430 Mass. 103 | Mass. | 1999
At issue is whether we should change the bright-
In August, 1998, the plaintiffs filed with the Attorney General an initiative petition.
The parties stipulated to a chart showing twenty-eight categories of disqualifying imperfections and the number of signatures disallowed under each category.
The exact copy requirement. Before addressing the issues, it is helpful to review briefly our holding in Hurst. In that case,
The plaintiffs ground their request to alter the rule in Hurst in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The Secretary argues that we should alter the holding of Hurst to qualify some of the signatures. According to the Secretary, the exact copy statute only regulates alterations made in the copying process, while art. 48 prohibits alterations that are misleading or constitute advocacy. In Hurst, he argues, the exact copy statute invalidated those petitions with preprinted information because those forms were not exact copies of the ones created by the Secretary. The other forms, containing stamps and underlined or highlighted summaries, were disqualified because they violated art. 48. Applying that analysis to this case, the Secretary argues that those markings on forms which misled the public or served as advocacy should be invalidated under art. 48 and inexact copies should be invalidated under the statute. However, the remaining marks, which neither misled nor advocated, should not invalidate petitions. The Secretary believes that a bright-line rule places too great a burden on the initiative process.
The Legislature has instructed that “exact copies” of petition
We decline the Secretary’s invitation to apply a case-by-case review under art. 48 and the bright-line test under the exact copy statute.
We turn to whether our application of this standard conflicts with the First Amendment. We conclude that it does not. The United States Supreme Court recently reiterated that “States allowing ballot initiatives have considerable leeway to protect the integrity and reliability of the initiative process.” Buckley v. American Constitutional Law Found., Inc., 525 U.S. 182, 191 (1999). Noting that petition circulation is “core political speech,” id. at 639, the Court has recognized that “there must be a substantial regulation of elections if they are to be fair and honest and if some sort of order, rather than chaos, is to accompany the democratic processes.” Id. at 640, quoting Storer
We address the injury to and burden on petition proponents. Contrary to the plaintiffs’ contention, the exact copy requirement is not a severe encroachment or a direct restraint on the right to propound a petition or to have one’s signature counted. Rather, the rule imposes a burden on petition proponents to make exact copies of the original and on circulators and signers to not “scribble,” “doodle,” highlight, underline, or write extraneous information on petitions. It requires signers and circulators to follow the warning on each petition: “DO NOT ALTER THIS INITIATIVE PETITION FORM IN ANY WAY. ADDITIONAL MARKINGS ON THIS PETITION WILL DISQUALIFY ANY SIGNATURES ON THIS PAGE.” This burden is not onerous. The restriction does not discriminate between one signer and another or one initiative and another.
Against these burdens, we weigh the State interests, identified in Hurst, in regulating the petition process. See ante at 104-105. Contrary to the plaintiffs’ argument, this is not a rule of administrative convenience. The regulation of petition forms is premised on the need to prevent misleading petitions and
The plaintiffs’ request for relief is denied. This matter is remanded to the county court for entry of a judgment denying the plaintiffs’ request for relief.
So ordered.
Justice Fried participated in the deliberation on this case, but resigned before the opinion was issued.
The parties originally filed a joint motion to report a question of law to the court. However, after a third party’s motion to intervene was denied, the full case was reported.
The Attorney General originally refused to certify the petition, because he believed that it contained matters excluded from the petition process under art. 48 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth. Several of the plaintiffs challenged this action in Federal court. Pursuant to an agreement between the parties, the Federal court entered an injunction directing the Secretary to release petition forms and to allow the petition process to proceed.
Where a signature was disqualified under more than one category, the parties counted the signature more than once. Thus, were we to validate some of the signatures, we would still have to evaluate each category in order to allow the Secretary to determine whether the petition could go forward.
General Laws c. 53, § 22A, states in part: “In no case shall any blank forms for such . . . referendum petitions be larger than eight and one half inches by fourteen inches, nor shall anyone be prohibited from making exact copies of such blanks provided by the Secretary of [Sjtate for the purpose of collecting signatures for such petitions, nor shall any such copies be rejected for certification or submittal to the secretary of state.”
Article 48, The Referendum, III, § 4, of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution states, in part: “A referendum petition may ask for the repeal of an emergency law .... Such petition shall first then be signed by ten qualified voters of the commonwealth, and shall be filed with the Secretary of the commonwealth .... The Secretary of the commonwealth shall provide blanks for the use of subsequent signers, and shall print at the top of each blank a fair, concise summary of the proposed law as such summary will appear on the ballot together with the names and residences of the first ten signers.”
In the agreed on classification chart, the parties cite the following reasons why petitions were disqualified: (1) underlining of text in summary; (2) highlighting of text in summary; (3) highlighting of the words “City or Town”; (4) highlighting of name of city or town; (5) highlighting of filing deadlines; (6) name of city or town written above summary which does not
The plaintiffs concede that the underlining or highlighting of words in the summary is a proper reason to exclude a petition.
According to the plaintiffs, there is a risk that a mark made on a petition after a signature will disqualify the foregoing signature. The plaintiffs call this “retroactive” disqualification and argue that it is a severe burden, entitled to strict scrutiny.
The plaintiffs also argue that only misleading marks should disqualify petitions. According to the plaintiffs, the petition circulation process is replete with advocacy and there is no justifiable reason to prohibit advocacy on the petition itself. We disagree. Like voting booths, the petition forms should serve as “a space free from the tumult and bias of political sloganeering.” Hurst v. State Ballot Law Comm’n, 427 Mass. 825, 828 (1998).
The plaintiffs also suggest that the rule in Hurst may cause opponents of •an initiative to sabotage a petition by sending saboteurs to place extraneous marks on the form. While we are mindful of that potential, we believe the criminal penalties for such actions, listed on each petition, are a sufficient deterrent. G. L. c. 56, § 11.
The plaintiffs also suggest that, under the dictates of Hurst, a petition drive could only be conducted by professionals or a large organization. There is no record support for that assertion. Indeed, in the present case, “amateurs” gathered 55,425 valid signatures.
At oral argument, the Secretary argued that the State Ballot Law Commission should determine, on objection, if a mark on a petition was improper. If such a determination were made, then the petition would be presumptively disqualified. However, if the proponent of the petition could establish that the alteration was made after the form was signed or that the alteration did not affect the signers, then the signatures could be saved.
There is a difference between the judgments that would need to be made in determining whether a mark was advocacy or misleading and other types of judgments which are in the initiative process under art. 48. While most other judgments are made once and applied to each and every petition across the board, here, individual judgments would be required about every alteration. Here, 3,507 signatures were disallowed for 4,253 reasons. Were we to allow petitions based on whether markings or copying errors were misleading or constituted advocacy, evidentiary hearings would be required on each alteration to determine whether each signature on each disqualified page were affected. Similarly, evidentiary hearings would be required to determine when a mark or alteration was made. Signers could be required to testify at such proceedings. We decline to so burden citizens who sign petitions.
The Secretary argues that a number of alterations to the forms, designed to facilitate the circulation of the petition, should be allowed. These alterations include the addition of the words “street address” or “over,” the highlighting of the filing deadline or “CITY OR TOWN,” and the writing of a city or town name on the forms. The Secretary can make these changes on the form he provides to petitioners.
The plaintiffs argue that the Secretary has applied a different set of rules to the signing of candidate petitions, by not invalidating petitions with a number on the front, top center. The plaintiffs argue that the same standards must be applied to both types of petitions under G. L. c. 53, § 22A, and under art. 48, and argue that the disparate application of Hurst violates their right to equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. This argument was not raised before the single justice and the record is inadequate to decide this issue.