OPINION
By the Court,
This is an appeal from a district court order determining that a proposed initiative violated NRS 295.009’s single-subject rule and enjoining its placement on the 2010 general election ballot. Before this appeal could be decided, the deadline for submitting initiative signatures to the Secretary of State passed without the initiative’s proponents having submitted any signatures, and the 2010 general election concluded without the initiative being included on the ballot. As a result, even if this court were to reverse the district court’s order, we could grant no effective relief from that order, *601 rendering this appeal moot. Because the appeal is moot, we dismiss it. In so doing, we address whether issue preclusion principles apply to the district court’s order, even though the appeal from that order is dismissed as moot, and we conclude that they do not.
FACTS
In anticipation of the November 2010 general election, appellant Personhood Nevada, an advocacy group, filed with the Secretary of State a ballot initiative proposing to amend Article 1 of the Nevada Constitution. 1 After the initiative petition was filed with the Secretary of State, respondents, interested persons and Nevada registered voters, sought declaratory and injunctive relief in the district court, asserting that the initiative petition impermissibly encompassed more than one subject and contained a misleading and insufficient description of effect. 2 See NRS 295.009; NRS 295.061. The district court determined that appellants’ proposed amendment violated NRS 295.009’s single-subject rule because it was “too general and vague” to identify a single subject and because its widespread effects were neither sufficiently related and germane to a single subject nor described in a maimer that would inform the petition signers and voters of the initiative’s varied consequences. Based on those findings, the district court enjoined the Secretary of State from placing the initiative on the November 2010 general election ballot.
Appellants then appealed the district court’s injunctive order to this court. However, before our review of the matter could be completed, the June 15, 2010, deadline for submitting proposed initiatives to the Secretary of State passed without appellants obtaining the necessary number of signatures or submitting the initiative to the Secretary. Nev. Const, art. 19, §§ 2(4) and 3(2);
We the People Nevada v. Secretary of State,
DISCUSSION
This appeal is moot
The question of mootness is one of justiciability. This court’s duty is not to render advisory opinions but, rather, to resolve actual controversies by an enforceable judgment.
NCAA v. University of Nevada,
In this case, the appeal was rendered moot when appellants failed to submit sufficient signatures on the initiative petition by the June 15 submission deadline, rendering the proposed initiative ineligible for vote in the 2010 general election regardless of our decision. In addition, the 2010 general election has now concluded. Thus, this court is unable to grant effective relief with respect to the district court injunction at issue, and this appeal is moot.
See Langston v. State, Dep’t of Mtr. Vehicles,
Even when an appeal is moot, however, we may consider it if it involves a matter of widespread importance that is capable of repetition, yet evading review.
Traffic Control Servs. v. United Rentals,
First, appellants point out that challenges under the NRS 295.009 single-subject requirement and to the description of effect must be made within 15 days of the proposed initiative’s initial submission to the Secretary of State, NRS 295.061(1), which period, they assert, does not allow sufficient time to gather signatures pre-challenge. They argue that, in this instance, they were prohibited from collecting any signatures post-challenge by the district court’s order. 3 In appellants’ view, collecting signatures on the petition was impracticable because the district court had declared the initiative invalid and suggested that its description of effect was improper.
Second, appellants indicate that they are planning to file an identical initiative petition in 2012, and thus, they continue to seek this court’s guidance on the matter now, suggesting that because of the short time period governing ballot initiatives, the issue could again become moot and evade review.
As to appellants’ concerns that the initiative-challenge statute does not allow adequate time for pre-challenge signature gathering or for judicial review, we note that while the initiative deadlines in general are relatively short, the district court must expedite any challenges to an initiative, NRS 295.061(1), and this court typically resolves ballot-related cases before they become moot, often expediting such cases when requested to do so.
See, e.g., In re Candelaria,
As for appellants’ plans to file a similar initiative petition in 2012, addressing a potential future initiative at this point would be speculative and lead to an improper advisory opinion.
See
Nev. Const. art. 6, § 4;
Applebaum
v.
Applebaum,
As respondents point out in their reply, other courts have dismissed appeals under similar circumstances.
See Ulmer v. Alaska Restaurant & Beverage Ass’n,
Vacatur is not necessary
Generally, courts agree that parties whose appeal from a judgment has been prevented through no fault of their own should not necessarily be bound in future litigation by the preclusive effects arising from that judgment. See 47 Am. Jur. 2d Judgments § 531 (2006). This principle has been effectuated in at least two different ways, however.
One approach, taken by the federal courts, applies preclusion principles unless the party seeking relief has asked the appellate court to reverse or vacate the underlying judgment.
See U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall Partnership,
According to the Restatement (Second) of Judgments, however, the federal approach of requiring a party to move for reversal or vacatur to avoid preclusion has been “criticized as setting a procedural trap for the unwary” and has not been adopted by many state courts, although some have made clear in their dismissal orders that no preclusive effect is to be given to the lower court’s order. Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 28 (1982) reporter’s note (citing 46 Am. Jur. 2d Judgments § 464 (1969)). Therefore, the Restatement (Second) of Judgments advocates a second approach: issue preclusion principles simply do not apply when an appeal has been rendered moot. Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 28(1) cmt. a.
Many state courts agree. For example, the Connecticut Supreme Court, in
Commissioner of Motor Vehicles v. DeMilo & Co.,
Relying on the Connecticut opinion, appellants ask that their supplemental brief be considered a direct motion to set aside the district court’s order based “upon balancing the hardships and finality considerations,” asserting that the decision could be asserted as binding precedent in the future.
DeMilo & Co.,
CONCLUSION
Because the deadline for submitting ballot initiative signatures and the November 2010 election have passed, this court can afford no relief from the district court’s injunctive order, and this appeal is dismissed as moot. Adopting the Restatement (Second) of Judgments, we conclude that because appellate review was precluded as a matter of law, no preclusive effect is to be given the district court’s order in any subsequent litigation.
Notes
Article 1 of the Nevada Constitution sets forth the people’s “Declaration of Rights.”
Below, respondents also argued that the initiative constituted an improper attempt to revise the Constitution. See Nev. Const, art. 16, § 2 (providing that when “a revision of [Nevada’s] entire Constitution” is necessary, the Legislature and the people must vote to call a convention to do so). The district court declined to rule on that argument, however, and it was not raised on appeal.
As respondents point out, the district court’s order enjoined the Secretary of State from placing the matter on the ballot, not the collection of signatures. Appellants provided no support in their written and oral arguments for their contention that they were unable to collect signatures due to the district court’s order.
