86 Ark. 555 | Ark. | 1908
This case involves a determination of the question whether or not the Governor of the State has the power to remove at will members of the board of trustees of the State Charitable Institutions. We hold that the members of said board are by appointment put in office for a fixed term, and that the Governor can not remove them.
The Constitution contains no specific provision concerning the creation of a board of trustees for the control and management of the charitable institutions of the State. Prior to the year 1893 the State institutions for the blind, the deaf mutes and the insane were under the control of separate boards, the statute regulating the appointment of members of each of these boards providing that the Governor should make the appointment biennially on the second Wednesday after the organization of the General Assembly, and that the appointees should hold office for a term of two years.
The General Assembly, by an act which was approved on April 5, 1893, abolished these separate boards and provided that “the Governor shall biennially appoint one board of trustees for the school for the blind, the deaf mute institute, the insane asylum, to be composed of six members, one from each congressional district, who shall have charge of said institutions, and discharge all duties now required by law.”
The amendatory act of February 23, 1905, follows the language of the former statute just quoted except that'the number of members of the board is increased from six to seven, and contains a proviso that “the seventh member of said board shall be appointed upon the passage of this act, and his term of office shall expire simultaneously with that of the other six.”
It is therefore seen that the Legislature long ago adopted the policy of giving to the members of these boards a fixed tenure of incumbency. Doubtless, this policy was inspired by a desire to secure the independent action of the members of the boards, free from any sort of dictation or control.
It is true that the statute consolidating the boards, or rather placing the institutions under control of one board, did not in express terms provide for a definite tenure, but says that the Governor shall appoint the members biennially. This surely does not manifest a legislative disposition to depart from the previously adopted policy and create a board composed of members removable at the will and pleasure of the executive. And certainly the language of the act of April 8, 1905, must be taken as a legislative construction of the former statute to mean a fixed term of two years for the members of the board. If not, why say that “the term of office” of the seventh member “shall expire simultaneously with that of the other six?” The other six ■must have been thought to have a definite term of office and a definite date for the expiration of the term.
Another legislative construction to the same effect is found in the act of May 14, 1907, authorizing the board of trustees to “make contracts for the purchase of fuel for twelve months, provided, this period shall not extend beyond the tenure of the office of the board.”
The' word “biennial” means once in two years. We do not say that the use of the word under all circumstanes necessarily imposes a limitation upon the space of time which must intervene. It may, under some circumstances, be held to mean that the thing-in question shall occur as often as once in two years. But we think that the use of the word in this instance clearly carries with it the meaning that a term of two years is fixed, and that appointments to membership on the board shah be made every two years contormably to the expiration of the term. The fixing of a time for making appointments necessarily implies a fixed tenure for the appointee, for if the executive can remove him and appoint another at will the command to appoint biennially is superfluous. Buffalo v. Mackay, 15 Hun, 204; Bryan v. Patrick, 124 N. C. 651.
Counsel for appellants rely upon People v. Kilbourn, 68 N. Y. 479, as sustaining their contention, but such is not the effect of that decision. The.court in that case held that the provision for a biennial appointment of an officer did not confer the right upon the appointee to hold the office for two years from the date of the appointment, regardless of the time the appointment should be made. The case involved the construction of a charter provision of a city authorizing the mayor to appoint certain officers biennially, and the court held that this provision related (quoting from the syllabi) “to the time when the appointments shall be made, and- was not intended to fix the term of office of the appointee without regard to the time of appointment,” and that “where a street commissioner was appointed just prior to the expiration of 'the term of office of the then mayor, and a new appointment was made by his successor, that the latter appointee was entitled to the office.” This doctrine meets with our entire approval, and is not inconsistent, with the conclusion reached in the present case.
The term begins, not necessarily from the date of appointment, but from the time fixed by the lawmakers for it to begin. It began with the approval of the act of April 5, 1893, creating the new board, and each succeeding term began biennially thereafter on the same day of the year.
The acts of February 23, 1905, and May 14, 1907, did not undertake to change the date of commencement of the term, and did not have that effect.
The members of the board having been appointed for a fixed term, and as the statute does not confer upon the governor the power of removal, the .power does not exist. The right to remove public officers does not inhere in the chief executive of the State. Throop on Pub. Off. § 362; State v. Pritchard, 36 N. J. L. 101. Under our system of government the executive enjoys no prerogative in the sense in which that word is usually employed, but he exercises only such powers as are conferred upon him by the Constitution 'and statutes of the State. These do not authorize him to remove members of the board of public charities. The Governor has nothing to do with the management and control of the charitable institutions of the State, further than to appoint the members of the board biennially.
The Constitution contains an express command to the Legislature to provide by law for the support of institutions for the education of the deaf mutes and for the blind, and for the treatment of the insane. Pursuant to this authority, the lawmakers have placed the control and management of these institutions in a board of trustees composed of seven members, to be presided over by the State Treasurer as ex officio member of the board. The Governor is authorized to appoint these members, and there his power in this respect ends. If the Legislature had intended to confer greater or additional powers, it would have been so expressed in the statutes.
Affirmed.