Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
(October 24, 2014)
Appellant Adelbert Bryan appeals from the Superior Court’s October 10, 2014 order, which denied his motion to enforce its August 29, 2014 order implementing this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion disqualifying Alicia “Chucky” Hansen from the general election ballot for membership in the 31st Legislature, and to hold the Supervisor of Elections — Caroline Fawkes — in contempt for her failure to comply with that order. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the Superior Court’s October 10, 2014 order, once again order Fawkes to immediately remove Hansen’s name from the general election ballot for
I. BACKGROUND
Because many of the facts of this case were set forth in this Court’s prior August 28, 2014 opinion, see Bryan v. Fawkes (Bryan I),
On September 3, 2014, the Governor of the Virgin Islands pardoned Hansen of her three convictions for willful failure to file an income tax return in violation of title 33, section 1524 of the Virgin Islands Code. The next day, Hansen attempted to “cure” the defect that led to her removal from the general election ballot by submitting “new” nomination papers. Fawkes, however, declined to place Hansen on the ballot because this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order both remained in effect.
On September 7, 2014, five Virgin Islands voters sued Fawkes and the Virgin Islands Joint Board of Elections in the District Court of the Virgin Islands. The next day, Hansen filed a virtually identical complaint against Fawkes, also in the District Court. Hansen and the voters moved for a temporary restraining order, a preliminary injunction, a permanent injunction, and for declaratory relief, primarily on the theory that the Governor’s pardon retroactively erased the impediment to Hansen serving in the 31st Legislature that resulted in her May 2014 nomination papers being set aside. In the alternative, they argued that Fawkes’s refusal to place Hansen on the ballot would purportedly violate the First, Fifth, and
The District Court consolidated the complaints filed by Hansen and the five voters, and heard oral argument on the motion for a temporary restraining order on September 10, 2014. At oral argument, Fawkes, rather than defend her decision to comply with the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order, stated that she fully agreed with all of the legal arguments raised by Hansen and the voters, and requested that the District Court issue a temporary restraining order directing her to reinstate Hansen’s name on the ballot. Despite having filed the Superior Court petition that resulted in Hansen being removed from the ballot, Bryan was not named as a defendant by either party to the District Court complaints,
At 3:39 p.m. on September 11, 2014, Fawkes filed a petition for rehearing with this Court, as allowed pursuant to this Court’s Rules of Appellate Procedure. See V.I.S.Ct.R. 31(a) (“A petition for rehearing may be filed within 14 days after entry of judgment.”). In her petition, Fawkes raised many of the same arguments that she, Hansen, and the voters all raised as part of the District Court proceeding, but also raised the issue of local law upon which the District Court ordered supplemental briefing. Specifically, Fawkes alleged that this Court’s decision to order the •Superior Court to set aside Hansen’s nomination papers “was premature since the defect was curable by pardon from the Governor restoring [her]
Despite being expressly informed by Hansen and the voters that the same issues were being considered by this Court as part of the same proceeding that had resulted in issuance of the August 28, 2014 opinion, the District Court issued a temporary restraining order on the morning of September 12, 2014. Payne v. Fawkes (Payne I), Civ. Nos. 2014-053, 055,
As to the merits, the District Court expressly rejected the primary argument advanced by Hansen, the five voters, and Fawkes, and concluded that the Governor’s pardon did not retroactively render her May 2014 nomination papers valid. Id.
Nevertheless, the District Court concluded that a temporary restraining order should issue. Althofigh neither Hansen nor the voters had pleaded any territorial law claims in their complaint, nor requested that the District Court exercise supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367, the District Court, having ordered briefing on the territorial law issue sua sponte, elected to issue a temporary restraining order based solely on its interpretation of territorial law. The District Court recognized that the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has instructed it that “when exercising jurisdiction over cases requiring the application of Virgin Islands law,” it “[is] required to predict how the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands would decide an issue of territorial law.” Id. 2014 U.S.
Later that same day, this Court ruled on Fawkes’s rehearing petition. In our September 12, 2014 order, this Court noted that virtually all of the arguments Fawkes made in her rehearing petition were waived since they could have been — but were not — raised in her appellate brief, and were instead being raised for the first time in her rehearing petition. Bryan v. Fawkes (Bryan II), S. Ct. Civ. No. 2014-0046, slip op. at 2 (V.I. Sept. 12, 2014) (unpublished) (citing Rivera v. People, S. Ct. Crim. No. 2008-0052,
While Fawkes cites to several cases from other jurisdictions standing for the proposition that a candidate’s qualifications at the time he or she is administered the oath of office, rather than on the date of the election, control whether the candidate is eligible to hold that office, those cases are inapposite because this case arose pursuant to a proceeding initiated under 18 V.I.C. § 412, a statute authorizing judicial review of the decision of the Supervisor of Elections to place a candidate on the ballot. That statute contains a specific provision relating to the ability to cure a nomination paper that has been challenged in a judicial proceeding:
If the court finds that the nomination petition or paper is defective under the provisions of section 411 of this title, or that it does not contain a sufficient number of signatures of electors entitled to sign it under the provisions of this chapter, or was not filed by persons entitled to file it, it shall be set aside. If the objections relate to material errors or defects apparent on the face of the nomination petition or paper, or on the face of the accompanying or appended affidavits, the court, after hearing, may, in its discretion, permit amendments within such time and upon such terms as to payment of costs, as the court may specify.
18 V.I.C. § 412 (emphasis added). Thus, section 412 clearly contemplates that candidates whose nomination papers have been challenged in the courts do not have an automatic right to cure the defect. Notably, Hansen never requested that this Court or the Superior Court grant her time to cure in the event she was found ineligible for nomination to the 31st Legislature.
Hansen was not eligible to be nominated for membership in the 31 st Legislature when she filed her nomination papers on May 13, 2014, due to her convictions for crimes involving moral turpitude. Nor was she eligible on August 28, 2014, when this Court issued its opinion reversing the Superior Court’s July 30, 2014 order, or on August 29, 2014, when the Superior Court, on remand, ordered her removal from*431 the ballot. While the Superior Court, in its discretion, could have arguably provided Hansen with a date certain by which to obtain a pardon, at no point did Fawkes or Hansen request that it exercise that discretion. After the Superior Court granted Hansen permission to intervene, Hansen filed a motion to dismiss; at no point did she request, in the alternative, that the Superior Court provide her with an opportunity to cure the defect alleged in Bryan’s petition. Similarly, although the matter had been pending before the Superior Court for approximately three months, Fawkes never requested that the Superior Court exercise its discretion under section 412 to provide Hansen with an opportunity to cure.
Of even more relevance to the rehearing petition, on appeal to this Court, neither Hansen nor Fawkes ever requested, either in their appellate briefs or even during oral argument, that this Court — were it to rule in Bryan’s favor — order the Superior Court to refrain from setting aside Hansen’s nomination papers until she had the opportunity to seek a pardon from the Governor. Rather, both Hansen and Fawkes premised their entire litigation strategy — both at the trial level and on appeal—on convincing the Superior Court and this Court to either refrain from resolving Bryan’s petition on the merits, or to sustain Fawkes’s determination that Hansen’s convictions were not for crimes involving moral turpitude. Despite being clearly aware of section 412’s existence, neither Fawkes nor Hansen requested that either the Superior Court or this Court grant leave to amend under that section. Thus, Fawkes cannot argue, for the very first time in her petition for rehearing, that this Court should have sua sponte mandated the Superior Court to grant leave to cure when, pursuant to statute, such leave is discretionary rather than mandatory. Rivera,2009 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 29 , at *3. In other words, like the other issues addressed in her rehearing petition, Fawkes could have—but did not— raise the issue of amendment or opportunity to cure in her appellate brief, but for whatever reason did not do so.
Bryan II, slip op. at 2-5 (footnotes omitted). In a footnote, this Court acknowledged the existence of 18 Y.I.C. § 411(c), but explained that it was a different provision in the Virgin Islands Code relating to when a nomination paper is rejected by the Supervisor of Elections, rather than set aside by a court. Id. at 3 n.2. And in a separate footnote, this Court questioned whether
Although faced with two contradictory orders •— the August 29, 2014 Superior Court order directing Hansen’s removal from the ballot, and the September 12, 2014 District Court order directing Hansen’s placement on the ballot — Fawkes chose to comply with the District Court order, and on September 15, 2014, the St. Croix District Board of Elections, by a divided 4-2 vote, approved Fawkes’s addition of Hansen to the ballot. On September 18, 2014, Bryan — who we again note was not a party to the District Court action — filed, with the Superior Court, an “Emergency Motion for Enforcement of Judgment and for Contempt Sanctions.” In his motion, Bryan argued that both this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order remained valid and enforceable, and that the conflict between the District Court’s September 12, 2014 temporary restraining order and this Court’s September 12, 2014 order denying rehearing should be resolved in favor of this Court’s order. Bryan further alleged that Fawkes and Hansen — the losing parties in Bryan I — colluded to bypass the adversarial litigation in the Virgin Islands court system — which was, and to this day remains, pending — through a non-adversarial District Court proceeding.
The Superior Court set Bryan’s motion for a hearing on September 24, 2014. However, the day before the hearing, Hansen filed a “Notice of Removal” with the District Court, which alleged that Bryan’s enforcement motion was removable pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) because it purportedly presented a substantial federal question. As a result of Hansen’s filing, the Superior Court cancelled the scheduled hearing.
On the morning of September 24, 2014 ■— the same day the Superior Court had originally planned to hold its hearing on Bryan’s motion to enforce the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order — the District Court converted its temporary restraining order into a permanent injunction. Payne v. Fawkes (Payne II), Civ. Nos. 2014-053, 055,
Later that week, on September 26, 2014, Bryan filed a motion for the District Court to remand his enforcement motion back to the Superior Court, on the grounds that Hansen’s removal notice was untimely and that, in any event, the District Court lacked federal question jurisdiction over the matter and did not possess the authority to enforce or decline to enforce a valid Superior Court order. The matter was assigned to the same District Court judge who presided over the Payne matter and issued the temporary restraining order and permanent injunction.
In an October 1, 2014 opinion and order, the District Court granted Bryan’s motion and remanded the matter to the Superior Court. Bryan v. Fawkes (Bryan III), Civ. No. 2014-066,
The same day that the District Court issued its October 1, 2014 opinion in Bryan III, Hansen and the five voters filed an emergency motion in the Payne case, which requested that the District Court enjoin any Superior Court proceedings on Bryan’s enforcement motion. In their motion, Hansen and the voters took the position that “[t]his is effectively an in rem proceeding where the conduct of one public official is at issue” which required emergency injunctive relief to prevent inconsistent adjudications.
The District Court, in an October 6, 2014 opinion, denied this emergency motion. Payne v. Fawkes (Payne III), Civ. Nos. 2014-053, 055,
The Superior Court finally held its hearing on Bryan’s enforcement motion on October 7, 2014. Although Bryan’s motion made many factual allegations regarding potential collusion between Hansen and Fawkes as to the procurement of the District Court temporary restraining order and. injunction, the Superior Court did not conduct an evidentiary hearing on this issue, even though the District Court, through its October 1, 2014 opinion in Bryan III, implied that it could conduct such an inquiry. Instead, the Superior Court only heard oral arguments as to whether Hansen possessed an automatic right to cure, and the relationship between the District Court orders and the earlier orders issued by the local courts. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Superior Court authorized the parties to file supplemental briefs on whatever issues they desired, which both Hansen and Bryan did on October 8, 2014.
The Superior Court issued an order denying the motion on October 10, 2014. In that order, the Superior Court first declined to hold Fawkes in contempt, reasoning that the District Court’s September 12, 2014 temporary restraining order “completely changed the circumstances” and, in effect, excused Fawkes’s non-compliance with this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order. With respect to Bryan’s request that it enforce the August 29, 2014 order, the Superior Court, like the District Court, concluded that 18 V.I.C. § 411(c) applied to the matter, and that Hansen therefore had an opportunity to cure. In a footnote, the Superior Court admonished Bryan for attempting to collaterally attack the District Court orders through his motion, and dismissed his reliance on this Court’s September 12, 2014 order denying rehearing because “the Supreme Court did not reach the issue of whether Hansen was entitled to a mandatory three day right to cure from Fawkes under § 411(b) and (c).” Bryan v. Fawkes (Bryan IV), Super. Ct. Civ. No. 144/2014 (STX), slip op. at 10 n.12 (V.I. Super. Ct.Oct. 10, 2014) (unpublished). Although specifically asked to do so, the Superior Court
Bryan timely filed a notice of appeal with this Court on October 15, 2014. On October 18, 2014, Bryan filed a motion requesting that this Court take summary action or grant expedited review of his appeal, given that the general election was less than two weeks away. This Court, in an October 20, 2014 expedited scheduling order, granted Bryan’s motion, ordered expedited transmission of the Superior Court record, and directed that Bryan file a letter-form brief no later than 4:00 pm on October 21, 2014, and that Fawkes and Hansen each file a letter-form brief no later than 4:00 pm on October 22, 2014. The Clerk of the Superior Court, as well as the parties, all complied with these expedited deadlines.
II. JURISDICTION
This Court possesses jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to title 4, section 32(a) of the Virgin Islands Code, which vests us with jurisdiction over “all appeals arising from final judgments, final decrees, [and] final orders of the Superior Court.” See also 48 U.S.C. § 1613a (“Upon the establishment of the appellate court provided for in section 1611(a) of this title all appeals from the decisions of the courts of the Virgin Islands established by local law not previously taken must be taken to that appellate court.”). Additionally, this Court may exercise jurisdiction pursuant to its statutory and inherent power to enforce its August 28, 2014 opinion, which directed the Superior Court to issue its August 29, 2014 order setting aside Hansen’s nomination papers and directing Fawkes to remove her name from the ballot. See 4 V.I.C. § 32(b) (“The Supreme Court shall have all inherent powers, including the power to issue all writs necessary to the complete exercise of its duties and jurisdiction under the laws of the Virgin Islands.”); 4 V.I.C. § 243(4) (“Every court shall have power . . . [t]o compel obedience to its judgments, orders, and process, and to the orders of a judge out of court, in all actions, or proceedings pending therein.”); 4 V.I.C. § 281 (“Every judicial officer shall have power . . . [t]o compel obedience to his lawful orders.”); In re Burke,
III. DISCUSSION
As the summary of the lengthy history of this procedurally-complex appeal illustrates, the disposition of this appeal rests primarily on the
A. The District Court Orders
Beginning with his September 18,2014 motion and continuing through this appeal, Bryan has maintained that the District Court’s various orders in the Payne litigation do not provide a bar to enforcing the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order entered on remand from this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion, notwithstanding the fact that the District Court’s September 12, 2014 temporary restraining order and September 24, 2014 permanent injunction each order Fawkes to do precisely the opposite of what this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order directed her to do. Fawkes and Hansen, in their filings in both the District Court proceedings and before the Virgin Islands courts, have maintained that both this Court and the Superior Court lack the power to question the validity of the District Court orders.
We disagree with Fawkes and Hansen that this Court is wholly without authority to examine the District Court orders. Although Fawkes and Hansen have maintained that the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution
While the Supremacy Clause is wholly irrelevant to this case because all courts involved are Article IV courts, we must nevertheless determine whether Congress, through other legislation, intended for this
We recognize that this case differs from our prior precedents, in that two of the parties to this proceeding — Hansen and Fawkes — were also parties in the Payne case before the District Court, and that both proceedings involve the same subject matter, to wit, whether Hansen’s name may appear on the general election ballot. We find this to be of no relevance, for it is well-established that “purported judgments entered by a court without jurisdiction over the subject matter are void and as such are subject to collateral attack.” Sierra Life Ins. Co. v. Granata,
Even if we were persuaded — despite our shared statuses as Article IV courts — that this Court should, for purposes of ascertaining the validity of the District Court orders, treat the District Court as if it were an Article III court and this Court and the Superior Court as if we were state courts, we would reach the same result. Contrary to Hansen and Fawkes’s claim that there is an absolute bar on state courts reexamining decisions rendered by a federal Article III court in a case involving one or more of the same parties, the law only creates a presumption that the Article III court appropriately exercised its jurisdiction. 50 C.J.S. JUDGMENTS § 729 (collecting cases). “[PJresumptions are precisely that — presumptions, i.e. ‘procedural device[s] to force the party against whom the presumption operates to come forward with rebuttal evidence.’ ” Rivera-Moreno v. Gov’t of the V.I.,
In this case, we cannot see how the question of the District Court’s jurisdiction could have been “fully and fairly litigated,” given that all of the parties to the case agreed on every issue, with Fawkes stipulating to issuance of a temporary restraining order and injunction without even attempting to set forth any defense, jurisdictional or otherwise. See Payne I,
Moreover, as noted above, an additional exception to the presumption of the correctness of an Article III court’s judgment exists, in that a state court need not give deference and effect to an Article III court’s decision if it is apparent, from the face of the federal court’s
The district court’s opinion also implies that it had jurisdiction over Musson’s state law claims under the doctrine of supplemental jurisdiction, nowpartly codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1367. The obvious problem*445 with the exercise of supplemental jurisdiction over Musson’s state law claims is that Musson never pled these claims in the district court.
At oral argument, both the defendant and the plaintiff told this court that state law claims were “impliedly” pled (without citing a source in the complaint for such an implication), and that supplemental jurisdiction was proper for this reason. We disagree. Modem pleading rales may be lax, but they still require that a party plead a claim before the court decides it. Furthermore, Fed. R. Civ. R 8 requires the complaint to contain “a short and plain statement of the grounds upon which the court’s jurisdiction depends.” At a minimum, this requires a plaintiff to identify state claims as such, or to cite the supplemental jurisdiction rule at 28 U.S.C. § 1367.
Musson Theatrical, Inc. v. Federal Exp. Corp.,
Even if we were to look beyond the District Court’s decision to grant a temporary restraining order and injunction sua sponte on a claim that had never been pled, other reasons exist to question the District Court’s subject matter jurisdiction. As noted earlier, Hansen and the voters argued, in their emergency motion to enjoin the Superior Court proceedings that was eventually denied through the Payne III opinion, that the District Court’s jurisdiction over the Payne case, as well as the Superior Court’s jurisdiction over the Bryan case, were in rem rather than in personam. An in personam action is one where the party bringing the action seeks a personal judgment against the defendant, such as an award of monetary damages. Kline v. Burke Constr. Co.,
The District Court, in its Payne III opinion, stated, without citing to any legal authority or attempting to predict how this Court would rule on the question, that “[t]he actions in both this Court and the Superior
The distinction between an in rem action and an in personam action is not merely academic, for the United States Supreme Court — which “is the final arbiter of conflicts between the several sovereignties under our federal system,” Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air v. Pennsylvania,
Although the District Court in the Payne matter sought to distinguish between “prepardon” and “postpardon” proceedings — apparently implying that the proceedings before this Court and the Superior Court somehow automatically came to a close after the Governor pardoned Hansen, even though Virgin Islands law provides no
is confined to cases of the kind from which the doctrine acquired its name: cases brought by state-court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-court judgments rendered before the district court proceedings commenced and inviting district court review and rejection of those judgments.
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Industries Corp.,
In this case, while the District Court purported not to review the correctness of this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order implementing that opinion, see Payne II,
Here, the District Court was clearly aware that Fawkes and Hansen were both parties to the proceedings before this Court and the Superior Court, and that the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order specifically ordered Fawkes to remove Hansen’s name from the ballot. Yet the District Court chose to issue a temporary restraining order on September 12, 2014, that directed Fawkes to place Hansen’s name on the ballot — the very situation that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine is intended to prevent. Additionally, by the time the District Court issued its September 24, 2014 permanent injunction, this Court had already issued its September 12, 2014 order denying Fawkes’s petition for rehearing, which adjudicated
More significantly, even though this Court’s September 12, 2014 order expressly stated, in unambiguous terms, that “candidates whose nomination papers have been challenged in the courts do not have an automatic right to cure the defect,” Bryan II, slip op. at 3, the District Court announced in Payne II that it would not follow this directive because it believed this Court’s interpretation “would appear to raise significant issues” with respect to the Revised Organic Act and “would seem to build an inequity into the nominations process based on the fortuity of whether a candidate happens to be the first person whose particular type of defect is accepted by the Supervisor of Elections and then successfully challenged in court.”
We emphasize, in the strongest terms' possible, that we have not reached our decision to disregard the District Court’s orders lightly. Had
Yet, as a direct result of this Court’s creation, the role of the District Court in shaping Virgin Islands law fundamentally changed. On January 28, 2007, the District Court possessed plenary authority over all issues of Virgin Islands law by virtue of its appellate jurisdiction over the Superior Court, subject only to review by the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. But upon this Court’s assumption of jurisdiction on January 29, 2007, “[t]he relationship between the federal courts and the territorial courts [became] largely governed by the precepts that govern the relationship between federal and state courts,” with the District Court now being required “to defer to [Virgin Islands] courts’ interpretations of [Virgin Islands] law.” Hodge v. Bluebeard’s Castle,
Edwards errs when he argues that the District Court of the Virgin Islands still remains vested with the “judicial power of the territory.” He cites a pre-1984 case of this court for the proposition that the District Court of the Virgin Islands sits “essentially as a local court,” not a federal court interpreting local law, V.I. Dep’t of Conservation & Cultural Affairs v. V.I. Paving, Inc.,714 F.2d 283 , 285-86,19 V.I. 642 *454 (3d Cir. 1983), but that opinion preceded the restructure of the courts of the Virgin Islands.
We recognize that it is not easy for the District Court, which has contributed generously and productively to the local law of the Virgin Islands, to accept its divestiture but that follows inexorably from the statutes and is confirmed by the legislative history.... We therefore take this opportunity to reject any statements to the contrary in District Court opinions. See, e.g., Spink v. Gen. Accident Ins. Co. of Puerto Rico, Ltd.,36 F. Supp. 2d 689 , 691,40 V.I. 396 (D.V.I. 1999) (“This court need not predict local law . . . because it is vested with the authority to decide novel questions as a local trial court.”).
Edwards,
Ensuring comity between this Court, the Superior Court, and the District Court is an important judicial interest, particularly during this transition period where the District Court continues to adjudicate appeals that were filed with it prior to January 29, 2007, see Hughley v. Gov’t of the V.I.,
But “comity is not a one way street.” McGee v. Estelle,
Simply put, “comity does not command abdication.” Doody v. Ryan,
Yet despite the fact that this Court’s authority to determine Virgin Islands law should now be beyond dispute, the District Court elected to issue a temporary restraining order and permanent injunction — sua sponte, and in a non-adversarial proceeding — premised exclusively on its interpretation of Virgin Islands local law, notwithstanding the fact that its orders directly contradicted the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order, and despite being fully aware that the very same issue of local law was being actively litigated in both this Court and the Superior Court. Turning a blind eye to the District Court’s usurpation of authority in this case would not further comity principles, but would instead represent an
For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the District Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter its temporary restraining order and permanent injunction. As such, they are therefore void and do not serve as a bar to enforcing either this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion, the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order, or this Court’s September 12, 2014 order.
B. Continued Validity of Local Court Orders
Having determined that the District Court orders do not preclude the Superior Court or this Court from ordering enforcement of the local court orders, we must now consider whether those orders remain valid in light of the Governor’s pardon and Hansen’s attempt to submit new nomination papers.
We cannot endorse the Superior Court’s reading of our September 12, 2014 order. That order said that “candidates whose nomination papers have been challenged in the courts do not have an automatic right to cure the defect.” Bryan II, slip op. at 3. “[A]s we have repeatedly emphasized,” when this Court includes plain, unambiguous language in a court order, court rule, or other court-issued document, this Court “simply means what it says.”
We recognize that, in certain cases, a trial court, whether through the parties or as a result of its own research, may discover that the appellate court overlooked a statute that, if applied, might have changed the outcome of the appeal. In such a case, the trial court may understandably believe that it must place its duty to faithfully uphold the law over its duty to comply with the appellate court’s mandate. See Culpepper v. Inland Mortg. Corp.,
This was not such a case. Our September 12, 2014 order did not ignore 18 V.I.C. § 411; on the contrary, that very statute was cited and discussed in footnote 2 of the order, where this Court explained that section 411 was a different provision in the Virgin Islands Code relating to when a nomination paper is rejected by the Supervisor of Elections, rather than set aside by a court. Bryan II, slip op. at 3 n.2. In other words, this Court interpreted section 411 as the exclusive means to cure when the Supervisor of Elections unilaterally rejects a nomination paper, and section 412 as the exclusive means to cure when a nomination paper is set aside by a court.
Our interpretation is supported by the plain language of both statutes. Section 411, by its own terms, sets forth a procedure for the initial review of nomination papers by the Supervisor of Elections without judicial involvement, with section 411(c) establishing a right to cure in situations where the Supervisor of Elections refuses to accept a nomination paper:
(a) The Supervisor of Elections or his deputy shall forthwith examine the nomination petitions, nomination papers or nomination certificates filed with him under this chapter and shall permit them to be*459 examined by any interested citizen. If the identity of any signer is unknown to him or if the identity or capacity of any signer seems to him doubtful or is challenged by any citizen, the Supervisor of Elections or his deputy within three days after the close of the nomination period shall hold a public hearing in the election district in which the signer in question purports to reside, to which hearing such signer and any material witnesses may be summoned. The Supervisor of Elections or his deputy shall determine the signer’s identity and capacity and ascertain that the candidates have been validly nominated.
(b) If the Supervisor determines that a candidate for election or nomination does not meet the qualifications established by law for the office, then he shall disqualify such candidate and delete the candidate’s name from the ballot if the ballots have not been printed.
(c) When a nomination petition, nomination paper or nomination certificate is found to be defective the candidate shall be notified immediately by special messenger with the reason or reasons therefor. If a new, valid petition, paper or certificate is not filed within three days thereafter the candidate shall be disqualified for nomination or election.
18V.I.C. § 411 (emphases added). In contrast, section 412, again by its own terms, addresses situations where the Supervisor of Elections accepts a nomination paper pursuant to section 411 that the Superior Court later determines should not have been accepted, and provides for a different cure mechanism:
All nomination petitions and nomination papers received and filed under this chapter, and accepted after the examination required by section 411 of this title, shall be deemed to be valid, unless, within five days after the last day for filing such nomination petition or papers, a petition is presented to the [Superior Court], specifically setting forth the objections thereto, and praying that such petition or paper be set aside. A copy of the petition shall, within such period, be served on the officer with whom the nomination petition or paper was filed. Upon the presentation of such a petition the court shall make an order fixing a time for hearing which shall not be later than 10 days after the last day for filing such nomination petition or paper, and specifying the time and manner of notice that shall be given to the candidate named in the*460 nomination petition or paper sought to be set aside. On the day fixed for the hearing, the court shall proceed without delay to hear such objections, and shall give the hearing precedence over any other business before it, and shall finally determine the matter not later than 15 days after the last day for filing such nomination petitions or papers. If the court finds that the nomination petition or paper is defective under the provisions of section 411 of this title, or that it does not contain a sufficient number of genuine signatures of electors entitled to sign it under the provisions of this chapter, or was not filed by persons entitled to file it, it shall be set aside. If the objections relate to material errors or defects apparent on the face of the nomination petition or paper, or on the face of the accompanying or appended affidavits, the court, after hearing, may, in its discretion, permit amendments within such time and upon such terms as to payment of costs, as the court may specify. In case a petition under this section is dismissed, the court shall make such order as to the payment of the cost of the proceeding, including witness fees, as it shall deem just. If a person shall sign any nomination petitions or papers for a greater number of candidates than he is permitted under the provisions of this chapter, if such signatures bear the same date, they shall, upon objections filed thereto, not be counted on any petition or paper and if they bear different dates, they shall be counted in the order of their priority of date, for only so many persons as there are candidates to be nominated or voted for by an elector at the general election.
18 V.I.C. § 412 (emphases added).
Had Fawkes rejected Hansen’s nomination papers when they were originally filed in May 2014, it is at least arguable that section 411(c) may have authorized Hansen to submit new nomination papers within three days of the rejection.
While not determinative to our outcome given our conclusion that a judge’s policy preferences are not sufficient reasons to justify disregarding the plain text of a statute, we note that the purported inequity identified by the District Court in its Payne II decision is based on an incorrect interpretation of section 412. In Payne II, the District Court stated that “an extension of the Supreme Court’s ‘no automatic right to cure’ interpretation of Section 412 to Section 411 would seem to build an inequity into the nominations process based on the fortuity of whether a candidate happens to be the first person whose particular type of defect is accepted by the Supervisor of Elections and then successfully challenged in court.”
The District Court, however, appears to have reasoned that the absence of an automatic right to cure is tantamount to no possibility of a cure. Section 412, by its own terms, provides that “the court, after hearing, may, in its discretion, permit amendments within such time and upon such terms as to payment of costs, as the court may specify.” 18 V.I.C. § 412. As we emphasized in our September 12, 2014 order, at no point in these proceedings — whether before the Superior Court initially, on appeal to this Court, or before the Superior Court on remand — did Hansen ever request that either court exercise its discretion to provide her with time to obtain a pardon prior to setting aside her nomination papers. “Modem pleading rules may be lax, but they still require that a party plead a claim before the court decides.” Musson Theatrical; Inc.,
We also disagree that applying sections 411 and 412 as they are written would render the statutes unconstitutional. In Payne II, the District Court reasoned that our interpretation of sections 411 and 412 may violate Section 6(b) of the Revised Organic Act
This Court has never held, whether in its September 12, 2014 order or in the instant opinion, that Hansen — despite having received a pardon from the Governor — is still not eligible to serve in the 31st Legislature. Rather, the issue is whether the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order setting aside Hansen’s nomination papers and directing that Fawkes remove her name from the general election ballot has somehow become invalid due to the Governor’s September 3, 2014 pardon. Because section 412 vests the right for a candidate to cure a nomination paper that has been judicially set aside in the sound discretion of the Superior Court, and Hansen never sought such a cure, we conclude that the August 29, 2014 order must stand, and that Hansen’s name may not be reinstated on the general election ballot. However, if Hansen were to mount a write-in candidacy — as she is entitled to do so under Virgin
Finally, we note that Hansen, in her brief in this appeal as well as her earlier filings in the District Court and the Superior Court, has taken the position that “[b]oth the Superior Court and Fawkes strictly and faithfully complied with this Court’s Judgment and Mandate that Fawkes ‘set aside the [first set] of nomination papers’ of Senator Hansen.” (Hansen Br. 1 (brackets in original).) However, neither this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and order, nor the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order, referred to a “first set of nomination papers.” This Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion “directed] the Superior Court to grant Bryan’s petition and remove Hansen from the general election ballot.” Bryan I,
C. Enforcement of Local Court Orders
Having determined that this Court’s August 28, 2014 opinion and the Superior Court’s August 29, 2014 order remain valid, we must now determine whether Bryan is entitled to have that order enforced. “The right to have a judgment enforced is not inherent in the judgment itself,” but naturally must “come from other provisions of law,” given that “[t]he judgment is itself a creation of law.” Stanford v. Coram,
We recognize, of course, that specific performance of the August 29, 2014 order is somewhat complicated by the fact that absentee ballots have been printed and early voting has begun, all of which include Hansen as a candidate for membership in the 31st Legislature. We further acknowledge that the United States Supreme Court has held that “the right of suffrage can be denied by a debasement or dilution of the weight of a citizen’s vote just as effectively as by wholly prohibiting the free exercise of the franchise.” Reynolds v. Sims,
We also do not believe that the rule announced by the United States Supreme Court in Purcell v. Gonzalez,
Moreover, we note that Purcell and similar cases, in addition to involving injunctions, did not involve challenges to a candidate’s access to the ballot, but instead involved requests for courts to impose large-scale changes to the election process itself that affected both voters and poll workers. See, e.g., Frank v. Walker,
Moreover, the resolution of this case will have no impact on voters — as noted earlier, we are confident thát those who already voted for Hansen will have their votes count, while those who have not yet voted could still vote for her as a write-in — or on elections personnel, who would not have to be trained to implement any new procedures. The sole cost incurred would be the costs associated with printing a new general election ballot, which, as we explain in greater detail below, cannot form a valid basis for declining to enforce the August 29, 2014 order, given that Fawkes’s decision not to comply with the August 29, 2014 order is precisely the reason why those costs would need to be incurred in the first place.
The decision of the Minnesota Supreme Court in Melendez v. O’Connor,
Likewise, we are not persuaded by Fawkes’s claim that this Court should not order her to remove Hansen from the ballot given that ballots were already printed. While we agree that “the value of preserving the status quo [in an election case] is much higher than in most other contexts,” Veasey,
Permitting Hansen’s name to appear on the general election ballot, notwithstanding the fact that it is not entitled to be there, would in effect nullify section 412 — a statute enacted to protect the public in precisely a situation such as this, where the Supervisor of Elections accepts nomination papers that, under Virgin Islands law, should not have been accepted — and it would reward both Fawkes and Hansen by granting them de facto relief from the August 28, 2014 opinion, the August 29, 2014 order, and the September 12, 2014 order not because they were incorrectly decided, but simply because Fawkes was able to successfully evade compliance and avoid the review of this Court until two weeks before the election. A decision from the territory of Guam supports this holding. Guam Election Comm’n v. Responsible Choices for All Adults Coalition,
While not determinative in our decision to order Fawkes to remove Hansen’s name from the general election ballot, we also note that
In this case, the Superior Court held a hearing on October 7, 2014, and even provided the parties with an opportunity to submit “anything in writing” by the close of business on October 8, 2014 (Hr’g Tr. 67), yet Fawkes failed to come forward with any evidence whatsoever to support a claim that she cannot order the reprinting of the general election ballot. Moreover, we note that Hansen is a candidate for the 31st Legislature from the District of St. Croix, and thus only the St. Croix general election ballot will need to be reprinted, rather than the general election ballot for the entire Territory. Additionally, we cannot ignore that, under Virgin Islands law, the Supervisor of Elections must use electronic voting machines, see 18 V.I.C. §§ 501, 521-24, and thus any cost in changing the ballot will likely be lower than in years past, given that the ballot may be changed simply by reprogramming a voting machine. And to the extent new paper ballots may not be printed in a sufficient time, other potential remedies exist to enforce the August 29, 2014 order, such as covering
D. Sanctions
Finally, we turn to Bryan’s request that the Superior Court, in addition to enforcing its August 29, 2014 order, hold Fawkes in contempt for her non-compliance or otherwise impose sanctions. It is well-established that the Superior Court’s decision to impose, or decline to impose, a sanction — including the ultimate sanction of contempt — is typically reviewed only for abuse of discretion. In re Rogers,
Courts have not spoken with a single voice as to whether the issuance of two conflicting orders by two separate courts, in which one court’s order cannot be followed without violating the other court’s order, serves as a valid defense to the imposition of sanctions, whether for contempt or otherwise. Compare In re Cornyn,
In the portion of his motion requesting imposition of sanctions, Bryan alleged that Fawkes and Hansen colluded to obtain the District Court temporary restraining order and permanent injunction in order to frustrate the ability of this Court and the Superior Court to enforce our otherwise-valid August 28, 2014 opinion and August 29, 2014 order. Specifically, Bryan alleged in his motion that Fawkes — despite having numerous defenses available to her, both as to jurisdiction and the merits — chose to “do[] nothing to defend herself in the District Court action,” electing to “not even lodge as a basic defense the valid court orders from the Supreme and Superior Courts,” and instead “proffer[] the identical arguments given by Hansen and the other Plaintiffs.” (Mot. 11 (emphasis in original).) To bolster his claim of collusion, Bryan notes that Fawkes and Hansen were co-appellees in the Bryan I proceeding and took substantially the same position on the merits, and further notes that Fawkes accepted representation from the Virgin Islands Attorney General, which he implies may have constituted a conflict of interest given that it is the Attorney General who advised the Governor as to the legal effect of Hansen’s pardon and issued the advisory opinion, relied upon by Hansen, that section 411 provided her with an automatic right to cure. (Id. at 10.) Even the District Court acknowledged, in its Bryan III opinion, the possibility that the Superior Court could hold Fawkes in contempt if Bryan established that Fawkes failed to mount a credible defense in violation of local law.
Despite Bryan having brought these issues directly before it, the Superior Court failed to make any factual findings or issue any conclusions of law based on the collusion claim; in fact, the October 10,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Superior Court’s October 10, 2014 order, again order Fawkes to remove Hansen’s name from the general election ballot for the November 4, 2014 general election, and remand the case to the Superior Court to make the factual findings and
In so holding, we recognize that this decision will not be without controversy; for instance, we note that Hansen’s counsel told the Superior Court judge, at the October 7, 2014 hearing, that declining to follow the District Court orders “would get you a ticket to the Supreme Court faster than your head could spin. Not the V.I. Supreme Court, the U.S. Supreme Court.” (Hr’g Tr. 52.) This Court recognizes that, as a result of the passage of Public Law 112-226, the United States Supreme Court is “the final arbiter” of any conflict between this Court and the District Court. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air,
Notes
Although a member of the Joint Board of Elections by virtue of his membership on the St. Croix District Board of Elections, the complaints filed by Hansen and the five voters did not identify Bryan as a defendant, but only the Joint Board.
In its Bryan III opinion, the District Court noted that it was “unclear” whether the Joint Board of Elections had been a party to the proceedings in this Court and the Superior Court, or if Fawkes had been the only respondent. Nevertheless, the District Court proceeded as if the Joint Board of Elections had been a party “because the Joint Boards were included in the caption of Senator Hansen’s ‘Notice of Removal,’ as well as in the filings that have followed.”
On the same day, Fawkes filed a “Notice of Joinder” with the Superior Court stating that she fully joined in the supplemental brief submitted by Hansen.
“This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.” U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2.
This is in accord with numerous decisions holding that other limitations on the power of state governments found in the United States Constitution do not apply to territorial governments, given that territorial governments exercise authority that has been delegated by Congress under Article IV. See Sakamoto v. Duty Free Shoppers, Ltd.,
See also State v. Montano,
We acknowledge that the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, shortly after issuance of the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision rejecting its analysis, dismissed the opinion as “a scholarly discussion of this Court’s prior ruling” and “an improper collateral attack on that ruling.” Robertson v. Bartels,
In fact, given the District Court’s explicit finding that all of the parties in the Payne case agreed on every legal issue, including the fact that a temporary restraining order and permanent injunction should issue, it is not clear to this Court how a live case and controversy was before the District Court. See Johnson v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Notably, the fact that the Payne matter was completely uncontested prevented any of the parties from appealing the District Court’s decisions to the Third Circuit.
Although not determinative to our analysis given that Hansen clearly possessed standing to challenge any decision to remove her name from the general election ballot, see Bowsher v. Synar,
In fact, as noted above, the District Court never identified, in its orders in Payne I, Payne II, or Payne III, the jurisdictional basis for issuing a temporary restraining order or injunction based solely on an interpretation of Virgin Islands law. Rather, the District Court referenced supplemental jurisdiction as its authority for issuing the Payne orders for the first time in its opinion in Bryan III, where it stated that it could exercise supplemental jurisdiction pursuant to the Third Circuit’s decision in Coffelt v. Fawkes,
We recognize that several of these cases refer to election contests, and that Bryan’s action against Hansen might be more accurately described as an election protest. However, the only difference between an election protest and an election contest is that an election protest refers to a judicial proceeding initiated prior to election day, whereas an election contest refers to such a proceeding initiated after the election has already occurred. Smith v. Scioto Cnty. Bd. of Elections,
It is well-established that the Revised Organic Act “divides the power to govern the territory between a legislative branch, an executive branch, and a judicial branch,” reflecting that “Congress ‘implicitly incorporated the principle of separation of powers into the law of the territory.’ ” Kendall v. Russell,
See United States v. Dixon,
See In re Amendments to the Virgin Islands Supreme Court Internal Operating Procedures and Style Guide, S. Ct. Prom. No. 2014-003, slip op. at 1 (V.I. Mar. 14, 2014) (striking existing Virgin Islands Supreme Court Internal Operating Procedures in their entirety and replacing them with new Internal Operating Procedures, to come into effect on April 1, 2014); Virgin Islands Court Rules Ann. 69 (May 2014 supp.) (identifying Supreme Court Internal Operating Procedures as having been amended on April 1, 2014).
See V.I.S.Ct.I.O.P. 5.7.1(a) (“An unpublished judicial opinion, order, judgment or other written disposition of this court may be cited regardless of the date of issuance.”); V.I.S .Ct.I.O.P. 5.3 (noting that an unpublished opinion generally has “little or no precedential or institutional value” but nevertheless “has value [to] the parties”).
For similar reasons, we also question whether the District Court’s actions were contrary to the federal Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2283. Although the District Court did not purport to issue an injunction enjoining further proceedings in this Court or the Superior Court, it is well-established — as with the Rooker-Feldman doctrine — that it is the substance, and not the form, of the federal court’s action that must be considered in determining whether the Anti-Injunction Act is violated by a federal court’s decree. See, e.g., Gloucester Marine Railways Corp. v. Charles Parisi, Inc.,
[The Anti-Injunction Act] includes all steps taken or which may be taken in the state court or by its officers from the institution to the close of the final process____It applies alike to action by the court and by its ministerial officers; applies not only to an execution issued on a judgment, but to any proceeding supplemental or ancillary taken with a view to making the suit or judgment effective.
Hill v. Martin,
This statute provides, in its entirety, that
Final judgments or decrees rendered by the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands may be reviewed by the [United States] Supreme Court by writ of certiorari where the validity of a treaty or statute of the United States is drawn in question or where the validity of a statute of the Virgin Islands is drawn in question on the ground of its being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties, or laws of the United States, or where any title, right, privilege, or immunity is specially set up or claimed under the Constitution or the treaties or statutes of, or any commission held or authority exercised under, the United States.
Although not directly raised by the parties on appeal, because the issue is relevant to the continued validity of the local court orders, we emphasize that we agree with the District Court’s conclusion that the Governor’s pardon could not operate retroactively. See Payne I,
We cannot ignore that, at the October 7,2014 hearing, Fawkes ’ s trial counsel—a different attorney than the one representing her in this appeal — argued, with respect to this Court’s September 12, 2014 order, that “There’s nothing in the Supreme Court’s order, when you read it carefully, rather than putting a spin to suit your own argument, there’s nothing in it that would suggest that the Supreme Court is saying Senator Hansen could not cure. There’s nothing.” (Hr’g Tr. 29.) While attorneys possess an obligation to zealously advocate on behalf of their clients, it is not clear to us how our statements that “candidates whose nomination papers have been challenged in the courts do not have an automatic right to cure the defect,” and that Hansen had waived her right to a discretionary cure because “at no point did she request, in the alternative, that the Superior Court provide her with an opportunity to cure the defect alleged in Bryan’s petition,” Bryan II, slip op. at 3-4, could ever be interpreted as not even suggesting the possibility that Hansen might not be authorized to cure.
As noted earlier, the District Court, in its Payne / opinion, predicted that this Court would adopt the position advanced by the Virgin Islands Attorney General in his advisory letter to the Governor.
[Tjhe opinion of the Virgin Islands Attorney General — an officer of the Executive Branch — as to how Virgin Islands law should be interpreted is in absolutely no way binding on this Court or the Superior Court, since statutory interpretation is unquestionably a judicial power of which this Court is the final arbiter. See 4 V.I.C. § 21 (“The Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands is established... as the highest court of the Virgin Islands and in it shall be reposed the supreme judicial power of the Territory.”); Aero Mayflower Transit Co., Inc. v. I. C. C.,686 F.2d 1 , 5-6,222 U.S. App. D.C. 279 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (“[Statutory construction ultimately is a judicial function.” (citation omitted)); Unwired Telecom Corp. v. Parish of Calcasieu, La.,903 So. 2d 392 , 404 (La. 2005) (“The function of statutory interpretation and the construction given to legislative acts rests with the judicial branch of government.” (citations omitted)).
Galloway v. People,
The parties, as well as the District Court, assume that the three-day cure provision set forth in section 411 (c) applies to disqualifications under section 411 (b). We are not convinced that the Legislature intended for the cure provision of section 411(c) to also apply to disqualifications under section 411(b), given that section 411(c) refers to nomination papers being rejected as defective, while section 411(b) refers to a candidate being disqualified for not meeting the minimum qualifications for office. In any event, we need not resolve this issue as part of this appeal, in light of our holding that section 411 has no applicability once a
As we noted in our September 12, 2014 order, we question whether Bryan’s objection to Hansen’s nomination papers — which was premised on her three convictions for crimes of moral turpitude — is one that “relate[s] to material errors or defects apparent on the face of the nomination petition or paper, or on the face of the accompanying or appended affidavits.” 18 V.I.C. § 412. In any case, we need not resolve this issue, given that Hansen never requested that either the Superior Court or this Court grant her time to obtain a pardon prior to setting aside her nomination papers.
The District Court, in its orders in Payne I and Payne II, stated that it relied on Moorhead v. Gov’t of the V.I.,
Section 411 outlines the duties of defendant Todman in her capacity as Supervisor of Elections in regard to the examination of the nomination petitions, papers and certificates, and necessary action should any defects in said nomination material be present. It provides that if the Supervisor determines that a candidate for election or nomination does not meet the qualifications, then she shall disqualify such candidate and delete his name from the ballot if the ballots have not been printed. Section 411 also requires the Supervisor to notify a candidate immediately by special messenger if any of his nomination material is defective along with the reason or reasons for the defect. In view of the fact that plaintiff submitted his material in late August and he was not notified of any defects in said material until the 11 th hour, it would appear that defendant Todman failed to timely inspect the nomination material and properly notify the plaintiff. That failure is frankly inexcusable.
Despite this fact, the acts of defendant Todman do not give Moorhead the right to hold public office. Plaintiff, however, relies on the language of 18 V.I.C. § 412 to support his estoppel argument. Specifically section 412 provides that all nomination material received, filed, and “accepted after the examination required by section 411 of this title, shall be deemed to be valid, unless, within five days after the last day for filing” such material, a petition is presented to the district court setting forth any objections to the material and praying that such be set aside.
Section 412 speaks not to the Supervisor of Elections but to the public at large. It affords an interested citizen the opportunity to timely object to a candidate’s petition or papers. Section 412 allows objection after examination pursuant to section 411(b), and if no such proper objection is made within the time period, the nomination petition or paper is then deemed valid. Nothing in section 412 or section 411 indicates that the mechanism provided for in section 412 is directly applicable to the Supervisor of Elections, defendant Todman.
*462 18 V.I. at 243-44 (emphases and paragraph breaks added, and internal citations and footnotes omitted).
To the extent that equity is in any way relevant to the statutory interpretation analysis, we note that while the District Court concluded that this Court’s interpretation of sections 411 and 412 would be inequitable, it did not consider that its construction of these same provisions would also result in inequity — perhaps an even greater inequity than simply interpreting sections 411 and 412 based on their plain language. On its face, section 412 only authorizes judicial review if the Supervisor of Elections has accepted a nomination paper, while section 411(c) provides for an automatic three-day cure if the Supervisor of Elections rejects a nomination paper as defective. Thus, if the District Court were correct that the automatic three-day cure provision in section 411 (c) applies even when it is the court, and not the Supervisor, that sets aside a nomination paper under section 412, the result would be that a candidate whose papers are rejected by the Supervisor would have a mere three days to cure, while a candidate whose papers are set aside through a section 412 proceeding could attempt a cure during the entire length of the Superior Court proceeding, plus an additional three days after that proceeding has concluded. For example, if two no-party candidates submit nomination papers bearing only 40 signatures rather than the required 50, see 18 V.I.C. § 381(b), the District Court’s interpretation of sections 411 and 412 would provide that a candidate whose papers were rejected by the Supervisor with only three days to obtain the additional 10 signatures if the Supervisor of Elections sets the petition aside, while granting a candidate whose papers were accepted by the Supervisor and challenged in the Superior Court at least a month—or more if, as in this case, the statutory deadlines in section 412 are not followed by the Superior Court — to obtain the additional signatures.
48U.S.C. § 1572(b) (“No person shall be eligible to be a member of the legislature who... has been convicted of a felony or of a crime involving moral turpitude and has not received a pardon restoring his civil.rights.”).
In addition, the District Court held that it interpreted sections 411 and 412 as providing Hansen with an automatic right to cure because “interpreting Sections411and412to prohibit Senator Hansen from curing would require an inherently difficult analysis of the underlying constitutional issues.” Payne II,
We recognize that Fawkes initially removed Hansen from the general election ballot, but then proceeded to place her back on the ballot two weeks later, without obtaining an order from either this Court or the Superior Court to modify the prior judgment directing Hansen’s removal. However, it is so fundamental as to not require citation that such “compliance” with the orders of this Court and the Superior Court is illusory. See New York State Labor Relations
In her appellate brief, Hansen also argues that “this Court... limited her intervention rights to those rights asserted by Fawkes and did not grant her the status as a ‘full party. ’ ” (Hansen Br. 13.) This is patently incorrect. While this Court held that Hansen lacked standing to challenge Bryan’s standing to bring a petition under section 412 because Fawkes had already waived that defense, we emphasized that standing — like the statute of limitations — was a defense personal to Fawkes, as the respondent in the proceeding, and that Hansen was thus precluded from raising such a defense on Fawkes ’ s behalf when Fawkes had already declined to do so. Bryan I,
Hansen argues that, because Bryan’s motion cited to 5 V.I.C. § 1176 — respecting monetary judgments — and Superior Court Rule 111 — governing enforcement of judgments in the Family Division of the Superior Court — he lacks a good-faith basis to enforce the underlying judgment. However, as noted above, sections 243(4) and 281 of title 4 of the Virgin Islands Code provide the statutory authority for a party—or even the court acting sua sponte —to enforce a valid order. Because it is well-established that “the substance of a motion, and not its caption, shall determine under which rule that motion is construed,” Bryan’s citation to the incorrect statute or court rule, without more, cannot serve as a bar to him obtaining the relief he desires. Anthony v. First Bank Virgin Islands,
In her appellate brief, Hansen, relying on Beachside Assocs., LLC v. Bayside Resort, Inc., No. 07-626,
In a section of her appellate brief titled “The rights of the Voters who are holding an actual Permanent Injunction cannot be compromised in this limited proceeding,” (Hansen Br. 37), Hansen resurrects many of the arguments that the five voters had made in the District Court proceeding. We question whether Hansen has standing to bring forth arguments on behalf of these individuals when they have, for whatever reason, elected not to intervene in this proceeding. However, if Fawkes were to comply with the August 29, 2014 order by counting all early and absentee votes already cast in favor of Hansen together with any write-in votes she receives in the future, the rights of all individuals who have already cast their ballots will be fully safeguarded.
In her brief, Fawkes notes that section 411 (b) provides that “[i]f the Supervisor determines that a candidate for election or nomination does not meet the qualifications established by law for the office, then he shall disqualify such candidate and delete the candidate’s name from the ballot if the ballots have not been printed,” implying that this provision should serve as a bar to this Court ordering that the general election ballot be reprinted to remove Hansen’s name. As we explained in considerable detail above, section 411 has absolutely no relevance when a judicial proceeding has been instituted under section 412, as is the case here.
In fact, we note that the state governments in Purcell and similar cases did not request that the United States Supreme Court and pertinent federal courts of appeal engage in pure speculation, but came forward with actual evidence demonstrating that changing the election procedures at such a late date would result in actual harm. See, e.g., Veasey,
Although there was a suggestion at the October 7, 2014 hearing that Bryan may have withdrawn his contempt charge, Bryan’s counsel, when pressed by the trial judge, unambiguously stated that he wanted to “make it clear, since everybody else seems to be confused,” that he was “not abandoning” his contempt claim. (Hr’g Tr. 25.)
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I join the majority opinion in full except for the section addressing the enforcement of this Court’s and the Superior Court’s orders. The majority presents the specific performance of these orders as the only result it can reach, framing this issue only in terms of Bryan’s right to have those orders enforced. But whether a court will require specific performance of its orders in a contempt proceeding is ultimately a matter of discretion. See Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air v. Com. of Pa.,
Ballots have been printed that include Hansen’s name, and hundreds of votes have already been cast since early voting began on Tuesday.
The District Court’s orders — as incorrect as they were — have been complied with by election officials since September 12. Whether we like
As the United States Supreme Court has cautioned, “[c]ourt orders affecting elections, especially conflicting orders, can themselves result in voter confusion and consequent incentive to remain away from the polls. As an election draws closer, that risk will increase.” Purcell v. Gonzalez,
Aldeth Lewin, First day of early voting nets hundreds of ballots, The VIRGIN ISLANDS DAILY news, Oct. 22, 2014, at 2; Ernice Gilbert, Over 160 cast their ballots on first day of early voting on St. Croix, V.I. CONSORTIUM (Oct. 22, 2014), http://viconsortium.com/poli tics/over-160-people-cast-their-ballots-on-first-day-of-early-votmg-in-st-croix/, archived at http://perma.cc/Z4XD-D74Q.
