Babbidge v. City of Astoria

25 Or. 417 | Or. | 1894

Opinion by

Mb. Chief Justice Lobd.

It is manifest from the language of these provisions that it is a temporary absence or disability only which authorizes the president of the council to act in the place of the mayor, and perform his duties. He is not authorized to approve ordinances or perform the duties pertaining to the office of mayor when such office is vacant and without an incumbent. It is in the absence or inability of the mayor,” or “in the absence of the mayor from the city,” or “during any absence of the mayor from the city, or if he be unwell, or unable to attend,” that the president of the council shall perform the duties of mayor, “approve and sign all ordinances,” or “have the right and power to approve such ordinances as may be passed during such absence.” Within the purview of the charter, the office of mayor is an important branch of the city government, the duties of which can only be performed by an incumbent, or some one acting in his stead when he is absent or disabled. The charter contemplates that a mayor is in esse; and that the office shall not be without an incumbent in case of death or resignation, for it provides that it “must be filled” by the council. So that, when a vacancy occurred by the resignation of Crosby, it was the duty of the council to appoint a mayor. To compel the performance of this duty in the interests of the public, the intent of the charter is that no business of importance shall be transacted until such duty is performed, and the vacant office provided with an incumbent. Hence, before the president of the council was authorized to act as mayor or perform his duties, there must have been a mayor in esse who was absent or disabled. He can only act in the place of a mayor who is *421■unable to act by reason of absence or inability. These are conditions which must exist before the president acquires the right to perform the duties of mayor. As the office of mayor was vacant when the president of the council approved the ordinances in question, his approval did not carry them into effect.

While the signature or approval of the mayor is not always, essential to the validity of an ordinance, when it is regularly passed, yet, if its submission to him for approval or veto is made necessary by the express terms of the charter, before the ordinance can become law, such requirement is mandatory, and the failure to observe it is fatal to the ordinance: Dillon on Municipal Corporations, § 331; 17 Am. & Eng. Enc. 243. The charter provides that “ No ordinance passed by the common council shall go into force or be of any effect until approved by the mayor, except as provided in sections 44, 45, and 46,” etc. These sections provide: “Upon the passage of any ordinance, the enrolled copy thereof, attested by the auditor and police judge, shall be submitted to the mayor by the auditor and police judge, and if the mayor approve the same, he shall write upon it approved/ with the date thereof, and sign it with his name of office, and thereupon, unless otherwise provided therein, such ordinance shall become law, and be of force and effect”: Section 44. “ If the mayor do not approve an ordinance so submitted, he must within ten days from the receipt thereof, return the same to the auditor and police judge, with his reasons for not approving it, and if the mayor do not so return it, such ordinance shall become law, as if he had approved it”: Section 45. “Upon the first meéting of the council after the return of an ordinance from the mayor, not approved, the auditor and police judge shall deliver the same to the council, with the message of the mayor, which must be read, and such ordinance shall then *422be put upon its passage again, and if two thirds of all members constituting the council, as then provided by law, vote in the affirmative, it shall become a law without the approval of the mayor, and not otherwise”: Section 46. It is plain from these provisions, that no ordinance can become a law and go into effect unless an enrolled copy thereof duly attested, shall be submitted to the mayor, and, after it is so submitted only by his express approval indorsed upon it, or, if he does not approve it, by his refusal to return it with his reasons therefor within the time specified, or, if he veto it, by a two thirds vote of the council over such veto.' An ordinance which has not been submitted to the mayor, although regularly passed, cannot become law. It must be submitted to the mayor for his action before it can go into effect. Where an act provided that every resolution of the common council of the city should be presented to the mayor for his approval or veto it was held that a formal and literal presentation must be made or shown: State v. Newark, 25 N. J. L. 399. The object of these provisions of the charter is to .submit the ordinance before it goes into effect to the calm and separate deliberation and responsibility of the mayor. The ordinance must not only pass the council but it must be subjected to the scrutiny of the mayor who is clothed with power to approve or negative legislative action. This being so, when the ordinances in question were passed and submitted to Bergman as president of the council he was not authorized to approve them as the office of mayor was without an incumbent, and, while such vacancy existed the contingency of absence or disability could not exist upon which his right to act as mayor in the approval of ordinances depended, and hence that such ordinances did not become law or go into effect. As a consequence, the proceedings founded upon said ordinances are a nullitv, and the decree must therefore *423be reversed and the defendants enjoined from further proceedings in the premises.

Reversed.

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