Leland Speed v. Delbert Hosemann

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 2011
Docket2011-CA-01106-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Leland Speed v. Delbert Hosemann (Leland Speed v. Delbert Hosemann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leland Speed v. Delbert Hosemann, (Mich. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2011-CA-01106-SCT

LELAND SPEED

v.

DELBERT HOSEMANN, SECRETARY OF STATE OF MISSISSIPPI AND DAVID WAIDE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/29/2011 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. WINSTON L. KIDD COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: LUTHER T. MUNFORD ROBERT GREGG MAYER FRED L. BANKS, JR. RONALD D. FARRIS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: HAROLD EDWARD PIZZETTA, III SAM E. SCOTT NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: VACATED AND DISMISSED - 09/08/2011 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

LAMAR, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. David Waide filed an Initiative 1 with Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert

Hosemann, and Hosemann has approved it for placement on the November 2011 general

election ballot.

1 The Initiative – now known as Initiative 31 – attempts to restrict the state’s power to transfer certain property to certain parties after taking it by eminent domain. ¶2. Leland Speed filed a complaint against Hosemann in the Hinds County Circuit Court,

along with a Motion for Expedited Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, asking the court to

declare Initiative 31 unconstitutional and to enjoin Hosemann from placing it on the ballot.

Speed argued that Initiative 31 “violates Section 273(5)(a) because that section prohibits use

of the initiative process for the ‘proposal, modification or repeal’ of ‘any portion’ of the

Constitution’s Bill of Rights.” Speed argued that Initiative 31 was a “‘proposal, modification

or repeal’ of the Bill of Rights . . . and more specifically of its Section 17, which governs

taking of private property for a public use.”

¶3. After Hosemann and Waide 2 responded to Speed’s pleadings, Speed filed a Motion

for Judgment on the Pleadings, in which he argued that the case “involve[d] a pure issue of

law with no material facts in dispute” and asked the court to enter judgment in his favor

under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). The trial judge both denied Speed’s motion

for judgment on the pleadings and ruled on the merits, finding that Speed’s complaint should

be dismissed with prejudice and ordering that Hosemann be allowed to proceed in placing

Initiative 31 on the ballot.

¶4. On appeal, Speed asks this Court to reverse the trial judge, declare that Initiative 31

violates Section 273(5) of the Mississippi Constitution, and “keep Initiative 31 off the

November ballot.”

¶5. We find that the issue presented in this appeal, i.e., the constitutionality of proposed

Initiative 31, is not ripe for adjudication by this Court, such that any opinion thereon would

be improperly advisory. Speed filed his complaint only two months ago, and the case already

2 The trial court granted Waide’s motion to intervene as a defendant.

2 has arrived on our docket. This case has been rushed through the trial court and efficiently

punted to this Court for “expedited review.” We find no good reason for the frenetic, fast-

paced atmosphere surrounding this case, and we think there is “time enough to pass upon

such important questions when they are reached in due course, with proper parties, in a

proper proceeding.” Power v. Ratliff, 72 So. 864, 865 (Miss. 1916).

¶6. In Ratliff, contestants obtained an injunction against Secretary of State Joseph Power

to prevent him from “taking the steps necessary to refer . . . several acts of the Legislature

to an election by the people,” and Power appealed. Id. at 865. This Court dissolved the

injunction and dismissed the action, noting the general rule that “an injunction will not lie

to restrain the holding of an election.” Id. And regarding pre-election review of initiatives

specifically, the Ratliff Court observed that when:

qualified electors are . . . attempting the performance of a legislative act, . . . courts have no more right to interfere with this legislative act of the people than they have to prevent an abortive attempt of the Legislature to pass a law. The making of the laws belongs to a co-ordinate branch of the government, and the courts have nothing to do with the making, but must deal altogether with the finished product. The complainants . . . are seeking an advance opinion as to the validity of a constitutional amendment before that amendment has been enforced in a way to affect the substantial . . . rights of anyone. There is no law authorizing a bill of complaint to remove an alleged cloud on or uncertainty about a statute or constitutional amendment before the same has been put into force and effect in a way to injure the parties complaining.

Id. at 867 (emphasis added). As such, only:

“[w]hen laws have been passed no doubt in a proper case the inquiry can then be made as to whether or not the requirements of the fundamental law in their passage or in their provisions have been observed, but in the first instance the body to which has been delegated the power to pass laws must be left untrammeled, to act in such matters as its wisdom may dictate.”

3 Id. (citation omitted) (emphasis added). So, as the Ratliff Court concluded, the “safer

policy” is to “refrain from interfering with the free exercise of the legislative functions of

government whether attempted to be exercised by the Legislature or by the people in their

sovereign capacity.” Id. at 869 (emphasis added).

¶7. We find this reasoning compelling and see no reason to retreat from it today. As it

presently stands, Initiative 31 is proposed legislation put forth for public debate and

discourse. It has not been “put into force and effect in a way to injure the parties

complaining.” Id. at 867. We find that general challenges to an initiative’s substantive

constitutionality, such as the one before us today, are not justiciable before the initiative has

been enacted by the electorate.

¶8. Speed relies on this Court’s decision in In Re Proposed Initiative Measure No. 20,

774 So. 2d 397 (Miss. 2000), to bring this pre-election action. There, the proponent of a

proposed initiative appealed after the circuit court had held that her initiative would not be

placed on the ballot. Id. at 399-400. The Measure 20 Court agreed that the initiative could

not be placed on the ballot, because it did not include an economic impact statement (a defect

in form). Id. at 402.

¶9. But the Measure 20 Court went on to hold implicitly that substantive challenges to

proposed initiatives also are proper for pre-election review. Id. at 401-02. Citing no

constitutional, statutory, or caselaw authority, the Measure 20 Court stated that “proposed

initiatives are subject to review of form and, therefore, content inasmuch as content affects

form and form affects content.” Id. at 401 (emphasis added). The lack of authority is no

surprise, as such authority is nonexistent. In fact, our existing caselaw has held exactly the

4 opposite. According to Ratliff, “the courts . . . must deal altogether with the finished

product.” Ratliff, 72 So. at 867. While we agree that “minimum constitutional and statutory

requirements” must be met before a measure is placed on the ballot, a pre-election review of

an initiative is limited to matters of form, i.e., the sufficiency of signatures and/or the ballot

title or summary.3 See Miss. Const. art. 15, § 273(9); Miss. Code Ann. §§ 23-17-13

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Related

Plessy v. Ferguson
163 U.S. 537 (Supreme Court, 1896)
Brown v. Board of Education
347 U.S. 483 (Supreme Court, 1954)
State Ex Rel. Moore v. Molpus
578 So. 2d 624 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1991)
In Re Proposed Initiative Measure No. 20
774 So. 2d 397 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2000)
Power v. Ratliff
72 So. 864 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1916)

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Leland Speed v. Delbert Hosemann, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leland-speed-v-delbert-hosemann-miss-2011.