State Ex Rel. Fatzer v. Salome

220 P.2d 192, 169 Kan. 585, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1950
Docket37,935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 192 (State Ex Rel. Fatzer v. Salome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Fatzer v. Salome, 220 P.2d 192, 169 Kan. 585, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 408 (kan 1950).

Opinion

*586 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This is an original proceeding in mandamus to compel the city officials of Wichita to accept and examine petitions under G. S. 1935, 12-107, calling for adoption of or a referendum upon a proposed ordinance repealing two resolutions adopted by the city of Wichita on August 14, 1945, and a third resolution adopted on April 22, 1947, all pertaining to flood control works in the city of Wichita and for incidental relief.

In a preliminary way it may be said that prior to 1943 United States army engineers had made a study of flood control problems in Sedgwick county, including the city of Wichita, resulting in two plans. After conferences which need not be noted, the city of Wichita and Sedgwick county agreed upon the plan referred to at times as the Big Ditch or Army Plan, and for the performance of flood control work thereunder within the city by the city of Wichita, and without the city by Sedgwick county. Under date of August 14, 1945, the governing body of the city of Wichita adopted resolutions to proceed under the above plan and to make the commitments authorized by Laws 1945, chapter 391, which as amended appear as G. S. 1947 Supp., chapter 19, article 33. After some further negotiations, the city adopted its resolution of April 22, 1947, which reiterated and affirmed its former action. Under date of June 22, 1948, the governing body of the city enacted its ordinance No. 15-270 which declared the work to be a public necessity, found the improvement to be for the general benefit of the city and directed issuance of bonds to pay the costs to be borne by the city. The county had meanwhile adopted requisite resolutions and made commitments for performance of the project outside the city. Shortly thereafter the city, as well as the county, issued temporary notes to pay costs and submitted them to the state auditor for registration, which was denied, and mandamus actions were commenced in this court by the city and by the county, the principal question being the constitutionality of G. S. 1947 Supp., chapter 19, article 33, under which the flood control projects were being performed. Constitutionality was upheld in an opinion filed November 13, 1948, and reported in Board of County Comm’rs v. Robb, 166 Kan. 122, 199 P. 2d 530. An appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States was dismissed on April 25, 1949, for want of a substantial federal question. On May 24,1949, the state on the relation of the county attorney of *587 Sedgwick county commenced an action in this court against the governing body of the city to compel a referendum on repealing Ordinance No. 15-270 above mentioned. This court held that ordinance to be administrative and not legislative in character and therefore not subject to referendum under G. S. 1935, 12-107, the opinion being filed July 9, 1949, and appearing as State, ex rel., v. Salome, 167 Kan. 766, 208 P. 2d 198. In that opinion may be found copies of the two resolutions of August 14, 1945, which are involved in the action now before us and reference is made thereto. Thereafter on October 5,1949, another action was commenced in this court by the state on the relation of the county attorney of Sedgwick county to compel a referendum on the question of repeal of the above mentioned resolutions of August 14, 1945, and April 22, 1947. This action was dismissed on October 19, 1949, as being prematurely instituted. On December 8, 1949, the state on the relation of the attorney general commenced the present action in this court. It is rather clear from all the litigation mentioned and from the arguments made from time to time that the controversy is not so much whether there be a flood control project, but what plan should be followed.

It is not necessary that we set forth in detail the allegations of the petition. For our purposes the petition alleged the adoption of the resolutions of August 14, 1945, and of April 22,1947, heretofore mentioned and that eighty-five petitions signed by qualified electors of the city, requesting the adoption of an ordinance repealing and rescinding the three resolutions, were filed with the city clerk on October 3, 1948, in pursuance of G. S. 1935, 12-107; that the petitions were signed by 6,575 qualified electors which number exceeds twenty-five percent of the entire vote cast for all candidates for commissioner at the last general municipal election; that it became the duty of the defendant commissioners to require the city clerk to certify as to the sufficiency of the petitions, and if the petitions contained 6,102 signatures of qualified electors, it then became the duty of the city commissioners to pass the proposed ordinance without alteration within twenty days or to call a special election; that the city commissioners met October 4, 1949, in regular session and notwithstanding the filing of the petitions ignored the duties imposed on them by the above statute. Then follow allegations concerning the second action of State, ex rel., v. Salome, previously referred to, an attempt to file additional petitions on October 18, 1949, *588 on which date the city clerk certified to the city commissioners that the petitions were numerically insufficient; then follow allegations concerning the tender of additional petitions, the refusal of the city clerk to receive them, the failure of the city commissioners to refer the petitions to the city clerk; the studied efforts of the city commissioners to prevent a vote on the proposed ordinance, and other allegations which include requests for declaratory judgments as to filing additional petitions and as to identification of signers with the registration lists will be referred to later if necessary. The prayer is that the city commissioners be ordered to direct the city clerk to accept and examine all of the petitions submitted and certify whether they are sufficient and contain the names of 6,102 qualified electors, and to issue his certificate as required by G. S. 1935,12-107, and if the clerk shall issue his certificate of sufficiency that the city commissioners pass the proposed ordinance or cause an election to be called as provided by law. Other portions of the prayer will not be noticed here.

The title of the proposed ordinance is “An Ordinance Relating to Flood Control, Repealing and Rescinding,” three resolutions later mentioned, and the gist of the ordinance is that the board of commissioners of the city now determines that the city should not be subjected to the “onerous, expensive, wasteful, unnecessary and immaterial Big Ditch or Army Plan” of so-called flood control which would take about 6,500 acres of valuable land out of production and entail future damage actions, and that the board sees fit to refuse to proceed with any and all contracts involving flood control, sees fit to refuse to proceed with any and all contracts it may have entered into under and by virtue of G. S. 1947 Supp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 192, 169 Kan. 585, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fatzer-v-salome-kan-1950.