STATE DEMOCRATIC PARTY v. Republican Party

256 P.3d 1, 2011 WL 2650032
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 2011
Docket58404
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 256 P.3d 1 (STATE DEMOCRATIC PARTY v. Republican Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE DEMOCRATIC PARTY v. Republican Party, 256 P.3d 1, 2011 WL 2650032 (Neb. 2011).

Opinion

256 P.3d 1 (2011)

NEVADA STATE DEMOCRATIC PARTY; and Ross Miller, in his Capacity as Secretary of State for the State of Nevada, Appellants,
v.
NEVADA REPUBLICAN PARTY; and David Buell, an Individual, Respondents.

No. 58404.

Supreme Court of Nevada.

July 5, 2011.

*2 Jones Vargas/Las Vegas

Perkins Coie, LLC

Griffin Rowe & Nave

Attorney General/Carson City

O'Mara Law Firm, P.C.

Parsons Behle & Latimer/Reno

ORDER OF AFFIRMANCE

This is an appeal from a district court order granting a permanent injunction in a special election matter. First Judicial District Court, Carson City; James Todd Russell, Judge. At issue is the manner of selecting the major political party candidates who may appear as such on the ballot in a special election to fill a vacancy in Nevada's House of Representatives seats. Do Nevada's election laws require the central committee for each major political party to select a single candidate apiece, as provided in NRS 293.165(1)? Or do they allow members of the major political parties to self-nominate pursuant to NRS 304.240(1), with the result that each major party may have multiple candidates?

Read in isolation from the other election statutes it incorporates, NRS 304.240(1) is opaque enough to allow "yes" answers to both questions. Standing alone, therefore, it is ambiguous. But conventional rules of statutory construction require NRS 304.240(1) to be read in light of the election laws it incorporates and the caselaw construing those laws. Since at least 1954 Nevada has equated a vacancy in office with a vacancy in major party nomination and turned to NRS 293.165(1) (or its predecessor, 1943 Nev. Compiled Laws § 2429 (1943-1949 Supp.)), and the major political parties' central committees to designate their candidate of choice when a vacancy in nomination occurs. See Brown v. Georgetta, 70 Nev. 500, 275 P.2d 376 (1954). If the 2003 Legislature that enacted NRS 304.240(1) had intended to abandon this long-settled practice when it provided for special elections to fill United States House of Representatives vacancies, it seems reasonable to conclude that it would have done so explicitly—particularly given that the self-nominating "free for all" or "ballot royale" approach is unusual and has not been adopted federally, 2 U.S.C. § 8 (2006), or in more than two jurisdictions. For these reasons, and in the absence of an express, contrary statutory directive or Secretary regulation, we conclude that NRS 304.240(1) must be read as incorporating NRS 293.165(1) in determining the manner in which a candidate of a major political party is selected to stand *3 for special election to fill a vacancy in the United States House of Representatives. We therefore affirm, albeit for different reasons, the injunction issued by the district court.

RELEVANT FACTS

On May 9, 2011, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval issued a proclamation announcing that the Honorable Dean Heller had resigned from the United States House of Representatives, creating a vacancy in Nevada's Second Congressional District. To fill the remainder of Heller's unexpired term, Governor Sandoval's proclamation ordered that a special election be held on September 13, 2011. The Governor's proclamation also stated that the special election "shall conform with all applicable federal and state laws as interpreted by the Secretary of State, the State's chief elections officer."

A week before Governor Sandoval's proclamation, on May 2, 2011, appellant Nevada Secretary of State Ross Miller issued an interpretation of Nevada's election laws governing the proceedings for conducting the special election to fill a vacancy in the United States House of Representatives. Focusing primarily on NRS 304.240, Secretary Miller concluded that major party candidates could self-nominate in a House of Representatives special election, thereby placing themselves on the ballot as a major political party candidate by filing a declaration or acceptance of candidacy, regardless of whether the major political party approved of the affiliation.

Respondents Nevada Republican Party and David Buell (collectively, the Republican Party) sued to challenge Secretary Miller's interpretation. They sought to enjoin its implementation on the ground that it precluded a major political party's central committee from nominating one candidate to represent the party on the special election ballot, violating NRS 293.165(1). Intervening in support of Secretary Miller was appellant Nevada State Democratic Party.

After an expedited hearing, the district court entered a written order resolving the case. It granted a permanent injunction requiring that, for a person to be a "candidate of a major policy party" eligible for nomination under NRS 304.240(1), he or she had to have been designated as such by the party's central committee pursuant to NRS 293.165. This appeal followed, which we have expedited to accommodate the special election schedule.

STATUTES INVOLVED IN THIS APPEAL

NRS 30U.200 through .250

This appeal involves a special election under NRS 304.200 through .250. The 2003 Nevada Legislature enacted these statutes to address filling vacancies in Nevada's United States House of Representative seats. The impetus for this legislation was the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. See Hearing on A.B. 344 Before the Assembly Comm. on Elections, Procedures, and Ethics, 72d Leg. (Nev., March 27, 2003). "Since their realization that on the morning of September 11, 2001, United Airlines Flight 93 was headed toward downtown Washington, D.C., with the objective of destroying the Capitol building, congressional leaders and outside policymakers [began] asking how the federal government would have continued operating if the Flight 93 hijackers had successfully completed their mission." John Bryan Williams, How to Survive a Terrorist Attack: The Constitution's Majority Quorum Requirement and the Continuity of Congress, 48 Wm. & Mary L.Rev.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 P.3d 1, 2011 WL 2650032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-democratic-party-v-republican-party-nev-2011.