150 P. 855 | Or. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
“The manner of exercising said powers shall be prescribed by general laws, except that cities and towns may provide for the manner of exercising the initiative and referendum powers as to their municipal legislation.”
This constitutional provision we consider ample to authorize the city by ordinance to prescribe the manner in which the election shall be held, and this it has done by Section 8 of Ordinance 208, which requires the recorder, at least 30 days prior to the time when the election is to be held, to cause to be printed 50 notices announcing the filing of the petition with a statement of its tenor and effect, etc., and to cause one or more of such notices to be posted in each ward of the city for a period of 10 days before the election and a notice stating the time and place of the election, with a brief statement of the measure to be voted on, to be published in some newspaper of general circulation in the city for two weeks preceding the election. All this was done, and more, as it appears that the notices were printed in two city papers of general circulation instead of one, and it is safe to assume that every voter in the city knew just when and where and for what purpose the election would be held. Section 10 of said ordinance requires the council to appoint judges and clerks of election and to designate the polling places, but further provides that in case of a failure on its part to perform these duties, the clerk shall designate the polling places, and that the electors present at the time for opening the polls shall elect the judges and clerks. The council did not comply with either of these requirements, and, as before noted,
“The council having failed to appoint judges and clerks for said election within the time provided by law, or at all, the qualified electors present at the polling places in each ward at the time for the opening the polls will elect, by vive voce vote, judges and clerks for said election.”
Thus it appears that every provision of the ordinance requisite to constitute a valid election was complied with.
Section 14 of the charter of Roseburg (Sp. Laws 1905, p. 36) provides, among other qualifications of a voter:
“He shall be the owner of real or personal property in his own right and name, situated within the corporate limits of the City of Roseburg, and shall have paid a tax thereon, or shall be subject to pay a tax thereon, as shown by the last assessment-roll of the county of Douglas.”
And it is stated in the complaint that the judges of election were instructed to permit none but taxpayers to vote. A similar provision in the charter of the City of Salem was held void in Livesley v. Litchfield, 47 Or. 248 (83 Pac. 142, 114 Am. St. Rep. 920), which was a case arising out of the refusal of the election officers to accept the vote of a nontaxpayer at an election held for the purpose of choosing city officers. Whether the same rule would obtain in an election held purely for the purpose of determining whether the city would adopt or reject a measure involving solely a question of taxation has not been determined by any decision involving that exact question, although in Oregon-Wisconsin Timber Co. v. Coos County, 71 Or. 462 (142 Pac. 575), it was held that Section 6391, L. O. L.,
The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Affirmed,