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CITIES: CONSOLIDATION: ELECTIONS: Voter approval of consolidation requires
affirmative vote of majority of persons voting on the question. Minn. Stat. § 414.01, subd. 6
(1998).
484e-1
(Cr. ref. 185b-2)
October 5, 2000
R. Lawrence Harris Thomas J. Radio
Melchert Hubert & Sjodin Hinshaw & Culbertson
121 West Main Street Piper Jaffray Tower, Suite 3200
Suite 200 222 South Ninth Street
Waconia, MN 55387 Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402-3336
Dear Mr. Harris and Mr. Radio:
In your letter to Attorney General Mike Hatch you relate substantially the following
FACTS
On March 3, 1997, the Minnesota Municipal Board by its own motion,
pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 414.041, subd. l(c), initiated consolidation proceedings
between the City of St. Bonifacius and the City of Minnetrista. On August 5,
1997, the Minnesota Municipal Board appointed a Consolidation Study
Commission chair and the members of the commission.
On June 4, 1999, the Office of Strategic and Long-Range Planning ("State
Planning") as successor to the Minnesota Municipal Board 1 received a report of
the Consolidation Study Commission, which report recommended the
consolidation of the City of Minnetrista and the City of St. Bonifacius into a new
city named Minnetrista. State Planning held a public hearing on the
Consolidation Study Commission report on July 28, 1999.
By order effective January 18, 2000 State Planning accepted the report of
the Consolidation Study Commission and directed the consolidation of the City of
Minnetrista and the City of St. Bonifacius into a single city, subject to adoption of
the order by a majority vote of the respective city councils and voter approval.
1
Under Minn. Stat. § 414.11 (Supp. 1999) the Municipal Board was abolished on June 1, 1999,
and its authority and duties were transferred to State Planning.
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Messrs. Harris and Radio
Page2
Pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 414.041, subd. 6(c), if the consolidation
proceedings are initiated by the Municipal Board's own motion the consolidation
is not effective until adopted by the council of each municipality and approved by
their qualified voters at a general or special election set according to law. The
city councils of both St. Bonifacius and Minnetrista rejected the consolidation
order. Within 90 days of the rejection of the consolidation order by the two
councils, each city received a petition signed by ten percent or more of their
resident voters who voted for governor at the last general election petitioning for a
referendum on consolidation. Subsequent to receiving the petitions, the city
councils met jointly with State Planning staff and set a referendum on the
consolidation for the next general election, November 7,2000.
Because each city council disapproved the consolidation order, the issue is
being placed on the ballot pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 414.041, subd. 6(d) which
provides as follows:
Notwithstanding a disapproval of the board's order for consolidation by a
city council of an affected municipality required to approve the board's
order in clause (a) or (c), the board's order for consolidation shall
nevertheless be deemed approved by that city council if ten percent or
more of the resident voters of that municipality who voted for governor at
the last general election petition the city of council for a referendum on the
consolidation as provided in clause (a), and a majority of those voting in
the municipality approve the board's order for consolidation.
(Emphasis added).
You then ask substantially the following
QUESTION
Does Minn. Stat. § 414.041 subd. 6(d) require that the consolidation order
be approved by a majority vote of all persons voting at the general election or a
majority vote of all persons voting on the issue of consolidation?
OPINION
We answer your question in the negative. In our opinion the consolidation will be
effective if it is approved by a majority of those who vote on the question of consolidation in
each city.
Messrs. Harris and Radio
Page 3
Under Section 414.041 subd. 6(d), approval of consolidation must be by "a majority of
those voting in that municipality." At first impression that language is ambiguous. It could be
taken to refer to those voting on consolidation, or in the case of a referendum held at the same
time as a general election, to all of those casting ballots for any office or question. In our view,
that ambiguity must be resolved in favor of counting only voters on the consolidation question.
First, requiring majority approval of all voters would be contrary to long established
principle. As noted by the Minnesota Supreme Court in Dayton v. City of St. Paul, 22 Minn. 400,
403 (1876):
It is the general rule, in affairs of government, that an election, or a voting,
whenever called for, is to be determined by the votes of those who vote to fill the
office which is to be filled, or for or against the proposition which is to be adopted
or rejected, and not by counting, on either side, those who do not vote at all. To
take a case out of this general rule requires a clearly manifested intention to apply
a different one.
In that case, the court held that the requirement that a constitutional amendment to be ratified by
"a majority of the voters present and voting," required only a majority of those voting on the
amendment itself. The court contrasted the quoted language with other language in the same
constitutional article, requiring that a call for a constitutional convention be approved by "a
majority of all the electors voting at [the next general] election." 2 Consistent with that
distinction, decisions requiring a majority vote of everyone voting at general elections have
construed constitutional or statutory language that expressly called for approval of a proposition
by a majority of those "voting at [a particular] election." See, e.g., Eikmeier v. Pipestone Co.,
2
The Constitution was later amended to require that proposed constitutional amendments also be
approved by ••a majority of all the electors voting at [a general] election." (1897 Minn. Laws, ch.
185.)
Messrs. Hanis and Radio
l Page 4
131 Minn. 287, 155 N.W. 92 (1915) and cases discussed therein. In this situation, the statutory
language does not expressly require that the consolidation be approved by a majority of all
persons voting at a general election.
Second, it is important to remember that on November 7, 2000, the voters of St.
Bonifacius and Minnetrista will be able to participate in at least two different elections. One will
be the general election for various national, state and local offices. The other will be the
consolidation referendum. Though they could have been scheduled for different dates, State
Planning, in consultation with both city councils, set the referenda at the time of the general
election; presumably for reasons of economy and convenience of the voters. Nevertheless, they
are distinct electoral activities. To construe section 414.041 subd. 6(d) as requiring consolidation
approval by a majority of all electors voting in the general election would mean that the standard
for voter approval could depend entirely upon the timing of a consolidation proposal. That
timing, normally bearing no relationship to the merits of a consolidation proposal, would often
be the result of arbitrary circumstances. In some circumstances, it could be subject to
manipulation in an effort to affect the outcome of the election.
Under section 414.04, subd. 6, when a consolidation referendum is ordered as a result of
a petition submitted by the voters, the election must be held within six months of the receipt of
the petition. Id. paragraphs (a), (b), and (d). In the instant case, the timing of the State Planning
order, and the petitions by the voters, were such that the referenda could be scheduled to coincide
with the November biennial general election. However, such coincidental scheduling is possible
Messrs. Harris and Radio
Page 5
for less than one-quarter of the 24-month general election cycle.3 For most of that time, a
consolidation referendum would need to be held as a special election, apart from any general
election. In those instances only persons going to the polls to vote in the special election could
be counted. In our view, to require that a higher number of affirmative votes be cast only when
the vote can be held at a general election due to the time when the issue arises would be an
unreasonable result, not intended by the legislature. See Minn. Stat.§ 645.17(1).
This analysis is consistent with Godward v. City of Minneapolis, 190 Minn. 51, 250
N.W.719 (1933) where the court concluded that a vote on a charter amendment was to be viewed
as a separate special election even though held concurrently with a general election. See also 26
Am. Jur. 2d Elections, § 409 which reports in part:
Where it is contemplated that a proposition may be submitted at either a general
or special election, the fact that, for convenience, it is submitted at the former,
does not alter the character of the election as a special election, and therefore a
majority only of the votes case on the special question, although less than those
case for officials, is sufficient. (footnote omitted)
Finally, we have considered that section 414.041 subd. 6(c) states that a consolidation
initiated by municipal board action and approved by the city council; will be effective if favored
at referendum by a majority of "votes cast on the question," but such explicit clarification is not
contained in paragraphs (a) or (d), under which these referenda are to be held. In your letter you
suggest that such an omission could indicate legislative intent to require only a majority of those
voting on the question when the city councils have already approved the consolidation, but to
3
Given the statutory requirements for advance notice, referenda could not normally be ordered
less than 45 days before an election. See Minn. Stat.§ 205.16.
Messrs. Harris and Radio
Page6
require a higher standard when the councils have not so approved. That argument is not
persuasive.
The "majority of those voting" requirement in paragraphs (a) and (d) is not limited to
instances when the city council has failed to approve. It also applies to petition-initiated
elections when the councils did approve. Id., par. (a) and (b). As noted above, if the alternative
construction were adopted, the standard for computing the requisite voting majority would
depend on the arbitrary factor of timing, not council approval or disapproval.
For these reasons, it is our view that the consolidation proposal will be adopted if
approved by a majority of the voters voting on that proposal.
Respectfully submitted,
MIKE HATCH
Attorney General
KENNETH E. RASCHKE, JR.
Assistant Attorney General
AG: 408731,v. 01