State Bar of Montana v. Krivec

632 P.2d 707, 193 Mont. 477, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 810
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1981
Docket81-035
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 632 P.2d 707 (State Bar of Montana v. Krivec) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bar of Montana v. Krivec, 632 P.2d 707, 193 Mont. 477, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 810 (Mo. 1981).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

State Bar of Montana, an unincorporated association instituted by this Court, [(1975), 165 Mont. 1, 530 P.2d 765] filed its petition in an original proceeding in this Court, seeking a declaratory judgment that Initiative 85 (Title 5, Ch. 7, MCA) violates the state constitution with regard to the supervision and licensing of attorneys and further that it is unconstitutionally vague so as to deny members of the State Bar of Montana due process of law.

The respondents are the Hon. Peg Krivec, commissioner of political practices of the State of Montana, designated in the Initiative as its administrative officer, and Mike Greely as the attorney general of the State of Montana, who is charged with enforcing the provisions of the Initiative.

James H. Goetz, a Bozeman attorney, appeared as an intervenor. All parties agree that this Court has original jurisdiction of this cause under the 1972 Mont.Const., Art. 7, § 2, and under Title 27, Ch. 8, MCA, the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, and Title 27, Ch. 19, MCA, relating to injunctions.

We find that the petition of the State Bar of Montana raises a justiciable controversy and we assume jurisdiction for the purpose of a declaratory judgment in accordance with this opinion.

This is the second occasion on which we have issued an opinion relating to Initiative 85. In Montana Automobile Association v. Mike Greeley, Attorney General, et al., Cause No. 81-45, 193 Mont. 378, 632 P.2d 300, Decided July 30, 1981, we upheld the validity of the Initiative after emending it. It is the context of the emended act that we consider here.

On its face, Initiative 85 applies to lawyers plying their trade bv appearing before state and local governmental entities on behalf of clients. The principal issues raised by the petition of State Bar of Montana are: (1) that Initiative 85 violates the doctrine of separation of powers between the judicial and executive functions, and (2) that section 2(4)(b) of the Initiative is unconstitutionally vague.

*480 We hold that Initiative 85, when considered as emended in Montana Automobile Association, supra, and given the interpretations which apply to the Initiative as hereinafter set forth, is not an unlawful intrusion into the power of this Court regarding attorneys, and further is not unconstitutionally vague as claimed.

The issues of unconstitutional invasion of the judicial power and unconstitutional vagueness are interlaced because they relate to two subsections of the Initiative which we will consider and discuss together.

We begin by pointing out that the State Bar of Montana raises no objection to the application of the Initiative to the practice of lobbying by attorneys before the legislature. The opposition of the State Bar is directed toward “non-legislative lobbying”, as that activity is defined in section 2(4)(b), (also designated as section 5-7-102(4)(b), MCA). That subsection states:

“(4) ‘Lobbying’ includes:

“(b) the practice of promoting or opposing official action by any public official in the event the person engaged in such practice expends $1,000 per calendar year or more exclusive of personal travel and living expenses.”

The subsection obviously points at official action by “any public official” and as such hinges on the definition contained in the Initiative of a “public official.” That definition is found in section 2(3) of the Initiative (also designated as section 5-7-102(3), MCA):

“(3) ‘Public official’ means any individual, elected or appointed, acting in his official capacity for the state or local government or any political subdivision thereof, but does not include those acting in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity.”

The rules applicable to judicial interpretation of initiatives are the same as those applying to legislation enacted by the legislature. State v. Dixon (1921), 59 Mont. 58, 76, 195 P. 841. Laws can be expressed only in words and such words must be reasonably and logically interpreted according to grammatical and *481 statutory rules. State v. Fox-Great Falls Theatre Corporation (1942), 114 Mont. 52, 66, 132 P.2d 689. In construing definitions, courts will determine the meaning of the definitions as found in the legislative act. State v. Jacobson (1938), 107 Mont. 461, 464, 86 P.2d 9. The function of the court in construing the legislation is simply to ascertain and state what terms or matters are contained in the legislation. Dunphy v. Anaconda Company (1968), 151 Mont. 76, 80, 438 P.2d 660. The fundamental rule of all statutory construction is that the intention of the legislative body (or the people) controls. Matter of Senate Bill No. 23, Ch. 491, Laws of 1973, 168 Mont. 102, 104, 540 P.2d 975 (1975). It is not the function of the courts to second-guess and substitute their judgment at every turn of the road for the judgment of the legislature in matters of legislation, and the same is true in the case of direct legislation by the people via the initiative process. Fritz v. Gorton (Wash. 1974), 83 Wash.2d 275, 517 P.2d 911, 917, appeal dismissed 417 U.S. 902, 94 S.Ct. 2596, 41 L.Ed.2d 208.

Clearly, the appearance by attorneys before any judicial tribunal at any level of state or local government is not be be considered lobbying under the definitions in the Act. It is in the sector of “quasi-judicial” functions that the State Bar sees vagueness and uncertainty, and in consequence, unlawful intrusion into the powers of this Court respecting attorneys.

The State Bar contends that Art. VII, § 2(3), authorizes the Montana Supreme Court to govern the “admission to the bar and the conduct of its members”; that Art. Ill, Section 1, establishes three distinct branches of government — legislative, executive and judicial; that section 3 (section 5-7-103, MCA) of the Initiative provides for licensing of lobbyists by the commissioner of political practices; that section 2(6) (section 5-7-102(6), MCA) includes attorneys in the “lobbying for hire” definitions; and that the definition of nonlegislative lobbying, which we have quoted above, on its face includes the appearance by attorneys before administrative bodies in behalf of their clients. Accordingly, the State Bar contends that the Initiative, with its licensing, supervision and other *482 provisions intrudes upon the power of this Court to regulate the conduct of attorneys in this state.

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Bluebook (online)
632 P.2d 707, 193 Mont. 477, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bar-of-montana-v-krivec-mont-1981.