Claudia Natalie CABRERA v. Cecilia R. PENATE, et al.
No. 110, Sept. Term, 2013.
Court of Appeals of Maryland.
June 20, 2014.
94 A.3d 50
Julia Doyle Bernhardt, Asst. Atty. Gen. (Douglas F. Gansler, Atty. Gen. of Maryland, Jeffrey L. Darsie, Asst. Atty. Gen., Baltimore, MD), on brief, Bruce L. Marcus (Sydney M. Patterson, Marcusbonsib, LLC, Greenbelt, MD), on brief, for Appellees.
Argued before BARBERA, C.J., HARRELL, BATTAGLIA, GREENE, ADKINS, McDONALD, and WATTS, JJ.
BARBERA, C.J.
Claudia Natalie Cabrera, Appellant before this Court, wished to seek the nomination of the Maryland Democratic Party for the office of delegate in the June 2014 gubernatorial primary election. When Appellant tendered for filing the certificate of candidacy expressing her intention to run in the election, she was a registered member of the Republican Party, but affirmed that she was a Democrat.
Cecilia R. Penate, one of the Appellees bеfore this Court, is a registered voter in the legislative district that Appellant sought to represent. She filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County challenging Appellant‘s candidacy. About the same time, the Maryland State Board of Elections (the “State Board“) sent to Appellant, through counsel, a notice of its intention to exclude Appellant‘s name from the primary election ballot, citing the fact that she was not affiliated with the Democratic Party.
After a hearing, the Circuit Court declared Appellant‘s candidacy invalid and ordered the State Board and Prince George‘s County Board of Election Supervisors (the “County Board“), the other Appellees before this Court, to excludе Appellant‘s name from the primary election ballot. In an order dated May 1, 2014, we affirmed the ruling of the Circuit Court. In this opinion, we explain the reasons for our conclusion that a registered member of one political party may not file a valid certificate of candidacy declaring the intent to run in the primary election of another political party.
I.
Appellant tendered for filing the certificate of candidacy with the State Board, requesting that her name be placed on the ballot in the June 24, 2014, gubernatorial primary election, on February 25, 2014, the deadline to do so. She sought the nomination of the Democratic Party for the office of delegate representing District 47B, located in Prince George‘s County.
On the certificate of candidacy, Appellant listed her address as 2528 Metzerott Road, Adelphi, Maryland, a residence located within District 47B. In fact, on February 25, 2014, Appellant resided outside of District 47B. She intended, at some time in the future, to move to the Metzerott Road residence; she moved in March 2014.
On March 4, 2014, Penate, a resident and registered voter in District 47B, filed in the Circuit Court for Prince George‘s County a petition challenging Appellant‘s certificate of candidacy, naming Appellant, the State Board, and the County Board as respondents. Penate brought the petition, initially, pursuant to
On March 18, 2014, Penate amended her petition, adding a claim pursuant to
(a) If no other timely and adequate remedy is provided by this article, a registered voter may seek judicial relief from any act or omission relating to an election, whether or not the election has been held, on the grounds that the act or omission:
(1) is inconsistent with this article or other law applicable to the elections process; and
(2) may change or has changed the outcome of the election.
Specifically, Penate argued that Appellant did not meet the party affiliation requirement of
(a)(2) Unless the individual is a registered voter affiliated with the political party, an individual may not be a candidate for:
(i) an office of that political party; or
(ii) except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,3 nomination by that political party.
As Appellant was a registered member of the Republican Party at the time she submitted her certificate of candidacy for the Democratic Party nomination in the primary election, Penate argued, Appellant‘s candidacy in that election was invalid.
On March 20, 2014, the State Board Administrator sent Appellant‘s counsel a “notice of proposed action,” advising that,
Section 5-203(a)(2) ... requires that any individual seeking nominаtion by a political party to a seat in the House of Delegates must be a registered voter affiliated with that political party. The State Board of Elections is required to determine whether individuals filing a certificate of candidacy meet the voter registration and party affiliation requirements of Title 5, Subtitle 2 of the Election Law Article. See EL § 5-301(b)(1).
According to State Board records, [Appellant] was not a registered voter affiliated with the Democratic Party as of the candidate filing deadline of 9 p.m., Tuesday, February 25, 2014.
The Circuit Court held a hearing on Penate‘s petition on March 21, 2014. The parties made arguments concerning whether Appellant satisfied the residency requirement, but Appellant arguеd, preliminarily, that Penate did not have standing to bring a challenge based on the party affiliation requirement. Appellant stated that nothing in
As to the merits of the party affiliation claim, Appellant argued that, although the deadline to file a certificate of candidacy for the 2014 gubernatorial election is much earlier in 2014 than in past election cycles, the deadline for changing party affiliation remains fixed with respect to the primary. Section 3-303 states that a voter‘s request to change party affiliation will be processed “at any time that registration is open.” Under
The State Board and County Board agreed with Penate that the deadline for putative candidates to fulfill the requirements of candidacy is the time of filing the certificate of candidacy, not the
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Circuit Court reserved judgment on the matter of residency but ruled that Appellant‘s certificate of candidacy was null and void “on thе ground[] that she was not a member of the [Democratic] party at the time of the filing of the [c]ertificate of [c]andidacy.” On March 26, 2014, the Circuit Court issued its order with an accompanying memorandum opinion. With respect to the residency requirement issue, the court ruled that Appellant fulfilled the constitutional residency requirement.4 The court then explained more fully its decision with respect to party affiliation:
Satisfaction of party affiliation is a prerequisite of the [c]ertificate of [c]andidacy. See Md. Election Law 5-203. To hold otherwise would require turning on head the oath
that a candidate takes in the certificate of candidacy which requires under Md. Election Law that the candidate is a registered voter affiliated with the political party.
* * *
[Appellant] has not argued or cited any other provision of the law that would permit the court to excuse her late February 27, 2014 change of party affiliation to cure this defect in her certificate of candidacy.
* * *
Requirements are there, as counsel for the County Board stated, for “full, fair and effective elections“; this is one the court cannot excuse nor turn a blind eye. Clearly, at the time of her certificate of candidacy [Appellant] was not a Democrat; therefore [Appellant] did not meet the requirements of the office, delegate to the General Assembly for District 47B under Md. Election Law 5-203(2).
Pursuant to
II.
We review de novo the decision of the Circuit Court, insofar as it rested on the interpretation of the Election Law Article. Falls Road Cmty. Ass‘n, Inc. v. Baltimore Cnty., 437 Md. 115, 134, 85 A.3d 185 (2014) (citing Forster v. Office of the Public Defender, 426 Md. 565, 579, 45 A.3d 180 (2012)).
Standing Under § 12-202
Before this Court, Appellant first argues that the Circuit Court erred in considering Penate‘s challenge brought under
In support of her argument that
On appeal, this Court held that the Circuit Court had erroneously granted the motion for summary judgment in reliance on
Just as Ross demonstrates the type of claims that may be brought under
Our cases thus show that
Appellant submits that, for another reason, there is no right on the part of an individual registered voter to challenge the qualifications of a putative candidate. She argues that the responsibility of the State Board under
Appellant misinterprets the charge of
based on alleged violations of the campaign finance reporting requirements of the Election Law Article. 387 Md. at 667-68, 876 A.2d 692. We conclude here that the function of an elections board to determine whether a putative candidate fulfills the requirements of the office he or she seeks does not bar an individual registered voter from bringing a claim pursuant to
It is important to specify the precise “act or omission relating to an election” under consideration here. Penate initially filed her petition pursuant to
Stating a Claim Under § 12-202
Appellant further argues that, even assuming that
cause of action under the statute. Appellant contends that, under Suessmann v. Lamone, 383 Md. 697, 714, 862 A.2d 1 (2004), the following four elements must be pleaded and proven to obtain relief under
Penate counters that the amended petition set forth three of the elements of
In Suessmann, this Court discussed the requirement that a challenger show that the act or omission “may change or has changed the outcome of an election.” 383 Md. at 714-21, 862 A.2d 1. In reviewing past cases, all of which required us to address claims that an act “may have changed” the results of an election, we found our precedent to instruct that there is “a high bar for satisfaction of
All the cases we discussed in Suessmann involved challenges to elections that had already taken place, where challengers speculated that the outcome of the election would have been different if not for certain alleged illegality or error. In Suessmann, then, we interpreted the phrase “has changed the outcome of an eleсtion.” On no prior occasion have we considered the meaning of “may change” as applied prospectively to an election that has not yet taken place, where our policy against overturning elections is not implicated. In Suessmann, we criticized the appellants for resorting to “pure speculation,” 383 Md. at 721, 862 A.2d 1, yet, in cases such as this one, speculation is permissible and, indeed, necessary. There can be no doubt that the inclusion of a candidate on the ballot “may change” the outcome of an election. Appellant‘s mere presence on the ballot creates the possibility that she may win the election; her absence from the ballot assures that shе will not.
We conclude that Penate satisfied this element of
Deadline to Meet the Party Affiliation Requirement
As to the merits of Penate‘s challenge, Appellant asserts that the Circuit Court erred in declaring her candidacy invalid, arguing that she changed her party affiliation to Democratic in time to qualify as a candidate in the primary election. That court, she charges, erred in finding her change of party affiliation untimely under
As we have mentioned, pursuant to amendments to Maryland election law, see 2011 Md. Laws ch. 169, the 2014 gubernatorial primary election is to be held earlier in the year than in past election cycles: in June, rather than September. See
Penate and the State Board11 are in accord that
Penate and the State Board point out that both
Finally, Penate and the State Board emphasize the unworkability, from an administrative standpoint, of permitting candidates to change party affiliation after submitting a certificate of candidacy. Preparing, certifying, and distributing election ballots for the June 24, 2014, primary, in compliance with the schedule set by various state and federal statutes, would be nigh impossible were June 3 the deadline to change party affiliation, as Appellant proposes. See
In interpreting a statute, we are mindful that the aim of statutory construction “is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the Legislature.” Stoddard v. State, 395 Md. 653, 661, 911 A.2d 1245 (2006) (quotation omitted). We have explained that, in determining the Legislature‘s intent,
we look first to the language of the statute, giving it its natural and ordinary meaning.... When the statutory language is clear, we need not look beyond the statutory language to determine the Legislature‘s intent. If the words of the statute, construed according to their common and everyday meaning, are clear and unambiguous and express a plain meaning, we will give effect to the statute as it is written.
Id. (quotations and citations omitted).
We find the language of
Although Appellant asserts that the Election Law Article does not set out a deadline for a putative candidate to fulfill the party affiliation requirement, we find such a deadline expressed within thе text of
We therefore decline Appеllant‘s invitation to declare, in the case of every primary election, that
Appellant did not satisfy the candidacy requirements for the office she seeks, as she was a registered Republican at the time she filed her certificate of candidacy for the Democratic primary. The Circuit Court was correct in declaring her candidacy invalid.
III.
Finally, Appellant renews her argument that it was the responsibility of the State Board, under
that she should not be penalized, by removal from the primary ballot, for the State Board‘s failure to perform its duty.
Penate points out that this interpretation of
For its part, the State Board questions what would have prompted the election officer in receipt of Appellant‘s certificate of candidacy to give her any advice at all, in light of the fact that Appellant filed “a false affidavit” certifying, under penalties of perjury, that she was a registered Democrat. Whatever the duty of elеction officials, the State Board argues, the putative candidate is not excused from the duty to provide truthful and accurate information.
We reject Appellant‘s suggestion that the State Board lost or relinquished its authority because, immediately upon Appellant‘s filing her certificate of candidacy, the Board did not complete its determination of whether she satisfied the requirements of candidacy. As we have stated, supra note 8, there is no time limitation imposed upon the State Board, under either
- I am a registered voter and a citizen of Maryland and meet all other requirements for the above listed office.
cratic primary; or (2) told [her] that in order to run in the Democratic primary, she needed to switch parties, which could have been done right then and there.”
- I understand that my signature authorizes local boards to change all voter registration records except party affiliation.
- I understand that final acceptance of this certificate depends upon verification of the information provided by me.
Here, the State Board performed its statutory duty: in verifying the information Appellant provided on the certifiсate of candidacy, election officials discovered that she did not satisfy the party affiliation requirement and, consequently, sent notice to her counsel that her name would not be included on the Democratic primary ballot. As we have held, Appellant did not satisfy the candidacy requirements of the office she sought, and the State Board was correct in so concluding.15
For all the above reasons, we issued our May 1, 2014, order affirming the judgment of the Circuit Court.
