Acting (law)
In law, a person is acting in a position if they are not serving in the position on a permanent basis. This may be the case if the position has not yet been formally created, the person is only occupying the position on an interim basis, the person does not have a mandate, or if the person meant to execute the role is incompetent or incapacitated.
Business
Organizations are advised to have a succession plan including the designation of an acting CEO if the person in that job vacates that position before a replacement has been determined. For example, the lead director on the board of directors may be designated to assume the responsibilities of the CEO until the board finds a new CEO.[1]
Politics
Examples of acting positions in politics include:
Legal frameworks
Commonwealth
In Commonwealth countries including Australia and Canada, the Carltona doctrine is the overarching legal principle governing when a minister may be said to be acting for or on behalf of a government department.[2][3]
United States
The 1910 edition of Black's Law Dictionary defines "acting" as a "term employed to designate a locum tenens who is performing the duties of an office to which he does not himself claim title".[4] The 1914 edition of Corpus Juris Secundum gives much the same account.[5]
Fraser v. United States, the first case cited in the Black's entry on "acting", concerns James G. Hill, the Supervising Architect of the Treasury. Hill had been suspended with pay while being investigated for a charge of fraud. Another person, John Fraser, was then directed by the Secretary of the Treasury to take charge of and perform the duties of Hill's office as "Acting" Supervising Architect. Officially, Fraser was merely a contractor who had been contracted to oversee the construction of a building for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. When Hill was returned to his position some five and a half months later, Fraser sought to be compensated for the time he had worked as Acting Supervising Architect, seeking the difference between the salary for that office and his much lower pay as a contracting architect for the Treasury. The Court of Claims found that the "acting" position was not a statutory creation, and that Fraser was entitled to no pay beyond that of his contract for the period.[6]
The rules for appointment of acting officials are covered in many cases by the Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998 (FVRA).[7] Legal scholar Anne Joseph O'Connell notes that one central—and unresolved—question about the nature of acting officials under FVRA is their status under the Appointments Clause of the Constitution of the United States.[8] O'Connell observes that portions of FVRA, an act of Congress which sets out a detailed scheme for filling vacant positions in federal agencies, may be unconstitutional if acting officials can be "principal" officers under the Appointments Clause.[8] The constitutional issue emerges because the Appointments Clause requires principal officers to be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. If acting officers who take office pursuant to FVRA—not pursuant to presidential nomination and Senate confirmation—can be considered principal officers, then the FVRA would be unconstitutional to the extent that it allows this to occur.[9] Heilpern, for his part, argues that acting Cabinet-level officials are principal officers.[10]
See also
References
- Ann Brockett, Zabihollah Rezaee, Corporate Sustainability: Integrating Performance and Reporting (2012), p. 139.
- McMillan 2000: 'The prevailing presumption of Anglo-Australian public law, articulated in the Carltona case … was that: [t]he duties imposed upon ministers and the powers given to ministers are normally exercised under the authority of the ministers by responsible officials of the department'.
- Malkin 2008, pp. 547–548.
- Black, Henry Campbell (1910). Black's Law Dictionary. Saint Paul, Minnesota: West. 23 – via Wikisource.
A term employed to designate a locum tenens who is performing the duties of an office to which he does not himself claim title; e.g., "Acting Supervising Architect." Fraser v. United States, 16 Ct. Cl. 514. An acting executor is one who assumes to act as executor for a decedent, not being the executor legally appointed or the executor in fact. Morse v. Allen, 99 Mich. 303, 58 N. W. 327. An acting trustee is one who takes upon himself to perform some or all of the trusts mentioned in a will. Sharp v. Sharp, 2 Barn. & Ald. 415.
[scan ] - Mack, William; Hale, William Benjamin, eds. (1914). "Acting". Corpus Juris Secundum. 1. New York: American Law Book Company. pp. 913–914 – via Internet Archive.
- Fraser v. United States, 16 Ct. Cl. 507, 1800 WL 1254 (1880).
- Brannon, Valerie C. (20 July 2018). "The Vacancies Act: A Legal Overview" (PDF). U.S. Congressional Research Service. pp. 9–13. Retrieved 8 November 2018. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- O'Connell 2020, p. 660.
- O'Connell 2020, p. 662 (note 238).
- Heilpern 2019, p. 265: "… this article shows that under current Supreme Court case law, an interim Cabinet Head is clearly an 'Officer of the United States'".
Sources
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Black, Henry Campbell (1910). Black's Law Dictionary. Saint Paul, Minnesota: West. 23 – via Wikisource. [scan ]
- Heilpern, James A. (2019). "Acting Officers" (PDF). George Mason Law Review. 27 (1): 263–306.
- Malkin, Alissa (2008). "Government Reorganization and the Transfer of Powers: Does Certainty Matter?". Ottawa Law Review. 39 (3): 537–570. SSRN 2714178.
- McMillan, John (7 November 2000). "Parliament and Administrative Law". Research Paper 13 2000-01. Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
- O'Connell, Anne Joseph (2020). "Actings". Columbia Law Review. 120 (3): 613–728. doi:10.2307/26910475. ISSN 0010-1958. JSTOR 26910475.