“1) Does HB 112 violate Part I, Article 11 of the New Hampshire State Constitution?
2) Does HB 112 violate any other provisions of the United States or the New Hampshire Constitution?”
To the Honorable House:
The following response is respectfully returned:
You have asked that the undersigned justices of the supreme court render an advisory opinion as to HB 112’s constitutional validity. See N.H. CONST, pt. II, art. 74. Part II, Article 74 requires justices of the supreme court to render advisory opinions “upon important questions of law and upon solemn occasions” when asked to do so by the legislature or the Governor and Council. Opinion of the Justices (Appointment of Chief Justice),
You have posed two questions about the validity of HB 112. Your first question asks whether HB 112 would violate Part I, Article 11 of the New Hampshire Constitution. Your second question asks whether HB 112 violates any other provision of the United States or the New Hampshire Constitutions. Historically, we have declined to answer general inquiries on constitutional infirmity and, in keeping with that practice, we respectfully decline to answer the second question. See Opinion of the Justices (Requiring Att’y Gen. to Join Lawsuit),
With regard to your first question, for the reasons that follow, “after carefully considering our constitutional duties and based upon long-established prior decisions,” we respectfully ask to be excused from answering your first question at this time. Opinion of the Justices (Appointment of Chief Justice),
Part II, Article 74 of the State Constitution “empowers the justices of the supreme court to render advisory opinions, outside the context of concrete, fully-developed factual situations and without the benefit of adversary legal presentations, only in carefully circumscribed situations.” Duncan v. State,
Your first question asks whether HB 112 violates Part I, Article 11 of the New Hampshire Constitution, which provides, in pertinent part: “All elections are to be free, and every inhabitant of the state of 18 years of age and upwards shall have an equal right to vote in any election.” The court has previously held that the equal right to vote, as set forth in Part I, Article 11, is fundamental. Akins v. Sec’y of State,
Determining whether HB 112 unconstitutionally impinges upon a complaining party’s equal right to vote requires weighing “the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the rights that [a complaining party] seeks to vindicate against the precise interests put forward by the State as justifications for the burden imposed by its rule, taking into consideration the extent to which those interests make it necessary to burden the [complaining party’s] rights.” Id. at 72 (quotation and ellipsis omitted); see Burdick v. Takushi,
Under this analytical framework, “the rigorousness of our inquiry into the propriety of [an]... election law depends upon the extent to which a challenged regulation burdens” a complaining party’s equal right to vote. Burdick,
Currently, there is pending before the court a litigated case, with a factual record developed over two years, that raises legal issues that are similar, if not identical, to those implicated by your first question. See Annemarie Guare & a. v. State of New Hampshire, No. 2014-0558 (N.H.
To answer your first question now would place us in the position of giving advice on issues without a developed factual record and in advance of a decision on a matter currently before the court that involves similar issues. See Opinion of the Justices (Appointment of Chief Justice),
For these reasons, we believe that “orderly procedure” requires that we respectfully ask to be excused from answering your first question at this time. Opinion of the Justices,
LINDA STEWART DALIANIS
GARY E. HICKS
CAROL ANN CONBOY
ROBERT J. LYNN
JAMES P. BASSETT
Charles G. Douglas, III, of Concord, filed a memorandum on behalf of the New Hampshire House of Representatives in support of negative answers to the questions presented.
Shaheen & Gordon, P.A., of Concord (William E. Christie on the memorandum), and American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire, of Concord (Gilíes R. Bissonnette on the memorandum), filed a memorandum on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire, the League of Women Voters of New Hampshire, and the Fair Elections Legal Network in support of affirmative answers to the questions presented.
