Lead Opinion
By the Court,
Under the Nevada Constitution, when a district judge’s office is vacated before the office’s term expires, the Governor may appoint an individual to temporarily fill the office until “the first Monday of January following the next general election.” Nev. Const, art. 6, § 20(1) and (2). In July 2008, a district judge vacated the office, and a temporary appointment later was made, several weeks before the November general election. The judge’s office, however, was not included on the 2008 ballot. Instead, the appointed judge was commissioned to serve until the office could be filled by virtue of the 2010 general election, giving rise to the question of concern to this court: whether the commission’s extension beyond the first Monday in January following the 2008 general election is valid.
That question initially was brought to this court’s attention when movant, a private Nevada citizen, sought leave to file a petition on behalf of the State of Nevada for a writ of quo warranto removing the judge from office. As we conclude that movant lacks standing, however, we consider the merits of the judge’s commission under our supervisory responsibilities over the judicial branch.
The legitimacy of the extended commission depends on the meaning of “next general election,” as used in the Nevada Constitution provision noted above. Thus, in resolving this issue, we address whether “next general election” means the election most immediately following the appointment or, as has been asserted, the next general election in which the vacancy may be filled in strict compliance with all election deadlines. In view of the apparent intent behind the Nevada Constitution’s “next general election” language to
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In July 2008, a district judge serving the Family Court Division of the Eighth Judicial District Court resigned, resulting in a vacancy approximately two and one-half years before that office’s term was set to expire. The vacancy was filled by temporary appointment in August 2008, when Governor Jim Gibbons appointed Judge Robert W. Teuton to the office, beginning August 22, 2008. Judge Teuton’s written commission designates the first Monday in January 2011 as its expiration date. Although a general election was held in November 2008, the district judge office was not included on the ballot. Thus, Judge Teuton has continued to serve in the office since 2008.
Under Article 6, Section 20(2) of the Nevada Constitution, when the Governor fills a vacant district judge office, the office’s term ‘ ‘expires on the first Monday of January following the next general election.” Arguing that, here, “next general election” meant the 2008 general election, rendering Judge Teuton’s commission invalid beyond January 5, 2009, a private Nevada citizen, movant Robert W. Lueck, moved this court for leave to seek a writ of quo warranto to remove Judge Teuton from office, after the attorney general denied Lueck’s written requests that she institute such quo warranto proceedings. Judge Teuton opposed the motion, primarily contesting Lueck’s standing to file a petition for a writ of quo warranto, as Lueck has only a “private citizen” interest in obtaining the requested relief. Lueck replied to Judge Teuton’s opposition, as permitted. After reviewing those initial filings, we directed Lueck and Judge Teuton to file supplements further addressing the standing issue.
Concerned with Lueck’s standing and cognizant that the question posed by his motion raised concerns of statewide importance regarding the validity of Judge Teuton’s continued service as a district judge, and based on this court’s responsibility to oversee the judiciary, we concluded that further inquiry was warranted. See Nev. Const, art. 6, § 19; Halverson v. Hardcastle,
DISCUSSION
Currently before this court, then, are two subjects. First, does Lueck have standing to pursue quo warranto proceedings and, if so, should leave to file the petition be granted? Second, what is the meaning of Section 20(2) and what is the provision’s effect on the validity of Judge Teuton’s continuing service in office?
Lueck’s motion
Quo warranto generally is available to challenge an individual’s right to hold office and to oust the individual from the office if the individual’s claim to it is invalid or has been forfeited. See Secretary of State v. Nevada State Legislature,
The Legislature has not authorized quo warranto petitions by private citizens with only a general interest in seeing this state’s laws upheld. Under NRS Chapter 35, only persons “claiming to be entitled to a public office,” NRS 35.050, or otherwise through the attorney general and “on the leave of the court,” NRS 35.040, may commence a quo warranto action against the alleged unlawful officeholder or usurper. See Harvey v. Dist. Ct.,
Here, the attorney general declined to institute a civil action in the nature of quo warranto against Judge Teuton, and Lueck does not claim to be entitled to Judge Teuton’s office. Lueck therefore does not fit within either provision of NRS Chapter 35 that addresses who may institute a quo warranto action to oust an individual from office, and consequently, he does not have standing to institute such an action under that chapter. And Lueck has not demonstrated that he has an interest in obtaining quo warranto relief sufficient to except him from NRS Chapter 35’s provisions. See, e.g., State v. City of Sarasota,
Section 20(2) ’s meaning
Although Lueck lacks standing to raise it, the issue of Judge Teuton’s continuing service in office still deserves our attention. That
In answering that question, we first note principles that guide this court’s constitutional language analysis. We then apply those rules to ascertain Section 20(2)’s meaning, specifically analyzing the history of the term “next general election” in the constitution and caselaw. Finally, after discerning the meaning of “next general election” in light of that analysis, we apply that meaning to the facts of this case.
The term “next general election’’ in Section 20(2) is ambiguous
As noted, the provision at issue here, Nevada Constitution Article 6, Section 20(2), provides that “[t]he term of office of any justice or judge [appointed by the Governor to fill a Supreme Court or district judge vacancy] expires on the first Monday of January following the next general election.” To determine Section 20(2)’s meaning, we turn first to its language. In so doing, we give Section 20(2)’s language its plain meaning, unless the language is ambiguous. Secretary of State v. Burk,
Section 20(2)’s “next general election” language can be read as referring to either the general election closest in time after the appointment, regardless of the election’s proximity to the appointment, or the next general election at which Nevada’s election deadlines can be fully carried out, meaning that the appointment could actually extend beyond the general election immediately following the appointment, as the Governor, Judge Teuton, and the Family Law Section suggest. Since both interpretations are reasonable but inconsistent, Section 20(2)’s “next general election” language is ambiguous. Accordingly, we turn next to that provision’s history to de
Section 20(2)’s “next general election’’ language was intended to preserve Nevada’s long-standing policy to fill judicial vacancies at the next ensuing general election
Originally, “next general election’’ was intended to safeguard Nevadans’ right to elect state offices
Section 20(2)’s “next general election” language originated at the debates and proceedings of Nevada’s 1864 constitutional convention. See Debates & Proceedings of the Nevada State Constitutional Convention of 1864, at 702 (Andrew J. Marsh off. rep., 1866). At that time, the Constitution’s drafters considered adding to the article governing the executive department the following provision for filling vacancies:
When any office shall, from any cause, become vacant, and no mode is provided by the Constitution and laws for filling such vacancy, the Governor shall have power to fill such vacancy by granting a commission, which shall expire at the next election and qualification of the person entitled to such office.
Id. After that language was presented, one of the delegates questioned whether the provision’s language allowed the Governor to appoint an individual to fill a judicial vacancy for the remainder of the office’s term, although the intent was to expire the appointment’s term at the closest election. Id. at 702-03.
The delegate posed a situation in which a vacancy arose in a supreme court justice office three or four years before the office’s term expired, and stated the following: “It is not intended, I apprehend, that the Governor shall, in such a case, fill [the office] for the rest of the term; and yet I do not see why he may not do it under that section,” to which another participant responded, “It says the commission shall expire at the general election and qualification of the person elected.” Id. at 702. The delegate replied:
Then the office would have to be filled by election, and I do not see but the man elected would hold the office for the next six years. In that manner the whole system might become deranged. The vacancy should only be supplied, by appointment, until the election, and then a judge should be elected merely for the unexpired term of the incumbent who has vacated the office.
Id. at 702-03.
Then, the delegate proposed language to ensure that appointments to fill vacancies in judicial offices lasted only until the most
In case the office of any Justice of the Supreme Court, or District Judge, shall become vacant before the expiration of the regular term for which he was elected, the vacancy may be filled by appointment by the Governor, until it shall be supplied at the next general election, when it shall be filled by election, for the residue of the unexpired term.
Id. (Emphasis added.) The debate surrounding the delegate’s proposed provision makes clear that the suggested language was intended to preserve the people’s constitutional right to elect their own officers, see Nev. Const, art. 6, § 5; State v. Arrington,
The delegates of the 1864 constitutional convention clearly favored the proposed provision, as they not only agreed to include it in the constitution, but also determined it should be considered for application to all state officers. Id. Because the addition of all state officers broadened its application, rather than placing the provision within the article pertaining to the executive or judicial department, the delegates included the provision among other miscellaneous provisions of a different article. Id. More specifically, the provision was set forth under Article 17, Section 22.
Decisional law initially focused on the context of “next general election” language
Since Article 17, Section 22’s enactment, the meaning of “next general election” in that provision and others have been interpreted several times by this court. For example, in 1924, in a case concerning vacancies in county clerk and treasurer offices, Ex Rel. Bridges v. Jepsen,
This court clarified the distinction between Bridges and Penrose in a 1940 case, Grant and McNamee v. Payne,
Decisional law ultimately reaffirmed that the intent behind “next general election” is the interpretative foundation for the phrase
Then, in Brown v. Georgetta,
While noting that similar language, without more, previously had been interpreted as meaning the next general election at which the office would normally be filled, the court recognized that in all of the prior cases, the language itself was not so much at issue as intent. Id. at 503-04,
After this court’s analyses of “next general election” language, Article 17, Section 22, was amended in 1976, when Nevada adopted Article 6, Section 20’s judicial selection process for filling vacancies that arise injudicial offices. Hearing on A.J.R. 14 Before the Senate Judiciary Comm., 57th Leg. (Nev., April 14, 1973). Specifically, in creating provisions for a judicial selection process, the drafters removed judicial officers from the provisions of Article 17, Section 22, instead addressing judicial vacancies within the context of the judicial selection process, in Article 6, Section 20(2). Id. In so doing, Section 20(2)’s drafters preserved some of the key language that the delegates had added at the constitutional debates and proceedings to ensure that the Governor could not fill a vacancy beyond the closest election following the appointment. Id. Indeed, although an early draft of the judicial selection process provisions provided that the individual appointed would serve the remainder of the unexpired term, that provision was amended to ensure that the individual appointed through the judicial selection process would not serve beyond the “next general election.” Id.
In light of the constitutional framers’ original intent to safeguard the people’s election prerogative, preserved by the most recent amendments, Section 20(2) must be read so as to effectuate the election policy of this state — gubernatorial appointments of judges last only until the January after the “next general election,” meaning the general election most immediately following the appointment.
As noted, the first Monday in January following the November 2008 general election was January 5, 2009. Accordingly, Judge Teuton’s term ended on January 5, 2009. Even though the statutory deadline for altering the general election ballot was not until August 19, 2008, NRS 293.165(4), after the office became vacant, no candidate’s name appeared on the general election ballot. As no individual was elected to fill the office in 2008, the office became vacant as of January 5, 2009, when Judge Teuton’s term expired.
CONCLUSION
First, in the absence of the attorney general’s participation and leave of court, NRS Chapter 35 does not authorize an individual with only a general interest in the outcome, such as Lueck, to pursue quo warranto proceedings on behalf of the state to remove a person from public office. Therefore, because the attorney general declined to pursue such an action on Lueck’s request and he has no special interest in obtaining quo warranto relief sufficient to justify excepting him from NRS Chapter 35’s provisions, we deny Lueck’s motion for leave to institute quo warranto proceedings. The clerk of this court shall return, unfiled, Lueck’s proposed petition for a writ of quo warranto.
Second, under Nevada Constitution Article 6, Section 20(2), an individual appointed to fill a vacancy in a district court judge office serves until “the first Monday of January following the next general election.” According to the history of that provision, the term “next general election” means the general election that most immediately follows the appointment. Such a construction supports Nevada’s long-standing policy in favor of filling vacancies in judicial office through election, subject only to the Governor’s power to temporarily appoint an individual to fill a vacancy until the next ensuing general election.
Notes
In the 2002 general election, Nevada voters rejected a proposal to amend Section 20(2) so that an appointed judge’s term expired after the first general election held at least 12 months after the appointment, when a judge had to be elected to serve the remainder of the term. NRS 47.130(2).
The Governor, Judge Teuton, and the Family Law Section point to NRS 3.080, which provides that an appointed judge’s term of office does not expire until after “the next general election ... at which ... a district judge shall be chosen for the balance of the unexpired term.” Because “next general election” in NRS 3.080 refers to an election at which a successor is elected, they assert, “next general election” in Section 20(2) likewise refers to such an election, and because no successor has been elected here, Judge Teuton’s commission remains valid.
Although Judge Teuton did not validly serve after January 5, 2009, his official acts between that time and the writ’s issuance remain valid, under de facto officer principles. See Walcott v. Wells,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I concur with the majority that movant Robert W. Lueck lacks standing to pursue quo warranto in this matter. Likewise, I agree that the constitutional appointment-term issue raised by Lueck nonetheless warrants this court’s immediate attention. From the majority’s analysis thereof, however, I must dissent.
In reaching its conclusion that Article 6, Section 20(2) of the Nevada Constitution mandates the expiration of an appointed judge’s term after the general election most immediately following the appointment, the majority accurately describes the history of that ambiguous provision. But nowhere in that extensive history championing the people’s right to select constitutional officers exists any indication that the provision should be construed outside the context of this state’s election laws, so as to result not in the installation of a newly elected judge, but rather in another potentially months-long judicial selection and appointment process. The provision must be read reasonably. See Secretary of State v. Burk,
As the majority points out, historically, Nevada has adhered to a strong policy of electing its judges and other constitutional officers. See Nev. Const, art. 6, § 5; State v. Arrington,
The majority decision necessarily ignores that fact, suggesting that the constitutional appointment term limit, as they comprehend it, applied regardless of the result. But the practical consequences of the majority’s conclusion means that, when a vacancy occurs after the second Tuesday in June, the office must again be declared vacant, as was done here, or the election deadlines must be viewed as optional. Neither result is acceptable.
Vacancies are disfavored and election deadlines should not be arbitrarily disturbed
The “law abhors a vacancy” in public office. State v. Triplett,
The alternative consequence, ignoring the statutory election deadlines, is no better. “[A]n election is not an inherent right in the people and cannot be held in the absence of legislation clearly authorizing the same.” Grant and McNamee v. Payne,
To recognize the election mandate is to recognize the inseparable obligation to allow a meaningful opportunity to vote. See, e.g., State v. Marshall,
In fact, NRS 3.080, a statute substantially unchanged from its earliest codifications in 1866, see 1866 Nev. Stat., ch. 108, §§ 38 and 48, at 238-39, ties the expiration of appointed judges’ terms to simultaneously filling the office through the general election. Like the original Article 17, Section 22 of the Nevada Constitution, that statute provides that an appointed judge’s term of office does not expire until after “the next general election ... at which ... a district judge shall be chosen for the balance of the unexpired term.” The majority dismisses this language as merely inconsistent with and, thus, superseded by, Nevada’s Constitution. But principles of constitutional interpretation insist that the “ ‘contemporaneous construction by the legislature of a constitutional provision is a “safe guide to its proper interpretation” and creates “a strong presumption” that the interpretation was proper.’ ” Halverson v. Secretary of State,
In like circumstances, the Iowa Supreme Court, in State v. Claussen,
The same analysis is warranted here, as we have recognized. See, e.g., Bridges,
Because the majority overlooks the full import of Nevada law regarding vacancies and renders a decision contrary to the election priorities of this state, I respectfully dissent from that portion of the majority’s decision concluding that vacancy appointments necessarily terminate after the general election most immediately following the appointment.
Indeed, in Brown,
Under our statutes providing for late nominations under certain conditions it is inevitable that circumstances will arise whereunder ballots containing the names of late nominees will not reach absent voters living in distant parts of the world. If the names of the nominees are otherwise lawfully placed upon the ballots personally voted at the polls, it could not reasonably be contended that the election for the particular office should be declared void.
(T|n fixing the time before election in which nominations may be made where a vacancy occurs ... the legislature must be presumed to have chosen these periods as reasonable ones to accomplish the purposes sought.
The primary election for the office in question was held on August 12, 2008. Judge Teuton was not appointed until August 22, 2008. The general election was November 4, 2008.
NRS 293.165(4) provides, in part, that “[n]o change may be made on the ballot for the general election after 5 p.m. on the first Tuesday after the primary election of the year in which the general election is held.” Therefore, the deadline for the general election ballot change was Tbesday, August 19, 2008, at 5 p.m., or three days before Judge Teuton was appointed by the Governor. The first primary and general elections for which petitions for candidacy may be filed will not take place until 2010.
