Judges: J.D. MacFARLANE, Attorney General
Filed Date: 2/16/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable W.P. "Wad" Hinman State Representative State Capitol Building Denver, CO 80203
Dear Representative Hinman:
This opinion letter is written in response to your December 3, 1981 letter in which you inquired about the constitutionality of legislation which would require that a resident of a park and recreation district, who is not a property taxpayer in the district, to be a registered elector of the district in order to vote in the district election.
QUESTION PRESENTED AND CONCLUSION
Does the legislature have the general authority to impose the requirement that a resident of a park and recreation district, who is not a property taxpayer in the district, be a registered elector of the district in order to vote in the district election?
My conclusion is "yes." The general assembly has the inherent power to impose a requirement that a resident of a park and recreation district, who is not a property taxpayer in the district, be a registered elector of the district in order to vote in the district election.
ANALYSIS
The Colorado Supreme Court has specifically upheld the right of the legislature to impose registration requirements. Dupreyv. Anderson,
The supreme court also has held that a special district election may be subject to more stringent requirements than those requirements imposed on general, primary or special elections.Chesser v. Buchanan,
The purpose of the special district statute, C.R.S. 1973,
On the other hand, the legislature also recognized that each type of special district has special requirements which require distinctive approaches and powers. For example, the legislature added C.R.S. 1973,
C.R.S. 1973,
Both Millis v. Board of County Commissioners of LarimerCounty, supra, and Chesser v. Buchanan,supra, permit distinctions between electors within a district. In Chesser, the Colorado Supreme Court upheld a statute which permitted landholders to vote in the Moffat Tunnel Improvement District elections but excluded non-landholders from voting. In Millis, the court upheld a statute which granted the right to vote in a water district election to landholders in the district who were Colorado residents but who did not reside in the district while denying voting rights to district landholders who were not Colorado residents. Thus, so long as there is a rational relationship to a legitimate state interest, the legislature may require a non-property owner to register to vote in a park and recreation district election even though it does not require registration of landholders. See also, McDonald v. Board ofElection Commissioners,
SUMMARY
The general assembly may enact legislation which would require that a resident of a park and recreation district who is not a property taxpayer in the district be a registered elector of the district in order to vote in a district election, so long as the distinctions are rationally related to a legitimate state interest.
Very truly yours,
J.D. MacFARLANE Attorney General
STATUTES SPECIAL DISTRICTS ELECTIONS
C.R.S. 1973,
LEGISLATIVE BRANCH General Assembly House of Representatives
The legislature has the right to require that a person who is not a property taxpayer be registered electors of the district in order to vote.