Gisriel v. Ocean City Board of Supervisors of Elections

693 A.2d 757, 345 Md. 477, 1997 Md. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 1, 1997
Docket5, September Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 693 A.2d 757 (Gisriel v. Ocean City Board of Supervisors of Elections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gisriel v. Ocean City Board of Supervisors of Elections, 693 A.2d 757, 345 Md. 477, 1997 Md. LEXIS 50 (Md. 1997).

Opinion

ELDRIDGE, Judge.

This case arose because of the refusal by the City Council of Ocean City, Maryland, to authorize, pursuant to a referendum petition, a referendum on a recently enacted comprehensive rezoning ordinance. The issues concern the appealability of the circuit court decision, as well as the duties and responsibilities of Ocean City officials with regard to the City’s registered voter list and the procedure for determining the validity of referendum petitions.

I.

The Mayor and City Council of Ocean City enacted a comprehensive rezoning ordinance on January 19, 1993. Shortly thereafter, a group of local citizens, led by the petitioner Vincent Gisriel, filed a petition pursuant to Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol.) Art. 23A, § 2(b)(30), and the Ocean City Charter, to bring the zoning ordinance to referendum. 1 The Ocean City Solicitor approved the form of the *481 referendum petition, and the petition was then forwarded to the Ocean City Board of Supervisors of Elections (the Board) for a determination of whether Gisriel had obtained a sufficient number of signatures to place the zoning ordinance before the electorate. Gisriel’s petition contained 1,013 signatures.

Section C-411 of the Ocean City Charter sets forth the general procedures for petitioning an ordinance to referendum. 2 The specific dispute in this case is over § Call’s requirement that a referendum petition contain the signatures of at least “20% of the qualified voters” of Ocean City. Upon learning that the Board’s standard practice for determining whether referendum petitions met this requirement was to *482 compare the names on a submitted petition with the City’s list of registered voters as of the date the petition was filed, Gisriel notified the Board that, in his view, the' list of registered voters contained the names of several unqualified voters.

After comparing the names on the petition with the registered voter list, and after checking the status of persons asserted by Gisriel to be unqualified voters, the Board recommended to the City Council that Gisriel’s petition be denied because it did not contain the names of at least 20% of the City’s qualified voters. 3 According to the Board, the number of registered voters in Ocean City was 4,903 as of February 16,1993, the date that the referendum petition was filed. The Board struck 66 of the 1,013 signatures on the submitted petition because they were duplicative, were the names of non-registered voters, or were otherwise “rejected signatures.” The remaining 947 signatures constituted only 19.31% of the 4,903 registered voters in Ocean City, a figure less than the 20% threshold requirement. 4 Following an initial decision by the City Council that the number of valid signatures was insufficient, Gisriel, pursuant to § C-505 of the Charter, requested an opportunity to be heard before the Council in order to present evidence contradicting the Board’s findings.

At a regularly scheduled Council meeting, Gisriel explained to the Council that the Ocean City voter registration list used by the Board is based on two voter registration rolls, the Worcester County “Universal List” and the Ocean City “Mu *483 nicipal Only” or “Supplemental List.” 5 Gisriel alleged, and produced evidence designed to support his allegation, that the voter registration list contained the names of 294 individuals who failed to meet the requirements for qualified voters under the provisions of the Charter. 6 Gisriel maintained that if the Board had removed the names of these allegedly unqualified voters from the list of registered voters, so that the list contained only the names of the City’s registered and qualified voters, the number of signatures submitted on his referendum petition would have exceeded 20% of the City’s qualified voters, requiring the City Council to place the ordinance on the ballot for consideration by the Ocean City electorate. 7 *484 Despite Gisriel’s submission, the Council voted to reaffirm its initial decision upholding the recommendation of the Board.

Thereafter, Gisriel instituted the present action in the Circuit Court for Worcester County, naming the City, the Board and the Council as defendants. 8 After a hearing, the circuit court issued an opinion and order. As a preliminary matter, the court rejected the City’s contention that a comprehensive rezoning ordinance was not subject to referendum under the state statute, Art. 23A, § 2(b)(30). Addressing the merits of Gisriel’s suit, the circuit court noted that there was a difference between a “qualified voter” and a “registered voter” as those terms were used in the Ocean City Charter, and the court concluded that the Board’s and Council’s “refusal to strike the unqualified but registered voters from the voter roll as of the date the Petition was timely delivered ... [was] erroneous as a matter of law....” The circuit court ordered the Board to “cull [the City’s registered] voter roll of unqualified ... voters” prior to determining the percentage of qualified voters who had signed the petition.

The defendants appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, which reversed. Ocean City Board v. Gisriel, 102 Md.App. 136, 648 A.2d 1091 (1994). After raising sua sponte the question of whether it had jurisdiction, the Court of Special Appeals concluded that it had jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. The intermediate appellate court held that, absent fraud or misconduct by election officials, the list of registered voters is presumed to be the list of all qualified voters at any given point in time, so long as there are appropriate remedies *485 available periodically to purge the list of unqualified voters. The Court of Special Appeals further held that the procedures enumerated in Maryland Code (1957, 1997 Repl.Vol.), Art. 33, § 3-16, were applicable to municipal elections and provided the mechanism for correcting errors in voting registration lists.

Gisriel then filed in this Court a petition for a writ of certiorari, arguing that the Court of Special Appeals erred in holding that the defendants were entitled to use the list of registered voters for the purpose of checking the petition, and arguing that the circuit court’s decision was correct. This Court granted the petition, and we directed the parties to address an additional issue, namely whether the Court of Special Appeals had jurisdiction to entertain the defendants’ appeal. We shall first address this jurisdictional issue.

II.

A.

It is an often stated principle of Maryland law that appellate jurisdiction, except as constitutionally authorized, is determined entirely by statute, and that, therefore, a right of appeal must be legislatively granted. See, e.g., Maryland-Nat’l v.

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Bluebook (online)
693 A.2d 757, 345 Md. 477, 1997 Md. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gisriel-v-ocean-city-board-of-supervisors-of-elections-md-1997.