Horn v. Allen

231 P. 1001, 195 Cal. 121, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 200
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1924
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8320.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 231 P. 1001 (Horn v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horn v. Allen, 231 P. 1001, 195 Cal. 121, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 200 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

SHENK J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondents as members of and constituting the council of the city of Los Angeles to certify the adoption of a certain separate proposition submitted to the electors of said city in connection with the submission and ratification of a new city charter. The respondents filed an answer as a return to the alternative writ issued herein, but by a *124 stipulation of facts subsequently filed all controversy as to the facts has been eliminated.

On the fifth day of June, 1923, a board of freeholders was elected for the purpose of framing a new charter for the city in accordance with the provisions of section 8 of article XI of the constitution. The draft of the new charter was duly prepared and submitted to the electors of the city at an election held on the sixth day of May, 1924. In the body of the charter, which comprises some 442 sections, sections 6 and 20 were incorporated, reading, respectively, as follows: “Section 6. The following officers of the city shall be elected by the electors of the City of Los Angeles, at large: Mayor, city attorney, the members of the council, the members of the board of education.” “Section 20. The council shall consist of eleven members, elected as in this charter elsewhere provided.”

In proposing the new charter the board of freeholders also proposed a separate proposition conflicting with sections 6 and 20 as incorporated in the body of the charter and which was denominated an alternative proposition. This proposition was submitted to the electors of the city with the charter. It immediately follows the closing section of the charter and was and is as follows:

“Alternative Proposition.
“That Sec. 6 of the charter shall read as follows: See. 6. (1) The following officers of the city shall be elected by the 'electors of the city of Los Angeles, at large: Mayor, City Attorney, Controller. The members of the board of education. (2) The members of the council shall be elected by districts as follows: (a) The council in office at the time of the approval of this charter by the legislature, shall, not less than sixty (60) days before the primary nominating election to be held on the first Tuesday in May, 1925, divide the city into fifteen (15) districts. Districts so formed shall comprise as nearly as practicable equal numbers of voters, as determined by the total number of votes cast for governor in said districts at the last preceding state election at which a governor was elected, and be composed of contiguous and compact territory and bounded by natural boundaries or street lines. xAny territory hereafter annexed to or consolidated with the city of Los Angeles shall, at the time of such annexation or *125 consolidation, be added to an adjacent district or districts by the council by ordinance. At the general election in June, 1925, one councilman shall be elected by each of the districts so constituted. On or before the first day of October, 1929, and each four years thereafter, the council shall by ordinance redistrict the city into fifteen districts in the same manner as prescribed in this section, and such districts shall be used for all elections of councilmen subsequent to such date until new districts are established, etc.
‘ ‘ That See. 20 of the charter shall read as follows: See. 20. The council shall consist of fifteen (15) members, elected as in this charter elsewhere provided.”

Upon the ballots used at the election there was printed, in addition to the other matters required by law, the following:

At an appropriate time the council met as a canvassing board and canvassed the returns of the election. In performing its duties in that respect it found that the total number of votes cast at the election was 172,265. It also found that the charter received 126,058 votes in favor thereof and 19,287 unfavorable votes, and declared the charter duly adopted. As to the separate proposition the respondents found that the same had received 88',275 votes in favor thereof and 53,441 unfavorable votes, and declared that the said separate proposition had failed of adoption. The reason assigned for so declaring is found in a resolution of the council declaring the result of the election as follows: ‘ and that said proposition, while receiving a majority of the votes cast thereon, failed of adoption for the reason that the charter which provides for the election of eleven (11) councilmen at large as an alternative received a larger majority of the votes cast at said election on said proposition.”

Counsel agree that the new charter was prepared, proposed, and submitted to the electors of the city in all re *126 spects as required by law and was duly ratified. Counsel also agree that it was competent for the board of freeholders to submit proposition No. 2 as a single, separate proposition, and that the form in which the same appeared on the ballot was in accordance with the law applicable thereto. Counsel, however, cannot agree as to the legal effect of the vote cast on proposition No. 2. The sole question for our determination is: Did the respondents properly declare and determine the result of the vote on proposition No 21 The solution of this question depends upon the legal effect to be given the vote, having in mind the method employed by the. board of freeholders and the city authorities in submitting the charter and the separate proposition in connection therewith, and the provision of section 8 of article XI of the constitution. The portion of that section bearing on the question is as follows: “In submitting any such charter or amendment separate propositions, whether alternative or conflicting, or one included within the other, may be submitted at the same time to be voted on by the electors separately, and, as between those so related, if more than one receive a majority of the votes, the proposition receiving the larger number of votes shall control as to all matters in conflict.”

Undoubtedly one of the purposes of this constitutional provision was to enable the board of freeholders to submit separately to the electors of the city for their approval or rejection questions of municipal concern -of a controversial nature and in such a way as to permit the free expression of the preferences of the voters as between opposing views on such questions. It must also have been contemplated that such questions be so submitted as to permit the expression of that preference to be properly ascertained on the part of the canvassing board in order that the prevailing proposition be correctly certified and declared. If the purpose be accomplished and the result be properly declared it would follow that the proposition so submitted and certified would be adopted and would become a part of the organic law of the city upon approval by the legislature.

Although this provision of the constitution has been in effect since November, 1914, the legislature has made no particular statutory provision prescribing the method or manner of submitting separate propositions in connection with the proposed charter. The language quoted must, *127

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P. 1001, 195 Cal. 121, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-allen-cal-1924.