Judges: W.A. DREW EDMONDSON, Attorney General of Oklahoma
Filed Date: 2/27/1996
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Dear Attorney Macy,
¶ 0 This office has received your letter asking for an official Opinion addressing, in effect, the following question:
May a deputy county Commissioner who, under the provisions of19 Ohio St. 180.81(B) (1995), has been designated in the office ofthe County Clerk as a County Commissioner's Chief Deputy — act inthe Commissioner's place by attending meetings of the Board ofCounty Commissioners and casting votes on matters on the agendasat such meetings when the County Commissioner is absent?
¶ 1 The Oklahoma Constitution, at Article
There are hereby created, subject to change by the Legislature, in and for each organized county of this State, the offices of Judge of the County Court, County Attorney, Clerk of the District Court, County Clerk, Sheriff, County Treasurer, Register of Deeds, County Surveyor, Superintendent of Public Instruction, three County Commissioners, and such municipal township officers as are now provided for under the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma, except as in this Constitution otherwise provided.
Okla. Const. Article
¶ 2 Shortly after statehood, in the case of Anderson v.Ritterbusch,
The right of the Legislature to at any time change or add to the list of county officers is granted by section 2, art. 17 (Bunn's Ed. § 324), of the Constitution.
Id. at 1011.
¶ 3 In 1993, the Oklahoma Legislature enacted the provisions of19 Ohio St. 180.81 (1995), and in doing so added to the list of county officers, as authorized by Article
Each principal officer named in paragraph 1 of Section 5 of this act, except judges, shall designate of record in the office of the county clerk a first or chief deputy or assistant who shall be chargeable with all the duties of such principal officer, while subject to the direction of the same; and such first or chief deputy or assistant shall carry on the duties of the office during the absence of the principal officer or, in the event of the death, removal or resignation of said principal officer, until a successor shall have qualified.1
19 Ohio St. 180.81(13) (1995) (emphasis added).
¶ 4 Under the provisions of 19 Ohio St. 180.81(B) (1995), Chief Deputy County Commissioners, designated of record in the office of the County Clerk, are empowered to perform the duties of a County Commissioner under two separate sets of circumstances:
1. When acting under the direction of the County Commissioner, or
2. During the County Commissioner's absence, or in the event of the County Commissioner's death, removal or resignation.
¶ 5 Thus, under the statutory scheme, a Chief Deputy County Commissioner who has been properly designated in the Office of the County Clerk being empowered to perform all the duties of the County Commissioner — when acting under the County Commissioner's direction, or when the County Commissioner is absent, may, just as the County Commissioner could, attend meetings of the Board of County Commissioners, and vote on matters presented at the meetings, just as the County Commissioner could.2 In examining a provision in the Oregon Constitution, similar to Section 180.81, under which the duties of the office of governor devolved on the secretary of state, the Oregon Supreme Court held that the devolving of the office and the duties of the office, necessarily included the powers to carry out those duties.Chadwick v. Earhart, 4 P. 1180,1181 (Or. 1884). See also Exparte Crump,
¶ 6 In providing that a duly designed Chief Deputy County Commissioner "shall carry on the duties of the office during theabsence" of the County Commissioner, the provisions of 19 O.S.180.81(B) (1995) do not define the word "absence." Under the long recognized rule of statutory construction, courts, in construing words used in a statute, "must assume that the lawmaking authority intended for the words to have the same meaning as that attributed to them in ordinary and usual parlance." Riffe Petroleum Co. v. Great National Corp., Inc.,
¶ 7 Article VI, Section
¶ 8 In Ex parte Crump,
¶ 9 In rejecting the respondent's position, the court found that the terms "absent" and "removal," as used in Article VI, Sections
[T]he plain intention of the framers of the Constitution and the people in adopting [art. VI, § 16] was to provide that in his absence from the state for any purpose or for any period of time, however short, his constitutional functions shall devolve upon the Lieutenant Governor as acting Governor. Such absence from the state is an abdication for the time being of the constitutional functions of his office, and the effect of that absence is to suspend his constitutional functions. He does not cease to be Governor by his temporary absence from the state. His vested right of tenure in the term of office attaches to his person and is distinct from his executive functions; it goes with him; but the constitutional functions of his office belong to the public and are confined to the state and cannot be exercised out of state; when he leaves the state, the constitutional functions of his office devolve pro tempore upon the Lieutenant Governor; and, when he returns to the state ipso facto, he resumes all of the powers, functions, and duties of his office. . . .
Ex parte Crump,
¶ 10 The Crump court's analysis is that the power of an executive office can only be exercised within the office's geographic jurisdiction; thus, once the Governor removed himself from the State's geographic boundaries, he lost the ability to exercise the powers of office.
¶ 11 Applying a like analysis to the provisions of 19 O.S.180.81(B), we conclude that when a County Commissioner absents himself from the county, the functions of the Office of County Commissioner devolve upon the duly-designated Chief Deputy County Commissioner, until the County Commissioner returns to the county. As the functions of the office and the attendant power to perform those functions devolve upon the Chief Deputy County Commissioner, the Chief Deputy County Commissioner, during the County Commissioner's absence, may perform all functions of the office, including voting at meetings of the Board of County Commissioners. Accordingly, during the County Commissioner's absence from the county, any votes cast by a duly designated Chief Deputy County Commissioner are as valid as those cast by the County Commissioner. That is, the votes will not be set aside because they were cast by the Chief Deputy County Commissioner, rather than the County Commissioner.
¶ 12 Of course, whether any particular vote at any specific meeting was properly cast by a Chief Deputy County Commissioner, is a question of fact, which is not properly considered in an Attorney General's opinion. 74 Ohio St. 18b(A)(5) (1995). For example, whether the Chief Deputy was acting under the direction of the Commissioner or in his or her absence, will always be a question of fact.
¶ 13 It is, therefore, the official Opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
1. Acting under the power conferred upon it by Article
W.A. DREW EDMONDSON ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
NEAL LEADER SENIOR ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
Article