85 W. Va. 359 | W. Va. | 1920
The main question presented upon this certificate relates to the sufficiency of the contract set forth in the declaration, demurrer to which was overruled, to constitute a binding obligation upon the defendant county court of Mercer County. According to the averments of the declaration, plaintiff was employed to act in the capacity of manager of the farm recently purchased by the county court for the care of the poor of the county, for the full term of three years, beginning on the 1st day of October, 1918, and ending on the 1st day of October, 1921, at an annual salary of $900, payable in twelve" equal monthly installments. And plaintiff, relying upon the promise and undertaking of the said defendant, entered upon and performed the duties incident to such employment, and continued to perform such duties until the 1st day of March, 1919. when defendant “refused to suffer or permit the said plaintiff to continue in its said service and employment, and then and there discharged him;” whereby plaintiff has lost and been deprived of all the wages, profits and advantages for himself and his family which he otherwise would have received from a continuance of the service and employment.
The first ground assigned in support of the demurrer is the failure of the declaration to aver that, before the institution of this suit, plaintiff had presented to the county court of Mercer County, or had filed with the clerk of such court for presentation, an itemized account or statement of his claim, and that the
The second and more important ground urged in support of the demurrer questions the validity of the contract set forth in the declaration as being beyond the authority and power of the county court to make, in view of section 23, ch. 46, Code 1918, which provides: “Every officer or other person appointed or employed by the county court under the provisions of this chapter, shall hold his office or appointment at its pleasure, and receive for his services such compensation as it may deem reasonable.”
Plaintiff was appointed pursuant to the authority conferred
Nor does section 1, ch. 39, Code, operate to validate a contract such as this. It merely makes the county court of every county a corporation, and in general terms empowers it to contract and be contracted with. Its specific authority, however, is only sucho as the Constitution and legislature of the state have seen fit to bestow upon it. “The county court is a corporation created by statute, and can only do such things as are authorized by law, and in the mode prescribed.” Goshorn’s Ex’rs v. County Court, 42 W. Va. 735, pt. 5, Syl. It has only such powers as are expressly conferred by the legislature, and such as are necessarily implied in the full and. proper exercise of those powers expressly given. Keatley v. County Court, 70 W. Va. 267, 275. The Constitution and Code of this state (section 24, Art. 8, Const.; section 9, ch. 39, Code), after an enumeration of certain powers not important here, provide: “They (county courts) shall also, under such regulations' as
The case of Helmick v. County Court, 65 W. Va. 231, which holds that a county court cannot remove from office a road surveyor appointed by it under section 1392, Code 1906, is clearly distinguishable from the cage now before us. In the former the appointment was made under a statutory provision designating two years as the term of office, thereby constituting a road surveyor a public officer holding for a fixed term. Here the statute authorizing the appointment expressly provides that the tenure of office shall be at the pleasure of the county court— a distinguishing feature recognized by the court in the Helmick case as material. Where a statute conferring the power to appoint fixes no definite term of office, but provides that the tenure shall be at the pleasure of the appointing body, the power to remove such appointee is discretionary (Town of Davis v. Filler, 47 W. Va. 413; see also Hartigan v. Board of Regents, 49 W. Va. 14), and cannot be contracted away so as to bind the appointing body to retain him in such position for a definite,'fixed period. Darrah v. Wheeling Ice & Storage Co., 50 W. Va. 417; Long v. United Savings & Annuity Co., 76 W. Va. 31.
No question is raised respecting the right of plaintiff to receive the salary specified in the contract for the months during which he served as manager of the poor farm, and we -express no opinion as to that.
The court below erred in overruling the demurrer to the declaration, and, therefore, we reverse the ruling, and recertify the case.
Reversed. Demurrer sustained.