23 Ga. App. 441 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1919
The first headnote in London v. City of Franklin, 118 Ky. 105 (80 S. W. 514), is as follows: “Ky. St., 1903, sec. 3.619, providing that the marshal and certain other city, officers shall be appointed for a term of two years by the city council, but may be removed at the pleasure of the city council, does not limit the power of such council to removals for cause only.” In the opinion of the court, which was written by Judge Hobson, is the following: “It is insisted for appellant that under the constitutional provision officers of cities and towns may be only removed for cause, and that section 3619 of the statute, above quoted, must be construed to refer only to removals for cause, or, if not so construed, is'unconstitutional. The language of the -statute is that the officers named may be removed at the pleasure of the city council: These words have a well defined legal meaning. The right to remove at pleasure is an
Applying the principles announced in the foregoing cases, it is apparent that the national banking law gives to' the directors of national banks the authority “at pleasure” and without cause to dismiss cashiers and other officers, and all resolutions and by-laws of the directors in conflict with this law are void. There is no conflict in the decisions above referred to and the decision in Rankin v. Tygard, 198 Eed. 795 (119 C. C. A. 591). In the opinion in that ease Sanborn, Circuit Judge, said (p. 799): “An election or appointment to an official position for a fixed term is, it is true, inconsistent with a removal during the term without cause in the absence of a precedent reservation of the right to make such a removal during the term. But an election or appointment to the office for a specified time subject to the precedent expressed .condition that the elective or appointive power may remove at will at any time during the term is consistent with such a removal without cause, and it is as much an election or appointment for a legal term as an election or appointment without such a reservation. It is an election or appointment for a fixed term subject to recall, and the legal term is the time the person elected or appointed will hold his office if the power to recall is not exercised.” Indeed, instead of being in conflict with the decisions referred to above, it supports them and is in thorough accord with what is decided in the instant ease. The board of directors of the First National Bank of Colquitt having no authority to employ a cashier for any fixed term, and the law providing that they could dismiss the cashier “at pleasure,” the petition set out no cause of action, and the court erred in overruling the demurrer thereto.
Judgment reversed.