This is a proceeding to enjoin the Secretary of State from placing an initiative measure upon the ballot for the general elections to be held November 3, 1964.
The plaintiffs contended that a measure which would substantially change the Workmen’s Compensation Law was ineligible for inclusion on the ballot because of alleged defects in the initiating petition. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and the plaintiffs appeal.
The proposed legislation was made a part of the petition. The measure is drafted in the form ordinarily employed in bills introduced in the Legislative Assembly. The plaintiffs argue that although the standard form of bill is legally sufficient for legislation originating in the Assembly, a measure drawn in the same form does not satisfy the constitutional requirements for an initiative petition.
Oregon Constitution, Art IV, § 1, provides in part:
“* # * The first power reserved by the people is the initiative, and not more than eight percent of the legal voters of the state shall be required to propose any measure by such petition, * * * and every such petition shall include the full text of the measure so proposed * *
*204 The initiative petition’s alleged violations of the foregoing constitutional provision consist of (a) the designation of certain sections of existing law to be repealed by section number only instead of the quotation of such sections in full, and (b) the failure to include (in some manner not disclosed) the full text of sections of existing law referred to in the initiative petition but left unchanged by the proposed measure. Such sections are referred to by section number only. The circuit court held that a petition satisfies the “full-text” requirement if it contains the precise terms of the proposed measure and nothing more.
The question presented in this appeal has not previously been before this court. A similar question, however, has been decided by the Supreme Judicial
Court of
Massachusetts. The Massachusetts court held that the printing in full of sections referred to in the proposed legislation is not demanded by a constitutional requirement that the full text of the proposed legislation be set forth in an initiating petition. Opinion of the Justices, 309 Mass 555, 560,
The full-text requirement of our constitution means exactly what it says. The petition must carry the exact language of the proposed measure. It need include nothing more.
The judgment of the trial court, which dismissed the complaint, is affirmed.
