City of Sherman v. Hudman

996 S.W.2d 904, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 4715, 1999 WL 424252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1999
Docket05-95-01600-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 996 S.W.2d 904 (City of Sherman v. Hudman) 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 of Sherman v. Hudman, 996 S.W.2d 904, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 4715, 1999 WL 424252 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*908 OPINION

Opinion By Justice MOSELEY.

The City of Sherman, Mayor Julie Ellis Starr, Former Mayor Harry Reynolds, and City Clerk Helen- Friend (collectively “the City”) appeal the trial court’s judgment voiding the results of an election repealing the City’s adoption of the Fire and Police Employee Relations Act. 2 In fifteen points of error, the City generally asserts (1) the trial court did not have jurisdiction to render a judgment, (2) the trial court applied incorrect legal findings of fact. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

In 1974, Sherman voters adopted the provisions of the Fire and Police Employee Relations Act. Under this act, police and firefighters are granted the right to organize and collectively bargain with the City regarding compensation, hoürs, and other conditions of employment. 3 Collective bargaining rights, once adopted, may be repealed only by an election called by the City after receiving a petition signed by a sufficient number of voters. 4

In early 1995, the Sherman City Council sought repeal of collective bargaining rights for police and firefighters.' According to testimony at trial, the City wanted to place the repeal measure on the May 6, 1995 general election ballot because a general election brought out a greater number of voters thereby increasing the probability that the repeal measure would pass. John Gilliam, the city attorney, prepared a petition form at the request of H.K. Lyde, a Sherman citizen active in the repeal effort. According to Gilliam, the petition form was drafted in an attempt to comply with state law and city charter requirements. The petition form called for “the repeal of collective bargaining rights for Sherman policemen and firefighters pursuant to section 174.053 of the local government code.” Lyde and others circulated the multiple petition forms and obtained signatures. Thirty-seven separate petition forms were received by the city clerk’s office between January 23, 1995 and February 8, 1995. When each form was submitted, it was stamped “received,” and the time of receipt was noted. After receiving all thirty-seven petition forms, the city clerk, Helen Friend, verified the signatures and certified the thirty-seven forms as one petition. Friend testified she placed all the petition forms in a single file folder and intended to treat them as a single document.

■ After receiving the petition forms, the Sherman City Council passed Ordinance 4401 placing the collective bargaining repeal measure on the May 6, 1995 general municipal election ballot. During the first reading of the proposed ordinance at the city council meeting, questions arose about the validity of the sworn circulator affidavits on several of the petition forms. Specifically, it came to light that Mayor Reynolds had circulated some petitions and obtained signatures. Gilliam went to the city clerk’s office to see if Mayor Reynolds had signed any circulator affidavits. Gilliam found no petition forms signed by Mayor Reynolds. However, Gilliam ascertained that Lyde had signed as circulator three petition forms that were actually circulated by Mayor Reynolds.

While at the city clerk’s office, Gilliam also learned a woman named Virginia Evans had signed a circulator affidavit on a petition form she did not circulate. Evans had taken a petition form circulated by her employer to the city clerk’s office for filing. The deputy clerk, Linda Ashby, noticed the circulator affidavit had not been signed and told Evans she needed to sign it. Evans informed Ashby she did not circulate the petition form and had not witnessed any of the signatures. Ashby consulted Friend about the matter, and *909 Friend stated that for Evans to submit the petition form, she would have to sign the circulator affidavit. Ashby relayed this information to Evans. According to Evans, both Ashby and Friend watched her sign the circulator affidavit knowing she (Evans) had not circulated the petition form. 5

Because of the problems, the City decided to disregard (but not officially decertify) the sixty-five signatures involved in the Lyde and Evans petition forms because the remaining petition forms collectively contained a total number of signatures that exceeded the minimum number of signatures required to call the election under section 174.053(a) of the local government code. City officials did not investigate any other circulator affidavits and represented they knew of no problems with the other petition forms. However, after the election, it was discovered that Lyde signed circulator affidavits on eight additional petition forms without actually witnessing the signatures thereon.

Before the election, the police and firefighters sought a temporary and permanent injunction, mandamus, and declaratory judgment in the district court on the ground the petition was invalid for failure to comply with applicable state law and city charter requirements. At the City’s urging, the trial court declined to enjoin the election and abated the action until after the election on May 6, 1995. The repeal measure appeared on the May 6 ballot.

After the votes were canvassed, the City declared the repeal measure passed by 257 votes. Thereafter, the police and firefighters amended their pleadings to add an election contest to their suit. The City filed a plea to the jurisdiction asserting the trial court did not have jurisdiction because the election contest was filed before the election was held and, thus, was premature. The City further asserted the declaratory judgments act did not confer independent jurisdiction on the trial court.

The trial court denied the City’s plea to the jurisdiction.

The case was called to trial before the court and, after hearing evidence, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. The trial court concluded that, to be legally sufficient, the petition had to meet the requirements of chapter 174 of the Texas Local Government Code, chapter 277 of the Texas Election Code, and “all applicable provisions” of the Sherman City Charter. Because the petition forms did not comply with these requirements, the trial court concluded the City did not have statutory authority to call the repeal election and, therefore, the May 6, 1995 repeal election was void.

The trial court also found certain city officials involved in the election engaged in misconduct rising to the level of fraud such that the court could not ascertain the true outcome of the May 6 repeal election. Specifically, the trial court found the conduct of city officials in knowingly falsifying one circulator affidavit, failing to swear in the affiants of at least fifteen circulator affidavits, ignoring known false affidavits, failing to fully investigate the possibility that other false affidavits existed, and certifying unverified signatures, among other related misconduct, constituted election fraud. The trial court entered judgment declaring the May 6, 1995 repeal election void, setting aside the repeal election results, permanently enjoining the City from giving effect to the repeal election results, and awarding attorney’s fees to the police and firefighters.

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996 S.W.2d 904, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 4715, 1999 WL 424252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sherman-v-hudman-texapp-1999.