159 A. 922 | Md. | 1932
The appellant, intervening as a defendant in a suit by the appellees against the Secretary of State and the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City, has appealed from the overruling of its demurrer to the bill of complaint upon which the appellees seek a declaration that an act of assembly is now in force and effect, notwithstanding the signing and filing of petitions for a referendum and popular vote upon it, and an injunction restraining the referendum. The act is chapter 485 of the Acts of 1931, and by its terms the operators of taxicabs in cities and towns having populations of more than 50,000 persons are required to obtain permits from the Public Service Commission of the State, and to take out liability insurance policies or give bonds to indemnify persons whom they might injure. And the bill of complaint charges that the signatures attached to the petitions for the referendum fall short of the constitutional requirements, that many are forgeries, some of the names are fictitious persons, others of persons who had died before the time of signing, others still of persons who, though residents in Maryland, lacked the requisite qualifications, and that the petitions do not bear the affidavits required. The Secretary of State and the Board of Supervisors of Elections appeared and answered the allegations of the bill.
Although the act was to take effect as law, in regular course, on June 1st, 1931, its provisions were not to become operative until January 1st, 1932. The Constitution, art. 16, sec. 2, provides that, if before the 1st day of June there shall have been filed with the Secretary of State a petition to refer to a vote of the people any law capable of referendum as provided later in the article, the law shall be referred to the vote by the Secretary of State, and shall not become an effective law until thirty days after approval by a majority of the electors voting thereon. Section 3 of the article fixes the requirements for referendum petitions. They must *422 be signed by 10,000 qualified voters of the state, and, if more than half but less than the whole of that number sign, and their signed petitions are filed with the Secretary of State before June 1st, the time for the law to take effect and for filing the remainder of the 10,000 signatures shall be extended to June 30th. Each form of petition signed must contain the affidavit of the person procuring the signature, that of his own personal knowledge each signature is genuine and bona fide, and that the signers are registered voters of the State, and of the city or county, as the case may be, set opposite their respective names. How it shall be ascertained whether these constitutional requirements have been met by petitions filed, the referendum article has not prescribed. The bill of complaint avers that before and during the month of June forms of petitions bearing a total of more than 10,000 names, and pretended signatures, were filed in the office of the Secretary of State, but that upon investigation the alleged forgeries and frauds were discovered, and that in fact signatures in the number required, duly supported by affidavits, were never filed with the Secretary of State. Nevertheless, it is averred, as a result of the filing of the forms of petition, the act has so far been treated as suspended, its provisions have not yet been enforced, and the evils sought to be remedied by it have increased, to the detriment of the public, and also to that of taxicab owners and operators, including the complainants, who already conform to the requirements. The appellants sue as taxpayers, on behalf of themselves and any other taxpayers who may join as complainants, averring that, if the referendum should proceed upon the petitions so charged with fraud, the taxpayers will be put to wrongful expense for the publication of the referendum and the printing of it on the ballots of the next general election, in November of 1932. On these averments the interference of the court of equity by injunction has been sought, and a preliminary order has been passed declaring the petitions ineffectual for the purpose of suspending the operation of the act, and declaring the act to be in full force and effect, and a preliminary injunction has been ordered — *423 all subject to rescission and dismissal upon motion of the defendants.
The demurrer of the Sun Cab Company, filed after its admission as a defendant, raises chiefly questions of jurisdiction. There are four general contentions: (1) That a court of equity could have no jurisdiction to issue the injunction, because the limitation on its jurisdiction in respect to subject-matter, that is, limitation to the relief of civil or property rights, excludes the restraining of political and election officials in the holding of an election, or interference in the process of legislation, in which the referendum sought would constitute one step, and, in so far as there may be any remedy in respect to those subjects, it must be by the writ of mandamus, at law; (2) that the complainants have no right as taxpayers to the relief they seek, even if equity might assume jurisdiction of such a subject-matter, because they show no special injury distinct and peculiar to themselves; (3) that the Secretary of State, whose official residence is at Annapolis, cannot be sued, and cannot submit to be sued, in Baltimore City, and the court in Baltimore City cannot make its orders or decrees take effect outside of the city; and (4) that the bill of complaint is multifarious in combining the prayers for relief which it contains, both those as to subject-matter and those as to parties.
Counsel have given the court the benefit of exhaustive studies and reviews of decisions applying the principles argued on one side and the other. Some of those reviewed are not upon exactly analogous situations. In this case the subject of controversy is the claim or pretension of individuals who have signed and offered the petitions to a right to have an act of assembly submitted to the test of a popular vote. It is averred that the petitions are insufficient and the claim fraudulent, and the object of the suit is to prevent this action of private individuals from being given an effect to which it is not entitled if the averments of fact are true. The subject of controversy has some relation to a popular election or vote, some relation to performance of duties of administrative officers, and some relation to legislation. But *424 the attack is directly and principally upon the claim of the private individuals, the claim to a right to the use of the governmental processes. And that is essentially a judicial controversy, as the parties agree. The court is not asked to interfere in any discretionary performance of duties by officials; the officials would be, in this instance, only ministerial agents or channels for the proceeding which the proponents seek to initiate. Their relation, or the relation of the State as a whole, is at this stage only that of a passive medium; and it is appropriate that in such a controversy the private individuals or corporations making the claim to the referendum should be admitted as parties defendant. And the court, again, is not asked to interfere directly in an election or in the process of legislation; to repeat, it is rather asked to determine now whether private individuals are such as may, under the Constitution, require an election or popular vote, or interfere in the processes of legislation. And many of the decisions cited have dealt with controversies of a different kind, immediately connected with activities committed to the executive or legislative departments of the government.
It is, of course, true that the courts cannot invade the fields of government committed to the other departments, and consequently that they cannot, generally speaking, interfere to control the holding of elections, in the usual meaning of that term, or interfere in any part of legislation. Hardesty v.Taft,
On the contention that, in so far as the controversy may be one which a court may adjudicate, it cannot be settled by an injunction issuing out of a court of equity, but must be dealt with under a writ of mandamus, at common law, we are unable to see why the principles followed in the cases just cited, those ofGraf v. Hiser and County Commissioners v. Henderson, do not apply and control the decision. Against this view it is argued that the Maryland cases in which injunctions against popular votes have been issued have all been concerned with votes upon purely local improvements and tax burdens, and consequently with elections in restricted localities only. No Maryland case, it is urged, and few, if any, in other jurisdictions, have ever held that a court of equity might enjoin the holding of a state-wide election upon a question concerning the state as a whole. And the election required upon a referendum of the act now involved would be state-wide. But the fact does not, so far as we can see, afford any ground for distinction in the problem with which we are engaged. In that problem it seems to be a matter of indifference whether the project to be voted on is of state-wide concern or of only local concern. The governmental action in both cases seems to be the same in legal nature and quality, and the referendum sought and opposed seems to be substantially the same in both cases. The situation averred in the bill would be one pre-eminently demanding preventive interference, at suit of the proper parties, because stopping a false pretension to a right to a referendum is obviously *426
better done at the start than at some later stage in its career. Not only would expense then be saved, but wrongful immediate suspension of the legislative enactment, awaiting the time for an election, would be avoided. The original bill in this case was filed more than a year before the time for the election, so that, if the allegations are true, a year's wrongful suspension of the act might then have been avoided as an incident to an injunction denying any future effect to the petitions. This court has held that, by dint of repeated exceptions allowed to the general rule, the writ of mandamus in this state is one which may be resorted to in some cases for preventive relief (Levering v.Supervisors,
The objection that the complainants as taxpayers lack sufficient interest to bring the suit is answered to some extent by the conclusions just announced. If the subject-matter is at all within the cognizance of a court of equity, as we conclude it is, if that court may be resorted to for prevention of a popular vote which would be void because based upon insufficient petitions, then, according to the settled practice, *427
taxpayers interested in avoiding the waste of funds derived from taxation which would be involved in conducting the void referendum may make application to the court for the remedy. In the cases so far cited on the power of the court to deal with the subject-matter, as, for instance, in the Maryland cases ofMontgomery County v. Henderson,
As to the power of the court in Baltimore City to proceed and issue the injunction against the Secretary of State, after he has appeared generally and answered, it is to be observed that the objection to a suit in a jurisdiction other than that prescribed is an objection to venue, not one to jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that the general rule that objections to venue are waived by appearance and answer applies in suits against public officers or the corporations which they represent.Peoria Ry. Co. v. United States,
In Graham v. Harford County,
But there is another consideration opposed to the confinement of the suit against the Secretary of State to the county of his official residence. He is not the only official made defendant. The supervisors of election are also parties, they are officially resident in Baltimore City, and two places of residence, and the convenience of the officials in each, are to be considered. And, so long as all these defendants are proceeded against jointly, the venue of the suit can be settled only by the adoption of the jurisdiction of one residence, necessarily outside of the jurisdiction of the other. The rule confining suits to official residences, so far as it applies, is a rule of convenience (Phillips v. Baltimore supra), and convenience does not require that, when officials of different residences are, apart from any question of venue, properly to be proceeded against jointly, they must nevertheless, in case of residence in different jurisdictions, be proceeded against in separate suits. Convenience requires the contrary; and insistence of the court upon separate suits *431 under those circumstances would be inconvenient and without reason.
The bill of complaint is objected to as multifarious in seeking, as it does, the several reliefs of declarations that the petitions for the referendum are void and ineffectual and that the act of assembly is in full force and effect, and injunctions against the defendant officers from proceeding with the referendum sought by the petitions. In this objection we are not able to agree. These reliefs are only several parts of the one relief from the effect which might possibly be given to an alleged insufficient action by the proponents of the referendum. All can be conveniently dealt with in one proceeding. Miller,Equity Practice, sec. 105.
Decree affirmed, with costs to the appellees, and causeremanded for further proceedings.