Taylor v. South Jordan City Recorder

972 P.2d 423, 352 Utah Adv. Rep. 20, 1998 Utah LEXIS 70, 1998 WL 655692
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1998
DocketNo. 981431
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 972 P.2d 423 (Taylor v. South Jordan City Recorder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. South Jordan City Recorder, 972 P.2d 423, 352 Utah Adv. Rep. 20, 1998 Utah LEXIS 70, 1998 WL 655692 (Utah 1998).

Opinions

ZIMMERMAN, Justice:

On July 16, 1998, five registered voters from the city of South Jordan (“the sponsors”) submitted a ballot initiative application to the South Jordan city recorder pursuant to section 20A-7-504 of the Code. On July 24, 1998, the sponsors were notified that their application had been denied. The rejection letter simply stated: “[T]he Application is denied by the City on the grounds that the subject matter of the proposed ordinance involves a zoning matter which is inappropriate for the initiative process.” The sponsors applied to this court for an extraordinary writ to compel the recorder to furnish them five copies of the initiative petition and five signature sheets.

[424]*424Section 20A-7-504(2) states, “The local clerk shall furnish to the sponsors: (a) five copies of the initiative petition; and (b) five signature sheets.” The language of section 20A-7-504(2) is mandatory. The statute makes the issuance of an initiative petition an entirely ministerial act, and nothing in the statute authorizes the local clerk to make any independent determination of whether the petition should be issued. Any determination of whether the subject matter is appropriate for the initiative process is proper only after the petition has been issued, completed, and returned.

Chief Justice Howe suggests that allowing the clerk to refuse to furnish initiative forms to sponsors when the clerk believes “he or she cannot legally accept the initiative petition if and when the required number of signatures has been obtained” is efficient and saves the taxpayers money. The difficulty we have with this position is that the clerk, by definition, is employed by the very entity whose action or inaction is likely the subject of the initiative. Therefore, the clerk, in a very real sense, is an adversary of the initiative sponsors, as is the city attorney from whom the clerk seeks advice. Under these circumstances, to give a clerk the power to make legal decisions about the propriety of petition requests and thus about the initiative petition’s circulation is to invite abuse. The statutes make the initiative process quite difficult for proponents. Following the course Chief Justice Howe suggests would add an additional hurdle not mandated by the language of the statute. In fact, the present litigation is an example of such a hurdle. The proponent taxpayers have already incurred additional costs by being forced to litigate over whether or not the clerk must furnish a petition.

In light of the foregoing, the city recorder (clerk) of the city of South Jordan is hereby ordered to furnish the sponsors five copies of the initiative petition and five signature sheets as required by section 20A-7-504(2) of the Code.

Associate Chief Justice DURHAM and Justice STEWART and Justice RUSSON, concur in Justice ZIMMERMAN’s opinion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Downs v. Thompson
2019 UT 53 (Utah Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
972 P.2d 423, 352 Utah Adv. Rep. 20, 1998 Utah LEXIS 70, 1998 WL 655692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-south-jordan-city-recorder-utah-1998.