Public Interest Legal Foundation v. Winfrey

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMay 28, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-13638
StatusUnknown

This text of Public Interest Legal Foundation v. Winfrey (Public Interest Legal Foundation v. Winfrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Interest Legal Foundation v. Winfrey, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION PUBLIC INTEREST LEGAL FOUNDATION, INC.

Plaintiff, Case Number 19-13638 v. Honorable David M. Lawson

JANICE M. WINFREY and GEORGE AZZOUZ,

Defendants. ________________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION BY LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF DETROIT AND MICHIGAN TO INTERVENE AS PARTIES DEFENDANTS On December 10, 2019, plaintiff Public Interest Legal Foundation, Inc., a not-for-profit entity incorporated in Indiana, filed the present lawsuit against the City of Detroit’s Clerk and Director of Elections seeking to compel the City to undertake more aggressive measures to purge its voter rolls of allegedly ineligible voters. Sixty days later, the League of Women Voters Detroit and the League of Women Voters Michigan moved to intervene as defendants. Their stated interest is to guard against the improper removal of qualified voters from the registry. The plaintiff opposes the motion and the present defendants do not. The motion is fully briefed and will be decided without oral argument. Because the motion to intervene was filed timely, and the proposed intervenors sufficiently have identified a common issue of fact or law implicating their interests that could be affected by the litigation, the motion will be granted and the moving parties may intervene as defendants on a permissive basis. I. The plaintiff bases its lawsuit on the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA). It asks for injunctive relief from the Court compelling the City of Detroit’s election officials to take stronger measures to purge the City’s voter rolls of allegedly “ineligible” voters. The plaintiff alleges that the City is not performing its obligation under the NVRA to “conduct a general program that makes a reasonable effort to remove the names of ineligible voters from the official lists of eligible voters by reason of (A) the death of the registrant; or (B) a change in the residence of the registrant.” 52 U.S.C. § 20507(a)(4).

The plaintiff alleges that the City’s failure of performance is demonstrated by (1) purported discrepancies between the number of voting age adults living in the City according to census estimates and the allegedly larger number of registered voters recorded on the rolls, (2) isolated discrepancies in some registrations identified by the plaintiff’s own audit of voting records, such as a voter whose date of birth is recorded as 1824, and (3) purportedly duplicative registrations of two or three persons identified by the plaintiff as having the same names, which the plaintiff believes indicates the registration of some voters more than once per individual. The plaintiff also alleges that it sent the City a report identifying 2,503 registrations of persons whose names the plaintiff had matched with Social Security Administration and other records indicating that persons

with those names were deceased. In its answer, the City, responding to the particular allegations of the complaint, contends that (1) the number of registrations cited by the plaintiff is deceptively overstated because the total figure plaintiff stated included many thousands of voters that already were listed as challenged or inactive, (2) the actual number of registered voters as of January 17, 2020 was more than 30,000 lower than the outdated figures that the plaintiff alleged in its complaint, (3) the census estimates on which the plaintiff relies are widely recognized as undercounting the actual voting age population of the City, (4) apparent anomalous registration details such as birth dates in the early 1800s are obviously mere scrivener’s errors, (5) the plaintiff’s assertions of “duplicate registrations” simply ignore the fact that different persons who are properly registered could have the same names, (6) more than 94% of the names identified by the plaintiff as duplicates or deceased voters already had been removed by routine list maintenance measures before the plaintiff filed its complaint, and the plaintiff had been so informed by the City before the suit was commenced, and (7) even taking the plaintiff’s figures at face value, the allegedly duplicative or

deceased registrants represented less than one-half of one percent of the total number of registrations. The League of Women Voters associations of Detroit and Michigan filed a motion to intervene as defendants on February 10, 2020. The Court held a scheduling conference two days later, at which counsel for the parties and the proposed intervenors were present. The City defendants answered the complaint and filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings on February 28, 2020. Under the scheduling order issued by the Court, discovery is set to close on August 31, 2020, and a bench trial is scheduled to begin on May 10, 2021. II.

The local and state chapters of the League of Women Voters argue that they should be allowed to intervene as defendants to represent the interests of their organizations and their members (1) to assure that no overzealous measures going beyond the reasonable list maintenance program required by the statute are employed, which could increase the risk of properly registered voters being removed by mistake, and (2) to avoid the need to expend the resources of the association identifying and aiding incorrectly removed legitimate voters in unnecessary efforts to have their registrations restored, in case they are purged by mistake. The plaintiff counters that the City defendants are fully capable of representing the League’s purported interest in retaining eligible voters on the rolls, that “there is no legitimate plausible interest” in keeping ineligible registrants active on the voter rolls, that intervention somehow will cause “disruption, delay and cost,” and that the motion is “untimely” because it was filed after the parties convened a Rule 26(f) conference (although before any scheduling conference was held by the Court). Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24 provides two procedural avenues for an entity that was

not named as a party to a lawsuit to seek to insert itself into the proceedings. Those are designated under the rule as “intervention of right,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(a), and “permissive intervention,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(b). “To intervene as a matter of right in a lawsuit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a), a proposed party must establish that: ‘(1) the motion to intervene is timely; (2) the proposed intervenor has a substantial legal interest in the subject matter of the case; (3) the proposed intervenor’s ability to protect that interest may be impaired in the absence of intervention; and (4) the parties already before the court may not adequately represent the proposed intervenor’s interest.’” Kirsch v. Dean, 733 F. App’x 268, 274 (6th Cir. 2018).

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(b)(1), on the other hand, allows for “permissive” intervention under more relaxed conditions: “‘On timely motion, the court may permit anyone to intervene who . . . has a claim or defense that shares with the main action a common question of law or fact.’” League of Women Voters of Michigan v. Johnson, 902 F.3d 572, 577 (6th Cir. 2018).

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Bluebook (online)
Public Interest Legal Foundation v. Winfrey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-interest-legal-foundation-v-winfrey-mied-2020.