State Ex Rel. Sutton v. Caldwell

197 So. 214, 195 La. 507, 1940 La. LEXIS 1095
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 27, 1940
DocketNo. 35598.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 197 So. 214 (State Ex Rel. Sutton v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Sutton v. Caldwell, 197 So. 214, 195 La. 507, 1940 La. LEXIS 1095 (La. 1940).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The relators in this case are fifty electors in the City of Shreveport. They are proceeding by mandamus to compel the mayor and councilmen to take action upon a proposed ordinance, either by adopting it or by submitting it to a vote of the electors of the city, at an election to be called for the purpose. The mayor and councilmen are appealing from a judgment making the mandamus peremptory.

The object of the proposed ordinance is to regulate and restrict the number of hours the firemen and fire-alarm operators in the city shall be required to be on active duty, and to provide penalties for violation of the ordinance.

The City of Shreveport is governed by Act No. 302 of 1910, which provides a form of government which certain classes of cities may adopt. The statute has been succeeded by Act No. 13 of the Third Extraordinary Session of 1934, having the same object. It is contended by the relators that the City of Shreveport is not subject to the provisions of the act of 1934 because the' citizens have not voted to adopt the act; but it is declared in the repealing clause, in section 21, of the act of 1934 that the cities that have adopted the provisions of the act of 1910 shall continue to be governed by that act “as modified by this act” — the act of 1934— “and except as otherwise provided herein”. •

In Section 14 of the act of 1910, and in Section 16 of the act of 1934, it is declared that, if a proposed ordinance is accompanied by a petition signed by a number of electors not less than a third of the number of votes cast for all candidates for mayor in the last preceding general election, and if the sufficiency of the number of petitioners is verified by the certificate of the registrar of voters, the council shall either adopt the ordinance within twenty days or forthwith submit it to a vote of the electors of the city. The petition in this instance was signed by more than the necessary number of electors; and the fact was verified by the certificate of the registrar of voters, as required by the statute. Nevertheless the council refused to adopt the ordinance, and refused to submit it to a vote of the electors.

In response to the rule to show cause why the mandamus should not be grant *512 ed, the mayor and counci-lmen filed an exception of no cause or right of action, and an answer setting forth in twenty-two numbered articles their reasons for refusing to take action -upon the proposed ordinance. The relators then filed a plea which they called a motion to strike out the articles numbered 9 to 22, inclusive, in the defendants’ answer. The judge overruled the defendants’ exception of no cause or right of action, and maintained the relators’ so-called motion to strike out, to the extent of ordering articles numbered 13 to 22, inclusive, stricken from the defendants’ answer. The case was heard then on the remaining issues, and resulted in a judgment for the relators.

The appellants complain first of the ruling of the judge “striking out” the allegations contained in the last ten articles in their answer; and they cite the case of Babst v. Hartz, 161 La. 427, 108 So. 871, where it was said that it was not permissible for a judge to strike out from any pleading any pertinent matter couched in language not offensive. In that case it was said that if the defense which was set up in the answer to the suit was not sufficient in law, the plaintiffs’ remedy was to take a rule on the defendants for a judgment on the petition and answer, according to the provisions of Act No. 300 of 1914, known as-the Pleading and Practice Act. There is no provision in the Pleading and Practice Act, or in the Code of Practice, for such a pleading as a motion to strike out; and our opinion is that the Code of Practice and the Pleading and Practice Act contain everything that is necessary or useful in the regulation of pleading and practice in this State. A better practice, in a case like this, is either to ask for a judgment on the petition and answer or to object to the introduction of evidence in support of any allegation under which the ¿vidence might not be relevant. In that way a record is made of the evidence that is offered, for use in the appellate court in case of an appeal; and nothing' is stricken out. It is argued for the relators that the condemning of the motion to strike out, in Babst v. Hartz, had reference only to “pertinent matter” in a defendant’s answer; and it is said that the allegations which were stricken from the defendants’ answer in the present case were not pertinent matter. What the court meant by referring to the allegations as “pertinent matter”, in Babst v. Hartz, was that the allegations were not impertinent, or not foreign to the subject of the lawsuit. It goes without saying that an allegation in the answer to a lawsuit should not be stricken out if evidence to support it would be pertinent or relevant to some issue in the case.

The striking out of the last ten of the twenty-two allegations in the defendants’ answer in this case did not leave the record in any worse condition than that in which it would be if the relators had bided their time and had objected to the offering of evidence to support the allegations. They are in the record, and they disclose that proof of them would not be admissible. There is no necessity for quoting the allegations here. They merely set forth the reasons why the mayor *514 and councilmen deemed it inadvisable, from a standpoint of economy, to adopt the proposed ordinance. That is a question which the council is required by the statute to submit to the electors, in any case where the council does not see fit to adopt the ordinance. A municipal council has no authority to decide the question of wisdom of an initiative ordinance which has been presented properly to the council. 43 C.J. Sec. 963, p. 592; State ex rel. Fleck v. Dalles City, 72 Or. 337, 143 P. 1127, 1128, Ann.Cas,1916B, 855. In the latter case it w&s said: “The question of the wisdom of municipal legislation proposed by initiative or of difficulties in its execution does not affect the question of its validity.”

The next complaint of the appellants is made in their exception of no cause or right of action. The exception presents two separate and distinct complaints. The first complaint is that the electors, in their petition to the council to either adopt the ordinance or submit it to a vote of the electors, did not give the street address of each petitioner, or state his age or length of residence in the city. That information was not given as to any of the petition. The petition, however, was supported by the certificate of the registrar of voters, showing that the necessary number of the petitioners were qualified electors in the city. The defendants rely upon Section 8 of Act No. 302 of 1910 and Section 11 of Act No. 13 of the Third Extraordinary Session of 1934, where it is said: “That petitions provided for in this Act shall be signed by none but qualified electors of the city. Each petition shall contain, in addition to the names of the petitioners, the street and house number in which petitioner resides, whenever practicable, his age, and length of residence in the city.”

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 214, 195 La. 507, 1940 La. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sutton-v-caldwell-la-1940.