Walton, Mayor v. Donnelly

1921 OK 258, 201 P. 367, 83 Okla. 233, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 347
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 28, 1921
Docket12265
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 1921 OK 258 (Walton, Mayor v. Donnelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walton, Mayor v. Donnelly, 1921 OK 258, 201 P. 367, 83 Okla. 233, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 347 (Okla. 1921).

Opinions

McNEILL, J.

The question for determination in this case is whether the commissioners of Oklahoma City, hy a motion receiving .the vote of four of the commissioners, can transfer the supervision and control of the police department and the city jail from the mayor. Oklahoma City has a commission form of government and is operated under a charter framed and adopted as provided hy section 3-a, art. 18, of the Constitution of the state. The charter provides for the election of five commissioners, who shall serve four years, and said charter assigns certain duties and departments to each commissioner. The instant case deals only with the duties of the mayor, who is commissioner of public affairs, and we will refer only to the sections of the charter applicable thereto.

Section 1, art. 2, provides:

“The elective officers of this city shall be five commissioners, i. e. the mayor, who is commissioner of public affairs; the commissioner of public safety, commissioner of accounting and finance, the commissioner of public works, and the commissioner of public property,” etc.

Section 4, art. 2, provides as follows:

“The mayor, as such, shall be the chief executive officer of the city, and he shall see that the laws are enforced. In addition to other duties imposed upon him by the state and municipal laws, and the board of commissioners, he shall sign the commissions of all appointive officers,” etc.

Section 6, art. 2, provides as follows:

^Commissioner of Public Affairs — The commissioner of public affairs shall be superintendent of and have charge of the department of public affairs, which shall include the police department, municipal counselor and assistant, municipal judge, city jail, and relation of the city to other municipalities.”

The charter, under the Constitution and statutes of this state, becomes the organic law of the city, and in addition to creating the offices of the five commissioners, and assigning them their duties, gives to the commissioners certain legislative powers.

On April 12, 1921, at a meeting of the commissioners it was moved by one commissioner and seconded by another that the police department and city jail, which are under the supu vision of the mayor, who as we have so-m should have charge of the police department and city jail under the charter, be assigned and transferred to the commissioner of accounting and finance, who should thereafter supervise and have charge of the police department and city jail, and said transfer to take effect from date, four commissioners voting in the affirmative and the mayor voting in the negative. The petition in this case sets out all of the different provisions of the city charter stated above and alleges that immediately after the passage of the motion above the commissioner of accounting and finance attempted to exercise supervision over the police department and the city jail. It is contended the action of the commissioners in transferring the supervision and charge of the police department from the mayor is void and in violation of sections 4 and 6, art. 2, of the city charter. The mayor, by his petition, asks to have the commissioner of finance and accounting enjoined from interfering with him in the performance of the duties assigned to him under the charter.

To the petition, the commissioner of accounting and finance filed a demurrer, which was sustained by the trial court. The mayor elected to stand upon the petition and refused to plead further, and the court * dismissed the case, and from said judgment an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.

The only question involved is the force and effect of the motion, and its validity. Second, whether injunction is the proper remedy.

It has been the uniform holding of this court that city charters become the organic law of the municipality, and supersede the laws of the state in conflict therewith in so far /as they attempt to regr ulate purely municipal matters. See Owen v. Tulsa, 27 Okla. 264, 111 Pac. 320; Lackev v. Grant. 29 Okla. 255. 116 Pac. 913; Mitchell v. Carter, 31 Okla. 592, 122 Pac. 691; Burns v. Linn, 49 Okla. 526, 153 Pac. 826. The Constitution provides that the charter shall not be in conflict with the Constitution and statutes of the state, and it has been further held that such charter provisions, where they conflict with the general laws of the state in matters not purely municipal, must give way, and while •they may run concurrently with the general laws of the state,.they may not run counter thereto. Burns v. Linn, supra; Board of Education v. Best, 26 Okla. 366, 109 Pac. 563; State v. Cummings, 47 Okla. 44, 147 Pac. 161.

In the case of Kemp v. City of Monett, (Mo. Ct. of App. of St. Louis) 69 S. W. 31, it was said:

“A ‘charter’ is the municipal organic law, which no ordinance may override.”

The courts have uniformly held that where an office is created by the Constitution, and the duties assigned to it by the Constitution, the Legislature has no power to *235 transfer those duties to some other office. The rule is stated as follows:

“Where an office is created by or imbedded in the Constitution, and the duties thereof are defined by that instrument, or where the office antedated the Constitution, and its duties were eumerated by the statute at the time the 'Constitution was adopted, or where the office owed its origin to the common law, and had certain well-recognized duties attached thereto, or inherently connected therewith, or forming a substantial part thereof, it was not within the power of the Legislature to transfer such ..duties to an office of its own creation or to an officer selected and chosen in the manner different from that by which the constitutional officer was named.” Trapp v. Cook Construction Co., 24 Okla. 854, 105 Pac. 667; Insurance Co. of North America v. Welch, 49 Okla. 620, 154 Pac. 48; Love v. Boyle, 72 Oklahoma, 180 Pac. 705.

This being the settled law in this state, and the charter of the city being the organic law of the city, the commissioners would have no power or authority to transfer from an office created by the charter the duties defined by the charter, unless there is some specific provision in the charter that authorizes such a transfer.

It is contended by the defendants, however, that section 11, art, 2, of the city charter authorizes such a proceeding. Said section is as follows:

“Board may assign duties to other departments. — The board of commissioners shall have the power to assign duties not specifically named above to any department to which they may properly belong, and shall have power by a vote of four out of five commissioners to transfer duties from one commissioner and one department to another commissioner and another department.”

The question for consideration is, Did the framers of the charter in this sentence use the word “duties” in the latter part of the sentence to refer to the same “duties” referred to in the first part of the sentence, or did they use it in its broad and unlimited sense and refer to any and all duties? In the determination of this matter the court must be guided by the following proposition, to wit:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 258, 201 P. 367, 83 Okla. 233, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walton-mayor-v-donnelly-okla-1921.