Fargnoli v. Cianci

397 A.2d 68, 121 R.I. 153, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 1758
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 22, 1979
Docket78-295-M.P
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 397 A.2d 68 (Fargnoli v. Cianci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fargnoli v. Cianci, 397 A.2d 68, 121 R.I. 153, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 1758 (R.I. 1979).

Opinion

*155 Kelleher, J.

As will be seen, this is a petition in equity in the nature of quo warranto, in which we are acting pursuant to the provisions of G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §10-14-1. This opinion supplements an order entered in this court on *156 August 9, 1978, in which we (1) vacated on jurisdictional grounds a July 28, 1978, judgment of the Superior Court which had upheld the Providence City Council’s July 12, 1978, confirmation of some twenty-eight mayoral appointments to various municipal boards and commissions and (2) ruled that certain individuals, specifically, Nancy Derrig (Derrig), John Sheehan (Sheehan), and James McManus (McManus) still retain their respective offices as member of the Board of Park Commissioners, Chairman of the Board of Licenses, and member of the Tax Assessment Board of Review, despite an attempt by the mayor and certain members of the council to replace them with the appointments of Carmine A. Bucci (Bucci), Raymond Dettore, Jr. (Dettore), and George T. Smith, Jr. (Smith).

In order that this dispute may be placed in its proper perspective, we shall first relate what took place at the July 12 meeting. We shall then discuss the Superior Court’s jurisdiction and conclude by setting forth the rationale for that part of our August 9, 1978 order which bars Bucci, Dettore, and Smith from exercising any of the powers supposedly bestowed upon them in July 1978.

Evidence adduced in the Superior Court indicates that at the conclusion of its regular July 6, 1978, meeting the council adjourned “to meet again at the Call of the Chair.” On July 10 the chair ordered the city clerk to call a meeting of the city council for Wednesday, July 12, at o p.m. The call indicated that the council at its meeting would consider a proposed ordinance which would freeze the city’s tax rate at the previous year’s level. When the meeting of July 12 was called to order, twenty of the twenty-four qualified council members were present. 1 The council recited the Pledge of *157 Allegiance, and from that point on, divisibility, rather than indivisibility, was the order of the day.

Following the Pledge of Allegiance, the council adopted a motion requiring a roll-call vote on any motion to adjourn or recess the evening’s meeting. The council then passed, by a roll-call vote of eleven to nine, a motion pursuant to council Rule 16 to consider business other than that on the prepared docket. 2 Councilman Sanford H. Gorodetsky (Gorodetsky) thereupon moved that a communication from the mayor appointing Ronald H. Glantz (Glantz) as city solicitor be approved. This motion was seconded but was not put to a vote at this time. Another council member, Edward W. Xavier (Xavier), immediately moved that the appointment be referred to the Committee on Employee Relations. Again, this motion was seconded but never put to a vote.

After the referral motion, oratory took over as charges and countercharges filled the air. After some concern had been expressed about the suddenness of the submission of the Glantz appointment, Councilman Thomas W. Pearlman (Pearlman) reminded his colleagues that “it was the policy of the majority of this Council up until now to reject every appointment of the Mayor” and “I think some of the Councilmen are finally fed up with the obstructionist attitude by those who were in the majority preventing the Mayor from running the City Government in accordance with the Charter.” 3 Councilman Robert F. Lynch (Lynch) had no doubt about the “rationale for the timing” as he observed that “[apparently Mayor Cianci or Mr. Glantz or the two of them realized or found out that three of the Regular *158 Democrats on this Council are hospitalized at the present time and perhaps thought this was an opportune time for him to present this appointment to the council, and I think it’s a shoddy trick.” After Councilman John P. Garan (Garan) had taken issue with the obstructionist charges made by Pearlman, Xavier moved that “we stand at ease.” Again, this motion was seconded but never put to a vote.

After Xavier’s motion was seconded, nine council members walked out of the meeting. Sometime thereafter Council President Pro Tempore Ralph R. Fargnoli (Fargnoli) reentered the council chamber, assumed the podium, and directed the clerk to call the roll. The clerk called the roll. She marked ten members as being present, twelve as absent, and recorded two as not responding. The two nonresponders, Gorodetsky and Councilman Charles R. Mansolillo, were present, but they refused to answer because they believed that the chair’s order violated the roll-call motion which had been introduced at the beginning of the meeting. Once the tally was announced, Fargnoli declared the meeting to be adjourned and departed. The eleven remaining members proceeded to elect Pearlman as acting president pro tempore, and once this was accomplished, they approved the appointment of Glantz as city solicitor. After questioning the existence of a quorum, the city clerk left the meeting. Although there is no record of the minutes subsequent to the clerk’s departure, apparently the remaining eleven members unanimously approved all of the appointments submitted by the mayor to the council and rejected the tax-freeze proposal.

Within a matter of days, six individuals filed in the Superior Court a multicount complaint labeled “class action for injunctive relief.” Three of the plaintiffs were Fargnoli, Lynch, and Council woman Carolyn A. Brassil (Brassil). The other three were the incumbent officeholders, Derrig, Sheehan, and McManus, who in the class-action phase of this complaint alleged that they were suing as individuals and as representatives of the class of persons allegedly removed as a result of the action taken by the city council. The defendants were Mayor Vincent A. Cianci, City Treasurer Donald *159 McKiernan, and four of the mayor’s appointees, Glantz, Bucci, Dettore, and Smith. These four appointees were sued individually and as representatives of the class of all persons who were purportedly appointed.

On July 19 an order was entered in the Superior Court which, in effect, enjoined all municipal boards and commissions to which appointments had been made from carrying on any business. A hearing on plaintiffs’ complaint began before a justice of the Superior Court on July 18 and ended 2 days later. Subsequently, on July 28, the trial justice ruled that the July 12 appointments were lawful and ordered that judgment be entered for defendants. The judgment which carried out the pertinent portions of the trial justice’s bench decision indicates that the trial justice treated plaintiffs’ complaint as a “class action” and recognized that the relief being sought was “in the nature of quo warranto and of general injunctive relief.”

On the same day, plaintiffs filed their appeal to this court and sought a stay of the Superior Court’s judgment. In due course a stay order was issued, memoranda in behalf of the named litigants were filed, and oral argument was held on August 4.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Felkner v. Chariho Regional School Committee
968 A.2d 865 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2009)
McKenna v. Williams
874 A.2d 1292 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2005)
Ago
Florida Attorney General Reports, 2003
Whitehouse v. Moran
808 A.2d 626 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2002)
(1996)
81 Op. Att'y Gen. 140 (Maryland Attorney General Reports, 1996)
Lutu v. Ale
28 Am. Samoa 2d 43 (High Court of American Samoa, 1995)
Opinion No.
Arkansas Attorney General Reports, 1992
State Ex Rel. Webb v. Cianci
591 A.2d 1193 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1991)
Violet v. Voccola
497 A.2d 709 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1985)
Bucci v. Fargnoli
437 A.2d 1384 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1981)
Rock v. Thompson
426 N.E.2d 891 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1981)
Nordberg v. Smith
431 A.2d 436 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
397 A.2d 68, 121 R.I. 153, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 1758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fargnoli-v-cianci-ri-1979.