League Of Women Voters Of Michigan V Secretary Of State

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2022
Docket163711
StatusPublished

This text of League Of Women Voters Of Michigan V Secretary Of State (League Of Women Voters Of Michigan V Secretary Of State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
League Of Women Voters Of Michigan V Secretary Of State, (Mich. 2022).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan Chief Justice: Justices:

Syllabus Bridget M. McCormack Brian K. Zahra David F. Viviano Richard H. Bernstein Elizabeth T. Clement Megan K. Cavanagh Elizabeth M. Welch

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been Reporter of Decisions: prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. Kathryn L. Loomis

LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF MICHIGAN v SECRETARY OF STATE

Docket Nos. 163711, 163712, 163744, 163745, 163747, and 163748. Decided January 24, 2022.

The League of Women Voters, Progress Michigan, the Coalition to Close Lansing Loopholes, and Michiganders for Fair and Transparent Elections brought an action in the Court of Claims against the Secretary of State, challenging the constitutionality of 2018 PA 608, which changed the procedures by which the people of Michigan can circulate petitions to invoke the referendum, initiative, and constitutional-amendment processes set forth in Michigan’s Constitution and statutory election laws. Specifically, 2018 PA 608 amended MCL 168.471 to state that no more than 15% of the signatures used to determine the validity of a petition could be from any one congressional district; it amended MCL 168.482 by adding Subsection (7), which required petitions to include checkboxes that would indicate whether the circulator of the petition was a paid signature gatherer or a volunteer; and it added MCL 168.482a, which provides that signature gatherers who are being paid must, before circulating any petition, file a signed affidavit to that effect with the Secretary of State. The Department of the Attorney General intervened to defend the laws, and the Michigan House and Senate participated as amici curiae. The Court of Claims, CYNTHIA D. STEPHENS, J., struck down the geographical limitation in MCL 168.471 as well as the checkbox requirement of MCL 168.482(7); however, it ruled that the affidavit requirement, MCL 168.482a, was constitutional. The parties appealed, and the Court of Appeals consolidated the appeals. Plaintiffs filed an application to bypass the Court of Appeals under MCR 7.305(C)(1)(a), which the Supreme Court denied. League of Women Voters of Mich v Secretary of State, ___ Mich ___; 963 NW2d 377 (2021). The Court of Appeals, RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and K. F. KELLY, J. (CAMERON, J., concurring), affirmed in part the Court of Claims’ decision, striking as unconstitutional the geographic limitation in MCL 168.471 and the requirement in MCL 168.482(4) that petitions include language identifying the signer’s congressional district. The Court of Appeals also reversed the Court of Claims as to the checkbox and affidavit requirements, holding that the checkbox requirement in MCL 168.482 was constitutional but the affidavit requirement in MCL 168.482a overly burdened the free-speech rights of the petitions’ sponsors. League of Women Voters of Mich v Secretary of State, ___ Mich App___ (2021) (Docket Nos. 357984 and 357986). Plaintiffs sought leave to appeal, arguing that the checkbox requirement, MCL 168.482(7), was unconstitutional. The Department of the Attorney General sought leave to appeal the Court of Appeals’ holdings as to the 15% geographic requirement, MCL 168.471, and the affidavit requirement, MCL 168.482a. Defendant Secretary of State sought leave to appeal in order to request that, regardless of the outcome, the decision be applied only prospectively.

In an opinion by Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Chief Justice MCCORMACK and Justices BERNSTEIN (except as to Part IV(A)), CLEMENT (except as to Parts IV(B) and V), and WELCH, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal and without hearing oral argument, held:

The 15% cap on signatures from any one congressional district and the precirculation affidavit requirement for paid circulators violated the Michigan Constitution. The checkbox requirement, however, passed constitutional muster. In light of the chaos and injustice that would ensue were the opinion to be applied retroactively, the decision was given prospective effect only. Any signature gathered after January 24, 2022, must be on a petition that conforms to the requirements of MCL 168.482(7).

1. Const 1963, art 2, § 9 reserves to the people the ability to approve or reject legislation that the Legislature has already adopted (the referendum) and to propose laws to the Legislature and enact them if the Legislature refuses (the initiative). The initiative provision set forth in Article 2, § 9 serves as an express limitation on the authority of the Legislature. Although the Constitution also directs the Legislature to implement these provisions, the Legislature’s power does not extend to an ability to enact the 15% geographic-distribution requirement. The word “implement,” which means “to put into practical effect” or “carry out,” carries the connotation that some received set of rules is being carried out, not that a new set of rules is to be created. Const 1963, art 2, § 9 provides in part that the power of referendum must be invoked in the manner “prescribed by law.” The committee in charge of drafting the Constitution used the phrase “prescribed by law” if only the details were left to the Legislature and not the overall planning, whereas it used the phrase “provided by law” when it intended that the Legislature do the entire job of implementation. Accordingly, the Legislature is empowered only to adopt rules that further the principles already set forth in Const 1963, art 2, § 9, which has no geographic-distribution requirement. The original referendum and initiative provisions in Michigan were amendments of the legislative vesting clause, Const 1908, art 5, § 1. While this provision originally did no more than vest the Legislature with the legislative power of the state, as a result of political parties’ continually making and breaking promises to pass legislation for which there was a popular demand, a 1913 amendment took back from the Legislature the right of the people themselves to initiate legislation and to approve legislation enacted by the Legislature. At the convention that produced the 1963 Constitution, much of the language added by amendment in 1913 was eliminated, but while matters of legislative detail were left to the Legislature, the remaining language makes it clear that this section is self-executing. Unless otherwise expressly indicated, the Legislature may not pass laws supplementary to self-executing constitutional provisions that curtail or place undue burdens on the rights guaranteed by those provisions. When implementing the direct-democracy provisions of the 1963 Constitution, the Legislature may adopt the sorts of requirements that were formerly provided in the Constitution of 1908—type size, the timeline for circulating petitions, the duties of state officials in processing petitions that have been submitted, and so on. By contrast, the 15% requirement in MCL 168.471 does not merely fill in necessary details, but rather adds a substantive obligation. Further, by choosing a statewide minimum number of signatures without a geographic cap, the people demonstrated their intent to allow a relatively small coalition of voters from a concentrated geographic area to propose changes to the law, with the understanding that such proposals would not become law without the approval of the Legislature or a majority of the voters in a statewide election. A cap on how many signatures can come from each part of the state would undermine these intentions by making it more difficult and expensive to gather the required number of signatures within the time frame required by Michigan’s election laws, and the related enforcement provisions would effectively ensure that some voters’ signatures would be rendered void merely because they were obtained after the 15% cap for that district had been reached.

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