Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett v. State Objections Panel and Abby for Iowa

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 15, 2022
Docket22-0618
StatusPublished

This text of Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett v. State Objections Panel and Abby for Iowa (Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett v. State Objections Panel and Abby for Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett v. State Objections Panel and Abby for Iowa, (iowa 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 22–0618

Submitted April 13, 2022—Filed April 15, 2022

KIM SCHMETT and LEANNE PELLETT,

Petitioners-Appellees,

vs.

STATE OBJECTIONS PANEL,

Respondent-Appellant,

and

ABBY FOR IOWA,

Intervenor-Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott J. Beattie,

Judge.

The State Objections Panel and a candidate committee appeal a ruling of

the district court reversing the Panel decision that overruled objections to the

candidate’s nomination petition. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Per curiam. McDonald, J., filed an opinion concurring specially, in which

Oxley, J., joined. 2

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Samuel P. Langholz (argued),

Assistant Solicitor General, Matthew L. Gannon, First Assistant Attorney

General, and Sharon Wegner, Assistant Attorney General, for appellant State

Objections Panel.

Gary Dickey (argued) of Dickey & Campbell Law Firm, PLC, Des Moines,

Kate S. Keane, Alexander F. Atkins, and Sarah N. Mahmood, Elias Law Group,

LLP, pro hac vice for intervenor-appellant Abby for Iowa.

Alan R. Ostergren (argued) of Alan R. Ostergren, PC, Des Moines, for

appellees. 3

PER CURIAM.

We must decide whether two missing dates and one incorrect date require

a candidate for the U.S. Senate to be removed from the June 7, 2022 primary

ballot. Without those signatures, the candidate does not qualify for the ballot;

with them, she is just above the threshold.

Although including the date is a legal requirement when an eligible elector

signs a nomination petition, see Iowa Code § 43.15(2) (2022), the legislature

passed legislation last year to identify the specific circumstances when

objections to petitions shall be sustained, see 2021 Iowa Acts ch. 147, § 9

(codified at Iowa Code § 43.24(2)(a) (2022)). The legislature did not include

missing or incorrect dates as one of the grounds for sustaining an objection to a

petition. See id. We conclude that the recent legislation prevails. Accordingly, we

sustain the State Objections Panel’s decision to reject the objections as to those

three signatures. This means that we reverse the carefully considered ruling of

the district court and remand with directions to dismiss the objectors’ petition.

I. Facts and Procedural History.

Abby Finkenauer is seeking the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate

from Iowa for the 2022 general election. On March 10, 2022, Finkenauer filed a

nominating petition with the office of the Iowa Secretary of State. On March 15,

two electors residing in Iowa, Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett, filed objections

to the petition. The objections raised a number of deficiencies in the petition,

including a sheet with missing header information, duplicate signatures,

incomplete addresses of signers, and missing or incorrect dates of signers. In 4

light of these deficiencies, Schmett and Pellett urged that the petition lacked the

required signatures from at least 100 eligible electors in at least nineteen

different counties. See Iowa Code § 45.1(1).

On the afternoon of March 29, the State Objections Panel (the Panel) held

a hearing on the objections. The Panel consisted of the secretary of state, the

auditor of state, and the state attorney general. See id. § 43.24(3)(a).1 The Panel

sustained a number of objections but ultimately voted 2-1 to overrule objections

to the signatures of three electors who had provided either no date or a clearly

incorrect date.2

One of these electors was from Allamakee County, and the other two were

from Cedar County. Counting their signatures, Finkenauer had 100 signatures

in Allamakee County and 101 in Cedar County, just above the statutory

threshold for each of those counties.

Significantly, after the Panel had gone through Schmett and Pellett’s other

objections, Finkenauer’s petition had met the 100-signature threshold in only

seventeen other counties.3 Thus, if the objectors’ position as to dates had been

sustained, Finkenauer would have failed to meet the requirements to be placed

on the June 7 Democratic primary ballot.

1Schmett and Pellett moved that the auditor of state and the state attorney general recuse themselves. They declined to do so. Although Schmett and Pellett initially sought judicial review of their decisions not to recuse, they now agree that those matters are not before us. 2The clearly incorrect date was “6-6-27.” 3Originally, Finkenauer turned in a petition that purported to have 100 or more signatures from each of twenty different counties. In eight of those counties, she turned in 113 or fewer signatures. 5

Following the Panel’s decision to allow Finkenauer’s nomination petition,

Schmett and Pellett filed a petition for judicial review in Polk County District

Court on March 31 and sought expedited consideration.4 The district court

granted that request. The court also granted a motion to intervene filed by Abby

for Iowa, Finkenauer’s official campaign committee.

After receiving briefs and hearing arguments from the parties on April 8,

the district court worked through the weekend and issued a thorough eighteen-

page decision on Sunday evening, April 10.5 The court did so to ensure that there

would be adequate time and opportunity for review by this court. We appreciate

the district court’s courtesy and we trust that the parties do as well.

In its April 10 ruling, the district court first found that Schmett and Pellett

had standing. It reasoned that Iowa Code section 43.24(1)(a) allows objections

from any Iowa elector eligible to vote in the general election regardless of party

because it permits objections from “any person who would have the right to vote

for the candidate for the office in question.” (Emphasis added.)

Turning to the merits, the district court agreed with Schmett and Pellett

that the three undated or improperly dated signatures should not have been

counted. The district court found the language of Iowa Code section 43.15(2)

controlling, which provides that “[e]ach signer shall add the signer’s residential

address, with street and number, if any, and the date of signing.” (Emphasis

4The district court and this court have been advised that a final decision must occur in this case on or before April 18 to allow time for the printing and mailing of ballots. 5Abby for Iowa filed an additional memorandum of law at 8:10 p.m. on Friday, April 8. 6

added.) The court also explained why it disagreed with the Panel’s view that

“substantial compliance” with the petition requirements would be sufficient.

The Panel and Abby for Iowa appealed on April 11. We retained the appeal

and, like the district court, granted expedited consideration.

II. Standard of Review.

In Chiodo v. Section 43.24 Panel, we assumed without deciding that the

State Objections Panel was an administrative agency from which judicial review

could be sought under Iowa Code chapter 17A. 846 N.W.2d 845

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Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett v. State Objections Panel and Abby for Iowa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kim-schmett-and-leanne-pellett-v-state-objections-panel-and-abby-for-iowa-iowa-2022.