Hopkins/Starrett v. Rosenblum

460 P.3d 503, 366 Or. 239
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 2020
DocketS067200
StatusPublished

This text of 460 P.3d 503 (Hopkins/Starrett v. Rosenblum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins/Starrett v. Rosenblum, 460 P.3d 503, 366 Or. 239 (Or. 2020).

Opinion

On petitions to review ballot title filed November 22, 2019, considered and under advisement on January 22; ballot title referred to Attorney General for modification March 5, 2020

Keely HOPKINS and Paul Donheffner, Petitioners, v. Ellen F. ROSENBLUM, Attorney General, State of Oregon, Respondent. (SC S067200) (Control) Kevin STARRETT, Petitioner, v. Ellen F. ROSENBLUM, Attorney General, State of Oregon, Respondent. (SC S067201) 460 P3d 503

Petitioners challenged aspects of the certified ballot title that the Attorney General prepared for Initiative Petition (IP) 40 (2020). If approved, IP 40 would establish requirements for securing firearms, reporting the loss or theft of fire- arms, and supervising minors’ use of firearms; and would establish consequences for violating those requirements, including strict liability for injuries caused by the use of the firearms involved in the violations. Held: (1) The caption and the “yes” result statement must be modified to accurately reflect that categories of persons in addition to owners would be subject to IP 40 if approved; (2) the cap- tion must be modified to describe the liability that IP would impose as strict liability; and (3) the “yes” result statement must be modified to accurately convey the scope of the requirement to secure firearms under IP 40. The ballot title is referred to the Attorney General for modification.

En Banc Shawn M. Lindsay, Harris Berne Christensen LLP, Portland, filed the petition for review and reply memoran- dum for petitioners Keely Hopkins and Paul Donheffner. Eric Winters, Wilsonville, filed the petition for review and reply memorandum for petitioner Kevin Starrett. 240 Hopkins/Starrett v. Rosenblum

Denise J. Fjordbeck, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, filed the answering memorandum for respondent. Also on the answering memorandum were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. DUNCAN, J. The ballot title is referred to the Attorney General for modification. Cite as 366 Or 239 (2020) 241

DUNCAN, J. In these consolidated cases, petitioners seek judi- cial review of the Attorney General’s certified ballot title for Initiative Petition 40 (2020) (IP 40). For the reasons explained below, we conclude that the ballot title’s caption and “yes” result statement do not substantially comply with the applicable statutory requirements. Therefore, we refer the ballot title to the Attorney General for modification. If enacted, IP 40 would establish requirements for securing firearms, reporting the loss or theft of firearms, and supervising minors’ use of firearms. It would also estab- lish consequences for violating those requirements, includ- ing strict liability for injuries caused by use of the firearms involved in the violations. Additional details about IP 40 are described below in our discussion addressing petitioners’ challenges to the ballot title, and the full text of IP 40 is attached as an appendix. We begin with a brief review of the statutes gov- erning ballot titles, including this court’s review of them. The contents of a ballot title are prescribed by statute. ORS 250.035(2). A ballot title consists of four parts: a caption, a “yes” result statement, a “no” result statement, and a sum- mary. Id. Each part is subject to a word limit. Id. The Attorney General prepares a draft ballot title, ORS 250.065(4), and the Secretary of State provides public notice of the draft and collects written comments on it, which are then provided to the Attorney General, ORS 250.067(1). After considering the comments, the Attorney General cer- tifies either the draft ballot title or a revised ballot title. ORS 250.067(2)(a). If an elector who submitted a timely written comment on the draft ballot title believes that the certified ballot title does not substantially comply with the applicable statutory requirements, the elector may petition this court for judicial review. ORS 250.085(2). On review, the elector may renew any challenge made to the text of the draft ballot title. ORS 205.085(6). The elector may also chal- lenge any text added after the comment period. Id. But an elector may not raise any challenge to the text of the draft ballot title that could have been made, but was not, during the comment period. Id. This court reviews certified ballot 242 Hopkins/Starrett v. Rosenblum

titles for substantial compliance with the applicable statu- tory requirements. ORS 250.085(5). As required by statute, the Attorney General pre- pared a draft ballot title for IP 40, and the Secretary of State circulated it for public comment. Dozens of persons submitted comments, including petitioners. In response to some of the comments, the Attorney General modified the draft ballot title and certified the following ballot title: “Owner must lock firearm/use locked storage (excep- tions), report loss, supervise minors’ use. Penalties/ liabilities. “Result of ‘Yes’ Vote: ‘Yes’ vote requires owner to lock firearms when stored, transferred; exceptions. Owner must report theft, loss. Use by minors supervised. Penalties; strict liability for injuries. “Result of ‘No’ Vote: ‘No’ vote retains current law; locking firearms, reporting theft or loss not required. Retains current law regarding possession/ sale to minors. Owner liability requires negligence. “Summary: Requires firearm owner/ possessor to secure it with trigger or cable lock, or in locked container when not carried by owner/ possessor, with some excep- tions; must transfer firearm with trigger or cable lock, or in locked container; must report theft or loss of firearm to law enforcement within 24 hours; person transferring firearm to minor must directly supervise minor’s use. Failure to comply with requirements treated as violation (not crime). Person who violates requirements strictly liable if firearm that is subject of violation injures person/ property within four years of violation; liability does not apply if injury results from self-defense or defense of another. Oregon Health Authority to adopt specifications for trigger locks, cable locks, firearm containers. Defines ‘firearm,’ ‘transfer,’ other terms. Other provisions.” Petitioners challenge all four parts of the Attorney General’s certified ballot title for IP 40.1 Some of petition- ers’ arguments could have been made during the comment 1 Petitioner Starrett filed one petition for review, and petitioners Hopkins and Donheffner filed another one. For convenience, we refer to the three petition- ers collectively. Cite as 366 Or 239 (2020) 243

period but were not; consequently, we cannot consider them. ORS 250.085(6). We have considered all of petitioners’ prop- erly raised arguments. For the reasons explained below, we agree with some of petitioners’ arguments regarding the bal- lot title caption and the “yes” result statement. We reject the remainder of their arguments without further discussion. Petitioners’ first challenge concerns the caption of the certified ballot title.

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Bluebook (online)
460 P.3d 503, 366 Or. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkinsstarrett-v-rosenblum-or-2020.