Save the Veterans Memorial v. City of Royal Oak

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 30, 2021
Docket357835
StatusUnpublished

This text of Save the Veterans Memorial v. City of Royal Oak (Save the Veterans Memorial v. City of Royal Oak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Save the Veterans Memorial v. City of Royal Oak, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

SAVE THE VETERANS MEMORIAL, UNPUBLISHED AMERICAN LEGION FRANK WENDLAND July 30, 2021 POST 253, ACORN POST NO. 1669, ROYAL OAK, MICHIGAN, OF VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS, WILLIAM BERARDO, WALLIS MAY ANDERSON, and WILLIAM E. HARRISON,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 357835 Oakland Circuit Court CITY OF ROYAL OAK, MICHAEL FOURNIER, LC No. 2021-188167-AW SHARLAN DOUGLAS, KYLE DUBUC, MONICA HUNT, BRANDON KOLO, MELANIE MACEY, PATRICIA PARUCH, MELANIE HALAS, and PAUL BRAKE,

Defendants-Appellants.

Before: JANSEN, P.J., and GLEICHER and TUKEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendants appeal as of right the trial court’s opinion and order granting plaintiffs mandamus relief and ordering defendants to take all actions necessary to place plaintiffs’ proposed ordinance on the ballot for the November 2021 election. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Defendants are the City of Royal Oak, its city clerk, city manager, mayor, and the members of the city commission. Plaintiffs are organizations and individuals who sued for mandamus to require defendants to place their proposed ordinance regarding the Royal Oak Veterans War Memorial on the ballot before the city’s voters at the next general election. The Veterans War Memorial was originally dedicated in 1946 in remembrance of those who died fighting in the Second World War. Additional monuments were subsequently added to the Memorial in remembrance of those who died in the First World War, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War.

-1- In 2005, the Royal Oak Memorial Society and supporters raised money to move the Memorial and rededicate it at a new location, between the Royal Oak City Hall and the Royal Oak Public Library, designated the Barbara A. Hallman Memorial Plaza. The Memorial was moved to that location in 2006. In 2007, Royal Oak voters approved Ordinance No. 2007-07, the Veterans War Memorial Ordinance, which “designate[d] a portion of the Barbara A. Hallman Memorial Plaza for continued use as a memorial honoring members of the American and Canadian Armed Forces who have lost their lives in service to their country.”

In 2020, the City Commission approved plans to redevelop and rebuild Royal Oak City Hall and the surrounding area. Those plans included removing the Memorial from its current location and replacing it within an expanded park area. At one point the City apparently moved the Memorial. That prompted veterans’ organizations and individuals to form plaintiff Save the Veterans Memorial and to circulate their petition proposing an ordinance designated the Veterans War Memorial Preservation and Protection Ordinance. The stated purpose of the proposed ordinance is:

[T]o designate a portion of the Barbara A. Hallman Memorial Plaza, and the monuments and improvements upon it, for continued use at its precise location as of December 31, 2020, as a memorial honoring members of the American and Canadian armed forces who have lost their lives in service to their country, to prohibit other uses upon such land, and to repeal and replace the Royal Oak Veterans War Memorial Ordinance . . . .

Section 5(A) of the proposed ordinance bars the removal or relocation of the Memorial from its precise location as of December 31, 2020, “without an affirmative vote of the majority of qualified electors of the City of Royal Oak . . . at a regularly scheduled general municipal election.” Section 5(B) of the proposed ordinance requires that if the Memorial is moved from that site “the City of Royal Oak shall restore such monuments and improvements to such precise location, in comparable or better condition, no later than one year from the full and complete effective date of this ordinance.” Section 5(B) also states that the City “shall reimburse or compensate all businesses, groups, citizens, and other persons, or their successors or assigns, who contributed financial or in-kind as of January 1, 2005 and December 31, 2007 to the moving or expansion of the Memorial to such precise site.”

The initiative petitions circulated by plaintiffs were entitled “INITIATION OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE PRESERVING AND PROTECTING THE ROYAL OAK VETERANS WAR MEMORIAL.” At the top the petition contained the following summary describing the proposed ordinance:

An initiative to adopt an ordinance designating a portion of the Barbara A. Hallman Memorial Plaza for continued use as a memorial honoring members of the armed forces who lost their lives in service to their country; to preserve the improvements thereon; to prohibit other uses; to provide that if such improvements are moved prior to the enactment of this ordinance that the City of Royal Oak restore such improvements to their prior location.

-2- The description also informed potential signers “FULL TEXT OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE ON THE BACK OF THIS PETITION.” At the bottom right corner the petition contained the notice that it was “Paid for with regulated funds by Save the Veterans Memorial . . . .” and that the “[p]etition drive [was] organized by American Legion Frank Wendland Post 253 . . . and VFW Acorn Post 1669 . . . .”

Chapter 6 of the Royal Oak City Charter, entitled “Initiative and Referendum,” states in relevant part:

Section 1. Any proposed ordinance may be submitted by petition, signed by qualified electors of the City, equal in number to the percentage hereinafter required. The procedure in respect to such petition shall be the same as provided in Sections 2, 3, 4, and 5 of Chapter Five except that petitions may be circulated for signature instead of being signed at the office of the City Clerk, with such modifications as the nature of the case requires, except that no blank form shall be furnished or preliminary affidavit made.

Section 2. If the petition accompanying the proposed ordinance be signed by qualified electors equal in number to at least 15% of the electors voting at the last preceding general municipal election, and contains a request that said proposed ordinance be submitted to a vote of the people, the Clerk shall thereupon ascertain and certify its number of qualified signers, whereupon if such certificate shows the required number of qualified signers, the Commission shall within 20 days thereafter either,

a. Pass said ordinance without alteration (subject to the referendum provided by the Charter), or

b. Call a special election, to be held within 30 days, unless a general or special municipal election is to be held within 90 days thereafter, and at such general or special municipal election said proposed ordinance shall be submitted without alternation to the vote of the qualified electors of said City.

Section 3. If the petition be signed by qualified electors equal in number to at least 5% but less than 15% of all the electors voting at the last preceding general municipal election, as shown in the manner hereinafter provided, and said proposed ordinance be not passed without alteration by the Commission within 20 days, as provided in the preceding section, then such proposed ordinance, without alteration, shall be submitted by the Commission to electoral vote at the next general municipal election that shall occur at any time after 30 days from the date of the Clerk’s certificate of sufficiency attached to the petition accompanying such ordinance.

Plaintiffs circulated the petitions, gathered signatures, and presented them to the city clerk. On April 21, 2021, the city clerk informed plaintiffs’ representatives that her office had verified 872 signatures on the petitions submitted, which was more than 5% but less than 15% of the electors voting at the last preceding general municipal election.

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Bluebook (online)
Save the Veterans Memorial v. City of Royal Oak, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/save-the-veterans-memorial-v-city-of-royal-oak-michctapp-2021.