Posts categorized "▪ Voting rights | election law"

April 30, 2008

New Article Published: "Because They Can: Judicially Excising the People from the Definition of 'County' in the Hawaii Constitution"

Slgn_frontpage The ABA Section on State & Local Government has published my article "Because They Can: Judicially Excising the People from the Definition of “County” in the Hawaii Constitution" in the State & Local Government Law News (Spring 2008). 

The article is a summary and analysis of County of Kauai ex rel. Nakazawa v. Baptiste, 165 P.3d 916 (Haw. 2007), the 3-2 decision in which the Hawaii Supreme Court creatively overcame justiciability problems to hold that the term "the counties" in the Hawaii Constitution's provisions regarding property taxes means "county councils."  In doing so, the court invalidated a voter-enacted Kauai charter amendment that would have rolled back property taxes to 1998 levels, and set a yearly cap on increases.  The dissenting justices accused the majority of "subverting the judicial process," and would have dismissed the case for lack of standing. 

For those of you who are not section members and don't receive a copy in the mail, the article is reposted here.  More on the case, including the majority and dissenting opinions, a Wall St. Journal story about the decision, and the briefs and oral arguments, is posted here.   

April 04, 2008

Merits Briefs in Upcoming ICA Appeal on Kuilima Resort Environmental Impact Statement

On April 9, 2008, the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals will be hearing oral arguments in Unite Here! Local 5 v. City and County of Honolulu, No. 28603, the appeal involving the question of whether the City should have required the Kuilima Resort to prepare a supplemental Environmental Impact Statement.  Here are the main merits briefs of the parties:

The issue, as stated by the Appellants:

Does the Hawai'i Environmental Protection Act (HEPA) [Haw. Rev. Stat. § 343-1, et seq.] and the Environmental Council Rules (HEPA Rules) obligate a public agency to determine whether a project requires a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (Supplemental EIS or SEIS) where new circumstances and evidence bring to light likely increased environmental impacts not previously dealt with in the project's twenty-two (22) year old EIS?

Opening Brief at 1.  The Resort, naturally, phrases the issue somewhat differently:

Plaintiffs challenge Kuilima's development Project, which the City and State entitled in 1986 based in part on the EIS.  Since the entitlements, and until this litigation began in January 2006, the Project proceeded forward.  Plaintiffs emphasized at the trial level that the lapse in time from 1986, without completion of the Project, is a "change" in the Project that, coupled with alleged changes in the regional environment over that time, requires an SEIS.  Plaintiffs continue to rely on alleged regional changes in environmental conditions since the acceptance of the EIS, but now argue that those changes, by themselves, form a stand-alone basis to require an SEIS under the last sentence of HRS [sic] § 11-200-27.  This misinterpretation of the SEIS Rules is just another argument that the lapse of time is enough to require an SEIS. [footnote omitted]

Kuilima Resort's Answering Brief at 1.

January 04, 2008

Commentary on Kauai Real Property Tax Charter Amendment Decision

California's Flash Report posted my op-ed "Hawaii Government Sues Itself to Quash Property Tax Relief -- And Wins" about the Kauai real property tax charter amendment appeal

January 02, 2008

Fourth Circuit on Open Primaries

Following up on a recent post about a possible legal challenge to Hawaii's system of "open" primaries: the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (Maryland, W. Virginia, Virginia, North and South Carolina) has denied rehearing/en banc review to a panel decision declaring Virginia's open primary unconstitutional.  Circuit Judge Wilkinson dissents in a detailed 20 page opinion that is worth reading for anyone interested in this area of voting rights and first amendment law.  Miller v. Cunningham, No. 06-2335 (Dec. 20, 2007).  Thanks to Election Law blog for publicizing the case.

2007 in Review: Hawaii Supreme Court Rewrites the Constitution

In August, by a 3-2 vote, the Hawaii Supreme Court determined that the term "county" in article VIII, section 3 of the Hawaii Constitution means "county councils."  The majority held that only county councils may establish property tax policies, and that voters of the county have no power to do so directly by amending their county charter. 

The majority first determined that it was perfectly acceptable for government officials to be both the plaintiffs and the defendants, and sue each other in a friendly lawsuit in which the County Attorney represented both sides.  The majority also approved of the county council hiring a private law firm to prosecute the case in which it was a defendant, with $250,000 of public funds.

The dissenting justices accused the majority of "subverting the judicial process" by ignoring standing and justiciability requirements by rearranging the parties after oral arguments, and by attributing the arguments of the defendants to the plaintiff.  Disclosure: I had a dog in this hunt, as I was counsel for the homeowners/intervenors who challenged the collusive lawsuit. 

Here are all the inversecondemnation.com posts on the case: opinion, briefs, oral argument transcripts, commentary, and the Wall Street Journal's take on the case.

December 13, 2007

A Challenge to Hawaii's Open Primary System?

Do primary voters choose candidates or do they choose parties?  The Honolulu Advertiser posts an interesting story about a possible federal constitutional challenge to Hawaii's system of open primary voting, "Hawaii Democrats may sue to close primaries." 

Under article II, section 4 of the Hawaii Constitution:

no person shall be required to declare a party preference or nonpartisanship as a condition of voting in any primary or special primary election.

Haw. Rev. Stat. § 12-31 provides more details:

Each voter shall be issued the primary or special primary ballot for each party and the nonpartisan primary or special primary ballot.  A voter shall be entitled to vote only for candidates of one party or only for nonpartisan candidates.

Hawaii's process, under which a voter is provided with several ballots, then chooses one secretly to vote is is known as an "open" primary.  Open primaries allow crossover voting since voters can participate in a party's primary election, without regard to the voter's affiliation.  This is in contrast to the "blanket" primary where the voter is free to vote for any candidate regardless of party affiliation, and a "closed" primary where the voter must choose party affiliation prior to election day and is provided only a party ballot.

The question posed by the lawsuit being considered is whether the U.S. Constitution mandates a particular form of primary election, one that allows the parties to determine who votes in their primaries, rather than having the state dictate the process.  The Court has held that California's blanket primary system unconstitutionally restricted political parties' First Amendment freedoms of association.  California Democratic Party v. Jones, 530 U.S. 567 (2000).  However, the Court has also held that a closed primary system was unconstitutional, since it infringed upon the associational rights of a party that wished to open its primary to non-party voters.  Tashjian v. Republican Party of Connecticut, 479 U.S. 208 (1986). 

If filed, it could be a very interesting case.

October 28, 2007

▪ SLAPP Suits, Ballot Measures, and Curbing Eminent Domain Abuse

A "SLAPP suit" is a "strategic lawsuit against public participation," and many states have statutes designed to thwart retaliatory lawsuits to protect the public's willingness to exercise First Amendment rights.  For example, California's statute defines SLAPP suits as:

lawsuits brought primarily to chill the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of speech and petition for the redress of grievances.

Cal. Code. Civ. Proc. § 425.16 (emphasis added).  Hawaii's anti-SLAPP statute is codified at Haw. Rev. Stat. ch. 634F, and defines a SLAPP suit somewhat differently than California:

"SLAPP" means a strategic lawsuit against public participation and refers to a lawsuit that lacks substantial justification or is interposed for delay or harassment and that is solely based on the party's public participation before a governmental body.

Haw. Rev. Stat. § 634F-1 (emphasis added).

In City of Riverside v. Stansbury, Nos. E040125 & E040973 (Cal. Ct. App. Oct. 12, 2007), the California Fourth District Court of Appeals held that a lawsuit by a local government against the proponents of an initiative was not an anti-SLAPP suit.  The court held that the lawsuit, which sought a declaratory judgment that an initiative designed to curb eminent domain abuse was not a proper subject for voters.  The lawsuit was not a SLAPP because it was "directed not at protected conduct, as required under the anti-SLAPP statute, but rather, at the validity of the proposed initiative." 

After citizens placed an initiative on the local ballot that would have curtailed the city's eminent domain power, the city sued the proponents of the measure.  The initiative was apparently in reaction to the US Supreme Court's decision in Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005), which held that the use of eminent domain for "economic development" did not always violate the Fifth Amendment's Public Use Clause. The measure mandated that "neither this City nor any of its subdivisions shall use eminent domain to take private property without the consent of the owners to be used for economic development."  It also limited how the City could dispose of property taken by eminent domain, and prohibited the City from undertaking "a contractual obligation to use its powers of eminent domain."  More on the case and some interesting background from Eminent Domain Watch here.

The City sued the person who submitted the measure as well as the group that backed it, claiming that the initiative was beyond the power of the city's voters, since in California initiatives are limited to matters of local concern, and eminent domain is a matter of statewide concern.  In response, the defendant filed an anti-SLAPP motion, which the trial court granted. 

The court of appeals reversed, holding that the lawsuit went to the validity of the initiative, and did not arise out of protected first amendment activity:

By its declaratory relief action, the City was simply asking for guidance as to the constitutionality of the proposed initiative. Indeed, the City did nothing to limit respondents’ activities in connection with the initiative, nor did the City, by its action, otherwise impact respondents’ First Amendment rights.  Moreover, it was proper for the City to initiate its declaratory relief action as a means of
disputing, in a preelection challenge, the validity of the initiative.

Slip op. at 11.  Anti-SLAPP statutes are designed to prevent lawsuits against citizens that are meant to chill expression of first amendment rights, and it certainly seems like the City's lawsuit would have that effect -- it would take a very committed citizen to propose an initiative if she knew that by doing so, she would be subject to being named as a defendant.  The court held that the lawsuit did not implicate Stansbury's petition rights because "there is no constitutional right to place an invalid initiative on the ballot.  Slip op. at 13 (emphasis original).  This seems like circular logic because it assumes the initiative is invalid, the very cause of action that forms the basis for the City's complaint. 

What appears to have driven the court's result is its belief that if the lawsuit were to be barred by the anti-SLAPP statute, local governments would not be able to bring pre-election lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of initiatives.  Slip op. at 2 ("if the trial court’s ruling is allowed to stand, no one could ever challenge an initiative’s constitutionality prior to the election").  Why this is a bad thing is not explained.      

Maybe they should just move to Hawaii: the Stansbury case is reminiscent of the recent "Ohana Kauai" property tax charter amendment case, County of Kauai ex rel. Nakazawa v. Baptiste, 115 Haw. 15, 165 P.3d 916 (2007).  In that case, when county officials claimed to doubt the constitutionality of a voter-approved charter amendment capping property taxes, they didn't sue the proponents of the measure as in Stansbury.  Instead, they sued themselves.  When government officials sue each other to strike down a law they disagree with, of course no one is going to raise an anti-SLAPP defense.  The County Attorney (Nakazawa) sued the Mayor (Baptiste), the County Council and the County Finance Director, seeking a declaratory judgment that the charter amendment was beyond the power of county voters.  The Hawaii Constitution delegates property tax power to "the counties," and the county officials argued that term meant "county councils."  The Hawaii Supreme Court agreed after first holding that the "county vs. county" lawsuit was procedurally proper. 

Hat tip to the California Public Law Blog for bringing the Stansbury case to our attention.  Tom Caso adds his thoughts about the decision in his blog post "City’s pre-election challenge to initiative not a SLAPP."

September 06, 2007

▪ Podcast: UH Law School Dean on "Pushing the Constitutional Envelope" (mp3)

Jay Fidell at ThinkTech Hawaii (Hawaii Public Radio KIPO-FM89.3) posts the podcasts of UH Law School dean and professor Avi Soifer's appearance on the topic of "Pushing the constitutional envelope - how quickly, if at all, can it snap back."  It's not about land use and related topics, but worth listening nonetheless for anyone interested in the role of the courts in protecting constitutional rights. 

Sidebar: One of the more interesting law review articles I've read lately is Dean Soifer's Courting Anarchy, 82 Boston U. L. Rev. 699 (2002), which criticized the U.S. Supreme Court's Bush v. Gore decision, and analyzed the corrosive effect on judicial legitimacy when courts make nakedly political decisions.  Speaking of that case, The Wall Street Journal's law blog has this interesting tidbit:

Continue reading "▪ Podcast: UH Law School Dean on "Pushing the Constitutional Envelope" (mp3)" »

September 05, 2007

▪ Getting the Government They Deserve — "Ohana Kauai" Solution Proposed

"In a democracy, the people get the government they deserve" states the old dictum.  That pretty much sums up one response to The Wall Street Journal story This Side of Paradise about the "Ohana Kauai" property tax charter amendment case.  A WSJ reader proposes: "It's Simple: Vote Them Out."

The need to restrain local taxation in Kauai may be compelling; but there is another, and undiscussed, option. Vote out the recalcitrant mayor and/or governing council and replace them with officials for whom controlling the level of taxation is a high priority. Who knows? Faced with the broader issues of local government, Ohana Kauai's voters may be able to impel all manner of improvements in local policy and administration.

Full story here

He's got a point, of course.  Removing unresponsive elected officials from their positions, either by voting for the other guy in the next election or by recall (the Kauai Charter provides in Article XXVII for the recall of any elective officer serving a four-year term) theoretically is always an option to the people of Kauai dissatisfied with their representatives' judicial engineering of the Baptiste litigation (with the taxpayers' money, no less).  The theory, however, is far removed from the reality, especially in incumbent-friendly Hawaii, where elected officials possess a distinct advantage and rarely vacate their offices involuntarily. 

Perhaps de Tocqueville's statement that "[a] democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it" is more appropriate.

September 01, 2007

▪ National Spotlight on the "Ohana Kauai" Property Tax Charter Amendment Case — Wall Street Journal: "This Side of Paradise"

The Wall Street Journal posts "This Side of Paradise," about the "Ohana Kauai" property tax Charter Amendment case, County of Kauai ex rel. Nakazawa v. Baptiste, No. 27351 (Aug. 6, 2007). 

In that 3-2 decision, the Hawaii Supreme Court over a vociferous dissent, held that friendly government officials have standing to manufacture lawsuits against each other to challenge a charter amendment enacted by a vote of the people, and that the Hawaii Constitution delegates property tax power exclusively to "county councils."

The Pacific Legal Foundation's Robert Thomas stepped in, arguing the case before the Hawaii Supreme Court on Feb. 15, 2007, on behalf of four property owners. Honolulu attorney Gary Slovin, for the county, countered that allowing people to vote on taxes would create "chaos." A few members of the County Council publicly agreed. The Hawaii Government Employees Association, fearing government jobs held by union members might be cut, issued a statement to say that giving residents power over taxes was an "absurd proposition."

Full article here.  One WSJ reader's response here.

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