State v. Marshall

633 P.2d 227, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 532
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1981
Docket5614
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 227 (State v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Marshall, 633 P.2d 227, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 532 (Ala. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

CONNOR, Justice.

I. Introduction

This case involves a petition brought by the Alaska Public Offices Commission (APOC), before the court on original jurisdiction, which seeks to declare void 1 the election of Joseph Marshall to the Fairbanks City Council and Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly. On December 30, 1980, the case was submitted to superior court judge Eben Lewis as a special master of this court. The Master’s Report, released April 10, 1981, found a violation of disclosure laws but recommended solely prospective enforcement of the forfeiture of office provision, pending APOC promulgation of regulations clarifying application of this sanction.

A. Facts

Stipulated facts and the Master’s findings establish that Marshall violated state election laws by failing to timely file a seven-day pre-election contributions and expenditures report during the October, 1980, Fairbanks municipal and borough elections. The report was due September 30, 1980. The election was held October 7, 1980. Marshall’s seven-day report was filed, i. e., received, by the APOC on October 16, 1980 (sixteen days late), although it was prepared October 14, 1980.

Marshall admits receiving on September 28th an APOC letter, dated September 24, *229 1980, which informed him, in part, that his seven-day report was due September 30, 1980. After the deadline passed, the APOC, by letter dated October 6, 1980 (one day before the election), informed Marshall that his report was past due. The letter discusses civil fines for Marshall’s filing delinquency, but makes no mention of a forfeiture of office sanction. The letter was not signed for (i. e., not received) until October 14th, the day Marshall finally prepared the report.

Marshall has a history of failing to timely file his contribution and expenditures reports for municipal and borough elections. During the 1974 elections, his seven-day pre-election report was filed twenty-two days late; no disciplinary action was taken. During the 1977 elections, his seven-day pre-election report was filed sixteen days late; again, no disciplinary action was taken.

Although Marshall, in the words of the Master, “had prior experience with the law requiring filing reports of campaign finances,” the Master nonetheless concluded that Marshall’s failure to timely file his 1980 pre-election report “should be characterized as careless or neglectful.” This conclusion was based on a finding that “[n]o corrupt or fraudulent acts” were committed, and apparently on Marshall’s testimony that he “just forgot” to file.

B. Statutory Framework

Candidates for elective office must disclose certain information in order to qualify for office. Among other things, the candidate must file up to five reports disclosing campaign contributions and expenditures: (a) one is due 30 days before the election; (b) one is due 7 days before the election; (c) one is due 10 days after the election; (d) one is due on December 31st of each year during which contributions or expenditures were made which were otherwise unreported; and (e) one is due within 24 hours of any contribution over $250 made during the week preceding the election. AS 15.13.110. Candidates for municipal office must comply with these reporting requirements unless the local government votes to take itself outside the scope of coverage. AS 15.-13.010. Neither the city nor borough has exempted itself.

Three sanctions are available when a candidate violates the reporting requirements: imprisonment, civil fine, or forfeiture of office. Failure to make a statement or report, e. g., the seven-day pre-election report, is an explicit violation. AS 15.13.-120(a)(1). Violations can be treated as misdemeanors, punishable by up to one year imprisonment or a maximum $5,000 fine. AS 15.13.120(a). Daily civil penalties may also result from late filing; the maximum amount for late seven-day reports is $50 per day. AS 15.13.125. Finally, an election or nomination “is void” if obtained concurrent with a violation of the chapter. AS 15.13.-120(b). 2

The APOC has, by regulation, provided for a schedule of civil penalties and for a process of assessment, 3 notice, 4 challenge, 5 *230 resolution, 6 and appeal 7 regarding these penalties. No regulations have been promulgated which directly deal with the forfeiture 8 of election sanction.

II. Legal Issues

After first finding original jurisdiction to be a legitimate exercise of this court’s power, the Master concluded, inter alia: (a) that the forfeiture sanction is a constitutional exercise of legislative power because it “does not determine eligibility for public office but rather establishes a mechanism to determine whether an eligible candidate may be permitted to enjoy that office ... (b) that the statute does not require proof that the violation was willful, and, further, that there is “no indication of a legislative intent respecting the degree of willfulness” required; (c) that the statute fails to provide standards for testing the candidate’s right to office; and (d) that AS 15.13.-120(b), the forfeiture sanction, should be construed as directory rather than mandatory as applied to delinquent reporting violations, pending the promulgation of regulations detailing the sanction’s applicability, and in any case should not apply to any 1980 elections. 9 We conclude that the statute is valid and that its plain language requires us to declare void Marshall’s election to the city council and borough assembly.

*231 A. Constitutionality of the Forfeiture Sanction 10

Although rarely stated as plainly as Alaska’s law, numerous other states have similar forfeiture provisions. 11 Several jurisdictions have declared these statutes unconstitutional on one of two grounds, neither of which applies here.

The first group of cases is premised on a separation of powers concept. State constitutions uniformly 12 declare that the members of each state legislative house shall determine the election and qualifications of its members. 13 Construing this constitutional grant of authority as exclusive, courts reason that empowering the judiciary to investigate and declare an election void violates separation of powers. See Dinan v. Swig, 112 N.E. 91, 92, 93 (Mass.1916); Combs v. Groener, 256 Or. 336, 472 P.2d 281

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633 P.2d 227, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marshall-alaska-1981.