134 Tenn. 93 | Tenn. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The charter of the city of Nashville (Priv. Acts. 1913 ch. 22) provides for a commission form of government. It also provides that the mayor or any commissioner elected by the people under this act may be removed from office by the qualified voters of the.city.
The suit now before us, on writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the court of civil appeals, was instituted in the circuit court of Davidson county by a petition of Laurent Brown and others, asking for a writ of mandamus to compel Howell, Turner, and Carr, commissioners of election, to certify a list of voters and to order an election to recall or remove Hilary B. Howse, mayor, and J. M. Wilkerson and B. B. Elliott, commissioners, from office.
The petition avers that there had been signed by upwards of 2500 voters, as required by the city charter, a joint and several petition asking for the removal of these three officials and others, that the petition had been filed with the board of election commissioners for more than thirty days, but that Howell and Carr had refused to join their cocommissioner, Turner, in providing for said election.
Howell and Carr answered, aiid pointed out a number of alleged irregularities in the recall petition which they averred justified their refusal to act. These defects were, among others, that Lyle Andrews, commissioner of finance, whose removal was sought, had been removed previously, and his successor selected in a legitimate way; that the petition sought the removal of Wilkerson and Alexander, who were not subject to recall under the charter of the city. They also pointed out that the petition was not joint and several, but jointly against a number of officials, whereas there should have been circulated and presented separate petitions against each separate officer whose removal was sought.
The case was heard on petition and answers.
It appeared that Wilkerson had resigned subsequent to the filing of the petition, and that Howse and Elliott had been temporarily suspended from office under, what is known as the Ouster Law (Pub. Acts 1915, ch. 11), a statute of the State providing for the removal of officials from office upon a judicial hearing. The temporary suspension of Howse and Elliott was shortly after the recall petition had begun to circulate among the voters. Since the case has been pending Howse has been permanently removed in the ouster case, and Commissioner Elliott has been restored to office by judgment of this court.
The city charter provides for the recall by a petition signed by duly qualified and registered voters equal in number to twenty-five per cent, of the entire vote cast for the office of mayor at the last preceding general city election, and demanding the election of a successor of the person sought to be removed, which shall be filed with the chairman of the county board of election commissioners. The petition shall state the grounds on which the removal is sought. The signatures need not be all appended to one paper, but each signer shall add to his signature his place of residence, giving street and number. Five of the signers to each such petition shall make oath before some competent officer that the statements made therein are true,' as he believes, and that each signature appended is the genuine signature of the person whose name it purports to be. When filed with the board of election commissioners, they shall determine whether it is signed by a sufficient number of voters to be ascertained from the registered voters, and it shall remain on file at the office of said board, and any citizen may procure a copy. Within thirty days from the date of filing, any citizen may appear before the board of election commissioners and show by competent evidence that the names of parties signing the petition
If by certificate of the county board of election commissioners the petition is shown to be insufficient, it may be amended within ten days from the date of said certificate, and the said board shall then make like examination of the amended petition within ten days after the amendment.
■ There are other provisions unnecessary to set out. An election is provided for. Any person sought to be removed may be a candidate to succeed himself, and his name shall be placed on the ballot without nomination unless he in writing requests otherwise. If some other person than the incumbent shall receive the highest number of votes, the incumbent shall thereupon be deemed removed from office upon the qualification of his successor, who shall hold for the unexpired term.
It will be seen that the board of election commissioners pass upon the sufficiency of the petition for removal.
We are of opinion the action of the court of civil appeals lays down the proper construction of this statute and the practice. The petition signed by the voters was for the removal of all the officials jointly. By what means can we determine that the people would sign a recall as to one or a few, less than all of the officials? The petition was joint and proceeded against all.
After a judicial inquiry by the courts under the Ouster Bill, Mayor Howse has been ousted from office, and Commissioner Elliott has been restored to office. Wiíkerson has resigned. So, if we were to order the writ of mandamus, and the election should be held, it could only apply now to Elliott, the only remaining officer subject to removal. How may we know that these 2500 voters who signed the joint petition for removal would now desire the removal of Elliott alone ?
This illustrates how improper it is to include a num-
The petition signed by the voters constitutes, so to speak, the pleading or indictment initiatory to remove an official. It should be directed against a single individual for the reason, first as we think, that it is so contemplated by the act of the legislature granting this remedy in the city charter. The act starts out with the provision that the mayor or any commissioner elected by the people under the terms and provisions of this act may be removed from such office by the qualified voters of the city. All the way through it grants authority to proceed against an officer sought to be removed, and nowhere indicates that the method may be proceeded with against a number of officials jointly. See Priv. Acts 1913, ch. 22, sec. 32.
The impropriety and injustice of proceeding against a number of persons in one petition is manifest. It is subject to objection on the ground that a voter, when presented with the petition, must judge as to the question of whether he shall ask for a removal of a number of men or else submit to the retention in office of all. He is not given the clear-cut right to pass on each individual and exercise his own individual judgment as to that particular person. The fact that the petition stated the same cause of removal against all does not cure it of this objection. The voter ought to have the right to judge singly against each officer if he so so desires. The legislature evidently so intended.
The official also should have the right to be judged alone by his fellow citizens as to his own merits or demerits. That the law-making body so intended in providing the recall we have no doubt. To construe it otherwise would be to attribute to the legislature the enactment of an unwise and intolerable law.
We have been furnished with no citation showing that any State has permitted the practice of including in the petition for recall a number of officials to be considered jointly. We take it for granted that none can be found; for counsel have prepared the case with great care. This indicates that the practice is the 'contrary wherever the remedy has been applied.
Two California cases have been found and cited where the removal of several officials occupying similar positions was sought by separate petitions against each official, circulated, and signed by the voters. These are Conn v. Richmond, 17 Cal. App., 705, 121
Those authorities cited by the petitioners holding that the recall is an efficient means of removal and should be given a liberal construction do not touch the question here, which is fundamental and goes to the personal right of the citizen. It is not a mere question of nicety of pleading. It is a question of construction of a statute of the State, and we construe it in accord with the spirit of our institutions.
This law is intended as a simple, direct, and just method of declaring a public official unfit to hold a given office, and gives twenty-five per cent, of the voters the power to stamp him with disapproval. "When so disapproved, he is by that act presented to all the voters for recall. How important it is, then, to the official himself, as well as to the public, that such power be so administered as to prevent political combinations, those who object to one official combining with those who object to another.
This is not a mere matter of pleading requiring a demurrer or plea in abatement. In their initiatory petition there was a failure to comply with the statute providing for the recall. The petition being improperly directed at a number of officials jointly, which is not permitted or provided for in the statute, it was a void proceeding.
“The answer to all of these questions depends almost entirely upon the provisions of the city charter. It is agreed by the parties to this proceeding that the charter is a grant of the powers, and not a limitation, so that no act can be legally exercised thereunder unless such act finds express authority in the charter itself, or is implied from some of its express terms.”
That court cited for the proposition McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, vol. 1, p. 783. And this is in accord with the previous holdings of our court.
The California court impliedly held that to authorize the submission of more than one ordinance in one petition it should have been provided for by the charter of the city. The court used the following language:
On the first point, that is, the claim that an initiative petition may contain more than one ordinance, no provision of the city charter to that effect has been
Then going further to the policy as well as the legality of submitting more than one ordinance to be voted on, and that to be the one the voter had petitioned for, the court further said:
“Here is a power granted unto the people to propose their own laws for adoption, provided certain legal procedure be allowed to properly place said laws before the voters. Assume, if you please, that certain features are included in such proposed laws or in connection therewith, which appealed to the voter, and in fact served as the controlling influence inducing him to sign the petition; has he not the right to assume, and should not the law protect him in the assumption, that he will have the opportunity and right to vote for the matters which he has petitioned for?”
The application of the reasoning in the California court above quoted is apparent. The learned circuit judge eliminated some of these officials from the petition in order to make it apply to those whom he conceived might be legally removed from office. But how may the court know that the required number of voters would have signed the petition if some of the names had been left out of the petition?
There is no more reason for reading into the charter of Nashville an implied power to include more than one official in a petition for removal than there was for the California court to find an implied authority in the charter provisions there considered to include in the initiative petition more than one ordinance to be voted on. The principles there decided have full application here.
The inclusion of the three officers in the petition who were not subject to the recall was illegal, therefore, because neither the election board nor the court by mandamus had the right to split up the recall petition and segregate objectionable features, and submit to the voters only those portions of the recall petition deemed proper or legal.
The inclusion of unauthorized and improper matter in the petition, namely, the three officers not subject to the recall, rendered the petition dual, and for that reason illegal. This proposition in principle was held in two Kansas cases. In one case the question of purchase of an existing water plant for the city, and the construction of a new one were attempted to be included together, submitting to the voters a proposition to issue bonds “to purchase, procure, provide, or contract for the construction of waterworks,” and in-
The other Kansas case is Hay et al. v. Dorn (1914), 93 Kan., 392, 397, 144 Pac., 235-237. This was a mmi-damus suit to require the holding of a recall election. The writ was denied because the petition included not only a demand to elect a successor to the officer sought to be removed for the reasons stated in the petition, but included without statutory authority for it another person therein to be nominated or elected as a successor to the officer sought to be recalled. The supreme court said:
“The statute does not authorize the naming in a recall petition of another person to be nominated or elected as a successor to the incumbent upon his removal. Some electors might desire the recall of the incumbent, provided the successor named in the petition was to be elected, but otherwise would be opposed to the recall. Such a petition presents to the electors a dual question and is illegal. Leavenworth v. Wilson, 69 Kan., 74, 76 Pac., 400, 2 Ann. Cas., 367. The petition in such case must present the single question, namely: Shall the city officer, naming him, be recalled?”
In the note in 2 Ann. Cas., 369, the illegality of thus submitting dual matters to the voters to be acted upon jointly, and showing the necessity of submitting» such questions single and separate from any other ques
For these and other reasons unnecessary to he mentioned we conclude that the petition for removal was absolutely void, and the election commissioners properly refused to certify it or provide for an election under it. The writ was granted in favor of petitioners, but for reasons herein stated, the judgment of the court of civil appeals is affirmed.