STATE OF MONTANA, EX REL., ROBERT BOESE, PETITIONER AND RELATOR, v. JIM WALTERMIRE, SECRETARY OF STATE, STATE OF MONTANA, DEFENDANT AND THE CONSUMER COMMITTEE TO DECONTROL MILK PRICES IN MONTANA, REAL PARTY IN INTEREST.
No. 86-383.
SUPREME COURT OF MONTANA
Submitted Oct. 9, 1986. Decided Dec. 10, 1986.
730 P.2d 375
Mike Greely, Atty. Gen., Helena, Elwood English, Secretary of State‘s office, Helena, for defendant.
Michael D. Cok, Bozeman, for Consumer Committee to Decontrol Milk Prices.
MR. JUSTICE WEBER delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Petitioner asked this Court to declare Initiative 104 (the Milk Decontrol Initiative) void and invalid, and to enjoin the Secretary of State from allowing it to appear on the November 1986 ballot. In an order signed October 2, 1986, we denied petitioner‘s request. This opinion explains the reasoning behind that order.
The issues are:
- Does petitioner have standing to bring this action?
- Does the title to Initiative 104 clearly express the subject of the Initiative as required by the Montana Constitution, and does it violate the Constitution by failing to disclose the creation of cooperative associations and the repeal of Fair Trade Rules statutes?
In March 1986 the form of the Milk Decontrol Initiative was approved by the Secretary of State, pursuant to
The proponents of the Initiative requested review in District Court of the statement of purpose and the fiscal note pursuant to
The petitioner, a Montana taxpayer, property owner, elector, and milk producer, asks us to remove the Initiative from the ballot. He argues that this Court has jurisdiction to exercise pre-election review of an initiative and that he has standing to bring this action. He asserts that the title of the Initiative is defective in several ways: (1) it misleads the voters by implying that the state would lose only some, and not all, of its power to regulate the processing, storage, and distribution of milk; (2) it does not disclose that the Initiative gives “special powers and privileges” to cooperative associations; and (3) it fails to disclose the Initiative‘s repeal of the Rules of Fair Trade Practices,
I
Does petitioner have standing to bring this action?
II
Does the title to Initiative 104 clearly express the subject of the initiative as required by the Montana Constitution, and does it violate the Constitution by failing to disclose the creation of cooperative associations and the repeal of Fair Trade Rules statutes?
“If the opponents of a ballot measure believe that the statement of purpose, the statements of implication of a vote, or the fiscal statement formulated by the attorney general pursuant to 13-27-312 do not satisfy the requirements of 13-27-312, they may, within 10 days of the date of certification to the governor that the completed petition has been officially filed, file an action in the district court in and for the county of Lewis and Clark challenging the adequacy of the statement and requesting the court to alter the statement.”
The legislative history of
The proponents have a right under
The notice provisions pertaining to the opponents of the measure, such as the petitioner in the present case, do not require that the opponent immediately come into the District Court or otherwise act in order to oppose an initiative. Instead, the statute reasonably allows the initiative procedure to go ahead. The proponents may proceed to obtain signatures on the petition. If they are able to obtain sufficient signatures to meet the statutory requirements for placing the initiative on the ballot, then the petitions must be filed with the Secretary of State. At that point the Secretary of State under
Petitioner argues that this Court may exercise original jurisdiction over this matter despite his failure to comply with
This Court has exercised jurisdiction to consider a pre-election constitutional challenge to an initiative since the enactment of
Petitioner cites
We conclude that to effectively protect and preserve the right which Montanans have reserved to themselves to change the laws of this State through the initiative process, pre-election judicial review should not be routinely conducted. We hold that the petitioner had failed to demonstrate any reason to allow him to sidestep the proce
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE and MR. JUSTICES HARRISON and GULBRANDSON concur.
MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY, concurring and dissenting:
I concur that the petition here should be dismissed. I dissent from the reasons stated by the majority for the dismissal.
In the general election of November 4, 1986, Initiative 104 did not muster enough votes from the electorate to become law. Because of the failure of the Initiative to gain passage, the issues raised by the petition, filed before the general election, have become moot. For that reason alone, the petition should be dismissed. There is no reason to discuss the issues raised by the petition further.
I dissent from the reasons given for the dismissal of the petition by the majority because those reasons are wrong in law and in logic.
The implication to be gained from the majority opinion is that unless the opponents of an initiative measure proceed under
“(2) If the opponents of a ballot measure believe that the statement of purpose, the statements of implication of a vote, or the fiscal statement formulated by the attorney general pursuant to 13-27-312 do not satisfy the requirements of 13-27-312, they may, within 10 days of the date of certification to the governor that the completed petition has been officially filed, file an action in the district court in and for the county of Lewis and Clark challenging the adequacy of the statement and requesting the court to alter the statement. (Emphasis added.)”
Two things ought to be clear from a reading of the foregoing statute. First, it pertains only to statements, and secondly, it is permissive, since the statute uses the word “may.”
In our dissent in Cause No. 86-400, entitled State of Montana, ex rel., Montana Citizens for the Preservation of Citizens’ Rights, et al., plaintiffs and relators vs. Jim Waltermire, Secretary of State,et al., defendants and respondents, and Montana Liability Coalition, real party in interest [224 Mont. 273,] 729 P.2d 1283, [43 St. Rep. 1869], we discussed the effect of that statutory provision. We said in our dissent:
“It is important to note that Section 13-27-316 is not an imperative statute. The word ‘may’ must be interpreted as permissive only. This Court has had a bitter experience in interpreting the word ‘may’ as ‘must,’ which it did in State ex rel. Interstate Lumber Company v. District Court (1918), 54 Mont. 602, 172 P. 1030. The holding was repudiated in Hardenburgh v. Hardenburgh (1944), 115 Mont. 469, 146 P.2d 151, and in Johnson v. Ogle (1945), 117 Mont. 419, 159 P.2d 337. Following up on these cases, this Court in Love v. Mon-O-Co Oil Corporation (1958), 133 Mont. 56, 319 P.2d 1056, again decided that the word ‘may’ should not be given the force of ‘must.’ Our last expression on the subject occurred in Clark Fork Paving, Inc. v. Atlas Concrete and Paving (1978), 178 Mont. 8, 582 P.2d 799, 781, where we said that the word ‘may’ as an exception to the statute [a venue statute] ‘needs to be read as a permissive word, and not as the imperative must.‘”
The majority opinion does not discuss this statute nor whether it is now by implication giving the word “may” the imperative force of “must” as far as legal actions to correct statements in initiative proposals are concerned. The implication in the majority opinion is that a failure to apply to the District Court in Lewis and Clark County within 10 days of the day of certification to the governor precludes all further judicial review of initiative proposal. That is an unwarranted, unnecessary and improper restriction on the judicial power. When initiative proposals affect directly the interests of the whole people of this state, when the public is vitally interested in the matter, and when the liberties or the property of the people of this state are involved, we should as a Court insist on the full jurisdiction of the district courts and of this Court to review and protect those rights and liberties.
The second issue adverted to by the majority opinion but not properly treated is whether Initiative 104 contained more than one subject.
Because Initiative 104 failed to gain the approval of the electorate, whether the initiative was multiplicitous is also now moot. Instead of so treating the issue, the majority opinion considers the issue foreclosed because the opponents did not bring an action within 10 days from the governors’ certification under
For the reasons foregoing, although I concur in the dismissal of the petition here, I cannot agree with the majority in the reasons given for the dismissal.
MR. JUSTICES HUNT and MORRISON concur in the dissent of MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY.
