State ex rel. Constance v. Evnen

317 Neb. 600
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 2024
DocketS-24-653
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 317 Neb. 600 (State ex rel. Constance v. Evnen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Constance v. Evnen, 317 Neb. 600 (Neb. 2024).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 09/13/2024 09:07 AM CDT

- 600 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 317 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. CONSTANCE V. EVNEN Cite as 317 Neb. 600

State of Nebraska ex rel. Elizabeth Constance et al., relators, v. Robert B. Evnen, Secretary of State of the State of Nebraska, respondent, and Elizabeth Peterson et al., intervenors. ___ N.W.3d ___

Filed September 13, 2024. No. S-24-653.

1. Constitutional Law: Justiciable Issues: Appeal and Error. Questions of justiciability and of constitutional interpretation that do not involve factual dispute are questions of law. 2. Mandamus: Words and Phrases. Mandamus is a law action and repre- sents an extraordinary remedy, not a writ of right. 3. Mandamus. Whether to grant a writ of mandamus is within a court’s discretion. 4. Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. Before reaching the legal issues presented for review, it is the duty of an appellate court to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the matter before it. 5. Justiciable Issues. A justiciable issue requires a present, substantial controversy between parties having adverse legal interests susceptible to immediate resolution and capable of present judicial enforcement. 6. Courts: Justiciable Issues. Ripeness is a justiciability doctrine that courts consider in determining whether they may properly decide a controversy. 7. Courts. The fundamental principle of ripeness is that courts should avoid entangling themselves, through premature adjudication, in abstract disagreements based on contingent future events that may not occur at all or may not occur as anticipated. 8. Initiative and Referendum: Justiciable Issues. Unlike challenges to the form of a ballot measure or the procedural requirements to its place- ment on the ballot, which are challenges to whether the measure is legally sufficient to be submitted to the voters, substantive challenges to proposed initiatives are not justiciable before the measures are adopted by voters. - 601 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 317 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. CONSTANCE V. EVNEN Cite as 317 Neb. 600

Original action. Writ of mandamus denied. Joshua M. Livingston, of Koenig Dunne, and David Quinn Gacioch, Dana M. McSherry, and Theresa M. Babendreier, of McDermott, Will & Emery, L.L.P., pro hac vice, for relators. Michael T. Hilgers, Attorney General, Eric J. Hamilton, and Zachary B. Pohlman, for respondent. Robert M. Schafer and Jeffery W. Davis, of Smith Schafer Davis, L.L.C., and James A. Campbell, of Alliance Defending Freedom, for intervenors. Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ. Cassel, J. INTRODUCTION In State ex rel. Brooks v. Evnen, 1 we rejected a preelection challenge—based primarily on the single subject limitation 2— to a ballot initiative entitled “Protect the Right to Abortion.” We now do likewise in a preelection challenge to the ballot initiative entitled “Protect Women and Children.” Relators in this mandamus action largely concede that if the challenge to the first initiative fails, so does their contest of the second ini- tiative. But regardless, we find no violation of the single sub- ject requirement and determine that any other claims asserted are not ripe. We therefore deny the writ. BACKGROUND Parties Relators in this case are 29 retired or currently practic- ing physicians. They are: Elizabeth Constance, Linda Collins, Courtney McLean, Claire Baker, Rachel Brock, Amy Garwood, Stephanie Gawel, Patricia Bohart, Mark R. Hutchins, Stacie 1 State ex rel. Brooks v. Evnen, ante p. 581, ___ N.W.3d ___ (2024). 2 See Neb. Const. art. III, § 2. - 602 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 317 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. CONSTANCE V. EVNEN Cite as 317 Neb. 600

Bleicher, Matthew Glathar, Julie Filips, Sharon Hammer, Deanna L. Hutchins, William Johnson, Alex Dworak, Kate Rosenberger, Brian Gallagher, Quinn Willet, Dawn Hosein, Andrew Bohart, Rachel Blake, Katherine Willet, Tracy Mak, Tara Kirkpatrick, James Nora, Erica Carlsson Buchta, Ryan Shelstad, and Kathryn Borman. Each is a registered voter and resident of Nebraska. Respondent is Robert B. Evnen, in his official capacity as Nebraska’s Secretary of State. In that capacity, Evnen has the duty to place a proposed initiative measure on the general election ballot if “constitutional and statutory requirements have been met” and the petition is “valid and sufficient.” 3 Intervenors are Elizabeth Peterson, Jan Kuehn, Mark Patefield, and Maureen Bausch. They are sponsors of the ini- tiative challenged here. Ballot Initiatives The challenge to the first initiative was disposed in State ex rel. Brooks. 4 The second initiative—now before us in this action—pro- posed adding a new section in article I of the Nebraska Constitution. The new section would state: “Except when a woman seeks an abortion necessitated by a medical emer- gency or when the pregnancy results from sexual assault or incest, unborn children shall be protected from abortion in the second and third trimesters.” Enough signatures were delivered to Evnen to place the initiative on the ballot. Evnen’s office issued a news release indicating that the petition effort would appear on the ballot. Proceedings in Nebraska Supreme Court We granted relators’ application for leave to commence an original action to challenge the second initiative. 3 See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 32-1409(3) (Cum. Supp. 2022). 4 State ex rel. Brooks v. Evnen, supra note 1. - 603 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 317 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. CONSTANCE V. EVNEN Cite as 317 Neb. 600

Relators asserted in their verified petition for writ of man- damus and declaratory judgment that both initiatives met the constitutional requirements for inclusion on the ballot and that voters were entitled to consider both. But because the initia- tives were structured similarly and because proponents of the second initiative had asked that we keep the first initiative off the ballot, relators argued that we should do the same with respect to the second initiative. According to relators, “The two amendments are structured similarly and either both or neither should appear on the ballot based on consistent appli- cation of the relevant constitutional principles.” The petition set forth two “counts”: one for violation of the “single subject rule” set forth in Neb. Const. art. III, § 2, and another alleging creation of voter confusion and doubt. Based on the verified petition, we issued an alternative writ of mandamus instructing Evnen to withhold and remove the second initiative from the November 2024 general election ballot or show cause why a preemptory writ commanding him to do so should not issue. Subsequently, we granted intervenors’ petition to intervene. Intervenors asserted as affirmative defenses that relators’ peti- tion for writ of mandamus and declaratory judgment failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and that this court lacked jurisdiction over the claim. Evnen responded to our alterative writ. He asserted that the intervenors could defend their initiative’s inclusion on the ballot. ISSUES PRESENTED The principal issue raised is whether a peremptory writ should issue to Evnen. Although relators also requested relief in the form of a declaratory judgment, for the same reasons explained in State ex rel. Brooks, 5 that request is subsumed in the issue of mandamus. 5 Id. - 604 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 317 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. CONSTANCE V. EVNEN Cite as 317 Neb. 600

APPLICABLE STANDARDS [1] Questions of justiciability and of constitutional interpre- tation that do not involve factual dispute are questions of law. 6 [2,3] Mandamus is a law action and represents an extraor- dinary remedy, not a writ of right.

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Bluebook (online)
317 Neb. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-constance-v-evnen-neb-2024.