Vollin v. Arlington County Electoral Board

222 S.E.2d 793, 216 Va. 674, 1976 Va. LEXIS 184
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 5, 1976
DocketRecord 741174
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 222 S.E.2d 793 (Vollin v. Arlington County Electoral Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vollin v. Arlington County Electoral Board, 222 S.E.2d 793, 216 Va. 674, 1976 Va. LEXIS 184 (Va. 1976).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*675 George Vollin, Jr. and more than two hundred other qualified voters in Arlington filed their petition in the court below, pursuant to Code § 15.1-694, requesting the court to open a poll and “take the sense of the qualified voters of the county on the question of whether they desire the form of government, or organization of government, of Arlington County changed to provide that the governing body members be elected from magisterial districts, rather than at large as at present”. Following a hearing, at which counsel for all parties appeared, the court concluded that “Section 15.1-694 is a provision available only to Virginia Counties which meet the standards of Section 15.1-694 and have not previously adopted either the Modified Commission Plan or County Manager Plan of government”, and therefore denied the petition. 1

Vollin says that the question is whether § 15.1-694 2 means “what it clearly says, and whether it is still applicable to Arlington County *676 when there is no express language to indicate that it is not”. He contends that the statute allows the court no discretionary alternative, and that whenever two hundred or more qualified voters petition the court to do so, it shall order the election officials to submit the issues to the voters.

We had occasion in Henrico v. City of Richmond, 177 Va. 754, 15 S. E. 2d 309 (1941), to comment on the genesis of Code § 15.1-694. There it was pointed out that the Acts of 1930, Ch. 167, p. 450 (Michie’s Code of 1936, §§ 2773 (10)—2773 (23)), amended the Code of Virginia by adding thereto a new chapter, numbered 109-A, which permits any county in the state, having a population of five hundred inhabitants or more to the square mile,, to adopt in a prescribed manner either the “modified commission plan” or the “county manager plan” of county government. We further said that the Act was designed to apply only to Arlington County, and noted that it had its origin in a bill which was introduced in the House of Delegates by the representative from that county. While the 1930 Act has been amended and reenacted from time to time, it (Code § 15.1-694) remains in large measure as it was when enacted on March 20, 1930.

Pursuant to the Act of 1930, and on the required petition, an election was held in Arlington and the voters selected the county manager plan of government, with county board members elected from the county at large. Prior to that time the county was governed by a body whose members were elected from magisterial districts. Since January 1, 1932, there have been no substantive changes in the organization or form of Arlington’s government.

The position of appellees is that although Arlington is authorized by statute to change its form of government and adopt an alternative form, the change sought to be accomplished by Vollin cannot be effected pursuant to and under § 15.1-694 without additional enabling legislation. 3 They say that § 15.1-694, when enacted in 1930, was ob *677 viously tailored for Arlington County; that it was enacted to give the people of that county an opportunity to replace their then existing form of government with either the modified commission plan or the county manager plan; 4 and that it was not designed for use by a county which had already adopted, and was currently operating under one of these two plans.

The statute requires that the voters answer three questions which are submitted to them in logical sequence. The first deals with whether the county should change its form of government. A vote “against” would be dispositive of all issues. In the event of an affirmative answer, the voter would proceed to the second question and make a choice between the two plans. The third question, concerning how the governing board is to be elected would, like the second question, be reached only in the event the voter desired a change in Arlington’s government.

In the case under review, Vollin desires a change in the manner in which the governing board of Arlington County is elected and he is, therefore, primarily interested in the third question. However, in pursuit of his goal he invokes a statute which requires that all three questions be submitted to the voters. If this were permitted, confusion would result when the voter reached the second question, for the issue would not be a choice between the two plans, but whether the county should retain its present county manager plan or change to the modified commission plan. Further, a voter who did not wish a change in the existing county manager plan, but only wanted to change the manner in which Arlington’s board was elected, would never reach that issue in an election now held under Code § 15.1-694, for the statute reads, liln the event of such change [in the form of government], shall the governing board be elected at large or by districts?” [Emphasis added]

We do attach significance to the fact that the General Assembly, in enacting § 15.1-584, whereby counties could adopt either the county executive form or the county manager form of government, provided the means whereby such a county could retain the form it had chosen or change to an alternative form. In § 15.1-589.1, it also authorized the *678 governing body of any county which had adopted a county executive form of government to have a special election to determine whether the board of supervisors should be elected at large or from magisterial districts. However, no such provisions were made in § 15.1-694 for changing from one of the alternative plans of government to the other.

It is also noted that there is a limitation on the frequency with which elections can be held for the purpose of changing the forms of government selected and organized under the provisions of Chapters 13 and 15. No similar provision is included under Articles 2, 3 and 4 of Chapter 14. If Vollin’s position is correct, the only limitation on the number and frequency of elections under Code § 15.1-694 is the willingness of at least two hundred people to sign a petition addressed to the court requesting an election.

We do not agree that the periodic amendment and reenactment of § 15.1-694 manifests an intention by the General Assembly to authorize Arlington to conduct repeated elections under that section. We have noted that none of the amendments subsequent to the original enactment of the statute were substantial in nature. We think it unlikely that the General Assembly has given serious consideration to the substance of the statute since 1930. Despite frequent redrafting, re-codification and efforts to correct and simplify statutes, the complete elimination of all vague, contradictory, uncertain and obsolete provisions appears impossible.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.E.2d 793, 216 Va. 674, 1976 Va. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vollin-v-arlington-county-electoral-board-va-1976.