801 N.E.2d 514 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2003
{¶ 2} The Board had denied a protest alleging that certain part-petitions supporting a state-wide electoral initiative were insufficient for several reasons. The common pleas court affirmed the Board's decision denying the protest in all respects, save one.
{¶ 3} The court found that the part-petitions were not properly verified by the person who had circulated them because they were "false." R.C.
{¶ 4} The informational requirement at issue appears in R.C.
{¶ 5} "In consideration for services in soliciting signatures to this petition, the solicitor has received or expects to receive ____ from ____ (Whose address is) ____ Before any elector signs the part-petition, the solicitor shall completely fill in the above blanks if the solicitor has received or will receive any consideration, and if the solicitor has not received and will not receive any consideration, the solicitor shall insert `nothing.'"
{¶ 6} The parties stipulated that all the part-petitions which were the subject of the protest before the Board, except for two, indicated that the solicitor had or would receive compensation from "John Mitchell," whose address was shown to be "2301 E. Sharon Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45241." It was not disputed that John Mitchell was at the location when the part-petitions were circulated by qualified voters. Neither was it disputed that the location indicated is a Red Roof Inn motel where Mr. Mitchell was temporarily lodged, and that he is not a resident of Ohio but a resident of California. The two part-petitions that contained different information indicated that the solicitor, H. Clemons, was paying himself and that his address was Cincinnati and/or Miami, Florida.
{¶ 7} The trial court concluded that the address given for Mr. Mitchell, at a motel in Cincinnati, "was intentionally used on the petitions to mislead an elector into believing that the person paying the solicitor was a resident of Ohio," and that as a result the part-petitions were false in that respect. R.C.
{¶ 8} Appellants are members of the committee in whose name the initiative petition was circulated. They present five assignments of error on appeal.
FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶ 9} "The court below lacked subject matter jurisdiction to invalidate part-petitions on a basis not set forth in the initial protest."
{¶ 10} The jurisdiction of the courts of common pleas is determined by statute. Article
{¶ 11} R.C.
{¶ 12} We do not agree. R.C.
{¶ 13} The disclosure of the name and address of a payor of any solicitor mandated by R.C
{¶ 14} The first assignment of error is overruled.
SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶ 15} "The address of the payor provided in the circulators' compensation statements complies with R.C.
{¶ 16} The common pleas court found that the address for John Mitchell stated on the face of the part-petitions was false, and per R.C.
{¶ 17} Use by organized and well-financed interest groups of paid solicitors to circulate petitions in support of the initiative elections has been the subject of concern and disapproval. See Broder, "DemocracyDerailed: Initiative Campaigns and the Power of Money," Harcourt, Inc. (2000). Of particular concern is that persons whose support is solicited often aren't aware that the solicitor with whom they are dealing is paid for his or her efforts, and thus not necessarily motivated by a desire to advance the public good.
{¶ 18} States have in various ways acted to cure this problem by limiting or restricting paid solicitation. Those efforts are limited by the fact that petition circulation is "core political speech" for which the First Amendment protection is "at its zenith." Meyer v. Grant
(1988),
{¶ 19} The trial court implicitly held that the paid-solicitor disclosures which R.C.
{¶ 20} Election laws are mandatory and require strict compliance, and substantial compliance is acceptable only when an election provision says that it is. State ex rel Vickers v. Summit Cty. Council,
{¶ 21} The dispute here is over the sufficiency or correctness of the information that appeared on the face of the part-petitions disclosing John Mitchell's address. The word address derives from Middle English, in which it was a verb in the sense of to "set upright," and to "guide, direct," which later developed into "write directions for delivery on." Oxford Dictionary of Word Histories, Oxford University Press (2002). It is now defined as a "[p]lace where mail or other communications will reach a person . . . Generally a place of business or residence." Black's Law Dictionary (5th Ed.). In this context it is also defined as "the designation of a place (or a residence or place of business) where a person or an organization may be found or communicated with." Webster's Third International New Dictionary.
{¶ 22} It is undisputed that the address for John Mitchell stated by the solicitors on the face of the petitions they circulated, "2301 E. Sharon Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45241," is a motel or hotel at which Mr. Mitchell lodged, temporarily, while the part-petitions were circulated for signature. Neither is it disputed that, as the trial court found, "Mr. Mitchell's residence is in California, not Ohio." The court then construed the word "address" as it appears in R.C.
{¶ 23} The definitions of "address" set out above plainly includes residential locations. However, they might as readily mean a place of business. The General Assembly specified neither application when it enacted R.C.
{¶ 24} Had the General Assembly intended to limit the payor's address in the paid circulator's disclosure statement to the payor's residence address, it presumably would have so defined it by addition of the term "residence," as it did with respect to the street address of subscribing electors. The General Assembly didn't do that, however, and instead allowed an ambiguity, one in which the location indicated might reasonably mean either a residence address or a business address. Election laws must be strictly construed. State ex rel Vickers. However, strict construction doesn't permit a court to read a limitation or distinction into a statute which the General Assembly itself did not adopt.
{¶ 25} If the payor's business address is sufficient for the declaration which R.C.
{¶ 26} The payor's name and address is framed as a statement by the paid circulator, indicating from whom payment has come or will come and where that person may be found. It can function to reveal whether support or assistance has come from outside Ohio. It can also function to "direct" electors whose signatures are solicited to the payor, for whatever inquiry or other communication the elector may wish to make. The temporary character of the location doesn't necessarily defeat such an inquiry, so long as the identity of the location coincides in time with when the elector's signature is solicited. In this instance, it did. Whether Mr. Mitchell might be there afterward is immaterial to the proposition. Had the Red Roof Inn rented Mr. Mitchell his room for use as a business location for some other venture on a more permanent basis, for six months, for example, there would be no question whether it was his business address through that time.
{¶ 27} The trial court rejected the part-petitions pursuant to R.C.
{¶ 28} The second assignment of error is sustained.
THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶ 29} "Invalidation of state initiative petitions on the basis of information in the circulators' compensation statements violates art.
FOURTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶ 30} "Invalidation of state initiative petitions on the basis of information in the circulators' compensation statements violates rights of political association and speech of appellants and the circulators and signers of the petitions in violation of art.
FIFTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶ 31} "Invalidation of state initiative petitions on the basis of information in the circulators' compensation statements violates rights of political association and speech of appellants and the circulators and signers of the petitions in violation of art.
{¶ 32} The third, fourth, and fifth assignments of error are rendered moot by our decision sustaining the second assignment of error. Therefore, per App.R. 12(A)(1)(c), we decline to decide them.
Wolff, J. and Young, J., concur. *392