Heidtman v. Shaker Heights

119 N.E.2d 644, 99 Ohio App. 415, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 232, 59 Ohio Op. 180, 1954 Ohio App. LEXIS 620
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1954
Docket23068
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 119 N.E.2d 644 (Heidtman v. Shaker Heights) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heidtman v. Shaker Heights, 119 N.E.2d 644, 99 Ohio App. 415, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 232, 59 Ohio Op. 180, 1954 Ohio App. LEXIS 620 (Ohio Ct. App. 1954).

Opinions

OPINION

By KOVACHY, J:

This cause is before us on questions of law on appeal by plaintiffs appellants-appellees, and a cross-appeal by defendants appellees-appellants, from a judgment rendered by the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga *234 County in a declaratory judgment action in which the court was asked to determine:

“Whether an initiative petition seeking enactment of an ordinance to establish the three-platoon system in the Fire Department and filed in accordance with the general laws of Ohio and the Charter Provisions of the Defendant, City of Shaker Heights, properly may be rejected as defective by the officials and council of the Defendant City on the ground that circulation of the initiative petition and parts thereof by members of its Fire Department constitutes political activity in violation of §486-23 GC (§143.41 R. C.).

The plaintiffs appellants-appellees are:

Alvin E. Heidtman, Frank J. Schieferstein, and John J. Rafter, and Shaker Heights Fire Fighters Association, Local No. 516, International Association of Fire Fighters A. F. L.

The defendants appellees-appellants are:

City of Shaker Heights, a municipal corporation, John W. Barkley, Mayor of the City of Shaker Heights, Robert D. Templeman. Wilson G. Stapleton, John H. Lansdale, Jr., R. Scott Mueller, Joseph R. Fawcett, Robert B. Dennison; and Wm. R. Van Aken, Councilmen of the City of Shaker Heights; Ralph W. Jones, Director of Law of Shaker Heights; Thos. E. Cook, Director of Finance of Shaker Heights, Ohio.

The Agreed Statement of Facts read:

(1) Plaintiffs, Heidtman, Schieferstein and Rafter are employees of the City of Shaker Heights, Ohio, employed in the classified service of said city as firemen in its Fire Department and constituted a committee of petitioners who, as residents, registered voters and taxpayers of the City of Shaker Heights caused to be circulated an initiative petition seeking enactment by ordinance of the three-platoon system for firemen. Shaker Heights Fire Fighters Association Local No. 516, International Association of Fire Fighters, American Federation of Labor is an unincorporated association with which the individual plaintiffs are affiliated as members.

(2) The defendant, City of Shaker Heights, is a municipal corporation and the individual defendants are the councilmen and officers of the City of Shaker Heights.

(3) The Charter of the City of Shaker Heights contains the following provisions respecting initiative:

ARTICLE III.

Section 1. Initiative. The electors of the City shall have power to propose any ordinance or resolution, except an ordinance for the appropriation of money or an ordinance making a tax levy, and to adopt or reject the same at the polls, such power being known as the initiative. An initiated ordinance or resolution may be submitted to the Council by petition signed by at least five (5%) percent of the registered electors of the City. When so submitted, the Council shall forthwith determine the sufficiency of the petition and if found sufficient, shall at once have the proposed ordinance or resolution read and referred to an appropriate committee which may be a committee of the whole. Provision shall be made for public hearings on the proposed ordinance or resolution not later than thirty days after the date on which such ordinance or resolution was submitted to the Council.

The Council shall within forty days after such ordinance or resolution is submitted, take final action thereon, either enacting or rejecting the *235 proposed ordinance or resolution. If the Council fails or refuses to pass such proposed ordinance or resolution or passes it in some form different from that set forth in the petition thereof, the committee of the petitioners may require that it be submitted to a vote of the electors either in its original form or in the amended form, by filing with the Council an additional petition signed by at least two percent (2%) of the registered electors of the City, and if said additional petition is signed by at least five percent (5%) of such registered electors, the date of the election may be fixed therein, not less than 60 days from the time of filing such additional petition. Such additional petition shall be filed within 10 days after the final action on such ordinance or resolution by the Council. The Council shall thereupon provide for submitting such ordinance or resolution to the vote of the electors at the date so fixed, or at the- next general election occurring more than 60 days from the filing of such additional petition, if no date be so fixed therein.

Section 3. Petitions. An initiative or referendum petition may be circulated in separate parts; but each part shall contain a full and correct copy of the title and text of the proposed or referred ordinance or resolution, and the separate parts shall be bound together and presented as one instrument. Each signer shall be a registered elector of this City, and shall sign his name in ink or indelible pencil, and shall place on the petition his name, his place of residence by street and number, and the date of signing the petition. The form of affidavit provided for nominating petitions by general law, and the other requirements of general law regulating nominating, initiative and referendum petitions shall apply in the case of initiative and referendum in this City.

(4) . Plaintiffs, Heidtman, Schieferstein and Rafter, constituting the committee of petitioners did, on January 17, 1953, file with Thomas E. Cook, Director of the Finance Department, and the City Auditor of said City of Shaker Heights, a duly verified copy of the title and text of a proposed ordinance, a true copy of which was attached to the original petition on file in this cause, and thereafter an initiative petition was distributed and circulated as parts thereof by firemen, members of the plaintiff Association, all employees in the classified service of the Fire Department of the City of Shaker Heights, Ohio.

(5) On January 26, 1953, plaintiffs Heidtman, Schieferstein and Rafter, constituting the committee of petitioners, filed with Thomas E. Cook, an initiative petition in 50 parts, in accordance with the provisions of Article III, Sections 1 and 3 of the aforesaid Charter of the City of Shaker Heights, each part containing a full and correct copy of the title and text of the proposed ordinance. A true copy of the initiative petition as circulated was attached to the original petition on file in this cause.

(6) Plaintiffs, Heidtman, Schieferstein and Rafter on Jan. 29, 1953. filed with Thomas E. Cook, in accordance with the provisions of §4227-9 GC (§731.35 R. C.) their sworn statement as circulators.

(7) The Board of Elections of Cuyahoga County, State of Ohio, having nad referred to it by defendants, the initiative petition to determine the sufficiency of the signatures thereon, reported thereafter to the defendants that the petitions contained 2132 signatures which could be certified as being genuine signatures of registered electors of the City of Shaker *236 Heights.

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.E.2d 644, 99 Ohio App. 415, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 232, 59 Ohio Op. 180, 1954 Ohio App. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heidtman-v-shaker-heights-ohioctapp-1954.