Barrett v. State

2024 MT 86, 547 P.3d 630, 416 Mont. 226
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 2024
DocketDA 22-0586
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2024 MT 86 (Barrett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. State, 2024 MT 86, 547 P.3d 630, 416 Mont. 226 (Mo. 2024).

Opinion

04/26/2024

DA 22-0586 Case Number: DA 22-0586

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2024 MT 86

STEVE BARRETT, ROBERT KNIGHT; MONTANA FEDERATION OF PUBLIC EMPLOYEES; DR. LAWRENCE PETTIT; MONTANA UNIVERSITY SYSTEM FACULTY ASSOCIATION REPRESENTATIVES; FACULTY SENATE OF MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY, DR. JOY C. HONEA; DR. ANNJEANETTE BELCOURT; DR. FRANKE WILMER; MONTANA PUBLIC INTEREST RESEARCH GROUP; ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY; ASHLEY PHELAN; JOSEPH KNAPPENBERGER; and MAE NAN ELLINGSON,

Plaintiffs, Appellees, and Cross-Appellants.

v.

STATE OF MONTANA, GREG GIANFORTE; and AUSTIN KNUDSEN,

Defendants, Appellants, and Cross-Appellees.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Gallatin, Cause No. DV-21-581B Honorable Rienne H. McElyea, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellants:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Michael D. Russell, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Emily Jones, Special Assistant Attorney General, Jones Law Firm, PLLC, Billings, Montana For Appellees:

James H. Goetz, Jeffrey J. Tierney, Goetz, Geddes & Bardner, P.C., Bozeman, Montana

Raphael Graybill, Graybill Law Firm, P.C., Great Falls, Montana

For Amici Five Female Athletes:

Justin M. Oliveira, Attorney at Law, Billings, Montana

Cody S. Barnett, Alliance Defending Freedom, Lansdowne, Virginia

Submitted on Briefs: August 16, 2023

Decided: April 26, 2024

Filed:

V5-- 6 A-- 4f __________________________________________ Clerk

2 Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 The Plaintiffs in this case—made up of former members of the Montana Board of

Regents, the Montana Federation of Public Employees (MFPE), a former commissioner of

higher education, Montana University System (MUS) faculty organizations, MUS faculty

members, MUS student groups, MUS students, and a delegate to the 1972 Montana

Constitutional Convention—brought constitutional challenges to four bills passed by the

Montana Legislature during the 2021 legislative session. The Plaintiffs filed suit against

the State of Montana, Governor Greg Gianforte, and Attorney General Austin Knudsen

(collectively, the State) in the Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Gallatin County, seeking

a declaration that HB 349, HB 112, HB 102, and §§ 2 and 21 of SB 319, as well as a

conditional appropriation found in HB 2 relating to HB 102, were unconstitutional. During

the pendency of the present case, both HB 102 and § 21 (and § 22) of SB 319 were found

to be unconstitutional in separate cases brought by other plaintiffs in the First Judicial

District Court, Lewis and Clark County. The State did not appeal the determination that

§ 21 (and § 22) of SB 319 was unconstitutional, but did appeal the First Judicial District

Court’s ruling on HB 102. That court’s ruling declaring HB 102 unconstitutional was

upheld by this Court in Bd. of Regents of Higher Educ. of Mont. v. State, 2022 MT 128,

409 Mont. 96, 512 P.3d 748. With the present case narrowed to the Plaintiffs’ challenges

to HB 349, HB 112, and § 2 of SB 319, the parties filed cross-motions for summary

judgment. The District Court granted the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, denied

the State’s cross-motion for summary judgment, declared HB 349, HB 112, and § 2 of

SB 319 unconstitutional, and denied the Plaintiffs’ request for attorney fees in its

3 September 14, 2022 Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment. Both parties appeal

from this order.

¶2 The State raises two issues on appeal, which we restate as follows:

1. Whether Plaintiffs have standing to challenge the constitutionality of HB 349 (2021), HB 112 (2021), and SB 319 (2021).

2. Whether HB 112 infringes on the Board of Regents’ authority under Article X, § 9 of the Montana Constitution.

In addition, the Plaintiffs have cross-appealed the portion of the District Court’s decision

denying them attorney fees. We restate the Plaintiffs’ issue on cross-appeal as follows:

3. Whether the District Court erred by denying the prevailing plaintiffs their attorney fees under the private attorney general doctrine.

¶3 Via majority, we affirm the District Court’s determinations that the Plaintiffs have

standing to bring their claims and that the challenged bills are unconstitutional. With

regard to the cross-appeal issue 3 set forth above, we do not reach a majority opinion with

Justice Gustafson, joined by Justice McKinnon, disagreeing with the District Court’s

decision to not award attorney fees; Chief Justice McGrath, joined by Justice Baker,

agreeing with the District Court’s decision to not award attorney fees, and Justice Shea

separately agreeing with the District Court’s decision to not award attorney fees. Justices

Rice and Sandefur take no position on the issue as they would find Plaintiffs had no

standing to bring suit. Given the lack of majority on this issue, the District Court’s denial

of the Plaintiffs’ request for attorney fees under the private attorney general doctrine

remains undisturbed.

4 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶4 In 1972, following a constitutional convention, Montana adopted and ratified a new

Constitution. Since that time, the Montana Constitution has explicitly provided that the

“government and control of the Montana university system is vested in a board of regents

of higher education which shall have full power, responsibility, and authority to supervise,

coordinate, manage and control the Montana university system and shall supervise and

coordinate other public educational institutions assigned by law.” Mont. Const. art. X,

§ 9(2)(a). During the 2021 legislative session, the Montana Legislature passed the three

bills at issue in this case, each of which directly concerns the activities of students in the

Montana university system.

¶5 HB 349, codified at §§ 20-25-518 and -519, MCA, regulates student organizations

and the speech of students on campus. The bill purported to limit the abilities of colleges

and universities to discipline students for certain kinds of speech and dictate whether

certain student organizations are entitled to university recognition, registration, use of

university facilities, use of “channels of communication,” and funding.

¶6 HB 112, codified at §§ 20-7-1305, -1306, and -1307, MCA, is styled as the “Save

Women’s Sports Act” and requires sports teams to be expressly designated as either male,

female, or coed, based on the biological sex of the participants, bars “students of the male

sex” from participating in women’s sports, and allows a cause of action against a school

for violating these requirements. In effect, the functional result of the bill would prohibit

transgender women from participating in interscholastic athletics.

5 ¶7 SB 319 purported to revise campaign finance laws, regulate the funding of certain

student organizations, regulate political activity on campus, and modify judicial recusal

procedures.1 Relevant to the present case, § 2 of SB 319, codified at § 20-25-452, MCA,

provided that student organizations functioning as political committees which were

“regularly active” may be “funded in the same manner as other student organizations,

except that if the organization is funded by an additional optional student fee, the fee must

be an opt-in fee,” essentially singling out certain types of student organizations for

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 MT 86, 547 P.3d 630, 416 Mont. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-state-mont-2024.