Walsh v. Secretary of the Commonwealth

430 Mass. 103
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 430 Mass. 103 (Walsh v. Secretary of the Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Secretary of the Commonwealth, 430 Mass. 103 (Mass. 1999).

Opinion

Abrams, J.

At issue is whether we should change the bright-[104]*104line rule announced in Hurst v. State Ballot Law Comm’n, 427 Mass. 825, 830 (1998). The holding in Hurst requires invalidation of voter signatures on initiative petition forms which are not exact copies or which bear marks or alterations. The plaintiffs, the first ten signers of an initiative petition, sought relief from a single justice of this court pursuant to G. L. c. 56, § 59, after the Secretary of the Commonwealth (Secretary) determined that a number of petition forms were invalid under the rule announced in Hurst. The plaintiffs sought a preliminary injunction requiring the Secretary to transmit the petition to the House of Representatives, to which the Secretary consented. The single justice entered the preliminary injunction and reported the case to this court.2 We conclude that the Secretary properly excluded the petition forms and we should adhere to the rule announced in Hurst.

In August, 1998, the plaintiffs filed with the Attorney General an initiative petition.3 The Secretary released petition forms to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs filed forms bearing 58,932 certified signatures. In December, 1998, the Secretary, relying on Hurst, disallowed 3,507 of the signatures because they were on forms which were not exact copies or which contained extraneous markings. Thus, the plaintiffs fell short of the 57,100 signatures needed for the Secretary to forward the petition to the Clerk of the House of Representatives.

The parties stipulated to a chart showing twenty-eight categories of disqualifying imperfections and the number of signatures disallowed under each category.4 See note 7, infra. The parties also submitted a sample of each imperfection.

The exact copy requirement. Before addressing the issues, it is helpful to review briefly our holding in Hurst. In that case, [105]*105the petition circulators gathered signatures on forms containing (1) a preprinted box with the proponents’ organization name and address, (2) a hand stamp with the same information, and (3) highlighting of information in the summary section of the form. We read G. L. c. 53, § 22A5 (exact copy statute), and art. 486 to protect the public from being misled and to “provide a means for the creation of a neutral form free from advocacy by those for or against the referendum. Like ballot forms and the voting booth, petition forms are thus protected as space free from the tumult and bias of political sloganeering.” Hurst, supra at 828. We noted that “exact copies” of petition forms could be made by petition proponents. However, we said that additions and alterations by persons other than the Secretary “invade[] the small but vital area of neutrality that the Constitution and G. L. c. 53, § 22A, demand.” Id. at 830. We concluded that “[s]orting permissible and impermissible additions on a case by case basis would almost certainly prove an impossible task, and one requiring untestable assumptions about the public’s perception of the added information.” Id. “We therefore [held] that no alterations — additions or deletions — of any sort may be made in forms provided by the Secretary under art. 48 and § 22A.” Id.

The plaintiffs ground their request to alter the rule in Hurst in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.7 The plaintiffs call the right to propound and sign initiative petitions [106]*106a fundamental right. They assert that the disqualification of signatures is a severe burden on that right that can only be justified by a compelling State interest and a narrowly tailored restriction.8 According to the plaintiffs, the justification for requiring pristine petitions in Hurst was the administrative convenience of not sorting through petitions to search for advocacy or misleading alterations. They contend that this rationale is insufficient to justify the severe burden on their rights. The plaintiffs also argue that the purpose of art. 48 is to support the initiative process and that we should not contravene that purpose, absent a compelling interest, by applying overly [107]*107technical rules. The plaintiffs argue that the imperfections on the petitions, with the exceptions of the highlighting or underlining of words in the summary prepared by the Secretary, are not advocacy or misleading, and thus, those petitions should not be invalidated.9 The plaintiffs would include petitions which were copied imperfectly.10

The Secretary argues that we should alter the holding of Hurst to qualify some of the signatures. According to the Secretary, the exact copy statute only regulates alterations made in the copying process, while art. 48 prohibits alterations that are misleading or constitute advocacy. In Hurst, he argues, the exact copy statute invalidated those petitions with preprinted information because those forms were not exact copies of the ones created by the Secretary. The other forms, containing stamps and underlined or highlighted summaries, were disqualified because they violated art. 48. Applying that analysis to this case, the Secretary argues that those markings on forms which misled the public or served as advocacy should be invalidated under art. 48 and inexact copies should be invalidated under the statute. However, the remaining marks, which neither misled nor advocated, should not invalidate petitions. The Secretary believes that a bright-line rule places too great a burden on the initiative process.11

The Legislature has instructed that “exact copies” of petition [108]*108blanks provided by the Secretary may be used to gather signatures. Exact copy means exact copy. See Hurst, supra at 828-830. The statute does not permit any alterations of forms, whether by copying machine, petition circulator, or petition signer.

We decline the Secretary’s invitation to apply a case-by-case review under art. 48 and the bright-line test under the exact copy statute.12 Both protect against misleading the public and advocacy. See Hurst, supra at 828. It would be anomalous to use a different standard to determine whether an alteration should invalidate a signature depending on whether that alteration was placed during copying or during circulation. The alterations have the same potential effect. We think the appropriate test is whether the copy is an exact copy of the original form provided by the Secretary.13

We turn to whether our application of this standard conflicts with the First Amendment. We conclude that it does not. The United States Supreme Court recently reiterated that “States allowing ballot initiatives have considerable leeway to protect the integrity and reliability of the initiative process.” Buckley v. American Constitutional Law Found., Inc., 525 U.S. 182, 191 (1999). Noting that petition circulation is “core political speech,” id.

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996 N.E.2d 457 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2013)
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Bluebook (online)
430 Mass. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-secretary-of-the-commonwealth-mass-1999.