ED. FREEDOM PAC v. REID (BALLOT ISSUE)

2022 NV 47, 512 P.3d 296
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 2022
Docket84736
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 NV 47 (ED. FREEDOM PAC v. REID (BALLOT ISSUE)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ED. FREEDOM PAC v. REID (BALLOT ISSUE), 2022 NV 47, 512 P.3d 296 (Neb. 2022).

Opinion

138 Nev., Advance Opinion L{") IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

EDUCATION FREEDOM PAC, No. 84736 Appellant,

vs. . RORY REID, AN INDIVIDUAL; i [ L - D BEVERLY ROGERS, AN INDIVIDUAL; 3

AND BARBARA K. CEGAVSKE, IN

HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS JUN 28 2022 NEVADA SECRETARY OF STATE, THA BR Respondents.

heF DEPUTY EF DEPUTY CIERK

Appeal from a district court order enjoining an initiative petition’s circulation and the initiative’s placement on the ballot. First Judicial District Court, Carson City; Charles M. McGee, Senior Judge.

Affirmed.

Hutchison & Steffen, LLC, and Jason D. Guinasso, Alexander R. Velto, and Astrid Alondra Perez, Reno, for Appellant.

Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General, Craig A. Newby, Deputy Solicitor General, and Laena St-Jules, Deputy Attorney General, Carson City, for Respondent Secretary of State.

Wolf, Rifkin, Shapiro, Schulman & Rabkin, LLP, and Bradley S. Schrager, John M. Samberg, and Daniel Bravo, Las Vegas, for Respondents Rory Reid and Beverly Rogers.

BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, EN BANC.

SupREME Court OF NEVADA

(0) 1947A

OPINION By the Court, HARDESTY, J::

The Nevada Constitution gives the people the power to enact laws by initiative petition, subject to the petition meeting constitutional and statutory requirements. First and foremost, under the Nevada Constitution, an initiative petition cannot require appropriations or expenditures without providing funding for those appropriations or expenditures. Reading the relevant state constitutional provisions in harmony, this requirement applies to initiatives proposing constitutional or statutory changes. Additionally, by statute, the description of effect for an initiative petition must adequately inform potential signatories about the petition’s goal. Lastly, an initiative petition cannot invade the Legislature’s primary role of proposing and enacting laws, a function that inherently includes deliberation and debate during legislative sessions, by directing a future Legislature to enact certain laws. This occurs when an initiative petition omits necessary statutory or constitutional changes and instead proposes a general idea and then directs the Legislature to enact laws to effectuate that idea at some future date.

The initiative before us in this matter falls short of all three of these requirements. Thus, we conclude the district court properly enjoined the circulation of the initiative petition and enjoined respondent Secretary of State from placing the initiative on the ballot. We also conclude that the statutory requirement to set a hearing on a complaint challenging an initiative within 15 days is directory, not mandatory, and under the circumstances here, the district court properly declined to dismiss the

complaint despite not having set the hearing within that time frame.

bo

(0) 1947A

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Appellant Education Freedom PAC (EFP) seeks to place an initiative on the ballot that would amend the Nevada Constitution to require the Legislature to establish education freedom accounts for parents to use to pay for their child’s education if their child is educated outside of the uniform system of common schools. The initiative seeks to add the following single section to Article 11 of the Nevada Constitution:

No later than the school year commencing in 2025, and on an ongoing basis thereafter, the Legislature shall provide by law for the establishment of education freedom accounts by parents of children being educated in Nevada. Parents shall be authorized to use the funds in the accounts to pay for the education of their child in full or in part ina school or educational environment that is not a part of the uniform system of common _ schools established by the Legislature. The Legislature shall appropriate money to fund each account in an amount comparable to the amount of funding that: would otherwise be used to support the education of that child in the uniform system of common schools. The Legislature shal provide by law for an eligibility criteria for parents to establish an education freedom account.

The initiative petition included the following description of effect on the signature pages:

The initiative will provide parents with the ability to use funds appropriated by the Legislature to pay for the education of their child in a school or educational environment that is not a part of the public school system. The initiative requires the Legislature to establish an education freedom account program under which parents may spend money appropriated by the Legislature into those accounts to pay for some or all of their child’s education outside the public school system. The

SuPREME Court OF

NEVADA Q oO

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Legislature must establish an eligibility criteria for parents to establish an account.

The initiative will result in the expenditure of state funds to fund the accounts in an amount comparable to the public support that would be used to support the education of the child for whose benefit the account has been established in a public school. For Fiscal Year 2021-2022, the Legislature determined the statewide base per pupil amount to be $6,980 per pupil. For Fiscal Year 2022-2023, that amount is $7,074 per pupil. Generating the revenue to fund the accounts could necessitate a tax increase or a reduction in government services. The Legislature must establish the program by the start of the school year that commences in 2025.

Respondents Rory Reid and Beverly Rogers (collectively referred to as Reid) filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief challenging the initiative in the district court. On the same day Reid filed his complaint, the assigned district court judge recused himself. Nine days later, Senior Judge Charles McGee was assigned to handle the matter, after Reid exercised a peremptory challenge on the remaining district court judge. EFP then intervened in the matter and filed an answer and a brief challenging the district court’s authority to hear the matter given that no hearing had been set within 15 days, as is statutorily required.

Thirty days after Reid filed his complaint, the district court set the matter for a hearing. After the hearing, the court entered an order enjoining EFP from circulating the initiative petition for signatures and enjoining respondent Secretary of State from including the initiative on the ballot. First, the district court concluded that while the hearing had not been set within 15 days after the complaint was filed, dismissal was unnecessary because the hearing was expedited to the best of the court's

ability. Second, the court concluded the initiative was invalid for three

SuPREME GourT OF NEVADA

reasons: (1) the initiative is an unfunded mandate, (2) the description of

effect is legally misleading and contains a material omission, and (3) the

initiative violates the Nevada Legislature’s inherent deliberative functions

vy commanding the Legislature to enact certain laws. EFP now appeals. DISCUSSION

The district court properly denied EFP’s request to dismiss

We first consider whether the district court properly denied EFP’s request to dismiss the complaint because the district court had not set the matter for a hearing within 15 days. NRS 295.061(1) requires a party to file a complaint challenging an initiative petition’s description of effect no later than 15 days after the petition is filed with the Secretary of State, which Reid did.

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Related

Nevadans for Reprod. Freedom v. Washington
546 P.3d 801 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 NV 47, 512 P.3d 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ed-freedom-pac-v-reid-ballot-issue-nev-2022.