State ex rel Sajo v. Paulus

688 P.2d 367, 297 Or. 646
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1984
DocketSC S31039
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 688 P.2d 367 (State ex rel Sajo v. Paulus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Sajo v. Paulus, 688 P.2d 367, 297 Or. 646 (Or. 1984).

Opinions

ROBERTS, J.

This is a mandamus proceeding of which this court took original jurisdiction under the Oregon Constitution, article VII, section 2 and ORS 34.120. Petitioners are proponents of an initiative measure, referred to as the Oregon Marijuana Initiative. Defendants are the Secretary of State and 28 county clerks from throughout the state. Petitioners allege that the defendants failed to follow proper signature verification procedures with respect to their initiative. These allegedly improper procedures led to the disqualification of a number of petition signers, which number, when applied in the Secretary of State’s predictive sampling formula (see pages 662-663), indicated that the total number of probable verifiable signatures fell below the necessary number of verified signatures required for placement on the ballot. As a result, the Secretary of State refused to place the initiative on the ballot.

I

We allowed the alternative writ in this case because of the importance and the novelty of the statutory and constitutional issues raised by the petition. This does not mean, however, that a petition invoking this court’s extraordinary and discretionary jurisdiction under article VII, section 2 of the Oregon Constitution will in the future be regarded as the accepted and proper way to secure judicial review of decisions of the Secretary of State under the election laws.

The statutes in fact prescribe at least one procedure for such judicial review. ORS 246.910(1) provides:

“A person adversely affected by any act or failure to act by the Secretary of State or a county clerk under any election law, or by any order, rule, directive or instruction made by the Secretary of State or a county clerk under any election law, may appeal therefrom to the circuit court for the county in which the act or failure to act occurred or in which the order, rule, directive or instruction was made.”

However, under subsection (4) of the same section this remedy expressly does not exclude other remedies.

“The remedy provided in this section is cumulative and does not exclude any other remedy against any act or failure to act by the Secretary of State or a county clerk under any [649]*649election law or against any order, rule, directive or instruction made by the Secretary of State or a county clerk under any election law.”

Also, it is possible that under some circumstances, a decision under the election laws, such as a decision on the eligibility of a voter or of a petition for an initiative or referendum, may be an order in a contested case under ORS 183.310(2) (a) and reviewable under ORS 183.482, or an order not in a contested case under ORS 183.310(5) and reviewable under ORS 183.484. If so, review under ORS 246.910(4) again does not exclude such other prescribed remedy. The applicability of these other statutes is not before us and we do not decide it.1

A writ of mandamus is one of the other remedies not excluded by ORS 246.910, although the statutory writ “shall not be issued in any case where there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law.” ORS 34.110. Whether the ordinary remedy is “speedy” depends on the remedy and whether it can be expedited as readily as can the proceeding in mandamus. The time required for appeals is not a factor, because the decision of a circuit court (or the Court of Appeals) is a judicial decision on the merits of the parties’ legal claims; they are not entitled by right to a decision of this court.2

As we have stated, however, we considered the issues in this case to be of sufficient public importance for the initiative process to deserve this court’s resolution for such guidance as one decision can give the responsible officials and the legislature. We therefore turn to those issues.

[650]*650II

We first review the laws relevant to this case.

A. Verification of Signatures

The Oregon Constitution sets forth the requirements for the initiative process. Oregon Constitution, article IV, section 1(4) (a) provides:

“Petitions or orders for the initiative or referendum shall be filed with the Secretary of State. Signatures of qualified voters on an initiative or referendum petition filed with the Secretary of State that have not been verified before the filing of the petition may be verified thereafter, but signatures not verified within the 15-day period after the last day on which the petition may be filed * * * shall not be counted.”

Article IV, section 1 contemplates that the bulk of the signatures will be verified before filing with the Secretary of State. The text clearly regards the Secretary of State’s 15 day post-filing verification process as the exception, in order to accommodate later signatures which could not be verified prior to filing.

Prior to amendment in 1968, the constitution specified no post-filing verification procedure. Statutes implementing the former constitutional provision required the Secretary of State to count only those signatures verified by county clerks before the petition was filed with the Secretary of State. ORS 254.040, Or Laws 1965. This statute also imposed on county clerks the obligation to maintain a verification schedule of 200 signatures per day. In Kays v. McCall, 244 Or 361, 418 P2d 511 (1966), we held that signatures not verified by the county clerks as of the filing deadline would not be counted for purposes of determining whether the requisite number of signatures of legal voters appeared on the petition signature sheets. This provided an impetus for statutory and constitutional amendments. Article IV, section 1 now allows an additional period for verification of signatures by the Secretary of State within the 15 days following filing. Signatures not verified within this period may not be counted.

The verification process itself is regulated by statute. As counsel for defendant Secretary of State describes it, the signature verification process now does not begin until the petition is filed with the Secretary of State. Then the entire signature verification process takes place within the 15 day [651]*651period following filing.3 Article IV, section l(4)(b) contemplates the passage of laws to implement the provisions of [652]*652section 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
688 P.2d 367, 297 Or. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sajo-v-paulus-or-1984.