Judges: MIKE BEEBE, Attorney General
Filed Date: 5/25/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Marc McCune Prosecuting Attorney Twenty-First Judicial District 206 South 3rd Street Van Buren, Arkansas 72956
Dear Mr. McCune:
I am writing in response to your request, submitted by Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Charles D. Baker, for an opinion on two questions involving a quorum court's authority to refer certain matters to a vote of the electors. Specifically, the request notes that a justice of the peace in Crawford County has previously filed resolutions and ordinances to reduce the salaries of members of the quorum court and to prohibit the quorum court from authorizing health insurance benefits for its members. Your request notes that these attempts have failed and that the quorum court member in question has now proposed two ordinances, each for a "voter referendum" on the respective issues. You have forwarded two questions regarding these facts as follows:
1. Does the Crawford County Quorum Court have the legal right to draft an ordinance which would authorize an election, so the voters of Crawford County have the opportunity to determine Justice of the Peace salaries, within Arkansas statutory limitations, in Crawford County?
2. Does the Quorum Court have the legal right to draft an ordinance which would authorize an election, so the voters of Crawford County have the opportunity to vote to prohibit health insurance benefits for the office of Justice of the Peace in Crawford County?
Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Charles D. Baker notes that he has researched these questions and advised that in his opinion, the "voters of Crawford County cannot vote to rescind the statutory powers given to the Quorum Court by the Arkansas Legislature." He has advised the justice of the peace in question that "it would be necessary to hold a state-wide referendum on those issues since the effect would be to change state law."
RESPONSE
It is my opinion, as a preliminary procedural matter, that the Quorum Court does not have the authority in this context to draft a proposed
ordinance and submit that ordinance to the voters for their approval. State law governing a quorum court's general power to refer ordinances to the voters only allows a quorum court to refer ordinances that it has actually passed to the voters for their approval or rejection. To the extent your questions inquire as to whether the Quorum Court can legally draft proposed ordinances and refer them to the voters, in my opinion the answer to each of your questions is "no." This conclusion does not mean, however, that the general topic of these measures, depending upon the exact content, could not be initiated by the voters of the county under the provisions of Arkansas Constitution, Amendment
Some explanation of this preliminary procedural matter is necessary prior to addressing the more substantive suggestion that giving this power to county voters would, in effect, "change state law."
The powers of county quorum courts are very comprehensively set out in Arkansas Constitution, Amendment
(f) REFERENCE TO ELECTORS. GENERALLY. A Quorum Court may, at the time of or within thirty (30) days of adoption and prior to the effective date of an ordinance, refer the ordinance to the electors for their acceptance or rejection. The referral shall be in the form of a resolution and shall require a three-fifths (3/5) affirmative vote of the whole number of justices comprising a quorum court. This action by a court shall not be subject to veto and shall constitute a referendum measure; from that point, the procedure of election shall be as required by Arkansas Constitution, Amendment
7 and by law.
(Emphasis added).
This statute empowers a quorum court to adopt an ordinance and then refer it to the voters for their approval or rejection. This conclusion is evident, in my opinion, from the use of the word "adoption" and the reference to the ordinance's "effective date." This statute does not, therefore, authorize the referral of a proposed ordinance that has not actually been adopted by the quorum court. In this regard, the powers of counties are different that those of city councils, which are empowered to refer either proposed or adopted ordinances to a vote of the people.See A.C.A. §§
To the extent, therefore, that your questions contemplate the mere drafting of a proposed ordinance, and not the actual passage of the ordinance by the Quorum Court before its referral, it is my opinion that the answer to each of your questions is "no," the Quorum Court does not have this right.
My conclusion above may obviate the necessity of opining further in order to answer your question. I will note, however, that my conclusion above regarding a quorum court's lack of power to refer proposed ordinances should not be read as indicating that the voters of the county could not, on their own, initiate measures of the general nature you describe, depending, of course, on the provisions of any particular ordinance. Arkansas Constitution, Amendment
Mr. Baker suggests that the described ordinances would be unlawful as being contrary to state law. I have not been provided with copies of the proposed ordinances in question and cannot, therefore, opine definitively on whether they would be contrary to state law if adopted. I can state, however, that the general topics of public official salaries and the decision of whether to afford them medical insurance coverage, are in my opinion within the county voters' rights of initiative and referendum.
The "salaries" of justices of the peace are in the form of "per diem." Amendment 55, § 5 states that "per diem compensation for members of the Quorum Court shall be fixed by law." Section
The compensation of justices of the peace is therefore set by county ordinance, with the minimums and maximums set out in A.C.A. §
A similar conclusion would attend an ordinance determining whether to provide medical insurance coverage to quorum court members. Section
Assuming an initiated ordinance did no more than to determine whether such benefits are to be provided, in my opinion, again, such an ordinance would be within the initiative powers of county voters. Your request, however, describes an existing proposed ordinance as "prohibiting the Quorum Court from authorizing health insurance benefits for members of the Quorum Court." It is true, in my opinion, that a proposed ordinance cannot purport to obliterate the Quorum Court's power, afforded by the General Assembly, to decide whether to afford medical insurance benefits to its members. In that sense, such an ordinance would be contrary to state law. It is clear, however, that any legislative matter that the Quorum Court could itself determine may also be subject to the people's power of initiative and referendum. Thus while the people, through an initiated ordinance, cannot take away power granted to the Quorum Court in state law, the voters can certainly exercise their own parallel power to determine the issue through an independent ordinance on the topic.
Deputy Attorney General Elana C. Wills prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:ECW/cyh