Edwards v. Weeks
Edwards v. Weeks
Opinion
This case presents the interesting issue of the right of a mayor of a town operating under a Code Charter to veto an order of its board of aldermen appointing a town attorney. Because the trial court erred in denying the mayor the right to veto pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. §
Lewis J. Weeks, Jr. (Weeks), appointed town attorney in July 1981 for the Town of Wesson, served in this capacity until 1990. The Town of Wesson operates under a Code Charter as provided by Miss. Code Ann. §
During the town's regular September 1990 meeting, the board of aldermen voted to remove Weeks as town attorney and to employ Attorney Richard E. Stratton, III.
In the October 1990 town meeting, the board, following a 3-2 vote, ordered that Weeks be rehired as town attorney. Mayor Edwards advised the board that she had the right to veto the rehiring order. Within the time limited by and pursuant to provisions of Miss. Code Ann. §
During the town's January 1991 meeting, the board again, by order following a 3-2 vote, reinstated Weeks as its town attorney and terminated the employment of Attorney Stratton. Again, pursuant to the statutory provisions of Miss. Code Ann. §
Weeks instituted suit against the town seeking to enjoin it, its officials, agents and employees, from interfering with his service as town attorney. Alternatively, Weeks sought restoration to the position of town attorney and damages for breach of contract.
After a lengthy hearing, the chancellor rendered an opinion finding and holding, inter alia, that the mayor had no power or *Page 1036 authority to veto the board's action in rehiring Weeks.
Aggrieved, the mayor appeals contending that she had the power and authority by statute to veto the board's orders.
Miss. Code Ann. §
§
21-15-25 . Municipal attorney; appointment and compensation.The governing authorities may annually appoint an attorney-at-law for the municipality, prescribe his duties and fix his compensation, and/or they may employ counsel to represent the interest of the municipality, should the occasion require. . . . (emphasis added)
Miss. Code Ann. §
It shall be the duty of the clerk of every municipality within the State of Mississippi to keep a book of permanent construction to be labeled "Municipal Minutes, City (or Town or Village, as the case may be) of ____," in which he shall record the proceedings and all orders and judgments of the governing authority of said municipality, and to keep the same fully indexed alphabetically, so that all entries on said minutes can be easily found. . . .
. . . .
All official actions of the governing authorities of a municipality shall be evidenced only by official entries duly recorded on such minute book.
Miss. Code Ann. §
§
21-3-15 . Duties of the mayor.(1) The mayor shall preside at all meetings of the board of aldermen, and in case there shall be an equal division, he shall give the deciding vote. He shall have the superintending control of all the officers and affairs of the municipality, and shall take care that the laws and ordinances are executed.
(2) Ordinances adopted by the board of aldermen shall be submitted to the mayor. The mayor shall, within ten (10) days after receiving any ordinance, either approve the ordinance by affixing his signature thereto, or return it to the board of aldermen by delivering it to the municipal clerk together with a written statement setting forth his objections thereto or to any item or part thereof. No ordinance or any item or part thereof shall take effect without the mayor's approval, unless the mayor fails to return an ordinance to the board of aldermen prior to the next meeting of the board, but no later than fifteen (15) days after it has been presented to him, or unless the board of aldermen, upon reconsideration thereof on or after the third day following its return by the mayor, shall, by a vote of two-thirds (2/3) of the members of the board, resolve to override the mayor's veto.
(3) The term "ordinance" as used in this section shall be deemed to include ordinances, resolutions and orders. (emphasis ours)
The trial court found that it was not the legislature's intent to vest the mayor with the authority to veto employment of a town attorney. In reaching its conclusion, the court relied upon Richv. McLaurin,
The mayor has no power to veto the election of such officer. He may give the casting vote, as a presiding officer of the tribunal known as the "Mayor and Board of Aldermen," in such elections. . . . And he may veto any measure passed by the board of aldermen. . . . But such an election is not "a measure," within the meaning of that section.
. . . .
It requires no ordinance to elect a police justice, for manifest reasons, arising from convenience and necessity.
83 Miss. at 101-02; 35 So. at 337.
Subsequent to Rich, the statute was amended by deleting the word "measure" *Page 1037 and inserting "ordinances" in its place and stead. In 1982, the statute was amended by adding Section (3) broadening the definition of "ordinance" as used in the statute.
Rich is distinguishable from this case because:
(a) The appointment of the police justice in Rich required no legislative action. The code chapter on "Municipalities" in 1903 did not provide how he should be elected. The court noted that the election was spawned solely from "convenience and necessity." Miss. Code Ann. §
(b) The code section in effect when Rich was decided has been amended to change the word "measure" to "ordinances" and to include within the definition of the term "ordinances" all resolutions and orders.1
Miss. Code Ann. §
We conclude that under §
REVERSED AND RENDERED.
DAN M. LEE and PRATHER, P.JJ., and SULLIVAN, PITTMAN, BANKS, McRAE, JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., and SMITH, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Terri Edwards, Mayor of the Town of Wesson v. Lewis J. Weeks, Jr.
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published