This case was commenced in the Superior Court by a complaint for injunctive relief and declaratory judgment filed by residents and taxpayers of. Newton. The named defendants are the school committee of Newton and the city of Newton.
1
At the request of the parties, a judge of the Superior Court reserved and reported the matter without decision to the Appeals Court. G. L. c. 231, § 111. Mass. R. Civ. P. 64,
The dispute between these parties involves the plaintiffs’ efforts to overturn by referenda the school committee’s votes of March 22, 1978, to close two elementary schools. The school age population in Newton has been declining for *445 several years. To deal with the problem of the resulting underutilization of school facilities, the superintendent of schools prepared and submitted a feasibility study for closing schools and consolidating school districts. The school committee adopted on February 15, 1978, certain guidelines for school consolidation. On March 22, 1978, the school committee voted to close two Newton elementary schools, Hamilton and Emerson. The Hamilton School would be closed as of September, 1978, and the Emerson School, as of September, 1979.
On March 27,1978, the plaintiffs filed with the city clerk a referendum petition, signed by the necessary number of registered voters, protesting the vote to close the Hamilton School. That same day, the plaintiffs filed a complaint in the Superior Court to prevent the school committee from deleting funds from budgetary accounts for the Hamilton School. In lieu of an injunction, the parties agreed to a stipulation that obligated the school committee to request a supplemental appropriation to fund the Hamilton School for the fiscal year 1979 budget, provided that (1) the highest Massachusetts court determine that the school committee’s vote of March 22, 1978, to close the Hamilton School was susceptible to referendum, and (2) the electorate approve the referendum. That evening the school committee voted to delete from its fiscal 1979 budget the funds for the operation of the Hamilton School.
The following day, the plaintiffs presented a referendum petition to rescind the March 22 vote which would close the Emerson School. The Newton election commission then duly certified the signatures on the petitions which protested the closing of the two schools. Thereafter the petitions were submitted to the school committee. The school committee decided that it could take no action on the petitions until it was determined whether the March 22 votes were proper subjects for referendum under the Newton charter. 2
*446 Subsequently, the plaintiffs brought a supplemental complaint, which narrowed their case to a declaratory action for a determination of their right to rescind by referenda the March 22 votes to close the Hamilton and Emerson Schools.
Because this case required a speedy resolution of the dispute, on May 17, 1978, we issued an order in which it was held that the school committee’s votes of March 22 are susceptible to the referendum provisions of the Newton charter. Our reasons for that holding are set forth below.
1. Although Newton did not adopt one of the charter plans set out in G. L. c. 43, the referendum provisions in art. 10 of the Newton charter, approved by the voters in 1971, are similar to the referendum powers granted voters in G. L. c. 43, §§ 37-43. Article 10, § 10-9, of the Newton charter reads in part: “Except as otherwise provided by law or the charter, any measure passed by the Board of Aider-men or the School Committee . . . may be protested and referred to the voters . . . .” Article 10, § 10-10, provides that “[referendum procedures shall be started by the filing of a referendum petition with the City Clerk within twenty days after the final passage ... of the measure to which the petition relates.” “Measure” is defined by art. 11, § ll-13g, to mean “an order, resolution, vote, or other proceeding passed or which could be passed by . . . the School Committee.”
If we were to literally construe this referendum provision, no distinction between legislative and executive acts would be drawn. See, e.g.,
McKinley
v.
Fraser,
The crucial test as to whether an act is legislative or executive is “whether the proposition is one to make new law or to execute law already in existence.” 5 E. McQuillan,
supra
at 213. In labeling an act as legislative, we have considered whether a “sweeping determination of municipal policy” was made. See
Gorman
v.
Peabody,
The line between executive and legislative actions is sometimes difficult to delineate and in some instances may be completely obliterated. See
Selectmen of Milton
v.
District Court of E. Norfolk,
Relying on
Fantini
v.
School Comm. of Cambridge, supra,
the defendants further contend that the challenged March 22 votes do not represent “final passage ... of the measure” (art. 10, § 10-10»), and hence are not amenable to referendum under the Newton charter. In
Fantini,
we held that the votes of the Cambridge school committee not to reappoint the superintendent and to so notify him were not “final” and thus could not: be rescinded by referendum. We found in that case that the. “essence of the vote was negative; the superintendent’s appointment was not to be terminated by action of the school committee but was to expire with the school year in the absence of action to reappoint him.”
Id.
at 324. See
Opinion of the Justices,
The defendants next assert that the March 22 votes may not be protested by referenda since they fall within art. 10, § 10-12 (3), which exempts the school comimittee budget from challenge by referendum. According to the defendants, the plaintiffs may not avoid this prohibition by challenging the votes leading up to passage of the budget rather than protesting the budget itself. We have already found, however, that the votes to close the schools were both final and legislative, and thus measures which may be protested by referenda. We do not interpret the budget exemption as prohibiting by implication a protest of a vote to
*449
close a school. Such a broad interpretation would consume the right to a referendum in view of the fact that most measures have some budgetary effect. Cf.
Murray
v.
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
2. We also reject the defendants’ argument that the school committee’s authority to manage the school system under G. L. c. 71, precludes a referendum to rescind its votes to close the two schools. It has long been recognized that “the school committees in this Commonwealth have had ‘substantially final authority’ to determine the needs of the school systems.”
Bell
v.
North Reading,
We believe that this case is controlled by
Gorman
v.
Peabody, supra. Gorman
declared that the “statutory provisions as to the powers and duties of school committees, which are of long standing, are to some extent, at least, by the charter provisions for the referendum, made subject to the orderly expression of the will of the registered voters, in so far as a ‘measure’ finally passed by the school committee is concerned.”
Id.
at 570. Contrary to the defendants’ claim, we do not believe that the right of the voters to rescind the decisions to close the Hamilton and Emerson schools would unduly interfere with the operations of the school committee. The cases which the defendants rely on to establish the supremacy of the school committee over the closing of schools do not involve the referendum process. See
School Comm. of Springfield
v.
Board of Educ.,
3. Because the votes to close the two schools are final measures subject to referenda under the Newton charter and are not superseded by the school committee’s power under G. L. c. 71, we hold that judgment should be entered declaring the right of the plaintiffs to submit their referendum petitions involving the Hamilton and Emerson schools to the voters.
So ordered.
Notes
In the statement of agreed facts, the parties state that they “disagree as to whether the City of Newton is a proper party defendant.” We note that the assistant city solicitor filed a motion to dismiss as to Newton under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12,
Pursuant to art. 10, § 10-11, of the Newton charter, within thirty days after a referendum petition is presented to the school committee it must either reconsider and repeal the measure which is the subject of the refer *446 endum petition or notify the board of aldermen that it has failed to take such action on the measure. The board must then provide for referral of the matter to the voters.
