Wallace L. Stahovic (Stahovic) and Dorothy E. Otto (Otto) appeal from an order for judgment 1 dismissing their petition for writ of certiorari to require Henry A. Rajchel, city clerk of the city of Greenfield (Greenfield city clerk), to file certain recall petitions with the Milwaukee cоunty clerk of courts. We reverse the trial court’s ruling that the Greenfield city clerk correctly disallowed entire pages of recall petition signatures on the ground that one or more of such signatures was invalid.
In June, 1983, a group of citizens began a recall petition drive in the city of Greenfield for the purpose of recalling three elected officials — Mayor Francis P. Ha-vey, Alderman John W. Gazvoda and Alderman Ron Zepnick. The citizens did not obtain a sufficient num *373 ber of signatures for recall of Alderman Zepnick; thus, the only petitions ultimately filed wеre those for recall of Mayor Havey and Alderman Gazvoda.
On August 5, 1983, the citizens filed 221 pages of petitions containing 2,968 signatures for recall of Mayor Havey and 49 pages of petitions containing 685 signatures for recall of Alderman Gazvoda. The required number of signatures for rеcall of these officials was 2,820 for Mayor Havey and 589 for Alderman Gazvoda. 2
Within the ten days set by sec. 9.10(4) (a), Stats., the Greenfield city clerk reviewed the petitions and determined that they contained a number of defects, e.g., undated signatures, improper dates, dates added by one other than the signer, more than one signature by the same person, signatures made by non-residents of Greenfield, signatures made on behalf of others, and printed instead of written signatures. Where the Greenfield city clerk found a defective signature, he disallowed the entire page of signatures (each petition page had room for ten signatures and the affidavit of the circulator). The Greenfield city clerk reasoned that even one defective signature impeached the circulator’s affidavit and that, therefore, the remaining signatures on the page must also be disallowed. The clerk found that 286 signatures were invalid in the recall petition for Mayor Havey and that 186 signatures were invalid in the recall petition for Alderman Gazvoda. Accordingly, the clerk found the petitions deficient by 138 and 90 signatures, respectively, and would not file the petitions with -the Milwaukee county clerk of courts.
On August 25, 1983, Stahovic and Otto filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the Milwaukee county circuit *374 court. The circuit court rendered a decision from the bench on October 4, 1983, upholding the actions of the Greenfield city clerk. The court dismissed the writ of certiorari in an order for judgment dated November 7, 1983.
Stahovic and Otto filed a notice of appeal on November 22, 1983, which we dismissed on the ground of mootness on March 1, 1984. On March 19, 1984, on our own motion, we reconsidered our dismissal and direсted resubmission of the appeal.
Our determination that the issue on appeal was moot was based on the fact that neither of the officials in question is in office any longer. Mayor Havey did not run for re-election, and Alderman Gazvoda was defeated in his bid for re-elеction. A case is moot when a determination is sought upon a matter which, when rendered, cannot have any practical legal effect upon a then existing controversy.
Milwaukee Police Association v. City of Milwaukee,
However, the general rule that a moot appeal will be dismissed is not adhered to unbendingly. If interests of a public character are asserted under conditions that are likely to be repeated, we may address the merits of an otherwise moot issue.
See Wisconsin Employment Relations Board v. Allis-Chalmers Workers’ Union,
*375 STANDARD OF REVIEW
On review by certiorari of a municipal officer’s determination, the reviewing court is limited to considering (1) whether the officеr kept within his jurisdiction; (2) whether he acted according to law; (3) whether his action was arbitrary, oppressive or unreasonable and represented his will and not his judgment; and (4) whether the evidence is such that he might reasonably have made the determination in question.
State ex rel. Geipel v. City of Milwaukee,
THE RIGHT OF RECALL
The right to recall elective officers of congressional, judicial, or legislative districts, or of counties, is constitutional.
See
Wis. Const, art. XIII, sec. 12. The right to recall municipal officials, however, is solely a creature of statute.
See
sec. 9.10, Stats.;
see also Beckstrom v. Kornsi,
While the right to recall municipal officials was created by the legislature, it has constitutional stature by virtue of the provisions contained in sec. 9.10(7), Stats.: “The purpose of this section is to facilitate the operation of article XIII, section 12, of the constitution and to extend the same rights tо electors of cities, villages, towns and school districts.”
*376 Section 9.10(2) (a), Stats., provides in part that the “preparation and form of the recall petition shall be governed by s. 8.15.” Section 8.15, Stats., sets forth the procedures applicable to nomination papers. Among other things, the section provides that only one signature per person for the same office is valid, that each signer shall list his or her residence and address and the date of signing, and that the affidavit of the qualified elector who circulated the petition must appear on the bottom of the paper, stating that he or she personally circulated the paper, is personally acquainted with the signers, knows they are electors of the district in question, knows they signed the paper with knowledge of its content, knows they signed on the date given, аnd that he or she, the affiant, is a resident of the particular district. Sec. 8.15(2) and (4) (a).
No party disputes that a transgression of a signature provision invalidates the signature. The question remains whether such a transgression invalidates the entire petition page because it impeaches the affidavit of the circulator. We conclude that it does not.
We begin with the fundamental principle that, in construing election laws, the will of the electorate is to be furthered. Section 5.01(1), Stats., entitled “Scope: Construction of Chs. 5 to 12,” provides as follows: “Chaptеrs 5 to 12 shall give effect to the will of the electors, if that can be ascertained from the proceedings, notwithstanding informality or failure to fully comply with some of its provisions.” To reject otherwise valid signatures in a petition because one signature on the page was defective would be to defeat the above-stated policy. “The object of election laws is to secure the rights of duly qualified electors and not to defeat them.”
State ex rel. Dithmar v. Bunnell,
*377
A review of Wisconsin case law demonstrates that substantial, and not literal, compliance with election laws has been deemed consistent with sec. 5.01, Stats. In
Lanser v. Koconis,
We are persuaded that it would not be in keeping with the provisions of sec. 5.01, Stats., to reject otherwise valid signatures, representing the will of the electorate, because they appear on the same page as an invalid signature. The supreme court has characterized individual signatures as “separate” and “independent:”
[E]ach signature is to be regarded as a separate anjl independent unit and by itself and cannot be added to or have necessary elements supplied from or by that which may be done in the same petition by others,— intending by this, of course, to in no wise question the validity of such signer making as his own, by appropriate ditto marks or common abbreviation, that which may appear above his signature and as part of the same paper.
*378
State ex rel. Baxter v. Beekley,
In disallowing entire pages of recall petitions on grounds of non-residency of one of the signers, the Greenfield city clerk acted in conformity with a proposed administrative code rule which provides that “[n]one of the signatures on a separate petition sheet will be counted if .. . any signature on the sheet is signed by a person who is not a resident of the district of the elеcted official being recalled.” [Proposed] Wis. Adm. Code, sec. El Bd 2.09(6) (a) (19 — ). 3 The Greenfield city clerk took it upon himself to expand the application of this proposed administrative rule by throwing out every petition sheet with a non-complying signature, regardless of the naturе of the violation.
We believe the above rule, as proposed, is inconsistent with sec. 9.10(7), Stats., and thus with art. XIII, sec. 12, of the Wisconsin Constitution. Section 12 of art. XIII, entitled “Recall of elective officers” (applicable to other than municipal officers), contains no provision authorizing invalidation of otherwise valid recall signatures simply because they appear on a petition with a defective signature. Subsection (7) of sec. 12 states that the section “shall be self-executing and mandatory” and *379 that “[l]aws may be enacted to facilitate its operation but no law shall be enacted to hamper, restrict or impair the right of recall.” Section 9.10(7), Stats., makes the rights and protections of art. XIII, sec. 12, applicable to the recall of city officials. We are persuaded that proposеd sec. 2.09(6) (a) of the administrative code, sec. El Bd, hampers, restricts and impairs the right of recall of city officials by denying qualified petitioners their right to be heard.
We ordinarily accord great weight to an administrative agency rule interpreting a law which the agency is chargеd with applying,
see Pigeon v. DILHR,
Case law from other jurisdictions reinforces our conviction that striking an entire page of signatures for one invalid signature violates the right of recall by denying valid signatories the right to be heard. Directly on point is
In re
Bower,
4
In conclusion, we hold that the spirit of Wisconsin law requires that, absent fraud, only invalid signatures be disallowed in a petition for recall. This rule does not impugn the integrity of the recall process, and it avoids thwarting the will of the electors. The Greenfield city clerk acted on an incorrect theory of the law in striking whole petition pages for one or more invalid signatures. The trial court erred in dismissing the petition for writ of certiorari. The trial court’s order for judgment is therefore reversed.
By the Court. — Order reversed.
Notes
Although this appeal is taken from an order for judgment, which is not usually a final order appealable as of right,
see Mitler v. Associated Contractors,
See. 9.10(1), Stats., requires that a petition for recall be signed by electors equal to at least 25 percent of the vote cast for the office of governor in the last eleсtion within the district from which the officeholder is being recalled.
A letter dated December 8, 1983, from the executive secretary of the State Elections Board to the city attorney of the city of Greenfield explains that sec. El Bd 2.09 was promulgated as an emergency rule in 1982, hаs since expired, but is still being followed and will be placed in the Administrative Code. The letter goes on to explain that the Elections Board uses a stricter standard of scrutiny for recall petitions than it does for nomination papers.
In re Bower
was cited in
Mueller v. Jensen,
