Powers v. City of Pawtucket

87 A.2d 107, 79 R.I. 229, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 19, 1952
DocketM. P. No. 999
StatusPublished

This text of 87 A.2d 107 (Powers v. City of Pawtucket) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers v. City of Pawtucket, 87 A.2d 107, 79 R.I. 229, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 36 (R.I. 1952).

Opinion

*231 Flynn, C. J.

This is a petition for a “Prerogative Writ Of Injunction.” It is brought by the attorney general on behalf of the state of Rhode Island and prays that the city of Pawtucket, a municipal corporation, and certain named officials in their capacities respectively as mayor, city treasurer and chairman of the joint standing committee on finance of the city council of that city, be enjoined from performing any acts whatsoever under a certain joint resolution of the city council, which resolution is alleged to violate the provisions of the city’s charter.

No objection, jurisdictionally or otherwise, has been raised by any of the respondents to the form or substance of the petition. Indeed all respondents, individually or through their attorneys, have signed and filed a stipulation of agreed facts and apparently join in the prayer of the petition for a determination of the validity of the joint resolution, hereinafter set forth, which purported to authorize said city to borrow moneys on temporary loans for current expenses in anticipation of taxes during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1951.

The following facts appearing from the stipulation and petition will aid in understanding the issue. The city of Pawtucket, one of the respondents, is a municipal corporation created by the general assembly of the state of Rhode Island and derives its authority generally to function as such by virtue of chapter 474 enacted on March 27, 1885, as amended by public laws 1902, chap. 1018, hereinafter referred to as the charter.

Section 2 of the charter, as amended, provides for the administration of all fiscal and municipal affairs and reads in part as follows:

“The administration of all the fiscal, prudential and municipal affairs of said city, with the government thereof, except as hereinafter specially provided, shall be vested in one officer to be called the mayor, a council *232 of six aldermen, to be called the board of aldermen, and a council of eighteen persons, to be called the common council, and which board of aldermen and common council together shall be called the city council.”

Section 3, clause 1, of the charter deals with the mayor’s duties and responsibilities, and the pertinent part thereof provides:

“The mayor shall be the chief executive officer of the city, and by virtue of his office a justice of the peace therein; he shall be vigilant and active in causing the laws of the state and the ordinances of the city to be executed and enforced; * * * and he shall have a general supervision of the subordinate officers of the city, and shall cause all neglect or violation of duty by them to be punished.”

On July 25, 1951 the joint resolution in question was originally passed by the board of aldermen. The pertinent part of that resolution reads as follows:

“Section 1. The City Treasurer hereby is authorized, with the approval of the Mayor or of the Chairman of the Joint Standing Committee on Finance, to borrow from time to time during the current municipal fiscal year beginning July 1, 1951, moneys for the purpose of meeting the current expenses of the city on temporary loans and in anticipation of taxes of said municipal fiscal year, and to give for such loans the notes of the city, payable within one year from their dates. The amount of such notes at any time outstanding shall not exceed the sum of Three Million ($3,000,000.00) Dollars nor the balance of uncollected taxes plus the collected taxes on hand and expressly reserved to meet such notes.”'

That resolution was passed in concurrent action by the common council on July 27, 1951 and was duly presented to the mayor who did not approve or sign it but returned it to' the board of aldermen with a veto message containing his objections. Thereafter it was duly passed over the mayor’s veto, first by the board of aldermen and then in concurrent action by the common council, by vote of a two- *233 thirds majority of the elected members in each of said branches in accordance with the express provisions of section 3, clause 6, of the charter.

Thereupon Lawrence A. McCarthy individually as a taxpayer and also in his capacity as mayor of the city brought a suit in equity in the superior court to enjoin the chairman of the joint standing committee on finance, the city treasurer, and other officials from exercising any public authority purportedly vested in them by virtue of said joint resolution. The ground therein alleged was in substance that the resolution violated the provisions of section 2 of the charter, deprived the mayor of his exclusive authority under the charter to approve such borrowings, and also invaded or prevented the performance of his duties and responsibilities in other respects as imposed by other provisions of the charter. After a hearing a decree of the superior court .was entered in that case granting the prayers of the bill for injunctive relief. The cause was later brought to this court on an appeal from that decree by the city and other respondents. McCarthy v. McAloon, 79 R. I. 55.

In that cause this court held in substance that the superior court sitting in equity had no jurisdiction to entertain a bill brought by the complainant merely in his capacity as mayor to vindicate a public right, because the attorney general of the state of Rhode Island alone could act in that capacity. We further held that as an individual taxpayer the complainant could not obtain such relief unless he alleged and proved a special injury to some right of property or other interest different from the common effect of the alleged actions upon other citizens generally. These elements being absent the decree was reversed. McCarthy v. McAloon, supra. However, neither the validity of the resolution itself nor the scope of the alleged duties and obligations of the mayor under the various sections of the charter as therein set forth were considered or decided in that opinion.

Subsequently the state of Rhode Island, acting through *234 its attorney general and on behalf of the public generally, brought in this court the instant petition for a so-called “Prerogative Writ Of Injunction” to restrain respondents as previously stated.

The petition alleges that pursuant to such resolution the respondents are threatening illegally to borrow on behalf of the city and to issue its corresponding notes of indebtedness in anticipation of taxes to the amount of $3,000,000 or a substantial portion thereof; and that the resolution violates section 2 of the charter in that it purports to divest the mayor and to deprive him of the exclusive power granted to him under section 2 of the charter to administer the fiscal, prudential and municipal affairs of the city in conjunction with the city council and purports to grant such power and authority also to the chairman of the joint standing committee on finance of the city council who is nowhere authorized to act in that respect under the charter.

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Related

McCarthy v. McAloon
83 A.2d 75 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1951)
Allen v. Rhode Island State Board of Veterinarians
52 A.2d 131 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1947)
Taft v. Zoning Board of Review
64 A.2d 200 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
87 A.2d 107, 79 R.I. 229, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-v-city-of-pawtucket-ri-1952.