In January of 1967 petitioner was a candidate for city councilman in the 14th district and requested defendant to provide him with an appropriate form on which to set forth a statement of his qualifications as provided by section 10012.5, Elections Code. 1 Defendant refused to comply, asserting that the provisions of the statute do not apply to the City of Los Angeles as a chartered city (art. XI, § 8, Cal. Const.). An alternative writ of mandate was issued and subsequently, upon submission of the cause, a peremptory *364 writ which ordered defendant to provide the form sought and otherwise comply with the statute in question. Thé instant appeal is from the judgment directing the issuance of the peremptory writ.
In his answer to the petition for the peremptory writ, defendant alleged that section 8% of article XI specifically grants to chartered cities the right to provide the manner in which municipal elections shall be conducted; that pursuant thereto and further pursuant to charter authority (§ 306) an Election Code for the City of Los Angeles was adopted in 1946 providing for a comprehensive set of rules governing all phases of city elections; and that the Election Code thus adopted provides for certain information of a substantive nature respecting issues to be included with the mailing of sample ballots but not candidate qualification booklets as provided in section 10012.5. It is pointed out on this appeal that the enactment by the City of the above section 306 (Los Angeles Charter) had constitutional sanction in that section 8%, supra, declares that “It shall be competent in any charter framed in accordance with the provisions of this section . . . for any city or consolidated city and county, and plenary authority is hereby granted ... to provide therein or by any amendment thereto, the manner in which, the method by which, the times at which, and the terms for which the several county and municipal officers and employees whose compensation is paid by such city or city and county, excepting judges of the superior court, shall be elected or appointed, and for their recall and removal. ...” (Italics added.) Such “plenary authority” having been given the City, pursuant to which section 306 and its own Election Code were thereafter adopted, it is contended that the latter code, wherein no provision is made for the mailing of candidate qualification pamphlets, should prevail over the provisions of section 10012.5 (Elections Code) which conflict with “the manner in which, [and] the method by which” the City has decided that its various “municipal officers . . . shall be elected.” Such contention, it is further asserted, has the support of decisional law to the effect that local municipal elections are strictly municipal affairs.
Respondent, on the other hand, invokes
Professional Fire Fighters, Inc.
v.
City of Los Angeles,
The difficulty with respondent’s reliance on
Professional Fire Fighters, Inc.,
and his argument otherwise, is that California courts have already determined that the conduct of municipal elections is a municipal affair and subject to municipal control.
(Socialist Party
v.
Uhl,
Finally, we perceive no substantial difference between the problem here and that which confronted the court in
Lawing
v.
Faull,
The judgment is reversed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 17, 1968. Peters, J., and Most, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
As added by Statutes 1965, chapter 1810, section 1, said section reads as follows: "Bach candidate for elective office in any local agency, city, county, city and county or district may prepare a statement of qualifications on an appropriate form provided by the clerk. Such statement may include the name, age, occupation, and education of the candidate and a brief description of no more than 150 words, of the candidate’s qualifications expressed by the candidate himself. Such statement shall not include the party affiliation of the candidate, nor membership or activity in partisan political organizations. Such statement shall be filed at the time nominating papers are filed.
"The clerk shall send to each voter together with the sample ballot, a voter’s pamphlet which contains the written statements of each candidate ’s qualifications that is prepared pursuant to this section. "The local agency may bill each candidate availing himself of this service a sum not greater than the actual prorated costs of printing and handling incurred by the agency as a result of providing this service. Only these charges may be levied and each candidate using this service shall be charged the same.
"The clerk shall reject any statement which contains any obscene, vulgar, profane, scandalous, libelous or defamatory matter, or any langauge which in any way incites, counsels, promotes or advocates hatred, abuse, violence or hostility toward, or which tends to cast ridicule or shame upon any person or group of persons by reason of race, color, religion or manner of worship, or any language or matter the circulation of which through the mails is prohibited by Congress.
"Nothing in this section shall be deemed to make any such statement or the authors thereof free or exempt from any civil or criminal action or penalty because of any false, slanderous or libelous statements offered for printing or contained in the voter’s pamphlet. ’ ’
