*127 Opinion
Does a city elections official have authority to refuse to certify an initiative petition based on extrinsic evidence relating to the manner of its circulation? We conclude that she does not, and that an elections official’s role in certifying an initiative petition is confined to the ministerial task of examining the four comers of the petition for compliance with submission requirements. Here, a city clerk refused to certify an initiative petition after deciding based on extrinsic evidence that it was circulated in violation of state law. This fact finding exceeded the scope of the clerk’s lawful ministerial duties, and the trial court properly issued a writ of mandate directing the clerk to certify the initiative petition. Therefore, we affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
In June 2001, respondent Alliance for a Better Downtown Millbrae (Alliance) circulated a petition seeking to have the “Downtown Zoning Initiative” (DZI) placed on the Millbrae ballot. If passed, the DZI would have amended Millbrae’s zoning ordinance to restrict the density of restaurants, adult businesses, and certain other establishments in a specific section of downtown Millbrae. After obtaining approximately 1,500 signatures, the Alliance submitted the DZI petition (Petition) to the Millbrae City Clerk, appellant Cheryl Mitchell Wade, for certification of the signatures. It submitted the Petition in sections. Each section consisted of a notice of intention to circulate the Petition, the proposed initiative text, a map of the affected area, and a signature sheet. The signature sheet contained the title and summary of the DZI on the front, along with spaces for three signatures, and spaces for seven signatures and a circulator’s declaration on the back.
The city clerk refused to certify the Petition and returned it to the Alliance. In her accompanying letter, she explained that she had determined that the Petition violated state law because (1) it did not include the title and summary of the DZI on every signature page (Elec. Code, § 9203, subd. (b)) 1 and (2) she believed the notice of intention to circulate the petition and the full text of the DZI had not been circulated with each signature sheet (§§ 9201, 9207).
The Alliance immediately filed for a writ of mandate, and the trial court issued the writ. The trial court concluded that the Alliance had substantially complied with applicable state election law and directed the city clerk to set *128 aside her rejection of the Petition and continue processing it in the manner required by law. In compliance with the writ, the city clerk forwarded the Petition to the San Mateo County Clerk, the custodian of voter registration records, who certified that the Petition contained a sufficient number of valid signatures. Before certifying the Petition to the Millbrae City Council, the city clerk filed a timely notice of appeal.
Discussion
I. The Appeal Is Not Moot
Preliminarily, the Alliance contends that this appeal is moot and that the city clerk has waived her right to appeal. The Alliance bases these arguments on the assertion that the city clerk voluntarily complied with the writ of mandate by forwarding the Petition to the county clerk for verification of signatures. We reject these contentions.
Generally, an appeal will be dismissed as “moot when any ruling by this court can have no practical impact or provide the parties effectual relief. [Citation.]”
(Woodward Park Homeowners Assn. v. Garreks, Inc.
(2000)
We likewise dismiss the notion that the city clerk has waived her appeal rights. Alliance’s waiver argument rests entirely on
City of Carmelby-the-Sea v. Board of Supervisors
(1982)
II. Standard of Review
Code of Civil Procedure section 1085, providing for writs of mandate, permits challenges to ministerial acts by local officials. To obtain such
*129
a writ, the petitioner must show (1) a clear, present, ministerial duty on the part of the respondent and (2) a correlative clear, present, and beneficial right in the petitioner to the performance of that duty.
(Santa Clara County Counsel Attys. Assn. v. Woodside
(1994)
On appeal following a trial court’s decision on a petition for a writ of mandate, the reviewing court “ ‘need only review the record to determine whether the trial court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence.’ ”
(Lake v. Reed
(1997)
III. The Petition Complies with Section 9203, Subdivision (b)
As a primary reason for rejecting the Petition, the city clerk concluded that it violated section 9203, subdivision (b). The trial court disagreed, finding substantial compliance with the statute. Because there is no dispute over the format of the Petition presented to the city clerk and the issue hinges entirely on the interpretation of section 9203, subdivision (b), we review the matter de novo.
Sections 9200 to 9226 spell out the manner in which the people may exercise their constitutional right to pass city ordinances by initiative. (See Cal. Const., art. II, §§ 8, subd (a), 11, subd. (a).) Under section 9203, subdivision (a), an initiative proponent must submit the proposed measure in advance to an elections official who will forward it to the city attorney. In turn, the city attorney must prepare a title and a true and impartial summary of the proposed measure. Section 9203, subdivision (b) governs placement of the title and summary, and requires that “[t]his title and summary must... be printed across the top of each page of the [initiative] *130 petition whereon signatures are to appear.” In other words, every single petition signature page must include the title and summary of the proposed measure. Here, it is undisputed that each signature sheet contained the title and summary on the front, but not the back. What the statute does not specify, and what we must decide, is whether “each page” means “each side of a sheet of paper” or “each sheet of paper.” The city clerk insisted upon the first definition in rejecting the Petition, while the Alliance argued, and the trial court implicitly agreed, that the statute adopts the second definition.
Both the city clerk and the Alliance have requested that we take judicial notice of their respective preferred dictionary definitions for the word “page.” We deny these requests as unhelpful to our decision. (See
Mangini v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
(1994)
Initiative summaries may be as long as 500 words. (§ 9203, subd. (a).) Consequently, a summary may consume a considerable portion of a side of paper. Here, for instance, the city attorney prepared a 418-word summary. Even in eight-point type, this summary takes up fully two-thirds of the available space on a side of an eight and one-half by eleven-inch sheet of paper and leaves room for only three signatures. A maximum-length summary would leave no more than an inch or two and room for at most one signature. In addition, section 9209 requires that each section of a petition contain a declaration from the person soliciting signatures addressing the manner in which signatures were obtained. (§§ 104, 9022, 9209.) If the declaration were included on each signature sheet, as was done here, the declaration and a full-length summary would leave no room at all for any actual signatures. Such a construction is strained and impractical, and we conclude that it is not required by the purposes underlying the impartial title and summary reprint requirement.
The title and summary reprint requirement serves two related purposes. Primarily, it reduces the risk that voters will be misled when asked to sign a
*131
petition to qualify a proposed measure for the ballot by making available to them a neutral explanation of the measure.
(Amador Valley Joint Union High Sch. Dist. v. State Bd. of Equalization
(1978)
IV. The City Clerk Exceeded Her Authority by Rejecting the Petition for Noncompliance with Sections 9201 and 9207 Based on Extrinsic Evidence
The city clerk offered as a second reason for her rejection of the Petition its noncompliance with sections 9201 and 9207. We conclude that in making this determination, she exceeded her ministerial authority.
Section 9201 governs the manner of submission of an initiative petition to a municipality. It provides: “Any proposed ordinance may be submitted to the legislative body of the city by a petition filed with the elections official of the legislative body .... The petition may be in separate sections, providing that the petition complies with this article. The first page of each section shall contain the title of the petition and the text of the measure. . . .” On its face, section 9201 mandates only that the full text of a proposed measure must be attached to each section of a petition
*132
when it is submitted to a city elections official; it says nothing about the manner of circulation. However, the statute’s full text requirement has been interpreted to apply to the manner of circulation as well.
(Mervyn's v. Reyes
(1998)
Section 9207, entitled “Circulation of petition; petition contents,” expressly governs the form of a petition during circulation. Section 9207 provides in relevant part, “The proponents [of a petition] may commence to circulate the petitions among the voters of the city for signatures by any registered voter of the city .... Each section of the petition shall bear a copy of the notice of intention . . . ,”
3
Decisions interpreting section 9207 confirm what the plain text suggests: during circulation, each section of a petition must include a copy of the notice of intention to circulate.
(Myers v. Patterson
(1987)
Neither section 9201 nor section 9207 spells out a specific enforcement mechanism for its requirements. However, as the city clerk correctly points out, numerous cases recognize that local elections officials have a ministerial duty to reject initiative petitions that violate one or more statutory procedural requirements.
(Farley v. Healey
(1967)
While these cases grant local elections officials authority to review initiative petitions for compliance with procedural prerequisites, they also place clear limits on that authority. Under
Farley,
an elections official’s “duty is limited to the ministerial function of ascertaining whether the procedural requirements for
submitting
an initiative measure have been met.”
(Farley, supra, 67
Cal.2d at p. 327, italics added.) Applying
Farley, Billig
upheld a city clerk’s rejection of a referendum petition for failure to include the full text of the proposed measure.
(Billig, supra,
223 Cal.App.3d at pp. 964, 968-969.) In doing so, it emphasized that the clerk was “only performing a ministerial function involving no exercise of discretion.”
(Id.
at p. 969.)
Myers
likewise found a ministerial duty to reject a proposed measure that was defective as submitted.
(Myers, supra,
The California Supreme Court recognized these limits on local elections official authority long ago. In
Ley v. Dominguez
(1931)
Collectively, these cases only authorize local elections officials to review a petition as submitted for compliance with procedural requirements, absent an express grant of broader powers. They foreclose elections official decisions that are discretionary or go beyond a straightforward comparison of the submitted petition with the statutory requirements for petitions.
Here, the Petition as submitted to the city clerk complied with sections 9201 and 9207. The full text of the proposed measure was provided in each section, and the notice of intention was included as well. The city clerk went beyond the face of the Petition and concluded that the full text and notice of intention had been added only after circulation, and that the sections had not been circulated in compliance with the requirements of sections 9201 and *134 9207. She deduced this from four pieces of evidence: (1) in some instances, the signature page showed greater wear than the full text page and notice of intention page, (2) unidentified third parties informed her that they had seen some circulators circulate sections of the Petition without the full text and notice of intention, (3) a folder containing signature pages without the notice of intention or full text attached was left in the city council chambers, and (4) the city clerk believed the proponents had violated the Elections Code in the past with respect to matters unrelated to the submission of the Petition.
This sort of decisionmaking is fundamentally different from the ministerial duties countenanced by Farley, Billig, and Myers. It involves not a straightforward comparison of the submitted petition with clear statutory directives (Is the full text attached? Is there a circulator’s signed declaration?) but a discretionary evaluation of evidence, including evidence extrinsic to the Petition itself, to reach a factual conclusion not evident from the face of the Petition. Unlike these earlier cases, here, reasonable minds could differ as to what inferences to draw from the evidence before the city clerk. The limited record before the city clerk and before us does not establish whether sections 9201 and 9207 were violated or how many signatures might have been affected by any violations. The city clerk’s decision involves the sort of discretionary, adjudicatory decisionmaking reserved for judges and juries. 4
The city clerk points to
Mapstead v. Anchundo
(1998)
We draw from
Mapstead
and sections 9114 and 9115 a significantly different lesson—that when the Legislature intends a factfinding role for elections officials, it says so expressly.
Mapstead
involved an explicit statutory structure authorizing elections officials to conduct factfinding on the limited question of the authenticity and validity of voter signatures. (§§ 9114-9115.) Even then, the governing statute channels that factfinding by barring clerks from considering extrinsic evidence. (§ 9114;
Mapstead, supra,
The city clerk argues that neither section 9201 nor section 9207 limits her to considering only the face of the Petition in carrying out her duties. We frame the issue differently: Neither section 9201 nor section 9207 authorizes a local elections official to evaluate the credibility of unidentified third parties, consider extrinsic evidence, and make an adjudicative decision concerning whether the election laws have been violated. In the absence of explicit legislative authorization, we conclude that such powers are not granted to elections officials.
This conclusion rests as well on a consideration of the rights at stake. “[T]he courts have described the initiative and referendum as articulating ‘one of the most precious rights of our democratic process’ [citation]. ‘[I]t has long been our judicial policy to apply a liberal construction to this power wherever it is challenged in order that the right be not improperly annulled. If doubts can reasonably be resolved in favor of the use of this reserve power, courts will preserve it.’ [Citations.]”
(Associated Home Builders etc., Inc. v. City of Livermore
(1976)
This is not to say that initiative circulators are free to ignore the requirements of the Elections Code, only that local elections officials are not empowered to adjudicate every potential violation. Local elections officials may refuse to certify a proposed measure if noncompliance is manifest on the face of the submitted petition. In all other instances, the
*136
courts offer an adequate forum for enforcing the provisions of the Elections Code because proposed measures are susceptible to legal challenge by interested parties. (See, e.g.,
Mervyn’s, supra,
In sum, we find no authority in the statutory structure for a local elections official to exercise adjudicative powers and consider extrinsic evidence in determining whether a submitted initiative petition complies with the Elections Code. Because on its face the Petition complied with applicable Elections Code requirements, the city clerk had a ministerial duty to accept it. The Alliance has shown a clear and present entitlement to have the city clerk certify the Petition to the Millbrae City Council under sections 9114 and 9211. 5
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. In the interests of justice, each side shall bear its own costs.
Stevens, Acting P. J., and Simons, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Elections Code unless otherwise noted.
We note that even if “page” were interpreted to mean a single side of a sheet of paper, the petition as submitted would substantially comply with section 9203 because the summary statement on one side of the sheet of paper informs the signer of the content of the proposed initiative, thereby providing “ ‘the substance essential to every reasonable objective of the statute.’ ”
(Assembly
v.
Deukmejian
(1982)
The notice of intention to circulate is prepared by proponents of a proposed measure before circulation. It may include a statement of reasons in support of the measure of up to 500 words, and must be signed by between one and three proponents. (§ 9202, subd. (a).)
The city clerk’s requests for an evidentiary hearing before the trial court effectively demonstrate that her decision to reject the Petition rested on a contested factual issue. In her pleadings and at the writ hearing, the city clerk sought an evidentiary hearing to address whether sections 9201 and 9207 were violated. On appeal, she reiterates that this issue is a factual one. We agree, but we conclude not that the trial court erred by failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing, but that the city clerk exceeded the scope of her authority by conducting her own discretionary factfinding.
The city clerk also appealed the trial court’s award of attorney fees to ensure that if she prevailed on the merits, the award would be reversed. Because we affirm on the merits and because no error was claimed in the award itself, we do not address this issue further.
