Joe Pool, III v. City of Houston

978 F.3d 307
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 2020
Docket19-20828
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 978 F.3d 307 (Joe Pool, III v. City of Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joe Pool, III v. City of Houston, 978 F.3d 307 (5th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

Case: 19-20828 Document: 00515613775 Page: 1 Date Filed: 10/23/2020

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED No. 19-20828 October 23, 2020 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk Joe Richard Pool, III; Trenton Donn Pool; Accelevate2020, L.L.C.,

Plaintiffs—Appellants,

versus

City of Houston; Anna Russell, in her official capacity as the City Secretary of the City of Houston,

Defendants—Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas USDC No. 4:19-CV-2236

Before Graves, Costa, and Engelhardt, Circuit Judges. Gregg Costa, Circuit Judge: It is often said that courts “strike down” laws when ruling them unconstitutional. That’s not quite right. See Jonathan F. Mitchell, The Writ- of-Erasure Fallacy, 104 VA. L. REV. 933, 936 (2018). Courts hold laws unenforceable; they do not erase them. Id. Many laws that are plainly unconstitutional remain on the statute books. Jim Crow-era segregation laws Case: 19-20828 Document: 00515613775 Page: 2 Date Filed: 10/23/2020

No. 19-20828

are one example.1 See Gabriel J. Chin et al., Still on the Books: Jim Crow and Segregation Laws Fifty Years After Brown v. Board of Education, 2006 MICH. ST. L. REV. 457 (highlighting the segregationist laws still present in the codes of several states); see also Josh Blackman, The Irrepressible Myth of Cooper v. Aaron, 107 GEO. L.J. 1135, 1199 (2019) (noting that the Texas law criminalizing sodomy at issue in Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003), remains in the state code). The City of Houston contends that it’s being sued for one of these so- called “zombie” laws. Its Charter allows only registered voters to circulate petitions for initiatives and referenda, even though the Supreme Court held a similar law unconstitutional twenty years ago. See Buckley v. Am. Constitutional Law Found., Inc., 525 U.S. 182, 193–97 (1999). This case thus requires us to decide when the threat of continued enforcement is enough to reanimate a zombie law and bring it from the statutory graveyard into federal court. I. Houston is one of more than three hundred Texas cities with a home rule charter. TERRELL BLODGETT, TEXAS HOME RULE CHARTERS 3 (2d ed. 2010). The Charter covers everything from the City’s power to regulate crematories to its requirements for streetcar operators. Houston, Tex., City Charter, art. II, § 15 (hereinafter CHARTER); id. art. IV, § 5. This case concerns the Charter’s rules for petition-based citizen legislation. Houston’s Charter allows “qualified voters” to place initiatives and referenda on ballots through petitions.2 Id. art. VII-a, § 2; id. art. VII-b, §§ 2–

1 Some are trying to repeal such laws. See, e.g., Laura Vozzella, Virginia Panel Finds Scores of Defunct, Racist Laws It Says Should Be Erased, WASH. POST, Dec. 6, 2019, at B1. 2 Initiatives propose new legislation, whereas referenda allow voters to uphold or repeal a law already enacted by the City Council.

2 Case: 19-20828 Document: 00515613775 Page: 3 Date Filed: 10/23/2020

3. These petitions must use a form specified in the Charter that requires circulators to attest by notarized signature that they are “one of the [petition’s] signers.” Id. art. VII-a, § 3. All signers must be “qualified voters of the City of Houston.” Id. To be a “qualified voter,” a person must reside in Texas and be “a registered voter.” Tex. Elec. Code § 11.002(a)(5– 6). As a result, the Charter effectively requires every person signing a petition—including the circulator—to both reside in Houston and be registered to vote there. A product of the Progressive Era, Houston’s citizen petition process, including the rules we have just described, dates back to 1913. CHARTER, art. VII-b, § 1. In 1999, however, the Supreme Court held unconstitutional a Colorado law providing that only registered voters could circulate petitions for ballot initiatives. Buckley, 525 U.S. at 193–97. More than two decades later, the voter-registration and residency requirements remain in the Houston Charter.3 The plaintiffs, Trent and Trey Pool, are ineligible to circulate petitions under the Charter’s qualified-voter provision. Neither is registered to vote in Houston: Trent resides in Austin; Trey lives in California. Trent is an avid petition circulator. In the past decade, he has petitioned in Texas and other states for Jill Stein, Ted Cruz, and Donald Trump; he has petitioned for medical marijuana referenda; and he has even petitioned for the creation of new political parties. Trent has such a passion for petitions that he runs a company dedicated to hiring professional circulators.4 Trey

3 Buckley did not decide the constitutionality of a residency requirement for petition circulators, 525 U.S. at 197, and the City’s position on whether a residency requirement is lawful is not clear. The district court did not think it necessary to resolve this issue because the “residency requirement is subsumed within the voter registration requirement and the two requirements cannot be separated.” Because the City does not appear to press the residency requirement as a separate requirement, we follow the district court’s assumption. 4 Trent Pool’s company, Accelevate2020 L.L.C., is the third Plaintiff in this suit. We refer to the Plaintiffs collectively as “the Pools.”

3 Case: 19-20828 Document: 00515613775 Page: 4 Date Filed: 10/23/2020

Pool does not have the same experience with petitions as Trent, but he does want to circulate petitions in Houston. One such petition spawned this lawsuit. A 2019 petition sought to put an ordinance on the Houston ballot that would limit campaign contributions from City contractors to candidates for municipal office. The Pools wanted to help collect signatures for this “anti-pay-to-play” initiative. But the Charter’s petition form, with its qualified-voter requirement, prohibited them from legally circulating the petition. They emailed the City of Houston Legal Department, providing notice of their desire to circulate petitions and intent to sue for relief. The City responded the following day but indicated that it had not yet determined its position on the Charter requirements’ enforceability.5 The Pools immediately filed a complaint in federal court, mounting facial and as-applied challenges to the Charter. The Pools sought a preliminary injunction allowing them to collect signatures for the anti-pay-to-play petition as well as a declaratory judgment that the Charter’s voter-registration and residency provisions are unconstitutional, permanent injunctive relief against enforcement of those provisions, and nominal damages. The Pools also filed an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO), which would allow them to circulate the petition through the deadline of July 9, 2019. The court granted a TRO, allowing the Pools to circulate the petition for the next week. It compared the Charter’s voter-registration requirement to the Colorado law at issue in Buckley. The court concluded, however, that the Pools had not demonstrated an injury sufficient to support standing with regard to future petitions.

5 Within a week, however, the City informed the Pools that it would not enforce the Charter’s voter-registration requirement.

4 Case: 19-20828 Document: 00515613775 Page: 5 Date Filed: 10/23/2020

With the restrictions enjoined, Trent collected forty signatures before the deadline. Those were not enough as the petition lacked enough signatures to put the initiative onto the ballot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
978 F.3d 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-pool-iii-v-city-of-houston-ca5-2020.