*201 OPINION
By the Court,
Respondents, residents of the City of North Las Vegas, initiated a petition to submit a proposed ordinance to the voters of North Las Vegas. The ordinance would provide minimum wages and fringe benefits and maximum hours for the city’s firemen and was to be retroactive to November 1, 1968 as to the wages. All procedural requirements for initiating the petition were met. The city and respondents sought by a declaratory judgment action a determination of the proposed ordinance’s validity.
The district court ordered that the proposal be submitted to the people thus ruling impliedly that it was valid, although the proposal has not yet been submitted to the voters.
The question here is whether or not the validity of a proposed legislative act can be ruled upon in advance of its enactment. The answer is that it cannot.
This court is confined to controversies in the true sense. The parties must be adverse and the issues ripe for determination. Kress v. Corey,
It is well-settled that the court will not entertain a declaratory action with respect to the effect and validity of a statute in advance of its enactment. Hodgman v. City of Taunton,
This opinion is restricted to proposed legislative acts exclusive of proposed constitutional amendments. Insofar as the latter are concerned, we have ruled only that the requirements of form and procedure must be met. Lundberg v. Koontz,
The district court erroneously entered a declaratory judgment. We reverse.
