delivered the opinion of the Court.
This аction for declaratory and injunctive relief was brought by Earl C. Westphal, a resident and taxpayer of Howard County, on behalf of himself and others similarly interested, to test the constitutionality of subsections (a) and (c) of § 125 of the Howard County Code (1957 Ed.), 1 as amended by Chapter 530 of the Laws of 1961, and the validity of the action of the Howard County Metropolitan Commission in authorizing the issuance of $2,500,000 in bonds to finance the construction of approved water and sewerage systems in three sub-sanitary districts of the county. Other interested residents and taxpayers of the county subsequently sought and were permitted to intervene in the action.
Chapter 991 of the Laws of 1943 created certain sanitary districts within Howard County and provided for the incorporation of a Howard County Metropolitan Commission (usually hereinafter referred to as the Commission) comрosed of three members appointed by the Board of County Commissioners of Ploward County (usually hereinafter referred to as the Board), to govern the sanitary districts thereby created. In addition to the power to construct, maintain and operate the water, seweragе and drainage systems and to employ such personnel as was necessary to perform these functions, the Commission was authorized, among other things, to purchase and condemn property; to issue bonds on the faith and credit of the county; and to levy taxes, assessments and other charges for the payment of such bonds and the cost and expense of operating, maintaining and controlling such systems. It was further provided that each member of the Commission should receive a fixed annual salary.
By Chapter 287 of the Laws of 1957, the original statute (as previоusly amended by Chapter 606 of the Laws of 1945 and Chapter 162 of the Laws of 1955) was repealed and reenacted to provide for increases in the salaries of the members of the
Lastly, Chapter 369 of the Laws of 1963 provided other аnd additional changes, the effect of which is to return to. the Board some of the powers and duties which had theretofore vested in the Commission. Section 129 of the county code, however, was not altered. Under it the Commission still has authority to issue bonds on the faith and credit of the county.
In April of 1961, the Commission, then consisting of three appointed members (Roger V. Laynor, Leroy C. Moser and J. Carroll Jenkins), approved surveys, plans, specifications and estimates for water and sewerage systems in the Elkridge and Dorsey sub-districts to be financed by grants in aid from the Federаl Government and from the State of Maryland and in part by the issuance of bonds on the faith and credit of Howard County in the aggregate amount of $1,500,000.
In February of 1963, the Commission, then consisting of four members (of whom Roger V. Laynor, Leroy C. Moser and J. F. Ammerman were appointed members, and David W. Fоrce, a county commissioner, was the member designated by the Board), approved revised surveys, plans, specifications and estimates for water and sewerage systems in the Patuxent sub-district to be financed in part by the issuance of bonds in the amount of $1,000,000.
On June 10, 1963, the Commission, then consisting of the same four members, authorized and gave final approval to the
Of the three appointed members presently serving on the Commission, two, Roger V. Laynor and Leroy C. Moser, are employed elsewhere. Laynor holds a position in the office of the Comptroller of the Treasury. Moser holds a position with the State Roads Commission.
The lower сourt, in ruling on the questions raised by the amended bill of complaint, declared that both subsections (a) and (c) of § 125 of the county code were unconstitutional and void; declared that the action of the Commission — in approving the Elkridge, Dorsey and Patuxent water and sewerage systеms and authorizing the issuance of the bonds to finance them — was valid; and denied the injunctive relief sought. These appeals followed. The Commission contends that both subsections of § 125 are constitutional and that the action of the Commission was valid. Westphal contends that both subsections are unconstitutional and that the action of the Commission was invalid. The intervenors contend that the decree of the lower court should be affirmed in its entirety.
(i)
The first question to be decided is whether subsections (a) and (c) of § 125 of the county code, as amended by Chapter 530 оf the Laws of 1961, or either of them, are unconstitutional in that they violate Article 35 of the Declaration of Rights providing that “no person shall hold, at the same time, more than one office of profit, created by the Constitution or Laws of this State.”
Since it is not disputed that the office of a county commissioner is one of profit (see
Hetrich v. County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County,
1960,
There is, as we see it, little room for doubt that a member of the Commission is a publiс officer. Although it is a fact
In reaching this conclusion, we have not overlooked the argument of the Commission — based on the holding in
School Commissioners v. Goldsborough,
The essential question in
Goldsborough
was whether or not
The correct rule, we think, is that which was applied in such cases as
Sappington v. Slade,
The prior decisions show that the facts and circumstances in each case, and particularly the nature and effect of the statutе involved therein, generally control the determination as to whether the office in question is one of profit. Accordingly, in the case at bar, we think that the circumstances and the relevant statute — which provides that the sanitary districts
We further hold, as did the lower court, that § 125 (c) is also unconstitutional. Since there is a clear indication in the recent legislative history of the statute that the purpose of reenacting subsections (a) and (c) оf § 125 by Chapter 530 of the Daws of 1961 was to limit the power and authority of the Metropolitan Commission and to give the Board of County Commissioners a measure of control over the actions of the Commission, we think it is apparent that the invalidity of subsection (a) lias the effect of rendеring subsection (c) incapable of effecting the purpose for which it was enacted; and that the entire amendment must therefore fall.
Heubeck v. City of Baltimore,
(ü)
The next question is whether the two membеrs of the Commission employed by the State, or either of them, hold more than one office of profit in violation of Article 35 of the Declaration of Rights. One of them, Roger V. Daynor, is Chief of the Alcoholic Beverages Division in the office of the Comptroller of Treasury. The other, Deroy C. Moser, is Chief of the Right-of-Way Department of the State Roads Commission. Neither of these positions is an office of profit under the decision of this Court in
Gary v. Board of Trustees, supra,
holding that the position of Deputy State Auditor is not a public office. Nor
Neither Laynor nor Moser exercises any portion of the sovereignty of the State in his own right. On the contrary, both serve the State undеr the direction and control of superiors. We hold therefore that both are mere employees, or at most, subagents, respectively, of the Comptroller of the Treasury and the State Roads Commission. See
State Tax Commission v. Harrington,
(iii)
The final question is whether the action of the Commission, in approving the three water and sewerage systems and in authorizing the issuance of bonds to finance such systems, was valid. We think it was.
The holding that Chapter 530 of the Laws of 1961 is invalid resulted in reinstating subsections (a) and (c) of § 125 of the county code as originally constituted and giving them such effect as they had рrior to the enactment of the invalid amendment. See
Cromwell v. Jackson,
Decree affirmed; the costs to be paid in equal parts by the Commission and Bari C. Westphal.
Notes
. Such of the public local laws of Howard County as were in force “to and inclusive of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1929,” are designated as Article 14 in the 1930 Code of Public Local Laws of Maryland.
