McCoid v. Kulongoski

900 P.2d 1028, 321 Or. 452, 1995 Ore. LEXIS 90
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1995
DocketSC S42338
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 900 P.2d 1028 (McCoid v. Kulongoski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCoid v. Kulongoski, 900 P.2d 1028, 321 Or. 452, 1995 Ore. LEXIS 90 (Or. 1995).

Opinion

*454 GILLETTE, J.

This is an original proceeding in which petitioner challenges the ballot title for a proposed initiative measure. Petitioner is an elector who, in a timely manner, submitted written comments about the Attorney General’s draft ballot title, pursuant to ORS 250.067(1). Accordingly, petitioner would be entitled to seek a different title in this court, ORS 250.085(2), if his comments survive the scrutiny required by ORS 250.085(6). That statute, which governs the permissible scope of this court’s review of challenged ballot titles, provides:

“When reviewing a title prepared by the Attorney General, the court shall not consider arguments concerning the ballot title not presented in writing to the Secretary of State unless the court determines that the argument concerns language added to or removed from the draft title after expiration of the comment period provided in ORS 250.067. ”

See McMurdo v. Roberts, 309 Or 319, 321-22, 786 P2d 1268 (1990) (explaining and applying standard, quoting Kafoury v. Roberts, 303 Or 306, 310-11, 736 P2d 178 (1987)).

The problem here is that petitioner’s arguments do not survive that scrutiny. Petitioner’s petition to this court challenges only the use of a single phrase in the Question portion of the Attorney General’s certified ballot title. That same phrase appeared in the Question in the Attorney General’s proposed ballot title. Petitioner made several comments concerning the proposed Question — some of which resulted in modifications in the Question — but he never intimated that there was anything about the challenged phrase that made its use impermissible under the appropriate statutory criteria. His effort to make that argument now comes too late. McMurdo, 309 Or at 322.

We turn to the question of the correct form of disposition of this case. There are at least two possible options: 1) Dismissal of proceeding, or 2) certification, by this court, of the ballot title already certified to the Secretary of State by the Attorney General. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that dismissal is the correct action.

*455 The pertinent statutory provisions are ORS 250.085-(2), (5), and (6). 1 Those statutory provisions may be traced to 1985 legislative amendments, which survive to this day with some renumbering but without material amendment. 2

In Kafoury, this court first interpreted the then-recent 1985 amendments. Petitioners there had written a short letter to the Secretary of State suggesting an alternative ballot title Caption and stating, “It is an improvement, don’t you think?” This court interpreted ORS 250.085(6) to require something more specific than that to meet the statutory prerequisite that a petitioner first have submitted ‘ ‘arguments concerning the ballot title” to the Secretary of State. The opinion devoted over two pages to what it described as this “procedural matter of some importance.” Id. at 310-12.

In deciding what to do with the petition, Kafoury held that the purpose of the 1985 amendments to the statutes, including the provisions requiring timely written comments to the Secretary of State as a prerequisite to judicial review, was to “remove from the judiciary and concentrate in the administrative branch the process of arriving at an appropriate title for ballot measures.” Id. at 311 (emphasis supplied). The court pursued this line of analysis by asserting that, “[i]n order to accomplish this purpose, the legislature requires something more than mere participation in the comment process in order to maintain a later challenge to a ballot title in this court.” Ibid, (emphasis supplied).

The pertinent point then was brought home by two separate statements. First, the court interpreted ORS *456 250.085(6) “as requiring that, before a party can claim a right under ORS 250.085(2) [to petition the Supreme Court],” the party must have offered an adequate criticism of the ballot title to the Secretary of State. Id. at 312 (emphasis supplied). Second, the court concluded:

“Accordingly, under the construction of ORS 250.085[(6)] we announce in this case, this petition should be dismissed. ”

Ibid, (emphasis supplied). The court decided not to do so in that case, however, because it was the first case interpreting the new law and because the petitioners were fairly close to satisfying the law. Ibid.

Kafoury stands as a controlling interpretation of the pertinent current statutes. It concluded, after analysis of the pertinent statutory wording, that dismissal was the appropriate disposition of a timely ballot title petition that raised only arguments that were not raised to the Secretary of State. Dismissal was appropriate, the court reasoned, because the petitioners had no right to seek judicial review and to engage the court in a process committed to the executive branch without first having raised their contentions to the Secretary of State. Cf. Morris v. Dept. of Rev., 320 Or 579, 889 P2d 1294 (1995) (utilizing same reasoning and result under a statute that provided that no person shall appeal to the Tax Court unless that person first exhausted the person’s administrative remedy).

Kafoury was followed by McMurdo, which quoted extensively from Kafoury and then, accordingly, dismissed the timely ballot title petition for failure to raise sufficient arguments to the Secretary of State. Other cases followed the same course, citing to Kafoury and McMurdo and, in one instance, characterized the defect that results in dismissal as a lack of “standing” to bring the action. Ransom v. Roberts, 309 Or 654, 665, 791 P2d 489 (1990) (no comments on proposed title made to Secretary of State); Remington v. Roberts, 309 Or 642, 644, 789 P2d 662 (1990) (no timely comments to Secretary of State; no “standing”).

Only this court’s most recent case on this subject, Farago v. Kulongoski,

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Related

Mabon v. Myers
33 P.3d 988 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2001)
Sizemore v. Myers
953 P.2d 360 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1997)
Nakamoto v. Kulongoski
904 P.2d 165 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
900 P.2d 1028, 321 Or. 452, 1995 Ore. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoid-v-kulongoski-or-1995.