ARTICLE 11, SECTION 4
SECTION 4 COUNTY GOVERNMENT AND TOWNSHIP ORGANIZATION. The
legislature shall establish a system of county government, which
shall be uniform throughout the state except as hereinafter
provided, and by general laws shall provide for township
organization, under which any county may organize whenever a
majority of the qualified electors of such county voting at a
general election shall so determine; and whenever a county shall
adopt township organization, the assessment and collection of the
revenue shall be made, and the business of such county and the
local affairs of the several townships therein, shall be managed
and transacted in the manner prescribed by such general law.
Any county may frame a "Home Rule" charter for its own
government subject to the Constitution and laws of this state,
and for such purpose the legislative authority of such county may
cause an election to be had, at which election there shall be
chosen by the qualified voters of said county not less than
fifteen (15) nor more than twenty-five (25) freeholders thereof,
as determined by the legislative authority, who shall have been
residents of said county for a period of at least five (5) years
preceding their election and who are themselves qualified
electors, whose duty it shall be to convene within thirty (30)
days after their election and prepare and propose a charter for
such county. Such proposed charter shall be submitted to the
qualified electors of said county, and if a majority of such
qualified electors voting thereon ratify the same, it shall
become the charter of said county and shall become the organic
law thereof, and supersede any existing charter, including
amendments thereto, or any existing form of county government,
and all special laws inconsistent with such charter. Said
proposed charter shall be published in two (2) legal newspapers
published in said county, at least once a week for four (4)
consecutive weeks prior to the day of submitting the same to the
electors for their approval as above provided. All elections in
this section authorized shall only be had upon notice, which
notice shall specify the object of calling such election and
shall be given for at least ten (10) days before the day of
election in all election districts of said county. Said
elections may be general or special elections and except as
herein provided, shall be governed by the law regulating and
controlling general or special elections in said county. Such
charter may be amended by proposals therefor submitted by the
legislative authority of said county to the electors thereof at
any general election after notice of such submission published as
above specified, and ratified by a majority of the qualified
electors voting thereon. In submitting any such charter or
amendment thereto, any alternate article or proposition may be
presented for the choice of the voters and may be voted on
separately without prejudice to others.
Any home rule charter proposed as herein provided, may
provide for such county officers as may be deemed necessary to
carry out and perform all county functions as provided by charter
or by general law, and for their compensation, but shall not
affect the election of the prosecuting attorney, the county
superintendent of schools, the judges of the superior court, and
the justices of the peace, or the jurisdiction of the courts.
Notwithstanding the foregoing provision for the calling of
an election by the legislative authority of such county for the
election of freeholders to frame a county charter, registered
voters equal in number to ten (10) per centum of the voters of
any such county voting at the last preceding general election,
may at any time propose by petition the calling of an election of
freeholders. The petition shall be filed with the county auditor
of the county at least three (3) months before any general
election and the proposal that a board of freeholders be elected
for the purpose of framing a county charter shall be submitted to
the vote of the people at said general election, and at the same
election a board of freeholders of not less than fifteen (15) or
more than twenty-five (25), as fixed in the petition calling for
the election, shall be chosen to draft the new charter. The
procedure for the nomination of qualified electors as candidates
for said board of freeholders shall be prescribed by the
legislative authority of the county, and the procedure for the
framing of the charter and the submission of the charter as
framed shall be the same as in the case of a board of freeholders
chosen at an election initiated by the legislative authority of
the county.
In calling for any election of freeholders as provided in
this section, the legislative authority of the county shall
apportion the number of freeholders to be elected in accordance
with either the legislative districts or the county commissioner
districts, if any, within said county, the number of said
freeholders to be elected from each of said districts to be in
proportion to the population of said districts as nearly as may
be.
Should the charter proposed receive the affirmative vote of
the majority of the electors voting thereon, the legislative
authority of the county shall immediately call such special
election as may be provided for therein, if any, and the county
government shall be established in accordance with the terms of
said charter not more than six (6) months after the election at
which the charter was adopted.
The terms of all elective officers, except the prosecuting
attorney, the county superintendent of schools, the judges of the
superior court, and the justices of the peace, who are in office
at the time of the adoption of a Home Rule Charter shall
terminate as provided in the charter. All appointive officers in
office at the time the charter goes into effect, whose positions
are not abolished thereby, shall continue until their successors
shall have qualified.
After the adoption of such charter, such county shall
continue to have all the rights, powers, privileges and benefits
then possessed or thereafter conferred by general law. All the
powers, authority and duties granted to and imposed on county
officers by general law, except the prosecuting attorney, the
county superintendent of schools, the judges of the superior
court and the justices of the peace, shall be vested in the
legislative authority of the county unless expressly vested in
specific officers by the charter. The legislative authority may
by resolution delegate any of its executive or administrative
powers, authority or duties not expressly vested in specific
officers by the charter, to any county officer or officers or
county employee or employees.
The provisions of sections 5, 6, 7, and the first sentence
of section 8 of this Article as amended shall not apply to
counties in which the government has been established by charter
adopted under the provisions hereof. The authority conferred on
the board of county commissioners by Section 15 of Article II as
amended, shall be exercised by the legislative authority of the
county. [AMENDMENT 21, 1947 Senate Joint Resolution No. 5.
Approved November 2, 1948.]