Fred Meise v. Michele Jaderlund, Grant County Auditor

413 P.3d 577
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 8, 2018
Docket35174-2
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 413 P.3d 577 (Fred Meise v. Michele Jaderlund, Grant County Auditor) 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
Fred Meise v. Michele Jaderlund, Grant County Auditor, 413 P.3d 577 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 8, 2018 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

IN RE: FEBRUARY 14, 2017, SPECIAL ) ELECTION ON MOSES LAKE ) No. 35174-2-III SCHOOL DISTRICT #161 ) PROPOSITION 1 ) ) FRED MEISE, DOUG BIERMAN, PAT ) HOCHSTATTER, MIKE COUNSELL, ) JASON MELCHER, AND JARED POPE, ) ) Appellants, ) ) v. ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) MICHELLE JADERLUND, GRANT ) COUNTY AUDITOR, ) ) Respondent. ) ) KATIE PHIPPS, MICHELLE ) KITTRELL, KRISTA HAMILTON, ) SUSAN MOBERG, CRAIG HARDER, ) DENNIS KEARNS, and BARBARA ) KEARNS, ) ) Respondent Intervenors. )

FEARING, C.J. — RCW 29A.60.165 directs the county auditor to mail notice to

voters who fail to sign ballot envelopes or whose signatures do not match signatures on

file with the auditor. The mailed notice gives the voter additional time to sign the ballot

declaration or to provide a new signature to the auditor. The same Washington statute No. 35174-2-III Meise v. Jaderlund

directs the county auditor to telephone such voters if they do not respond to mailed

notice. At the conclusion of a Moses Lake School District bond election, Grant County

Auditor Michelle Jaderlund mailed notice to such defective signature voters but did not

call voters who failed to respond to the mailing. The petitioners, six Moses Lake School

District voters, ask us to invalidate the election. Based on the distinction between

directory and mandatory duties, the doctrine of substantial compliance, and other election

challenge principles, we deny the request and affirm the superior court’s dismissal of this

election challenge.

FACTS

On February 14, 2017, Moses Lake School District held a special election that

sought approval of a $135 million bond measure. The bonds intended to raise funds for a

new elementary school and new high school. We do not know the publicity given to the

election in the Moses Lake vicinity. We do not know if the Valentine’s Day ballot

contained any candidate races or other measure elections.

One hundred twenty-six ballots submitted for the bond measure contained either a

mismatched signature or no signature. A mismatched signature occurs when the Grant

County auditor determines the signature on the ballot envelope looks dissimilar to the

voter’s signature on file with the auditor’s elections division. Pursuant to law, Grant

County Auditor Michele Jaderlund mailed a letter and a correction form to each voter

who failed to sign the ballot envelope. The letter requested that the voter sign the form so

2 No. 35174-2-III Meise v. Jaderlund

that election authorities could include his or her vote in the election’s tally. The Grant

County auditor also mailed a letter to voters with mismatched signatures, which letter

directed the voter to journey to the auditor’s office to update his or her signature so that

election officials would include his or her vote in the bond measure’s count.

Ninety-five residents rectified their ballot signatures and the Grant County auditor

included their votes when tabulating results in the Moses Lake School District bond

election. Thirty-one voters did not respond to Michele Jaderlund’s letters. The record

does not indicate that the postal service returned any of the auditor’s letters as

undeliverable. The auditor did not attempt to make telephone contact with the thirty-one

voters who failed to cure their ballots. Of the thirty-one voters, twenty-four had

telephone numbers on file with the auditor. We will refer to these twenty-four electors as

the “uncalled voters” throughout the opinion.

The Moses Lake School District bond measure required a sixty percent vote for

passage. 5,678 votes favored the bond measure and 3,781 votes opposed the measure.

Under this count, a supermajority of 60.03 percent voted in favor, with the measure

passing by two votes. Obviously, the uncalled voters could have changed the outcome.

On February 24, 2017, the Grant County auditor certified the ballot outcome.

Also on February 24, the Grant County Canvassing Board certified the passage of the

measure. During the February 24 canvass, the canvassing board rejected all thirty-one

ballots, for which the auditor received no response from her letter.

3 No. 35174-2-III Meise v. Jaderlund

PROCEDURE

On March 8, 2017, six registered voters filed this election contest petition in

superior court. The petitioners claim that Grant County Auditor Michele Jaderlund

engaged in misconduct by having failed to telephone the twenty-four voters as directed

by Washington statute. The petitioners seek annulment of the Moses Lake School

District bond measure election. Each petitioner signed and filed an affidavit, with the

petition, that informed the court of the basis for the election contest and declared him or

her to be a registered voter within the Moses Lake School District.

On March 9, the Grant County Canvassing Board conducted a mandatory recount

because of the closeness of the vote. The recount did not change the result, and, on

March 10, the canvassing board certified the outcome a second time. The board did not

seek corrected votes from the thirty-one voters whose ballots the auditor did not count.

The record does not reflect how the thirty-one voters, whose votes the Grant

County auditor did not count, had voted or would have voted. The parties stipulated that

contacting the thirty-one voters during the course of this litigation would be inappropriate

and that the thirty-one rejected ballots could no longer be counted or opened. The parties

also stipulated that the superior court should not speculate as to how the uncalled voters

would vote.

Grant County Auditor Michele Jaderlund filed a motion to dismiss the six voters’

election contest petition. Thereafter, the court allowed seven registered voters to

4 No. 35174-2-III Meise v. Jaderlund

intervene in support of the auditor’s motion. The intervenors then sought to dismiss the

petition as untimely filed. The trial court ruled that the petitioners timely filed their

petition, but ruled in favor of the Grant County auditor on the merits. We agree with both

of the trial court’s rulings.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

Statute of Limitations

On appeal, Grant County Auditor Michele Jaderlund and the intervenors renew the

argument that petitioners untimely filed the election contest petition. A statute demands

that an election contest be filed within ten days of the election’s certification. The auditor

and the intervenors contend that the ten-day period commenced on February 24, when the

Grant County Canvassing Board first certified the passage of the measure, rather than

March 10, when the canvassing board recertified the outcome. The petitioners filed their

challenge on March 8. We disagree and hold that petitioners timely filed the petition.

RCW 29A.68.020 permits a registered voter to challenge in superior court the

certification of the result of an election on any measure. The statute directs, in part:

All election contests must proceed under RCW 29A.68.011 or 29A.68.013.

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