359 Mass. 411 | Mass. | 1971
The plaintiffs appeal from interlocutory and final decrees sustaining demurrers to their amended bill and dismissing it. The plaintiffs are alleged to be “residents, registered voters, and more than 10 taxable inhabitants of Lynn,” and “signers of the referendum petition hereinafter referred to,” and “include those who endorsed and filed the same.” The amended bill seeks injunctive and declaratory relief against the city of Lynn and numerous officials of the city. Apparently in response to a claim of nonjoinder of necessary parties, the Lynn Redevelopment Authority and the United States of America, Department of Housing and Urban Development, were added as parties defendant by leave of court, but no relief is sought against them.
The bill is replete with extraneous matter consisting of references to the plaintiffs’ connection with an organization known as Citizens for a Better Lynn, of declamatory allegations about urban renewal and “a self-perpetuating bureaucracy,” of what was common knowledge in Lynn, of conversations of one of the plaintiffs and counsel for the plaintiffs with the city solicitor and with other city officials, of motives and strategies imputed to city officials, and the like. The plaintiffs’ brief includes pages and pages of argument about “bureaucratic absolutism,” “the Establishment,” “the demand for equality of the negro,” the danger of riots, a “corrupt class-stratified society,” and the like;
“A bill or petition may be so overloaded with such mat
Stripped of surplusage, the bill alleges the following. On December 9, 1969, the Lynn city council finally passed the ‘
1. The controversy thus stated is an appropriate one for declaratory relief under G. L. c. 231A, § 1. Morra v. City Clerk of New Bedford, 340 Mass. 240. O’Shea v. Holyoke,
2. There is no nonjoinder of necessary parties. The plaintiffs do not complain of the sustaining of the demurrer of the Lynn Redevelopment Authority, except as it affects other defendants. The record shows nothing as to the United States of America, Department of Housing and Urban Development, after the allowance of the plaintiffs' motion that it be made a party defendant and that an order of notice issue to bring it before the court. Notwithstanding G. L. c. 231A, § 8, we “need not have before the court every person or group who conceivably might ultimately be affected by the outcome of this case.” Trustees of Tufts College v. Volpe Constr. Co. Inc. 358 Mass. 331, 340. The particular controversy can be resolved by a declaration of the rights and duties of the plaintiffs and the city and its officials under the city charter. Declaratory relief, therefore, need not be refused under G. L. c. 231 A, § 3.
3. Thus it was error to sustain the demurrer of the city and to dismiss the bill. If the referendum petition is a nullity, the court should so declare. “In many decisions of this court we have stated that a demurrer cannot properly be sustained to a bill for declaratory relief on the ground that the court does not agree with the plaintiff’s contention.” Trustees of Tufts College v. Volpe Constr. Co. Inc. 358 Mass. 331, 337.
5. The interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer of the Lynn Redevelopment Authority is affirmed. The interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer of the city of Lynn and the final decree are reversed. The ease is remanded to the Superior Court. An interlocutory decree is to be entered overruling the demurrer of the city of Lynn. The defendants are to have thirty days in which, to file their answers.. After the answers are filed the case is to be heard on the merits.
So ordered.
The brief asserts: “ A demurrer is a cruel weapon in the hands of the power elite . . . It concludes: “We need only concern ourselves with short range solutions; because, if we fail, it will be the Eskimos, the Arapesh or the Zunis who will determine the future of mankind.”
“Section 54. If within five days after the final passage of any measure, except an emergency measure, by the city council or the school committee, a notice of intention to file a referendum petition, as hereinafter provided, signed by not less than one hundred registered voters is filed with the city clerk, and if, within twenty days after the final passage of any such measure, a petition signed by registered voters of the city, equal in number to at least fifteen per cent of the total number of registered voters, including any who have signed the original petition only, be presented to the city council or to the school committee, as the case may be, protesting against such measure or any part thereof, the operation thereof shall thereupon be suspended; and the city council or the school committee, as the case may be, shall immediately reconsider such measure or part thereof; and if such measure or part thereof be not entirely annulled, repealed or rescinded, or the part objected to eliminated by amendment, the city council shall submit the same by the method herein provided, to a vote of the qualified voters of the city, either at the next regular city election, or at a special election which may, in its discretion, be called for the purpose, and such measure or part thereof shall forthwith become null and void unless a majority of the qualified voters voting on the same at such election shall vote in favor thereof, and unless it receives the affirmative vote of at least a third of the whole number of registered voters. The petition provided for by this section shall be termed a referendum petition. The procedure in respect to the referendum petition shall be the same, so far as it may be applicable, as that provided by the foregoing sections relating to initiative petitions, except that the words ‘measure or part thereof protested against’ shall for this purpose be understood to replace the word ‘measure’ wherever it may occur in said section, and that the word ‘referendum’ shall be understood to replace the word ‘initiative’ in said sections.”
“Section 6. All the powers, rights, privileges, liabilities and duties relating to primaries, caucuses or elections by law vested in and imposed upon the mayor and city council or either of them, the city clerk, the city solicitor or the board of registrars of voters in cities, except the power and duty of giving notice of elections and fixing the days and hours of holding the same, shall in the city of Lynn be vested in and performed by the board, who shall be subject to all the penalties prescribed by general laws for failure to per form the said duties.”