294 N.W. 496 | Wis. | 1940
Mandamus on relation of Marjorie Loomis Marshall against the Board of Supervisors of Dane county to compel submission to a vote of the electors of the county the adoption of a civil-service ordinance pursuant to a referendum statute. From an order quashing the alternative writ the relator appeals. The facts are stated in the opinion. Sec. 10.43, Stats., is a referendum statute applicable only to cities that provides that, upon petition signed by fifteen per cent of the voters of the city requesting, the city council shall pass a proposed ordinance without change within thirty days or submit it to a vote of the people at an ensuing election. Ch. 263, Laws of 1939, enacted sec. 59.074, Stats., sub. (1) of which provides that any county may proceed under sec. 10.43 to establish a civil-service system of selection, tenure, and status, applicable to all county employees other than elective constitutional officers, members of the board of supervisors, and members of boards and commissions, and members of the judiciary. Sub. (2) provides for likewise establishing a pension system for county employees paid by the county and embraced in sub. (1).
The relator's petition for a writ of mandamus recites that a petition signed by the requisite number of voters and proposing for adoption a complete civil-service ordinance was presented to the Dane County Board of Supervisors with demand for action by the board as provided by sec. 10.43, Stats.; that the board voted not to enact the proposed ordinance; that the board adjourned its November, 1939, session without providing for submission of the ordinance to the vote of the people; and demanded that an alternative writ issue requiring the board to submit the proposed ordinance at the next regular election, or show cause to the contrary. The board moved to quash the alternative writ and an order quashing it was duly entered.
The case is plainly ruled by Meade v. Dane County,
So here. Ch. 263, Laws of 1939, so far as it applies to county boards, conflicts with the constitution. The proposed ordinance is of a "local, legislative and administrative character." The power to enact such an ordinance must, under the constitutional provision cited, be vested by the legislature in the county board itself; the legislature cannot authorize the county board to delegate the power to enact an ordinance of such a character to the electors. In the instant case, the petition shows that the county board itself voted not to enact the proposed ordinance. That ended the matter.
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court quashing the writ is affirmed. *60