City Commission of Pampa v. Whatley

366 S.W.2d 620, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1991
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1963
Docket7226
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 366 S.W.2d 620 (City Commission of Pampa v. Whatley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Commission of Pampa v. Whatley, 366 S.W.2d 620, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1991 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, Justice.

This case involves the right of appel-lees, (Herman Whatley, W. C. Fry, Claude Wilson, A. W. Lunsford, and A. C. Troop) each a private individual occupying no official position in the city of Pampa or Gray County, to a writ of mandamus to compel the city commission of Pampa to fix a day for holding recall elections upon the commissioners of three of the four wards 1 of the city of Pampa and by such order direct that each election be held the same day and that only the qualified electors residing in the respective wards be permitted to cast ballots for or against the commissioners in whose ward such electors resided. Appellees Whatley, Wilson, and Troop were alleged to be candidates to fill *621 the positions proposed to be created by the recall election sought. The election was ordered by the commission to determine whether Mayor Sidwell should be recalled from his elective office as mayor of the city of Pampa, so that question is not before us. It was denied as to the four commissioners “for the reason that said petitions, singly and compositely, do not comply with the requirements of Article 4, Section 2 of the charter of the city of Pampa authorizing the governing authority of the city to order and fix a day for holding a recall election * * naming each commissioner in each order denying the petitions.

The trial court granted the writ of mandamus. The three commissioners now involved are Lloyd M. Simpson, Commissioner of Ward One (1) ; Leon Holmes, Commissioner of Ward Three (3); and L. P. Fort, Commissioner of Ward Four (4).

All emphases herein are ours.

There is no special statutory authority in Texas authorizing private citizens to bring actions for the removal of elective municipal officers in recall elections. The only specific statutory procedures we have found in connection with the removal of municipal officers are Articles 5991 through 5995 Vernon’s Tex.Civ.St. and those statutes have no application to the instant case. If the petitions had been brought under specific statutory authority, mandamus would have been applicable to enforce such special statutory right. Yett v. Cook, 115 Tex. 205, 281 S.W. 837. In that case our Supreme Court said:

“The cases of Sansom v. Mercer [68 Tex. 488, 5 S.W. 62], * * * Kimberly v. Morris, 87 Tex. 637, 31 S.W. 808, and Boynton v. Brown (Tex. Civ.App.) 164 S.W. 893, are not in point in favor of defendant in error. In each of these cases there was a statute conferring upon certain petitioners the right to have an election ordered. Mandamus was awarded to enforce •.this special statutory right.”

Therefore, the only authority petitioners had in the instant case was the charter authority provided in the Pampa City Charter for the recall of the elected municipal officers. That charter provision provided that a petition for the recall of any elective officer of the city “shall be signed by at least thirty (30) per cent of the qualified voters, to be determined by the number of votes cast in the last regular municipal election-, at least one-tenth (1-10) of these signing the petition shall certify that at the election at which the officer or officers was or were elected, they voted for the election of such officer or officers proposed to be recalled.” That charter provision was enacted at a time when the city of Pampa operated with a mayor and two city commissioners elected from the city at large. When the ward system with four commissioners was adopted, the provision for recall of elective officers was not amended and had not been amended to the day the petitions for recall were submitted to the commission.

None of the petitions for recall of any commissioner complied with the plain requirement of the charter to the effect that the petitions for recall of any elective officer shall be signed by at least thirty per cent of the qualified voters to be determined by the number of votes cast in the last regular municipal election. When that charter provision became effective, it was completely operative because the commission was elected from the city as a whole and there was not any ward division within the city. When the city adopted the ward system it provided each commissioner should be elected from his own ward but it failed to amend the charter to make it conform to a sitution where thirty per cent of the electors of any ward constituted a sufficient number of electors for the recall of that particular commissioner, provided ten per cent of them certified that at the election at which the officer sought to be recalled was elected they voted for him.

It is not possible from this record for us to know whether it was the intention of *622 the city when it adopted the ward system and left the recall section of the charter as it was, to require thirty per cent of the qualified voters of the entire city to sign a petition for recall of each commissioner or if it was an oversight in not amending the recall section to conform to the change. When elected, a commissioner becomes an officer for the entire city and his vote binds the entire city. It is not entirely unreasonable to assume that in leaving the recall section as it was the city was giving those who could not vote for three of the commissioners a voice in recalling them instead of leaving the recall only to the commissioner’s own ward, whether friendly or unfriendly. Had they intended to change it all that would have been necessary would have been to amend the recall section to say each petition for recall of each commissioner should contain thirty per cent of the qualified voters in that commissioner’s ward. This they did not do. We do not believe we have the authority to amend the charter by judicial decree in order to make it possible for the petitioners to mandamus the commission to call the elections even though it should be said that charters should be liberally construed in favor of the people.

One of the points urged by the Commission is that mandamus will not lie because the petition for writ of mandamus would require the performance by the commission of judicial functions in its determination as to whether the petition for the recall of each commissioner measures up to the requirements of the Pampa City Charter which are prerequisite to an order of the commission calling the election. We believe what we have already said would require us to hold that this point is well taken.

The city secretary under the charter of the city of Pampa was required to perform certain ministerial acts prerequisite to the presentation of the petition to the commission. This he did. The petitions provided they must include the number of voters heretofore mentioned, which required of the commission an interpretation of the recall section of the charter as to whether it was thirty per cent of the voters of each ward or thirty per cent of the voters of the city as a whole. The acts of the city secretary were clearly ministerial while those of the commission were just as clearly discretionary. Mandamus will not lie in such instances but only where the acts sought to be enforced are ministerial in character or require discretionary acts of little substance. 37 T.J.2d Sections 18 and 19 beginning on page 617 and cases there cited.

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Bluebook (online)
366 S.W.2d 620, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-commission-of-pampa-v-whatley-texapp-1963.