96 P.3d 732 | Nev. | 2004
Lead Opinion
Article 19, Section 3(1) of the Nevada Constitution requires, among other things, that each document of a ballot-initiative petition be accompanied by an affidavit, executed under oath by a person who signed the document, attesting that the document’s signatures are genuine and that the signatories were, at the time of signing, registered voters in the county in which they reside. Respondents submitted documents comprising two initiative petitions to the Nevada Secretary of State for inclusion on the November 2004 general election ballot. The Secretary then discounted thousands of signatures in the documents for failure to comply with Section 3(1) and disqualified the initiatives from the ballot. Consequently, respondents sought relief in the district court, which declared Section 3(l)’s affidavit requirements unconstitutional under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, and ordered the Secretary to qualify the previously disqualified signatures and place the initiatives on the ballot. We affirm because Section 3(1)’s requirement that an initiative-petition document be accompanied by a signatory’s affidavit imper-missibly burdens political speech by either compelling the use of only registered voters as circulators or compelling unregistered cir-culators to be accompanied by a registered voter who is willing to sign a petition booklet and execute an affidavit under oath authenticating that booklet’s signatures.
BACKGROUND
In full, Article 19, Section 3(1) of the Nevada Constitution reads, with emphasis added:
Each referendum petition and initiative petition shall include the full text of the measure proposed. Each signer shall affix thereto his or her signature, residence address and the name*484 of the county in which he or she is a registered voter. The petition may consist of more than one document, but each document shall have affixed thereto an affidavit made by one of the signers of such document to the effect that all of the signatures are genuine and that each individual who signed such document was at the time of signing a registered voter in the county of his or her residence. The affidavit shall be executed before a person authorized by law to administer oaths in the State of Nevada.1
In 1966, this court interpreted Section 3(1) to mean that an initiative-petition document, such as a signature booklet, must be excluded if it is not authenticated by a signer’s affidavit.
In an attempt to reconcile Section 3(1) and Buckley, the Secretary requires by regulations that each signature booklet be accompanied by a signer’s affidavit and a circulator’s affidavit.
Respondents Give Nevada A Raise, Inc., and Danny Thompson (collectively, GNR) sponsored a ballot initiative calling for an increase in Nevada’s minimum wage. Although GNR gathered more than the 51,337 signatures needed to ensure placement on the November 2004 general election ballot, the Secretary discounted thousands of signatures in booklets that were not each accompanied by “a valid affidavit signed by a registered voter who had signed that particular [booklet].” Consequently, GNR lacked sufficient signatures to qualify its ballot initiative. Respondents People for a Better Nevada and Carmen Cashman (collectively, PBN) also lost necessary qualifying signatures for their “Stop Frivolous Lawsuits and Protect Your Legal Rights Act” ballot initiative due to omitted signers’ affidavits.
On July 12, 2004, GNR filed a complaint for declaratory, in-junctive and writ relief against the Secretary, seeking to compel the minimum-wage initiative’s placement on the ballot. GNR alleged that, although its petition circulators had not signed the petition, they had signed affidavits authenticating booklet signatures, and that requiring affidavits executed by booklet signers violates the First Amendment. PBN intervened against the Secretary, stating that it had lost signatures under the same circumstances as GNR, and that it was adopting GNR’s complaint. The Nevada State Medical Association and the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce
Following a bench trial, the district court concluded that Section 3(l)’s affidavit requirements could withstand neither Buckley’s strict scrutiny nor a “lesser standard of review.” Consequently, the district court declared the Section 3(1) affidavit requirements unconstitutional, and ordered the Secretary to qualify the signatures he had stricken from GNR’s and PBN’s initiative petitions and to place the initiatives on the ballot. The Secretary, Medical Association and Chamber of Commerce appealed.
DISCUSSION
I. Buckley v. American Constitutional Law Foundation, Inc.
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects speech, which, as observed in Buckley, includes the circulation of initiative petitions.
Consequently, if Section 3(1) severely burdens political speech, we apply strict scrutiny; otherwise, “less exacting review” is warranted and “important regulatory interests will usually be enough to justify reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions.”
II. Section 3(1) severely burdens political speech
We begin our Section 3(1) analysis cognizant that a state, although it has “considerable leeway to protect the integrity and reliability of the initiative process,”
Under Section 3(1), then, circulation may be accomplished either by a registered voter or a two-person team composed of an unregistered person and a registered voter. In either instance, Section 3(1) mandates the use of circulators who are registered voters and who are willing to sign the petition. If unregistered circulators are unable to locate a registered-voter companion, their only alternative, if they wish to participate in the circulation process, is to register to vote. Requiring a circulator to be a registered voter is expressly precluded by Buckley, and requiring an unregistered circulator to be accompanied by a registered voter fails under Buckley’s reasoned disapproval of circulation restrictions that “significantly inhibit communication with voters about proposed political change.”
At least one other court has found a severe burden in a two-person circulation-team requirement. In Morrill v. Weaver,
As to Section 3(1), we similarly conclude that a team-circulation option is severely burdensome. But unlike the statute in Morrill, Section 3(1)’s affidavit requirement is not capable of a constitutional construction.
Although we fully recognize our duty to construe the Nevada Constitution in a manner that will preserve that venerable document’s text,
We therefore apply strict scrutiny: Section 3(1) must be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.
III. Section 3(1) is not narrowly tailored
Appellants identify, as compelling, Nevada’s interests in ensuring “that the initiative signature gathering process is fair, honest, reliable and verifiable.” For purposes of this appeal, we will assume that “policing the integrity” of the initiative-petition process is a compelling state interest.
As to the degree to which a signer’s affidavit advances the State’s interest in guarding against corruption of the initiative process, appellants do not address the fact that the person most competent to attest to the genuineness of signatures and the residency of signatories may be an unregistered circulator (or a registered, nonresident circulator), who cannot sign the Section 3(1) affidavit. And even if we were to follow appellants’ suggestion that Section 3(1) be somehow interpreted to allow a Section 3(1) affi-ant to rely on the “uncontradicted assertion of the circulator” as to genuineness and residency, the value of an affidavit not based on personal knowledge is, as noted above, highly suspect and directly contravenes the voters’ desire in 1958 to “make the requirements to commence and carry through an initiative petition more strict.” Thus, based upon the record before us, Section 3(1)’s requirement that each petition booklet be accompanied by the affidavit of a registered voter who signed that booklet does not tangibly advance the State’s interests in ensuring the integrity and reliability of the initiative process and therefore is not narrowly tailored.
CONCLUSION
Article 19, Section 3(l)’s requirement that an initiative-petition document be accompanied by a signatory’s affidavit severely bur
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s judgment ordering the Secretary to qualify previously disqualified signatures and to place GNR’s and PBN’s initiatives on the ballot.
This version of Section 3(1) was proposed and passed by the 1960 and 1961 Legislatures and approved and ratified by voters in the 1962 general election. The need for an accompanying affidavit originated in the 1958 version as part of an initiative-originated amendment intended to “make the requirements to commence and carry through an initiative petition more strict.” Propositions to be Voted Upon in State of Nevada at General Election, November 4, 1958, at 6.
Lundberg v. Koontz, 82 Nev. 360, 418 P.2d 808 (1966); see also Stumpf v. Lau, 108 Nev. 826, 839 P.2d 120 (1992) (observing that a Section 3(1) affidavit may only be executed by a registered voter who signed the petition document).
Nev. Const. art. 19, § 2(2); id. § 3(1).
525 U.S. 182, 194 (1999).
NAC 293.182; NAC 295.020.
interpretation of the Secretary of State #00-01 (Jan. 24, 2000).
The Secretary’s interpretation directly conflicts with NRS 295.150(2) when the Section 3(1) affidavit is for a referendum petition on a legislative act pertaining to a particular county. In that instance, the statute requires that the affidavit be based on “information and belief,” and the signatures must have been executed in the affiant’s “presence.”
As the district court issued declaratory and permanent injunctive relief in the absence of any factual dispute, we review the district court’s judgment de novo. See University System v. DR Partners, 117 Nev. 195, 18 P.3d 1042 (2001) (stating that, in the absence of disputed facts, preliminary and permanent injunctions are reviewed de novo); County of Clark v. Upchurch, 114 Nev. 749, 961 P.2d 754 (1998) (observing that a district court’s decision to render a determination in a declaratory relief action is reviewed for abuse of discretion, but that a district court’s issuance of declaratory relief based on statutory construction is reviewed de novo).
525 U.S. at 186-87. The First Amendment applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. Goldstein v. Chestnut Ridge Volunteer Fire Co., 218 F.3d 337, 340 n.1 (4th Cir. 2000).
The registration requirement originated from a voter-approved amendment to the Colorado Constitution. Buckley, 525 U.S. at 190.
Id. at 186 (quotation marks omitted).
Id. at 187 (quotation marks omitted).
Id. at 195.
Id. at 196.
Id. at 192 n.12 (quotation marks omitted) (alternation in original).
Id. at 191.
Id. at 194-95.
Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, 520 U.S. 351, 358 (1997) (quotation marks omitted).
Buckley, 525 U.S. at 191.
See id. at 194-95.
224 F. Supp. 2d 882, 886, 900 (E.D. Pa. 2002).
Id. at 894, 898.
Id. at 900, 902; accord Chandler v. City of Arvada, Colorado, 292 F.3d 1236 (10th Cir. 2002) (declaring unconstitutional a city ordinance limiting initiative, referendum and recall petition circulation to city residents); Molinari v. Powers, 82 F. Supp. 2d 57, 75-76 (E.D.N.Y. 2000) (invalidating a New York statute that allowed a circulator to witness signatures only in the political subdivision of his or her residence, unless the circulator was a notary public or commissioner of deeds), cited approvingly in Lerman v. Board of Elections in City of New York, 232 F.3d 135 (2d Cir. 2000); KZPZ Broadcasting v. Black Canyon Citizens, 13 P.3d 772 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2000) (invalidating a local residency restriction on referendum petition circulation).
In addition to declaring Section 3(1)’s affidavit requirements unconstitutional, the district court offered a construction that would purportedly avoid any conflict with the First Amendment. In relevant part, Section 3(1) states:
The petition may consist of more than one document, but each document shall have affixed thereto an affidavit made by one of the signers of such document ....
(Emphasis added.) The district court proposed construing “ ‘signers of such document’ to include someone who has signed one of two affidavits at the end of the petition rather than having signed the body of the petition.” But this construction poses a circular exercise, as it requires each document to be accompanied by “an affidavit made by one of the signers of such [affidavit].” Further, “such document” clearly refers to documents that comprise the petition, and not to “affidavit[s].”
State ex rel. Herr v. Laxalt, 84 Nev. 382, 441 P.2d 687 (1968).
Propositions to be Voted Upon in State of Nevada at General Election, November 4, 1958, at 6. See generally supra note 1.
Chandler, 292 F.3d at 1241.
Krislov v. Rednour, 226 F.3d 851, 863 (7th Cir. 2000).
See Burk v. Augusta-Richmond County, 365 F.3d 1247 (11th Cir. 2004).
Buckley, 525 U.S. at 196, 205.
See, e.g., NRS 205.125 (criminalizing the forgery of signatures on referendum and initiative petitions); NRS 294A.150 (requiring initiative sponsors to report contributions over $100); NRS 294A.220 (requiring initiative sponsors to report expenditures over $100).
The parties have not challenged and we do not comment on the validity of the Secretary’s regulations that require a circulator’s affidavit.
Compare Nev. Const. art. 19, § 3(1) (requiring a signer’s affidavit attesting to genuineness of signatures and residency of signatories), with NAC 293.182 (requiring a circulator’s affidavit revealing the circulator’s address and recitations concerning genuineness of signatures, residency of signatories, the
We note that local residency requirements, like the one found in NRS 295.055(2), are constitutionally infirm. See supra note 24.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Recognizing that political speech is the most vital ingredient to a healthy and evolving democracy, and following the dictates of the United States Supreme Court in Buckley v. American Constitutional Law Foundation, Inc.,
I write separately to address statements in the record below apparently ridiculing the administrative measures taken by the Secretary of State to comply with the exacting dictates of Buckley. To me, the severity of the criticism was not justified. It was incumbent upon the Secretary to attempt to effect compliance with a very strict ruling handed down by the United States Supreme Court. It was also incumbent upon him to test the validity of these measures before this court. Given the restraints imposed by the Buckley decision, and given the express language of Article 19, Section 3(1) of the Nevada Constititution, the task of effecting compliance was fraught with considerable difficulty. In my view, the ingenuity and vigor of the legal arguments offered in support of and in opposition to these measures demonstrate that the measures were neither unintelligent nor unwise. They simply fell short of federal constitutional muster.
525 U.S. 182, 194 (1999).