In Re Initiative Petition No. 365 State Question No. 687

2000 OK 47, 9 P.3d 78, 71 O.B.A.J. 1747, 2000 Okla. LEXIS 45, 2000 WL 872966
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 20, 2000
Docket94,155
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2000 OK 47 (In Re Initiative Petition No. 365 State Question No. 687) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Initiative Petition No. 365 State Question No. 687, 2000 OK 47, 9 P.3d 78, 71 O.B.A.J. 1747, 2000 Okla. LEXIS 45, 2000 WL 872966 (Okla. 2000).

Opinion

WINCHESTER, J.

1 1 The protestants against Initiative Petition No. 865, State Question No. 687, move for summary disposition of the petition asking that we find it invalid as a matter of law. They claim that the petition is fatally defective on its face because the names of the proponents are not in the proper location on the petition, nor are they identified as proponents in conformance with 1994 Okla.Sess. Laws, ch. 147, § 2, codified in 34 O.S.Supp. 1999, § 2. 1 In addition, the protestants filed two related motions. They moved to quash the "Notice of the Filing of State Question Number 687, Initiative Petition Number 865," published in the Daily Oklahoman on January 28, 2000, because the petition did not identify the proponents. The protestants also moved to strike Janet Halliburton and the Oklahoma Coalition Against Cockfighting, Cynthia Armstrong and Jenice Keisling as parties to the legal challenge to the petition. We hold that the petition is in substantial compliance with the statute, and we deny the protestants' motions.

- 12 Janet Halliburton and Oklahoma Coalition Against Cockfighting filed Initiative Petition 865 (the petition) with the Oklahoma Secretary of State on September 18, 1999. The petition seeks to prohibit cockfighting, making it a felony to hold or encourage a cockfight or to keep birds for fighting purposes and also making it a misdemeanor to be a spectator at a cockfight. In a letter to this Court dated January 10, 2000, the Secretary of State, Mike Hunter, informed the Court that he had received twelve boxes of signature pamphlets for the petition from Janet Halliburton, Oklahoma Coalition Against Cockfighting, P.O. Box 780378, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 73178. Pursuant to 34 0.S$.Supp.1999, 8(C), the secretary certified the total number of signatures from the 5,388 pamphlets to be 99,809. The secretary also certified the total number of votes cast, which was 878,585, for the state office receiving the highest number of votes at the last general election, which was for the office of governor. The Oklahoma Constitution, Article 5, § 2, provides that eight percent of the legal voters can propose any legislative mea *80 sure. The eight percent is based upon the total number of votes cast at the last general election for the state office receiving the highest number of votes at that election. Therefore, the proponents needed 69,887 signatures to bring the matter to a vote of the people.

T3 On January 23, 2000, the Secretary of State published notice of the filing of the petition. The publication gave notice that any citizen of the State of Oklahoma could file a written protest of the petition or a written objection to the signature count in the office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma, with a copy directed to the proponents of the petition. This notice was a publication of an order of this Court. That order recognized Janet Hali-burton and the Oklahoma Coalition Against Cockfighting as the proponents of the petition. The order and its contents are required by 1992 Okla.Sess.Laws, ch. 92, § 7, codified in 34 0.S.Supp.1999, 8.

14 The petition places the name of the proponents after the lines for signatures instead of before, which is the statutory placement, and the proponents are not specifically designated proponents. The issue is whether the failure of the proponents of an initiative petition to identify themselves as proponents and the failure to place this information before the signature lines is significant enough to invalidate the whole initiative process. Title 34 provides the general provisions for initiative and referendum. Section 2 provides the form for the initiative petition. That section begins, "The form of initiative petition shall be substantially as follows...." In construing § 2, this Court has held that the procedure prescribed by the statute is not mandatory, but is sufficient if substantially followed. In re Initiative Petition No. 176, 1940 OK 214, 102 P.2d 609, 612. That case explains that, "If the end aimed at can be attained the procedure followed will be sustained. Clerical and mere technical errors are to be disregarded." In re Initiative Petition No. 176, 1940 OK 214, 102 P.2d at 612. Citing In re Initiative Petition No. 176, and In re Initiative Petition No. 224, 1946 OK 215, 197 Okla. 482, 172 P.2d 324, this Court reaffirmed that substantial compliance with the provisions of the statutes with reference to initiative petitions is sufficient. In re Initiative Petition No. 249, 1950 OK 238, ¶ 8, 222 P.2d 1082, 1085.

¶ 5 In re Initiative Petition No. 176 involved questioned signatures. On many pamphlets, the person who signed line number 1, wrote out his residence, followed by the name of the city or town, written in full, followed by the abbreviation "Okla." The subsequent signers on the pamphlet, when from the same city or town, would indicate that by a ditto mark under the name of the city or town in the line above. After those pamphlets were delivered to the County Commissioner of Oklahoma County, who supervised the circulation of the petition, either he or one of his clerks or secretaries wrote in the name of the city or town and the state over the ditto marks before filing the petition with the Secretary of State. The protestants wanted all of these names stricken. They contended that where the addresses of the signers did not appear on the pamphlets when verified by the circulator, and were supplied or written in by some person after the pamphlet had left the possession of the cireulator, the signatures did not substantially comply with § 2. Section 2 required the form of the petition to include that "my residence or post office are correctly written after my name." In addition, the protestants claimed that the pamphlets did not substantially comply with § 6 of title 384, which required each circulator by affidavit to state that "I believe that each [signer] has stated his name, postoffice address, and residence correctly...." The Court held that in the absence of evidence of willful fraud or guilty knowledge on the part of the cireulator, the signatures should be counted unless the residence and postoffice addresses of the signers were entirely supplied or written in after the petitions were verified by the circulator. In re Initiative Petition No. 176, 1940 OK 214, 102 P.2d at 611-612.

T6 Before the 1992 amendment to § 2, the statute provided that the petition, after including an exact copy of the title and text of the measure being submitted to the voters, must contain the following:

*81 Residence Post Office ______ If in the city, street and number. (Here follow forty numbered lines for signatures.)" "Name

The 1992 amendment to § 2, 1992 Okla.Sess. Laws, ch. 92, $ 2, added above the line for name and residence: "Name and Address of Proponents (not to exceed three)." 2 A proponent is one who offers or proposes something. Since the statute adds the parenthetical "not to exceed three," we may infer that the legislature did not require that all proponents of an initiative petition include their names and addresses. The protestants argue from the fact that the legislature chose to make the word "proponent" plural, that at least two proponents must be named. We do not agree. A petition may have only one proponent, and that proponent need not find another to meet the requirements of the . statute.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 OK 47, 9 P.3d 78, 71 O.B.A.J. 1747, 2000 Okla. LEXIS 45, 2000 WL 872966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-initiative-petition-no-365-state-question-no-687-okla-2000.