Meyers v. Town of Westport

570 A.2d 249, 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 295, 41 Conn. Supp. 295, 1989 Conn. Super. LEXIS 15
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1989
DocketFile 0104065S
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 570 A.2d 249 (Meyers v. Town of Westport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyers v. Town of Westport, 570 A.2d 249, 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 295, 41 Conn. Supp. 295, 1989 Conn. Super. LEXIS 15 (Colo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Flynn, J.

The plaintiffs, Barbara Meyers and Paula Armstrong, seek to have the defendants, the town of Westport and Joan Hyde, the Westport town clerk, show cause why their names should not be placed on the ballot for the November 7,1989 election as candidates for the Westport representative town meeting.

*296 This action was filed after the town clerk notified both of the plaintiffs that their petitions for placement on the ballot were being rejected because, as Westport town employees, they had access to confidential information and, therefore, were part of the executive branch of the town government. Further reasons for their rejection were set out in an attached letter from the town’s attorney.

Meyers is employed as the secretary to the town attorney and his assistant, while Armstrong is a secretary in the comptroller’s office. Westport has not adopted a merit system as authorized by chapter 113 of the General Statutes and, therefore, neither plaintiff is a classified employee.

It is not contested that, apart from the town clerk’s claim that the plaintiffs are ineligible because of their particular secretarial functions, the plaintiffs’ petitions otherwise meet the legal requirements for placement of their names on the election ballot.

Representative town meeting elections in Westport are nonpartisan in that the town charter provides for a petition nomination process and the candidates so nominated by petition do not run under any party label. The town clerk has no discretion in the matter. If the petition meets all the proper requirements of law, the clerk’s duty is to certify the petition for nomination and to place the name on the ballot.

The temporary mandamus application is granted, because the defendants are not authorized by either the General Statutes or the state constitution to bar these employees from running for election for public municipal office.

The plaintiffs claim that a town or city has only those powers delegated by the General Assembly and that no statute authorized the town of Westport to prohibit *297 unclassified employees like the plaintiffs from running for the representative town meeting. They further claim, therefore, that the town clerk is without power to reject the plaintiffs’ petitions.

The defendants contend that an express town charter provision, § C5-2 (C), provides in pertinent part that “no person holding any salaried office or position in the government of the Town . . . shall be eligible for election as a member of the Representative Town Meeting . . . .” and that that provision bars the nomination of either plaintiff. The defendants further maintain that because the plaintiffs have access to confidential information and are an integral part of the executive branch of town government, they are ineligible to run.

Temporary orders of mandamus are authorized under § 544 of the rules of practice. Orders of temporary mandamus may issue only when the following four conditions are satisfied: (1) there is no other adequate remedy; (2) irreparable harm has been shown; (3) the law imposes a mandatory, not discretionary, duty on the party against whom the writ is sought; and (4) the party who is seeking the writ of mandamus has a clear legal right to have the duty performed.

There is little question that there is no other adequate legal remedy available to the plaintiffs. If they are not placed on the ballot in time to be voted upon for the 1989 election by an order of mandamus, no other remedy exists to which they may resort, at their option, fully or freely without let or hindrance. Juliano v. Farrell, 196 Conn. 283, 287, 492 A.2d 187 (1985); Wheeler v. Bedford, 54 Conn. 244, 249, 7 A. 22 (1886). The plaintiffs’ objective is to be placed on the ballot.

While the rule is that mandamus also will not lie if there is an adequate equitable remedy, the plaintiffs have requested injunctive relief. There are situations, and this appears to be one, where the use of one rem *298 edy rather than the other involves a matter of semantics. Monroe v. Middlebury Conservation Commission, 187 Conn. 476, 481, 447 A.2d 1 (1982).

Irreparable harm has been shown by the plaintiffs. The election of 1989 will come and go, and, if the plaintiffs have a right to be on the ballot but that right is denied to them, no other remedy will afford them adequate redress.

The duty that the plaintiffs seek to have performed is mandatory and not discretionary. Subsections B, C and D of § C5-4 of the Westport town charter set out the procedures to be followed by the town clerk in certifying nominations. Section C5-2 sets out the qualifications for election and it provides: “Qualifications for election. Each Representative Town Meeting member shall be an elector of the Town and a resident of the voting district from which elected. No person holding any salaried office or position in the government of the Town, no elected official of the Town, no member of any elected or appointed board or commission of the Town and no official of the Probate or any state court shall be eligible for election as a member of the Representative Town Meeting unless their respective terms of office shall have ended at the same election. No member of the Representative Town Meeting shall hold any such salaried office or any such elected, appointed or court position. The Representative Town Meeting shall be the judge of the election and qualification of its members.”

For the reasons set out hereafter, the court rules that this provision is invalid insofar as it purports to prevent the plaintiffs’ nomination because of their municipal employment status.

Subsections B, C and D of § C5-4 of the charter require little comment because the town clerk concedes that all their requirements, including that of twenty- *299 five signatures on written forms, have been met. Nowhere in the provisions of those subsections is there any discretion for the town clerk to certify a candidate. Subsection D provides: “The Town clerk shall, at least 28 days before such election, certify the names of candidates nominated in accordance with this Charter to the Secretary of State.” The town clerk’s duties with respect to the nomination of representative town meeting candidates are ministerial, not discretionary.

This brings the court to the last consideration, and largest issue in the case, namely, whether the plaintiffs have established a “clear legal right to be certified and placed on the ballot.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
570 A.2d 249, 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 295, 41 Conn. Supp. 295, 1989 Conn. Super. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-town-of-westport-connsuperct-1989.