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1916 Report of the State Tax Commissioner
Volume 432, Page 5   View pdf image (33K)
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for the year shall exceed the sum which he is by law entitled to
retain as his salary or compensation for the discharge of his duties,
and for the expenses of his office, shall yearly pay over to the Treas-
urer of the State the amount of such excess, subject to such dispo-
sition thereof as the General Assembly may direct; if any of such
officers shall fail to comply with the requisitions of this section for
the period of thirty days after the expiration of each and every year
of his office, such officer shall be deemed to have vacated his office,
and the Governor shall declare the same vacant, and the vacancy
therein shall be filled as in the case of vacancy for any other cause,
and such officer shall be subject to suit by the State for the amount
that ought to be paid into the treasury; and no person holding any
office created by or existing under this Constitution, or laws of the
State, or holding any appointment under any Court in this State,
shall receive more than three thousand dollars a year as a compen-
sation for the discharge of his official duties, except in cases specially
provided in this Constitution."

Prior to the first of June, 1914, the Mayor and City Council of
Baltimore regularly paid the portion of the salaries to the members
and general counsel of the Public Service Commission, as imposed
upon it by the Act of 1910; but upon the demand by the State Tax
Commission simultaneously with the demand of the members of the
other bodies, the authorities of Baltimore refused to pay any of the
salaries and contended that the amount was in excess of the con-
stitutional limit, and that payment of part by the city amounted
to an unlawful charge.

Upon this refusal to pay the portions of the salaries, the mem-
bers of the Public Service Commission instituted mandamus pro-
ceedings to compel the payments, and the case finally reached the
Court of Appeals.1 It was decided at the January term, 1915, and
the Court held, in an elaborate opinion, that there was no inhibition
on the part of the Legislature to provide for salaries of State officers
in excess of $3,000, holding that the provision of the Constitution
applied to fee officers and not to those who received a salary. The
Court also held that the payment of the excess by the Mayor and
City Council of Baltimore was not an unconstitutional provision
and ordered the payments. Following the decision, salaries accrued

(1) Thrift vs. Laird, 125 Md. 55.


 

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1916 Report of the State Tax Commissioner
Volume 432, Page 5   View pdf image (33K)
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