State ex rel. Lane v. Chambers

353 S.W.2d 835, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 558
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1962
DocketNo. 23633
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 353 S.W.2d 835 (State ex rel. Lane v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Lane v. Chambers, 353 S.W.2d 835, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 558 (Mo. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

HUNTER, Presiding Judge.

This is an action in mandamus brought in the name of the State of Missouri by relators, George Lane, Harold Herman and Edmund Gorman, who are registered, qualified electors and citizens of the City of Kansas City, Missouri for the purpose of requiring respondents, who constitute the full membership of the election bodies and officials in charge of elections for the City of Kansas City, Missouri, to place a certain proposal for amendment of the Charter of Kansas City, Missouri on the ballot at the next election to be held in the City on March 6, 1962.

This court has issued its alternate writ which has resulted in a full hearing on the merits of the controversy. There is little dispute over the facts, most of which have been admitted either in the pleadings or by respective counsel at the hearing. We proceed to set out such of these facts as are pertinent to the issues.

For some time prior to January 2, 1962, relators and others circulated petitions for the purpose of obtaining a Charter amendment to the Charter of the City of Kansas City, Missouri. The petitions recited that the undersigned, being duly registered, qualified electors of the City of Kansas City, Missouri, “pursuant to Sections 19 and 20 of Article VI of the Constitution of the State of Missouri, present to the City Council of this City, this petition by filing the same with the City Clerk of Kansas City, Missouri, and request the City Council to adopt at once an appropriate ordinance so that the following proposed amendment to the Charter of Kansas City, Missouri, shall be placed upon the ballot and submitted to the registered and qualified electors of Kansas City, Missouri, for their adoption or rejection * * * ; said pro[837]*837posed amendment will require the City to be divided into twelve councilmanic districts with one councilman running for election inside each district, and no councilman running at large.”

Attached to each of these petitions was a copy of the proposed amendment to the City Charter.1

As a result of the circulation of these petitions approximately 32,000 signatures were obtained.

It is undisputed that these petitions were in proper form and were signed by substantially more than ten percent of the registered qualified voters of Kansas City, Missouri as of the time of the last preceding general election and also more than ten percent of the registered qualified voters of Kansas City, Missouri on January 2, 1962, and at all other times mentioned.2

On January 5, 1962, there was filed with the City Council of Kansas City by Holman T. Ham, County Clerk and ex officio Registration Officer of Platte County, Missouri, one of the above named respondents, two certificates dated January 2, 1962, certifying that there were no qualified electors of Kansas City, Missouri from Platte County who voted in the last preceding election in Kansas City, no part of Platte County having come into the city limits of Kansas City prior to January 1, 1962; that as of January 1, 1962, there were 79 residents of newly annexed territory of Kansas City registered in Platte County.

Likewise on January 5, 1962, there was filed with the Office of the City Clerk of Kansas City a duly attested certificate executed January 4, 1962, by the Board of Election Commissioners of Clay County^ Missouri, to which certificate was attached a copy of the petition for the proposed charter amendment in which the Election Commissioners of Clay County, Missouri certified that 960 registered qualified electors of Kansas City, Missouri in Clay County had signed the mentioned petition for the proposed Charter amendment.

Also on January 5, 1962, the Kansas City Board of Election Commissioners executed a certificate which at 11:30 a. m. on January 5, 1962, it filed with the City Clerk of Kansas City, Missouri, which certificate, among other things, certified that the above mentioned petitions for the proposed Charter amendment and their signatures were duly canvassed and found to contain 23,921 signatures of duly registered qualified electors of the City of Kansas City, Missouri, and that such signatures constitute more than ten percent of the registered qualified electors of the City of Kansas City, Missouri, as of January 2, 1962. The certification did not include the 960 registered qualified electors certified by the Election Commissioners of Clay County, Missouri.

On December 1, 1961, a proponent of the proposed Charter amendment, Joseph S. Levy, with the consent of the City Council of Kansas City appeared at a meeting of the City Council, discussed the proposed Charter amendment, and requested the City Council to pass an ordinance placing the proposed amendment on the ballot at the March 6, 1962, election.

On December 8, 1961, Ordinance No. 26933 was introduced and passed by the City Council calling for the placing of a [838]*838Charter amendment on the ballot at the March 6, 1962, election, which proposed Charter amendment was substantially different from the one advanced by relators.3

Later this ordinance was repealed and replaced by Ordinance No. 27022, passed on January 5, 1962, for the apparent purpose of supplying an effective date for the ordinance omitted in the earlier ordinance. Ordinance No. 27022 was duly certified to respondents to be placed on the election of March 6, 1962, and submitting the Council’s proposed Charter amendment to the electorate. According to the evidence this ordinance was passed by the City Council just after it voted 4 to 4 on Ordinance No. 27015.

On January 5, 1962, and after the mentioned certifications of the sufficiency of the petitions sponsored by relators the City Council of Kansas City had on its docket reference to these petitions and their certifications ; they were at the Council Meeting declared to be received and filed; and there was duly presented at this Council Meeting Ordinance No. 27015 providing for the submission of relators’ proposed City Charter amendment to the electors of Kansas City on March 6, 1962, that date being the next election to be held in Kansas City more than sixty days after the passage of such ordinance as provided by Sections 19 and 20 of Article VI of the Constitution of Missouri, V.A.M.S.

After presentation and discussion of Ordinance No. 27015 by the members of the City Council, and after being advised by the City Counselor of Kansas City that because the certified petitions were sufficient and the ordinance was in proper form and content the passage of Ordinance No. 27015 was, by the terms of the Constitution of the State of Missouri, mandatory and outside the discretion of the members of the Council, the City Council voted 4 to 4 on the ordinance, thus failing to enact it.

Since that time relators have been unable to get the respondents to place the proposed City Charter amendment sponsored by relators on the ballot for the March 6, 1962, election, the position of respondents being that they will not do so unless directed to do so by a court of appropriate jurisdiction.

We next turn to those provisions of the Constitution of the State of Missouri and the City Charter that apply to the issues before us.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 S.W.2d 835, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lane-v-chambers-moctapp-1962.