IN RE CITY OF TULSA

Annotate this Case

IN RE CITY OF TULSA
1976 OK 167
559 P.2d 430
Case Number: 48859
Decided: 11/09/1976
Supreme Court of Oklahoma

IN RE INITIATIVE PETITION NUMBERED XI OF THE CITY OF TULSA, OKLAHOMA, A MUNICIPAL CORPORATION.

¶0 Initiative Petition numbered XI of the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma proposing amendments to the city charter was made the subject of application to this Court by proponents for an order to the City Auditor pursuant to the provisions 34 O.S.Supp. 1973 § 8 certifying to that official the total number of presumptively valid signatures affixed to such petition. City Auditor found the petition insufficient on grounds stated in the publication notice directed by the cited statute and by the related order of this Court. Untimely protest was filed in this Court coupled with an application by proponents for mandamus compelling submission of the proposals of the petition to a vote of the electorate. Held the time limitation for protest under 34 O.S.Supp. 1973 § 8 is jurisdictional and as a consequence there exists no justiciable controversy. Mandamus is accordingly denied and the cause dismissed.

CAUSE DISMISSED.

Chapel, Wilkinson, Riggs, & Abney by Frank Gregory, Tulsa, for proponents.

Waldo F. Bales, City Atty., Neal E. McNeill, Jr., Asst. City Atty., William M. Northcutt, Deputy City Atty., Tulsa, for contestants.

HODGES, Vice Chief Justice.

¶1 An initiative petition was made the subject of an application by proponents for certification by this Court of the number of presumptively valid signatures subscribed to such petition pursuant to 34 O.S.Supp. 1973 § 8 . The matter was referred to a Referee of this Court who thereafter entered an order determining that the counterparts of the said petition bore 26,516 presumptively valid signatures and directed the city auditor of the City of Tulsa to discharge the duties made incumbent upon him by Section 8, supra.

¶2 The city auditor

(1) that the number of presumptively valid signatures are insufficient to place the proposals before the electorate.

(2) that the initiative petition joined together a multiplicity of purposes and subjects but allowing only a single choice.

(3) that the measures proposed by the petition violate the constitutional prohibition against delegation of legislative power.

¶3 The assigned Referee has determined that the finding of the city auditor was published in a newspaper of general circulation on July 9, 1976 and that such notice proclaimed that any citizen of the City of Tulsa could, within ten (10) days following publication, file a protest or objection by written notice to the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma. The Referee has also determined that proponents of the petition did on July 20, 1976 file in this Court an application which pleading challenged the validity of the finding by the city auditor and the legal authority to make such finding. Proponents included in the application a prayer for a writ of mandamus compelling submission of the proposals of the petition to the electorate for adoption or rejection.

¶4 The objection by proponents to the finding by the city auditor was filed on the eleventh day following the date of publication, which was beyond the period allowed by statute. 34 O.S.Supp. 1973 § 8 . The tenth day following the publication on July 9, 1976, ended on Monday, July 19, 1976. The cited statute in pertinent part provides:

". . . Upon order of the Supreme Court it shall be the duty of the Secretary of State to forthwith cause to be published, in at least one newspaper of general circulation in the state, a notice of such filing and the apparent sufficiency or insufficiency thereof and notice that any citizen or citizens of the state may file a protest to the petition or an objection to the count made by the Supreme Court of the state, by a written notice to the Supreme Court of the state and to the person or persons filing the petition, said protest to be filed within ten (10) days after publication . . ."

¶5 Contestants contend the failure of the proponents to file their protest or objection within the statutory period of ten days renders it jurisdictionally defective. We agree. In In Re Initiative Petition, 461 P.2d 14 (Okl. 1969), we held, if a protest or objection to an initiative or referendum is not filed within the statutory period, there is no jurisdiction, and the appeal must be dismissed. Furthermore, Rule 1.170, Rules of Supreme Court, Appellate Procedure - Civil, Ch. 15, App. 2, provides:

An appeal from a decision of the Secretary of State or of a chief clerk of a city passing on the legality or sufficiency of an initiative or a referendum petition may be commenced by filing in this court, within 10 days after such decision has been made, a petition for review with four copies. 34 O.S. 1961 § 8 . This time limit may not be extended either by the tribunal or by this court . . . .

¶6 No justiciable controversy came into existence during the interval allowed for invocation of the jurisdiction of this Court in an initiative petition matter and the determination by the city auditor became final. Time limitations are in nature arbitrary, but an orderly procedure must necessarily fix, and honor, time limits, Haynes v. Barnett, 483 P.2d 1140 (Okl. 1971). The alternatives lead uniformly to chaos.

¶7 There being nothing before this Court for adjudication, the cause is dismissed.

¶8 All Justices concur.

Footnotes:

1 The City Auditor is the Chief Clerk of the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma, and functions as the counterpart of the Secretary of State in matters of municipal legislation.

 

Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.