other person is appointed to the same office, whichever shall first occur.” All virtue and force of the commission, therefore, terminated with the end of the Legislature; and the present holding, consequently, by the appellee is without commission, — a state of things for which we find no warrant in the Constitution.

In case of the nomination and appointment of some other person than the first appointee to fill the office during the remainder of the term, as provided by the 11th section of Article 2 of the Constitution, the commission may well run until the expiration of the term, and until a successor be appointed and qualify, upon the principle applied in the case of Sappington vs. Scott, 14 Md., 40; but that is because there is no such restriction or limitation imposed upon the operation of the commission issued to such party, as is provided and declared in the case of the appointment first made by the Governor alone to fill the vacancy. It is true, upon this construction, in the case of an appointment to fill a vacancy in office, other than the office of Inspector of Tobacco, it maybe that the Governor may he required to make an ad interim appointment, for the period between the end of the Legislature and the first Monday of May ensuing, the latter date being the time of commencement of the term of office as fixed by Section 13, of Article 2, of the Constitution; but to avoid that consequence we are not justified in totally disregarding the express limitation, that the commission to the party appointed by the Governor during the recess to fill the vacancy “ shall continue in force until the end of the next session of the Legislature, or until some other person is appointed to the same office, whichever shall first occur.” These terms are imperative, and they must have *178accorded to them their full force and effect. And as by this limitation the appointment and commission of the appellee terminated with the end of the last Legislature, it follows that from that time there was a vacancy in the office until a successor was appointed as provided by the Constitution to fill such vacancy.

In this case it is admitted that the appellant was nominated by the Governor to the Senate for the term of office commencing the first Monday of March, 1884, and that the Senate adjourned without taking action upon such nomination; and that after the adjournment of the Legislature, the Governor appointed the appellant to fill the vacancy in the office. It is by clear implication conceded in the answer, and not controverted in the argument, that if the nomination of the appellant to the Senate had been confirmed by that body; the appointment thus made would have been valid, and would have entitled the appellant to the office. But that could only be so upon the assumption that the nomination and confirmation of the appellee contemplated and had reference solely to the period for which he had heen previously appointed and commissioned by the Governor; and that is what we say and determine was the effect of such nomination to and confirmation by the Senate, and nothing more. It is very clear that the confirmation by the Senate could have no such effect as to extend the period for holding the office beyond that for which the party was appointed and commissioned as authorized by the Constitution. The Constitution having fixed the limit of the holding, and the commission that issued to the appellee having ceased to be of force as declared by the express terms of the Constitution, he now holds by wrong and without color of authority; and the Governor was well warranted in making the appointment of the appellant to fill the vacancy.

The case of Smoot vs. Somerville, 59 Md., 84, much relied on by the appellee, has no application to this case. There *179Somerville held under a regular appointment made by the Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, under section 13 of Article 2 of the Constitution; and his right to hold as against Smoot, appointed to fill a supposed vacancy in the office, turned upon the construction of the terms “and until their successors qualify according to law,” used in the limitation of the term for which the party was appointed and held his commission. No such question is involved in this case; the rights of the parties here being dependent exclusively upon the terms employed in section 11, Article 2 of the Constitution, making provision for filling vacancies during the recess of the Senate.

(Decided 15th May, 1884.)

We must therefore reverse the pro forma order appealed from, overruling the demurrer of the appellant to the answer of the appellee, refusing the mandamus, and dismissing the petition with costs, and remand the cause that a mandamus may issue as prayed by the petition.

Order reversed, and cause remanded.