Lead Opinion
¶1 Following its inquiry into the complaint filed against Leroy Not Afraid (Not Afraid) by appointed prosecuting attorney, Geoffrey R. Keller (Keller), the Judicial Standards Commission (JSC) filed its recommendation with this Court. The JSC recommends that Not Afraid be sanctioned for violating the Montana Constitution and the Code of Judicial Conduct by a public reprimand and the imposition of proceeding costs. Not Afraid objects to the recommendation and requests dismissal of the complaint. Keller has responded to Not Afraid’s objections. We conclude that the complaint must be dismissed. We state the dispositive issue as follows:
p2 Is the office of Crow Tribal Chairman an “elective public office” for Purposes of Article VII, Section 10?
I FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
■[3 Not Afraid was duly elected Justice of the Peace for Big Horn Bounty in November 2006, and he began his term of office on January ., 2007. Pursuant to Article III, Section 3 of the Montana Constitution ind §3-10-202, MCA, he took the constitutional oath of office before ssuming his duties.
[4 Not Afraid is an enrolled member of the Crow Tribe of Indians. In larch 2009, Not Afraid filed as a candidate for the office of Crow 'ribal Chairman while maintaining his office as Justice of the Peace, ’he Crow Constitution and Law and Order Code define the Chairperson as an executive position. Crow Const, art. IV, §1; Crow nw & Order Code. tit. 21, art. Ill, § 1(1) (2005). The JSC sent two ¡tters to Not Afraid and his attorney, advising Not Afraid of the ■revision of Article VII, Section 10 of the Montana Constitution ftquiring a holder of a judicial position to forfeit that position upon ■ling for а non-judicial elective public office. Not Afraid did not forfeit Hs position and campaigned for the tribal office. Not Afraid advanced fcer the primary tribal election held on March 28, 2009, but he was B)t elected Tribal Chairman in the general tribal election held on April 18, 2009. In December
¶5 Not Afraid sought dismissal of the complaint on the grounds that the JSC lacked jurisdiction; violated his Crow constitutional rights federal supremacy, Montana law, Crow tribal sovereignty and triba law; and improperly interpreted “elective public office.” Not Afraid argued that the alleged violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct were illusory because of the erroneous application of Article VII, Section 10
¶6 In March 2010, the JSC denied Not Afraid’s motion to dismiss concluding that Article VII, Section 10 and the Code of Judicia Conduct applies to Not Afraid for his actions as Justice of the Peace and that the Crow Tribal Chairman position is included within th< common definition of an “elective public office.” The JSC furthei determined that the Code of Judicial Conduct would serve as ai independent basis for sanctions against Not Afraid which would not b mooted by the completion of the tribal election.
¶7 Ahearing on the complaint was held on June 25,2010. Not Afraii testified about state offices he had resigned upon his election as Justic of the Peace, and about the counsel he had sought and receive* regarding the necessity of resigning his Crow legislative seat. H testified that, based upon this advice, it was his belief that he was n< required to resign his Crow legislative seat, and that he was also fr to pursue election as Crow Chairman while maintaining his state judicial position. After hearing, the JSC concluded that Not Afraid violated Article VII, Section 10, as well as Rules 1.1,1.2, and 3.1 of the Code of Judicial Conduct. The JSC viewed the advice against resignation which Not Afraid had received as a mitigating factor and recommended to this Court that Not Afraid be publicly reprimanded instead of forfeiting his office, and that he pay the costs of the proceeding.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8 We review the Judicial Standard Commission’s proceedings de novo. Harris v. Smartt,
¶9 As a preliminary matter, we address Not Afraid’s broadly-stated arguments challenging jurisdiction. Not Afraid argues that the ‘imposition of Article VII, Section 10 of the Montana Constitution upon [him] constituted a violation of and interference with the Crow Constitution[] and Crow sovereignty ....’’First, though not specifically raised by Not Afraid, it is clear that Not Afraid cannot raise the lefense of sovereign immunity. Indian tribes, and tribal officials acting n their official tribal capacity, have sovereign immunity from suit in state courts unless Congress authorized the suit or the tribe has mequivocally waived its immunity. Thompson v. Crow Tribe of Indians,
¶10 Subject matter jurisdiction pertains to the fundamental power of a court to hear and decide a case. Pinnow v. Mont. St. Fund,
¶11 We have also acknowledged that, generally, “‘[tjhe exercise state jurisdiction over activities occurring entirely on Indian lands i| an infringement on inherent tribal authority and is contrary principles of self-government and tribal sovereignty.’ ” Matter Hanna,
¶12 We disagree with Not Afraid’s contention that the JSC is attempting to regulate ‘lndian[s] running for tribal office.” The state has made no effort to regulate candidates for tribal office. The Crow Tribe may
¶13 Is the office of Crow Tribal Chairman an “elective public office”for purposes of Article VII, Section 10?
¶14 Article VII, Section 10 of the Montana Constitution states that ‘ta]ny holder of a judicial position forfeits that position by either filing for an elective public office other than a judicial position or absenting himself from the state for more than 60 consecutive days.” (Emphasis added.) Not Afraid argues that the definition of “elective public office” in the constitution and in statute does not include elective tribal offices, and thus he did not violate the provision by filing as a candidate for tribal office. He argues that Keller failed to establish that a "public” office includes an office filled by qualified tribal members voting in an election on their own reservation. Evidence introduced at the hearing indicated that the number of votes cast in the Crow ■Chairman primary election was about 3,500, and the number of votes ■past in the Crow Chairman general election was approximately 3,400. ■Keller responds that “elective public office” includes the Crow Chairmanship because the position is defined as an executive office in Che Crow Constitution, is elected by a public vote of eligible voters, and Boreign authority has held that tribal council members are “elected public officials.”
■115 ‘The same rules of construction apply in determining the meaning IBf constitutional provisions as apply to statutory [construction.” Keller v. Smith,
¶16 Using this framework as a guide, we first look at the words of the constitution. Constitutional language should be given its natural or ordinary meaning. Gen. Agric. Corp. v. Moore,
¶17 ‘The rule is that when the framers’ intent cannot be determined] from the Constitution’s plain words, recourse may be had to tb proceedings of the Constitutional Convention.” State ex rel. Racicot v. Dist. Ct.,
¶18 We may also consult the Legislature’s determination constitutional intent. “While such determination is not binding on thi] Court, it is entitled to consideration.” Keller,
Supreme court justice or district court judge candidacy for nonjudicial office-resignation required. (1) If a person occupying the office of chief justice or associate justice of the supreme court or judge of a district court of the state of Montana becomes a candidate for election to any elective office under the laws of the state of Montana other than a judicial position, the person shall immediately, or in any event at or before the time when the person is required to file as a candidate for the office in any primary, special, or general election, resign from the office of chief justice, аssociate justice, or district court judge.
This provision requires a judge to resign from his office upon becoming ‘a candidate for election to any elective office under the laws of the state of Montana ....’’Section 3-1-607(1), MCA (emphasis added). This anguage applies the prohibition to only those offices governed by state aw and thus excludes tribal offices, which are created and governed )y tribal law. Keller correctly notes that this provision does not include ustices of the peace, addressing only district court judges and supreme :ourt justices. We acknowledged the same in regard to the predecessor ersion of the statute in Committee for an Effective Judiciary v. State,
¶19 Not Afraid notes that tribal offices are not mentioned with the other offices included within the definition of “public office” provided by the election statutes, and he urges that we make the same distinction. Section 13-1-101(28), MCA, provides that “‘[plublic office’ means a state, county, municipal, school, or other district office that is filled by the pеople at an election,” and tribal offices are notably missing from this listing. There is also legislative history regarding the election statutes which supports Not Afraid’s position. In 2003, the Legislature considered a bill to generally revise the election code. The sponsor proposed an amendment which was eventually adopted anc is currently codified at §13-10-201(1), MCA: “A candidate may not file for more than one public office....” During the discussion of thi provision, Rep. Windy Boy asked the sponsor if he, as a tribal member would be affected by the rule against running for two position! simultaneously. Mont. H. State Admin. Comm., Minutes of the Hearing on H. Bill 190, 58th Legis., Reg. Sess. 3 (Jan. 29, 2003). Rep. Wind; Boy was also a Chippewa-Cree
¶20 Keller argues that this definition of "public office” should h restricted to Title 13 of the MCA and not applied to issues arisin under the Montana Constitution or the Code of Judicial Conduct. Hi notes that § 13-1-101, MCA, states “[a]s used in this title, unless th context clearly indicates otherwise, the following definitions apply... We have held, however, that “when a word is defined in the code, th: definition is applicable to other parts of the code except where t contrary is plainly indicated.” SJL of Mont. Assocs. Ltd. Partn. v. Cit of Billings,
¶21 This Court has previously addressed the issue of what constituí a ‘^public office.” We have noted that “ £[t]he American concept of public office is that of a public trust or agency created for the bene: of the people, and in which the incumbent has not a property right, be administered under legislative control in the interest of t] people.’ ” State ex rel. Hollibaugh v. State Fish & Game Commn.,
After an exhaustive examination of the authorities, we hold that five elements are indispensable in any position of public employment, in order to make it a public office of a civil nature: (1) It must be created by the Constitution or by the legislature or created by a municipality or other body through authority conferred by the Legislature; (2) it must possess a delegation of a portion of the sovereign power of government, to be exercised for the benefit of the public; (3) the powers conferred, and the duties to be discharged, must be defined, directly or impliedly, by the Legislature or through legislative authority; (4) the duties must be performed independently and without control of a superior power, other than the law, unless they may be those of an inferior or subordinate office, created or authorized by the legislature, and by it placed under the general control of a superior officer or body; (5) it must have some permanency and continuity and not be only temporary or occasional.
Forty-Second Legis. Assembly,
nI22 Applying the above test, the position of Crow Tribal Chairman is pot created by the Montana Constitution nor by the Legislature, so element (1) is not satisfied. The powers and duties of Crow Tribal Chairman are not directly or impliedly defined by the Montana Legislature, thereby negating element (3). At least two elements would pot be satisfied. While this test may not have been designed for the particular issue before us, it nonetheless provides guidance with regard to the factors we have considered to be significant in deciding Jhe contours of a “public office.”
1123 Keller’s argument emphasizes the following language from Committee for an Effective Judiciary:
The judicial article is clearly the most restrictive-it imposes severe sanctions on office-seeking by judicial office holders. Any judge holding office in this state forfeits his office if he files for anyoffice-other than a judicial position.” (Art. VII, Section 10, supra.)
Comm. for an Effective Jud.,
¶25 We acknowledge there is little authority to assist in deciding this question. However, it is clear that nothing within the constitutional language, the delegates’ statements, statutory provisions, legislative history or case precedent reveals any indication to include tribal offices within the concept of “elective public office” under Montana law. All indications point to the opposite conclusion-that tribal offices are creations оf another sovereign and not considered public offices of the state. Here, the office of the Crow chairmanship was created by the Crow Tribe and only tribal members are eligible to run for or to vote for the position. Members of the Montana public at large are not.
¶26 Therefore, we conclude that the phrase “elective public office” in Article VII, Section 10, of the Montana Constitution does not include the tribal office of Crow Tribal Chairman. Consequently, Not Afraid did not violate this provision by becoming a candidate for election as Crow Tribal Chairman. Because Not Afraid was not in violation of Article VII, Section 10, we also conclude that he was not in violation of Rules 1.1,1.2, or 3.1 of the Montana Code of Judicial Conduct. We further order that each party is responsible for its own legal costs and fees.
¶27 The complaint against Not Afraid is dismissed.
DATED this 30th day of December, 2010.
Notes
Pursuant to authority granted by Article VII, Section 11(2) of the Monta Constitution and by §3-1-1105(2), MCA, the JSC adopted Rule 10(b), which provide! fa] complaint shall not be a prerequisite to action by the Commission. The Commissioj may act on its own motion ... where the Commission considers it appropriate.’Tn State ex rel. Smartt v. Jud. Stands. Commn.,
Rule 1.1 provides: “Compliance with the Law A judge shall comply with the la including the Code of Judicial Conduct.
Rule 1.2 states: “Promoting Confidence in the Judiciary A judge shall act at j times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the independence, integrity, t impartiality of the judiciary, and shall avoid impropriety and the appearance| impropriety.”
Rule 3.1 provides: “Extrajudicial Activities in General A judge may engagej extrajudicial activities, except as prohibited by law or this Code....”
The JSC’s recommendation for the imposition of costs upon Not Afraid is mtrary to our holding in Harris v. Smartt,
It is not necessary to address, and we take no position on, the opinions expressed tthin the referenced Attorney General’s opinion, which focused on a different issue, j e simply review the statutes for the broader purpose of gleaning constitutional intent.
The Court in Committee for an Effective Judiciary declared the predecessor Irsions of § 3-1-607 and 608, MCA, to be unconstitutional. Comm. for an Effective Id.,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the result but dissenting from the reasoning.
¶28 I agree with the Court that the complaint against Not Afraid must be dismissed, but I strongly disagree with the Court’s rationale.
I. Jurisdiction
|¶29 The most fundamental problem with this case is evident from its (caption: Inquiry Concerning Complaint оf: Judicial Standards ICommission v. Leroy Not Afraid. While the Court correctly observes Sthat questions of jurisdiction may be raised at any time, Opinion, P 10-indeed, courts have an ‘independent obligation” to determine Ivhether jurisdiction exists, even in the absence of a challenge from bny party, see Stanley v. Lemire,
¶30 The JSC is established by the Montana Constitution, and its power and authority are delineated by the Constitution. In particular, ‘Tt]he commission shall investigate complaints, and make rules implementing this section. It may subpoena witnesses and documents.” Mont. Const, art. VII, § 11(2) (emphasis added). Significantly, this provision does not grant the JSC authority to commence investigations into any matter it deems interesting or worrisome. It says, rather, that the JSC shall investigate “complaints.” The implication of this language is that the JSC does not act on its own motion but, rather, acts only pursuant to a “сomplaint”brought by someone other than the JSC itself.
¶31 This interpretation is supported by the statutes implementing Article VII, Section 11. Section 3-l-1106(l)(a), MCA, states:
The commission, upon the filing of a written complaint by any\ citizen of the state, may initiate an investigation of any judicia officer in the state to determine if there are grounds fo: conducting additional proceedings before the commission. If tb commission’s investigation indicates that additional proceeding; before the commission may be justified, the commission shal' require the citizen who filed the original written complaint to sij a verified written complaint before conducting additional proceedings. [Emphases added.]
Likewise, subsection (l)(b) states:
The commission shall give the judicial officer written notice o: the citizen’s complaint and of the initiation of an investigation! Notice must also be given if a verified written complaint is file' and must include the charges made, the grounds for the charges) and a statement that the judicial officer may file an answer. Thi notice must be signed by the commission. [Emphases added.]
Also, § 3-l-1126(l)(a), MCA, directs the JSC, in its reports to thi Legislature, to identify “each complaint, whether or not verified] received by the commission” (emphasis added). There is no suggestio: that complaints may be filed by the JSC itself. To the contrary, thes provisions recognize only complaints filed by citizens.
¶32 This interpretation of Article VII, Section 11(2) is also supportej by the comments of the 1972 Constitutional Convention delegate Delegate Aronow observed that
this article provides for three district judges, one lawyer and one layman, a committee of five, to investigate and look into any complaints that are made or any information that comes to the attention of thecommission that a judge, either beсause of old age, other disability, is not attending to duties properly and provide for his retirement or removal from office.
Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, Feb. 29, 1972, p. 1123.
we’ve never had a commission of this type to which a practicing lawyer could go. The only way that you can get rid of a judge was through impeachment or wait until the next election and try to get somebody to run against him. This is a procedure where a letter can be written or a charge filed with this commission and ask them to look into it, investigate it, and, if the facts were found to be true, then to take such action as [they] might deem appropriate.
Id. at 1126 (emphasis added).
133 Likewise, Delegate Berg noted that
[w]e are particularly interested in seeing to it that District judges and Supreme Court justices have some protection, not only of themselves in the case of senility or alcoholism, but frequently charges are made against judges which, of course, they are almost powerless to answer. If there is a commission before whom those charges can be filed, the judge has an opportunity to defend himself.
d. at 1125.
¶34 The delegates contemplated that the JSC’s proceedings would be t the behest of an aggrieved citizen. Indeed, it is notable that the elegates adopted the current language of Article VII, Section l(2)wvhich, as noted, grants the JSC authority to ‘investigate omplaints”-over language that would have granted the JSC “the ower to investigate . . . upon complaint by any сitizen or on its own lotion.” See id. at 1122 (emphasis added). Section 3-1-1106(1), MCA, irrespondingly, refers to a complaint filed by a citizen, not by the JSC i its own motion.
■35 In the present case, however, the official record filed with the Blerk of the Supreme Court in Case No. PR 09-0639 does not contain ■written complaint by a citizen-let alone a verified -written complaint by a citizen. Rather, the so-called ‘Formal Complaint” upon which this action is premised was filed by the JSC itself. To be sure, it was signed by an individual (Geoffrey R. Keller). But Keller signed in his capacity as ‘Prosecuting Attorney,” and the first paragraph of the complaint states that Keller was “appointed by the Judicial Standards Commission” and is proceeding “on behalf of’the “Judicial Standards Commission,” which is the named ‘Complainant.” In other words, the JSC hired Keller as prosecutor and then directed him to file, in the JSC’s name, the complaint against Not Afraid, which the JSC ther heard and decided.
¶36 While not a matter of record, it appears that the JSC’s action wai prompted by an unverified letter from the Commission on Courts o: Limited Jurisdiction (COCLJ) dated May 5,2009 and addressed to the Chief Justice and myself, with copies to Not Afraid and the JSC. Thii letter was intended to “notify! ]” this Court and the JSC of “an issue that may result in the disqualification of a sitting Justice of th< Peace.”
1. Upon the filing of the written complaint, initiate ai investigation to determine if there are grounds for conductin additional proceedings.
2. If the investigation indicates that additional proceedings maj be justified, then “require the citizen who filed the origin; written complaint to sign a verified written complaint befo: conducting additional proceedings.”
3. After an investigation, and upon a finding of good cause, do an| of the following: (a) order a hearing to be held before the JS concerning the censure, suspension, removal, or retirement of t' judicial officer; (b) confidentially advise the judicial officer a: this Court that the complaint will be dismissed if the judici officer files a letter stating that he or she will take correcthl action satisfactory to the JSC; or (c) request that this Couj appoint one or more special masters to hear and take evidem and to report to the JSC.
4. If after a hearing or after considering the record and the report of the masters the JSC finds the charges true, then recommend to this Court the censure, suspension, removal, or disability retirement of the judicial officer.
¶37 Again, assuming the COCLJ letter constituted a citizen complaint, the JSC was permitted to initiate an investigation to determine whether grounds existed to conduct additional proceedings. If such grounds existed, the JSC was required to obtain a verified written complaint before conducting the additional proceedings. According to the record filed in this case, however, that procedure was not followed. There is no verified written complaint by a citizen. Rather, the JSC proceeded based solely on its own complaint against Not Afraid. The JSC held a hearing on the complaint in June 2010 (step 3(a) above) and filed a recommendation with this Court in August 2010 (step 4) that Not Afraid receive a public reprimand. Basically, everything the JSC did after receiving the letter and completing a preliminary investigation (step 1) was unlawful.
¶38 There is no authority for the JSC to charge, hear, and then adjudicate the merits of its own complaint. That approach is contrary ¡to the intent of Article VII, Section 11(2) and the dictates of §3-1-1106, MCA. The JSC in this case has plainly overstepped its authority. Moreover, I note that this procedure-under which the JSC has anointed itself complainant, investigator, and adjudicator-raises the same concerns which prompted this Court to enact structural changes to the Commission on Practice. See Goldstein v. Commn. on Practice of the Supreme Court,
¶39 The Court does not deny that the constitutional and statutory requisites for the JSC’s proceedings were not met in this case. Rather, in a footnote, the Court merely cites to the JSC’s Rule 10(b) and our decision in State ex rel. Smartt v. Jud. Stands. Commn.,
¶40 First, Smartt is distinguishable on its facts in that the proceedings there were initiated at the behest of a citizen (Samuel Harris) who filed first an unverified complaint, and later a verified complaint, against Smartt with the JSC. See Smartt, ¶¶ 5, 21. Notably, the JSC conceded that the First Judicial District Court Vas correct to enjoin the Commission from instituting formal proceedings [against Smartt] before it had obtained a
¶41 Furthermore, the question under consideration in ¶ 30 of Smart\ was whether the JSC had overstepped its authority by investigation allegations which had come to the JSC’s attention in the course o: investigating Harris’s complaint and which had been leveled by different individual who had not filed a complaint with the JSC. Se> Smartt, ¶¶ 5, 22. We stated that the JSC may act on its own motion and in the absence of a verified complaint, to investigate allege judicial misconduct based upon information otherwise received) Smartt, ¶¶ 29-30. Yet, although I signed our opinion in Smartt, upo: further research I cannot agree with the proposition that the JSC ma; file charges against a judge or justice on its own motion and then sij in judgment of its own case. That is not what the delegates had i: mind; indeed, as noted, they declined to adopt language that woul have granted the JSC “the power to investigate ... on its own motion.] Also, it is not what the applicable statutes say.
¶42 In this regard, this Court has held that the JSC may not adopl rules which conflict with the statutory provisions implementing Articl) VII, Section 11. State ex rel. Shea v. Jud. Stands. Commn., 198 Mon 15, 30-34,
assuming unto itself the right to ignore legislatively enacted provisions governing its procedure, and even its own rule requiring a verified complaint, in its perception and under the assumption that it is now acting and will act for the public good. The question, however, is not one of motives but of constitutional authority, for which the best of motives is not a substitute.
Id. at 32,
The commission, upon the filing of a written complaint hy any citizen of the state, may initiate an investigation of any judicial officer in the state to determine if there are grounds for conducting additional proceedings before the commission. If the commission’s investigation indicates that additional proceedings before the commission may be justified, the commission shall require the citizen who filed the original written complaint to sign a verified written complaint before conducting additional proceedings.
Ejection 3-l-1106(l)(a), MCA (1983 & 2009) (emphases added). This is lurther evidence that the JSC has no authority to commence proceedings against a judge or justice on its own complaint.
¶45 The significance of Justice Weber’s vote was overlooked by the Court in Smartt. We asserted that the Shea Court “did not issue the writ of prohibition solely because the Commission proceeded agains' Justice Shea without the statutorily required verified complaint, but, rather, primarily because the Commission exceeded its jurisdiction in| investigating a charge that did not amount to ‘misconduct in office. Smartt, ¶ 17. This is a complete misstatement of the Shea decision. The fact is that the writ of prohibition did issue solely because the JS1 proceeded against Justice Shea without the statutorily require^ verified complaint. That was the one-and only-ground that commanded a majority of the Court. Only a plurality reached th< conclusion that the JSC had also exceeded its jurisdiction b; investigating charges that did not amount to “misconduct in office,’! and the entire discussion under Issue 4 of Shea was, therefore, dictaj
¶46 For the foregoing reasons, the suggestions in Smartt that the JS' may initiate an investigation and file charges on its own motion am that we did not squarely hold to the contrary in Shea are simply wron; and should be overruled.
¶47 As a final matter, the Court notes that the JSC adopted Rule 10( pursuant to authority granted by Article VII, Section 11(2) an| § 3-1-1105(2), MCA. The former authorizes the JSC to “investigat< complaints, and make rules implementing this section,” while thj latter states that the JSC “shall make rules for the conduct of i affairs and the enforcement of confidentiality consistent with this part.”Yet, the authority to make rules is not also authority for the JSC to delineate or expand its own jurisdiction. In this regard, it should not be forgotten that jurisdiction is conferred “only by the Constitution or statutes adopted pursuant to the Constitution” and that administrative rules are not a source of jurisdiction. Pinnow v. Mont. State Fund,
1148 Accordingly, the JSC’s action here is legally unfounded, and I cannot agree with the Court’s ratification of it. The JSC has no luthority to charge, hear, and adjudicate the
II. ‘Elective Public Office”
49 Because the Court has proceeded to analyze the merits of the SC’s complaint against Not Afraid, I will explain my disagreement rith the Court’s analysis.
50 First, the Court’s entire discussion commencing at ¶ 17 and Dncluding at ¶ 26 is premised on the notion that Article VII, Section 0 is ambiguous. (As the Court concedes, if a provision is nambiguous, we simply apply the provision according to the plain meaning of its words and do not resort to extrinsic sources as the Court does here. Opinion, ¶ 15; see also State v. Turbiville,
¶51 Article VII, Section 10 states: “Any holder of a judicial position forfeits that position by either filing for an elective public office othei than a judicial position or absenting himself from the state for more than 60 consecutive days.” The term at issue is “elective public office.” These words have a plain and unambiguous meaning.
¶52 A “public office”is “[a] position whose occupant has legal authority to exercise a government’s sovereign powers for a fixed periodBlack’i Law Dictionary 1351 (Bryan A. Gamer ed., 9th ed., Thomson Reuters 2009). This, in substance, is the same definition of “public office” that existed when Article VII, Section 10 was adopted. See Black’s Lau Dictionary 1235 (rev. 4th ed., West 1968) (‘The right, authority, anc duty created and conferred by law, by which for a given period ... ai individual is invested with some portion of the sovereign functions o government for the benefit of the public.’). Likewise, this Court ha; recognized that “the creation and conferring of an office involves ; delegation to the individual of some of the sovereign functions government, to be exercised by him for the benefit of the public.” Stat ex rel. Running v. Jacobson,
1. The position must be created by the constitution, by ti legislature, or through authority conferred by the legislature
2. It must possess a delegation of a portion of the sovereign powi of government, to be exercised for the benefit of the public.
3. The powers conferred, and the duties to be discharged, must defined, directly or impliedly, by the legislature or throuj legislative authority.
4. The duties must be performed independently and withoj control of a superior power, other than the law (with exceptio not applicable here).
5. It must have some permanency and continuity and not be only temporary or occasional.
See Forty-Second Legislative Assembly v. Lennon,
¶54 The Court asserts that the first and third elements of the five-prong test are not met here because the position of Crow Tribal Chairman ‘is not created by the Montana Constitution nor by the Legislature” and the powers and duties of the position “are not directly or impliedly defined by the Montana Legislature.” Opinion, ¶ 22. But these observations miss the mark. The fact that the position is not created by the Montana Constitution or the Montana Legislature and the fact that its powers and duties are not defined by the Montana Legislature establish nothing except that the position is not a “public office” of this state. That is not the relevant question, however. The juestion, rather, is whether the position is a “public that is what the constitutional language says, d, for the reasons just discussed, it plainly is a “public office”-albeit, i created by a different sovereign, but no less a “public office.”
5 Next, is the position “elective’? An “elective office” is ‘ta]n office it is filled by popular election rather than by appointment.” Black’s w Dictionary 596 (9th ed.); accord Black’s Law Dictionary 610 (rev. l ed.) (‘One which is to be filled by popular election. One filled by the ect exercise of the voters’ franchise.”). Here, Article IV, Section 1 of ! Crow Constitution states that the position of Tribal Chairman all be elected by the qualified voters.” Thus, there can be no doubt it the position of Crow Tribal Chairman is an “elective public office.” Article VII, Section 10 of the Montana Constitution states that a holder of a judicial position forfeits that position by ‘filing for an elective public office other than a judicial position.” Not Afraid filed for an “elective public office” that was an executive position. Hence, he forfeited his judicial position.
¶56 The Court circumvents this plain-meaning interpretation of the unambiguous constitutional language by manufacturing an ambiguity where there is none. The Court asserts that Article VII, Section 10 is ambiguous-thus justifying resort to extrinsic sources-because it does not expressly state whether it applies to an “elective public office” of another sovereign. Opinion, ¶ 16. I disagree with this ‘failure by omission” approach. We can always criticize a statute or constitutional provision for using a general term in lieu of listing every specific object to which the provision is intended to apply. But that does not make the general provision ambiguous; it simply makes the provision broad and nonexclusive. This issue came up during the 1972 Constitutional Convention with respect to the jurisdiction of the district courts. The 1889 Constitution articulated a laundry list of cases and writs ovei which the district courts had jurisdiction. However, the delegates eschewed that approach in favor of general language so as not to imply that any cases or writs not specifically identified in the constitutiona' provision were excluded from the district courts’ authority. Compan Mont. Const, art. VIII, §11 (1889), with Mont. Const, art. VII, §4(1)] (
¶57 Likewise here, the language is general: Any holder of a judicial position forfeits that рosition by filing for “an elective public offio other than a judicial position.” The delegates chose this broad nonexclusive, and unqualified language. It thus was not necessary for them to state that the term “elective public office” includes elective public offices “of another sovereign.” If anything, they should have qualified the language which they actually used if they intended for it to be limited to “elective public offices of this state.'” Indeed, had they wanted to limit the scope of “elective public office” to state offices, they certainly could have included the “of the state” language which the Court wrongly inserts into Article VII, Section 10. See Opinion, ¶ 25 (asserting that “tribal offices are creations of another sovereign and not considered public offices of the state”~even though “of the state” is not part of Article VII, Section 10’s language (emphasis added)).
¶58 In short, although constitutional language “should be given its natural or ordinary meaning,” Opinion, ¶ 16, the Court fails to abide by this directive and instead inserts words (“of the state”) that do not appear in Article VII, Section 10. This approach violates Montana’s blackletter law-§ 1-2-101, MCA
¶59 Lastly, I do not believe the extrinsic sources cited by the Court support its ultimate construction of Article VII, Section 10. First, with regard to the January 29, 2003 hearing on HB 190, the Court in effect attributes constitutional significance to the remarks made in response to a question about the scope of a proposed statute. Opinion, ¶ 19. This approach sets bad precedent, not only because the remarks had absolutely nothing to do with the meaning of Article VII, Section 10, but most fundamentally because it is the province and duty of the judiciary, not speakers at legislative hearings, to interpret the Constitution and say what the law is. Marbury v. Madison,
¶60 Likewise, I do not find the Title 13 election statutes cited by the Court to be of any persuasive value. The Court considers it “notabl[e]” that tribal offices are missing from the definition of “public office” in § 13-1-101(28), MCA, which states: “ ‘Public office’ means a state, county, municipal, school, or other district office that is filled by the people at an election.” Opinion, ¶ 19. I find this, however, to be quite unsurprising. The Legislature does not dictate the procedures for electing candidates to tribal offices-a point the Court makes in ¶ 12-and thus there would be no reason for the Legislature to include tribal offices in the definition of “public offices” in Title 13. Title 13, after all, sets forth the procedures for electing candidates to state offices, not tribal offices. Moreover, Title 13 does not purport to implement Article VII, Section 10, and thus its
¶61 On the other hand, the Attorney General has opined-in a 1991 deсision which focused on a different issue-that §3-1-607 and -608, MCA, are implementing statutes for Article VII, Section 10. Opinion, ¶ 18. Yet, I am aware of no occasion on which the Attorney General has opined that these statutes fully implement the constitutional provision; and the language of the statutes themselves indicates that they do not purport to do so, but rather are directed at three specific state judicial offices.
¶62 To summarize, then, the Court takes unambiguous constitutional language, manufactures an ambiguity, and then uses extrinsic sources of limited or no probative value to rewrite the constitutional language-in violation of the canons of construction-from “an elective public office other than a judicial position” to “an elective public office of the state other than a judicial position.” I strongly dissent from this approach and from the Court’s corresponding conclusion that Crow Tribal Chairman is not an “elective public office” under Article VII, Section 10.
III. ‘Forfeits”
¶63 Having concluded under the foregoing analysis that Not Afraid! filed for “an elective public office other than a judicial position,” the j question arises as to what consequences flow from this action. I
¶64 As noted, Article VII, Section 10 states that the holder of a judicial! position ‘forfeits that position” either by filing for an elective public I office other than a judicial position or by absenting himself from the! state for more than 60 consecutive days. This language is both! mandatory and prohibitory. It dictates that forfeiture occurs upon! either of the two stated events. Correspondingly, it deprives the officeholder of his or her power to act in a judicial capacity. As Delegate Dahood observed during the Constitutional Convention:
[Constitutions are based on the premise that they are presumed to be self-executing, particularly within the Bill of Rights. If the language appears to be prohibitory and mandatory,... then in that event, the courts in interpreting the particular section are bound by that particular presumption and they must assume, in that situation, that it is self-executing.
Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, Mar. 7, 1972, p. 1644. Thus, once it is clear that either of the two events described in Article VII, Section 10 has occurred, then forfeiture of the judicial position is automatic.
¶65 We interpreted this language in one case, Comm. for an Effective Judiciary v. State,
The judicial article is clearly the most restrictive-it imposes severe sanctions on office-seeking by judicial office holders. Any judge holding office in this state forfeits his office if he files fоr any office-1' other than a judicial position.” (Art. VII, §10, supra.) Though it does not mention filing for a legislative or an executive office, the crystal clear message of this provision requires a judge to forfeit his judicial office if he files for either a legislative or an executive office.
Comm. for an Effective Judiciary,
¶66 Our determination that a judge forfeits his judicial office if he files for an executive office is in accord with the intent of the delegates, as evidenced by the following exchange which occurred when Article VII,
CHAIRMAN GRAYBILL: I take it that this means that he’s-he forfeits if he does either of these two things which were contained in two separate paragraphs above; namely, files for another elective office or absents himself for 60 days. Is that right?
DELEGATE SCHILTZ: That’s right.
Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, Mar. 13, 1972, p. 2187.
¶67 Thus, it is clear from the plain language of Article VII, Section 10, as confirmed by the delegates’ comments, and from our interpretation of this language in Comm, for an Effective Judiciary that when a judge files for a nonjudicial elective public office, the judge forfeits his judicial position. That is precisely what the Constitution says.
¶68 To ‘forfeit” means “to lose or lose the right to by some error, offense, or crime.” Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 457 (10th ed., Merriam-Webster 1997). ‘Forfeiture” has a well-understood meaning in the law. It involves “[t]he loss of a right, privilege, or property because of a crime, breach of obligation, or neglect of duty.” Black’s Law Dictionary 722 (9th ed.). In other words, forfeiture meаns that a person loses a right or privilege as a consequence of having done or omitted to do an act. It is a divestment as a consequence of default or offense; a loss by reason of misdeed or transgression. In the usual context, forfeiture occurs simultaneously with the act, error, omission, or violation of the condition precedent. Examples of these principles appear repeatedly in our cases. See e.g. State v. Riggs,
¶69 The JSC, however, construes the forfeiture provision as a resignation provision that works prospectively, where a judge has violated Article VII, Section 10 but refuses to give up his judicial position during his campaign for the nonjudicial office. The JSC acknowledges that Not Afraid did not resign his judicial position when he filed for Crow Tribal Chairman; and, for that, the JSC recommends that we publicly reprimand him. Then, given that Not Afraid ultimately did not win the Tribal Chairman position in the April 2009 general election, the JSC states:
Should [Not Afraid] file for non-judicial elective public office in the future (tribal or non-tribal), and refuse to forfeit any judicial position held at that time, the Judicial Standards Commission will immediately file a formal complaint with the Montana Supreme Court and request immediate suspension from office while the complaint is pending. [Emphasis added.]
¶70 Setting aside the fact that the JSC has no authority to file complaints for the reasons already discussed, the JSC’s approach contemplates that if either of the two events described in Article VII, Section 10 occurs, then the judge must affirmatively resign his or her position in order for the forfeiture to take effect and the office to become vacant. The JSC’s theory appears to be that forfeiture is not automatic but, rather, requires a resignation or some sort of proceeding to declare the judge’s office vacant.
¶71 This approach is wrong and in contradiction to the unambiguous language of the Constitution. Article VII, Section 10 does not give the officeholder the choice or option of whether to resign-and when. The Constitution does not state that the holder of a judicial position “must resign” that position if he either files for a nonjudicial elective public office or absents himself from the state for more than 60 consecutive days. The JSC’s
¶72 The JSC’s approach would allow a justice of the peace to file and run for the office of Governor while continuing to sit on the bench-so long as the justice refuses to resign, and until he is formally removed from office. Just as untenable, the JSC’s approach would require a resignation or some sort of proceeding to declare a judicial position vacant if the judge leaves the state for six months to take up residence in Argentina with his mistress. That the JSC’s approach would countenance such a result in either case is nonsensical. With respect to the latter situation, moreover, the JSC’s approach is contrary to statute. See § 2-16-501(6), MCA (“An office becomes vacant on the happening of any one of the following events before the expiration of the term of the incumbent:... except as provided in 10-1-1008, absence of the incumbent from the state, without the permission of the legislature, beyond the period allowed by law.” (emphasis added, paragraph breaks omitted)). It should be noted, as well, that by the time the machinery to remove the intransigent judge comes to bear, he will have continued to render decisions-some, perhaps, in cases affecting his campaign contributors and the voters of the county or district over which he presides.
¶73 The fact is that the judge’s formal resignation, or refusal to do so, is completely immaterial. His forfeiture of office occurs by reason of, and coincidentally with, the prohibited act of filing for a nonjudicial elective public office or absenting himself from the state for more than 60 consecutive days. Accordingly, when Not Afraid filed for a nonjudicial elective public office, he immediately forfeited his position as justice of the peace. His office became vacant at the time of filing, without more.
¶74 I recognize that there may be instances in which the officeholder claims that he or she did not file for a nonjudicial elective public office or was not absent from the state for more than 60 consecutive days. In that situation, a fact-finding proceeding may be necessary. But that is not situation here, as it is undisputed that Not Afraid filed for Crow Tribal Chairman-which, under my analysis above, is a nonjudicial elective public office. In this regard, I note that Not Afraid, in response to letters from the JSC directing him to resign, not only refused to do so but also, in blatant defiance of the Constitution, asserted that if he again ran for a tribal office, he would not resign his position as justice of the peace. This is a goоd example of why forfeiture under Article VII, Section 10 is automatic. A defiant judicial officer must not be allowed, as here, to thumb his nose at the Constitution by refusing to '“resign” his already forfeited office with the challenge, ‘Remove me if you think you can!” |
¶75 Indeed, reflecting this sort of contumaciousness, Not Afraidj argues that his tribal political activities are beyond the reach oil Montana law. Such argument, however, is unavailing and withouij merit. While neither the JSC nor this Court has jurisdiction over the! Crow tribal government and its elected officers, that is not the point! Both the JSC and this Court unquestionably do have jurisdiction oveil Not Afraid as an elected justice of the peace in Big Horn County and! accordingly, must require him to follow Montana’s Constitution and laws in the conduct of his state judicial office. In this regard, Article VII, Section 10 prohibits the holder of a state
¶76 In sum, the forfeiture provision of Article VII, Section 10 is self-executing. The act causing the forfeiture-filing for a nonjudicial elective public office or absenting himself or herself from the state for more than 60 consecutive days-immediately and automatically creates a vacancy in the office, which must then be filled according to law. See e.g. Mont. Const, art. VII, §8(2) (Supreme Court justices and district court judges); §3-10-206, MCA (justices of the peace). The language of Article VII, Section 10 requires neither a resignation nor a proceeding to declare the office vacant. The prohibited filing or absence creates the forfeiture, and the forfeiture creates the vacancy.
IV. Conclusion
¶77 The Court’s Opinion today is incredibly far-reaching-and, in my view, patently wrong on any number of levels.
¶78 First, the Court does not adequately address the jurisdiction of the JSC over this case. The JSC’s procedure of hiring its own prosecutor to file a complaint in its own name is contrary to the unmistakable intent of Article VII, Section 11(2) and the dictates of §3-1-1106, MCA, which require that judges and justices be charged and disciplined based upon a complaint filed by a citizen, not the JSC itself. The Court errs in not following these constitutional and statutory mandates. Instead of acknowledging and condemning the JSC’s unlawful process in this case, today’s Opinion blesses the abuse. I cannot agree. After today’s decision, it appears that if the JSC feels the language I have used in this dissent is too ‘intemperate,” Shea,
¶79 Second, while the Court, in one breath, waxes eloquent about the sovereignty of the Crow Tribe as a separate government, the Court then, in the next, demeans that same sovereignty by equating the Crow Tribe to “a group whose membership is narrower than the general public”-not unlike a social club or a sporting group-and by refusing to recognize the offices of the Crow tribal government as “elective public offices.” No doubt the Crow Tribe will be surprised, if not insulted, to learn that its government and its elective public offices are not on the same par as Montana’s. Again, I cannot agree.
¶80 Third, it is now apparently lawful for a sitting Montana justice of the peace, at least, to hold both his or her tribal executive office and his or her Montana judicial office at the same time. This holding perverts another fundamental principle of judicial ethics and conduct enshrined in Article III, Section 1 (Separation of Powers) and Article VII, Section lOmamely, that one cannot serve two masters. AMontana judge or justice cannot serve the master of the judicial branch and the master of the legislative or executive branch at the same time. A judge or justice owes his or her exclusive loyalty and obligation of duty to one branch of government-the judicial branch-4o the exclusion of any loyalty or obligation of duty to either of the other two branches. That is what the doctrine of separation of powers and the prohibition of Article VII, Section 10, read together, require. That fundamental, core principle is written into the 2008 Montana Code of Judicial Conduct, in the Preamble and Rules 1.2, 2.1, 2.2, 3.1, and 3.2-demanding the independence, impartiality, and integrity of the judiciary, and eschewing any appearances of impropriety and conflicts of interest. A sitting Montana judge cannot
¶81 In sum, I would hold that the JSC had no jurisdiction over thisl action, and I would dismiss the case on this basis. But as to the merit J of the JSC’s complaint, which the Court proceeds to address, I would! hold that Not Afraid forfeited his judicial position on March 6, 2009| when he filed for the office of Crow Tribal Chairman and that hiJ judicial officе has been vacant since that date. I would further hole! that any judicial act which Not Afraid performed during his unlawful tenure is, therefore, void ab initio.
¶82 Today’s decision establishes bad policy, bad precedent, and a bad result. I cannot agree. I have no doubt that Montana’s judges will be shocked by the Court’s decision.
¶83 I concur in the result but dissent from the reasoning.
The composition of the JSC was later amended to be two district judges, one ;omey, and two laypersons. See id. at 1126.
I believe the JSC also compensated Keller for his time and trouble on behaUj his client, the JSC.
It is unfortunate that this Court, itself, did not intervene in this matter at tf point. Clearly, we could have and should have under our power of supervisory contn Mont. Const, art. VII, §2(2). See ¶ 48 n. 4, infra.
This is not to say that cases like this will go unaddressed if no complaint is filed .th the JSC. Constitutionally, this Court has “general supervisory control over all her courts” in this state. Mont. Const, art. VII, §2(2). In cases where the JSC is thout authority to act, as here, this Court has the constitutional power and obligation act sua sponte and to take appropriate action as the Constitution, law, and cumstances require.
See also e.g. Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, Feb. 2il 1972, pp. 1049-50 (Delegate Berg): ‘We have deleted from the existing Constitution th| reference to all of the various types of cases that are enumerated there, because : doesn’t add anything and, if anything, it may be limiting. It may be confusing. What tb existing Constitution says and what the majority report says is, it has jurisdiction il all cases in law and equity, including-and then it goes down and it specifies all of the various types of cases that may be included. But we’re looking to the future now. W don’t know and we can’t say, no lawyer here can assure you that the various types I cases enumerated within the old Constitution and still contained in the majority repojj will be adequate for full adjudication of all rights, and what a shame and a colossi mistake it would be for a person to have a wrong and no remedy because the remediil have been so categorized and specified and this particular wrong is not included. Thl would be a colossal error. To avoid that possibility, we have done just like almost si other states, just like the United States Constitution, we’ve said it has origin! jurisdiction in all cases, both civil and criminal. Then we add, so that there’s T question, about the authority of the District Court to issue original and remedial wrifi That covers the waterfront. It covers every conceivable known writ today. If, in til future, it becomes necessary to recognize-perhaps through the Legislature-a new wri| that will accomplish purposes unknown today, the jurisdiction is there to do it.
‘In the construction of a statute, the office of the judge is simply to ascertain and declare what is in terms or in substance contained therein, not to insert what has been omitted or to omit what has been inserted.” Section 1-2-101, MCA. This same rule applies in the construction of constitutional provisions. See State ex rel. Nelson v. Ninth Jud. Dist. Ct.,
Given the Court’s heavy reliance on the election statutes, one cannot help bu question the incongruity of grounding today’s decision on statutes that do not implement Article VII, Section 10, while completely ignoring statutes that da implement Article VII, Section 11(2). As discussed, §3-1-1106(1), MCA, requires thaij JSC proceedings be founded upon a verified written complaint by a citizen, not upon th<j JSC’s own motion. |
Of course, those decisions will all be void ab initio. See ¶ 81 n. 10, infra.
In the present case, Not Afraid conceded that all voters for the Crow Tribi Chairmanship were potential future litigants or defendants before him as Big Hor County Justice of the Peace.
See Potter v. Sixteenth Jud. Dist. Ct.,
