In January of 1999, the three members of the Board of Commissioners of Fannin County unanimously voted to retain Lynn Doss in the position of county attorney. Cline Bowers, who is the former Chairman оf the Board of Commissioners, subsequently asserted that he alone had the authority to employ and discharge the County Attorney, and he sought to dismiss Ms. Doss. Commissioners Randy Collins and Yvonnе McNelley opposed this move, contending that they too had a vote in the selection and retention of the county’s legal representative. Seeking judicial approval of his unilateral authority in the matter, Bowers brought suit for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief and issuance of a writ of mandamus. After conducting a hearing, thе trial court denied the claims for mandamus and for an interlocutory injunction. Although Bowers filed this appeal, he subsequently left office, and Dr. Richard Vollrath succeedеd him as Chairman of the Board of Commissioners.
1. The Commissioners have moved to dismiss this appeal, asserting that it became moot once Bowers left his post as chairmаn. Chairman Vollrath opposes the motion to dismiss, and he has filed a motion to substitute himself for Bowers as the appellant.
The issue in this case is not whether Bowers, as an individuаl, was authorized to serve as chairman of the Board of Commissioners. Compare
Bruce v. Maxwell,
2. Under the terms of Ga. L. 1975, p. 2814 et seq., neither Chairman Vollrath alone nor the three commissioners together are granted express specific authority to determinе who shall serve as the county attorney. The Commissioners maintain that, in the absence of such a provision in the local act, the power to fill that position is conferred implicitly upon the collective members of the Board by virtue of their authority over the county’s financial matters. See
Templeman v. Jefferies,
the Chairman shall have the exclusive power and authority to appoint, remove and fix the compensation of, within budgetary provisions . . . which may now or hereafter be established by the Board of Commissioners of Fannin County, all employees and officials of the County, except as to . . . elected officers and employees under their supervision and control.
(Emphаsis supplied.) Ga. L. 1975, pp. 2814, 2822, § 12. Clearly, this provision constitutes the general grant to Chairman Vollrath of sole authority to discharge Ms. Doss and to name her replacement, unless she is a county employee who is under the common supervision and control of all three of the elected commissioners. See Krieger v. Walton County Bd. of Commrs., supra at 682 (4) (chairman has general authority over employment of all county employees, except those whose hiring the local act specified as within the control of the board).
The concept of supervision and control connotes the relationship of master and servant.
“A
master is one who employs another to perform serviсes and who controls or has the right to control the physical conduct of the person employed in the performance of those services. [Cit.]”
Farmer v. Ryder Truck Lines,
relationships are very different. At common law, and in all of the jurisdictions of this country (except in instances where changed by statute) the difference in cоncept is fundamental and substantial. Generally the servant performs work or labor for the master, sometimes skilled and sometimes not, while the agent, within the ambit of his authority, represents his principal in some business dealing. He is vested with authority, real or ostensible, to create obligations on behalf of his principal. ...
Southeastern Fidelity Ins. Co. v. Heard,
The Commissioners further rely upon language of the local act which provides that the chairmаn’s authority is subject to the “budgetary provisions . . . which may now or hereafter be established by the Board of Commissioners of Fannin County . . . .” Because the Board of Commissioners makes the county’s fiscal decisions, the contention is that this statutory language constitutes a limitation on the chairman’s power to name a county attorney. If that were truе, however, then Chairman Vollrath would have no authority to fill
any
position, since the Board of Commissioners must appropriate the money to pay the salaries of
all
сounty employees. Thus, such a construction of the budgetary limitation in the local act would render meaningless the “exclusive power and authority” otherwise granted to Chairman Vollrath to hire and fire certain county employees. “It is
*604
a well-established principle that a statute must be viewed so as to make all its parts harmonize and to give a sensible and intelligent effect to each part.”
Houston v. Lowes of Savannah,
3. As to his remaining claim, Chairman Vollrath urges that the trial court erred in entering a declaratory judgment in favor of the Commissioners. A review of the record shows, however, that he never invoked any ruling by the trial court as to that claim and that the trial court has never addressed it. Accordingly, the issue of declaratory relief remains pending below, where Chairman Vollrath is free to pursue his claim.
Judgments reversed.
