The Honorable Billy Joe Purdom State Representative Route 1, Box 135B Yellville, AR 72687-9605
Dear Representative Purdom:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on several questions involving certain petitions for referendum that were circulated in the City of Bull Shoals and filed with the city clerk. Your five questions concerning the validity of the petitions are as follows:
1. Under Arkansas Code Annotated
7-9-106 , are these petitions valid, considering that only two of the 26 petitions circulated had a copy of the measure for which referendum was sought attached to the petition?2. Is the Ordinance prescribing the hours of employment for the mayor an administrative matter, and therefore subject to referendum?
3. Is the fixing of the mayor's salary by the Resolution an administrative matter, and therefore subject to referendum?
4. Are administrative matters, acted upon by the City Council, subject to referendum?
5. What effect, if any, does the decision of the City Council declaring the Ordinance and Resolution administrative matters, have in this case?
If, in fact, a "full and correct copy of the measure" was not attached to the petitions when they were circulated, then it is my opinion in response to your first question that the petitions are likely invalid. This will, of course, require a factual determination that falls outside the scope of an opinion from this office.
As you note, the relevant statutory provision is A.C.A. §
To every petition for the referendum shall be attached a full and correct copy of the measure on which the referendum is ordered.
Petitions may, of course, be "circulated and presented in parts," in accordance with Amendment
The people could not intelligently act on an initiative measure unless a copy of the measure itself was before them. The same reasoning would obtain in cases of a measure referred to the people. A full and correct copy of the measure attached to the petition would enable the signer thereto to act intelligently in the premises. . . . The statute was not passed as a mere matter of convenience or direction to be observed . . . by those circulating the petitions. . . . The act was passed as a safeguard to the rights of the voters to whom the petition was offered for signature. The requirement was intended to secure the voters whose interests were to be affected an opportunity to know what they were signing. . . .
The court also stated that this requirement is mandatory, and not merely directory.
It is my opinion, in response to your second and third questions, that both the Ordinance and Resolution are subject to the referendum provisions of Amendment
Amendment 7 reserves the power of referendum to the local voters of each municipality as to all "municipal legislation of every character. . . ." Ark. Const. amend.
The question in this instance, therefore, is whether the Ordinance declaring the position of mayor a full-time position and requiring a minimum of thirty-two hours per week, and the Resolution setting the mayor's salary, are administrative or legislative in character. According to my research, the Arkansas Supreme Court has addressed neither of these precise questions. As noted by at least one other court, however, the numerical weight of authority in other jurisdictions which have passed upon the question supports the proposition that the fixing of salaries is a proper subject for legislative action. Shriver v. Bench,
As to the Ordinance making the position full-time and setting the minimum hours, it is my opinion that this must also be characterized as legislative in nature. It is significant to note in this regard that the City Council is not simply prescribing particular duties, pursuant to its authority to "from time to time require [other duties compatible with the nature of the mayor's office]." A.C.A. §
Declaring the office to be full-time and setting the minimum weekly hours thereof is, however, in my opinion, more in the nature of local legislation in that such action establishes the essential characteristics of the office. While the authority to enact such an ordinance may derive from the statutes pertaining to the mayor's duties (see A.C.A. §§
The Arkansas Supreme Court has held, moreover, that a county quorum court may, pursuant to its local legislative authority, require that all county constitutional offices be open to serve the public from 8:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Walker v. Washington Co.,
Your fourth question is whether administrative matters are subject to referendum. The answer to this question is "no," as discussed above.
With regard to your last question concerning the effect of the City Council's declaration that the Ordinance and Resolution are administrative matters, it must be recognized that according to the Arkansas Supreme Court, "`[t]he form or name does not change the essential nature of the real step taken.'" Scroggins, supra, at 143,quoting 1 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations 1000 (2d ed., rev., 1940).See also Greenlee v. Munn, supra. As stated in Greenlee, "[t]he crucial test . . . is whether the action is one making a new law or one executing a law already in existence, regardless of the form or name put on the action. . . ."
It is accordingly my opinion that the Council's designation of the action as administrative in this instance is not effective.
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:EAW/cyh
