Court Opinion

ID: 9781017
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-30 15:12:41.995374+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:09:55.509962
License: Public Domain

Jacob Bennett v. Harford County, Maryland, No. 38, September Term, 2022.

STATUTORY INTERPRETATION – ELIGIBILITY TO BE A HARFORD
COUNTY COUNCIL MEMBER

Section 207 of the Harford County Charter, which prevents a Council member from
holding employment in the government of the State, Harford County, or any municipality
within Harford County, does not preclude a teacher employed by the Harford County Board
of Education from simultaneously serving as a member of the Harford County Council.
Finding Charter § 207 ambiguous concerning whether it applies to employees of the Board,
the Court applied a canon of construction favoring candidate eligibility to resolve the
ambiguity.

PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT – INCOMPATIBLE POSITIONS

The doctrine of incompatible positions does not preclude a teacher employed by the
Harford County Board of Education from simultaneously serving as a member of the
Harford County Council.
Circuit Court for Harford County
Case No. C-12-CV-22-000857                                            IN THE SUPREME COURT
Argued: April 4, 2023
                                                                            OF MARYLAND*

                                                                                  No. 38

                                                                          September Term, 2022

                                                                ______________________________________

                                                                            JACOB BENNETT

                                                                                    v.

                                                                   HARFORD COUNTY, MARYLAND

                                                                ______________________________________

                                                                           Fader, C.J.,
                                                                           Watts,
                                                                           Hotten,
                                                                           Booth,
                                                                           Biran,
                                                                           Gould,
                                                                           Eaves,

                                                                                  JJ.
                                                                ______________________________________

                                                                          Opinion by Fader, C.J.
Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials                Gould, J., dissents.
Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this
document is authentic.                                          ______________________________________
               2023-08-30
               10:17-04:00                                           Filed: August 30, 2023
Gregory Hilton, Clerk

* At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional
amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to the Supreme Court
of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
       Jacob Bennett, the appellant, and Harford County, Maryland (the “County”), the

appellee, dispute whether Mr. Bennett is barred from serving as a member of the Harford

County Council (the “Council”) because of his employment as a schoolteacher by the

Harford County Board of Education (the “Board”). In the November 2022 general election,

Mr. Bennett was elected to the Council. Soon after, a dispute arose between Mr. Bennett

and the County concerning whether he is precluded from serving simultaneously as a

member of the Council and as an employee of the Board by either: (1) Section 207 of the

Harford County Charter (the “Charter”), which prohibits a Council member from holding,

among other things, “employment in the government of the State of Maryland[ or] Harford

County”; or (2) the common law doctrine of incompatible positions. We hold that neither

Charter § 207 nor the doctrine of incompatible positions bars Mr. Bennett from

simultaneously serving as a member of the Council and an employee of the Board.

       First, Charter § 207 does not preclude Mr. Bennett from serving on the Council

because his employer, the Board, does not have the character of either a State or County

government entity in the context presented. County boards of education can have the

character of State, county, hybrid, or independent entities. Which character applies to a

particular situation depends on context and applicable statutory and regulatory provisions.

As applied in the context of Charter § 207, a county board of education does not have a

particular character as State, county, hybrid, or independent entity. We therefore turn to

our canons of statutory interpretation to discern the legislative intent underlying the

provision. Because the language of § 207 is ambiguous and legislative history clarifies

only part of that ambiguity, we employ a canon of statutory interpretation favoring
candidate eligibility. We ultimately conclude that, for purposes of the applicability of

§ 207, the Board is an independent entity, neither State nor County, and that § 207 therefore

does not preclude Mr. Bennett from simultaneously serving as a member of the Council

and an employee of the Board.

       Second, the doctrine of incompatible positions does not preclude Mr. Bennett’s

simultaneous service on the Council and as an employee of the Board because there is no

present or prospective conflict of interest between the positions; neither position has a level

of supervisory power over the other or the ability to hire, fire, or set the salary of the other;

and none of the functions of the offices are “inherently inconsistent and repugnant.”

Hetrich v. County Comm’rs of Anne Arundel County, 222 Md. 304, 308 (1960) (quoting

Lilly v. Jones, 158 Md. 260, 266 (1930)). The Council’s limited roles with respect to the

budget and membership of the Board are too attenuated from Mr. Bennett’s position as a

teacher to implicate the doctrine.

       For those reasons, in a per curiam order issued following oral argument, we held

that Mr. Bennett was not barred from serving on the Council while remaining a

schoolteacher employed by the Board, reversed the contrary order and declaratory

judgment of the Circuit Court for Harford County, and remanded the case with instructions

to that court to enter a declaratory judgment in accord with our order. Bennett v. Harford

County, 483 Md. 414 (2023) (per curiam). We now explain the basis for that order.

                                               2
                                     BACKGROUND

       A.     The Harford County Charter and the Council

       Harford County is governed by the terms of a charter adopted by the eligible voters

of the County in November 1972. See Maryland Manual 1973-1974, at 589 (Morris L.

Radoff & Frank F. White, Jr., eds., 1974). The legislative branch of the County government

is the seven-member Council. Harford County Charter § 201. Six members of the Council

must, at the time of their elections, reside in one of the County’s six Council districts. Id.

§ 204. The seventh, who serves as Council President, is elected at large. Id. Members are

elected for four-year terms on the same schedule as the election of state officers. Id. §§ 204,

206.

       To be qualified to serve as a Council member, a candidate must “have been a

resident and a qualified voter of the County for at least two years immediately preceding

election or appointment,” and (other than the Council President) “a resident of the Council

district from which elected or appointed.” Id. § 207.

       While serving on the Council, a “member shall not hold any other office of profit or

employment in the government of the State of Maryland, Harford County, or any

municipality within Harford County, except a position held by virtue of being a Council

member.” Id. Members are further ineligible during their term “for appointment to any

County office or position carrying compensation” other than Council member or the

County Executive. Id.

                                              3
       This dispute centers on the prohibition in Charter § 207 against a member holding

“employment in the government of the State of Maryland[ or] Harford County” while

serving on the Council.1

      B.      Factual Background

       Before the circuit court, the parties stipulated to the following facts, among others.

       Mr. Bennett is a teacher in the Harford County Public Schools, employed by the

Board. For the 2022-2023 school year, Mr. Bennett was under contract with the Board to

teach wherever the Superintendent of the Harford County Public Schools assigned him.

       In the November 2022 General Election, the voters of Harford County Council

District F elected Mr. Bennett to serve as the Council member representing that district.

Mr. Bennett intends to work as a teacher in Harford County Public Schools while

simultaneously serving as a Council member.

       Mr. Bennett is paid by the Board. As a teacher, Mr. Bennett participates in the State

retirement system, with funding that comes from the County.

       The Board receives substantial funding from the State, some of which comes from

federal programs, and the County. Annually, the Board submits a proposed budget to the

County Executive and the Council. Since 1972, the County Executive and the Council

have fully funded the Board’s proposed budget only four times, three of which were the

last three fiscal years. Each year, the Council meets with Board representatives, considers

the Board’s proposed budget and any proposed cuts to it, and usually approves in part and

       1
         As no party contends that the Board could be considered a government entity
within a “municipality in Harford County,” we do not consider that part of Charter § 207.
                                              4
denies in part the proposal. The Council also considers and acts on Board requests to

transfer funds in the Board’s budget between major categories. In making its funding

decisions, the Council allocates County funds among the various agencies and units of

government that receive funds from it, including several non-County entities.2 The Board

is the largest recipient of County operating budget funds.

       Annually, the Council approves the allocation of County revenues to the Board,

which the Board uses to pay for textbooks and classroom supplies; information and

communication technology; a fleet of vehicles; and the salaries of its personnel, including

teachers. The Council also approves the allocation of County revenues to the Board to pay

for debt service on bonds issued to fund Board facilities, as well as to fund construction of

and improvements to Board facilities.

       Mr. Bennett’s compensation as a member of the Council would be $49,000 per year.

       C.     Procedural Background

       About one month after Mr. Bennett’s election, the County filed this action. In its

complaint, the County sought a declaratory judgment that Mr. Bennett was not qualified to

serve on the Council while employed by the Board, as well as an injunction barring him

from serving on the Council. Before the circuit court, the County argued that the Board

was either a State or a County agency and that, in either case, Mr. Bennett’s employment

with the Board rendered him unqualified to serve on the Council pursuant to Charter § 207

       2
        Among the non-County agencies that receive funding from the County, as
approved by the Council, are the Sheriff and Sheriff’s office, the Harford County Health
Department, circuit court personnel, State’s Attorney’s Office personnel, and the Harford
Soil Conservation District.
                                             5
and the doctrine of incompatible positions. Mr. Bennett contended that the Board was

neither a State nor a County agency and, therefore, he was not precluded from serving on

the Council. Mr. Bennett counterclaimed for injunctive, declaratory, and mandamus relief

to force the County to permit him to serve on the Council.

       In February 2023, after a hearing, the circuit court ruled for the County. The court

concluded that because the controversy arose from the Council’s required input on the

Board’s annual budget, and budgetary issues are local in nature, the Board should be treated

as a County entity for purposes of Charter § 207. The court noted that even if the Board

were instead treated as a State agency, “the result [would] remain[] the same.” The court

accordingly entered a declaratory judgment and order in which it: (1) declared that

Charter § 207 “applies to public school teachers employed by the Harford County Board

of Education”; (2) declared that Mr. Bennett, due to his employment with the Harford

County Board of Education, “is not qualified to be a member of the Harford County

Council”; (3) ordered Mr. Bennett to “cure his lack of qualification . . . by terminating his

employment with the Harford County Board of Education”; and (4) enjoined Mr. Bennett

from acting as a member of the Council “unless and until he cures his lack of

qualification[.]”

       Mr. Bennett filed a notice of appeal with the Appellate Court of Maryland,3 and

petitioned for a writ of certiorari to this Court before action was taken by the Appellate

       3
         At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
to the Appellate Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
                                             6
Court. This Court granted Mr. Bennett’s petition and the parties’ joint petition for

expedited proceedings on March 6, 2023. Bennett v. Harford County, 483 Md. 264 (2023).

       On April 5, 2023, following oral argument, we issued a per curiam order reversing

the circuit court and declaring that neither Charter § 207 nor the doctrine of incompatible

positions precludes Mr. Bennett from serving on the Council while employed as a teacher

by the Board. Bennett, 483 Md. at 416. We therefore remanded the case to the circuit

court with instructions to enter: (1) a declaratory judgment that Mr. Bennett is qualified to

serve as a member of the Harford County Council while being employed as a teacher by

the Harford County Board of Education; and (2) any injunctive relief that may be necessary

and appropriate to implement and enforce that declaratory relief. Id. We now explain the

basis for our order.

                                      DISCUSSION

       The interpretation of a provision of a county charter is a legal question, which we

review without deference. Prince George’s County v. Thurston, 479 Md. 575, 585 (2022).

The application of the doctrine of incompatible positions to undisputed facts is also a

question of law, which we again review without deference. See Uthus v. Valley Mill Camp,

Inc., 472 Md. 378, 385 (2021).

                                    I. CHARTER § 207

       Charter § 207 prohibits an individual from serving as a Council member if, among

other things, the individual is employed by the State of Maryland or the County.

Mr. Bennett is employed by the Board. The dispositive question is thus whether the Board,

for purposes of the application of § 207, is a State entity, a County entity, or neither. The

                                             7
answer is not straightforward. Statutes treat county boards of education as State entities

for some purposes, County entities for others, and hybrid or independent entities for yet

others. Our decisional law reflects that the character of county boards of education changes

depending on the context in which an issue arises. We therefore begin with an exploration

of the role of county boards of education as they relate to the State and the County.

       A.      The Statutory Scheme

       Article VIII, § 1 of the Constitution of Maryland requires the General Assembly to

“establish throughout the State a thorough and efficient System of Free Public Schools,”

and to “provide by taxation, or otherwise, for their maintenance.” The framework the

General Assembly has created for that system of free public schools is contained in the

Education Article (2022 Repl.).

       Title 2 of the Education Article establishes the State Department of Education as a

principal department of the State government, with the State Board of Education (the “State

Board”) serving as head of the department. Educ. §§ 2-101, 2-102. The State Board, which

consists of 13 regular members and one student member, id. § 2-202(a), is charged broadly

with “[d]etermin[ing] the elementary and secondary educational policies of this State,” and

“[c]aus[ing] to be carried out those provisions of this article that are within its jurisdiction,”

id. § 2-205(b)(1) & (2).

       The State Board appoints a state superintendent, who serves as the chief executive,

secretary, and treasurer of the State Board and is charged with “[c]arry[ing] out the

educational policies of the State Board.”           Id. §§ 2-204(c)(1); 2-302(a); 2-303(c)(1).

Through the state superintendent, the State Board “exercise[s] general control and

                                                8
supervision over the public schools and educational interests of this State” and

“establish[es] basic policy and guidelines for the program of instruction for the public

schools.” Id. § 2-205(g)(2) & (h)(1). The State Board is authorized to “adopt bylaws,

rules, and regulations for the administration of the public schools,” id. § 2-205(c); prepare

and send to the Governor, after certification by the state superintendent, “the annual State

public school budget,” which includes State aid to counties, id. § 2-205(j); “explain the true

intent and meaning of the provisions of” the Education Article that are within its

jurisdiction and the bylaws, rules, and regulations it adopts, id. § 2-205(e)(1); and “decide

all controversies and disputes under these provisions,” id. § 2-205(e)(2). This Court has

described the State Board’s broad authority “as a visitatorial power of such comprehensive

character as to invest [it] with the last word on any matter concerning educational policy

or the administration of the system of public education.” Donlon v. Montgomery County

Pub. Schs., 460 Md. 62, 81 (2018) (quoting Bd. of Educ. of Prince George’s County v.

Waeldner, 298 Md. 354, 360 (1984)).

       Title 3 of the Education Article establishes “a county board of education,”

co-extensive with the geographical boundaries of each county in the State, “for each county

school system.” Educ. §§ 3-102, 3-103. State law governs the size, composition, and

manner of selection of the members of each county board of education. See generally id.

§§ 3-105–3-1405. In Harford County, the Board consists of six elected members: one

from each Council district; three members appointed by the County Executive, subject to

the advice and consent of the Council; the county superintendent of schools (ex officio);

and one student member. Id. § 3-6A-01(b), (c) & (d). In the event of a vacancy of an

                                              9
elected member of the Board, the Council is to appoint a qualified individual to serve for

the remainder of the term. Id. § 3-6A-01(f)(1).

       County boards of education are responsible for “educational matters that affect the

counties.” Id. § 4-101(a). Each county board of education is responsible for selecting a

county superintendent, who is to serve as “the executive officer, secretary, and treasurer of

the county board.” Id. § 4-102; see also id. §§ 4-204, 4-205 (setting forth the powers and

duties of county superintendents). Upon the written recommendation of the county

superintendent, each county board is responsible for appointing and setting the salaries of

“all principals, teachers, and other certificated and noncertificated personnel.” Id. § 4-103.

       Under State law, county boards are required, among other things, to carry out

applicable provisions of the Education Article “and the bylaws, rules, regulations, and

policies of the State Board”; maintain throughout their jurisdiction “a reasonably uniform

system of public schools that is designed to provide quality education and equal educational

opportunity for all children”; “determine . . . the educational policies of the county school

system”; and promulgate “bylaws, rules, and regulations not inconsistent with State law,

for the conduct and management of the county public schools.” Id. § 4-108. To carry out

those duties, county boards may establish public schools that, if approved by the state

superintendent, “become[] a part of the State program of public education.” Id. § 4-109.

       Each county board of education must prepare and submit an annual budget

“[s]ubject to the rules and regulations of the State Board and with the advice of the county

superintendent.”    Id. § 5-101(a)(1).      Although budgets are submitted to county

governments, the contents and process for the submission, review, and approval of annual

                                             10
budgets is prescribed by State law, which sets out in detail the categories that must be

included in the budget for receipts and expenses. Id. § 5-101(b). Notably for our purposes,

all “[i]nstructional salaries,” including the salaries of all teachers, aides, psychological

personnel, guidance counselors, and library personnel, constitute a single subcategory of a

county board’s budget. Id. § 5-101(b)(2)(iii).

       In counties with a county executive and council, such as the County, budgets are

due at least 45 days before the date for levying local taxes. Id. § 5-102(b). The county

executive is first charged with identifying in writing categories of the budget to deny or

reduce “and the reason for the denial or reduction.” Id. § 5-102(c)(2). The budget then

goes to the county council, which may “restore any denial or reduction made by the county

executive.” Id. § 5-102(c)(3). The budget must include at least the minimum amount of

funding required by a formula set forth in § 5-2354 of the Education Article. Id. § 5-103(a).

If a county council does not ultimately approve the full amount requested by a county

board, the county board must submit to the council, “within 30 days after the adoption of

the budget, a report indicating how the alterations to the budget will be implemented,

accompanied by reasonable supporting detail and analysis.” Id. § 5-103(c)(2). The county

council is then obligated to levy property taxes that, together with other available revenue,

“will produce the amounts necessary to meet the appropriations made in the approved

annual budget of the county board.” Id. § 5-104(a). During a budget year, a county board

may transfer funds within major budget categories on its own, but must obtain the county

       4
        Section 5-103(a) of the Education Article references § 5-202(d)(1)(i), but § 5-202
was renumbered to § 5-235 in 2021. 2021 Md. Laws ch. 36.
                                             11
council’s approval to transfer funds between major budget categories. Id. § 5-105(b)(1) &

(2).

       County boards are responsible for employing individuals necessary to the operation

of the public schools in the county, but they may not hire anyone as a county

superintendent, supervisor, principal, or teacher unless the individual is eligible to be issued

a certificate by the state superintendent.         Id. §§ 6-101, 6-201(a)(1).      The county

superintendent is responsible for nominating, for the county board’s approval, all

professional assistants in the county superintendent’s office and all principals, teachers,

and other certificated personnel. Id. § 6-201(b)(1). The county superintendent is also

responsible for the assignment, transfer, and recommendation for promotion of those

personnel. Id. § 6-201(b)(2). On recommendation of the county superintendent, a county

board may suspend or dismiss a teacher on specified grounds. Id. § 6-202(a). An appeal

from such a decision may be made to the State Board. Id. § 6-202(a)(4).

       As shown by the discussion above, county boards of education are: (1) integral

parts of the State system of public education, which is established and thoroughly regulated

by State law and ultimately presided over by the State Board; (2) organized, selected, and

funded in significant part on a county level, although through a process grounded in State

law; and (3) in many respects, distinct in their operations from both State and county

entities.

       The unique status of county boards is reflected in other statutes as well. For

example, tort claims against State entities, including the State Board, and related immunity

for State personnel, are governed by the Maryland Tort Claims Act, Md. Code Ann., State

                                              12
Gov’t §§ 12-101–12-110 (2021 Repl.; 2022 Supp.) & Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-522 (2020

Repl.); and tort claims against local government entities, including all counties and

Baltimore City, and related protections for their employees, are governed by the Local

Government Tort Claims Act, Cts. &. Jud. Proc. §§ 5-301–5-304. But tort claims against

county school boards, including the Board, and protections for their members and

employees, are governed by a separate tort claim and immunity regime applicable only to

county boards of education. See id. § 5-518; see also Neal v. Balt. City Bd. of Sch.

Comm’rs, 467 Md. 399, 422-24 (2020) (contrasting approaches taken under the Maryland

Tort Claims Act and Local Government Tort Claims Act with Courts and Judicial

Proceedings § 5-518).      For purposes of tort claims handling, indemnification, and

protection of personnel, county school boards are thus treated both separately and

differently from both State entities and local government entities.

       Maryland’s Public Ethics Law also treats State entities, county entities, and county

school boards separately. The Maryland Public Ethics Law contains provisions addressing

conflicts of interest, financial disclosures, and lobbying that apply generally to State

officials and employees. See Md. Code Ann., Gen’l Provs. §§ 5-101–5-716 (2019 Repl.;

2022 Supp.). Separately, “each county and each municipal corporation” is required to

enact its own regulations governing the public ethics of local officials that, although similar

to those applicable to State officials and employees, may be modified to be more relevant

“in that jurisdiction.” Id. §§ 5-807–5-810. And separately still, county school boards are

required to adopt regulations governing the ethics of their own members and, if they

choose, their officials and employees, that, although similar to the State provisions, may

                                              13
be modified to be more relevant in “that school system.” Id. §§ 5-815–5-818. Other

statutes that distinguish between the State and the various governmental entities within it

also further distinguish between counties and county boards of education, among other

subdivisions. See, e.g., id. § 4-101(j) (defining a “political subdivision” of the State, for

purposes of the Maryland Public Information Act, to include a county, a municipal

corporation, an unincorporated town, a school district, or a special district); State Gov’t

§ 10-1301(f)(2) (defining “unit,” as applicable to non-State entities, as including “a county,

municipality, bi-county, regional, or multicounty agency, county board of education,

public corporation or authority, or any other political subdivision of the State”).5

       B.     Treatment of County School Boards in Caselaw

       Reflecting the complexity of the character of county school boards laid out in the

Maryland Code, this Court has not adopted a uniform determination of the character of

such boards for all purposes. Instead, we have recognized that their character can vary

based on context.     We recently traced the evolution of our caselaw in this area in

determining whether a county school board is part of the executive branch of the State

       5
         Provisions of the Harford County Code similarly treat the Board as an entity
separate from the County and the State. See, e.g., Harford County Code § 235-7(A)(1)(d)
(“The applicant shall also state how many channels, what facilities and what services shall
be provided free of charge to the County, the school systems and the public[.]”); id.
§ 235-10(F) (“On the County and educational channels, the company shall carry or
cablecast such programming as designated by the County or its designated representative
and the school system or its designated representative, respectively.”); id. § 68-8 (“The
government of the county, the County Board of Education and the Board of Trustees of the
Harford Community College are hereby exempted from the provisions of this chapter.”).

                                             14
government for purposes of the State’s Whistleblower Protection Law in Donlon v.

Montgomery County Public Schools, 460 Md. 62 (2018).

       In Donlon, we rejected the petitioner’s contention that county school boards are

State agencies for all purposes. Id. at 79. We acknowledged that several of our prior

opinions had “referred to county boards of education as State entities in a variety of

contexts,” but concluded that “none [we]re consequential to the present case,” both because

the conclusory statements at issue were made in dicta and because they were not explained.

Id. We also observed that courts had uniformly determined that county school boards are

State agencies for purposes of sovereign immunity.6 Id. at 80-81. However, we also noted

that it was possible for an entity to “qualify as a State agency for some purposes, while

being classified as a local agency for other purposes.” Id. at 83 (quoting Wash. Suburban

Sanitary Comm’n v. Phillips, 413 Md. 606, 632 (2010)).7 Looking to our more recent

       6
         See, e.g., Lee-Thomas v. Prince George’s County Pub. Schs., 666 F.3d 244, 248-49
n.5 (4th Cir. 2012) (discussing state and federal decisions recognizing that Maryland’s
county school boards are “instrumentalities of the State” for Eleventh Amendment
immunity purposes); Jones v. Frederick County Bd. of Educ., 689 F. Supp. 535, 538 (D.
Md. 1988) (holding, in the context of an employment discrimination claim, that a county
school board member, superintendent, and school principal, when employed by a county
school board, are state officials protected by Eleventh Amendment immunity); Bd. of Educ.
of Balt. County v. Zimmer-Rubert, 409 Md. 200, 205-06 (2009) (stating, in connection with
sovereign immunity, that this Court has “long considered county school boards to be State
agencies”); Norville v. Anne Arundel County Bd. of Educ., 160 Md. App. 12, 62 (2004)
(concluding that a county school board was “an arm of the State” and so protected by
sovereign immunity), vacated on other grounds sub nom. Anne Arundel County Bd. of
Educ. v. Norville, 390 Md. 93 (2005).
       7
         In Phillips, in the course of concluding that the Washington Suburban Sanitary
Commission was a local entity for certain purposes, we determined that the Commission
“is a ‘hybrid’ entity, which defies simple and definitive categorization as either a ‘State’ or

                                              15
cases, including Chesapeake Charter, Inc. v. Anne Arundel County Board of Education,

358 Md. 129 (2000) and Beka Industries, Inc. v. Worcester County Board of Education,

419 Md. 194 (2011), we concluded in Donlon that county boards of education are agencies

whose character can vary based on context.

      We first summarized our decision in Chesapeake Charter, in which we “elaborated

. . . on the hybrid nature of county school boards of education.” Donlon, 460 Md. at 83.

The issue in Chesapeake Charter was whether the Anne Arundel County Board of

Education is subject to the State’s General Procurement Law and, therefore, to the

jurisdiction of the Maryland State Board of Contract Appeals. Id. (discussing Chesapeake

Charter, 358 Md. at 134). In resolving that question, we explained that county school

boards “are generally regarded as State agencies because they are part of the State public

education system, are subject to extensive supervision and control by the State Board of

Education, and exercise a State function[.]”      Donlon, 460 Md. at 83-84 (quoting

Chesapeake Charter, 358 Md. at 139-40). Nonetheless, we noted that “from a budgetary

and structural perspective, [county school boards] are local in character.” Id. Indeed, we

observed that “in terms of their composition, jurisdiction, funding, and focus, [county

school boards] clearly have a local flavor[.]” Donlon, 460 Md. at 84 (quoting Chesapeake

Charter, 358 Md. at 135-36). We also found it notable that county school boards “retain

unique autonomy aspects, irrespective of the [State Board]’s authority,” that weighed

‘local’ agency or instrumentality for any and all purposes.” 413 Md. at 630 (citation
omitted).
                                             16
against concluding that they were part of the State procurement system. Donlon, 460 Md.

at 85-86.

       Ultimately, in the context presented in Chesapeake Charter, we concluded that “the

county board’s school bus contracts were not subject to the General Procurement Law

because the board did not fall within the purview of the statute.” Id. at 86. We held that

“from a budgetary and structural perspective,” county boards “are local in character[,]” and

they do not comprise “‘divisions of or units within’ the State government.” Id. (quoting

Chesapeake Charter, 358 Md. at 139).

       We next turned to our decision in Beka, which the petitioner in Donlon argued had

limited our holding in Chesapeake Charter. We disagreed. Donlon, 460 Md. at 87. The

relevant issue in Beka “was whether a county board of education retained its right to

sovereign immunity asserted in defense to a breach of contract action under [State

Government] § 12-201.” Id. We concluded that our decision in Chesapeake Charter “did

not foreclose, in Beka, a different analysis and holding” for purposes of the application of

a sovereign immunity waiver. Id. at 87-88. We therefore “reiterated that, for purposes of

Eleventh Amendment/sovereign immunity analysis, local boards of education are entities

of State government.” Id. at 88. The different answers provided in Chesapeake Charter

and Beka concerning whether the county school boards at issue were units of State

government resulted from the different contexts in which the questions arose. See id.

       In turning to the facts of Donlon, we observed that “sovereign immunity [wa]s

extraneous to the purpose and legislative history of the [Whistleblower Protection Law].”

Id. After noting “the local flavor of a county board of education’s budgeting process,”

                                            17
which was central to the outcome of Chesapeake Charter, we observed that “[t]he blend

of State, local, and independent characteristics of a county board extends beyond local

budgetary concerns,” and that “[p]ersonnel matters are inherently local at their inception.”

Id. at 90. Dissecting the relevant provisions of the Education Article, we specifically noted

the special authority of county school boards—“distinct from [the State Board]”—over

personnel matters and discipline. Id. at 91. Because the Whistleblower Protection Law is

a law concerning personnel matters and discipline that is limited in its application only to

State employees, we concluded that it was “not expansive enough . . . to cover under its

umbrella county boards and their school teachers[.]” Id. at 94. We therefore held “that a

county board of education is not an entity of the State . . . for purposes of the

[Whistleblower Protection Law].”8 Id. at 96.

       As clarified in Donlon, county school boards do not have the same character for all

purposes.   To the contrary, they have a “blend of State, local, and independent

characteristics,” id. at 90, that, depending on context, could result in a determination that

they are of a State, local, or independent character for a particular purpose. Which

character prevails depends on an investigation of the particular context and the

       8
        In Donlon, we went on to observe that during the pendency of that litigation, the
General Assembly had expanded whistleblower protection to employees of county school
boards, but chose to do so by enacting a new whistleblower protection law applicable only
to county school boards, rather than by expanding or clarifying the reach of the State
Whistleblower Protection Law. 460 Md. at 97-102. That is yet another example of the
General Assembly treating county boards of education separately from both State and
county entities.
                                             18
characteristics of county school boards that are relevant to that context.        With that

understanding, we turn to the present dispute.

       C.     The Character of the Board for Purposes of Charter § 207

       Charter § 207 establishes the qualifications to be a member of the Council. One of

those requirements is that the individual may not “hold . . . employment in the government

of the State of Maryland[ or] Harford County.” We must therefore determine whether the

Board is of State, county, or independent character in the context of employment with the

Board serving as a qualification for public office in the County.

       The circuit court concluded that the Board is a County agency for purposes of

Charter § 207 because “the issues springing from the controversy here are born from the

Board’s budget and the Council’s role in the Board’s budget.” Observing that this Court

in Chesapeake Charter had concluded that county school board budgetary issues are local

in nature, the circuit court determined that the Board was a County agency for purposes of

Charter § 207.

       If Charter § 207 were a budgetary provision, we would agree with the circuit court’s

reasoning. But it is not. Charter § 207 establishes qualifications to hold office as a member

of the Council, none of which are either expressly or implicitly tied to budget

considerations. They appear in the middle of Article II of the Harford County Charter,

which is titled “Legislative Branch” and contains provisions relating to the personnel,

powers, duties, and operations of the Council. Provisions of the Charter relating to the

budget are found in Article V, titled “Budget and Finance.” Our focus must therefore be

                                             19
on the character of the Board for purposes of employment with it serving as a qualification

(or, here, disqualification) for public office.

       In relevant part, Charter § 207 bases an individual’s qualification to become a

member of the Council on the individual’s status as an employee (or not) of certain

governments, untethered from any role or function of those governments.                Where

applicable, the limitation thus applies equally to all employees of the State, the County, or

any municipality within the County, regardless of the roles those employees perform or

whether their positions are in any way related to any business before the Council. The

limitation applies equally to an administrative assistant employed by the Maryland

Department of Labor, a laborer employed by the State Highway Administration, an

inspector with the Harford County Liquor Control Board, and the Director of Finance of

the Town of Bel Air.

       In Chesapeake Charter, Beka, and Donlon, our analyses turned on the character of

the role or function of the county board as it pertained to the issue in dispute: procurement

matters, sovereign immunity, and personnel matters, respectively. But where affiliation

with the county board is itself the purported disqualification, there is no applicable role or

function of the county board to be analyzed to determine whether it is State, county, or

independent in character. If Charter § 207 applies to county boards of education, it does

so irrespective of the character of their operation in any particular area.

       Because there is no necessary character of a county school board for purposes of

determining whether its employees are eligible to serve in the government of a different

governmental entity, we are ultimately confronted with a question of statutory

                                                  20
interpretation: whether the framers of the Harford County Charter intended Charter § 207

to render employees of the Board ineligible to serve simultaneously on the Council. To

resolve that question, we turn to our canons of statutory construction, which “apply with

equal force to the interpretation of a charter provision.” Prince George’s County v.

Thurston, 479 Md. 575, 586 (2022). As we set forth earlier this term:

      “Our goal is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the legislature and
      we begin that exercise by reviewing the statutory language itself.”
      [Comptroller v.] Citicorp[ Int’l Commc’ns, Inc.], 389 Md. 156, 165 [(2005)]
      (quotations omitted). We read the plain meaning of the language of the
      statute “as a whole, so that no word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered
      surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory.” Wheeling v. Selene Fin.
      LP, 473 Md. 356, 376 (2021) (quoting Koste v. Town of Oxford, 431 Md. 14,
      25-26 (2013) (internal quotations omitted)). “Additionally, we neither add
      nor delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain and
      unambiguous language of the statute, and we do not construe a statute with
      forced or subtle interpretations that limit or extend its application.”
      Wheeling, 473 Md. at 376-77 (quoting Lockshin v. Semsker, 412 Md. 257,
      274 (2010)) (cleaned up). “If the language of the statute is unambiguous and
      clearly consistent with the statute’s apparent purpose, our inquiry as to
      legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the statute as written, without
      resorting to other rules of construction.” Id. at 377 (quoting Lockshin, 412
      Md. at 275). That said, as the Court recently reiterated in Wheeling,

          [w]e, however, do not read statutory language in a vacuum, nor do we
          confine strictly our interpretation of a statute’s plain language to the
          isolated section alone. Rather, the plain language must be viewed
          within the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs,
          considering the purpose, aim, or policy of the Legislature in enacting
          the statute. We presume that the Legislature intends its enactments to
          operate together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and,
          thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the
          extent possible consistent with the statute’s object and scope.

          Where the words of a statute are ambiguous and subject to more than
          one reasonable interpretation, or where the words are clear and
          unambiguous when viewed in isolation, but become ambiguous when
          read as part of a larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the
          ambiguity by searching for legislative intent in other indicia,

                                            21
           including the history of the legislation or other relevant sources
           intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process. In resolving
           ambiguities, a court considers the structure of the statute, how it
           relates to other laws, its general purpose, and the relative rationality
           and legal effect of various competing constructions.

           In every case, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation,
           not one that is absurd, illogical, or incompatible with common sense.

       473 Md. at 377 (quoting Lockshin, 412 Md. at 275-76) (internal quotations
       omitted).

Comptroller v. FC-GEN Operations Invs. LLC, 482 Md. 343, 379-81 (2022).

       We have recognized another canon of statutory interpretation applicable specifically

to provisions relating to candidate qualification: When statutory language is ambiguous,

there is “a presumption in favor of the eligibility of one who has been elected or appointed

to a public office.” Mayor & Comm’rs of Westernport v. Green, 144 Md. 85, 89 (1923);

see also Abrams v. Lamone, 398 Md. 146, 179-80 (2007) (discussing the presumption in

favor of eligibility).

       Because county boards of education are not inherently of either State or county

character, and Charter § 207 does not expressly mention the Board, the language of the

provision sheds no light on whether the Board should be considered a State or County

entity, or neither, for purposes of determining the qualifications of a member of the

Council.

       Context provided by other sections of the Charter suggests that the framers did not

view the Board as part of the County government. Article IV of the Charter identifies the

administrative organization of the County.        Section 401 provides that “[e]xcept as

otherwise provided in this Charter or in state law, all agencies of the County government

                                             22
shall be subject to the direction, supervision, and control of the County Executive.”

(Emphasis added). Section 402 then identifies 11 agencies as being within the executive

branch of the County government, along with “any other agencies established by law.”9

The Board is not among the agencies listed. Indeed, the sole mention of the Board in the

Charter is in § 409, which concerns the Harford County Department of Parks and

Recreation. In setting out duties of the Director of that department, § 409(b) requires the

Director to “encourage the development of cooperative programs and joint use of facilities

with the Board of Education[.]” The only mention of the Board in the Charter is thus a

direction that a County department seek to cooperate with it.

       The County directs us to Charter § 502, which contains definitions “of terms used

in” Article V, the Budget and Finance Article. The first definition is: “The term of

‘County’ or ‘County government’ shall include all agencies and their officers, agents, and

employees who receive or disburse County funds.” As a recipient of County funds, the

Board falls squarely within that definition, which the County encourages us to apply as

well to Charter § 207. To do so, however, we would have to ignore both (1) the express

limitation on the scope of that definition to the provisions of Article V and (2) the much

different scope of County government agencies identified in Article IV. Contrary to the

       9
         As we observed in Donlon, “§ 8-201 of the State Government . . . Article lists 19
[now 21] principal departments of the Executive branch of State government,” and “county
boards of education are not” among them. Donlon, 460 Md. at 82. As we also noted in
Donlon, the State Department of Education is not listed in § 8-201 either, but it is separately
identified as a “principal department of the State Government” in Education § 2-101. Id.
at 82 n.8. The Board is thus not identified in the laws of the State or the County as a
principal department or agency of either.
                                              23
County’s view, the decision of the framers of the Charter to expressly limit the applicability

of that broad definition of “County” only to the Budget and Finance Article suggests that

they understood the term to have a narrower—or at least a different—meaning when used

elsewhere in the Charter.

       Our consideration of “the purpose, aim, or policy” underlying Charter § 207,

FC-GEN, 482 Md. at 380, sheds little additional light on our inquiry. Section 207 does not

identify its purpose. It does not state why individuals employed by the State, the County,

or a municipality in the County are precluded from serving on the Council, nor is that

readily apparent from the set of entities included. If the intent underlying the restriction is

to avoid a conflict concerning the Council’s budgeting responsibilities, as the circuit court

seemed to conclude, it would appear to be both overly broad (in its application to all State

employees) and overly narrow (in its omission of non-governmental entities that receive or

benefit from County funding). An intent to avoid overlap with governmental entities over

which the Council exercises some measure of control also would not explain the inclusion

of State government employees. And an intent to avoid entanglement with all other

governmental entities, as suggested by the County, seems inconsistent with the omission

of the federal government—which, notably, is included in the analogous provision

applicable to the County Executive, see Charter § 305—and the governments of

neighboring jurisdictions. Nor is it readily apparent how precluding service by public

schoolteachers would further that goal.       We are therefore unable to discern a clear

legislative purpose underlying Charter § 207 to aid in our interpretation.

                                              24
       Although context suggests that the framers of the Charter did not view the Board as

part of the County government, we do not find that context strong enough to be dispositive.

As a result, after considering the plain language, context, and purpose of Charter § 207, we

conclude that the provision is ambiguous with respect to whether employment with the

Board disqualifies an individual from simultaneous service on the Council. We therefore

turn to other indicia of legislative intent.

       The scant legislative history that might reflect on the question before us consists

mostly of explanations provided by one member of the Charter Board during a January 27,

1971 public hearing. During that hearing, in response to comments from the County

superintendent of schools, Charter Board member Robert J. Carson explained his view that

the Board was part of a state education system and, therefore, that the “[s]uperintendent

and all the employees underneath of that [position], I don’t think, will be affected in any

way by the charter,” with the possible exception of school construction bonds. He also

explained that the County lacked the authority to alter the manner of selecting members of

the Board. And in responding to a different inquiry about why education was not included

in the Charter, Mr. Carson stated that was because “the State alone controls the educational

system in this State and forbids the Counties passing local laws in respect to schools.” He

observed, however, that the County pays for a portion of the education system, as required

by State law, and that the County Executive and the Council would scrutinize that part of

the budget. To the extent these comments can be understood to reflect the understanding

                                               25
of the Charter Board as a whole,10 they are evidence that the framers did not consider the

Board to be an agency of the County government. Although the same comments indicate

that the framers understood the Board to be part of the Statewide system of public

education, they do not necessarily suggest that the Charter Board members viewed it as an

entity of the State government. That subject simply did not come up.

       Legislative history also strengthens our conclusion that the definition of “County”

included in Charter § 502 was not intended to apply outside of Article V of the Charter. In

the first draft of the Charter, the term “County” was not defined in Article V. However,

§ 910(l), in what was then the General Provisions Article, provided: “The word ‘agency’

when used to designate a subordinate element of government shall be construed as

including all offices, departments, institutions, boards, commissions, and corporations of

the County government and, when so specified, all offices, departments, institutions,

boards, commissions, and corporations which receive or disburse County funds.” In a

letter, the County Superintendent of Schools expressed concern that the definition could be

interpreted as applying to the Board and expressed the Board’s view that it would not be

“appropriate for us to be considered an agency of County government.” The version of the

       10
          Ordinarily, the views expressed by one member of the legislative body would not
necessarily provide much insight into the intent of the entire body. State v. Phillips, 457
Md. 481, 488-89 (2018) (“The views expressed by individual members of the legislative
(or Constitutional) body as part of the debate may be considered, subject to the critical
caveat that those views may not have been shared by anyone else and, to that extent, may
be irrelevant.”). Here, however, Mr. Carson was one of just five members of the Charter
Board, and his statements were made without contradiction while seated with at least three
of the other members of the board in responding to questions raised about the draft charter
at a public hearing.
                                            26
Charter that was ultimately adopted included the definition of “County” now contained in

§ 502, perhaps to identify Article V as the “so specified” portion of the Charter in which

all entities that receive or disburse County funds are to be treated as County agencies.

       The legislative history of Charter § 207, alongside the plain language and context

of the provision, is sufficient to rule out the possibility that the framers of the Charter would

have viewed employees of the Board as County employees for purposes of that provision.

It does not, however, resolve whether they would have viewed employees of the Board as

State employees. Nor have the parties pointed us to any other indicia of legislative intent

that provide a definite conclusion.

       Considering the remaining unresolved ambiguity, we reach our resolution of the

scope of Charter § 207 as applied to employees of the Board by invoking the canon of

construction establishing “a presumption in favor of the eligibility of one who has been

elected or appointed to a public office.” Green, 144 Md. at 89; see also Abrams, 398 Md.

at 179-80. As described succinctly in an Opinion of the Attorney General:

       Constitutional and statutory provisions that impose restrictions on the
       eligibility of a person to hold public office are construed liberally in favor of
       the eligibility of the person to hold the office. See 63C Am.Jur.2d Public
       Officers and Employees §53 at pp. 497-98 (observing that the case law
       generally holds that “[i]f there is any doubt or ambiguity in the applicable
       provisions, such doubt or ambiguity must be resolved in favor of eligibility”);
       see also 67 C.J.S. Officers §23 at pp. 175-76 (“The courts have a duty to
       liberally construe words limiting the right of a person to hold office”). The
       underlying basis for the presumption of eligibility is to favor the right of the
       voters to select their public officers. Id.

91 Op. Att’y 99, 103 (2006).

                                               27
          This Court applied the presumption in favor of eligibility in Green, in which the

Circuit Court for Allegany County had found an individual ineligible to serve as clerk of

Westernport, Maryland due to his service in the General Assembly when, the circuit court

found, an increase in the salary for the clerk position “was virtually directed by [a] statute

passed [by the General Assembly] during his legislative term.” 144 Md. at 87. The circuit

court issued a writ of mandamus removing the clerk from office. Id. at 89. This Court

disagreed with the circuit court’s interpretation of the effect of the relevant statute, and then

stated:

          There is a presumption in favor of the eligibility of one who has been elected
          or appointed to a public office. 22 R. C. L. 400. Before his removal can be
          compelled by mandamus his constitutional or statutory disqualification
          should be clearly apparent. In this case the alleged ineligibility is not
          sufficiently demonstrated to require us to declare the appointment invalid. It
          will, therefore, be necessary to reverse the order for the writ of mandamus
          which directed the office to be vacated.

Id.11

          The principle underlying the presumption in favor of candidate eligibility is that

“[t]here is nothing more fundamental to our society than the ability of our electorate to

choose its leaders.” Becker v. Dean, 854 So. 2d 864, 869 (La. 2003); see also id. (“The

purpose of the election process is to provide the electorate with a wide choice of

candidates. . . . Thus, the interests of the state and its citizens are best served when election

laws are interpreted so as to give the electorate the widest possible choice of candidates.”);

          11
         We also discussed the same presumption in Abrams but determined that it was
inapplicable there because the constitutional provision in dispute was not ambiguous. 398
Md. at 179-80.
                                               28
In re Farnese, 17 A.3d 357, 372 (Pa. 2011) (“[T]he Election Code must ‘be liberally

construed to protect a candidate’s right to run for office and the voters’ right to elect the

candidate of their choice.’” (quoting In re Nomination Petition of Driscoll, 847 A.2d 44,

49 (Pa. 2004))); State ex rel. Kelly v. Cuyahoga County Bd. of Elections, 639 N.E.2d 78,

79 (Ohio 1994) (“Words limiting the right of a person to hold office are to be given a liberal

construction in favor of those seeking to hold office, in order that the public may have the

benefit of choice from all those who are in fact and in law qualified.” (quoting State ex rel.

Schenck v. Shattuck, 439 N.E.2d 891, 893 (Ohio 1982))); Sears v. Bayoud, 786 S.W.2d

248, 251 (Tex. 1990) (“We have repeatedly recognized the principle that constitutional

provisions which restrict the right to hold public office should be strictly construed against

ineligibility.”).

       In recognition of the public interest in strictly construing laws limiting eligibility for

public office to protect the right of voters to choose their elected officials, we continue to

adhere to the presumption in favor of eligibility when laws imposing restrictions are

ambiguous. Applying that presumption here to resolve the ambiguity in Charter § 207, we

hold that it does not preclude Mr. Bennett from serving as a member of the Council while

maintaining his position as a public schoolteacher employed by the Board.

                    II. THE DOCTRINE OF INCOMPATIBLE POSITIONS

       The circuit court also determined that Mr. Bennett is barred from simultaneously

serving as a member of the Council and an employee of the Board by the common law

doctrine of incompatible positions.          Under that doctrine, an individual cannot

simultaneously hold two offices that are incompatible with each other. Lilly v. Jones, 158

                                              29
Md. 260, 265-66 (1930); see also Hetrich v. County Comm’rs of Anne Arundel County,

222 Md. 304, 308 (1960). “The fundamental test of incompatibility . . . is whether there is

a present or prospective conflict of interest, as where one office is subordinate to the other

or subject to supervision by the other, or where the incumbent of one office has the power

to appoint or remove or to set the salary of the other.” Hetrich, 222 Md. at 308.

Incompatibility is determined by “the character and relation of the offices,” id. (quoting

Lilly, 158 Md. at 266), and “whether there is a present or prospective conflict of interest,”

Hetrich, 222 Md. at 308. If an officer accepts two offices that are incompatible with each

other, the officer generally must vacate the first one the officer accepted. Id.

       Hetrich and Lilly are instructive as to when two offices are incompatible. In Hetrich,

a Board of County Commissioners appointed one of its members to serve as the Acting

County Business Manager. Id. at 307. The trial court concluded that the positions were

incompatible. Id. at 306-07. This Court agreed, noting that, by statute: (1) the Board of

County Commissioners had direct authority over the County Business Manager, including

the power to appoint, remove, and set the salary for the position; and (2) the manager was

“responsible to the board of county commissioners for the proper administration of all

affairs of the county[.]” Id. at 308.

       In Lilly, this Court held that service on the Baltimore City Service Commission and

the Port Development Commission of Baltimore City, both appointments by the Mayor of

Baltimore City, were incompatible. 158 Md. at 265-66. The Baltimore City Service

Commission was responsible for classifying all municipal offices and positions in the City

of Baltimore, including those of the Port Development Commission, and “no appointment

                                             30
to any such offices or places [could] be made except under the rules of the” Baltimore City

Service Commission. Id. at 262. In that way, “[t]he powers and duties of the Port

Development Commission in the matter of appointments [we]re subject to the supervisory

powers of the City Service Commission[.]” Id. at 266. The purpose of the division between

the classification power of the Baltimore City Service Commission and the appointment

power held by the various other entities in the City government was “to provide a merit

system of appointment for the City of Baltimore.” Id. at 262. In light of that, we held that

“to permit one person to exercise the powers of both commissions would not only allow

[that person] to exercise powers that are inconsistent, but would defeat the very object and

purpose of the creation of the City Service Commission.” Id. at 266.

       Returning to the dispute before us, any possible conflict between the positions of

Council member and public schoolteacher is too attenuated to run afoul of the doctrine of

incompatible positions. In Hetrich, we identified two examples of “a present or prospective

conflict of interest” that would fail the “fundamental test of incompatibility”: (1) “where

one office is subordinate to the other or subject to supervision by the other,” or (2) “where

the incumbent of one office has the power to appoint or remove or to set the salary of the

other.” 222 Md. at 308. Here, neither position is subordinate to or subject to supervision

by the other. A teacher in the Harford County school system is subordinate to and subject

to the supervision of the Board, the County Superintendent, and, presumably, the principal

and other administrators in the school in which the teacher is placed. To the extent a teacher

has a right to appeal certain decisions of the Board, such as those related to discipline, that

right of appeal is to the State Board, not the Council. Educ. §§ 6-203, 6-202(a)(4); see,

                                              31
e.g., Donlon, 460 Md. at 70-73. The Council plays no role in any aspect of the supervision

of Board employees.

       Nor does the Council have the power to appoint, remove, or set the salary of a public

schoolteacher employed by the Board. Rather, subject to the State Board’s role in setting

standards for teachers and certifying them, Educ. §§ 2-205(b), (c) & (g), 6-101,

6-202(c)(3), the County Superintendent and the Board in some combination hold the power

to appoint, id. § 4-103(a), remove, id. § 6-202(a), and set the salary, id. §§ 4-103(a)(2),

6-201(f), of a public schoolteacher. The Council’s role with respect to the Board’s budget

is also limited, constrained to approving or reducing broad categories of spending, one of

which is all salaries of all teachers, administrators, and other personnel in the system. Id.

§§ 5-102(b), 5-105(b). If the Council fails to approve the full amount requested in the

Board’s budget, it is for the Board to decide how to adjust its spending. Id. § 5-103(c).

Simply put, the Council’s role concerning the Board’s overall budget does not provide it

with any power to appoint, remove, or set the salary of an individual teacher.12

       We also do not discern any incompatibility between the Council’s limited role in

the selection of members of the Board and employment as a public schoolteacher. The

       12
          The parties included in the record an advice letter from Assistant Attorney
General Kathryn M. Rowe opining that it would not “violate the common law doctrine of
incompatibility of offices for a teacher in Carroll County to also serve as a County
Commissioner.” Assistant Attorney General Rowe observed that “[t]he County
Commissioners do not have supervisory authority over teachers, do not set policy for the
school system, and do not have the authority to hire or fire teachers.” She further noted
that the Commissioners’ limited impact on the school system’s budget, “and thus some
possible impact on teachers[’] salaries,” was “too attenuated to create incompatibility
between the positions.” At least as applied to the facts here, we agree with that analysis.

                                             32
Council must approve of the County Executive’s selection of three of the nine voting

members of the Board, whether for a full term or to fill a vacancy. Id. § 3-6A-01(d)(1)(ii)

& (f)(2). And, in the case of a mid-term vacancy in any of the six elected seats on the

Board, the Council may fill the vacancy “for the remainder of the term.”                      Id.

§ 3-6A-01(f)(1). But neither of those responsibilities provides the Council with any

supervisory authority over a public schoolteacher, or with the ability to hire, fire, discipline,

or set the salary of such a teacher. The Council’s role is simply too remote from the

position of any individual teacher to violate the doctrine of incompatibility.13

       Nor does any inherent incompatibility arise from the possibility that a public

schoolteacher might favor policy decisions that enhance education in the County or provide

additional funding for it, any more than a similar possibility that a business owner might

favor policy decisions that enhance the business climate in the County or provide for

additional spending on infrastructure that might benefit that individual’s business. The

doctrine of incompatible positions precludes service in roles that are specifically

incompatible, such as the roles at issue in Hetrich and Lilly. It does not preclude service

by individuals who might benefit generally or indirectly from the roles they fulfill. Indeed,

by making residency in one’s Council district a qualification for election, the Charter

ensures the election of Council members who will be able to benefit generally from the

Council’s decisions.

       13
          We offer no opinion concerning whether any applicable code of ethics would
require Mr. Bennett to recuse himself from voting on any individual issue that may come
before the Council during his tenure.
                                               33
                                     CONCLUSION

          In summary, we hold that Mr. Bennett was not barred by (1) Section 207 of the

Harford County Charter or (2) the doctrine of incompatibility, from serving as a member

of the Harford County Council while simultaneously employed as a teacher by the Harford

County Board of Education. For that reason, we reversed the declaratory judgment and

order issued by the Circuit Court for Harford County entered on February 15, 2023 and

remanded the case to the circuit court for entry of: (1) a declaratory judgment that

Mr. Bennett is qualified to serve as a member of the Harford County Council while being

employed as a teacher by the Harford County Board of Education; and (2) any injunctive

relief that may be necessary and appropriate to implement and enforce that declaratory

relief.

                                            34
Circuit Court for Harford County
Case No. C-12-CV-22-000857
Argued: April 4, 2023                               IN THE SUPREME COURT

                                                         OF MARYLAND*

                                                               No. 38

                                                     September Term, 2022
                                             __________________________________

                                                        JACOB BENNETT

                                                                   v.

                                               HARFORD COUNTY, MARYLAND
                                             __________________________________

                                                    Fader, C.J.,
                                                    Watts,
                                                    Hotten,
                                                    Booth,
                                                    Biran,
                                                    Gould,
                                                    Eaves,

                                                             JJ.
                                             __________________________________

                                                 Dissenting Opinion by Gould, J.
                                             __________________________________

                                                    Filed: August 30, 2023

* During the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court
of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
       The Majority Opinion reaches two conclusions. First, that the Harford County

Charter (“Charter”) section 207 does not preclude Mr. Bennett from serving on the Harford

County Council (“Council”) because, under the circumstances here, his employer, the

Harford County Board of Education (“Board”), lacks the character or qualities of either a

State or County government. Second, that the doctrine of incompatible positions does not

preclude Mr. Bennett from serving as both a schoolteacher and a Council member

simultaneously. I respectfully disagree with both conclusions.

                      The Plain Language of Charter Section 207

       Section 207 of the Charter provides: “During the term of office, the Council member

shall not hold any other office of profit or employment in the government of the State of

Maryland, Harford County, or any municipality within Harford County, except a position

held by virtue of being a Council member.”

       In construing section 207, the Majority focuses on the identity of the entity that

employs Mr. Bennett, stating that section 207 “prohibits an individual from serving as a

Council member if, among other things, the individual is employed by the State of

Maryland or the County.” Maj. slip op. at 7 (emphasis added). From that premise, the

Majority surveys caselaw that addresses whether certain state statutes treat local boards of

education as State or County governmental entities. See Donlon v. Montgomery Cnty. Pub.

Schs., 460 Md. 62 (2018) (holding county boards of education are state governmental

entities for purposes of Maryland’s Whistleblower Protection Law, Md. Code Ann., State

Pers. & Pens. §§ 5-301–5-314 (1993, Repl. Vol. 2015)); Beka Indus., Inc. v. Worcester

Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 419 Md. 194 (2011) (holding county boards of education are state
governmental entities for purposes of sovereign immunity under Md. Code Ann., State

Gov’t § 12-201 (2014, Repl. Vol. 2021)); Chesapeake Charter, Inc. v. Anne Arundel Cnty.

Bd. of Educ., 358 Md. 129 (2000) (county boards of education are not state governmental

entities for purposes of the General Procurement Law, Md. Code Ann., State Fin. & Proc.

§§ 11-101(x), 11-202 (1985, Repl. Vol. 2021)). Respectfully, whether a particular State

statute—which reflects only the intent of the General Assembly—applies to a local board

of education tells us little about the meaning and intent behind section 207 of the Charter.

       In my view, the Majority misconstrues section 207. Section 207 requires us to ask

whether Mr. Bennett holds “employment in the government of the State of Maryland,

Harford County, or any municipality within Harford County,” (emphasis added), not which

entity serves as his official employer. As a teacher in the County public school system,

Mr. Bennett clearly holds employment in either the State or County government. That the

Board—a creature of State statute that can be viewed as either a State or County entity

depending on the circumstances—cuts Mr. Bennett’s paycheck is beside the point.

       Furnishing a free, public education system is a primary function of this State’s

government. Article VIII, Section 1 of the Maryland Constitution provides: “The General

Assembly, at its First Session after the adoption of this Constitution, shall by Law establish

throughout the State a thorough and efficient System of Free Public Schools; and shall

provide by taxation, or otherwise, for their maintenance.” The General Assembly carried

out this mandate by enacting the statutes contained in the Education Article. This Court

has previously described the constitutional and statutory framework as establishing a

“shared responsibility between State and local governments for public school education

                                              2
and emphasizing the need for a measure of local control and initiative.” Hornbeck v.

Somerset Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 295 Md. 597, 630 (1983). Importantly, when we made that

statement, we relied on sources that predated the 1972 adoption of the Charter. Id. & n.9

(citing Green Comm’n, Report of Maryland Commission to Re-Study and Re-Evaluate the

Philosophy and Practices of the Finances of the Public Schools (1962); Hughes Comm’n,

Report of Senate Committee on Taxation and Fiscal Matters (1963); and Hughes Comm’n,

Report of the Commission to Study the State's Role in Financing Public Education (1971)).

The framers of the Charter presumably understood the shared responsibility between the

governments of the County and the State in providing for and funding Harford County

public schools. The Charter’s various provisions should be construed in that light.

       As a teacher in Harford County’s public school system, Mr. Bennett is on the

frontlines in executing a specific governmental function for which both the State and

County governments share responsibility. That the General Assembly chose to implement

its constitutional mandate by creating local boards of education that serve as the official

employers of public school teachers does not obscure the governmental nature of Mr.

Bennett’s job as a teacher. The General Assembly could change the structure of the public

school system at any time, but Mr. Bennett’s role as a teacher in the government-

established and government-funded school system would remain unchanged. One way or

the other, Mr. Bennett is employed “in” either the State or County government. The

Majority’s exercise in characterizing the nature of the entity that formally employs Mr.

Bennett—which is merely an instrument devised by the General Assembly to implement

its constitutional mandate—misses the forest for the trees.

                                             3
                                   Charter Section 502

       The Charter certainly treats Mr. Bennett as a County employee. Section 502

provides a list of “[d]efinition[s] of terms used in this article.” There, “County” or “County

government” is defined to “include all agencies and their officers, agents, and employees

who receive or disburse County funds.” Charter § 502(a). It then defines “County funds”

as “any monies appropriated or approved by the Council or to which the County may at

any time have legal or equitable title.” Charter § 502(b).

       The Majority acknowledges that “[a]s a recipient of County funds, the Board falls

squarely within [section 502’s definition of County government],” but dismisses the

relevance of that provision to section 207 because of “both (1) the express limitation on

the scope of that definition to the provisions of Article V and (2) the much different scope

of County government agencies identified in Article IV.” Maj. slip. op. at 23. I respectfully

disagree with the Majority on both fronts.

       First, nothing in section 502 can be properly characterized as an “express limitation

on the scope” of the definitions set forth therein. The language on which the Majority

relies is found exclusively in the title of section 502, which reads in full: “Section 502.

Definition of terms used in this article.” That language does not constitute an “express

limitation on the scope” of section 502’s definitions. Rather, that language, combined with

the definitions that follow in section 502, provides the reader with interpretive tools to

make sense out of words and phrases that are repeatedly used in Article V, which is entitled

“Budget and Finance.” Relevant here, “County” or “County government” is used 65 times

                                              4
in the subsequent provisions of Article V. So, it makes sense that the framers saw fit to

define those words in that Article.

       But that doesn’t render irrelevant such definitions for the purposes of section 207.

To the contrary, the sweeping breadth of section 502’s definition of “County” or “County

government” to include any entity or person who receives any funding from the County is

entirely consistent with the sweeping breadth of section 207’s prohibition of Council

members from holding “any other office of profit or employment in the government of the

State of Maryland, Harford County, or any municipality within Harford County[.]”

(emphasis added). Absent express language in either section 207 or section 502 requiring

otherwise, these sections of the Charter should be construed in harmony, which means that

employment “in” County government under section 207 would include any person

considered a County employee under section 502. See O’Connor v. Baltimore County, 382

Md. 102, 113 (2004) (“Local ordinances and charters are interpreted under the same canons

of construction that apply to the interpretation of statutes.”); Moore v. RealPage Util.

Mgmt., Inc., 476 Md. 501, 512 (2021) (“The Court presumes that the Legislature intends

its enactments to operate together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and,

therefore, attempts to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the extent possible

consistent with the statute’s object and scope.” (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting

State v. Johnson, 415 Md. 413, 421–22 (2010)).

       Second, the Majority’s reliance on Article IV is misplaced. Starting from the

premise that the Board is an agency, the Majority notes that section 401 places all agencies

of the County government under the control of the County Executive. Thus, according to

                                             5
the Majority, if the Board is intended by the Charter to be a County agency, one would

expect to find the Board on the list of the agencies under executive branch control. The

Majority notes that the list of such agencies is found in section 402, and the Board is not

on it. The Majority reasons that this indicates that the framers did not intend for the Board

to be considered a County agency. The Majority sees this tension between sections 401

and 402—which don’t include the Board as part of the County government—with the

definition of County government in section 502—which does include the Board—as an

indication that the definitions in section 502 were meant to be cabined to Article V, and

not applicable elsewhere in the Charter.

       The problem with the Majority’s reasoning is that it doesn’t give meaning to the

prefatory words of section 401, which provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this

Charter or in state law, all agencies of the County government shall be subject to the

direction, supervision, and control of the County Executive.” The phrase “[e]xcept as

otherwise provided in this Charter or in state law” is critical. It means that, if provided

elsewhere in the Charter or otherwise in State law, an agency can be part of the County

government even if it is not under the control of the executive branch. And, in section 502,

the Charter does otherwise provide that the Board is part of the County government and

that a teacher is employed in the County government. Thus, by the plain language of

section 401, any tension between section 401 and section 502 is resolved in favor of the

latter. Sections 401 and 402 are not, therefore, impediments to construing sections 207 and

502 together.

                                             6
       In sum, when section 207 is read in conjunction with section 502, Mr. Bennett’s

status as a teacher means that he holds employment in the County government and is thus

ineligible to serve as a member of the Council. I would hold, therefore, that so long as Mr.

Bennett remains employed as a teacher in the County public school system, he is ineligible

to serve as a Council member. Accordingly, I would affirm the circuit court’s judgment

on that basis.

                         The Doctrine of Incompatible Positions

       The Majority correctly states:

       Under [the doctrine of incompatible positions], an individual cannot
       simultaneously hold two offices that are incompatible with each other. . . .
       “The fundamental test of incompatibility . . . is whether there is a present or
       prospective conflict of interest, as where one office is subordinate to the other
       or subject to supervision by the other, or where the incumbent of one office
       has the power to appoint or remove or to set the salary of the other.” . . .
       Incompatibility is determined by “the character and relation of the offices,” .
       . . and “whether there is a present or prospective conflict of interest[.]” . . .
       If an officer accepts two offices that are incompatible with each other, the
       officer generally must vacate the first one the officer accepted.

Maj. slip op. at 29-30 (internal citations omitted).

       In my view, the positions of teacher and Council member meet this test of

incompatibility. As the Majority acknowledges, the Board wields considerable power in

appointing, removing, and setting the salaries of teachers. The Board also has considerable

input in setting the Board’s budget. The Council, in turn, has a significant role in choosing

the members of the Board. Indeed, the Council has veto authority over three of the nine

Board members appointed by the County Executive.                   Md. Code Ann., Educ.

§ 3-6A-01(d)(1)(ii) (2008, 2022 Repl. Vol.).           Presumably, the General Assembly

                                              7
determined that such veto authority would have a meaningful impact on the constitution of

the Board.

       Because a teacher’s salary and working conditions are determined in large part by

the Board, and the Council plays a material role in the selection of the Board members, it

seems obvious that the position of Council member is incompatible with the position of a

teacher. Think of it this way: if each Council member were a teacher in a County public

school, those teachers would have a significant role in selecting the teachers’ negotiating

counterparts in setting teacher compensation. The potential for a conflict of interest is, in

my view, readily apparent. As such, I would affirm the circuit court on that basis as well.

       Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

                                              8