Rise, Inc. v. Wisconsin Elections Commission

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJuly 7, 2023
Docket2022AP001838
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Rise, Inc. v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, (Wis. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. July 7, 2023 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Samuel A. Christensen petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2022AP1838 Cir. Ct. No. 2022CV2446

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

RISE, INC. AND JASON RIVERA,

PLAINTIFFS,

V.

WISCONSIN ELECTIONS COMMISSION,

DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT,

MARIBETH WITZEL-BEHL,

DEFENDANT,

WISCONSIN STATE LEGISLATURE,

INTERVENOR,

MICHAEL WHITE AND EVA WHITE,

PROPOSED-INTERVENORS-APPELLANTS. No. 2022AP1838

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Dane County: JUAN B. COLÁS, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Blanchard, P.J., Kloppenburg, and Graham, JJ.

¶1 BLANCHARD, J. This is an appeal from a special proceeding involving a request for intervention.1 Michael White and Eva White appeal the denial by the Dane County circuit court of their motion to intervene in a suit brought by nonprofit Rise, Inc. and Jason Rivera (“Rise”) against the Wisconsin Elections Commission and the City of Madison clerk.

¶2 In the underlying case, Rise seeks a declaratory judgment regarding one issue of statutory interpretation: the correct definition of “the address of a witness” that is required to be included in the witness certification accompanying absentee ballots in a Wisconsin election.

¶3 We conclude that the circuit court correctly applied WIS. STAT. § 803.09(1) (2020-21) to deny the Whites intervention as of right because they fail to overcome multiple presumptions that existing parties in the case will adequately represent the Whites’ interests.2 We also conclude that the court did not erroneously exercise its discretion in denying the Whites permissive intervention under § 803.09(2). Accordingly we affirm the order denying the Whites’ motion to intervene in its entirety.

1 A motion to intervene initiates a special proceeding and a circuit court order denying intervention is a final order in that proceeding, providing a basis for appeal regardless of the status of the underlying action that the movant seeks to join as an intervenor. See Wengerd v. Rinehart, 114 Wis. 2d 575, 582, 338 N.W.2d 861 (Ct. App. 1983). 2 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted.

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BACKGROUND

¶4 The following is pertinent legal context. An elector’s completion of an absentee ballot must be witnessed and, as proof of that, an envelope containing a ballot is required to contain a written certification by a witness. WIS. STAT. § 6.87(2), (4)(b)1. The required witness certification must include the witness’s address. Id. In 2015 Wisconsin Act 261, the legislature enacted § 6.87(6d), which provides that a witness certification that “is missing the address of a witness” “may not be counted.” Neither § 6.87(2) nor § 6.87(6d) defines the word “address.” Regarding permitted activities of clerks in this context, § 6.87(9) provides in pertinent part, “[i]f a municipal clerk receives an absentee ballot with an improperly completed [witness] certificate or with no certificate, the clerk may return the ballot to the elector … whenever time permits the elector to correct the defect and return the ballot.”

¶5 In October 2016 the Commission, responding to the enactment of WIS. STAT. § 6.87(6d), sent guidance to local clerks statewide that contained two positions pertinent to the arguments made by the parties in this appeal. First, the “address” on the witness certification must include the following information: street number, street name, and municipality name. Second, local clerks were to “take corrective actions in an attempt to remedy a witness address error.” Options for corrective actions included making corrections to a witness address directly on the certificate envelope, so long as the clerk was “reasonably able to discern” “from outside sources” the content of “any missing information.” For example, the guidance provided, a clerk could use “lists or databases at his or her disposal to determine the witness’s address.” Other options to attempt to complete an address included directly contacting voters and “offer[ing] suggestions for correcting the certificate envelope to ensure the voter’s absentee ballot will not be rejected.”

3 No. 2022AP1838

¶6 One of the Whites’ arguments for intervention in the Dane County case rests on the outcome of a separate legal action that the Whites and others successfully pursued against the Commission in the Waukesha County circuit court. The Waukesha case involved the options clerks have under the law to correct address information on witness certifications. The Waukesha County case was resolved before the Whites moved to intervene in the Dane County case. We now summarize the Waukesha County case.

¶7 The Whites’ position in the Waukesha County case was that the aspect of the Commission’s guidance that called for clerks to use various options to attempt to complete witness certifications violated the intent of pertinent Wisconsin statutes. White v. WEC, Waukesha Cnty. No. 2022CV1008, Compl. (Waukesha Cnty. Cir. Ct. July 12, 2022). As the Waukesha County circuit court explained in addressing the parties’ arguments, the issue was “whether Wisconsin law authorizes clerks to insert address information in the witness certification on an absentee ballot and, if not, whether the guidance [that the Commission] provides mandating such actions can be tolerated.” Id. (hearing held Sept. 7, 2022)

¶8 The Waukesha County circuit court agreed with the Whites and the other plaintiffs, entering an order enjoining the Commission from disseminating the following guidance: (1) clerks “can add information to absentee ballot witness certifications in any form,” (2) clerks may take actions contrary to the terms of WIS. STAT. § 6.87(9), quoted in pertinent part above; or (3) clerks “have the duty or ability to modify or add information to incomplete absentee ballot certifications.” White, No. 2022CV1008 (order issued Oct. 3, 2022). The order granting final judgment states that it “applies to portions” of the Commission’s guidance “that contain[] or indicate[] that municipal clerks or local election

4 No. 2022AP1838

officials can modify or add information to absentee ballot certifications.” Id. The order also states: “Nothing herein is intended, nor shall be construed, to enjoin [the Commission] from issuing or distributing its guidance regarding the definition of ‘address’ as used in WIS. STAT. § 6.87.” White, No. 2022CV1008 (order issued Oct. 3, 2022).

¶9 No party appealed the final order of the Waukesha County circuit court.

¶10 Shortly after the Waukesha County circuit court made its oral ruling and shortly before the court entered its final order, Rise initiated the Dane County case underlying the special proceeding here, naming as defendants the Commission and the Madison clerk. Rise does not challenge the ruling in the Waukesha County case involving how witness certifications may or may not be corrected or completed by clerks or others. Instead, the Dane County case is about the correct definition of the phrase “the address of a witness” in WIS. STAT. § 6.87(6d) and related statutory references.

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Bluebook (online)
Rise, Inc. v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rise-inc-v-wisconsin-elections-commission-wisctapp-2023.