Edelman v. STATE EX REL. PUBLIC DISCLOSURE COM'N

68 P.3d 296
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 13, 2003
Docket28563-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 68 P.3d 296 (Edelman v. STATE EX REL. PUBLIC DISCLOSURE COM'N) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edelman v. STATE EX REL. PUBLIC DISCLOSURE COM'N, 68 P.3d 296 (Wash. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

68 P.3d 296 (2003)
116 Wash.App. 876

Robert EDELMAN, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Washington ex. rel. PUBLIC DISCLOSURE COMMISSION, Respondent.

No. 28563-1-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

May 13, 2003.

*297 John James White, Kevin B. Hansen, Attorneys at Law, Kirkland, WA, for Appellant.

Nancy Joan Krier, Office of Attorney General, Olympia, WA, for Respondent.

HUNT, C.J.

Robert Edelman appeals the trial court's dismissal of his petition to repeal WAC 390-16-311. The Public Disclosure Commission (PDC) promulgated WAC 390-16-311 to resolve a perceived ambiguity in RCW 42.17.640 and RCW 42.17.660 relating to campaign contribution limits for large organizations. The Legislature had enacted these statutes to implement voter-approved Initiative 134, the Fair Campaign Practices Act.

Edelman argues that in promulgating WAC 390-16-311, the PDC exceeded its statutory authority. Finding RCW 42.17.640 and RCW 42.17.660 unambiguous, we hold that WAC 390-16-311 improperly modifies the statutes, we invalidate the rule, and we reverse the trial court.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. Initiative 134

Washington voters passed Initiative 134 (I-134), the Fair Campaign Practices Act, on November 3, 1992. Laws of 1993, ch. 2, §§ 1-36. The Legislature passed laws to implement this initiative in RCW 42.17.640 and RCW 42.17.660. Laws of 1993, ch. 2, §§ 4, 6. One of the initiative's primary purposes was to establish campaign contribution limits and to reduce the influence of large organizational contributors. RCW 42.17.620.

*298 RCW 42.17.640(1) limits individual campaign contributions to $500 per candidate. RCW 42.17.660(2) provides that a contribution by a national, state, or single local unit of an organization or entity will be attributed to all other parts of the organization or entity for purposes of determining RCW 42.17.640's $500 individual contribution limit to a political campaign in the State of Washington.

B. Public Disclosure Commission

The Legislature has empowered the Public Disclosure Commission (PDC)[1] to interpret, to implement, to investigate, and to determine violations of the state's campaign finance requirements and contribution limits, lobbying, political advertising, and public officials' financial affairs reports, and to adopt rules to carry out these tasks. RCW 42.17.370(1).

In December 1992, the PDC began receiving inquiries about what rules it might adopt to implement RCW 42.17.660, especially RCW 42.17.660(2). The questions focused on (1) the effect on the individual campaign contribution limit when a parent or umbrella organization does not contribute to an election campaign governed by RCW 42.17.640 and RCW 42.17.660; and (2) what qualifies as an entity's "affiliates" within the meaning of the statute for aggregation of contributions subject to a single $500 limit.

After holding several public meetings and rulemaking hearings, the PDC concluded that RCW 42.17.660 was ambiguous because it did not address how the contribution limit applies to local units when a parent or umbrella organization makes no contributions. To clarify this perceived ambiguity, the PDC adopted WAC 390-16-309 and WAC 390-16-311. WAC 390-16-311 essentially released local affiliates from having to combine their contributions toward a single limit under RCW 42.17.640 and RCW 42.17.660 when the parent or umbrella of the organization makes no contribution to a particular campaign.

II. ADMINISTRATIVE AND JUDICIAL REVIEW

A. PDC

In December 2000, Robert Edelman petitioned the PDC to amend WAC 390-16-309 and to repeal WAC 390-16-311. On February 27, 2001, the PDC conducted an open public hearing on Edelman's petition.

Edelman argued that (1) WAC 390-16-311 is arbitrary and capricious because it amends RCW 42.17.660 by adding an exception to the single entity requirement; (2) federal laws governing federal elections do not allow a controlled entity to maintain its own contribution limit; (3) WAC 390-16-311 grants exceptions to selected organizations without authority; and (4) because this rule illegally permits multiple units to have separate contribution limits, it thereby gives organizational contributors a disproportionate influence on elections, contrary to the purpose and intent of the initiative and the statute. The PDC countered that WAC 390-16-311 does not create an exception to the single entity rule but, rather, was a practical application of the statute.

The PDC rejected Edelman's petition, finding that (1) WAC 390-16-311 does not amend RCW 42.17.660 in an arbitrary and capricious manner; (2) federal law does not preempt the state's implementation of its own rules; (3) the rule does not grant an "exception" but rather is a practical application of the actual statutory language, consistent with the scope of the PDC's authority; and (4) Edelman's petition sought to regulate large organizational contributors in a manner that the PDC deemed to be an unreasonable interpretation of RCW 42.17.660. The PDC recommended that Edelman ask the Legislature to impose additional restrictions on large organizations' ability to contribute to state political campaigns.

Edelman sought review of the PDC's decision by the Governor, who rejected the same arguments that Edelman had presented to the PDC.

*299 B. Judicial Review

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