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MONTANANS FOR a BALANCED FEDERAL BUDGET COMMITTEE Et Al. v. HARPER Et Al.
469 U.S. 1301
SCOTUS
1985
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Justice Rehnquist,

Circuit Justice.

Applicants ask that I stay a mandate of the Supreme Court of Montana prohibiting the placement on Montana’s November 1984 ballot of a “Balanced Federal Budget” initiative. If adopted by the voters, the initiative would direct the Montana Legislature to apply to Congress pursuant to Article V of the United States Constitution to cal! a convention to consider a federal balanced budget amendment. In addition to holding the initiative unconstitutional on its face, in violation of Article V, the Montana Supreme Court held it to be “independently and separately facially invalid under the Montana Constitution. ” The Montana court’s per curiam order stated that an opinion would follow — an opinion which apparently has not yet been issued — but the order is sufficient to indicate an adequate and independent state-law ground for the decision. I am not persuaded by applicants’ attempt to distinguish Uhler v. American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations, 468 U. S. 1310 (1984) (Rehn- *1302 QUIST, J., in chambers). The Montana Supreme Court has rested its decision on the Montana Constitution, and it is the final authority as to the meaning of that instrument. Accordingly, for the same reasons given in Uhler, the application for a stay is denied.

Case Details

Case Name: MONTANANS FOR a BALANCED FEDERAL BUDGET COMMITTEE Et Al. v. HARPER Et Al.
Court Name: Supreme Court of the United States
Date Published: Jan 17, 1985
Citation: 469 U.S. 1301
Docket Number: A-245
Court Abbreviation: SCOTUS
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