CAZIER v. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY

883 S.E.2d 517, 315 Ga. 587
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 27, 2023
DocketS22C0513
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 883 S.E.2d 517 (CAZIER v. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CAZIER v. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY, 883 S.E.2d 517, 315 Ga. 587 (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

315 Ga. 587 FINAL COPY

S22C0513. CAZIER et al. v. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY.

ORDER OF THE COURT.

The Supreme Court today denied the petition for certiorari in this case.

Peterson, P. J., and Bethel and LaGrua, JJ., and Judges Jeffrey O. Monroe and Shondeana Morris concur. Boggs, C. J., and Warren, Ellington, McMillian, and Pinson, JJ., disqualified, and Colvin, J., not participating.

PETERSON, Presiding Justice, concurring.

I concur in the Court’s denial of certiorari in this case. The

issues here have gravity, and Cazier makes a number of good points:

interpreting the law is the role of courts; judicial deference to

executive branch legal interpretations poses a risk to the separation of powers; and, in any event, whatever permissible role there might

be for such deference, a law is not “ambiguous” simply because interpreting it is hard. See City of Guyton v. Barrow, 305 Ga. 799,

803-04 (2) (828 SE2d 366) (2019). But the law of the case doctrine

prevents us from reaching those important issues here, and so the

Court correctly declines to do so. Nevertheless, I write separately to

express my growing doubt about our recent precedents requiring judicial deference to executive branch agencies’ interpretation of legal text. My doubt has a constitutional origin: judicial deference to

executive branch legal interpretations implicates the Separation of

Powers Provision of the Georgia Constitution. See Ga. Const. of

1983, Art. I, Sec. II, Par. III (“The legislative, judicial, and executive

powers shall forever remain separate and distinct; and no person

discharging the duties of one shall at the same time exercise the

functions of either of the others except as herein provided.”); see also

Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. I, Par. I (“The judicial power of the

state shall be vested exclusively in the following classes of courts:

magistrate courts, probate courts, juvenile courts, state courts,

superior courts, state-wide business court, Court of Appeals, and

Supreme Court.”); City of Guyton, 305 Ga. at 799 (“At the core of the

judicial power is the authority and responsibility to interpret legal

text.”). Because the Separation of Powers Provision has been carried

forward unchanged through every Georgia Constitution since 1877,

and every previous Georgia Constitution contained a similar

2 provision, our historical understanding of judicial deference to the

legal interpretations of other branches informs our understanding

of whatever limitations our current Constitution may place on the

subject. Cf. Black Voters Matter Fund, Inc. v. Kemp, 313 Ga. 375,

396 (1) & n.27 (870 SE2d 430) (2022) (Peterson, J., concurring)

(detailing the history of the Provision and suggesting that a century

of pre-1983 standing precedent may be “baked into the 1983

Constitution[’s]” Provision).1

But our history of deference is messy; our precedent is all over

the place, and has been for nearly the entire existence of our Court.

Eight years ago, we announced for the first time in our state’s

history that our precedent on judicial deference to executive branch

legal interpretations is best understood through the federal lens of

Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467

1 Following my concurrence in Black Voters Matter Fund, we held that

at least some Georgia standing rules do arise from the Georgia Constitution — but we found those particular rules arose instead from the provision that vests the “judicial power” in Georgia courts. See Sons of Confederate Veterans v. Henry Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 315 Ga. 39 (880 SE2d 168) (2022). We left open the possibility that the Separation of Powers Provision may inform the scope and nature of other standing rules, however. See id. at 54 (2) (c) n.13, 61-61 (2) (c) (iii) n. 19. 3 U.S. 837 (104 SCt 2778, 81 LE2d 694) (1984). That recency poses a

problem. If — as it appears to me — our post-1983 decisions

pronounced deference principles without proper grounding in our

cases interpreting the earlier versions of the Constitution, then

those post-1983 decisions do not shed light on the original public

meaning of the current Separation of Powers Provision. And as I

explain below, our pre-1983 precedent does not appear to support a

Chevron-style regime. So, in an appropriate case, I think we should

reconsider the matter.

1. Our recent discovery of Chevron-style deference in our

precedent was ill-founded.

In Chevron, the United States Supreme Court held that courts

should defer to a federal agency’s reasonable interpretation of

ambiguous federal statutes, reasoning that such ambiguity

represents an implicit delegation from Congress for the agency to

decide that question. See 467 U.S. at 843-44, 865-67. Under

Chevron, courts must first ask “whether Congress has directly

spoken to the precise question at issue.” Id. at 842. “[I]f the statute

4 is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question

for the court is whether the agency’s answer is based on a

permissible construction of the statute.” Id. at 843.

Eight years ago, we asserted for the first time that our

deference precedent was properly understood as “in accord with that

identified by the United States Supreme Court in Chevron.” See

Cook v. Glover, 295 Ga. 495, 500 (761 SE2d 267) (2014). We were

wrong. Nothing we cited in Cook supported that view. And Georgia

deference precedent historically had different rationales from

Chevron, was less binding, and principally applied to long-standing

interpretations (again, unlike Chevron).

(a) None of the cases cited in Cook support its claim about our

deference precedent.

Cook’s novel assertion about Chevron and our own precedent

came in a case involving the application by a state agency of a legal

interpretation of federal law by a federal agency (to which Chevron

would apply anyway as a matter of federal law), and came over the

disagreement of two justices. 295 Ga. at 497-98, 502-03. But on

5 closer examination, none of the cases Cook cited for the idea that

Georgia law resembles Chevron actually support it — and certainly

not in any way that reveals a consistent and definitive construction

of our Separation of Powers Provision.2 See id. at 499-501 (citing

Handel v. Powell, 284 Ga. 550, 553 (670 SE2d 62) (2008); Schrenko

v. DeKalb County School District, 276 Ga. 786, 791 (2) (582 SE2d

109) (2003); Center for a Sustainable Coast v. Coastal Marshlands

Protection Committee, 284 Ga. 736, 741 (2) (670 SE2d 429) (2008);

Ga. Real Estate Comm. v. Accelerated Courses in Real Estate, 234

Ga. 30, 32-33 (2) (214 SE2d 495) (1975); Ga. Dept. of Community

Health v. Medders, 292 Ga. App. 439, 440 (664 SE2d 832) (2008)).

2 By this I mean that these cases do not explain the meaning of our

Separation of Powers Provision with such consistency and clarity that, by re- enacting the provision into later Constitutions without material change, the legislature is presumed to have baked those interpretations into the original public meaning of our current Constitution. See Elliott v. State, 305 Ga.

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