OPINION
This appeal concerns whether a member of the Board of Governors of the Yavapai County Community College District vacated his office by moving out of the district from which he was elected. We affirm the trial court’s ruling that the board member did vacate his office.
John E. Oakley was first elected to the Board of Governors of the Yavapai Community College District in 1974. He was reelected three times, most recently in 1990 for a term to expire at the end of 1996. The community college district is comprised of five smaller election districts, each of which contains a number of election precincts. One board member is elected from each of these smaller election districts, and must be a resident of that district. See Ariz.Eev.Stat.Ann. (“A.E.S.”) §§ 15-1441 (A) and 38-291(5). Oakley served as the board member from District One. While the statutes sometimes refer to these five smaller districts as “precincts,” we will continue to describe them as “election districts” to distinguish them from regular election precincts.
At its meeting on August 13, 1991, the community college board drew new boundaries for the five election districts. The boundaries were drawn so that the current board members would still reside in the districts from which they had been elected. On October 7, 1991, the Yavapai County Board of Supervisors approved the revisions of the election districts previously drawn by the community college board.
At the time the new election districts were drawn and approved, Oakley lived at 405 Delano Avenue in Prescott, which was in District One, both as that district originally existed and as it was redrawn. On November 5, 1991, Oakley moved to a house on Cyclorama Drive in Prescott which was in
Shortly thereafter, the State filed an action to require Oakley to vacate his office. It posed four alternative dates for when the new election districts took effect. 3 Each such date was after the date of Oakley’s move to the Cyclorama Road residence. If the State is correct as to any alternative effective date, Oakley moved out of the district from which he was elected and vacated his office pursuant to A.R.S. section 38-291(5) and article 7, section 15 of the Arizona Constitution. Oakley answered the suit with the contention that the new election districts took effect on October 7, 1991, the date on which the board of supervisors approved the new boundaries, so that even if he did move to his new home on November 5, he was always a resident of District One.
Following a trial, the judge found that Oakley moved out of the district from which he had been elected. The judge, apparently basing his decision on the terms of A.R.S. section 16-412, concluded that the new district boundaries became effective on March 1,1992, and entered an order excluding Oakley from a position on the board. Arizona Revised Statutes section 16-412 provides that “[f]or the purpose of conducting any election called pursuant to the laws of this state, [election districts] shall not become effective until March 1 of the year of the next general election.” Since the statute refers narrowly to the effective date “for purposes of conducting any election,” it is arguable that the trial judge applied the statute too broadly in extending it to establish the effective date for determining whether a board member resided within the district from which he was elected. The ease need not turn on this issue because we believe that even if the trial judge was wrong on this point, the State is certainly on firm ground in asserting that the effective date was November 15, 1991, which was thirty days after the board of supervisors approved the minutes of the meeting at which they had approved the new boundaries. We will affirm the trial court when it reaches the correct result even though it does so for the wrong reasons.
Gary Outdoor Advertising Co. v. Sun Lodge, Inc.,
THE NEW ELECTION DISTRICTS TOOK EFFECT ON NOVEMBER 15, 1991
We turn to an explanation of why we believe the boundaries took effect on November 15. The gist of our conclusion is that no enactment can take effect until after the time for filing a referendum petition has expired.
Referendum petitions against municipal actions; emergency measures
B. A city or town ordinance, resolution or franchise shall not become operative until thirty days after its passage by the council and approval by the mayor, unless it is passed over his veto, and then it shall not become operative until thirty days after final approval and until certification by the clerk of the city or town of the minutes of the meeting at which the action was taken, except emergency measures necessary for the immediate preservation of the peace, health, or safety of the city or town____ (Emphasis added.)
While the statute, by its express terms, refers only to cities and towns, we find that it also applies to the enactments of county boards of supervisors. Arizona Revised Statutes section 19-144, which was in effect when the county board of supervisors approved the election districts, provided that referendum petitions against an ordinance, franchise or resolution passed by a county board of supervisors may be filed under the provisions of title 19, article 4, of which A.R.S. section 19-142 is a part. In
Pioneer Trust Co. v. Pima County,
We must determine whether the approval of new election districts was subject to a referendum. An action by the board of supervisors is subject to referendum only if it is a
legislative,
as opposed to an administrative, action.
Wennerstrom v. City of Mesa,
[A]n act or resolution constituting a declaration of public purpose and making provision for ways and means of its accomplishment is generally legislative as distinguished from an act or resolution which merely carries out the policy or purpose already declared by the legislative body.
Id.
at 489,
In
Menendez v. City of Union City,
When a municipal governing body has latitude within its discretion in adopting the specific provisions of an ordinance, its enactment is legislative and subject to referendum, even though its authority to legislate on that subject has been delegated to it by State law. When a municipal governing body is merely complying with and putting into execution a State or local legislative mandate in adopting an ordinance, in effect exercising a ministerial function, its enactment is administrative and not subject to referendum.
Id.
We conclude that the adoption of the boundaries of an election district is a legislative act. The authority to establish
THE STATUTE CREATING ELECTION DISTRICTS IS CONSTITUTIONAL
Oakley, basing his position on article 7, section 15 of the Arizona Constitution, argues that the statute which creates five election districts within a community college district is unconstitutional. Article 7, section 15 reads:
§ 15. Qualifications for public office
Section 15. Every person elected or appointed to any elective office of trust or profit under the authority of the State, or any political division or any municipality thereof, shall be a qualified elector of the political division or municipality in which such person shall be elected.
Oakley’s first argument is that the entire Yavapai County Community College District, as opposed to the five election districts, is the “political division” to which the constitution refers. This being true, he says, he never moved out of the political district from which he was elected. The State takes the opposite position, arguing that the election districts within the community college district are themselves political divisions of the state so that under the very terms of the constitution itself, Oakley was required to maintain his residence in District One. Our examination of the question discloses little which sheds light on it except for the statute which creates the election districts. In enacting that provision the legislature impliedly construed the constitution to mean that persons must reside in the election districts from which they are elected. We cannot say that construction is either unreasonable or not in accord with the intent of those who adopted the constitution. Presumably the legislature acts constitutionally. When there is a reasonable, albeit 'debatable, basis for a statute, we will uphold it unless it is clearly unconstitutional.
State v. Arnett,
Oakley has another related argument. He says that the legislature never had the right to adopt the election district statute because article 7, section 15 imposes the
only
qualification for the office he held, and the legislature had no authority to impose additional qualifications. We begin our analysis of this argument with an old case from another jurisdiction which is directly on point. In
State ex rel. Hartford v. Craig,
No person shall hold the office of councilman unless, at the time of his election, he is a resident of the ward from which he is elected, and, in the case of the removal of any councilman from the ward from which he was elected, the common council shall have power to declare his office vacant, and order a special election to fill the vacancy.
Ind. Code § 3043 (1881).
The Supreme Court of Indiana, in resolving the very argument Oakley makes in this case, observed that the legislature had the power to impose additional restrictions and conditions with respect to the office of councilman as long as those restrictions or conditions were not in conflict with any express provision of the constitution.
Id.
Every citizen of the United States who is a legal resident of the state and is a qualified elector therein, shall be qualified to hold any public office in the state except as otherwise provided in this Constitution.
N.M. Const, art. VII, § 2.
The New Mexico Constitution also provided that municipal officers were required to reside within the political subdivision for which they were elected. N.M. Const, art. V, § 13. The court posed the question it had to decide in the following terms:
The question presented, then, is whether a ward within a city, town, or village is a political subdivision within the intendment and meaning of the Constitution. If it is not, then residence within the municipality meets the constitutional requirement, and the Legislature has no power to add restrictions upon the right to hold office beyond those provided in the Constitution, because the constitutional provision is not a negative one, providing that no person shall be eligible to hold an office unless he possess certain qualifications, as is often the case in other states, but is a positive provision, giving the right to every person possessing the qualifications therein set forth to hold office, except as otherwise provided in the Constitution itself.
Id.
There are several reasons why Gibbany does not govern the case before us. First, unlike the New Mexico Constitution, there is no provision in the Arizona Constitution which says that all qualified electors may hold public office- except as otherwise specified in the constitution. Second, by New Mexico law, aldermen, unlike community college board members in Arizona, were expressly elected at large.
There is one Arizona case, not cited by either party, which deserves comment. In
Whitney v. Bolin,
It is our opinion that the constitutional specifications are exclusive and the legislature has no power to add new or different ones. The qualifications fixed in the Constitution are exclusive for the reason that if it were not intended by the framers thereof to fix all the qualifications, then it must have been intended to fix only a part and leave it to the legislature to fix others. Such a view is inconsistent with accepted constitutional construction that the enumeration of certain specified things in a constitution will usually be construed to exclude all other things not so enumerated. Positive directions in a constitution contain an implication against anything contrary to them. Indeed, were the framers to intend otherwise, they would have created the office with directions that the legislature could or should fix other qualifications.
It is established that where a state constitution provides for certain officials and names the qualifications, the legislature is without authority to prescribe additional qualifications unless the constitution further, either expressly or by implication, gives the legislature such powers.
Id.
at 47,
Notwithstanding the statement of the general proposition that the legislature cannot add qualifications for office not speci
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Oakley insinuates that the trial judge abused his discretion in finding that November 5 was the date Oakley moved to Cyclorama Road. He did not make this an issue in his opening brief. In his reply brief, he argues that he did not really change his address until December of 1991. Oakley raises the issue too late.
See Camelback Contractors, Inc. v. Industrial Comm’n,
. A.R.S. § 38-291(5) states that "[a]n office shall be deemed vacant from and after the occurrence of any of the following events before the expiration of a term of office if the office is elective, the person holding the office ceasing to be a resident of the state, or, if the office is local, or from a legislative or congressional district, the person holding the office ceasing to be a resident of the district, county, city, town or precinct for which he was elected, or within which the duties of his office are required to be discharged."
. It is unnecessary to discuss all the alternative dates the State suggested as the effective date of the new election districts. We need only discuss the date the trial judge relied on and the date we conclude was the one on which the new districts surely took effect.
. We assume, on a silent record, that a correct copy of the board’s action could not have been available before the minutes of the October 7 meeting were approved. Even if this is not correct, the effective date of the new election district boundaries would be November 7, a date after Oakley moved from the Delano Street address.
