Farris Ex Rel. Anderson v. Colley

73 A.2d 37, 145 Me. 95
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 12, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 73 A.2d 37 (Farris Ex Rel. Anderson v. Colley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farris Ex Rel. Anderson v. Colley, 73 A.2d 37, 145 Me. 95 (Me. 1950).

Opinion

Williamson, J.

On report. The Attorney General on relation of certain persons, who are members of the police department and voters of the City of Portland, seeks by mandamus proceedings to compel the respondents, members of the city council, to take the necessary steps to submit a proposed ordinance to the voters under the initiative provisions of the city charter. It is agreed that the proposed ordinance was duly initiated and presented to the city council, and that action by the council is required if the proposal is to be voted upon by the people.

The case is presented on demurrer by the relators to the return of the respondents to the alternative writ, together with an agreed statement of facts.

The controlling issue is whether the proposed ordinance, if adopted, would be valid. In other words, may the proposed ordinance legally be adopted by the city? If so, the proposal must be submitted to the voters, but not otherwise.

The title “An ordinance fixing the minimum wages and the maximum hours for patrolmen of the Police Department of the City of Portland, Maine” fully and adequately describes the proposed ordinance, and for our purposes it is unnecessary to consider its details.

At the outset we point out that the only question before us is the existence or non-existence of power in the City of Portland, “a body politic and corporate,” to use the terms of the charter, to adopt the proposed ordinance. Whether the policy expressed in the proposal is wise or unwise is not for us to consider or pass upon.

*97 It must be kept firmly in mind that a city is the creation of and subject to the control of the Legislature. The powers of a city are derived from two sources: first, from the charter and special legislation directed to the particular city; and second, from the Constitution of the State and statutes of general application. Within the charter, except as otherwise provided by statute and constitution, we find the framework of the municipal government with the various powers and duties therein established and distributed.

Chief Justice Dunn said in Burkett, Attorney General v. Youngs et al., 135 Me. 459 at 465, 199 A. 619, 621 (1938):

“Purely of legislative creation, the municipality, as an instrument of government, a hand of the state, is always subject to public control through the Legislature.”

Like principles were stated by the justices of our court in answering questions submitted by the governor as follows:

“Municipal corporations are but instruments of government, created for political purposes and subject to legislative control. Legislative authority to create and incorporate political sub-divisions of the State clearly embraces the right to alter or amend the original charter or act of incorporation as the public welfare demands and the wisdom of the lawmaking power dictates.”
133 Me. 532 at 535, 178 A. 613 at 615 (1935)

For a thorough discussion of the underlying principles, see 2 McQuillin, The Law of Municipal Corporations (3d Edition 19U9) Sections 9.01 and 9.03.

The charter of Portland was enacted by the Legislature and accepted by the voters in accordance with the Act in 1923. P. & S. L., 1923, Chap. 109. Subsequent amendments by the Legislature do not bear upon the present problem, nor do we find any statute of general or local application touching the issue here presented.

*98 That the principle of control of a municipality by the Legislature has force and vitality is well illustrated by acts of the Legislature of 1949 affecting Portland. Statutes which granted authority to provide by ordinance for adjusting pensions of members of the police and fire departments and for an annuity to dependents of any member of such departments who has lost his life in performance of his duties were amended by P. & S. L., 1949, Chap. 37 and Chap. 90. The city was authorized to provide by ordinance for an annuity to the dependents of any member of its department of electrical appliances who has lost his life in performance of his duties. P. & S. L., 1949, Chap. 73. The charter was amended with respect to issuance of bonds and form of the ballot, and in neither case was the amendment referred to the people. P. & S. L., 1949, Chap. 72 and Chap. 103.

Our court has said in Ellsworth v. Municipal Officers of Portland, 142 Me. 200, 49 A. (2nd) 169 at 171 (1946) :

“When the new city charter was granted to the City of Portland in 1923, Priv. & Sp. Laws, Ch. 109, it was clearly the intention to provide a new and comprehensive system for the government of the city.”

Under the charter the administration, in general, of all the fiscal, prudential, and municipal affairs, with the exception of the schools, is vested in the city council, a body of nine members which acts only by ordinance, order, or resolve. The city manager, chosen by the council “solely on the basis of his character and executive and administrative qualifications, is “the administrative head of the city” and “responsible to the city council for the administration of all departments.” Charter: Art. II “City Council.” Sec. 1 omd Sec. 8; Art. VI “Administrative Officers,” Sec. 1 (a), Sec. 6, and Sec. 7.

The initiative and referendum established by the charter are applicable in terms to “any proposed ordinance, order or resolve,” or to “any ordinance, order or resolve enacted *99 by the city council which has not yet gone into effect.” Charter: Art. Ill, Sec. 1.

Our constitution, in Section 21 of Amendment XXXI, permits the city council of any city to establish the initiative and referendum in regard to its municipal affairs on ratification at a municipal election, and authorizes the Legislature to provide at any time “a uniform method for the exercise of the initiative and referendum in municipal affairs.”

The City of Portland has not adopted an initiative and referendum ordinance under the constitution nor has the Legislature enacted a uniform method applicable to cities generally. The source of the initiative and referendum in Portland is in the charter alone and not elsewhere.

No action by the city through the city council or the people can alter or change the charter which was enacted not by the people of Portland but, to use the words of the legislative act, “by the People of the State of Maine.” The rule is clearly stated in 5 McQuillin, Law of Municipal Corporations (3d Edition 1949), Sec. 15.19, as follows:

“The charter of the city is the organic law of the corporation, being to it what the constitution is to the state, and the charter bears the same general relation to the ordinances of the City that the constitution of the state bears to the statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
73 A.2d 37, 145 Me. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farris-ex-rel-anderson-v-colley-me-1950.