In Re: Nom. Pets. of Major, R.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 8, 2021
Docket15 EAP 2021
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Nom. Pets. of Major, R. (In Re: Nom. Pets. of Major, R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Nom. Pets. of Major, R., (Pa. 2021).

Opinion

[J-43-2021] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

BAER, C.J., SAYLOR, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

IN RE: THE NOMINATION PETITIONS OF : No. 15 EAP 2021 RANIA MAJOR AS A DEMOCRATIC : CANDIDATE FOR MUNICIPAL JUDGE IN : Appeal from the order of the PHILADELPHIA COUNTY OBJECTION : Commonwealth Court dated March OF: TIMOTHY BROOKS AND CAROL : 26, 2021 at No. 63 MD 2021. BROOKS : : SUBMITTED: April 1, 2021 : APPEAL OF: RANIA MAJOR :

OPINION

JUSTICE DOUGHERTY DECIDED: April 8, 2021 This election matter requires us to revisit our relatively recent holding that the

signature of a registered voter “may not be stricken from a nominating petition solely

because the address set forth on the nominating petition is different from the address at

which the signer is currently registered to vote.” In re Vodvarka, 140 A.3d 639, 640 (Pa.

2016). Following our unanimous decision in Vodvarka, the General Assembly in October

of 2019 enacted Act 77,1 which made significant changes to Pennsylvania’s Election

Code, 25 P.S. §§2600-3591, such as the advent of no-excuse mail-in voting. One lesser-

known change effected by Act 77 was the amendment of 25 P.S. §2868, which requires

a signer of a nominating petition to add certain information. Significantly, only one change

was made to the statute by the amendment: the former requirement that a signer add his

“residence” was replaced with a new requirement that he add the “address where he is

1 Act of October 31, 2019, P.L. 552, No. 77. duly registered and enrolled.” 25 P.S. §2868.2 After careful review, we conclude this

purposeful legislative change in statutory text has displaced our holding in Vodvarka

pertaining to the address requirement. More importantly, we conclude the statute as

amended plainly and unambiguously imposes a mandatory duty on a signer of a

nominating petition to add the address where he or she is duly registered and enrolled,

and, further, that the failure to comply with this requirement exposes the signature to

viable legal challenge. As the Commonwealth Court reached this same conclusion below,

we affirm.

Few facts are needed to appreciate the discrete legal question we face and, as it

so happens, the parties have narrowed them further still by agreeing to a limited number

of joint stipulations. Those stipulations reveal the following. On March 8, 2021, Rania

Major, Esquire (“Candidate”) filed a nominating petition for the office of Judge of the

Municipal Court of Philadelphia County. Candidate’s petition consisted of 89 pages

containing 1,582 lines of signatures of qualified Philadelphia County electors who are

registered and enrolled members of the Democratic Party. On March 15, 2021, Timothy

and Carol Brooks (“Objectors”) filed in the Commonwealth Court a petition to set aside

Candidate’s nominating petition, challenging 997 of the 1,582 signature lines for various

reasons. See 42 Pa.C.S. §764(1) (granting Commonwealth Court exclusive original

jurisdiction over certain contested nominations).

The Honorable Michael H. Wojcik promptly entered a scheduling and case

management order requiring the parties to, inter alia, review with an operator for the

SURE system3 each and every signature challenged by Objectors. The parties complied

2 The full text of the statute is produced infra. 3 “The SURE system is the Statewide Uniform Registry of Electors, the statewide database of voter registration maintained by the Department of State and administered by each county.” In re Morrison-Wesley, 946 A.2d 789, 792 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008), aff’d,

[J-43-2021] - 2 with Judge Wojcik’s order and ultimately “determined that the validity of [C]andidate’s

nominat[ing] petition should be decided by [the court]’s determination of the validity of 213

line challenges as ‘NRA,’ not registered at address.” Joint Stipulation of Facts at ¶15

(emphasis in original). The parties further stipulated the 213 signature line challenges

“do not relate to the qualification of the signers as electors of Philadelphia County, nor do

they relate to whether the signers are registered and enrolled members of the Democratic

Party.” Id. at ¶16. Instead, the parties explained, the 213 signature lines at issue were

being “challenged solely upon the basis that the addresses of those 213 qualified,

registered and enrolled electors as stated on the [n]ominating [p]etition pages differ from

their addresses as recorded in the [SURE system].” Id. at ¶17 (emphasis added).4

Finally, the parties agreed that “should the NRA objections be overruled, then [C]andidate

944 A.2d 78 (Pa. 2008). Among other things, the records maintained by this system include an elector’s registered address. 4 Given this joint and express concession as to the limited nature of the legal issue before the lower court, we deem waived those issues raised by Candidate that do not directly emanate from that single issue litigated below. Pa.R.A.P. 302(a). Compare Candidate’s Brief at 8-9 (purporting to set forth eight questions for review) with Objectors’ Brief at 1 (arguing Candidate’s proposed questions two, seven, and eight are beyond the scope of this appeal since they were not raised below). For similar reasons, we deny the Pennsylvania Democratic Party’s motion for leave to file an amicus curiae brief, in which the putative amicus encourages us “to address, even in a summary manner, the unsupported arguments that have been made in this case, and in other cases, that the global pandemic allows prospective candidates to not comply with the petition requirements of the Election Code in the absence of a per se or as-applied infirmity under the Constitution.” Proposed Amicus Curiae Brief at 1. No party in this case has preserved any issue pertaining to the ongoing pandemic, and we reject any invitation to issue an advisory opinion on matters not properly before us. Finally, all outstanding motions and applications pertaining to Candidate’s Jurisdictional Statement, Objectors’ Response thereto, the Pennsylvania Democratic Party’s Motion for Leave to File Amicus Brief and Response, and the Non-Party Philadelphia County Board of Election’s Application to Expedite Consideration of Petition, are denied as moot. Candidate’s Application to Be Excused from Reproducing the Record is granted.

[J-43-2021] - 3 has met the 1000 signature requirement” of 25 P.S. §2872.1(15)5 and, conversely,

“should the NRA objections be sustained[,] then [C]andidate has failed to meet the

minimum 1000 signature requirement[.]” Id. at ¶¶18-19.

After entertaining briefing and oral argument on the limited legal issue agreed upon

by the parties, Judge Wojcik concluded a plain reading of 25 P.S. §2868 made it “clear

that the 213 signature lines on the [n]omination [p]etition are invalid because the electors

did not provide the address where he or she ‘is duly registered and enrolled’ to vote as

indicated by the SURE [s]ystem.” In Re: The Nomination Petitions of Rania Major, 63

M.D. 2021, at 6 (Pa. Cmwlth. Mar. 26, 2021) (Wojcik, J., single judge op.). In so

concluding, Judge Wojcik opined that Candidate’s reliance on our decision in Vodvarka

was misplaced, because in that decision we “applied a prior version of [25 P.S. §2868]

that did not require, as the current version does, that an elector’s address provided on a

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