D.A.R. 12,683
Tom BATES; Edward H. Lyman; Ardis Graham; Richard D.
Lewis; Lawrence J. Buchalter; Jonathan Browning; Rachel
Sherman; Martha A. Escutia; Sylvia Hernandez; Ana Rosa
Pena; Claudia Navar; Barbara J. Friedman; Susan Zarakov;
Harriet Sculley, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Bill JONES, Secretary of the State of California; Bradley
J. Clark; Alameda County Registrar Of Voters;
Conny McCormack, Los Angeles County
Registrar of Voters,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
Peter F. Schabarum; Lewis K. Uhler; Lee A. Phelps;
National Tax Limitation Committee; Alliance Of
California Taxpayers & Involved Voters;
Intervenors-Appellees.
Bill JONES, Sеcretary of the State of California, Defendant-Appellant,
and
Peter F. Schabarum; Lewis K. Uhler, Intervenors-Appellants,
v.
Tom BATES; Edward H. Lyman; Richard D. Lewis; Lawrence J.
Buchalter; Jonathan Browning; Rachel Sherman,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
and
National Tax Limitation Committee; Alliance Of California
Taxpayers & Involved Voters, Intervenors,
v.
Bill JONES, Secretary of the State of California, Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 97-15864, 97-15914.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Aug. 6, 1997.
Order Decided Oct. 7, 1997.
Einer Elhauge, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Daniel E. Lungren, California Attorney General, Sacramento, California, for defendant-appellant Bill Jones.
Anthony T. Caso, Pacific Legal Foundation, Sacramento, California, for intervenors-appellants Peter F. Schabarum, et al.
Joseph Remcho, Remcho, Johansen & Purcell, San Francisco, Califоrnia, for plaintiffs-appellees Tom Bates et al.
Stephen J. Safranek, University of Detroit Mercy School of Law, Detroit, Michigan, for amicus curiae U.S. Term Limits.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California; Claudia Wilken, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. 95-CV-02638-CW.
Before: SNEED, FLETCHER, and REINHARDT, Circuit Judges.
In this case involving thе constitutionality of California's initiative (Proposition 140) imposing lifetime legislative term limits, the court has before it two motions for intervention.1 In the first motion, twenty state legislators and voters request leave to intervene on the side of plaintiffs-appellees Tom Bates, et al.2 In thе second motion, one state legislator, Curt Pringle, and U.S. Term Limits, a non-profit organization that promotes legislation regarding term limits and already enjoys amicus status, seek to intervene on the side of defendants-appellants Bill Jones, et al. The state opposes both mоtions. We grant the first motion and deny the second.
The controlling principle for our decision is the need for uniformity in the November, 1998 election. The state in its briefs to this court, and to the Supreme Court, has repeatedly expressed its legitimate desire to avoid to the greatest extent possible any unnecessary inequities and delay in the upcoming election cycle. We agree. Unlike the state, however, we believe that the most effective way to achieve this objective is to allow as many parties as possible who seek to run for office contrary to the term limits provision of Proposition 140 to be bound by our decision. Such joinder undoubtedly will facilitate any further judicial action that may occur3 and will render inconsistent application of the law less likely.
I. Applicants as Plaintiffs-Appellees
The state primarily argues that the applicants for intervention as plaintiffs-appellees are barred from intervening by res judicata. We thus address that argument first. Finding that it is unpersuasive, we then consider the state's argument that these applicants fail to satisfy the formal criteria for permissive intervention.
A. Res Judicata
We apply California law to the state's res judicata claim. 28 U.S.C. § 1738. The large majority of those seeking to intervene as plaintiffs-appellees were not parties to Legislature v. Eu,
We also hold, in part for the same reasons, that application of the public interest exception to legislators who аctually participated in the Eu litigation is justified under the unusual circumstances present here. Another exception recognized by California courts is applicable to these proposed intervenors as well. Under California law, a prior legal determination is not conclusive "if injustice would result," Kopp v. Fair Political Practices Comm'n,
B. Criteria for Intervention
Intervention on appeal is governed by Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See Landreth Timber Co. v. Landrеth,
The state bases its objection regarding the criteria for intervention solely on an alleged lack of timeliness.4 The state contends that if we allow these applicants "casual[ly]" to intervene now, we will open the door for future litigants to "sandbag" other parties by waiting to intervene until a favorable ruling seems likely. The state's argument ignores the highly unusual posture and circumstances of this case.
In analyzing timеliness, we focus "on the date the person attempting to intervene should have been aware his 'interest[s] would no longer be protected adequately by the parties,' rather than the date the person learned of the litigation." Officers for Justice v. Civil Service Comm'n,
Even more important, however, are the rights of the voters. It is not too late to ensure that their interests in fairness and uniformity are protected if all that is required is to pеrmit candidates who will seek re-election to become bound by our decision. The state's electoral process would be subject to disruption if eligibility in each district has to be decided in a separate lawsuit. Surely all parties should want uniformity in the 1998 election. Whatever the ultimate outcome of this case, intervention can only be a step in that direction.
Under these circumstances, and given the fundamental nature of the right at stake, we find it both "imperative" and in the public interest that we allow these applicants to intervene. Like оther cases in which intervention has been allowed on appeal, the state does not assert that it will be prejudiced by intervention, and we find no reason to think otherwise. See, e.g., Atkins v. State Bd. of Educ.,
II. Applicants as Defendants-Appellants
The state (collectively the defendants-appellants) also opposes the applicants Pringle's and U.S. Term Limits' motion to intervene. These would-be intervenors, unlike the others, seek to intervene on the state's side of the case. Here, wе agree with the state's position because we believe that these applicants have failed to demonstrate that they satisfy the requirements for intervention and no construct of public interest supports their participation as parties.
Unlike the appliсants for intervention as plaintiffs-appellants, applicants Pringle and U.S. Term Limits do not have a sufficiently protectable interest in this litigation to warrant intervention. Pringle merely asserts that "[h]e understands that this Honorable Court's decision in this case will affect his future attempts at running for stаte legislative office...." Nowhere does he assert that he wishes to run for re-election; in fact, by requesting intervention on the side of the state, Pringle has signaled his desire to be prevented from running for re-election. In order to protect this interest, Pringle need only refrain from running for office; no decision by this court could remove any impediment from that goal. Accordingly, Pringle's motion is denied.6
Applicant U.S. Term Limits, a public interest group that advocates term limits, already enjoys the status of amicus curiae in this case. Unlike the other intervenors on the state's side, it was not an official sponsor of the initiative, and we see no reason to grant it intervenor status. Although this court has held that a "public interest group is entitled as a matter of right to intervene in an action challenging the legality of a measure it has supported," Idahо Farm Bureau Fed'n v. Babbitt,
III. Conclusion
Intervention is granted as to the 20 named parties seeking leave to intervene as plaintiffs-appellees. Intervention is denied as to Pringle and U.S. Term Limits.
SNEED, Circuit Judge, dissents from this order.
Notes
We concurrently file an opinion in which we determine the validity of Proposition 140's lifetime-legislative-term-limits provision
The applicants for intervention as plaintiffs-appellees are Kenneth L. Maddy, Donald A. Jackson, Ruben S. Alaya, Sondra J. Elrod, David Gonzalez, Louis B. Medina, Charles M. Calderon, Philip Pace, Leroy F. Greene, Alex F. Ives, Teresa P. Hughes, Mary Lou Costano, Bill Lockyer, Mary Robin Torello, Henry J. Mello, Helen A. Mello, Herschel Rosenthal, Steven Parker, Mike Thompson, Mel Varrelman, Diane E. Watson, Anna L. Gonzales, Valerie K. Brown, Doris Elaine Lowe, Cruz M. Bustamante, Lawrence Alderete, Denise M. Ducheny, Verna Quinn, Martin Gallegos, Christopher Kakimi, Diane Martinez, Ruth B. Raful, Kevin Murray, Laura Dixon, Lisa Dixon, Marc Pryor, Grace F. Napolitano, Robert L. Henderson, Don Perata, Penny L. Stanley, Roderick D. Wright, and Ruby Maillian
We note thаt the state, even prior to our decision on the merits, petitioned the Supreme Court for, inter alia, expedited review of this case. In the event that the Court grants review, our ruling would ensure that as many of the affected parties as possible are before the Court. Alsо, in its most recent filing in the Supreme Court, the state forwarded a newspaper clipping stating that some voters contemplated a new state court proceeding. See Supplemental Brief for Petitioner Bill Jones to the U.S. Supreme Court, Jones v. Bates, [not docketed] (Sept. 26, 1997)
The state does not challenge these applicants' assertions that they satisfy all of the other criteria for intervention, see Sierra Club v. United States EPA,
The most that the California Supreme Court has done is to suggest a few times in dicta that it might, under some unspecified circumstances, decline to follow a Ninth Circuit decision on federal law. See, e.g., Raven v. Deukmejian,
Pringle also asserts without further explanation his interest "as a voter" in intervention. He does not assert, however, that he wishes to vote for any candidate who would be "termed out."
