GREATER NEW ORLEANS EXPRESSWAY COMMISSION
v.
Honorable Rebecca M. OLIVIER, Judge, First Parish Court, Division "A" and Honorable George W. Giacobbe, Judge, First Parish Court, Division "B".
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*571 McCranie, Sistrunk, Anzelmo, Hardy, Maxwell & McDaniel, Thomas P. Anzelmo, *572 Sr., Burgess E. McCranie, Jr., Kyle Paul Kirsch, Metairie, for applicant.
Stanley, Flanagan & Reuter, LLC, Richard Charles Stanley, Jennifer L. Thornton, William M. Ross, Donald H. Knecht, Jr., New Orleans, for respondent.
CALOGERO, Chief Justice.
This case presents the issue of whether Louisiana law permits a judge to refuse to perform a statutory duty that is ministerial in nature, presumably in order to precipitate a mandamus action in which the judge will have the opportunity to argue that the statute is not constitutional. We hold that a judicial officer, like any other public officer, lacks standing to raise the constitutionality of a statute as a defense in a mandamus action seeking to compel the performance of duties that are mandated by statute and ministerial in nature. Thus, defendants here were without standing to raise the issue of the constitutionality of La.Rev.Stat. 32:57(G), and the district court erred in considering this argument.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY:
The plaintiff in this case, Greater New Orleans Expressway Commission ("the Commission"), is responsible for policing the Huey P. Long Bridge and operating, maintaining, and policing the Lake Ponchartrain Causeway Bridge. In December 2001, the Commission filed a petition for writ of mandamus against the defendants, two First Parish Court judges, to compel them to collect costs from certain traffic violators, as required by La.Rev.Stat. 32:57(G). The judges had refused to collect this cost, believing that the statute was unconstitutional.
Under La.Rev.Stat. 32:57(G)(1), a "cost" of five dollars[1] shall be collected from "any person who is found guilty, pleads guilty, or pleads nolo contendere to any motor vehicle offense when the citation was issued for a violation on the Huey P. Long Bridge or the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway Bridge or approaches to and from such bridges." The five dollar cost only applies, however, where the citation was issued by Commission police officers. Id.[2] The proceeds are initially to be deposited in the state treasury, then later moved into a "special fund" known as the Greater New Orleans Expressway Commission Additional Cost Fund. Id. (G)(2). The statute then directs the legislature to appropriate all money in the special fund to the Commission to "supplement the salaries of P.O.S.T. certified officers and for the acquisition or upkeep of police equipment." Id.
The district court denied the Commission's petition for mandamus. In its reasons for judgment, the court found that the defendants had standing to question the constitutionality of the statute, and that the statute violated several provisions of the constitution.[3] The Commission appealed this judgment directly to this court. *573 We held that we lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal under La. Const. art. V, § 5(D), because the district court's declaration of unconstitutionality appeared only in the reasons for judgment, and not in the judgment itself. Greater New Orleans Expressway Comm'n v. Olivier, 2002-2795 (La.11/18/03),
On remand, the district court amended its judgment to state that "La. R.S. 32:57(G) is unconstitutional for the reasons set forth in the Court's Reasons for Judgment dated March 5, 2002." The Commission has appealed to this court, challenging the district court's judgment on three grounds: (1) the court improperly held that defendants had standing to raise the issue of the constitutionality of the statute; (2) the court erred in declaring the statute unconstitutional; and (3) the court erred in denying the Commission's petition for writ of mandamus. Because the district court declared La.Rev.Stat. 32:57 unconstitutional, we have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to La. Const. art. V, § 5(D) to consider the propriety of the trial court's judgment.
DISCUSSION:
Before addressing the district court's holdings that La.Rev.Stat. 32:57 is unconstitutional and that the Commission was not entitled to mandamus relief, we must first consider the court's determination that these judges, as defendants in a mandamus proceeding, had standing to challenge the constitutionality of the statute. This is so because this court may only consider a constitutional issue where "`the procedural posture of the case and the relief sought by the appellant demand that [it] do so.'" State v. Mercadel, XXXX-XXXX (La.5/25/04),
This court has explained that a party has standing to argue that a statute violates the constitution only where the statute "seriously affects" the party's own rights. Mercadel,
On several occasions, this court has considered how the doctrine of standing applies to a public official who is a party to a mandamus action seeking performance of statutory duties, and who attempts to justify his or her nonperformance on the grounds that the statute violates the constitution. In State ex rel. New Orleans Canal & Banking Co. v. Heard,
[W]e feel fully confirmed in the correctness of the conclusion [] ... that executive officers of the state government have no authority to decline the performance of purely ministerial duties which are imposed upon them by a law, on the ground that it contravenes the constitution. Laws are presumed to be, and must be treated and acted upon by subordinate executive functionaries as, constitutional and legal, until their unconstitutionality or illegality has been judicially established; for in a well-regulated government obedience to its laws by executive officers is absolutely essential and of paramount importance. Were it not so, the most inextricable confusion would inevitably result, and `produce such collision in the administration of public affairs as to materially impede the proper and necessary operations of government.' It was surely never intended that an executive functionary should nullify a law by neglecting or refusing to execute it. The result of this conclusion is that respondents are without right to urge the unconstitutionality of the concurrent resolution which is involved.
Id. at 751. Having found that the executive officers lacked standing, the court did not consider their constitutional challenge to the statute.
In Dore v. Tugwell,
Again, in Smith v. Flournoy,
This court has applied the standing requirements articulated in Heard not only to executive officials, but to members of the judicial branch as well. In State ex rel. Hall v. Judge of the Tenth Judicial District,
Such a latitude would present cases where, in a certain district, an accused could be charged, tried and punished for an offence under a statute recognized as binding by the judge of that particular district, when at the same time, in an adjoining district, the accused would be protected from prosecution for a similar offence, on the ground that the same statute would be held unconstitutional by the judge of the latter district.
Id. Thus, we stated, it was better left to criminal defendants actually charged with *576 violating a statute, and not to judges in a criminal cases, to raise the issue of a statute's constitutionality. Id.
Similarly, in Crespo v. Viola,
Thus, we reject defendants' attempt to distinguish Heard as applying only to executive officers. Although the officials involved in Heard, Dore, and Smith were members of the executive branch, those decisions did not turn upon this fact. And, more significantly, the Hall and Crespo cases applied the same standing requirements to members of the judiciary as were applied to the executive branch in Heard and its progeny. Moreover, we find that some of the policy concerns we articulated in Heard with respect to the executive branch apply with equal force when the public officer at issue is a member of the judiciary. Although it is uniquely the province of judges to interpret the law, it is essential that they constrain themselves to do so only when an appropriate case is presented to them for adjudication. To condone defendants' refusal to comply with a presumptively constitutional legislative act, when no litigant had challenged the act's validity, would tend to hasten the "inextricable confusion" and "collision in the administration of public affairs as to materially impede the proper and necessary operations of government" that Heard foretold.
Also, the dangers of inconsistent enforcement that we predicted in Hall have become reality in this case. While defendants have refused to collect the statutory cost, the judges of the Second Parish Court for the Parish of Jefferson and the 22nd Judicial District Court for the Parish of St. Tammany have imposed the cost. Thus, whether a violator is charged the cost depends upon the fortuity of which court he happens to find himself in, a result that we do not countenance.
Just as we noted in Hall,
Moreover, we find that defendants', and the court of appeal's, reliance upon Safety Net for Abused Persons v. Segura, 96-1978 (La.4/8/97),
Safety Net does not stand for the proposition that a judge may question the constitutionality of a statute in a mandamus proceeding in which he is a party, because this court did not consider or decide that precise question in the case. The Safety Net court merely proceeded to the constitutional question without considering the threshold issue of standing. This case does not provide a blueprint for judges seeking to mount challenges to the constitutionality of statutes in the future.[7]
Although we find that Safety Net does not support defendants' contention that they have standing, we note that the constitutional issue defendants have identified in this case is not an insignificant one. Safety Net,
Thus, we hold that defendants' lacked standing to challenge the constitutionality of La.Rev.Stat. 32:57(G) as parties to a mandamus proceeding which seeks to compel them to perform statutory duties that are ministerial in nature. Because we find that the threshold requirement of standing is not met in this case, we do not consider the correctness of the district court's judgment that the statute is unconstitutional.
DECREE:
The district court's holding that the defendant judges had standing to challenge the constitutionality of La.Rev.Stat. 32:57 is reversed, and its judgment finding the statute unconstitutional and denying the Commission's petition for writ of mandamus *578 is vacated and set aside. In light of our ruling in this case, it becomes unnecessary for the court to decide the constitutional issue at this time. We remand the case to the district court with instructions to find that defendants did not have standing to raise the constitutional issue as a defense, and to permit the litigation to go forward.
VACATED, SET ASIDE, and REMANDED.
JOHNSON, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
WEIMER, J., concurs and assigns reasons.
JOHNSON, J. dissents, assigning reasons.
I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion that the defendant judges do not have the authority to plead the alleged unconstitutionality of La.Rev.Stat. 32:57(G) as a defense to a mandamus action.
Our jurisprudence has long recognized that a court may not sua sponte declare a statute unconstitutional. This Court in State v. Brewster, 00-1266 (La.6/30/00),
As a general rule, courts should not reach the question of a statute's constitutionality when its unconstitutionality has not been placed at issue by one of the litigants. See Vallo v. Gayle Oil Co. Inc., 94-1238, (La.1994),646 So.2d 859 . Unless a statute as drawn is clearly unconstitutional on its face, it is preferred that the parties to a dispute uncover any constitutional defects in a statute through the dialectic of our adversarial system; for a court sua sponte to declare a statute unconstitutional is a derogation of the strong presumption of constitutionality accorded legislative enactments.
The sole exception to this general rule is that a court may reach the constitutional question on its own motion when its jurisdiction is affected. State v. Brewster, supra. This exception has typically been applied in cases where a legislative enactment interferes with or curtails the plenary power of the reviewing court. Id.
The defendants in this matter, two First Parish Court judges, argue that this case does not present a sua sponte determination that a statute is unconstitutional. Rather, the judges were specifically named as defendants in this mandamus action, brought explicitly to have the district court order them as judicial officers to enforce the statute at issue. The judges, in their role as defendants, raised the issue of the constitutionality of La. R.S. 32:57(G). They contend that as defendants, they, like any party litigant, have the right to assert any defense to an action naming them personally and seeking an order compelling them to act in a manner contrary to their oath. Defendants argue further that under federal and Louisiana law, a party has standing to challenge the constitutionality of a statute if the statute adversely affects his or her own right. Whitnell v. Silverman, 95-0112 (La.12/6/96)
The majority has held that judges, when named defendants to a mandamus action, have no right to question the constitutionality of the statute sought to be enforced as a defense to the action. The majority has relied upon several cases which address the issue of standing in regard to a public official's constitutional challenge to a statute or ordinance raised as a defense in a suit to compel the official's performance, most notably State ex rel. New Orleans *579 Canal & Banking Co. v. Heard and its progeny. However, State v. Judge of Fifth Judicial District Court,
The Heard court made the following reference to the Judge of the Fifth Judicial District Court case:
[I]n State v. Judge of Fifth Judicial District Court,5 La. Ann. 756 , where the act of the legislature providing for the trial of causes in which a district judge shall be recused by the judge of an adjoining district was alleged to be unconstitutional by the respondent, and held to be valid by the court, it being a question in which the judge had an interest, and which was a necessary issue to be disposed of. In that case, the judge was called upon to test the constitutionality of the law as a matter of defense.
Heard,
The most recent decision from this Court involving a constitutional challenge by members of the judiciary as a defense to a mandamus action is Safety Net for Abused Persons v. Segura, 96-1978 (La.4/8/97),
In my mind, one of the functions of judicial officers is to pass upon the constitutionality of laws. This is unlike the role of executive officers, whose duty it is to simply execute a law and perform their ministerial duties in accordance with the laws of the state until its constitutionality is determined by the judiciary. I cannot agree with a ruling that establishes a bright line rule that in every case involving a judicial officer as a defendant in a mandamus action, the officer may never raise the constitutionality of the statute as a defense. In most cases the judge does not have a direct interest in the particular statute at issue. However, where a judge has been mandated to enforce a statute which is either unconstitutional on its face or an abrogation of a court's plenary power; *580 the judge should be permitted to plead unconstitutionality as a defense.
WEIMER, J., concurring.
The judges in this case provoked the mandamus action after making a determination without a hearing, without submission of evidence or legal argument, and without the dissent of an adversary, that they would not collect certain costs. In making this statement, I do not suggest they were not sincere in their concerns. I would not establish a rule which prohibits a judge from invoking a defense of unconstitutionality in all cases, but would limit our holding that these judges lack standing in this case.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Although the statute labels the five dollars violators are charged a "cost," one of the central issues defendants have raised is whether this "cost" is actually a disguised tax.
[2] This five dollar cost is in addition to the base court costs and the actual fine a traffic violator already must pay. Defendants note that, in First Parish Court, each person who commits a traffic violation is already responsible for paying $78 in base court costs even before assessment of the extra five dollar statutory cost.
[3] The district court found that the statute violated the Louisiana constitution in several respects: (1) the statute was unconstitutionally vague; (2) the statute imposed a tax in violation of the separation of powers doctrine; (3) the statute created an unconstitutional classification in violation of the equal protection doctrine; and (4) the statute impermissibly allocated collected funds.
[4] We express no opinion concerning the correctness of the court of appeal's reasoning.
[5] See also La. Motor Vehicle Comm'n v. Wheeling Frenchman,
[6] Both Hall and Crespo are cited in Dore,
[7] Neither does State v. Judge of the Fifth Judicial District,
