31 N.W.2d 646 | Minn. | 1948
Lead Opinion
The amended judgment below was entered on February 9, 1948, determining that the proposal was not an amendment, but a new charter and on the authority of §§
The background of legislation and constitutional history, prior to the adoption of Minn. Const. art.
Minneapolis brought itself within the purview of § 36 in 1920 by having a charter commission appointed under authority of that section and legislation in furtherance thereof and by adopting the home rule charter proposed by the commission. The present litigation arises out of the fact that the charter commission has proposed what it calls a "new charter," which is regarded by plaintiff as an amendment of the present charter. The trial court decided, and counsel for the commission contend, that the proposal is in fact a new charter and not an amendment and that it may be submitted and accepted under M. S. A.
The question presented for decision is whether §§
1. By § 36, the people of the state carved out of the power of the legislature and vested in the electorate of the municipalities to which it applied the power to make charters for self-government, within certain limitations. In Almquist v. City of Biwabik,
"* * * Home rule charters are but a constitutional diversion of legislative power from the constitutional legislature to the citizens of the charter-making area, * * *. The whole plan of home rule charters as set up by the adoption of § 36 is an exception carved out of the powers which, under the constitutional division of powers, was conferred exclusively upon the legislature as an independent branch of the government."
Section 36 set up a symmetrical plan, complete in itself, clearly defining the powers of the commission and those left to the legislature. By making the board of freeholders permanent and investing it with power to propose a charter and amendments thereto, it adequately provided for not only the original charter, but for any modifications which the people might desire. The obvious purpose was to take from the legislature and vest in the electorate of the city a government with a measure of stability which could be changed only by well-publicized and well-considered amendments. This is evident from the requirement of a greater percentage of votes to accept amendments than for adoption of an original charter and by the publicity required for proposed amendments. It definitely prescribed just what powers and duties the board should have, and it definitely described and delimited the powers that were left in the legislature. Section 36 was not self-executing in one sense, because it was not available to municipalities until the legislature prescribed the general limits within which the charter "shall be framed." It left four things to be done by the legislature: (1) To provide for a board of 15 freeholders, to be appointed by the district judges, and to fix their terms at not to exceed six years (this was a *572
command; the length of term of office of the members of the board was the only thing left to the wisdom of the legislature); (2) to prescribe the general limits within which a charter should be framed (this also was a command, but left the limits of power to the wisdom of the legislature); (3) to prescribe the duties of the commission (the board of freeholders) relative to submitting amendments of the charter; (4) in making general laws relating to municipal affairs, to classify the cities of the state according to population. There is no contention by anyone that this last power was exercised in §§
On the question here presented, it is significant that § 36 constitutes the board of freeholders a permanent board, and therefore, in contemplation of law, there is continuity of duties, powers, and responsibilities in that board. Consequently, the present board of 15 commissioners is as much the same board as the one which formulated the first home rule charter in 1920, just as this court is the same court as that established originally by the Minnesota constitution. The powers vested by § 36 in the board are to draft a charter for submission to the voters of the city and to return that draft to the chief magistrate of the city within six months from the appointment of the board. Section 36 specifically states that *573
the proportion of qualified voters necessary to accept the original proposed charter shall be four-sevenths of those voting at the election. It makes no requirement as to publication as it did in regard to amendments. Once accepted, the charter becomes the city charter, and it supersedes "any existing charter and amendments thereof." Counsel for the commission ingeniously endeavor to support the validity of §§
Referring to the original home rule charter, which is the charter previously referred to, § 36 states:
"* * * Such charter so deposited may be amended by proposal therefor made by a board of fifteen commissioners aforesaid, published for at least once each week for four successive weeks in a legal newspaper of general circulation in such city or village, and accepted by three-fifths of the qualified voters of such city or village voting at the next election and nototherwise; * * *." (Italics supplied.)
The phrase "and not otherwise" emphasizes the intent, otherwise quite clear, to foreclose and prohibit any other method of modifying the home rule charter. It must be by amendment only. The commission is endowed with no other power or authority to modify or *574
change "the charter," nor does § 36 permit the legislature so to endow it. The provisions for formulating and submitting the original charter and, after its adoption, for formulating and submitting amendments constitute the total extent of power of proposal vested in the board by the constitution. Whether the proposed change in the charter be complete or only slight, the method prescribed by § 36 is the only one permitted. After a municipality has adopted a charter, § 36 expressly, and therefore exclusively, provides how it may be modified, that is, by amendment. "Where constitutions speak, statutes should be silent." Switzer v. State ex rel. Silvey,
"These provisions are not only mandatory, but they are also exclusive, that is, they are controlling as against any statutory enactment or departure therefrom.
"Now, after a municipality has adopted a charter, the state constitution itself expressly and therefore exclusively provides for a change in such municipal constitution or charter, that is by amendment, * * *."
Nor does the provision in § 36 which authorizes the legislature to prescribe the duties of the commission relative to submitting amendments of the charter to the vote of the people permit it to circumvent the strict and definite requirement for amendment of the original charter by incorporating the amendment with some provisions already in the existing charter and by submitting such amendments in the guise of an original or new charter and therefore evading the requirements for publication or that it be accepted by a three-fifths vote. That authority relates strictly to amendments, not to new charters, and relates only to duties to submit, not to manner of submission or acceptance. That construction is clear. The provision was in § 36 when first adopted, and it was immediately supplemented by the requirement adopted in 1898 for the submission of an amendment petitioned for by five percent of the voters. *575
In our opinion, the language of § 36 is clear and cannot be evaded by first endeavoring to create either an ambiguity or an unwarranted implication from the language actually used and thus speciously spell out a power in the legislature which § 36 did not contemplate; nor can the legislature by statute enlarge the powers of the commission as circumscribed and limited by the constitution.
Counsel for the commission rely principally upon Morrow v. Kansas City,
Blanchard v. Hartwell,
"Since a procedure for the amendment of such a charter is expressly provided, the presumption would be (independently of the declaration that all the provisions of the constitution are mandatory and prohibitory unless the contrary is expressly stated) that such mode is exclusive. Under such a constitution this seems indisputable. The one mode of amendment is commanded, and all others are prohibited.
"* * * In the third place, the amendment must be approved by a majority of three-fifths of the qualified electors; a charter may be adopted by a majority vote of such electors. This is also a provision favoring permanence, and against changes made under temporary excitement. What a fatuous limitation or requirement this would be if the policy thus clearly indicated could be defeated by adopting a new charter once in sixty days by a mere majority vote."
2. There is no merit to the contention that this court has given its tacit approval to §§
"The principle of our decision of this case, as well as of those we have just cited, is that which attends every constitutional grant of power to any official or department of government. 'A constitution being the paramount law of a state, designed to separate the powers of government and to define their extent and limit their exercise by the several departments, * * * no other instrument is of equal significance. * * * when the people have declared by it that certain powers shall be possessed and duties performed by a particular officer or department, their exercise and discharge by any other officer or department, are forbidden by a necessary and unavoidable implication. Every positive delegation of power to one officer or department implies a negation of its exercise by any other officer, department or person. If it did not, the whole constitutional fabric might be undermined and destroyed.' State ex rel. Crawford v. Hastings,
"The argument of practical construction, opposed to this decision, has so much factual basis that it deserves special attention. * * *
* * * * *
"There is thus abundant ammunition for the argument of practical construction. But the case furnishes it no target. We cannot even adopt it as a buttress for a conclusion already reached, as is sometimes done. State ex rel. Hilton v. Sword,
"* * * Were the courts, simply because of its extendedduration, obliged to follow an erroneous practical constructionof a plain provision of it, a constitution could be amendedwithout consulting the people. Nothing is farther from thebasic theory of our government. 'When the meaning and scope of a constitutional provision are clear, it cannot be overthrown by legislative action, although several times repeated and never before challenged.' The delay in presenting the question is no excuse for not giving it full consideration and determining it in accordance with the true meaning of the constitution. Fairbank v. U.S.
Moreover, " 'The application of the doctrine of contemporaneous construction is more restricted as applied to the interpretation of constitutional provisions than when applied to statutory provisions. * * * So, where the meaning of a constitutional provision is clear, a contemporaneous or practical legislative or executive interpretation thereof is entitled to no weight, and will not be allowed *579
to distort or in any way change its natural meaning.' " Button v. Drake,
See, also, 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, § 32, p. 71; 11 Am.Jur., Constitutional Law, § 78, p. 698. Other cases substantiating this limitation include Fairbank v. United States,
3. We need not discuss at any length the problem of whether the proposal under consideration here is in the form of a new charter, a revision, or an amendment. The court below found that "very many subsections and subdivisions are substantially identical with similar provisions in the existing Home Rule Charter." In our view, the commission may, if in its wisdom it so desires, propose an amendment which is a complete revision or modification of the existing home rule charter so long as it respects the limitations contained in § 36 and keeps within the prescribed general framework. Reutener v. City of Cleveland,
It is our opinion, and we so declare, that §§
Judgment reversed.
"SEC. 33. In all cases when a general law can be made applicable, no special law shall be enacted; and whether a general law could have been made applicable in any case is hereby declared a judicial question, and as such shall be judicially determined without regard to any legislative assertion on that subject. The legislature shall pass no local or special law regulating the affairs of, or incorporating, erecting or changing the lines of, any county, city, village, township, ward or school district, or creating the offices, or prescribing the powers and duties of the officers of, or fixing or relating to the compensation, salary or fees of the same, or the mode of election or appointment thereto, authorizing the laying out, opening, altering, vacating or maintaining roads, highways, streets or alleys; remitting fines, penalties or forfeitures; regulating the powers, duties and practice of justices of the peace, magistrates and constables; changing the names of persons, places, lakes or rivers; for opening and conducting of elections, or fixing or changing the places of voting; authorizing the adoption or legitimation of children; changing the law of descent or succession; conferring rights upon minors; declaring any named person of age; giving effect to informal or invalid wills or deeds, or affecting the estates of minors or persons under disability; locating or changing county seats; regulating the management of public schools, the building or repairing of schoolhouses, and the raising of money for such purposes; exempting property from taxation, or regulating the rate of interest on money; creating corporations, or amending, renewing, extending or explaining the charters thereof; granting to any corporation, association or individual any special or exclusive privilege, immunity or franchise whatever, or authorizing public taxation for a private purpose. Provided, however, That the inhibitions of local or special laws in this section shall not be construed to prevent the passage of general laws on any of the subjects enumerated.
"The legislature may repeal any existing special or local law, but shall not amend, extend or modify any of the same."
"SEC. 36. Any city or village in this state may frame a charter for its own government as a city consistent with and subject to the laws of this state, as follows: The legislature shall provide, under such restrictions as it deems proper, for a board of fifteen freeholders, who shall be and for the past five years shall have been qualified voters thereof, to be appointed by the district judges of the judicial district in which the city or village is situated, as the legislature may determine, for a term in no event to exceed six years, which board shall, within six months after its appointment, return to the chief magistrate of said city or village a draft of said charter, signed by the members of said board, or a majority thereof. Such charter shall be submitted to the qualified voters of such city or village at the next election thereafter, and if four-sevenths of the qualified voters voting at such election shall ratify the same it shall, at the end of thirty days thereafter, become the charter of such city or village as a city, and supersede any existing charter and amendments thereof; Provided, that in cities having patrol limits now established, such charters shall require a three-fourths majority vote of the qualified voters voting at such election to change the patrol limits now established. Before any city shall incorporate under this act the legislature shall prescribe by law the general limits within which such charter shall be framed. Duplicate certificates shall be made setting forth the charter proposed and its ratification, which shall be signed by the chief magistrate of said city or village and authenticated by its corporate seal. One of said certificates shall be deposited in the office of the secretary of state, and the other, after being recorded in the office of the register of deeds for the county in which such city or village lies, shall be deposited among the archives of such city or village, and all courts shall take judicial notice thereof. Such charter so deposited may be amended by proposal therefor made by a board of fifteen commissioners aforesaid, published for at least once each week for four successive weeks in a legal newspaper of general circulation in such city or village, and accepted by three-fifths of the qualified voters of such city or village voting at the next election and not otherwise; but such charter shall always be in harmony with and subject to the constitution and laws of the state of Minnesota. The legislature may prescribe the duties of the commission relative to submitting amendments of charter to the vote of the people, and shall provide that upon application of five per cent of the legal voters of any city or village, by written petition, such commission shall submit to the vote of the people proposed amendments to such charter set forth in said petition. The board of freeholders above provided for shall be permanent, and all the vacancies by death, disability to perform duties, resignation or removal from the corporate limits, or expiration of term of office, shall be filled by appointment in the same manner as the original board was created, and said board shall always contain its full complement of members. It shall be a feature of all such charters that there shall be provided, among other things, for a mayor or chief magistrate, and a legislative body of either one or two houses; if of two houses, at least one of them shall be elected by general vote of the electors. In submitting any such charter or amendment thereto to the qualified voters of such city or village, any alternate section or article may be presented for the choice of the voters, and may be voted on separately without prejudice to other articles or sections of the charter or any amendments thereto. The legislature may provide general laws relating to affairs of cities, the application of which may be limited to cities of over fifty thousand inhabitants, or to cities of fifty and not less than twenty thousand inhabitants, or to cities of twenty and not less than ten thousand inhabitants, or to cities of ten thousand inhabitants or less, which shall apply equally to all such cities of either class, and which shall be paramount while in force to the provisions relating to the same matter included in the local charter herein provided for. But no local charter, provision, or ordinance passed thereunder shall supersede any general law of the state defining or punishing crimes or misdemeanors."
"410.24 Any city named in section
"410.25 It shall not be necessary or obligatory for the board of freeholders framing such new charter, or making such revision under sections
Dissenting Opinion
I concur in the dissent of Mr. Justice Magney. It is elementary that a state legislature possesses well-nigh unlimited legislative power, except where limitations have been imposed by the federal or the state constitution. Our only concern here is to determine what limitations, if any, have been imposed on that plenary power of the legislature with respect to its exercise in granting to cities and villages the right to adopt home rule charters. Art. 4, § 33, prohibits special legislation, but does not limit the power to enact general laws. Any limitation upon the plenary power of the legislature to enact general laws must be found, if at all, in art. 4, § 36. Obviously, in adopting § 36 as an amendment to the constitution, the primary purpose was to provide cities and villages with a method by which they could, subject to certain restrictions, help themselves in obtaining a new charter. This primary purpose was effected by conferring on such cities and villages a narrowly limited legislative power which represented only a segment or fraction of the plenary power possessed by the legislature. The limitations or restrictions found in § 36 are upon the exercise by the cities and villages of that segment of legislative power so conferred, and not upon the exercise of the remaining fraction of plenary power which was not granted to such municipalities and which was not otherwise taken from the legislature. Pursuant to the power so retained by the legislature, general laws may be enacted whereby cities and villages are given other and additional authority for the adoption of new charters as conditions change from time to time. Although § 36 guaranteed to cities and villages a certain minimum power of *592 self-help, it was not intended as a strait jacket prohibiting the legislature from extending other and additional forms of relief. Controlling principles and authorities are fully set forth in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Magney.
*1
Dissenting Opinion
The merits or demerits of the proposed charter or any part thereof are, of course, none of our concern. Our province is limited to the legal questions raised in connection with its submission.
The first question called to our attention is whether the document proposed by the charter commission is a new charter or an amendment. Plaintiff, the taxpayer, contends that it is an amendment *580 to the present charter. Defendants, members of the charter commission, members of the city council, and the city clerk, insist that it is a new charter. The trial court held it to be a new charter. The clear intention of the charter commission is that it is a new charter. As observed by the trial court, there is nothing to indicate that the proposed charter is a mere subterfuge in form of an amendment while pretending to be a new charter. It is suggested by counsel that the provisions of the new proposed charter that are similar in wording or substance with the provisions of the present charter be counted, and then that the changed or dissimilar provisions in the two documents be also counted. That may be a way of determining the question, but as the provisions of a charter are of different importance, and the dissimilar provisions, although fewer, may be of vital importance, it seems that a purely mathematical calculation and determination therefrom is unsound. From the very nature of things, there are bound to be many provisions in a present city charter and a proposed charter that are similar in substance if not in language.
In the instant case, the trial court has passed on this disputed question and found that the document drawn by the charter commission is a proposed new charter, and not an amendment to the present one. In my opinion that finding is correct.
The question then arises: If this document is a proposed new charter and not a proposed amendment to the present charter, is there legal authority for its submission? Appellants claim that no such legal authority exists. Respondents, the members of the charter commission, contend that the proposed submission is authorized, and therefore legal.
By an amendment to Minn. Const. art.
"Any city or village * * * may frame a charter for its own government as a city consistent with and subject to the laws of this state, as follows: [stating procedure]. Such charter * * * [if ratified] shall * * * become the charter of such city or village as a city, and supersede any existing charter andamendments thereof, * * *.
"Before any city shall incorporate under this act thelegislature shall prescribe by law the general limits withinwhich such charter shall be framed. * * *
"The legislature may provide general laws relating to affairs of cities, * * * which shall be paramount while in force to the provisions relating to the same matter included in the local charter herein provided for." (Italics supplied.)
In 1909 the legislature adopted c. 236 (L. 1909). Section 1 of such act (now M.S.A.
"Any city in this state which now has, or may hereafter adopt, a so-called 'home rule' charter by and under the provisions of section 36, article 4 of the constitution, and of any statutes enacted in pursuance thereof, is hereby authorized and empowered to frame, submit and adopt a new charter in the same manner and mode as is by law provided for the original adoption of such so-called 'home rule' charter."
Under this statute, the city of Minneapolis is "authorized and empowered to frame, submit and adopt a new charter," unless §
In State ex rel. Simpson v. City of Mankato,
"The relator has cited many authorities to support the proposition, propounded by Chief Justice Start in Cooke v. Iverson,
"We must not forget that the voice of the legislature is the voice of the sovereign people, and that, subject only to such limitations as the people have seen fit to incorporate in their Constitution, the legislature is vested with the sovereign power of the people themselves. In other words, the provisions of a state Constitution do not and cannot confer upon the legislature any powers whatever, but are mere limitations in the strict sense of that term, and the legislature has all the powers of an absolute sovereign of which it has not been divested by the Constitution. [Citing cases.] In determining, therefore, the constitutionality of an act of the legislature, the canon of constitutional construction above recited must be applied, together with that other equally as sacred canon that every intendment must be indulged in favor of the constitutionality of an act of the legislature. State v. Corbett, supra; 3 Dunnell, Minn. Digest, § 8931."
In State v. Corbett,
"Except where the constitution has imposed limitations upon the legislative power, it must be considered as practically absolute; and to warrant the judiciary in declaring a statute invalid they must be able to point out some constitutional limitation which the act clearly transcends."
The first and main question, then, for determination is not whether the constitution authorized the law of 1909, but whether such act contravenes any provision thereof.
In Farrell v. Hicken,
"* * * But we must bear in mind that, as far as power of legislation is concerned, the state Constitution is an instrument of limitation, not of grant. We need not search in it for authority for this legislation. We need look in it only for prohibitions. No constitutional authority to legislate upon this subject is required. The power of the legislative authority to legislate is plenary, unless the Constitution has deprived it of that power."
See, Lommen v. Minneapolis Gaslight Co.
In State ex rel. Meighen v. Weatherill,
"* * * for that department [legislative] is clothed with the right to exercise any and all powers of government where no restrictions are expressly or by necessary implication imposed by the Constitution. Or, as otherwise expressed, the Constitution is generally construed as a limitation and not a grant of power. State [ex rel. Simpson] v. City of Mankato,
In Williams v. Evans,
"The state legislature possesses all legislative power not withheld or forbidden by the state or Federal Constitution."
See, also, to the same effect State ex rel. Kelly v. Wolfer,
There is nothing in art. 4, § 36, which by words or by necessary implication restricts the legislature in giving authority to municipalities to adopt a second charter. And, as was said in State ex rel. Meighen v. Weatherill,
The whole purpose of art. 4, § 36, was to give municipalities greater freedom of action. Appellants are now attempting to place upon the municipality restrictions that certainly were not intended. As was said in State ex rel. Smith v. City of St. Paul,
"* * * Manifestly the purpose of article 4 was to give cities the maximum freedom of self-government consistent with the general welfare of the state * * *."
Counsel for appellant members of the city council quote from Switzer v. State ex rel. Silvey,
In two jurisdictions, where no statute similar to L. 1909, c. 236, had been enacted, the supreme courts have held, under constitutional provisions very similar to that of Minnesota, that a municipality did not exhaust its authority to adopt a second charter by the adoption of a first home rule charter. *586
In Reeves v. Anderson,
"* * * Such proposed charter shall be submitted to the qualified electors of said city, and if a majority of such qualified electors voting thereon ratify the same, it shall become the charter of said city and shall become the organic law thereof, and supersede any existing charter, including amendments thereto, and all special laws inconsistent with such charter. * * * Such charter may be amended by proposals therefor submitted by the legislative authority of such city to the electors thereof at any general election, after notice of such submission published as above specified, and ratified by a majority of the qualified electors voting thereon."
The court said (
"We think that the right to make a new charter is included within the constitutional grant of power to 'frame a charter;' that the right is a continuing right, and that by the act in question the legislature has made it possible for the people to exercise such constitutional right to create a new charter. * * *
* * * * *
"We think that the power to frame a charter for themselves is a continuing right vested in the voters of the city, and that it does not become exhausted because once exercised. We agree with counsel for respondent that the object of the constitutional provision is to confer upon the large cities of the state the power of local self-government (subject, as already stated, to general laws) and that this right to 'home rule is not limited at all in point of time.' "
In Morrow v. Kansas City,
"* * * the people having vested in the city and its inhabitants the power to frame and adopt a charter, we can see no reason why the exercise of it in 1889 should forever tie the hands of the city *587 from adopting a new charter in harmony with the conditions and necessities which its growth may require, or unforeseen exigencies may demand, for the welfare of its people.
* * * * *
"* * * It ordains that 'any city' of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants may frame a charter for its own government. It does not say any unchartered city of that population, or a city having a general legislative charter, or one having a special legislative charter prior to the adoption of the Constitution, may frame its own charter, but 'any city' of the requisite population, which will include one that has already framed and adopted a charter, and it is not for the courts to import into the Constitution a proviso that 'any city' of the requisite population which has not already availeditself of this grant, may frame and adopt its own charter.
"The grant is broad and unrestricted. But this is not all. This section provides further that a charter so framed and adopted shall 'supersede any existing charter or amendments thereof.' Here it is seen again, that the charter so framed will supersede any existing charter, a freeholders' charter as well as any other.
"But it is urged that the Constitution simply provides for an amendment, and does not contemplate a new freeholders' charter after one has been framed and adopted. * * *
"We can not bring ourselves to the view that it was intended to confine these cities to the amending plan."
The wording of the provision of the constitution of Missouri, as will be seen from the above, is very similar to art. 4, § 36, and the above reasoning applies fully to our situation. The Missouri court continues (
"We think that the power conferred by section 16 of article 9 of the Constitution of Missouri upon cities having more than one hundred thousand inhabitants is a legislative power conferred directly upon such city and its people, and such being its nature, it is a continuing one, in the absence of a constitutional prohibition; that there is no such prohibition in the Constitution; that the *588 mere fact that such a charter may be amended in the manner prescribed in this section of itself does not amount to a prohibition to frame and adopt a new charter, but that the section has a two-fold object, and points out a method for the obtaining of each without destroying the other."
These two cases clearly support respondents' position. In view of the provisions of the constitution, there can be no reason for holding that the power once exercised is exhausted and that there exists in the municipality no further power to frame and adopt a second or any other home rule charter. The same reason for adopting the initial, or original, charter applies to a new charter. New times demand new instrumentalities. The only case which may be considered contra is Blanchard v. Hartwell,
In passing upon the constitutionality of enactments, a cardinal rule is that every reasonable doubt must be resolved in favor of the constitutionality of a legislative act. It was so stated by Mr. Justice Mitchell in State ex rel. Hagestad v. Sullivan,
"Inasmuch as the legislature is a co-ordinate branch of the government, the courts do not sit to review or revise their legislative action; and hence, if they hold an act invalid, it must be because the legislature has failed to keep within its constitutional limits. * * * Except where the constitution has imposed limits upon the legislative power, it must be considered as practically absolute. *589 * * * Neither are courts at liberty to declare an act void merely because, in their judgment, it is opposed to the spirit of the constitution. They must be able to point out the specific provision of the constitution, either expressed or clearly implied from what is expressed, which the act violates. Moreover, courts will never declare a statute invalid unless its invalidity is, in their judgment, placed beyond reasonable doubt. Cooley, Const. Lim. c. 7."
"This rule has always obtained in this state," this court commented in Farrell v. Hicken,
Under the above test of constitutionality, it is clear that L. 1909, c. 236, is a valid enactment. If a valid enactment, the city of Minneapolis has the authority to submit a new charter to the voters. It violates neither the wording or spirit of the constitutional provision.
In Farrell v. Hicken,
"* * * The people of the city of Duluth, pursuant to the authority granted to them by the Constitution and laws of the state, adopted this charter for their own local government at a popular election, by a vote of at least four-sevenths of the electors voting." *590
When the court refers to the laws of the state, it seems reasonable to assume that it had in mind also L. 1909, c. 236, § 1. But it may be that no one, including the courts, had in mind the contention for invalidity now raised in the instant case in the three cases which came to this court after the adoption of the second home rule charter by the city of Duluth in 1912. In all the cases it was apparently assumed that the city had authority to adopt a second home rule charter. In Standard Salt Cement Co. v. National Surety Co.
"On December 2, 1912, the city ratified a new charter. * * * The charter became effective and superseded the former charter on January 2, 1913. Woodbridge v. City of Duluth,
In the three Duluth cases it must be said that the validity of the second charter was not an issue.
Since § 36, the constitutional amendment, was adopted in 1899, and since §
In view of the fact that the whole purpose of art. 4, § 36, was to give municipalities greater freedom in the handling of their own municipal affairs, it could not have been the intention of the electors in adopting the amendment to permit a municipality to adopt only one charter, and, by this adoption, exhaust its authority. Freedom to act but once is a very limited freedom. After once acting, the municipality would be shackled against the adoption of a new *591 charter to meet situations which arise in an age where municipal problems and functions not only are greatly increasing, but are also becoming more complicated and involved, requiring more efficient instrumentalities with which to meet them.
For the reasons above set forth, I respectfully dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
I concur in the dissent of Mr. Justice Magney.