Walsh v. Hobbs

557 P.3d 701, 3 Wash. 3d 914
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 2024
Docket103,174-2
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 557 P.3d 701 (Walsh v. Hobbs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Hobbs, 557 P.3d 701, 3 Wash. 3d 914 (Wash. 2024).

Opinion

THIS OPINION WAS FILED

FILE FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON OCTOBER 24, 22024

IN CLERK’S OFFICE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON SARAH R. PENDLETON OCTOBER 24, 2024 ACTING SUPREME COURT CLERK

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

JIM WALSH, DEANNA MARTINEZ, AMBER GOLDADE and JOHN GOLDADE,

Appellants, No. 103174-2

v. EN BANC STEVE HOBBS, in his official capacity as Secretary of State of the State of Washington, BOB FERGUSON, in his official capacity as Attorney General of the State of Washington, DAVID Filed: October 24, 2024 SCHUMACHER, in his official capacity as Director of the Office of Financial Management, NO ON 2109 COMMITTEE, NO ON 2117, and NO ON 2124,

Respondents.

GONZÁLEZ, C.J.—In our state, the people have the power to propose laws through the initiative process and, if the constitutional requirements are met, vote on whether those laws should be enacted. Like any other law, initiatives often come with budget impacts. Walsh v. Hobbs, No. 103174-2

In recent years, the legislature concluded that voters should be told when an initiative will affect the budget through, among other things, “public investment impact disclosures.” RCW 29A.72.027. These disclosures are short ballot statements that tell voters the initiative will increase or decrease the funding available for some public service. Proponents of three initiatives sued to prevent public investment impact disclosures from appearing on the ballot. The trial court denied them relief and dismissed their complaint. Because the election was fast approaching, we retained the appeal, considered it on the merits at a special en banc conference, and affirmed by order with opinion to follow. Today, we explain our decision. BACKGROUND After gathering voters’ signatures, appellant and sponsor Jim Walsh, a member of the Washington State House of Representatives, submitted six initiatives to the legislature at its 2024 session. The legislature enacted three of the initiatives. The other three initiatives, I-2117, which would repeal the Washington Climate Commitment Act, a cap and trade program designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions; I-2109, which would repeal the state’s capital gains tax; and I-2124, which would make participation in the state’s “WA Cares” long-term care insurance program optional rather than mandatory, will appear on the November 2024 general election ballot for a vote of the people. Initiatives, like any other piece of legislation, often have fiscal impacts. The Office of Financial Management (OFM) has long been required to prepare a fiscal impact statement on the expected impact of any legislative bill that may impact state revenues or expenditures. RCW 43.88A.020. In recent years, the legislature has

2 Walsh v. Hobbs, No. 103174-2

extended that obligation to initiatives. RCW 29A.72.025. Now, OFM must prepare a fiscal impact statement for every initiative measure appearing on the ballot, “describ[ing] any projected increase or decrease in revenues, costs, expenditures, or indebtedness that the state or local governments will experience if the ballot measure were approved by state voters.” Id. These fiscal impact statements must be available on the secretary of state’s website and be printed in the voter’s pamphlet. Id. In addition, the attorney general must prepare a public investment impact disclosure for any ballot measure that (1) “[r]epeals, levies, or modifies any tax or fee, including changing the scope or application of an existing tax or fee,” and (2) “[h]as a fiscal impact statement . . . that shows that adoption of the measure would cause a net change in state revenue.” RCW 29A.72.027(1)(a), (b). A public investment impact disclosure must appear on the ballot itself, briefly describing the public investments that the measure will affect. RCW 29A.72.027(2). The attorney general must use neutral language that cannot reasonably be expected to prejudice the vote. RCW 29A.72.027(4). Representative Walsh, as primary sponsor of the initiatives, and Deanna Martinez, a state resident and chair of Mainstream Republicans of Washington (collectively Representative Walsh), filed a complaint in Thurston County Superior Court against Secretary of State Steve Hobbs, Attorney General Bob Ferguson, and Director of OFM David Schumacher. Proponents and opponents of the initiatives were allowed to intervene. Representative Walsh sought (1) a writ of prohibition preventing the attorney general from preparing and the secretary of state from certifying public investment impact disclosures for the three initiatives, (2) a writ of mandamus compelling the secretary of state to instruct all county election officials to

3 Walsh v. Hobbs, No. 103174-2

print ballots without public investment impact disclosures for the three initiatives, and (3) a writ of mandamus compelling the director of OFM to revise the fiscal impact statement for I-2109 to state it will not cause a change in state revenue. In Representative Walsh’s view, I-2109 will have no impact because the legislature impliedly repealed the capital gains tax by enacting I-2111, which prohibits the state from taxing personal income. He also argues that neither of the other two initiatives exact a “tax or fee” within the meaning of the public investment impact disclosure statute. The superior court denied Representative Walsh’s petition for writs of mandamus and prohibition and dismissed the complaint after a hearing. That court rejected Representative Walsh’s argument that the legislature impliedly repealed the capital gains tax by enacting I-2111. Without that implied repeal, it is undisputed that repealing the capital gains tax will reduce state revenues, requiring a fiscal impact statement and public investment impact disclosure. The court also determined that the other two initiatives each repeal or modify a “tax or fee” within the meaning of the public investment impact disclosure statute, requiring public investment impact disclosures.1 Representative Walsh appealed directly to this court. We retained the appeal and after a special en banc conference on August 9, 2024, issued an order with opinion to follow affirming the superior court’s judgment in result. 2

1 Representative Walsh concedes that passing I-2117 and I-2124 would affect state revenues. 2 In our order, we also denied a motion by Tim Eyman to file an amicus curiae brief in support of the appeal. Under RAP 10.6(a), only attorneys may file amicus briefs. Eyman is not an attorney. In addition, the court will grant leave to file an amicus brief only if all parties consent or the amicus briefs will assist the court. See RAP 10.6(a). The State and intervenor respondents inform us they did not consent to filing this brief. Finally, Eyman’s brief almost entirely concerns the constitutionality of the public investment impact disclosure statute. As this is outside the scope of the issues properly before this court, his brief does not assist us. 4 Walsh v. Hobbs, No. 103174-2

ANALYSIS This case came before the superior court as a petition for writs of prohibition and mandamus.

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Bluebook (online)
557 P.3d 701, 3 Wash. 3d 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-hobbs-wash-2024.