102 Cal. 298 | Cal. | 1894
This is an appeal from a judgment on the judgment-roll, and the only contention of appellant is that the judgment is not supported by the findings.
The action was instituted by the attorney general upon the relation of one Wells, challenging the legality •of the proceedings taken for the reorganization of
The court found the facts to be in substance as fol- \ lows: The town of Berkeley was organized as a municipal corporation in 1878, under an act of the legislature, approved April 1, 1878, and entitled “An act to incorporate the town of Berkeley, in Alameda county”; and thereafter it continued to exercise its corporate franchise, under and by virtue of said act, until June 28, \ 1893. On April 3, 1893, at a regular meeting of the board of trustees of the town, there was presented to said board, read, and placed on file, a petition asking that the question of the reorganization of the town, as a city of the fifth class, under the general laws relating to municipal corporations, should be submitted to the electors thereof at the next general election to be held therein. This petition was signed by only forty-seven qualified electors of the town, but attached to it were seven other sheets of paper signed by qualified electors ! of the town, numbering in the aggregate one hundred and sixty-five. The signatures were obtained as follows: Prior to April 3, 1893, eight separate petitions, identical in form and language, were circulated by different persons, and signatures were obtained to each of them. After these petitions had all been signed, the signatures on seven of them were cut off and detached by a person having no authority to do so, and were then attached to the other one so that they appeared to constitute a part of it. The petition to which the seven detached sheets were thus attached was then by the same person presented and filed as aforesaid, as and for a genuine petition containing two | hundred and twelve signatures. The whole number of votes cast at the last prior municipal election held in the town was one thousand and fifty-five. On the day the said petition was presented, April 3d, the board of trustees, acting upon the same, passed an ordinance submitting to the electors of the town at the next general election to be held therein, to wit, on the eighth
And as conclusions of law the court found:
“ That said defendant has never been legally organized as a city of the fifth class, and that all the steps, proceedings, and elections held in that behalf, as in the findings of fact herein are stated, were and are void.”
“ That defendant has usurped, intruded into, and unlawfully held and exercised the franchise of a municipal corporation of the fifth class, and is now usurping, intruding into, and unlawfully holding and exercising such franchise.”
Three questions are presented, and counsel on both sides earnestly ask that each of them be considered and decided. They are:
1. Was the petition, presented to the board of trustees, sufficient to give it jurisdiction to submit the proposition of reorganization to a vote of the electors?
2. Was the election at which the proposition was sub*304 mitted a general election within the meaning of the statute?
3. To carry the proposition, was a majority of all the electors voting upon it sufficient, or was a majority of all those voting at the election necessary?
1. The constitution provides: “Corporations for municipal purposes shall not be created by special laws; but the legislature, by general laws, shall provide for the incorporation, organization, and classification, in proportion to population, of cities and towns, which laws may be altered, amended, or repealed. Cities and towns heretofore organized or incorporated may become organized under such general laws whenever a majority of the electors voting at a general election shall so determine, and shall organize in conformity therewith.” (Const., art. XI, sec. 6.)
In obedience to this mandate of the constitution, an act was passed by the legislature and approved March 13,1883, entitled: “An act to provide for the organization, incorporation, and government of municipal corporations.” (Stats. 1883, p. 93.)
Section 4 of this act provides: “ The common council, board of trustees, or other legislative body of any city and county, city, or town, organized or incorporated prior to the first day of January, eighteen hundred and eighty, at twelve o’clock meridian, shall, upon receiving a petition therefor, signed by not less than one-fifth of the qualified electors of such city and county, city, or town, as shown by the vote cast at the last municipal election held therein, submit to the electors of such city and county, city, or town, at the next general election to be held therein, the question whether such city and county, city, or town, shall become organized under the general laws of the state relating to municipal corporations of the class to which such city and county, city, or town may belong.”
It is clear that, under these provisions, a municipality could only be reorganized in the manner and after a compliance with all the conditions prescribed. It fol
As before stated, the number of votes cast at the last municipal election held in the town was ten hundred and fifty-five. It was necessary, therefore, that the petition be signed by at least two hundred and eleven electors. The petition presented was signed by only forty-seven, and unless the signatures on the attached sheets could be counted, it was clearly insufficient. Probably if the several petitions as signed had been presented they might and should be regarded and treated as “ a petition” within the meaning of the statute; and in a similar case it was so held by the supreme court of Florida. (McKinney v. County Commrs., 26 Fla. 267.)
In Fox v. Board of Supervisors, 49 Cal. 563, the same question now in hand arose, and it was held that “ if two petitions, identical in language, are circulated and signed, and, to make the required number of names, the signatures on one petition are cut off and pasted on to the other, which is presented, the board have no authority to order the election.” The court, by Wallace, C. J., said: “ The petition presented to the board must be that petition which was signed by the petitioners. Both signature and presentation are necessary. In this view the identity of the instrument presented as being that which came from the hands of the petitioners is indispensable. To say that, though the signers did not affix the names to the petition presented, they did affix them to another and similar petition not presented to the board is no answer; nor does it satisfy either the terms of the statute or its obvious policy, which was to shut the door against frauds which would inevitably occur if the practice of detaching signatures from one petition and attaching them to another were permitted.”
And Crockett, J., in a concurring opinion, also said:
*306 “If numerous petitions with similar headings be circulated for signatures, and if the headings from all the petitions except one be cut off, and all the names, without the knowledge or consent of the signers, be pasted to the one heading, and in that form presented to the board, it is clear that the papér thus presented was not ‘signed’ by those whose signatures were affixed to it by pasting. Whether they signed another paper with a similar heading will rest entirely in parol, and can only be ascertained by oral proofs. If such proof will suffice as to a portion of the petitioners, it will be equally .effective as to all. We might then have the case of a petition never in fact signed by any one; and the omission could be supplied only by oral proof that the petitioners had signed other similar petitions. If a practice of this kind was tolerated it would open the door to numerous frauds, and would result in substituting oral proof for that which the statute requires to be in writing.”
There are some conflicting authorities in other states, and counsel for appellant insist that the decision in the Fox case should be overruled. It has, however, so far as we know, remained unquestioned in this state for nearly twenty years, and seems to be based on sound and convincing reasoning. It should, therefore, in our opinion, be upheld and followed.
2. The election held on May 8, 1893, was the annual election provided for by law for the election of municipal officers, and, in our opinion, it was a general election at which the question of reorganization might •properly be submitted. It is true that the words “general election ” are ordinarily used to designate one at which state and county officers are elected, but we know of no provisions in the constitution or statutes limiting them to such an election. Two classes of elections only are spoken of, general and special; and a regular annual municipal election cannot be included in the latter class, but must be treated as a general election.
In Ruggles v. Board of Trustees of the City of Woodland, 88 Cal. 430, application was made for a writ of mandate
And it was held that a peremptory writ should issue. No general state or county election took place on May 6th, but the court must have considered the election held on that day a general election, or it could not have said that the proposition to reorganize “ was duly submitted to the electors.”
3. At the election held on May 8th a majority of all the electors who voted upon the proposition to reorganize were in favor of it, but not a majority of all who voted at the election.
The provision of the constitution in regard to elections like that under consideration has been quoted, and it will be observed that the words used are-, “whenever a majority of the electors voting at a general election shall so determine.” These words clearly do not indicate that only a majority of the electors voting upon the proposition is necessary, but would seem to imply that a majority of all those voting at the election is required. And such was evidently the interpretation placed upon this provision by the legislature when it passed the General Municipal Incorporation Act of 1883. Section 4 of that act, after providing for the presentation of a petition, the submission of the question at the next general election, etc., proceeds as follows: “The votes so cast shall be canvassed at the time and in the manner in which the other votes cast at such election are canvassed. If, upon such canvass, a majority of all the electors voting at such election shall be found to have voted for such reorganization the said council, board, or other legislative body shall, by an order entered upon their minutes, cause their clerk, or other officer per
This language plainly implies, we think, that a majority of all the electors voting at the election is necessary to carry the proposition to reorganize.
Counsel on both sides have argued the questions at great length, and have cited numerous authorities, but we do not deem it necessary to follow their arguments further, or to review the cases referred to.
It follows that the court below drew correct conclusions from the facts, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Searls, C., and Vanclief, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Paterson, J