COMMONWEALTH of Pennsylvania, ex rel. Mario BAGNONI, Councilman of the City of Erie, on His Own Behalf and on Behalf of All Property Owners of the City of Erie, v. James E. KLEMM, City Clerk, the City of Erie and Mayor Louis J. Tullio, Appellants.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
Decided Dec. 31, 1982.
454 A.2d 531
Argued Sept. 21, 1982.
The Unemployment Compensation Law was intended to provide benefits for those unfortunate persons who lose their employment through no fault of their own. When an employee attacks the character and competence of his supervisor in violation of reasonable employer expectations of employee behavior, bringing about his own discharge, his conduct can hardly be said to be without fault. This is not to say that an employee may not challenge disciplinary action taken against him, but only that if he does, he should not expect to preserve his eligibility for unemployment benefits if he violates legitimate employer rules and/or expectations in the course of making an otherwise permissible challenge.
The Commonwealth Court should be affirmed.
McDERMOTT, J., joins this dissenting opinion.
Lawrence L. Kinter, Deputy City Sol., Erie, for appellant.
George M. Schroeck, Erie, for appellee.
Before O‘BRIEN, C.J., and ROBERTS, NIX, LARSEN, FLAHERTY, McDERMOTT and HUTCHINSON, JJ.
OPINION
HUTCHINSON, Justice.
Resolution of this case turns solely upon a question of statutory construction: viz. whether an Act of Assembly which requires “a vote of two-thirds of the members” to override the Mayor‘s veto means two-thirds of the entire body or two-thirds of the members present. We hold that in the context of section 413(a) the Optional Third Class City Charter Law (Article IV, Mayor-Council Plan A), Act of July
On June 14, 1978, the City Council of Erie passed an ordinance providing for the City‘s sewer rental rates to remain unchanged until December 31, 1978. Mayor Louis J. Tullio vetoed this ordinance. Pursuant to section 413(a) of the Optional Third Class City Charter Law, a council member introduced a resolution before the Council proposing to override the Mayor‘s veto. Four members of the Council voted in favor of overriding the veto, two members voted against the resolution, and one member was absent.1 The City Solicitor ruled at the meeting that this vote was insufficient to constitute an override of the veto by “two-thirds of the members of Council” within the meaning of section 413(a).
On August 14, 1978, appellee, Councilman Mario Bagnoni, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus and declaratory judgment in the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County, requesting that the court order the City Clerk to enter in the official city journal that the veto of the Mayor was overridden. The Court of Common Pleas denied the petition holding that there is no modifying language in section 413(a) to indicate that “members” means only those who are present at the meeting. The Commonwealth Court reversed and this appeal followed.2
This Court has applied the common law rule that a majority of those voting in the presence of a quorum can act for a board or other body “in the absence of any language to the contrary in the relevant enabling statute.” Stoltz v. McConnon, 473 Pa. 157, 373 A.2d 1096 (1977) (citing Raynovich v. Romanus, 450 Pa. 391, 299 A.2d 301 (1973)) (emphasis in original); Meixell v. Hellertown Borough Council, 370 Pa. 420, 88 A.2d 594 (1952); Commonwealth ex rel. Fortney v. Wozney, 326 Pa. 494, 192 A. 648 (1937); Frackville Borough Council Case, 308 Pa. 579, 162 A. 835 (1932). However, in the same context of voting requirements in representative municipal bodies this Court has rejected the necessity of a clear and explicit statutory provision to demonstrate a legislative intent to change the common law rule and require a majority of the full body. The Pennsylvania Statutory Construction Act,
In cases not involving votes by representative bodies of strictly limited membership, e.g. general public elections or elections open to the entire membership of a church or religious institution, this Court has applied the common law rule more rigorously:
‘[T]he great weight of authority holds that where a statute provides for a vote of “a majority of the voters“, “a majority of the legal voters,” “a majority of the qualified voters“, etc., all that is required is a majority of those actually voting, unless a contrary legislative intention and purpose is very clearly expressed.’
Heuchert v. State Harness Racing Comm., 403 Pa. 440, 450, 170 A.2d 332, 338 (1961) (quoting Munce v. O‘Hara, 340 Pa. 209, 211, 16 A.2d 532, 533 (1940)) (emphasis added). See also Stryjewski v. Panfil, 269 Pa. 568, 112 A. 764 (1921). Schlichter v. Keiter, 156 Pa. 119, 27 A. 45 (1893).
The reasons are manifest for a more stringent application of the common law rule to general elections. First, as the older cases stressed, there is an inability to determine the number of electors as distinguished from voters. A second and more compelling reason is that there is no way to compel people to vote. Particularly in primaries where less than fifty percent of the registered voters participate, a requirement of a majority of all voters would, for all practical purposes, cause institutional paralysis. See Heuchert v. State Harness Racing Comm., supra.
With this background we consider section 413(a) of the Optional Third Class City Charter Law to ascertain whether the legislature intended that the required number of votes be computed as a portion of the entire membership or only of those members present. Section 413(a) provides:
No ordinance or any item or part thereof shall take effect without the mayor‘s approval . . . unless council upon reconsideration, thereof, . . . shall by a vote of two-thirds of the members resolve to override the mayor‘s veto.
The appellees’ and Commonwealth Court‘s reliance on the fact that the legislature is familiar with more specific lan
No bill shall become an ordinance unless a majority of all the councilmen elected be recorded as voting in its favor . . . If [the mayor] disapproves it, he shall return it to council, and council pass (sic) the same, . . . by vote of three-fifths of all the members elected thereto, it shall become law without his approval.
“If, upon reconsideration, council shall pass the ordinance or resolution over the veto of the mayor, by a two-thirds vote of all the members thereof, it shall be a binding ordinance or resolution of the city.”
If, after such reconsideration, two-thirds of all the members elected to said council, or a majority of council plus one, when the number composing such council is less than nine, shall vote to pass such ordinance or resolution, it shall become of as (sic) full force and effect . . . .
Every bill which shall have passed both Houses shall be presented to the Governor; if he approves he shall sign it, but if he shall not approve he shall return it with his objections to the House in which it shall have originated, which House shall enter the objections at large upon their journal, and proceed to reconsider it. If after such reconsideration, two-thirds of all the members elected to that House shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be sent with the objections to the other House by which likewise it shall be reconsidered, and if approved by two-thirds of all the members elected to that House it shall be a law.
The common thread in all of these provisions is the use of an adjective to modify the word “members” which expressly states the intention that a proportion of the whole number of members is required.
An example showing the legislature also has the ability to use clear language codifying the Common Law Rule, thus requiring only a majority of a quorum is:
Six directors attending shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of any business and, unless a greater number is required by the by-laws of the agency, the act of a majority of the directors present at any meeting shall be deemed the act of the Board.
Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency Act of 1963, Act of August 7, 1963, P.L. 549 § 3(b), as amended,
In establishing the number of votes required to override the mayor‘s veto in the Third Class City Code the legislature chose simply to state the requirement in terms of a fraction
Other sources relating to the resolution of this ambiguous statutory language are also unclear. Favoring the common law view that the use of the phrase “two-thirds of the members” means two-thirds of the membership is a footnote in one version of Robert‘s Rules of Order, (Pyramid Publications, Inc. 1967):
A two-thirds, or majority, vote means two-thirds or a majority of votes cast, ignoring blanks, which should never be counted. Sometimes By-Laws provide for a vote of two-thirds of the members present, or simply of two-thirds of the members, which may be very different from a two-thirds vote. Thus, if twelve members vote on a question in a meeting of a society where twenty are present out of total membership of thirty, a two-thirds vote would be eight; a two-thirds vote of those present would be fourteen; and a vote of two-thirds of the members would be twenty. In this case a majority vote would be seven.5
With respect to statutes that confer a power to be exercised by two-thirds of “the members” or two-thirds of “that body” there is a division between the text writers. 4 McQuillan, Municipal Corporations § 13.31(c) at 556 (Revised 3d ed. 1979) (footnotes omitted) states:
(p)ower conferred upon a city council to be exercised “by a vote of two-thirds of that body,” or by an “affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members of the council,” has been construed to mean two-thirds of a legal quorum, and not two-thirds of the entire membership of the council.
On the other hand, 1 Antieau, Municipal Corporation Law, § 4.11, at 4-24 (1982) (footnotes omitted) opines:
Thus, neither this statute, our own cases, or the recognized text writers provide a clear answer to the meaning of the language in question.
To ascertain the legislature‘s intention in its use of the phrase “two-thirds of the members” we turn then to general principles of statutory construction.6 These include the rule of construction that a section of a statute must be construed with reference to the entire statute and not alone. We also note that wherever possible we must give effect to all of its provisions.
With such considerations in mind we examine other provisions of the Optional Third Class City Charter Law dealing with voting requirements for passage of ordinances to see whether they shed light on the meaning of section 413(a). Article VI, section 607 (General Provisions Common to Op
For example, in this seven member council section 607 requires four votes to pass an ordinance. A quorum consists of four members. Under the Commonwealth Court‘s holding two-thirds of that quorum, three votes, could override the mayor‘s veto. Such a result is wholly at odds with the purposes of a veto provision. Reconsideration of an ordinance after a veto puts the original bill back before a legislative body for more careful deliberation on the question of its adoption. Kubik v. City of Chicopee, 353 Mass. 514, 233 N.E.2d 219 (1968). Accord Commonwealth ex rel. Atty. General v. Barnett, 199 Pa. 161, 48 A. 976 (1901). Such reconsideration can be made meaningless if a mayoral veto can be overriden by fewer votes than required to act initially.
Moreover, putting our particular statute to one side, in every case in which the legislature has provided a municipal executive with veto power it has related the fractional number of votes required for an override of that veto to a whole consisting of the entire membership of the municipal body. We find no policy reasons in the Optional Third Class City Code suggesting the legislature had any reason to deviate from that course.
For these reasons and in order to avoid a result which permits a mayor‘s veto to be overriden by less votes than needed to send a bill to him in the first place, we resolve the ambiguity of section 413, after reading it in relation to section 607, by concluding the legislature intended the phrase “two-thirds of the members” to mean two-thirds of
Reversed.
McDERMOTT, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which LARSEN, J., joined.
McDERMOTT, Justice, dissenting.
The seven member city council of Erie, Pennsylvania passed a resolution.
The resolution was forwarded to the Mayor. He vetoed the resolution. It was returned to the council, where a two-thirds vote was required to override. When the resolution was re-submitted, six of the seven council members were present. Four voted to override, two to sustain the veto, one absent.
The city solicitor ruled that the override failed because the Optional Third Class City Charter Law * required a vote by all the members of the council. Six present is not seven, hence the veto was sustained.
Mandamus was brought to compel the clerk of council to enter the vote in the official journal as overriding the veto.
The court of common pleas denied the petition. The Commonwealth Court reversed, hence this appeal. The common law of Pennsylvania is clear:
“[A] majority of those voting in the presence of a quorum, can act for a Board or a body.”
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It is true that Pennsylvania courts have repeatedly applied the common law rule to representative municipal bodies of limited membership in the absence of any language to the contrary in the relevant enabling statute. Stoltz v. McConnon, 473 Pa. 157, 163-64, 373 A.2d 1096, 1099-1100 (1977) (emphasis original).
* Act of July 15, 1957, P.L. 901, as amended,
In writing section 413(a) it is clear that the Legislature had its own precedent before it. In section 607(a), when they specified the manner in which a resolution originates in the Council, they wrote:
Section 607. (a) Council shall determine its own rules of procedure, not inconsistent with ordinance or statute. A majority of the whole number of members of the council shall constitute a quorum, but no ordinance shall be adopted by the council without the affirmative vote of a majority of all the members of the council.
The Commonwealth Court recognized this distinction of intention and properly reversed the court of common pleas.
[O]ne or a relatively few persons could, by their intentional absence from, or by their presence at a meeting and their failure to vote, or their casting a blank or illegal ballot, block indefinitely a important election or important legislation and thus paralyze government with obviously great harm to the public interest.
DiGiacinto v. City of Allentown, 486 Pa. 436, 440, 406 A.2d 520, 522 (1979), quoting, Meixell v. Borough Council of Borough of Hellertown, 370 Pa. 420, 425, 88 A.2d 594, 596 (1952).
Obviously, there are anomalies at either end. We have firmly opted to avoid the anomaly of one member delaying and obstructing the democratic process by his absence. The Legislature has chosen to accept the anomaly of a lesser vote in a reconsideration after a veto. Their decisions should be controlling.
LARSEN, J., joins in this dissenting opinion.
Notes
(1) The occasion and necessity for the statute.
. . .
(3) The mischief to be remedied.
(4) The object to be attained.
(5) The former law, if any, including other statutes upon the same or similar subjects.
(6) The consequences of a particular interpretation.
