State ex rel. Wagner v. Evnen

307 Neb. 142
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 2020
DocketS-20-623
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 307 Neb. 142 (State ex rel. Wagner 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. Wagner v. Evnen, 307 Neb. 142 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 12/04/2020 09:12 AM CST

- 142 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 307 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. WAGNER v. EVNEN Cite as 307 Neb. 142

State of Nebraska ex rel. Terry Wagner, relator, v. Robert B. Evnen, Secretary of State of the State of Nebraska, respondent, and Nebraskans for Sensible Marijuana Laws, also known as Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana, et al., intervenors. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed September 10, 2020. No. S-20-623.

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. Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews questions of law de novo, drawing independent conclusions irrespective of any decision made below. 3. Mandamus: Words and Phrases. Mandamus is a law action and repre- sents an extraordinary remedy, not a writ of right. 4. Mandamus. Whether to grant a writ of mandamus is within a court’s discretion. 5. Courts: Justiciable Issues. Before reaching the legal issues presented for review, courts must determine whether the issues presented are justiciable. 6. ____: ____. 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. A challenge to a voter ballot initiative based on substantive provisions of law is not ripe before an election because an opinion on the substantive challenge based on the contingent future event of the measure’s passage would be merely advisory. - 143 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 307 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. WAGNER v. EVNEN Cite as 307 Neb. 142

9. ____: ____. A preelection challenge based on the procedural require- ments to a voter ballot initiative’s placement on the ballot is ripe for resolution. 10. Initiative and Referendum. A challenge to the legal sufficiency of a ballot initiative is a claim based on procedural requirements. 11. Constitutional Law: Statutes: Initiative and Referendum: Appeal and Error. Because the voter ballot initiative power is precious to the people, an appellate court construes statutory and constitutional provi- sions dealing with voters’ power of initiative liberally to promote the democratic process. 12. Constitutional Law: Statutes: Initiative and Referendum. By peti- tion, the initiative power may be invoked and, if the appropriate procedures are followed, used to propose statutory or constitutional amendments to the state’s voters without resorting to the Nebraska Legislature. 13. Constitutional Law: Initiative and Referendum. The people’s reserved power of the initiative and their self-imposed requirements of procedure in exercising that power are of equal constitutional significance. 14. ____: ____. The single subject rule under Neb. Const. art. III, § 2, was adopted by voter ballot initiative to avoid, among other things, logrolling. 15. Initiative and Referendum: Words and Phrases. Logrolling is the practice of combining dissimilar propositions into one voter initiative so that voters must vote for or against the whole package even though they only support certain of the initiative’s propositions. 16. Courts: Initiative and Referendum. Courts in Nebraska follow the natural and necessary connection test for determining whether a voter ballot initiative violates the single subject rule. 17. Initiative and Referendum. Under the natural and necessary connec- tion test, where the limits of a proposed law, having natural and neces- sary connection with each other, and, together, are a part of one general subject, the proposal is a single and not a dual proposition. 18. ____. The controlling factors in an inquiry under the natural and neces- sary connection test are the initiative’s singleness of purpose and the relationship of other details to its general subject. 19. ____. An initiative’s general subject is defined by its primary purpose. 20. Courts: Initiative and Referendum. A court’s analysis under the single subject rule begins by characterizing the general subject. 21. Constitutional Law: Initiative and Referendum. A general subject must not be characterized too broadly when considering an amendment to the constitution. - 144 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 307 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. WAGNER v. EVNEN Cite as 307 Neb. 142

22. Initiative and Referendum. A general subject must be characterized at a level of specificity that allows for meaningful review of the natural and necessary connection between it and the initiative’s other purposes. 23. Constitutional Law: Initiative and Referendum. The single subject requirement may not be circumvented by selecting a general subject so broad that the rule is evaded as a meaningful constitutional check on the initiative process. 24. Words and Phrases. Necessary means something on which another thing is dependent or contingent. 25. Declaratory Judgments: Justiciable Issues. The function of declara- tory relief is to determine a justiciable controversy that is either not yet ripe by conventional remedy or, for other reasons, is not conveniently amenable to usual remedies. 26. Declaratory Judgments. Although declaratory judgment actions are permitted by statute, in certain circumstances under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, a declaratory judgment will generally not lie where another equally serviceable remedy is available. 27. Mandamus: Declaratory Judgments. If a writ of mandamus would be adequate and equally serviceable, then a declaratory judgment will not lie. 28. Mandamus: Proof. Mandamus relief is available if the movant can show (1) a clear right to the relief sought, (2) a corresponding clear duty to perform the act requested, and (3) no other plain and adequate remedy is available in the ordinary course of law. 29. Public Officers and Employees: Initiative and Referendum. Nebraska law imposes on the Secretary of State a nondiscretionary duty to deter- mine the legal sufficiency of ballot measures and withhold any legally insufficient measure from the ballot. 30. Initiative and Referendum. The single subject rule was adopted by voters to protect against voter ballot initiatives that failed to give voters an option to clearly express their policy preference. 31. Constitutional Law: Courts: Initiative and Referendum. Just as courts must respect and give effect to the power the people have reserved to themselves to amend the constitution through initiative measures, courts are obliged to give meaningful effect to the people’s self-imposed limitations on that power.

Original action. Writ of mandamus granted.

Mark A. Fahleson, of Rembolt Ludtke, L.L.P., for relator. - 145 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 307 Nebraska Reports STATE EX REL. WAGNER v. EVNEN Cite as 307 Neb. 142

Jason W. Grams and Michael L. Storey, of Lamson, Dugan & Murray, L.L.P., and Teri L. Vukonich-Mikkelsen, of Reisinger Booth & Associates, P.C., L.L.O., for intervenors.

Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.

Per Curiam. I. INTRODUCTION The Nebraska Secretary of State certified a voter ballot initiative to create a constitutional right for persons with seri- ous medical conditions to produce and medicinally use can- nabis, subject to a recommendation by a licensed physician or nurse practitioner. A Nebraska resident challenged the deci- sion, claiming the initiative violated the single subject rule under Neb. Const. art. III, § 2, and should be withheld from the November 2020 general election ballot.

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Bluebook (online)
307 Neb. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wagner-v-evnen-neb-2020.