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City of Burbank Dennis A. Barlow, City Attorney
Memorandum
Date:
March
15, 2000 To:
Judie Sarquiz, City Clerk From:
Dennis A. Barlow, City Attorney Subject: Petition
for Restore Our Airports Rights Initiative
The purpose of this memorandum is to address the compliance of
the above-referenced petition with the requirements of state law,
including the Elections Code. On
March 14, 2000, the Initiative proponents submitted for filing the
petition for the Initiative entitled “A Measure Imposing Conditions on
the Burbank City Council’s Authority to Approve Entitlements,
Financing and Construction Related to the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena
Airport” (the “Initiative Petition”).
Our office has reviewed the Initiative Petition for compliance
with state law requirements, including Elections Code sections 9200 et
seq. We believe that
the Initiative Petition fails to comply with Elections Code section
9207, which states that “each section of the petition shall bear a
copy of the notice of intention . . . .” DISCUSSION
Elections Code section 9207 states in pertinent part: “Each
section of the petition shall bear a copy of the notice of intention and
the title and summary prepared by the city attorney.” The Elections Code permits initiative proponents to submit a petition in sections, provided that each section complies with the statutory requirements. Elections Code § 9201. In Myers v. Patterson (1987) 241 Cal.Rptr. 751, the First District Court of Appeal held that an initiative petition that did not bear a copy of the notice of intention on each section failed to comply, actually or substantially, with the statutory requirement. In Myers, initiative proponents submitted a
petition that did not include a copy of the notice of intention and the
city registrar thereafter rejected the petition on that basis.
Id.
at
752.
Analyzing the predecessor provision to section 9207, the court
noted that the city registrar’s duty in that case included “‘the
ministerial function of ascertaining whether the procedural requirements
for submitting an initiative measure have been met.’” Id. at
754-755 (citing Farley v. Healey (1967) 67 Cal.2d 325, 327).
Because the petition failed to bear a copy of the notice of
intention, the Myers court rejected the proponents’ contention
that the city registrar was bound to accept it for filing: “Did
defendant’s duties as registrar of voters require him to, in effect,
disregard section 4005's [now 9207] notice requirement and accept the
petition? The answer is clearly, ‘No.’
We conclude, in fact, that just the opposite is true, that he had
a duty to reject the petition.”
Myers, supra, 241 Cal.Rptr. 751 (emphasis in original).
As we view the Initiative Petition, it was submitted in sections,
with each section being one double-sided page[1]. Each Petition section includes the ballot title and summary,
the text, signatures, and the declaration of the circulator.
We do not see anywhere on each section a copy of the notice of
intention to circulate the Petition prepared pursuant to Elections Code
section 9202. We also note
that in our discussions with your office you likewise have not been able
to find the notice of intention on the Petition.
Importantly, the court also concluded that the petition did not
“substantially” comply” with the statutory requirements.
Myers, supra, 241 Cal.Rptr. at 755-756.
The court rejected the proponents’ assertion that the notice
does not serve any significant informational propose. As it pertains to section 9207, “substantial
compliance” “‘means actual compliance in respect to the
substance essential to every reasonable objective of the statute.’” Id. at 755 (emphasis in original)(citation omitted).
In particular, the court noted two salutary purposes for the
requirement set forth in section 9207.
First, the notice of intention often includes a statement of
reasons for the proposed initiative which provides additional
information about its contents to potential signers.
Ibid. Even
though the particular notice of intention in that case would have added
little to the title and summary, the court stated that the informational
purpose of the statute was clear. Second,
the notice of intention identifies the proponents of the initiative and
allows potential signers to decide whether or not to sign the petition
based upon who the proponents are.
Ibid.
Similar informational purposes are evident in section 9207. Section 9202 permits a notice of intention setting forth the
reasons in up to 500 words. Even
if the notice of intent would not add much to the other part of the
petition, Myers supports the proposition that potential voters
had the right to see what reasons the proponents offer for the
initiative. More noticeably, the Initiative Petition does not name the
initiative proponents, which Myers concludes is one of the basic
purposes of the requirement that each section contain the notice.
Potential signers should be notified who is proposing the measure
and failure to actually meet this informational purpose negates
any claim that a petition substantially complies with the law.
We note that, ultimately, you have the sole authority to accept
or reject the Petition. We
merely note what the law requires.
Myers clearly states that an election official has a duty
to reject a petition that does not “bear a copy of the notice
of intention.” Based upon
Myers, we must advise that there is the potential that you will
be subject to legal challenge in the event you determine that the each
section of the Petition does not bear a copy of the notice and you
accept it for filing nonetheless. A
copy of the Myers opinion is attached for your reference. CONCLUSION [1] We note that there is no authority in the Elections Code as to whether or not double-sided pages are permitted or whether the text of the initiative is on the “first page” of the Petition, as required by Section 9201. We make no opinion as to those issues but only make the observations. Attachments 241
Cal.Rptr. 751 (Cite as: 196 Cal.App.3d 130, 241
Cal.Rptr. 751) Nicole MYERS et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. Jay PATTERSON, as Registrar of Voters, etc., Defendant and Respondent. No. A036228. Court
of Appeal, First District, Division 2, California. Nov.
13, 1987. Proponents of city ordinance initiative filed petition for
writ of mandate to compel city registrar to accept and certify
petition. The Superior
Court, City and County of San Francisco, Morton Colvin, J., denied
peremptory writ, and proponents appealed.
The Court of Appeal, Smith, J., held that:
(1) even though date of election had passed, court would
review controversy on merits under public interest exception;
(2) city registrar had duty to reject petition which did not
bear copy of previously published notice of intention; and (3)
proponents did not substantially comply with petition notice
provision by publishing notice of intention. Affirmed. [1] APPEAL AND ERROR k781(1) 30k781(1) Moot
appeal will not be dismissed if it presents unsettled issues of
public importance likely to recur in future between same or other
parties. [2] MANDAMUS k187.2 250k187.2 Even
though election date had passed, appeal of denial of writ of mandate
to require city registrar to accept initiative petition due to
deficient notice on petition would be considered on merits under
public interest exception, as notice deficiency problem was likely
to recur and yet evade meaningful appellate review.
West's Ann.Cal.Elec.Code §§ 4002‑4005. [3] MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k108.3 268k108.3 City
registrar had duty to reject initiative petition which failed to
include copy of notice of intention on petition.
West's Ann.Cal.Elec.Code §§ 4002‑ 4005. [4] MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k108.3 268k108.3 City
registrar has ministerial duty to place on ballot all initiative
measures that comply with formal requirements.
West's Ann.Cal.Elec.Code §§ 4002‑ 4006. [5] MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS k108.3 268k108.3 Proponents
of initiative ordinance did not substantially comply with statutory
requirement that each section of circulated petition bear copy of
notice of intention by complying with newspaper‑publication
provisions. West's
Ann.Cal.Elec.Code §§ 4002‑4005. [6] ESTOPPEL k115 156k115 Pleading
and proving detrimental reliance is essential to doctrine of
estoppel. *132 **751
Arlo Hale Smith, San Francisco, for plaintiffs and appellants. *133 **752
Louise H. Renne, City Atty., Thomas J. Owen, Deputy City Atty., San
Francisco, for defendant and respondent. SMITH, Associate Justice. The Elections Code requires that proponents of city initiative
measures publish and file a "notice of intention" before
circulating a signature petition (§§ 4002‑4003) and that
each section of the circulated petition bear a copy of the notice (§
4004). (All statutory
references will be to the Elections Code unless noted otherwise.) Plaintiffs, proponents of a commercial rent control ordinance
they sought to place on the November 1986 ballot in the City and
County of San Francisco (city), failed to include the notice on
their petition, and defendant Jay Patterson, the city's registrar of
voters, rejected the petition on that basis.
Plaintiffs unsuccessfully sought writ of mandate (Code
Civ.Proc., § 1085) to compel defendant to accept and certify the
petition, and this is their appeal from a superior court order
denying a peremptory writ. We will affirm. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs' measure, "The Commercial Rent Arbitration
Initiative," would have added a commercial rent stabilization
and arbitration ordinance to the city's administrative code if
passed. It is undisputed that plaintiffs complied with all pertinent
Elections Code requirements except the petition notice provision.
On March 28, 1986, plaintiffs had the following notice
published in the San Francisco Progress, a newspaper of general
circulation (§§ 4002‑4004): "NOTICE OF INTENTION TO CIRCULATE PETITION [¶] Notice is
hereby given that the undersigned individuals intend to circulate a
petition for an initiative ordinance within the City and County of
San Francisco. [¶] The
reason and purpose for such petition is to establish stabilization
and arbitration controls for commercial rent."
(Plaintiffs' names and the date omitted.) A copy of the published notice and a proof of publication were
then filed on April 4, within the 10 days set by code (§ 4004). *134
Plaintiffs circulated the petition between April 19 and July 23,
after waiting the required 21 days after publication (§ 4005), and
gathered about 15,000 signatures, allegedly more than the number
needed to qualify the measure.
(S.F. Charter, § 9.111 [5% of those who voted for mayor in
the last general municipal election].)
None of the petition sections contained the published notice. Plaintiffs presented the petition to defendant for filing on
July 23, within the required 180 days from the date of publication (§
4006). However,
defendant refused to examine or verify the petition (§§
3707‑3708, 4008‑4009), citing the notice deficiency. Plaintiffs petitioned the superior court for a peremptory writ
of mandate on July 31, alleging a ministerial duty on defendant's
part to verify and certify the initiative petition.
The writ was ordered denied on August 27, after a hearing,
and plaintiffs filed notice of appeal on September 3. In August, while the matter was still pending in the superior
court, this court summarily denied a petition by plaintiffs for
mandate and a stay (A035893). Following the lower court's order, plaintiffs applied to this
court for a writ of supersedeas.
We summarily denied the application on September 9 (A036118),
and plaintiffs' subsequent petition for review in the Supreme Court
was denied on the 18th. APPEAL I A threshold issue, which this court raised on its own at oral
argument, is mootness. The
November 1986 election has passed, and reversal of the superior
court's order is no longer an effective remedy.
Defendant cannot be compelled to verify or certify the
measure for that election. It
also appears that plaintiffs will have to regather signatures for
any future initiative effort. Section
**753 4006 states in part:
"Signatures ... shall be secured, and the petition ...
shall be filed within 180 days from the date of publication.... If
the petitions are not filed within the time permitted by this
section, the petitions shall be void for all purposes." [1] Nevertheless, a moot appeal will not be dismissed if it
presents unsettled issues of public importance likely to recur in
future elections between these or other parties.
(See, e.g., Zeilenga v. Nelson (1971) 4 Cal.3d 716,
719‑720, 94 Cal.Rptr. 602, 484 P.2d 578;
Diamond v. Bland (1970) 3 Cal.3d 653, 657, 91 Cal.Rptr. 501,
477 P.2d 733, cert. den. (1971) 402 U.S. 988, 91 S.Ct. 1661, 29
L.Ed.2d 153; Mann v. Superior Court (1986) 181 *135 Cal.App.3d 372, 374‑375, 226 Cal.Rptr. 263.)
As between these parties, we assume that plaintiffs would not
make the same mistake twice. As for other cases, we note from the record that defendant's
office makes an informational chart available to initiative
proponents which clearly states the code's notice requirement should
someone be unfamiliar with it, and the code itself is clear (§
4005). [2] On the other hand, the city urges that we apply the public
interest exception and issue an opinion for guidance because the
notice deficiency problem is likely to recur and yet evade
meaningful appellate review. The
city represents that another initiative measure targeted for the
same election suffered from the same defect, and the record shows
that the defect has been an issue on at least one prior occasion as
well. We find the
exception applicable and therefore reach the merits of the
controversy. II A notice of intention must be accompanied by a brief statement
of reasons (§ 4002)
and so is referred to in the code as a "notice of intention and
statement" (see §§ 4003‑4006).
Section 4005 states: "Twenty‑one
days after the publication or posting or both of the notice of
intention and statement, the petition may be circulated among the
voters of the city for signatures by any registered voter of the
city. Each section of
the petition shall bear a copy of the notice of intention and
statement." (Emphasis
added.) Plaintiffs raise the unsettled question of whether the
notice‑inclusion requirement of this section is mandatory or,
rather, directory only. However,
as the city correctly points out, this case does not pose that
question. The "mandatory‑directory" distinction is used
to determine whether action taken in violation of a statutory
provision is valid. Failure
to comply with a mandatory provision renders the action void;
failure to comply with a merely directory provision does not.
Which way to characterize the provision depends on its
importance in the legislative scheme. (Morris v. County of Marin (1977) 18 Cal.3d 901,
908‑910, 136 Cal.Rptr. 251, 559 P.2d 606;
Campbell Elementary Teachers Assn., Inc. v. Abbott (1978) 76
Cal.App.3d 796, 805‑806, 143 Cal.Rptr. 281.) Plaintiffs argue that section 4005's notice provision is
directory only. However,
there is no issue of validity here.
The initiative was never placed on the ballot and, of course,
never became law. Whether
the initiative would have been valid, had it been voted into law
without inclusion of the notice, is immaterial. *136
The true issue is whether defendant had a ministerial duty to accept
the petition in its defective form.
Writ of mandate issues only "to compel the performance
of an act which the law specially enjoins, as a duty resulting from
an office, trust, or station; ..." (Code Civ.Proc., § 1085.) [3] Did defendant's duties as registrar of voters require him
to, in effect, disregard section 4005's notice requirement and
accept the petition? The
answer is clearly, "No."
We conclude, in fact, that just the opposite is true, that he
had a duty to reject the petition. [4] Defendant's duties as city registrar include "the
ministerial function of ascertaining whether the procedural
requirements for submitting an initiative measure have been
met." (Farley v. Healey (1967)
**754 67 Cal.2d 325, 327, 62 Cal.Rptr. 26, 431 P.2d 650, citing
S.F. Charter, § 180.) He thus has a ministerial duty to place on
the ballot all initiative measures that comply with formal
requirements. (Ibid.;
cf. deBottari v. City Council (1985) 171 Cal.App.3d 1204,
1209, 217 Cal.Rptr. 790.) Plaintiffs' implicit argument that a registrar has a
ministerial duty to accept measures that do not comply is
incompatible with the aforesaid duty, generally, and untenable in
this particular dispute. Assuming
purely for sake of argument that plaintiffs are correct in
characterizing the notice requirement as "directory" and
that failure to comply thus would not render the resulting enactment
void, it does not follow that a registrar is free to disregard the
requirement. "There
is, of course, a duty to comply even with purely directory
provisions. [Citation.]" (Campbell Elementary Teachers Assn., Inc. v. Abbott, supra,
76 Cal.App.3d 796, 805, 143 Cal.Rptr. 281.)
The "mandatory‑directory" test used to
determine validity is analytically distinct from the
"mandatory‑permissive" test used to determine the
nature of duty. (People v. McGee (1977) 19 Cal.3d 948,
958‑959, 140 Cal.Rptr. 657, 568 P.2d 382;
Morris v. County of Marin, supra, 18 Cal.3d 901, 908, 136
Cal.Rptr. 251, 559 P.2d 606.) The
tests are related in the sense that procedures which are purely
permissive in the sense of duty are generally regarded as directory
and thus not invalidating. "The
converse of this proposition is not always true, however, for ... '[m]any
statutory provisions which are "mandatory" in the
obligatory sense are accorded only "directory" effect.'
[Citation.]" (People
v. McGee, supra, 19 Cal.3d at p. 959, 140 Cal.Rptr. 657, 568 P.2d
382.) The statute in this case states that each petition section
"shall bear a copy of the notice of intention and
statement." (§
4005, emphasis added.) For
purposes of the Elections Code, generally, " 'Shall' is
mandatory and 'may' is permissive."
(§ 11.) To
declare a registrar duty‑bound to ignore the notice
requirement would be to write it out of the code, leaving the
requirement an *137 idle act of the Legislature, something we must avoid if
possible. (Moore v. City Council (1966) 244 Cal.App.2d 892, 897, 53
Cal.Rptr. 603.) Of course, it is our courts' policy to construe statutory and
charter provisions in favor of the exercise of the initiative and
referendum powers. Thus, in Truman v. Royer (1961) 189 Cal.App.2d
240, 11 Cal.Rptr. 159, a case relied on by plaintiffs, this court
upheld a Redwood City clerk's decision to accept a referendum
petition which was defective in that affidavits from the circulators
of the petition failed to state their addresses or to state that
they were voters of that city.
(Id., at pp. 241, 243‑244, 11 Cal.Rptr. 159.)
The defect did not invalidate the petition. The affidavits merely accompanied but were not a part of the
petition, and the missing information was purely for "the
benefit and convenience of the clerk, ..." (Id., at pp.
243‑244, 11 Cal.Rptr. 159.) Here, in contrast to Truman, the defect directly affected the
content of the petition sections circulated to voters.
Also, as will be explained in part III (infra ), the
information was not just for the benefit of the city official. The city calls our attention to a case analogous to ours,
Bricker v. Banks (1929)
98 Cal.App. 87, 276 P. 399. The
defect in Bricker was trivial by comparison‑‑the
statement of reasons in a recall petition was about 50 percent
longer than the 200‑word limit imposed by a city charter
provision, and proponents unsuccessfully sought mandate to compel
the city clerk to certify the petition.
(Id., at p. 88, 276 P. 399.)
Noting that writ of mandate issues only to compel the
performance of a duty enjoined by law, the court rejected an
argument (identical to the one raised here) that the writ should
have issued because the charter provision was only
"directory." (Id.,
at pp. 88‑89, 276 P. 399.)
The court reasoned: "It
may be conceded that a recall election held in pursuance of a
petition stating the reasons for the recall in somewhat more than
two hundred words would not be held invalid on the mere ground that
the published call for the election used too many words in stating
such reasons, but in the
**755 initial stages of a proceeding for the recall of an
officer, in determining the sufficiency of a petition therefor, the
law certainly does not enjoin upon any officer, as a duty resulting
from his office, the disregard of even a directory statute."
(Emphasis added.) We conclude that defendant did not have a duty to accept the
petition in this case. III Plaintiffs argue that section 4005's requirement of including
the previously published notice on each petition section does not
serve any significant informational purpose for voters and only
assists the registrar in *138
ascertaining whether proponents have complied with the
newspaper‑ publication provisions of sections 4002 and 4003.
Thus, they reason that having in fact published the notice
constitutes substantial compliance with section 4005.
We disagree. Substantial compliance " 'means actual compliance in
respect to the substance essential to every reasonable objective of
the statute.' (Stasher
v. Harger‑Haldeman (1962) 58 Cal.2d 23, 29 [22 Cal.Rptr. 657,
372 P.2d 649]....)" (Assembly v. Deukmejian (1982) 30 Cal.3d 638, 649, 180
Cal.Rptr. 297, 639 P.2d 939, app. dism. and cert. den., 456 U.S.
941, 102 S.Ct. 2003, 72 L.Ed.2d 463.)
Refusal to accept a petition will be upheld when the
petition's deficiencies threaten the proper operation of election
procedures. (Id., at p.
648, 180 Cal.Rptr. 297, 639 P.2d 939.) If the notice‑inclusion requirement serves some
informational purpose for prospective signers of a petition, then
there clearly was no substantial compliance.
The petition sections in this case failed altogether to
include the notice. We believe that the notice‑inclusion requirement does
serve an informational purpose.
We reject the assertion that the requirement serves as a mere
"convenience" to the registrar.
The registrar already has the published notice on file along
with an affidavit of publication from the newspaper (§ 4004).
A copy of the published notice, lacking the affidavit, would
not provide as reliable an assurance of compliance.
More importantly, if inclusion were truly intended as a
convenience to the registrar, there would be no need to have the
notice included on every petition section (§ 4005) since the
petition presumably is presented for filing all at once (see §§
4006, 4008). In fact,
requiring every section to have the notice strongly indicates an
intent to inform prospective signers. The notice also imparts useful information.
Its capsule statement of reasons can (1) convey a purpose
that the measure's title alone might not (cf. Clark v. Jordan (1936)
7 Cal.2d 248, 251, 60 P.2d 457;
Boyd v. Jordan (1934) 1 Cal.2d 468, 472, 35 P.2d 533;
see § 4001), (2) allow the voter to compare those reasons
with any offered verbally by the circulator, and (3) affect the
voter's decision whether to stop right there or read the text of the
entire measure. It is
true that the extremely terse statement of reasons in this case
would have added little to the summary printed on the top of each
petition section, but the code contemplates a statement of up to 500
words. (§ 4002.) The
informational purpose is clearly evident. The notice also conveys information beyond a statement of
reasons. The notice
must be signed by at least one and no more than three (formerly
five) *139 of the measure's proponents.
(§ 4002; see
Stats. 1976, ch. 248, § 3, p. 507.)
In reviewing financial disclosure provisions for candidates,
the Supreme Court has noted, in words applicable here:
"Voters who may well be able to understand and judge
candidates may not always be able to comprehend and determine the
merits of ballot measures which frequently are cast in language, the
precise meaning of which often is confusing and perhaps on occasion
intentionally so. [Citation.]
A voter may reasonably seek to judge the precise effect of a
measure by knowledge of those who advocate or oppose its adoption,
and he may gain such knowledge only through pre‑election
disclosure requirements of the nature here involved."
(Brown v. Superior Court (1971) 5 Cal.3d 509, 522, 96
Cal.Rptr. 584, **756 487 P.2d 1224.) Plaintiffs question the value of the
information here by pointing out that the "proponents" who
sign the notice might be " 'people off the street' who sign on
behalf of the persons and interest groups" that actually
spearhead the measure. There
is no indication that that is what happened here, but in any event,
the argument cuts both ways. A
voter might decide against signing because the proponents do not
include anyone he or she recognizes. We are not impressed with plaintiffs' argument that lack of a
statutorily designated print size or location on the petition
connotes legislative indifference to informing voters.
Nor is it particularly significant that other parts of the
Elections Code governing initiative or referendum petitions lack a
notice‑inclusion requirement.
The Legislature is free to "enact reform measures 'one
step at a time, addressing itself to the phase of the problem which
seems most acute to the legislative mind.'
[Citation.]" (Brown v. Superior Court, supra, 5 Cal.3d 509, 521, 96
Cal.Rptr. 584, 487 P.2d 1224.) [5] Plaintiffs did not substantially comply with section 4005.
Even if we felt that the function of the statement of reasons
in this case was adequately covered by the petition summary, there
was no actual compliance with the statute's apparent objective of
identifying the measure's proponents. (Assembly v. Deukmejian,
supra, 30 Cal.3d 638, 649, 180 Cal.Rptr. 297, 639 P.2d 939.) IV Finally, plaintiffs argue that defendant is estopped to insist
on compliance. In the
trial court, they alleged estoppel and submitted a declaration by a
third party attesting that defendant has accepted defective
initiative petitions on at least two prior occasions and has, in
general, exhibited "very loose standards ... with respect to
petition form." Defendant
submitted an opposing declaration explaining the circumstances of
the two occasions to which plaintiffs alluded, and the city argues,
as it did below, that those situations are factually
distinguishable. [6] *140 The short
answer is that plaintiffs have failed to allege or show any reliance
on defendant's prior acts. Pleading
and proving detrimental reliance is essential to the doctrine of
estoppel. (City and
County of San Francisco v. Grant Co. (1986) 181 Cal.App.3d 1085,
1091, 227 Cal.Rptr. 154; Board
of Supervisors v. Superior Court (1983) 147 Cal.App.3d 206,
212‑216, 195 Cal.Rptr. 67; cf. Assembly v. Deukmejian, supra, 30 Cal.3d 638,
650‑651, 180 Cal.Rptr. 297, 639 P.2d 939.) DISPOSITION The judgment (order denying peremptory writ of mandate) is
affirmed. KLINE,
P.J., and ROUSE, J., concur.
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