Fraternal Order of Police v. Montgomery County , 446 Md. 490 ( 2016 )


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  •     HEADNOTE: FOP v. MONTGOMERY COUNTY (S.T. 2015, No. 45)
    IN AN ACTION BY A POLICE UNION CHALLENGING THE AUTHORITY OF A
    CHARTER COUNTY TO USE ITS FISCAL AND HUMAN RESOURCES TO URGE
    APPROVAL OF A LAW ENACTED BY THE COUNTY COUNCIL THAT LIMITED
    BARGAINING RIGHTS AND THAT HAD BEEN PETITIONED TO REFERENDUM,
    THE COURT OF APPEALS HELD:
    (1) THE COUNTY HAD SUCH AUTHORITY UNDER BOTH STATE AND
    LOCAL LAW AND THE “GOVERNMENT SPEECH” DOCTRINE;
    (2) THE COUNTY EXECUTIVE AND DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF
    PUBLIC INFORMATION HAD AUTHORITY TO ACT FOR THE
    COUNTY IN EXERCISING THAT AUTHORITY;
    (3) FOP WAS NOT BARRED FROM FILING ITS ACTION BY LACK OF
    STANDING OR LACHES.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County
    #370302                                          OF MARYLAND
    Argued: January 7, 2016
    No. 45
    September Term, 2015
    FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE, et al.
    vs.
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
    MARYLAND, et al.
    Barbera, C.J.
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts
    Raker, Irma S. (Retired, Specially
    Assigned)
    Wilner, Alan M. (Retired, Specially
    Assigned)
    JJ.
    Opinion by Wilner, J.
    Filed: February 23, 2016
    There are several issues presented in this appeal. The principal one is whether a
    charter county – Montgomery County in this instance -- is authorized to use its human
    and fiscal resources to encourage the electorate of the county to support, or oppose, a
    ballot measure that may have a significant impact on the operations of the county
    government. The Circuit Court for Montgomery County said “no,” the Court of Special
    Appeals said “yes,” and we also shall say “yes.”
    BACKGROUND
    The Battle Over Effect Bargaining
    Sections 33-75 through 33-85 of the Montgomery County Code provide for
    collective bargaining between the county and the certified representative of county police
    officers below the rank of lieutenant which, in this case, is petitioner, Lodge 35 of the
    Fraternal Order of Police (FOP). The provisions most relevant to this appeal are §§33-80
    and 33-81.
    Section 33-80(a) lists the matters that are subject to mandatory collective
    bargaining. Section 33-80(b) lists certain rights and responsibilities of the county that are
    not subject to mandatory collective bargaining but, under subsection (c), may, in the
    county’s discretion, be discussed with the union. They include such things as
    determining the overall budget and mission of the police department; maintaining and
    improving the efficiency and effectiveness of the department; determining the overall
    organizational structure, methods, processes, means, job classifications, or personnel by
    which operations are to be conducted; directing and supervising employees; hiring,
    selecting, and establishing standards governing promotion of employees; transferring,
    assigning, and scheduling employees; and taking actions to carry out the mission of
    government in situations of emergency.
    The items listed in §33-80(a), for the most part, are those common in collective
    bargaining laws – salary and wages; pension, retirement, and other benefits; hours and
    working conditions; a grievance procedure; and matters relating to the health and safety
    of employees. Prior to 2011, there was an additional matter (§33-80(a)(7)) that also was
    subject to mandatory bargaining – “the effect on employees of the employer’s exercise of
    rights listed in subsection (b).” That provision, insofar as Montgomery County was
    concerned, was unique to collective bargaining with the police union. It was not part of
    the county collective bargaining law pertaining to firefighters or county employees
    generally. Indeed, an attempt to add it to that law in 1986 was rejected by the County
    Council.1
    Subjection of the “effect” of the county’s exercise of rights reserved to it under
    §33-80(b) to mandatory bargaining had particular significance because of §33-81(c)(2),
    1
    Although FOP asserts that “effect bargaining” is common in collective bargaining laws,
    evidence produced at the hearing on the bill that ultimately amended §33-80(a)(7) in
    2011 revealed that “effect bargaining” was not part of the collective bargaining law for
    employees in Baltimore City, Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Frederick, Harford, Howard, or
    Prince George’s County, for most State Executive Branch employees, or for public
    school employees.
    2
    which dealt with the procedure for resolving impasses in bargaining over such “effects.”
    The procedure was a form of final offer arbitration. Under that section, if the county
    notified FOP that it “intends to exercise a right listed in Section 33-80(b), the exercise of
    which will have an effect on members of the bargaining unit,” the parties were required
    to choose an impasse neutral, and, unless they were otherwise able to resolve the dispute,
    each was required to submit a final offer to the neutral. The neutral was then empowered
    to select what he or she believed was the more reasonable offer and, if appropriate, to
    provide retroactive relief.
    Section 33-80(a)(7) was part of the original collective bargaining law for police
    officers enacted in 1982. The legislative history of that law indicates that the intent of the
    provision was not to subject the “decision to exercise a management right” to bargaining,
    but only the method of implementing that decision. The county personnel director at the
    time stated, by way of example, that a decision to lay off employees would not be subject
    to bargaining, but the decision as to whom to lay off first would be. At least one
    councilmember disagreed with that interpretation, but an attempt to delete the provision
    failed.
    On January 31, 2011, the Montgomery County Organizational Reform
    Commission, created in 2010 by County Council Resolution to recommend changes that
    would increase the efficiency of county operations, filed its Final Report which, in
    Recommendation 21, urged that §33-80(a)(7) be amended to make it consistent with the
    scope of bargaining for firefighters and other county employees.      The Commission
    3
    noted that, in practice, effect bargaining “has become the exception that makes most
    management decisions subject to bargaining” and “has hampered the ability of the Police
    Department to issue directives to govern how police officers must operate.” It added that
    “FOP has recently delayed the implementation of all directives by refusing to respond to
    them.”2
    Responding to the Commission’s recommendation, the County Council President
    introduced Bill No. 18-11 in June 2011 to amend §33-80(a)(7) by limiting effect
    bargaining to the “amelioration” of the effect on employees when the county’s exercise
    of rights under §33-80(b) “causes a loss of jobs in the [bargaining] unit.” The bill also
    deleted the special impasse procedure under §33-81(c) with respect to effect bargaining.
    At the County Council hearing on the bill, the county Police Chief listed the kinds
    of administrative directives that were subject to effect bargaining. He estimated that
    bargaining over a minor issue normally required between two weeks and 90 days, without
    impasse arbitration, that impasse arbitration added an additional two to three months, and
    that a “significant” matter could take up to two years to resolve. He noted that the
    county’s attempt to create a mandatory electronic reporting system was delayed by three
    years of bargaining and that he still was required to send all communications to officers
    in paper form because they had refused to establish county e-mail accounts.
    2
    An attempt was made by the County Executive in 2000 to have the County Council
    amend §33-80(a)(7) but, in the face of FOP opposition, the attempt failed.
    4
    The bill was passed by the County Council in July 2011 and was signed by the
    County Executive on August 1. Pursuant to §112 of the Montgomery County Charter,
    the law took effect October 31, 2011 – 91 days after it was signed. FOP promptly
    commenced an effort to refer the law to referendum pursuant to §114 of the County
    Charter and Art. 11-F, §7 of the Maryland Constitution. That drive ultimately proved
    successful. Petitioners were able to collect more than the required number of signatures
    (five percent of the qualified voters in the county), whereupon the county challenged the
    validity of several thousand of those signatures. That challenge was not resolved until
    August 12, 2012, when this Court concluded that the signatures were valid. See FOP
    Lodge 35 v. Montgomery Co., 
    427 Md. 522
    , 
    50 A.3d 8
    (2012) (per curiam Order
    explained later in 
    436 Md. 1
    , 
    80 A.3d 686
    (2013)).
    Upon the filing of our per curiam Order, Bill No. 18-11 was slated to appear on
    the ballot at the November 6, 2012 general election as Question B, whether the bill
    should become law. A “yes” answer would sustain the law; a “no” vote would nullify it.
    In accordance with §115 of the County Charter, the effect of the law which, as noted, had
    taken effect the previous October, was stayed pending the result of the referendum.3
    Both sides commenced their respective campaigns to capture the hearts and minds of the
    county voters.
    3
    With exceptions not relevant here, §115 provides that, when a referendum petition that
    contains the required signatures has been filed, the legislation to be referred shall not take
    effect until 30 days after its approval by a majority of the registered voters voting
    thereon.
    5
    The County Executive, Isiah Leggett, believing that the requirement of effect
    bargaining had significantly hampered the ability of the Police Chief to efficiently
    manage the operation of the County Police Department, directed an effort by the County
    government to encourage county voters to vote “yes” on Question B. The effort was
    managed in large part by Patrick Lacefield, Director of the County Office of Public
    Information. Leggett authorized Lacefield to spend up to $200,000 from the funds
    appropriated by the County Council to his office in furtherance of the effort.
    Lacefield ultimately spent $122,350, which went for such things as putting ads in
    buses, displaying posters in county libraries and bumper stickers on county cars,
    purchasing ads in the local media, producing and distributing flyers and lawn signs,
    posting a “Vote for Question B” on the county website, including advocacy materials in
    its electronic newsletter distributed to about 125,000 county residents, mass mailings to
    more than 163,000 households in the county, employing political and media consultants,
    and hiring individuals to distribute campaign literature. Leggett enlisted the support of
    both the Democratic and Republican Central Committees. The central message of the
    county was that FOP had been holding up a variety of policies necessary to the efficient
    operation of the Police Department, which raised the question of who should be running
    the Department – the Police Chief or the union leaders?
    FOP, which contemporaneously was running a vigorous campaign to defeat the
    new law, objected to the county’s advocacy and, in particular, to the use of county funds
    and personnel in furtherance of it. FOP complained to the American Civil Liberties
    6
    Union, the County Inspector General, the State Prosecutor, and the United States
    Attorney for the District of Maryland, and when it received no relief from them,
    petitioners (FOP and two of its members, individually), filed this lawsuit on November 5,
    2012 -- one day before the election. The next day, the voters approved Question B, 58
    percent voting “yes” and 42 percent voting “no.”
    The Complaint
    The complaint was brought both individually and as a class action -- the class
    being Montgomery County police officers below the rank of lieutenant – against the
    county, Leggett, and Lacefield. As amended, it contained ten counts. Counts 1 through
    6 sought declaratory and injunctive relief as follows:
    Count 1, against Leggett and Lacefield, sought a declaratory judgment that their
    conduct violated the campaign finance organization and activity requirements of Title 13,
    Subtitle 2 and the reporting requirements of Subtitle 3 of the State Election Law Article
    (EL) and a directive that they comply with those requirements.
    Count 2, also against Leggett and Lacefield, sought a declaratory judgment that
    their conduct violated Article 24, §13-105 of the Maryland Code (since revised as §1-304
    of the Local Government Article (LG)).4
    4
    Article 24, §13-105 (current LG §1-304) prohibits an employee of a governmental entity
    from engaging in political activity while on the job during working hours.
    7
    Count 3, against Leggett and Lacefield, sought a declaratory judgment that their
    conduct violated §§405, 406, and 408 of the Montgomery County Charter, §19-A-14 of
    the County Code, and Montgomery County Personnel Regulation 3-8.5
    Count 4, against the county, sought a declaratory judgment that the county had no
    power or authority to engage in electioneering and campaigning activities to promote the
    approval of Question B and that its actions were ultra vires and unlawful.
    Count 5, also against the county, sought a declaratory judgment that the
    electioneering and campaigning activities of the county in promoting the approval of
    Question B were in violation of Maryland law, including EL Title 13 and Art. 24 §13-105
    (LG §1-304).
    Count 6, against the county, sought a declaratory judgment that the county’s
    electioneering and campaigning activities were in violation of §§405, 406, and 408 of the
    County Charter, §19-A-14 of the County Code, and County Personnel Regulation 3-8.
    5
    In relevant part, §405 of the County Charter provides that no county officer or employee
    shall be obligated to contribute to a political campaign or to render political service.
    Section 406 prohibits officers or employees of the county from detailing or causing any
    other officer or employee to do or perform any service or work outside the officer’s or
    employee’s public office or employment. Section 408 requires officers and employees
    paid in whole or in part from county funds to devote their entire time during their official
    working hours to the performance of their official duties. Section 19A-14 of the County
    Code contains a number of restrictions on using the prestige of a public employee’s office
    for private gain or using county property or work time for personal use. County Personal
    Regulation 3-8 contains restrictions on political activity by county employees, including
    the use of county property for a political cause or campaign.
    8
    In addition to the declaratory relief, each of the first six counts also sought costs
    and other unspecified general relief.
    Counts 7 through 10 also sought declaratory relief but money damages as well, as
    follows:
    Count 7 charged that Leggett’s use of county resources to promote the approval of
    Question B violated Article 6 of the Md. Declaration of Rights and constituted
    misconduct in office.6 It sought a “determination” to that effect and an order that he
    reimburse the county for the cost of all of the electioneering and campaign activity
    undertaken by the county, plus reasonable attorneys’ fees. Count 8 sought the same relief
    against Lacefield.
    Count 9 purported to be a taxpayer cause of action seeking a declaratory judgment
    that Leggett’s and Lacefield’s activities in support of Question B constituted an
    impermissible use of public funds and demanded an accounting by them and
    reimbursement to the county.
    6
    Art. 6 of the Declaration of Rights states that all persons invested with Legislative or
    Executive powers of government are trustees of the public and are accountable for their
    conduct.
    9
    Count 10, against the county, Leggett, and Lacefield, alleged that their activities
    violated “the State Constitutional rights” of FOP and its members and sought a
    declaration to that effect plus damages and reasonable attorneys’ fees.7
    The county contested the merits of the complaint and argued, in addition, that
    petitioners had no standing to bring the action, that the claims were barred by laches, and
    that, because FOP had participated in a campaign in connection with a 2010 ballot
    question, FOP was proceeding with unclean hands.
    The Judgment
    After a 10-day bench trial, the Circuit Court, on March 21, 2014, entered a
    memorandum and order, followed a week later by a series of declaratory judgments. The
    court rejected the defenses of lack of standing, laches, and unclean hands. The heart of its
    decision were declarations by the Court that the county, Leggett, and Lacefield had no
    authority to do what they did and that their conduct violated the State and local laws, as
    alleged by petitioners. In that regard, it declared inapplicable the doctrine of
    “government speech,” which the county asserted permitted governmental entities to
    promote or oppose legislative measures, including ballot questions, that may affect its
    operations. With respect to Counts 7 through 10, however, which sought monetary relief,
    7
    The first amended complaint alleged more specifically the violation of Articles 6, 7, 10,
    19, and 24 of the Declaration of Rights and Section 7 of the Constitution of Maryland.
    That was replaced later with the blanket allegation. There is no section 7 of the Maryland
    Constitution.
    10
    the court found that Leggett and Lacefield had qualified immunity, and it dismissed those
    counts. More specifically, the court entered declaratory judgments that:
    As to Count 1, Leggett and Lacefield constituted a “political committee” under EL
    Title 13, that they were required to comply with the organization and activity
    requirements of Subtitle 2 and the reporting requirements of subtitle 3 of that Title, and
    that they failed to do so.
    As to Count 2, the activities of Leggett and Lacefield caused county employees to
    engage in the “partisan political campaign” to support Question B in violation of Art. 24,
    §13-105.
    As to Count 3, those activities of Leggett and Lacefield also violated §405, 406,
    and 408 of the County Charter, §19A-14(a), (c), (e), and (f) of the County Code, and
    County Personnel Regulation 3-8(b) and (d).
    As to Count 4, the county had no legal authority under Art. XI-A of the Maryland
    Constitution, or Art. 25A, §5 of the Maryland Code (now part of LG Title 10) to engage
    in electioneering and the “partisan political campaign” to advocate voter approval of
    Question B.
    As to Count 5, the county was not subject to the Election Law Article.
    As to Count 6, the electioneering and “partisan political campaign” activities of
    the county in advocating voter approval of Question B violated §§405, 406, and 408 of
    11
    the County Charter, §19A-14(a), (c), (e), and (f) of the County Code, and County
    Personnel Regulation 3-8(b) and (d).
    In its March 21 Memorandum and Order, the court concluded that, because the
    conduct of Leggett and Lacefield, even if illegal, was discretionary in nature and did not
    violate “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person
    would have known,” they enjoyed qualified immunity from monetary damages. For that
    reason, the court dismissed Counts 7 through 10.
    The Appeal
    Neither side was happy with the Circuit Court judgments, and so there were cross
    appeals. The respondents objected to the declaratory judgments denying the county’s
    authority to advocate for or against ballot issues that may have an impact on the operation
    of the county government and finding that Leggett and Lacefield violated the various
    laws in implementing the county’s efforts to have the law sustained. They also renewed
    their defenses of lack of standing and laches. Petitioners were unhappy with the court’s
    finding of immunity on the part of Leggett and Lacefield. FOP was seeking
    reimbursement for the money it claimed it was required to spend in response to the
    county’s campaign.
    The Court of Special Appeals reversed the Circuit Court judgments. Montgomery
    Co. v. Fraternal Order of Police, 
    222 Md. App. 278
    , 
    112 A.3d 1052
    (2015). It affirmed,
    12
    however, the Circuit Court’s rejection of the county’s standing and laches defenses. The
    Court held that, as the certified representative of police officers under the rank of
    lieutenant, FOP had a fiduciary duty to its members to advocate against Question B, the
    passage of which would diminish their bargaining rights. That gave it a special interest in
    challenging the county’s use of public funds and employees to work for approval of that
    question, different in character and kind from that possessed by the general public.
    As to laches, the appellate court observed that petitioners were not seeking to
    overturn the election result, that FOP had pursued several non-judicial remedies before
    resorting to litigation, and that the declaratory and monetary relief sought was susceptible
    to post-election adjudication without prejudice to the county. It concluded that the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in finding that there was no unreasonable delay or any
    prejudice from the filing of the action on November 5, 2012.
    The major disagreement between the Circuit Court and the Court of Special
    Appeals, with respect to the county, centered on the contours of the government speech
    doctrine. The Circuit Court found that the doctrine does no more than exempt
    government speech from First Amendment scrutiny and does not constitute an
    affirmative authority for government to advocate and spend money on political
    campaigns.
    The Court of Special Appeals had a broader view of the doctrine. Relying on a
    number of Federal appellate decisions that applied language from Johanns v. Livestock
    Mktg. Ass’n, 
    544 U.S. 550
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 2055
    , 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 896
    (2005), the Court of Special
    13
    Appeals concluded that the county’s speech was directly related to its governance, was in
    an area in which it had expertise, and concerned an issue about which the voters were
    entitled to hear its perspective in deciding how to vote, and therefore constituted
    government speech. Its ultimate conclusion was that the county “had inherent power to
    use properly appropriated funds for a governmental purpose, and that advocacy on a non-
    partisan ballot measure pertaining to the County’s police force plainly was a
    governmental purpose.” Montgomery 
    County, supra
    , 222 Md. App. at 
    315, 112 A.3d at 1094
    .
    The appellate court disagreed as well with the trial court’s conclusions regarding
    Leggett’s and Lacefield’s activity. It concluded that Leggett and Lacefield did not
    constitute a political committee and were not required to comply with the requirements of
    EL Title 13, subtitles 2 or 3, that they did not violate Art. 24, §13-105, §§405, 406, or
    408 of the County Charter, §19A-14 of the County Code, or County Personnel
    Regulation 3-8. In light of those holdings, it found the cross-appeal moot. As there were
    no violations, there was no need to consider immunity.
    Because of the important issues presented, we granted the petitioners’ petition for
    certiorari and, as well, respondents’ conditional cross-petition seeking review of the
    rejection of their standing and laches defenses.
    DISCUSSION
    14
    Standing and Laches
    This Court discussed the doctrine and requirement of standing most recently in
    Kendall v. Howard Co., 
    431 Md. 590
    , 
    66 A.3d 684
    (2013) and State Center v. Lexington
    Charles, 
    438 Md. 451
    , 
    92 A.3d 400
    (2014). We pointed out in Kendall that the
    requirement of standing “is an element in the larger question of justiciability and is
    designed to ensure that a party seeking relief has a sufficiently cognizable stake in the
    outcome so as to present a court with a dispute that is capable of judicial 
    resolution.” 431 Md. at 603
    , 66 A.3d at 691 (quoting from Hand v. Mfrs. & Traders Trust Co., 
    405 Md. 375
    , 399, 952 A,2d 240, 254 (2008). We added in Kendall that, under Maryland
    common law, “standing to bring a judicial action generally depends on whether one is
    ‘aggrieved,’ which means whether a plaintiff has ‘an interest such that [he, she, or it] is
    personally and specifically affected in a way different from . . . the public generally.’”
    Id. at 
    603, 66 A.3d at 691
    .
    In a nutshell, a person – individual or organization – has no standing to bring an
    action in court unless the person has suffered some kind of special damage from the
    alleged wrong differing in character and kind from that suffered by the general public.
    Kendall was a case where there was no such special damage. The plaintiffs were seeking
    to have the court annul a number of county land use decisions, in the form of legislative
    resolutions and ordinances, and administrative decisions that they claimed were
    unauthorized by, and indeed were in violation of, the county charter. They showed no
    special harm, however, to their property or to themselves as taxpayers, but merely “an
    15
    abstract, generalized interest in the County’s compliance with [its Charter], which is
    shared by all members of the general public in [the county],” and that was not enough to
    provide standing. 
    Id. at 615,
    66 A.3d at 698.
    That is not the case here. Although all citizens living in Montgomery County have
    a general interest in assuring that the county government does not exceed its legitimate
    authority and does not expend funds or the labor of its employees for unlawful purposes,
    petitioners had a more specialized interest in sustaining effect bargaining and assuring
    that the county did not use unlawful means to repeal that provision.
    FOP had a statutory duty under §33-78(c) of the County Code to represent fairly
    and without discrimination all police officers in the bargaining unit. Part of that duty,
    and, under §33-80(a)(7), was to bargain collectively on the effect of the county’s exercise
    of any of its otherwise exclusive rights under §33-80(b). As the legislative history of that
    provision indicates, it greatly expanded the scope of mandatory bargaining in favor of the
    police officers in the bargaining unit and thus directly affected, in a positive way for
    them, the conditions of their employment. Both the police officers and FOP, as their
    exclusive bargaining agent, having successfully petitioned the repeal to referendum, had
    a clear special interest in protecting that right. In such a political battle, that special
    interest extended to requiring its formidable opponent to act lawfully.
    In that regard, our decisions in Teachers Union v. Board of Education, 
    379 Md. 192
    , 
    840 A.2d 728
    (2004) and Patterson Park v. Teachers Union, 
    399 Md. 174
    , 
    923 A.2d 60
    (2007) are particularly relevant. In Teachers Union, the teachers union, being the
    16
    exclusive bargaining representative for public school teachers in Baltimore City, filed suit
    to prevent the State Board of Education from turning control over three public schools in
    the City to a private company, including the power to hire, assign, discipline, and dismiss
    teachers in those schools and thereby remove those employees from the scope of the
    labor agreement that the union had with the City school board.
    The State Board moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the union had
    no special interest in the Board’s action and therefore no standing to bring the lawsuit.
    We disagreed, noting that the effect of the turnover was to shrink the size of the
    bargaining unit and thereby diminish the negotiating power of the union vis a vis the City
    school board. We followed that approach as well in Patterson Park. The Circuit Court
    and the Court of Special Appeals were correct in holding that the petitioners had standing
    to pursue this lawsuit.
    In arguing laches, respondents note that petitioners certainly were aware of the
    county’s efforts to sustain the law on referendum by September 20, 2012, when FOP
    complained to the County Inspector General about what Leggett and Lacefield were
    doing, yet they did not file suit until November 5 – a month-and-a-half later and only a
    day before the election – and did not succeed in serving respondents until December 31.
    They rely on Ross v. Board of Elections, 
    387 Md. 649
    , 
    876 A.2d 692
    (2005).
    Except for the general discussion of laches in our Opinion, Ross is wholly
    distinguishable and of no assistance to the petitioners. Glenn Ross was an unsuccessful
    candidate for a seat on the Baltimore City Council. Eleven days before the election,
    17
    running as the Green Party candidate, he asked the State Board of Elections to disqualify
    the Democratic Party nominee, Paula Branch, on the ground that, because of the failure
    of her campaign to timely file campaign finance reports, she was not qualified to be on
    the ballot. The Board, without opining whether that failure constituted a ground for
    disqualification, declined to remove Branch from the ballot, and she proceeded to defeat
    Ross soundly, garnering 80 percent of the vote. Three days after the election, Ross filed
    suit to enjoin the City Board of Canvassers from certifying Branch as the winner.
    Cross motions for summary judgment were filed. Ross’s was denied, whereupon
    he sought a temporary restraining order to preclude Branch from taking the oath of office.
    That, too, was denied, and Branch was duly sworn into office. As the case proceeded, the
    State Elections Board moved to dismiss on the ground that the suit was not timely under
    two provisions of the Election Code – EL §§9-209 and 12-202.8 Branch claimed that the
    action was barred by laches. The Circuit Court accepted the Board’s position and
    dismissed the action as being untimely under EL §9-209.
    This Court found that EL §9-209 was not a proper basis for dismissing the action
    but that §12-202, providing a 10-day window for seeking judicial review, was applicable.
    8
    EL §9-209, part of the subtitle dealing with ballots, permits a registered voter, within
    three days after the content and arrangement of the ballot are placed on public display, to
    seek judicial review of that content or arrangement. Section 12-202, in relevant part,
    permits a registered voter to seek judicial relief from any act or omission relating to an
    election on the ground that the act or omission is inconsistent with a law applicable to the
    election process and may change or has changed the outcome of the election within the
    earlier of 10 days after the act or omission became known to the voter or seven days after
    the election results are certified.
    18
    Because the action was an equitable one, however, laches, rather than direct application
    of the statutory time period, was the proper focus.
    Laches, we said, was an ancient defense in equity against stale claims. It was a
    necessary invention because, historically, statutes of limitations did not apply to claims in
    equity, although, as a general rule, courts sitting in equity will apply statutory time
    limitations in determining, at least as an outside limit, whether laches has run. Ross,
    
    supra, 387 Md. at 670
    , 876 A.2d at 704-05. We pointed out that there was no inflexible
    rule as to what constitutes, or does not constitute, laches, but its existence must be
    determined by the facts and circumstances of each case. 
    Id. at 669,
    876 A.2d at 669.
    Confirming language from Buxton v. Buxton, 
    363 Md. 634
    . 
    770 A.2d 152
    (2001), we
    added that, where the delay is of lesser duration than the statute of limitations, the
    defense of laches “must include an unjustifiable delay and some amount of prejudice to
    the defendant.” Ross, 
    supra, 387 Md. at 669
    , 876 A.3d at 704.
    Although declining to adopt a per se rule that any claim “against a state electoral
    procedure must be expressed expeditiously,” we did apply laches against Ross, noting
    that the Court had “imposed a duty on parties having grievances based on election laws
    to bring their complaints forward for pre-election adjudication when possible” and
    concluding that Ross had not done so. 
    Id. at 671-72,
    876 A.2d at 705. Ross was aware
    well before the election that Branch was a certified candidate and that she had failed to
    file campaign finance reports timely. His decision to wait until after the election to file
    his suit was (1) unnecessary, (2) prejudiced Branch and the voters of the district, who
    19
    rightfully relied on the State Board’s certification of Branch as a qualified candidate, and
    (3) prejudiced the State Board as well.
    That is not the case here. Unlike Ross, petitioners in this action were not seeking
    to overturn the results of the election. They accept Bill No. 18-11 as valid law. Their
    action is solely to seek monetary redress for what they regard as unlawful activity by the
    county, Leggett, and Lacefield that was prejudicial to them and, through their quest for
    declaratory judgments, to preclude the county and its officials from engaging in that
    conduct in the future.
    As the Court of Special Appeals noted, there was no prejudice to respondents, or
    anyone else, from petitioners’ waiting until the eve of the election to file their suit. The
    delay itself was not inordinate, and petitioners’ claims can be adjudicated as easily after
    the election as they could have been before. Indeed, given the considerable amount of
    discovery necessary to set forth all of the conduct of the respondents and the time
    required for the parties to assemble their respective cases, navigate through the motion
    practice, for the court to schedule a trial that took ten days to complete, not to mention
    post-trial motions and appeals, it likely would have been impossible to resolve the action
    prior to the election even had the lawsuit been filed near the end of September. The
    Circuit Court and the Court of Special Appeals were correct in rejecting the defense of
    laches.
    Government Speech: Scope and Limitations
    20
    The government speech defense is particularly germane to Count 4, which broadly
    challenged the county’s authority to engage in political campaigns of any kind, but it has
    ripple effects on the other counts as well. As we shall explain, in the absence of clear
    and specific prohibitions under State or Federal law, it provides an affirmative basis
    for government entities to inform the public of their views regarding legislative measures
    that may significantly affect their operations or programs, including ballot questions.
    The term “government speech,” in the context of what is before us, is relatively
    new and arose as part of First Amendment jurisprudence. The broader question of
    whether, and to what extent, governments or government officials or agencies are
    permitted to use public funds or government employees to support or oppose ballot
    measures or pending legislation that may affect the operations of the government or the
    agency is not new. The answer to that question traditionally has depended on whether
    such advocacy, ranging from simple informational bulletins to more aggressive political
    campaigns, is authorized or prohibited by the assortment of laws governing the agency or
    the election process.
    The early cases dealing with the broader question often involved challenges in
    State court proceedings to efforts by local school or public works agencies to support
    bond authorizations on the ballot – authorizations needed, in the agency’s view, to allow
    it to perform its legitimate function. The courts looked closely at the laws governing the
    agency to determine whether they authorized the expenditure of appropriated money for
    that purpose and tended to interpret those laws very narrowly. The narrow construction
    21
    arose, in part, from the view then current, commonly referred to as Dillon’s Rule (derived
    from propositions espoused in 1 Dillon, Municipal Corporations, §237, at 448-50 (5th ed.
    1911)), that municipal corporations had no inherent powers but only those granted in
    express words or that necessarily were implied in or incident to those express powers.
    At least in the early period, there were few, if any, statutes expressly authorizing
    municipal agencies to advocate for or against ballot measures.
    In some instances, that narrow focus was influenced as well by a deep concern
    whether that kind of advocacy was ever a proper function of government. In enjoining
    such an effort, a New York trial court expressed the view that “[i]t would be establishing
    a dangerous and untenable precedent to permit government or any agency thereof to use
    public funds to disseminate propaganda in favor or against any issue or candidate,”
    adding that “[t]his may be done by totalitarian, dictatorial or autocratic governments but
    cannot be tolerated, directly or indirectly in these democratic United States of America.”
    Stern v. Kramarsky, 
    375 N.Y.S.2d 235
    , 239 (S.Ct.N.Y.Co 1975).
    A similar concern, expressed with somewhat less flourish, appears in Stanson v.
    Mott, 
    551 P.2d 1
    , 8 (Cal. 1976) (“A fundamental precept of this nation’s democratic
    electoral process is that government may not ‘take sides’ in election contests or bestow an
    unfair advantage on one of several competing factions”). Citing only four cases,
    including Stern, the Stanson Court concluded that “every court which has addressed the
    issue to date has found the use of public funds for partisan campaign purposes improper,
    either on the ground that such use was not explicitly authorized . . . or that such
    22
    expenditures are never appropriate.” 
    Id. at 8-9.
    (Emphasis added). In a 1929 decision,
    the Illinois Supreme Court concluded that “[t]he conduct of a campaign, before an
    election, for the purpose of exerting an influence upon the voters, is not the exercise of an
    authorized municipal function and hence is not a corporate purpose of the municipality.”
    Eisenau v. City of Chicago, 
    165 N.E. 129
    , 131 (Ill. 1929).
    The emergence of the government speech doctrine, as an element of First
    Amendment law, added a new dimension to this traditional analysis. The articulation of
    the concept of government speech emanates, in large measure, from Johanns v. Livestock
    Marketing 
    Association, supra
    , 
    544 U.S. 550
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 2055
    , 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 896
    , although
    the Court had embraced the concept earlier.9 It had long been clear, of course that, with
    very limited exceptions, governments may not regulate or limit, or attempt to regulate or
    limit, a person’s right to speak, particularly on matters of public interest. Two aspects of
    that general prohibition were the proscription against granting differential access to a
    public forum based on content or viewpoint and compelling persons to support
    pronouncements of ideas or causes against their will. If a public body makes a forum
    available for the expression of opinion by private persons, it may not limit access to that
    forum based on the content of the opinion sought to be expressed; nor may it compel
    private persons to express support for a cause or to subsidize a cause – at least a political
    9
    See Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of University of Virginia, 
    515 U.S. 819
    , 833, 
    115 S. Ct. 2510
    , 2519, 
    132 L. Ed. 2d 700
    , 718 (1995), construing language in Rust v. Sullivan,
    
    500 U.S. 173
    , 194, 
    111 S. Ct. 1759
    , 1773, 
    114 L. Ed. 2d 233
    , 256 (1991) as a recognition
    that “when the government appropriates public funds to promote a particular policy of its
    own it is entitled to say what it wishes.”
    23
    one -- with which they disagree. See Police Dept. of City of Chicago v. Mosley, 
    408 U.S. 92
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 2286
    , 
    33 L. Ed. 2d 212
    (1972); Wooley v. Maynard, 
    430 U.S. 705
    , 
    97 S. Ct. 1428
    , 
    51 L. Ed. 2d 752
    (1977).
    Johanns drew a distinction, in a First Amendment context, between compelling
    private speech or the subsidization of that speech, on the one hand, and allowing
    government, through its authorized officials or employees, to express the government’s
    views on matters relevant to its function and operation that private persons may oppose
    but, through their taxes or special assessments, must subsidize, on the other. The case
    involved a Federal statute that directed the Secretary of Agriculture to promote the
    marketing and consumption of beef, the promotional activities to be funded by
    assessments on the importation and sale of cattle. Several individuals and associations
    charged with collecting or paying the assessment filed suit, claiming that some of the
    advertising funded by the assessments that promoted beef as a generic commodity
    impeded their effort to promote the superiority of specific kinds of beef. There was no
    doubt that the advertising being challenged constituted government speech, not private
    speech; the question presented was whether compelled funding of that speech nonetheless
    violated the First Amendment rights of those who had to pay the assessments.
    The Court observed that, in all of the cases invalidating exactions to subsidize
    speech, the speech was, or was presumed to be, that of an entity other than the
    government itself. It noted its rulings in Board of Regents of Univ. of Wis. System v.
    Southworth, 
    529 U.S. 217
    , 229, 
    120 S. Ct. 1346
    , 1353-54, 
    146 L. Ed. 2d 193
    , 256 (2000)
    24
    that (1) compelled support of government, even those governmental programs that one
    does not approve, is “perfectly constitutional,” (2) some governmental programs consist
    of advocating a position, and (3) within that broader principle “it seems inevitable that
    funds raised by government will be spent for speech and other expression to advocate and
    defend its own policies.”
    Building on that base, the Johanns Court concluded that citizens may challenge
    compelled support of private speech “but have no First Amendment right not to fund
    government speech” and that “is no less true when the funding is achieved through
    targeted assessments devoted exclusively to the program to which the assessed citizens
    object.” 
    Id. at 562,
    125 S. Ct. at 
    2063, 161 L. Ed. 2d at 908
    . Finally, for our purposes, the
    Court rejected the notion that “every instance of government speech must be funded by a
    line item in an appropriations bill.” 
    Id. at 563,
    125 S. Ct. at 
    2064, 161 L. Ed. 2d at 909
    .
    The principles announced in Johanns were confirmed by the Court in subsequent
    cases. See Pleasant Grove City, Utah v. Summum, 
    555 U.S. 460
    , 467-68, 
    129 S. Ct. 1125
    , 1131, 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 853
    , 861 (2009). Citing Justice Scalia’s comment in his
    concurring Opinion in National Endowment for Arts v. Finley, 
    524 U.S. 569
    , 598, 118 S.
    Ct. 2168, 2184, 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 500
    , 523 (1998), that “[i]t is the very business of
    government to favor and disfavor points of view,” the Pleasant Grove City Court added
    that “it is not easy to imagine how government could function if it lacked this freedom.”
    Importantly, the Court did note that there may be constraints on government speech. It
    must comport with the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, and (1) “[t]he
    25
    involvement of public officials in advocacy may be limited by law, regulation, or
    practice,” and (2) “a governmental entity is ultimately accountable to the electorate and
    the political process for its advocacy.” 
    Id. at 468-69,
    129 S. Ct. at 
    1132, 172 L. Ed. 2d at 861
    (quoting, in part, from 
    Southworth, supra
    , 529 U.S. at 
    235, 120 S. Ct. at 1357
    , 146 L.
    Ed.2d at 209.
    At least two Federal Courts of Appeals and several U.S. District Courts have
    applied those precepts to sustain activities by local governments in support of ballot
    measures or pending legislation relevant to their operations or programs. In Kidwell v.
    City of Union, 
    462 F.3d 620
    (6th Cir. 2006), a resolution by the Union City Council
    establishing a separate fire department for the City was petitioned to referendum by
    groups favoring the then-current situation, under which fire and emergency services were
    provided by a neighboring township.
    The campaign was described as a “lively” one, in which opponents of the
    Resolution organized a “Vote Yes” campaign, which would nullify the Resolution, and
    the Council expended public funds urging citizens to “Vote No,” to sustain it. Banners
    and leaflets were distributed to the public; advertisements were placed in the local
    newspaper. The Resolution was sustained, but the battle raged on, and the Council
    continued to use public funds to oppose subsequent ballot initiatives regarding land
    acquisition and a tax levy to fund the new fire department. The opponents sued,
    challenging the town’s use of public funds to defeat the referendum.
    26
    Affirming the trial court’s dismissal of the action, the Sixth Circuit Court began by
    quoting the comment in Rosenberger that, when a government appropriates public funds
    to promote a particular policy, it is entitled to say what it wishes. Citing NAACP v. Hunt,
    
    891 F.2d 1555
    (11th Cir. 1990), the Court recognized three categories of action that would
    constitute an infringement of free speech and thus limit the right of government speech:
    (1) abridgement of equality by granting differential access to public fora based on
    viewpoint; (2) monopolization of the marketplace of ideas; and (3) compulsion of citizens
    to support candidates, parties, ideologies, or causes that they oppose. In further
    discussion, the Court concluded that none of those limitations were applicable.
    The Court recognized that elections raise unique Constitutional issues and that,
    where the government uses its official voice “in an attempt to affect the identity of the
    people’s elected representatives,” it can subvert one of the principles underlying
    democratic society, but concluded that “[a]lthough these principles require some limit on
    the government’s power to advocate during elections, they do not require a bright line
    rule barring such speech, at least where the government speaks within the scope of its
    governance functions.” 
    Kidwell, supra
    , 462 F.3d at 625. The issues on which the City
    advocated, the Court held, were germane to the mechanics of its function of providing
    emergency services, and the advocacy was therefore permissible.
    In Page v. Lexington County School District One, 
    531 F.3d 275
    (4th Cir. 2008), the
    Court rejected a challenge to the school district’s use of its resources – e-mails, website
    links -- to convey its opposition to a bill pending in the State (South Carolina) legislature
    27
    providing tax credits for private and home schooling. The school district was concerned
    that the bill would undermine public education. A proponent of the bill requested that the
    district include his viewpoint on its informational distribution system, and, when the
    district refused, a lawsuit was filed.
    Although the principal issue before the Court was whether the message of the
    school district constituted government speech, which the Court held it did, the
    significance of the case, for our purposes, lies in the Court’s rejection of the argument
    that the government speech doctrine does not apply when the government attempts to
    influence legislation. Citing Kidwell and two U.S. District Court opinions, the Court
    noted that “[m]any courts have rejected First Amendment challenges to government
    speech involving advocacy regarding ballot measures” and that such speech regarding
    legislation also fits within the government speech doctrine. 
    Page, supra
    , 631 F.3d at 287.
    See also Cook v. Baca, 
    95 F. Supp. 2d 1215
    (D.N.M. 2000); Ala. Libertarian Party v. City
    of Birmingham, 
    694 F. Supp. 814
    (N.D. Ala. 1988); Adams v. Me. Municipal Assoc. 
    2013 WL 9246553
    (D. Me. Feb. 14, 2013).
    The two doctrines or approaches have retained their separate functions, but there
    clearly has been some confluence of those doctrines. The right of government to express
    its views on matters relating to its legitimate operations and to authorized programs, even
    in the context of supporting or opposing ballot measures or pending legislation, has been
    recognized as an adjunct to its legitimate operations or programs, and, at least in some
    instances, laws defining the general powers of governmental bodies are being expanded
    28
    and construed more liberally than in the past. See Burt v. Blumenauer, 
    699 P.2d 168
    , 172
    (Ore. 1985); Vargas v. City of Salinas, 
    205 P.3d 207
    (Cal. 2009).
    State and Local Law
    Ultimately, whether a State or local government, through its agencies or officials,
    can use public funds or public employees to engage in government speech for the purpose
    of promoting or opposing ballot issues or pending legislation depends on whether the
    applicable State or local law negates or limits such authority. Except as to First
    Amendment or other supervening Federal issues, the government speech doctrine was not
    intended to override valid laws articulating, or that may limit, the powers of the
    government agency or official. We need to look, then, at the laws governing the powers
    of the Montgomery County government and its County Executive that petitioners claim
    preclude the activity complained of here.
    The thrust of petitioners’ complaint – what they regard as the “central issue” in the
    case -- set forth most directly in Count 4 of the amended complaint, is that the county
    itself had no authority to become involved in a political campaign. Their view is that
    Montgomery County’s governmental power is limited strictly to the express powers
    legislatively delegated to charter counties pursuant to Art. XI-A §2 of the Maryland
    Constitution, that the use of county funds and county personnel for the political activity
    complained of is not among those delegated powers, and that the county therefore does
    not have them. If the county had no such authority, it follows, in petitioners’ view, that
    29
    Leggett and Lacefield had no authority to do what they did. Beyond that vicarious lack
    of authority, petitioners contend that, in implementing the county’s political activity,
    Leggett’s and Lacefield’s conduct actually violated the State election laws, State and
    county laws governing political activity by county employees, and provisions of the
    county Charter.
    Scope of Delegated Powers Under Art. XI-A
    As a preface, we start with the facts that (1) Montgomery County is, indeed, a
    charter county; (2) it adopted and, from time to time has amended, its Charter pursuant to
    Art. XI-A of the Maryland Constitution; and (3) pursuant to Art. XI-A and its Charter, the
    county may exercise, in the manner established in its Charter, the powers delegated to
    charter counties by the General Assembly. Those powers are now codified mostly in LG
    Title 10, and one does not find among them any express and specific power to advocate
    for or against ballot measures. Nor is there anything in those delegated powers expressly
    negating or limiting such authority.
    Those facts are undisputed. The crux of this “central issue” is what to make of the
    silence. As noted, petitioners’ view is that, if the power is not expressly and affirmatively
    stated, it does not exist; respondents argue that a power may be implied from other
    powers or from Art. XI-A itself, especially as it is not expressly negated. Relying on
    Perry v. Board of Appeals, 
    211 Md. 294
    , 303, 
    127 A.2d 507
    , 511 (1956), petitioners urge
    that the county has “only so much [police power] as the Legislature has expressly
    delegated to it” -- that is “granted in express words” or that is “necessarily or fairly
    30
    implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted.” (Emphasis added). They assert
    as well that the powers expressly delegated under Art. XI-A §2 must be construed in a
    very narrow, constricted manner. We note first, that Perry did not address the home rule
    powers of a county, but of a village – a municipal corporation.
    More important, later decisions of this Court have expressed a broader view of
    what was intended in Art. XI-A. In Ritchmount Partnership v. Board, 
    283 Md. 48
    , 
    388 A.2d 523
    (1978), the Court stated that the intent of that Article – the Home Rule
    Amendment – was “to secure to the citizens of Maryland ‘the fullest measure of local
    self-government in respect of their local affairs’” and that the legislative powers
    delegated by the General Assembly pursuant to §2 of Art. XI-A “are those usually
    associated with the objects of government -- that is, powers to legislate for the benefit of
    the health, safety and general welfare of the local community.” Id, at 56-57, quoting in
    part from State v. Stewart, 
    152 Md. 419
    , 422, 
    137 A. 39
    , 41 (1927).
    More recently, in Chesapeake Bay Found. v. DCW Dutchship, 
    439 Md. 588
    , 
    97 A.3d 135
    (2014), we recounted what had been stated in Ritchmount and noted that this
    Court and the Court of Special Appeals “have been unwilling to construe narrowly the
    powers delegated to counties” but instead have viewed the delegated powers as “an
    expansive grant of authority.” Chesapeake Bay Found. at 
    601-02, 97 A.3d at 143
    .
    Quoting from Montgomery Citizens League v. Greenhalgh, 
    253 Md. 151
    , 160, 
    252 A.2d 242
    , 246 (1969), we observed that “[g]ratification would not be afforded the purposes of
    home rule or the reasons which prompted it if the language of [the Express Powers Act]
    31
    were not to be construed as a broad grant of power to legislate on matters not specifically
    enumerated in [the laws governing charter counties].” Chesapeake Bay 
    Found., 439 Md. at 602-03
    , 97 A.3d at 143.
    See also Annapolis v. Anne Arundel County, 
    347 Md. 1
    , 14, 
    698 A.2d 523
    ,
    (2007), observing that, although the authority of charter counties to budget and
    appropriate funds “is not expressly granted by the Express Powers Act or any other
    enactment of the General Assembly,” it “is implicit in Article XI-A and is an inherent
    power of all Maryland counties.”
    These cases make clear that the powers of a charter county are not, as petitioners
    contend, limited to a narrow and constricted reading of the list of express powers
    delegated following the ratification of Art. XI-A in 1915. We need look no further in that
    regard than what is now codified as LG §10-206, authorizing the county council to pass
    any ordinance not inconsistent with State law that may aid in executing and enforcing any
    power in Title 10 of that Article or that “may aid in maintaining the peace, good
    government, health, and welfare of the county.” In Greenhalgh, 
    supra, 253 Md. at 160
    ,
    252 A.2d at 246, this Court viewed that grant, then codified as Art. 25A, §5(S) of the Md.
    Code, as a statutory authority to pass all ordinances the Council “deems expedient under
    the police power,” except as limited by State law. Under § 201 of the Montgomery
    County Charter, the County Executive, who is the chief executive officer of the county, is
    charged with faithfully executing those laws.
    32
    What we have, then, is a law enacted by the County Council modifying the
    requirement of bargaining on the effect of the county’s exercise of rights expressly
    reserved to it in the collective bargaining law -- a law intended to correct what the
    Council found to be behavior by FOP and its members that was disruptive to the proper
    running of the Police Department and not conducive to public safety. FOP succeeded in
    petitioning that law to referendum and was mounting a substantial political campaign to
    persuade the voters to nullify it. The County Executive, in aid of preserving that law and
    countering that effort, directed the expenditure of funds lawfully appropriated by the
    Council to the County Office of Public Information, to inform the voters of the impact of
    nullifying the law and, for the welfare of the county, advocate for its confirmation. We
    find that to be a proper use of government speech that is consistent with the authority
    delegated to the Council by the General Assembly and to the County Executive in the
    County Charter.
    We add, as a caution, that we are not dealing here with an attempt by the county to
    use public funds or public employees to support or oppose (1) any partisan political
    cause, such as the election of particular candidates for office, or (2) a politically-tainted
    ballot measure expressing disputed principles of social policy that would neither hamper
    nor enhance the operations or programs of the county government in any material way.
    That kind of advocacy, we agree, is not a proper function of government and is not within
    the permissible ambit of government speech.
    Other State and County Laws
    33
    We shall address petitioners’ other allegations of unauthorized or unlawful activity
    on the part of respondents in the context of the counts in their amended complaint.
    Counts 1, 4, and 5 charge that the activities of Leggett and Lacefield violated
    Title 13 of the Election Law Article. In particular, they asserted that the two of them
    constituted a political committee and campaign finance entity and made no effort to
    comply with requirements pertaining to those entities. In his Memorandum, the trial
    judge found that to be the case. Although concluding that EL Title 13 did not apply to
    the county, itself, and acknowledging that all of Leggett’s and Lacefield’s actions were
    conducted on behalf of the county government and in reliance on advice from the County
    Attorney and the Attorney General’s Office that Title 13 did not apply to the county, he
    nonetheless, without any analysis, concluded that Leggett and Lacefield individually
    were required to comply with the requirements of Title 13 and entered a declaratory
    judgment to that effect.
    The Court of Special Appeals disagreed, largely on the basis that, under the
    government speech doctrine, the county was authorized to advocate in favor of sustaining
    the law, that it could only do that through its officials and employees, and, as Leggett and
    Lacefield were acting solely as agents of the county, they were not subject to the election
    law requirements.
    There are statutes in other States that speak directly to whether local governments
    may use public funds to advocate for or against ballot measures or pending legislation.
    See, for example, Ariz. Rev. State, Ann. §9-500.14 (2008); Cal. Gov’t Code, 54964;
    34
    Colo. Rev. Stat. §1-45-117(1)(a)(I); Mass. Gen. Laws ch.55 §§1-42; Or. Rev. Stat.
    §260.432 (2012). There is no express prohibition of such activity by local governments
    in Maryland. Nor can we find anything in the text of the statutes in EL Title 13 to
    indicate that the General Assembly intended for those statutes to apply to local
    governments. As a general proposition, “[t]his Court has consistently held that the word
    ‘person’ in a statute does not include the State, its agencies or subdivisions unless an
    intention to include these entities is made manifest by the Legislature.” Unnamed
    Physician v. Comm’n, 
    285 Md. 1
    , 12, 
    400 A.2d 396
    , 402 (1979) (Emphasis added). See
    also WSSC v. Phillips, 
    413 Md. 606
    , 622, 
    994 A.2d 411
    , 421 (2010).
    Apart from that general proposition, we are especially averse to finding such an
    intent in this regard, for to do so would run roughshod over budgetary and fiscal controls
    enacted pursuant to county charters and necessary to the operation of county government.
    EL §13-207, for example, prohibits a political committee from “receiv[ing] or
    disburs[ing] money or any other thing of value unless the political committee is
    established in accordance with the requirements of this section.” If applicable to county
    officials acting solely in their official capacity, that would preclude them from receiving
    and spending money lawfully appropriated by the legislative body of the county, for any
    purpose. The required structure of a political committee—a chair, treasurer, campaign
    manager – and the duties of those persons are inconsistent with the structure of county
    government. The requirement in EL §13-220 regarding campaign accounts is likely
    35
    inconsistent with fiscal controls established by county law enacted pursuant to its
    Charter.
    The Legislature has recognized, in a related context, that advocacy in regard to
    legislative matters by county officials, when undertaken solely in an official capacity, is
    permissible and that controls imposed on private persons when engaging in such activity
    are not applicable to them. See §5-702(b) of the General Provisions Article, exempting
    from the laws regulating lobbyists “an appearance as part of the official duties of an
    elected or appointed official or employee of the State, a political subdivision of the State,
    or the United States, to the extent that the appearance is not on behalf of any other
    entity.”
    In summary, if EL Title 13 does not apply to a county, it surely cannot apply to
    authorized county officials when acting solely in their official capacity, for it is only
    through those officials that the county can exercise its powers. The Court of Special
    Appeals was correct in holding that Leggett and Lacefield did not constitute a political
    committee and were not required to comply with the provisions of EL Title 13.
    We turn, then, to the complaints that Leggett’s and Lacefield’s use of other county
    employees in furtherance of the county’s advocacy efforts violated various laws
    governing political activity by county employees, in particular former Md. Code, Art. 24
    §13-105 (current LG §1-304) (Count 2), §§405, 406, and 408 of the County Charter,
    §19A-14 of the County Code, and County Personnel Regulation 3-8 (Count 6). We find
    no merit in those complaints.
    36
    LG §1-304, in relevant part, prohibits employees of governmental entities from
    engaging in political activity while on the job during working hours. Sections 405, 406,
    and 408 of the County Charter provide, in relevant part, that no county officer or
    employee shall be obligated to contribute to a political campaign or render political
    service (§405) or cause any officer or employee to do or perform any service or work
    outside of the officer’s or employee’s public office or employment (§406), and that all
    officers and employees shall devote their entire time during official working hours to the
    performance of their official duties (§408). Section 19A-14 of the County Code prohibits
    county employees from using the prestige of their office for private gain, using county
    property or work time for personal use, or intimidating or discriminating against any
    person for the purpose of interfering with that person’s freedom to engage in political
    activity. Finally, County Personnel Regulation 3-8 generally precludes county employees
    from engaging in political activity during working hours and using county property for
    private political purposes.
    There was no evidence that any of those provisions were violated by Leggett,
    Lacefield, or other county employees operating pursuant to instructions from Leggett or
    Lacefield. As we have concluded that Leggett’s and Lacefield’s activities, on behalf of
    the county, were an authorized and proper manifestation of legitimate government
    speech, it follows that any assistance in those activities by subordinate county employees
    at the direction of Leggett or Lacefield also was a proper county function and fell within
    the scope of their official duties.
    37
    Counts 7, 8, 9, and10; Attorneys’ Fees
    As noted, Counts 7 through 10 of the amended complaint sought not only
    declaratory relief but monetary damages from Leggett and Lacefield based on their
    allegedly wrongful conduct. The trial judge denied such relief based on qualified
    immunity. The Court of Special Appeals, having found that there was no wrongful
    conduct on their part, found as well that there was no basis for such relief and declined to
    address any issue of immunity. We agree. As to petitioners’ request for attorneys’ fees
    (Counts 7, 8, and 9), as they have not prevailed on any claim in this case, there is no basis
    for an award of attorneys’ fees.
    CONCLUSION
    The mandate of the Court of Special Appeals was to reverse the Circuit Court
    judgment. The legal conclusions reached by the appellate court were correct, but its
    judgment was technically incorrect. Counts 1 through 6 sought declaratory judgments,
    and declaratory judgments were, in fact, issued on those counts. Even though they were
    legally in error, the correct remedy is not simply to reverse them but to vacate them and
    remand the case for the entry of proper declaratory judgments. As to Counts 7 through
    10, the Circuit Court found wrongdoing on the part of Leggett and Lacefield but denied
    relief because of its finding of qualified immunity. The denial of relief was correct, but
    for the wrong reason. We think that a more structured mandate is required.
    38
    JUDGMENT OF COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS VACATED;
    CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS
    (1) TO REVERSE THE JUDGMENTS ENTERED BY THE
    CIRCUIT COURT ON ALL COUNTS; (2) TO REMAND THE
    CASE TO THE CIRCUIT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO
    ENTER DECLARATORY JUDGMENTS ON ALL COUNTS
    THAT SOUGHT THEM IN CONFORMANCE WITH THE
    OPINION OF THIS COURT AND TO ENTER JUDGMENT
    DENYING MONETARY RELIEF UNDER COUNTS 7
    THROUGH 10 ON THE GROUND THAT LEGGETT AND
    LACEFIELD DID NOT VIOLATE ANY OF THE LAWS
    ALLEGED BY PETITIONERS; COSTS IN THIS COURT, THE
    COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS, AND THE CIRCUIT COURT
    TO BE PAID BY PETITIONERS.
    39