Coopersmith v. City and County of Denver

399 P.2d 943, 156 Colo. 469, 1965 Colo. LEXIS 771
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 15, 1965
Docket21347
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 399 P.2d 943 (Coopersmith v. City and County of Denver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coopersmith v. City and County of Denver, 399 P.2d 943, 156 Colo. 469, 1965 Colo. LEXIS 771 (Colo. 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sutton

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We will refer to plaintiffs in error as plaintiffs, or individually by name, and will refer to defendants in error, who are the City and County of Denver, various public officials, a commission and others named, as the City.

Plaintiffs in the trial court and by this writ of error, in a class action, have challenged the validity of submitted ordinance No. 137, Series 1962, which was an amendment to the Charter of the City and County of Denver which created a joint department of safety and excise. Stated in its broadest terms, plaintiffs object to the ordinance in question because it requires their retirement from the fire department, under certain conditions, upon attaining the age of 65 years.

The record discloses that the City Council of Denver submitted to the qualified voters of the City and County of Denver a proposed charter amendment, which was voted on and approved at a special municipal election held June 5, 1962. This action, which was tried to the court, was begun July 2, 1962, by plaintiff Coopersmith and others who were active members of the fire department and of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local No. 858. Then Fire Chief Allie A. Feldman, who is not a member of Local No. 858, but who is over 65 years of age and affected by the ordinance, was a witness at the trial. He sought to intervene after adverse judgment below, which request was denied. He was, however, on his showing made here permitted to intervene on this writ of error. The Denver Policemen’s Protective Association was, on motion, allowed to intervene before trial. It supported the validity of the amendment.

*473 The wording of the charter amendment which is the principal cause of this controversy states:

“C5. 36-1 Any member of said fire department who is otherwise eligible for retirement shall be retired from said fire department upon reaching his 65th birthday or on July 1, 1964, which ever event occurs later.”

Plaintiffs present eight points for our consideration, six of which are urged for reversal of the judgment contending that the charter amendment, as applied to them and those similarly situated, is invalid for the following reasons:

(1) That it allegedly and improperly contains many diverse and “multifarious” subjects;

(2) That is was not submitted to the voters in the proper manner as required by the Colorado Constitution;

(3) That it improperly imposes duties on the State Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund;

(4) That repeal and adoption of the amendment, using the so-called 1960 Compilation, failed to accomplish a legal repeal or adoption of the parts thereby affected;

(5) That firemen’s retirement is a matter of statewide concern only and the city was without power to legislate on the subject;

(6) That the amendment impairs alleged contractual rights of plaintiffs;

(7) That “Authorities in other states frown upon subsequently effective provisions for involuntary retirement”; and,

(8) That Feldman had a right to intervene after judgment below and on this writ of error.

Because of the question raised as to Feldman’s right to join in the prosecution of this writ of error, we shall first dispose of that matter.

Feldman’s motion here has been granted and he is properly before this court. In Tower v. Tower, 147 Colo. 480, 364 P.2d 565 (1961), we cited with approval the language in Miller v. Clark, 144 Colo. 431, 356 P.2d 965 (1960), which sets forth the requirements necessary *474 for a person rightfully to prosecute a writ of error to this court as follows: “One of two tests must be met before any party may prosecute a writ of error to this court. He must either be a party to the action or he must be a person substantially aggrieved by the disposition of the case in the lower court.”

Feldman was a member of the class represented by the Fire Fighters Union and when the Union decided not to prosecute a writ of error, Feldman as a member of the class and also as a party aggrieved by the disposition of the case in the lower court, had a right, upon making a proper showing that an appeal might not be taken to protect his interests, under the tests stated, to participate in prosecuting this writ of error. We thus need not decide whether the trial court was correct in denying him permission to intervene below, after judgment had entered.

We turn next to the other issues before us.

First, as to whether the amendment is void because it assertedly covers several subjects. Here the object of the City government and the voters was to create one new department of government. The title of the ordinance so describes it and the body of the act, though containing some sections applicable to all City employees (of which these protestants were a part) relates to those objects expressed in the title. The applicable rule is that if the title of an ordinance adequately describes each subject included in the body, and if the voters can vote for or against the issue presented and can express their intentions in regard to any alternative amendment or proposition submitted, then the form of the legislation is valid. Merely because no alternative or counter amendments or propositions were submitted here does not invalidate this charter amendment as presented to the voters.

The question of whether Article XX, Section 5 of the Colorado Constitution prohibits a home rule charter amendment from containing more than one subject *475 was before this court in Denver v. Mewborn, 143 Colo. 407, 354 P.2d 155 (1960). There the City Council of the City and County of Denver passed an ordinance calling for the submission to the voters of an amendment to replace Article III of the Charter. That amendment repealed Article III in its entirety and substituted therefor thirty-seven new sections divided into four titles: a Department of Public Works, a Department of Parks and Recreation, one of Eminent Domain, and one of Local Public Improvements. This court held in Mewborn that there was no constitutional provision prohibiting the inclusion of those four subjects in one amendment. The court there concluded in effect that the inhibition against more than one subject in legislative enactments has no application to constitutional or organic law.

Decisions prior to Mewborn seemed to avoid the question of whether unrelated subjects could be included in one amendment but did establish the rule that if the subjects submitted were germane to each other or if the subjects were so interconnected and dependent on each other that it would not be desirable to adopt one without the others, it is unnecessary to submit to the voters each subject individually. E.g. Cook v. City of Delta, 100 Colo.

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Bluebook (online)
399 P.2d 943, 156 Colo. 469, 1965 Colo. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coopersmith-v-city-and-county-of-denver-colo-1965.