In Re Initiative Petition No. 9 of Oklahoma City

1939 OK 238, 90 P.2d 665, 185 Okla. 165, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 286
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 9, 1939
DocketNo. 28452.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1939 OK 238 (In Re Initiative Petition No. 9 of Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Initiative Petition No. 9 of Oklahoma City, 1939 OK 238, 90 P.2d 665, 185 Okla. 165, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 286 (Okla. 1939).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal by Owen F. Renegar et al., proponents of Initiative Petition No. 9 of Oklahoma City, from a decision of the city clerk of said city which sustained a protest of O. B. Williams et al. to the sufficiency in form of said petition.

The record shows that on November 3, 1937, the proponents filed with the aforesaid city clerk a copy of an initiative petition and attached thereto a notice which stated that said petition would be circulated for the purpose of obtaining the necessary signatures of qualified electors thereon; that on November 36, 3937, the proponents filed with the said city clerk pamphlet forms of said petition which had been circulated and which bore approximately 9,800 signatures. The petition so filed and circulated was, omitting the proposed amendments, substantially in the following form:

“Initiative Petition No. 9
“ ‘WARNING’
“ ‘It is a felony for anyone to sign an initiative or referendum petition with any name other than his own, .or knowingly to sign his name more, than once for the measure, or to sign such petition when he is not a legal voter.’
“Twenty names only allowed on a petition.
“To the Honorable Mayor of Oklahoma City “Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
“We; the undersigned, citizens and legal voters of the State of Oklahoma and the City of Oklahoma City, County of Oklahoma, respectfully order that the following proposed amendments to the City Charter shall be submitted to the legal voters of the City of Oklahoma City, County of Oklahoma, State of Oklahoma, for their approval or rejection at the next regular city election or at a special election to he held as soon as possible, and each for himself says: T have personally signed this petition; I am 'a legal voter of the City of Oklahoma City, County of. Oklahoma, ’State of Ok’ahoma; my residence and Post Office address are correctly written after my name’.. The time for filing, this petition expires January 29, 1938. The question we herewith submit to bur fellow’voters is: Shall the following proposed amendments to the City Charter 'be ' adopted?:
..“Amendments of Article.II; Sections 1,.2 and 27 of Article TV; Section 2 of Article VII and Articles X and XI of the Charter of the City of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, relating to the legislative department, the duties of city employees, preparation of budget, holding primary, run off and general elections, and construction of Charter; amendment of the charter as a whole by repealing Section 3 of Article IV, relating to duties of City .Manager; Article V, relating to the manner of adopting ordinances, publication and enrollment thereof, and admission of same as evidence; and 'Section 10 of Article IX relating to the holding of elections; providing for partisan government, placing administration and executive power in the Mayor, abolition of present offices of Mayor and Councilmen and of City Manager and Assistant City Manager by constituting a new governing body composed of Mayor and Council, giving to same only two-year term of office, providing change of salary for Mayor and providing for the election of the Police Judge and Police Chief at salaries of $4,000 a year each.
“AMENDMENT OF ARTICLE II
“That Article II of the Charter of the City of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:
(Here appear 20 blank spaces for name, residence and post office addresses.)”
And certificate page as follows:
“STATE OF OKLAHOMA
“COUNTY OF OKLAHOMA ss.
“I, _, being first duly sworn, say
(Here shall be written legibly or typewritten the names of the signers on the reverse side of this sheet) (here follow 20 blank spaces for 20 names) signed this sheet of the foregoing petition, and each of them signed his name thereto in my presence, I believe that each has stated his name, post office address and residence correctly, and that each signer is a legal voter of the State of Oklahoma.
“_ Street
“(Post Office Address) Oklahoma
“City, Oklahoma.
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this _ day of- A. D. 1937.
“Notary Public
“('Seal)
“My Commission expires _”

Notice of the filing of said petition was thereupon duly given by the city clerk to all persons who might .desire to protest the same. Two protests were ified against the petition. At the hearings. held by the city clerk said protests were merged and the protestants urged that said petition *167 was insufficient in form, first, on account of failure to contain an enacting clause sueli as required by section 3, art. 5, of tbe Constitution, in tbe style of all bills; and, second, on account of omission from tbe certificate page of the words “and City of 'Oklahoma City”: and third, that the required number of signers should be ascertained by reference to the last preceding general shite rather than the last preceding municipal election, and that when so ascertained was insufficient. The city clerk sustained the first two contentions made by the protestants and declined to rule on the third contention. The parties, however, stipulated that if the last preceding municipal election was to be used in ascertaining the required number of signers, then said petition contained sufficient signers, otherwise it did not.

The proponents contend here that the requirement of section 3 of art. 5 of the Constitution has no application to a petition such as is here under consideration and that the petition complies substantially with the requirements of tbe statute and that the omission of the words “and city of Oklahoma City” from the certificate page constitutes at most a mere irregularity and that the requirement of section 4 (b) of art. 18 of the Constitution with reference to the number of signers relates to the next preceding municipal election, and that hence under the stipulation of the parties the petition contained the required number of signers.

Sections 3(a) and 3(b) of article 18 of the Constitution and sections 6424 and 6425, O. S. 1931 (11 Okla. St. Ann see. 558), authorize any city containing a population of more than two thousand inhabitants to frame a charter for its governmenr and control the procedure to be followed in so doing. Broshears v. Robertson, 158 Okla. 47, 12 P.2d 532; Fuller v. Getz, 168 Okla. 617, 36 P.2d 265. A charter adopted by a city in the manner thus provided becomes the organic law of said city, and if it contains a provision for its amendment, it is thereafter subject to amendment only in the manner thus provided. State ex rel. Reardon v. Scales, 21 Okla. 683. 97 P. 584; Lackey v. State ex rel. Grant, 29 Okla. 255, 116 P. 913; In re Initiative Petition, City of Okmulgee, 89 Okla. 134, 214 P. 186; Caruth v. State ex rel. Tobin, 101 Okla. 93, 223 P. 186; Foster v. Young, 149 Okla. 19, 299 P. 162. In obedience to the requirement of the Constitution (section 3(a) art.

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Bluebook (online)
1939 OK 238, 90 P.2d 665, 185 Okla. 165, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-initiative-petition-no-9-of-oklahoma-city-okla-1939.