In RE MARIA TERESA RAMIREZ MORRIS, AND TEXAS ALLIANCE FOR LIFE, INC. v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 2023
Docket23-0111
StatusPublished

This text of In RE MARIA TERESA RAMIREZ MORRIS, AND TEXAS ALLIANCE FOR LIFE, INC. v. the State of Texas (In RE MARIA TERESA RAMIREZ MORRIS, AND TEXAS ALLIANCE FOR LIFE, INC. v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In RE MARIA TERESA RAMIREZ MORRIS, AND TEXAS ALLIANCE FOR LIFE, INC. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. 2023).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 23-0111 ══════════

In re Maria Teresa Ramirez Morris, and Texas Alliance for Life, Inc., Relators

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Writ of Mandamus ═══════════════════════════════════════

JUSTICE YOUNG, joined by Justice Devine and Justice Blacklock, dissenting.

Today the Court refuses to remedy a clear violation of the Election Code. It offers a host of salutary reasons. I agree with them all—when they apply. But none of the Court’s stated reasons apply here because they all depend on the same mistaken premise: the existence of a lawfully ordered special election. If such a special election had been properly called, each of these hoary principles would be relevant: • “our longstanding commitment to avoid undue interference with elections,” ante at 2; • our preference to act “without disturbing [an] election from going forward,” id. at 5; • our historical practice of not “enjoin[ing] elections altogether,” id. at 6; see also id. at 11; • the obligation of the judiciary never to “deprive the voters of an election,” id. at 6; and • the need “to facilitate elections, not to stymie them,” id. at 16. Each of those important values, however, depends on a common premise that is missing here: a lawfully ordered election. The Court’s reliance on those values requires it to assume the answer to the very issue that is in dispute—whether any special election for May has been validly ordered at all. Using doctrines that protect elections to protect events that are not elections is bootstrapping. When a purported election is not a real election, saying so does not “interfere” with an election; stating the correct date to hold an election does not “disturb” that election; telling the City when the law allows it to hold an election does not “enjoin” or “stymie” or “deprive” anyone of an election. These steps instead “facilitate” holding the election. Following the law of Texas can never be regarded as against the interests of the People of Texas. Texas law provides strict requirements for calling special elections, including how to order them and when they may or must include petition-initiated proposed city-charter amendments. One such requirement is that, to hold a special election, a city council must order it at least 78 days beforehand. The city council clearly failed to follow that binding legal requirement here. The legislature expressly authorizes Texas courts to enforce such election requirements, which protect all voters. The courts should provide pre-election relief when, as here, the core of the protection will be lost forever if not vindicated before the election and when the request for relief is timely. The need for that relief is amplified in this case because other serious issues are also present,

2 such as when, whether, and how the courts can address the contention that the proposed charter amendment violates the Local Government Code’s single-subject requirement. All the Court needs to address now, however, is the timing violation. It can and should do so by granting partial relief that directs the City to hold the special election in November, not May. In my judgment, the Court’s refusal to do so is mistaken and lacks substantial legal support. My disagreement does not connote disrespect. The Court’s decision does not follow from any improper motive. To the contrary, it expresses a most praiseworthy motivation—the determination to allow the People to govern themselves through the electoral process. I share that commitment and disagree only as to how the judiciary properly serves that foundational principle. I cannot agree that the judiciary is limited to post-election relief in the narrow circumstances before us. I therefore must respectfully dissent. I I begin with how this case came to us and why the law warrants granting partial relief. A As the Court describes, a lengthy citizen-initiated petition in the City of San Antonio—dubbed the “Justice Policy Charter Amendment”— seeks to amend the city’s charter through a variety of mechanisms concerning a host of policy issues, all related in some way to the enforcement of local, state, and federal law within the city.1 This

1 The Court briskly summarizes the proposed amendment, see ante at 2, which is even more dramatic than the brief summary suggests. Broadly speaking, the proposed amendment seeks to regulate or outright prohibit the

3 litigation commenced based on relators’ contention that the proposed amendment’s scope violated the single-subject requirement of Texas Local Government Code § 9.004(d).2 Whether the proposed amendment is otherwise substantively or procedurally improper, however, is immaterial to the question before us now: whether there is any lawfully called special election at all. The timeliness issue emerged after the city council scheduled a vote on February 16 for the purpose of ordering the May 6 election. That scheduling choice left only one extra day before the last possible day to comply with state law, which requires special elections to “be ordered

enforcement of abortion crimes, drug offenses, and theft (to name a few). More specifically, it would bar sharing specified information with other governmental agencies unless doing so would advance the proposed amendment’s preferred policy goals (like “defend[ing] the patient’s right to abortion care or the healthcare provider’s right to provide that care”). It would regulate how the police enforce warrants; restrict police authority to seek so-called “no knock” warrants from a court; and limit what the police may take as evidence incident to a search. The proposed amendment would bar the use of “chokeholds” by the police and require that police release (rather than arrest) certain categories of alleged offenders—those charged with theft of property worth less than $750, those who bring contraband into a jail or prison, and those charged with various other crimes. The proposed amendment would also have its non-enforcement scheme overseen by a newly appointed “Justice Director,” who would work with the city council and provide impact statements for any decisions affecting the city’s budget or law enforcement. All that and far more. 2 That contention, and its companion argument that such a multifaceted proposed amendment violates the requirements of Local Government Code § 9.004(e), warrant more analysis—including whether those provisions entail judicially enforceable rights and, if so, whether they protect voters at the polls (so that pre-election review is proper) or only those affected by enforcement of a voter-approved charter amendment (so that only post-election review is proper). See infra Part III (discussing how granting partial relief based on timing would have allowed the Court to consider these questions without the rush of emergency litigation).

4 not later than the 78th day before election day.” Tex. Elec. Code § 3.005(c). Shortly before the vote, this Court ordered the parties to provide status reports regarding what action, if any, the city council took with respect to the proposed amendment, and what effect the city council’s action had on the pending request for relief. The parties subsequently informed the Court that the ordinance ordering the special election passed by a vote of 7-0-3: seven voted to order the election; none voted against doing so; and three abstained from the vote. All parties agree that, under the city charter, the ordinance could not take effect until February 26—ten days from February 16, when it passed—because it received fewer than eight votes. See San Antonio, Tex., City Charter art. II, § 15; ante at 3 & n.2.3 Thus, the ordinance could only effectively “order” an election on February 26—69 days before the scheduled election.

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In RE MARIA TERESA RAMIREZ MORRIS, AND TEXAS ALLIANCE FOR LIFE, INC. v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-maria-teresa-ramirez-morris-and-texas-alliance-for-life-inc-v-the-tex-2023.