Municipality of Anchorage v. Frohne

568 P.2d 3, 1977 Alas. LEXIS 521
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1977
Docket3050, 3104
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 568 P.2d 3 (Municipality of Anchorage v. Frohne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Municipality of Anchorage v. Frohne, 568 P.2d 3, 1977 Alas. LEXIS 521 (Ala. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

Before BOOCHEVER, C. J., and RABI-NO WITZ, CONNOR and BURKE, JJ.

RABINO WITZ, Justice.

This appeal and cross-appeal arise from two final orders of the superior court. The first permanently enjoined appellant from “disbursing funds from the treasury of the Municipality of Anchorage except in accordance with appropriations authorized by ordinance.” The second ordered that an initiative petition which was circulated by cross-appellant and certified as legally sufficient by the clerk of the Greater Anchorage Area Borough should not be submitted to the voters of the Municipality of Anchorage, and granted summary judgment to cross-appellees. We reverse the superior court as to its first order concerning the method of municipal appropriations required, and affirm with respect to the superior court’s grant of summary judgment on the initiative.

Appellee Mary Frohne was a member of the Anchorage Municipal Charter Commission, an eleven member organization responsible for drafting the Anchorage Municipal Charter. The Greater Anchorage *5 Area Borough and the City of Anchorage unified to become the Municipality of Anchorage upon adoption of the charter on September 9, 1975. 1 Frohne subsequently brought suit alleging various violations of the provisions of the new charter. We will first address the substantive issues concerning the authorized methods of appropriation by the Municipality.

The facts are undisputed in this case. Prior to unification, the City and Borough followed different procedures in authorizing budget revisions, transfers and supplemental appropriations. The Borough was subject to AS 29.48.130 and 29.48.190(c) which prohibit second class and general law municipalities from authorizing expenditures except by appropriation ordinance. The former City of Anchorage, as a home rule municipality, was not subject to these statutory restrictions on expenditures 2 and followed a general practice of processing budget revisions, transfers, appropriations, and supplemental appropriations by council action memoranda. Pursuant to the terms of the Anchorage Municipal Charter, 3 the mayor noted a conflict between the methods of appropriation utilized by the former Borough and City governments. The proee-dure “designated” by the mayor and approved by the assembly for future appropriations by the Municipality of Anchorage was the informal action memorandum used by the city before unification. Until the imposition of the injunction which is the subject of this appeal, 4 the Municipality was utilizing both ordinances and memoranda for budget revisions, appropriations and supplemental appropriations.

As a preliminary matter, we note that the Alaska Constitution imposes no explicit restrictions on the methods of appropriation available to home rule municipalities. 5 Since the general statutory provisions requiring municipal appropriation ordinances are also inapplicable to home rule governments, 6 disposition of this first issue turns on the construction given to the provisions of the municipal charter. 7

The charter itself is devoid of any express requirement that appropriations be made by ordinance. Appropriation is defined in the charter as “a unit of funding provided for by the Assembly in the municipal budget.” 8 We deem it significant that the subject of appropriations is omitted from a charter listing of “actions requiring an ordinance.” 9 Although by its own terms this *6 list is not exhaustive, 10 the text of the charter explicitly indicates throughout where other actions are to be carried out “by ordinance.” 11

When a charter is silent as to the mode of decision on a matter committed to the legislative body, ordinance procedures are not ordinarily required. 12 This is particularly true where, as in the present case, specific parts of a charter mandate ordinance procedures. The clear implication is that other powers may then be exercised without proceeding by ordinance. 13

With one exception, the Anchorage Municipal Charter consistently refers to the making of appropriations and omits the limitation “by ordinance.” In the section on initiative and referendum, however, reference is made to “ordinances . . . appropriating funds.” 14 The stated purpose of this provision is to limit the exercise of the powers of initiative and referendum. 15 We do not believe that, standing alone, this section pertaining to initiative and referendum can be used as a basis for imposing a procedure for appropriations not contemplated by the charter as a whole. 16 In our view it evidences an intent to withdraw from the voters the power to directly intervene in appropriations which, like the annual municipal budget, 17 are passed by ordinance. We cannot read this provision to imply an intent on the part of the drafters of the charter that in addition all appropriations must be by ordinance when such a restriction could have been explicitly included in the charter. 18 We therefore reverse the judgment of the superior court on this issue with directions upon remand to dismiss the permanent injunction which required the Municipality of Anchorage to make appropriations exclusively by ordinance.

The initiative which is the subject of the instant cross-appeal would have directed the Greater Anchorage Area Borough Assembly to select one of three multiple member district apportionment plans and one of two single member district apportionment plans proposed in the initiative and “give the voters their opportunity to choose between the two by including them in one ordinance and placing them on the same ballot in a special election, to take place within 60 days of enactment of this initiative.” The petition was circulated and certified 19 by the municipal clerk on July 25, 1975. Since it was not acted upon by *7 the Borough Assembly, the initiative was scheduled for presentation to the voters at the next regular municipal election in October 1976. 20

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568 P.2d 3, 1977 Alas. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/municipality-of-anchorage-v-frohne-alaska-1977.