McDuffie v. District of Columbia Board of Elections

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 31, 2023
Docket22-AA-0276
StatusPublished

This text of McDuffie v. District of Columbia Board of Elections (McDuffie v. District of Columbia Board of Elections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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McDuffie v. District of Columbia Board of Elections, (D.C. 2023).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 22-AA-0276

KENYAN MCDUFFIE, PETITIONER,

V.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BOARD OF ELECTIONS, RESPONDENT,

and

BRUCE SPIVA, INTERVENOR.

On an Application for Expedited Review of an Order of the District of Columbia Board of Elections (2022-BOE-000003)

(Argued April 27, 2022 Decided August 31, 2023)

Baruch Weiss, with whom Thorn L. Pozen, Kevin M. Hilgers, Joe Sandler, Stephen K. Wirth, and Samuel F. Callahan were on the application, for petitioner.

Christine Pembroke for respondent.

Theodore A. Howard for intervenor.

Robert P. Charrow and Juliana Laurello for amicus curiae Council Chairman Phil Mendelson, Councilmember Vincent Gray, and former Councilmembers Yvette Alexander, Kwame Brown, Michael Brown, David Catania and Tommy Wells in support of petitioner. 2

Mary M. Cheh on behalf of herself, adopting the views of the amicus brief via letter.

Before EASTERLY and ALIKHAN, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON, Senior Judge.

EASTERLY, Associate Judge: We interpret in this case for the first time the

experiential requirements for candidates for Attorney General in the District of

Columbia, and specifically what it means for a potential candidate to have been

“actively engaged . . . as . . . [a]n attorney employed in the District of Columbia by

. . . the District of Columbia.” See D.C. Code § 1-301.83(a)(5)(D). After an

opponent challenged Councilmember Kenyan McDuffie’s qualifications to run as a

non-practicing attorney, the Board of Elections concluded Mr. McDuffie could not

be placed on the ballot for the June 2022 primary election. In light of our obligation

to resolve this issue within tight timeframes established by statute, we issued a

published order on April 28, 2022, affirming the Board’s decision. We briefly

explained that the text of D.C. Code § l-301.83(a)(5)(D), although ambiguous, is

most reasonably read through a holistic examination of the statute and its history to

require that a candidate be employed in an attorney role—in other words, a role that

requires the individual to be a licensed attorney. See McDuffie v. D.C. Bd. of

Elections, 273 A.3d 838 (D.C. 2022) (per curiam). As promised in that order, we

now issue this opinion to more thoroughly explain our reasoning. 3

I. Facts and Procedural History

On March 21, 2022, Mr. McDuffie filed his paperwork seeking to run for

Attorney General in the upcoming Democratic primary. Mr. McDuffie represented

Ward 5 at the time and had done so since 2012. He was also an active member, in

good standing, of the District of Columbia Bar and had been since he was admitted

in 2008. Prior to his role on the Council, Mr. McDuffie was employed in various

attorney roles. The Board of Elections preliminarily approved his candidacy.

The following day, Bruce Spiva, who also sought the Attorney General

position, filed a challenge to Mr. McDuffie’s candidacy based on D.C. Code

§ 1-301.83(a)(5), arguing that Mr. McDuffie’s role as a Councilmember could not

fulfill the requirement to be “actively engaged . . . as” either “[a]n attorney in the

practice of law in the District of Columbia” under subsection (A) or “[a]n attorney

employed in the District of Columbia by . . . the District of Columbia” under

subsection (D). Mr. McDuffie conceded that he did not meet the requirements under

subsection (A) but argued that the statute’s text and history demonstrate that it was

meant to include someone like him either because (1) he is an attorney and separately

is employed by the District of Columbia or (2) he is an attorney and, although not

employed as such, is “actively engaged” in legal work in his capacity as a 4

Councilmember. The Board of Elections concluded that to be qualified under

subsection (D), a potential candidate must “have served or be serving in the position

of attorney” (which it defined by “roles where . . . [bar] membership is a

prerequisite” 1), a requirement distinct from being engaged in “practice of law”

(which it defined by roles where one is “engaged by a client to perform legal services

for consideration”). See also D.C. App. R. 49(b)(2) (defining practice of law as

“provid[ing] legal services for or on behalf of another person within a client

relationship of trust or reliance”). The Board reasoned that this determination was

dictated by the plain text of the statute and that to read the statute as Mr. McDuffie

had urged would either effectively eliminate an experiential requirement for

government employees who happen to be attorneys but do not serve in attorney

positions or create a line-drawing problem in determining when a District employee

not employed as an attorney is engaged in “functional[ly] equivalent” work. It thus

concluded that Mr. McDuffie’s name could not be placed on the June 21, 2022,

Democratic primary ballot as a candidate for Attorney General.

1 The Board aligned itself with the portion of Mr. Spiva’s brief, which would define the “position of attorney” as one that requires D.C. Bar membership only, which would be duplicative of the requirement in D.C. Code § 1-301.83(a)(4). At oral argument, the Board clarified that it was defending an interpretation that requires “bar credentials as a condition of employment” not limited to the D.C. Bar. We assess the Board’s decision based on that clarification. 5

Mr. McDuffie sought expedited review of the Board’s order pursuant to D.C.

Code § 1-1001.08(o)(2). We considered his petition before the Board of Elections’

deadline for printing primary ballots and issued our order affirming the Board’s

decision on April 28, 2022. McDuffie v. D.C. Bd. of Elections, 273 A.3d 838 (D.C.

2022) (per curiam). In that order, we “provide[d] a brief summary of our reasoning”

but stated a published opinion would follow. Id. at 839.

II. The History of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia Clarification and Elected Term Amendment Act of 2010

From the time the District was granted Home Rule until 2014, the position of

Attorney for the District of Columbia—until 2004 called “Corporation Counsel” and

thereafter the Attorney General 2—was filled by mayoral appointment. See Attorney

General for the District of Columbia Clarification and Elected Term Amendment

Act of 2009, Report on Bill 18-65 before the Comm. on Pub. Safety & the Judiciary,

Council of the District of Columbia, at 2, 6 & n.19 (Dec. 16, 2009) (hereinafter

Comm. Rep.). After concerns arose about “the independence and integrity of the”

Office of Attorney General, the Council considered a bill in 2007 to clarify the

appointment process and qualifications required for the role. See Comm. Rep.,

2 Mayor’s Order 2004-92 (May 26, 2004). 6

Memorandum from D.C. Appleseed to Councilmember Phil Mendelson, at 2-3. The

2007 bill would have required seven years of D.C. Bar membership prior to

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