Hartman v. Kenyon

227 Cal. App. 3d 413, 277 Cal. Rptr. 765, 91 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 905, 91 Daily Journal DAR 1442, 1991 Cal. App. LEXIS 81
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1991
DocketH006600
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 227 Cal. App. 3d 413 (Hartman v. Kenyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartman v. Kenyon, 227 Cal. App. 3d 413, 277 Cal. Rptr. 765, 91 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 905, 91 Daily Journal DAR 1442, 1991 Cal. App. LEXIS 81 (Cal. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Opinion

COTTLE, J.

Recall proponent Steve Hartman sought a writ of mandate to compel Patricia Kenyon, City Clerk of the City of Santa Cruz (hereafter Clerk), to certify that three recall petitions he submitted contained the requisite number of signatures of eligible registered voters. When Hartman filed his petitions with the Clerk for examination, each contained more than the number of signatures required. However, after the Clerk completed her examination of the petitions, she determined that they were short of the required number by approximately 50 signatures. Because the Clerk had rejected approximately 120 signatures on each petition for irregularities in circulator declarations, Hartman sought leave of the Clerk to file amended circulator declarations. When the Clerk refused to accept them, Hartman filed a petition for writ of mandate. The trial court denied the petition, finding that the Clerk had no statutory authority to accept amended circulator declarations and that other signatures had been properly rejected. We affirm.

Facts

All relevant dates are in 1989.

On February 13 and 14, Steve Hartman commenced recall proceedings by serving notices of intention to circulate a recall petition on three sitting *416 members of the Santa Cruz City Council, real parties in interest Mardi Wormhoudt, Jane Yokoyama and Don Lane. Hartman’s statement of the reasons for the proposed recalls cited the council members’ “recent vote to ‘NOT’ invite the United States Navy to join us in celebration of Independence Day, ... a willful violation of [their] ‘Oath[s] of Office’.” Copies of the notices of intention, along with the requisite proofs of service, were filed with the Clerk’s office on February 14 and 15.

On March 7, the Clerk advised Hartman that his proposed petitions contained a minor technical defect which would have to be corrected before he could circulate them. Hartman made the changes and submitted revised petitions the following day. On March 14, the Clerk notified him that the form and wording of the revised petitions met statutory requirements and that he could commence circulation of the recall petitions.

Hartman then had 120 days in which to submit his petitions with the requisite number of registered signatures. (Elec. Code, 1 § 27210, subd. (d).) That number was determined to be 6,541 for each petition, which represented 20 percent of the city’s registered voters. (See § 27211, subd. (a)(3).) On the 120th day, July 12, Hartman submitted the 3 signed petitions to the Clerk’s office. Because each contained prima facie more than the number of signatures required, the Clerk accepted the petitions for filing.

The Clerk then had 30 days in which to examine the petitions and from the records of registration ascertain whether or not they were signed by at least 6,541 eligible voters. There were over 7,000 signatures on each petition to be examined.

On August 8, the Clerk certified all three petitions as insufficient. On Yokoyama’s recall petition, 6,485 of 7,201 signatures were found to be valid, on Lane’s, 6,483 of 7,167, and on Wormhoudt’s, 6,492 of 7,214. Thus, each recall petition was short of the 6,541 valid signatures required by about 50 signatures.

The Clerk disqualified approximately 200 signatures on each petition on the ground the signer’s address on the petition differed from that shown on his voter registration affidavit. The Clerk also disqualified more than 120 signatures on each petition on grounds of circulator declaration problems, including circulators’ failure to include dates, failure to sign declarations, and inclusion of circulation dates prior to approval of the form of the petitions by the Clerk.

*417 Hartman requested and was granted leave to examine the three petitions to determine which signatures were disqualified and for what reasons. (See § 27302.) Eighteen days later, he wrote to the Clerk requesting leave to file a number of amended circulator’s declarations. Hartman hoped to cure technical defects which had caused the signatures in the accompanying petition sections to be invalidated. On September 1, the Clerk responded to Hartman’s letter, stating she had no statutory authority to amend her earlier findings.

Hartman filed his writ petition on September 27 seeking to compel the Clerk to validate certain previously invalidated signatures and to certify the three petitions as sufficient. After a hearing, the court rendered its decision denying the petition.

Statutory Scheme

Section 706 of the Santa Cruz City Charter provides that “the provisions of the Elections Code of the State of California . . . governing the . . . recall of municipal officers, shall apply in the City . . . .”

Under the Elections Code, the recall of a city council member is commenced by the service, filing and publication or posting of a notice of intention to circulate a recall petition. The notice of intention must: (1) identify the council member whose recall is sought and the proponent of the recall election (§ 27020); (2) be served on the council member; and (3) be filed in the city clerk’s office within seven days, along with a proof of service (§ 27021). The council member may, at his option, file an answer (§ 27023).

The recall petition must expressly request that an election be called to determine whether the council member shall be removed from office and, if so, whether the subsequent vacancy on the council shall be filled by appointment or special election. (§ 27031.)

Where the council member does not file an answer, the proponent of the recall has only 17 days from the notice of intention to file two blank recall petitions with the city clerk. The clerk must then, within 10 days, ascertain whether the wording of the blank petitions meets statutory requirements. If corrections are required, the proponent has 10 days in which to make them. No signature may be affixed to a recall petition until the clerk notifies the proponent that the petition meets statutory requirements. (§ 27031.5)

Only registered voters may sign or circulate recall petitions. (§ 27035.) Signers must affix their signatures and print their name, residence address and city of residence on the petition (§ 27032), and circulators must sign a *418 declaration attesting to the fact the circulator actually circulated a particular section of the petition, that he saw the signers sign the petition, that to the best of his information and belief each signature is the genuine signature of the person whose name it purports to be, and that the signatures were collected between the dates the circulator set forth in the declaration. (§ 44.)

The signed recall petitions must be presented for filing in cities the size of Santa Cruz within 120 days of the clerk’s notification that the petition’s wording was proper. (§ 27210.) Only if the petitions prima facie contain the number of signatures required will the clerk accept the petitions for filing. (§ 27212.) The clerk then has 30 days to ascertain from the records of voter registration whether the petition was in fact signed by the requisite number of eligible registered voters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 Cal. App. 3d 413, 277 Cal. Rptr. 765, 91 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 905, 91 Daily Journal DAR 1442, 1991 Cal. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-kenyon-calctapp-1991.