Scolaro v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics

691 A.2d 77, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 39, 1997 WL 123725
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1997
Docket96-AA-1738
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 691 A.2d 77 (Scolaro v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics) 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.

Bluebook
Scolaro v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics, 691 A.2d 77, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 39, 1997 WL 123725 (D.C. 1997).

Opinions

FERREN, Associate Judge:

This case began with a student-community struggle over available parking places. It concerns the resulting desires of large numbers of Georgetown University students to [79]*79vote in local Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) elections, and the corresponding efforts of many Georgetown community residents to stop them from doing so, on the ground that the students really reside elsewhere and thus are not “qualified electors” entitled to vote here. The Board of Elections and Ethics accepted large numbers of student voter applications based on each student’s signature on the voter registration form just above a warning of severe criminal penalties for knowingly violating eligibility requirements listed there, including residency in the District of Columbia.

Petitioners include two local residents who lost ANC elections to Georgetown University students. Petitioners claim that (1) the voter registration form does not comport with the law; it effectively permits transients to register; (2) the Board in any event had an affirmative duty to scrutinize student applicants carefully, on its own initiative, in order to ferret out those who in fact permanently reside elsewhere; and (3) the Board arbitrarily refused to accept challenges to student voters at the polls, which the election statute permits. Petitioners accordingly ask us to set the two ANC elections aside and to order new ones, based on statutory requirements and constitutional due process.

We reject petitioners’ first two contentions but agree that petitioners have proffered enough evidence of irregularities that, depending on the results of some preliminary fact-finding, they may be entitled to eviden-tiary hearings on their challenges. Because the Board lacks subpoena power necessary to assure attendance required for a productive hearing, we refer this proceeding to the Superior Court for hearing and fact-finding so that we shall be in a position to decide, after the court reports to us its findings and conclusions, whether petitioners are entitled to any relief.

I.

Because there has been no administrative hearing or any record certified for our review, we have relied, necessarily, on the transcript (proffered by intervenors) of the Board’s December 4 and 13, 1996 hearing into the allegations of voter intimidation by petitioner Byrd, as well as on the parties’ submissions by counsel, who serve not only as advocates but also as officers of the court. Our recitation of the facts, therefore, is tentative pending final review after fact-finding on remand.

In the spring of 1996, Georgetown University students organized “Campaign Georgetown,” dedicated to involving students in the political process locally and nationally. By the end of June 1996, Campaign Georgetown claimed to have registered approximately 300 to 400 students to vote in the District of Columbia.

During the summer of 1996, the Georgetown ANC persuaded the Council of the District of Columbia to pass a bill amending D.C.Code § 40-303(e) (1990 Repl.), which had exempted full-time students who were not “legal resident[s] of the District of Columbia” from registering their automobiles with the District of Columbia Department of Motor Vehicles. Effective October 1, 1996, students living in the District who desired to hold residential parking stickers had to register their vehicles and pay the appropriate registration fee.

In September 1996, Campaign Georgetown continued its efforts to register students to vote in the District of Columbia. Also in September, three Georgetown students, in-tervenors Fogarty and Sinderbrand and a third student, Theo Jacobs, filed petitions for placement on the ballot as candidates for three ANC seats in the single member ANC Districts then served by Beverly Jost and Patricia Scolaro.1 Scolaro challenged before the Board many of the signatures on both Sinderbrand’s and Jacob’s petitions and was successful in her challenge to Jacobs’ petition.2 The Board also sustained 13 of Scola-ro’s 23 challenges to Sinderbrand’s petition, but this left 26 valid signature’s for Sinderb-rand — one more than required for a place on [80]*80the ballot. None of Scolaro’s challenges alleged that any of the student signers was not a legal resident of the District of Columbia, although she did challenge the signatures of several voters who allegedly resided outside the ANC district. Nor did Scolaro otherwise challenge either Sinderbrand or Jacobs as unfit candidates.

Sometime around September 10, 1996, petitioner Byrd drafted a flyer warning students that, if they registered in the District as voters, they would be required to pay income taxes in the District, they could lose grant money from their home states, they would have to change their driver’s licenses from their home states to the District, and they would lose the benefit of any “Zone 2” stickers they had received and would have to reregister their cars in the District. On September IB, Dan Leistikow, a Campaign Georgetown organizer, filed a complaint with the Board alleging that the flyer raised questions of voter intimidation which the Board should investigate.

On October 28, Byrd sent the Board and other public officials a letter (on official ANC stationery) calling for investigation of the “900 Georgetown University Students” recently registered. The letter called for “an immediate and thorough joint investigation by all relevant DC agencies to prevent voting by unqualified electors.” The letter also suggested the agencies that should participate and mentioned what they could do to determine whether the registered students had complied with District statutes governing the responsibilities of District residents.

On October 25, Board Chairman Benjamin Wilson replied to Byrd in writing that there was no legal basis for challenging registered students simply because they had failed to pay District taxes or to acquire District driver’s licenses. Wilson also suggested that Byrd’s letter “may be suggestive of voter intimidation” and that the Board would schedule a hearing on whether Byrd had violated the District’s voter intimidation laws. See D.C.Code §§ 1-1316, -1318 (1992 Repl. & 1996 Supp.). Byrd responded on November 1 with a letter citing case law from other jurisdictions that Byrd believed supported her position and demanding that Wilson retract his allegations.

By the end of October, Campaign Georgetown had registered another 600 to 700 students since spring, for a total of approximately 1,000. As election day drew nearer, Byrd consulted Alice McCrory-Miller, the Board’s Acting Executive Director and General Counsel, on procedures for challenging registered voters. McCrory-Miller informed Byrd that because the 90-day cutoff for written challenges before election day had passed, see D.C.Code § 1-1311(e)(5)(A) (1996 Supp.), voters could be challenged only by duly appointed poll watchers when the voters attempted to cast their ballots. See D.C.Code § 1-1313 (1996 Supp.). Poll watchers for Byrd, Jost, and Scolaro accordingly began to organize their efforts to challenge student voters.

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Scolaro v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics
691 A.2d 77 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
691 A.2d 77, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 39, 1997 WL 123725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scolaro-v-district-of-columbia-board-of-elections-ethics-dc-1997.