BD. OF CTY. COM'RS OF CTY. OF WELD v. Andrews

687 P.2d 457, 1984 Colo. App. LEXIS 1128
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1984
Docket83CA0409
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 687 P.2d 457 (BD. OF CTY. COM'RS OF CTY. OF WELD v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BD. OF CTY. COM'RS OF CTY. OF WELD v. Andrews, 687 P.2d 457, 1984 Colo. App. LEXIS 1128 (Colo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

VAN CISE, Judge.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment to determine the status of appointed deputy sheriffs, other than the undersher-iff, under the home rule charter for Weld County, Colorado. The plaintiff, Board of County Commissioners, contended that deputy sheriffs are covered by the personnel policy set forth in the Weld County policy manual, while the defendant sheriff contended he is entitled to hire and fire his deputies at will. The facts were stipulated, and the parties agreed that the court could take judicial notice of the home rule charter.

The trial court held generally in favor of the commissioners, decreeing that:

“1. The appointed deputies of the defendant Harold Andrews, as Sheriff of Weld County, Colorado, other than the Under sheriff, are employees within the meaning of the Home Rule Charter of Weld County, Colorado.
“2. The employment and dismissal of such deputies, other than the Undersher-iff, are governed by the provisions of the Home Rule Charter for Weld County, Colorado, providing for the establishment of a personnel system, and the policies and rules relating to such personnel system adopted by the Board of County Commissioners of Weld County, Colorado.
“3. The Weld County Personnel Policies and Procedures presently in effect are as set forth in the Weld County Policy Manual under date of April 28,1980, and said policies and procedures govern the employment and dismissal of such deputies, other than the Undersheriff.
*458 “4. The provision of the Home Rule Charter for Weld County, Colorado, and the policies and procedures adopted pursuant thereto supersede general Colorado statutes relating to the employment and discharge of deputy sheriffs.”

The defendant sheriff appeals. We affirm, and in so doing adopt the portions of the trial court’s “Memorandum of Decision and Order” entered December 14, 1982, set forth below. The contentions of defendant are met and disposed of in that order.

“The charter was adopted by the people of Weld County pursuant to the authorization contained in Article XIV, Section 16 of the Constitution of the State of Colorado. That Section is as follows:

“Section 16. County home rule. (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, and 15 of this article, the qualified electors of each county of the state- are hereby vested with the power to adopt a home rule charter establishing the organization and structure of county government consistent with this article and statutes enacted pursuant hereto.
“(2) The general assembly shall provide by statute procedures under which the qualified electors of any county may adopt, amend, and repeal a county home rule charter. Action to initiate home rule may be by petition, signed by not less than five percent of the qualified electors of the county in which home rule is sought, or by any other procedure authorized by statute. No county home rule charter, amendment thereto, or repeal thereof, shall become effective until approved by a majority of the qualified electors of such county voting thereon.
“(3) A home rule county shall provide all mandatory county functions, services, and facilities and shall exercise all mandatory powers as may be required by statute.
“(4) A home rule county shall be empowered to provide such permissive functions, services, and facilities and to exercise such permissive powers as may be authorized by statute applicable to all home rule counties, except as may be otherwise prohibited or limited by charter or this constitution.
“(5) The provisions of sections 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, and 15 of article XIV of this constitution shall apply to counties adopting a home rule charter only to such extent as may be provided in said charter.

“Sections 6, 8, 9,10, 12, and 15 of Article XIV of the Colorado Constitution are those sections which set forth the officers who shall be elected in each county and how they shall be chosen and compensated.

“By these constitutional provisions the people of a home rule county are given broad discretion in setting up the organization and structure of their county government. They are limited only by the requirement that the organization and structure be consistent with the constitution and statutes enacted pursuant to it.

“In terms of the functions which the county government may perform in a home rule county the constitution is much more restrictive. A home rule county must do the things that all counties must do and must provide the services all counties must provide. It may also do such additional things and provide such additional services as are specifically authorized by statute for all home rule counties.

“In response to the constitutional directive, the Forty-eighth General Assembly enacted Chapter 105, Article 28 of the Laws of 1971 governing county home rule charters. This legislation forms the basis of Colorado Revised Statutes, 1973, Title 30 Article 11 Part 5, which is still in our statutes.

“This legislation again emphasized the wide discretion possessed by the qualified electors of any county to establish the organization and structure of a county government. Few restrictions were placed upon this discretion, other than those set forth in the constitution, except that any charter was required to contain procedures for initiative, referendum, and recall. The legislation was, however, quite vague on the question of the functions which a home rule county might perform, and really add *459 ed nothing to the constitutional provisions. This led to some question concerning which, if any, of the permissive county powers possessed by nonhome rule counties might also be exercised by a home rule county.

“This was the legislative situation which existed at the time of the adoption of the Home Rule Charter for Weld County, Colorado, in 1975.

“Shortly after the adoption of the Weld County Charter the legislature partially remedied the defect in the statute regarding the permissive functions which might be exercised by a home rule county by enacting certain amendments which are now part of C.R.S., 1973, section 30 — 11— 511. These amendments essentially provided that a home rule county might exercise all of the mandatory and permissive functions of a nonhome rule county, but none others.... [O]ne of the purposes of this amendment was to validate certain provisions of the Weld County Charter which had been attacked as being beyond what was previously authorized by law.

“This legislative framework remained substantially unchanged until 1981 when the Colorado County Home Rule Powers Act, C.R.S., 1973, Title 30 Article 35, was enacted. This act appears to broaden the powers granted to home rule counties and to grant to such counties certain powers not available to nonhome rule counties.

“The court has set forth the foregoing legislative history of county home rule in Colorado, and in Weld County particularly, to stress the dual nature of the constitutional and legal basis for county home rule.

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Bluebook (online)
687 P.2d 457, 1984 Colo. App. LEXIS 1128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bd-of-cty-comrs-of-cty-of-weld-v-andrews-coloctapp-1984.