Tiara Young Hudson v. Kay Ivey, in her official capacity as Governor of Alabama Patrick Tuten, in his official capacity as appointee to a circuit-court judgeship in the Twenty-Third Judicial Circuit and Tom Parker, in his official capacity as Chair of the Judicial Resources Allocation Commission ( 2023 )


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  • Rel: March 24, 2023
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern
    Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts,
    300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other
    errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.
    SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
    OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023
    _________________________
    SC-2022-0836
    _________________________
    Tiara Young Hudson
    v.
    Kay Ivey, in her official capacity as Governor of Alabama;
    Patrick Tuten, in his official capacity as appointee to a circuit-
    court judgeship in the Twenty-Third Judicial Circuit; and Tom
    Parker, in his official capacity as Chair of the Judicial
    Resources Allocation Commission
    Appeal from Montgomery Circuit Court
    (CV-22-900892)
    STEWART, Justice.
    SC-2022-0836
    This case concerns the reallocation of a circuit-court judgeship from
    the 10th Judicial Circuit located in Jefferson County to the 23d Judicial
    Circuit located in Madison County. Tiara Young Hudson, an attorney
    residing in Jefferson County, had been a candidate for appointment and
    election to the Jefferson County judgeship before its reallocation to
    Madison County. In response to the reallocation of that judgeship,
    Hudson initiated an action in the Montgomery Circuit Court ("the trial
    court") seeking a judgment declaring that the act providing for the
    reallocation of judgeships, § 12-9A-1 et seq. ("the Act"), Ala. Code 1975,
    violated certain provisions of the Alabama Constitution of 1901. Hudson
    also sought a permanent injunction removing the Madison County circuit
    judge that had been appointed to fill the reallocated judgeship from office
    and directing the governor to appoint a new person nominated by the
    Jefferson County Judicial Commission to fill the judgeship in Jefferson
    County. The trial court dismissed the action on the ground that it did not
    have subject-matter jurisdiction to grant the requested relief. We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    On May 24, 2022, Hudson won the Democratic Party primary
    election to be that party's nominee for the Place 14 circuit-court judgeship
    2
    SC-2022-0836
    in the criminal division of Alabama's 10th Judicial Circuit for a term
    beginning in January 2023. On June 1, 2022, then Place 14 circuit judge
    Clyde Jones retired, leaving a vacancy in the Place 14 judgeship. In
    response to that vacancy, on June 9, 2022, the Alabama Judicial
    Resources Allocation Commission ("the Commission") convened and,
    pursuant to powers granted it by the Act,1 voted to reallocate the Place
    14 judgeship from 10th Judicial Circuit, the circuit least in need of an
    additional circuit-court judgeship according to a formal judicial-caseload
    study, to the 23d Judicial Circuit, the circuit most in need of an additional
    judgeship according to the same study. On July 18, 2022, Governor Kay
    Ivey appointed Judge Patrick Tuten, then a district judge in Madison
    1Section   12-9A-2(a), Ala. Code 1975, provides, in part:
    "Only in the event of a vacancy due to death, retirement,
    resignation, or removal from office of a district or circuit
    judge, the Judicial Resources Allocation Commission shall
    have 30 days to determine whether to reallocate such
    judgeship to another district or circuit. … All reallocation
    decisions require a two-thirds vote of the commission
    members. In determining whether to reallocate such
    judgeship, the commission shall consider the need based on
    the district and court rankings as determined pursuant to
    Section 12-9A-1. …"
    3
    SC-2022-0836
    County, to fill the newly reallocated circuit-court judgeship, a position he
    assumed the next day.
    On July 19, 2022, several hours after Tuten had taken the oath of
    office, Hudson filed a complaint in the trial court seeking declaratory and
    injunctive relief. The only three defendants named in the action were
    Governor Ivey, who has the authority to make appointments to fill
    judicial vacancies; Chief Justice Tom Parker, who is the chair of the
    Commission; and Tuten. Specifically, Hudson asserted that the Act
    represented an unconstitutional delegation of the legislative authority to
    establish circuit-court judgeships and requested the following relief:
    "A. Declare that the [Commission]'s duties under 
    Ala. Code § 12
    -9A-2 represent an unconstitutional delegation of
    legislative authority, to the extent that 
    Ala. Code § 12
    -9A-2
    allows for the reallocation by [the Commission] of vacant
    judgeships;
    "B. Declare invalid and unconstitutional the Governor's
    appointment of Patrick Tuten to serve as circuit judge in the
    newly created Madison County judicial seat;
    "C. Preliminarily and permanently enjoin Patrick Tuten
    from taking the oath of office to serve as a circuit judge in the
    newly created Madison County seat or otherwise assuming
    the purported duties of that seat and exercising any authority
    as a circuit judge in that seat;
    "D. Order the Governor to choose a candidate from those
    submitted by the [Jefferson County Judicial Commission] to
    4
    SC-2022-0836
    fill the Tenth Judicial Circuit, Place 14 judgeship vacancy in
    Jefferson County as mandated by the constitution of the State
    of Alabama."
    The defendants jointly moved to dismiss the action based on three
    main grounds. First, they argued that the trial court lacked subject-
    matter jurisdiction because a quo warranto action -- not a declaratory-
    judgment    action   --   provided   the   exclusive   remedy   under   the
    circumstances. Second, the defendants argued that Hudson lacked
    standing because she had not suffered an injury in fact and because, the
    defendants claimed, her purported injury was neither caused by nor
    capable of being redressed by the named defendants. Finally, the
    defendants contended that Hudson had failed to state a claim upon which
    relief could be granted because the legislature had lawfully empowered
    the Commission to reallocate the judgeship. On August 12, 2022,
    following a hearing and briefing by the parties, the trial court entered a
    judgment dismissing Hudson's action for all the reasons asserted by the
    defendants. Hudson timely appealed.
    Standard of Review
    The defendants asserted that Hudson's action was due to be
    dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1), Ala.
    5
    SC-2022-0836
    R. Civ. P., and because it failed to state a claim upon which relief could
    be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Ala. R. Civ. P. On appeal, no
    presumption of correctness is given to a dismissal. " 'We review de novo
    whether the trial court had subject-matter jurisdiction.' " Taylor v.
    Paradise Missionary Baptist Church, 
    242 So. 3d 979
    , 986 (Ala. 2017)
    (quoting Solomon v. Liberty Nat'l Life Ins. Co., 
    953 So. 2d 1211
    , 1218
    (Ala. 2006)). "The appropriate standard of review under Rule 12(b)(6)[,
    Ala. R. Civ. P.,] is whether, when the allegations of the complaint are
    viewed most strongly in the pleader's favor, it appears that the pleader
    could prove any set of circumstances that would entitle her to relief."
    Nance v. Matthews, 
    622 So. 2d 297
    , 299 (Ala. 1993). Furthermore, this
    Court reviews questions of law de novo. See Ex parte Liberty Nat'l Life
    Ins. Co., 
    209 So. 3d 486
    , 489 (Ala. 2016).
    Analysis
    We first address whether the trial court correctly concluded that
    Hudson's exclusive remedy in this case was to petition for a writ of quo
    warranto. As this Court has explained,
    "[t]he writ of quo warranto is a common law writ used to
    determine whether one is properly qualified and eligible to
    hold a public office. The writ is utilized to test whether a
    person may lawfully hold office, unlike impeachment, which
    6
    SC-2022-0836
    is the removal of an officeholder for inappropriate acts while
    lawfully holding office. See Sullivan v. State ex rel. Attorney
    General of Alabama, 
    472 So. 2d 970
     (Ala. 1985); State ex rel.
    Chambers v. Bates, 
    233 Ala. 251
    , 
    171 So. 370
     (1936). Stated
    another way, the purpose of the writ of quo warranto is to
    ascertain whether an officeholder is 'constitutionally and
    legally authorized to perform any act in, or exercise any
    functions of, the office to which he lays claim.' 65 Am Jur. 2d
    Quo Warranto § 122 (1972).
    "In Alabama, actions for the writ of quo warranto may
    be brought by private citizens pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, §
    6-6-591. Rouse v. Wiley, 
    440 So. 2d 1023
     (Ala. 1983). Section
    6-6-591 states, in pertinent part:
    " '(a) An action may be commenced in the
    name of the state against the party offending in
    the following cases:
    " '(1) When any person usurps,
    intrudes into or unlawfully holds or
    exercises any public office ….'
    "The issuance of a writ of quo warranto must serve the public
    good, although it may also incidentally benefit the person or
    persons that institute the action. Floyd v. State ex rel. Baker,
    
    177 Ala. 169
    , 
    59 So. 280
     (1912); State ex rel. Fuller v.
    Hargrove, 
    277 Ala. 688
    , 
    174 So. 2d 328
     (1965)."
    Ex parte Sierra Club, 
    674 So. 2d 54
    , 56-57 (Ala. 1995).
    A declaratory judgment, on the other hand, serves the broader
    function of enabling parties to obtain a judicial determination of their
    legal rights related to an actual controversy between them in advance of
    an invasion of such rights and whether or not further relief is or could be
    7
    SC-2022-0836
    claimed. See, e.g., Harper v. Brown, Stagner, Richardson, Inc., 
    873 So. 2d 220
    , 224 (Ala. 2003) (stating that a purpose of Alabama's Declaratory
    Judgment Act, § 6-6-220 et seq., Ala. Code 1975, is "to enable parties
    between whom an actual controversy exists or those between whom
    litigation is inevitable to have the issues speedily determined when a
    speedy determination would prevent unnecessary injury caused by the
    delay of ordinary judicial proceedings").
    " 'The Declaratory Judgment Act, §§ 6-6-220 through
    -232, Ala. Code 1975, "does not ' "empower courts to … give
    advisory opinions, however convenient it might be to have
    these questions decided for the government of future cases." ' "
    Bruner v. Geneva County Forestry Dep't, 
    865 So. 2d 1167
    ,
    1175 (Ala. 2003) (quoting Stamps v. Jefferson County Bd. of
    Educ., 
    642 So. 2d 941
    , 944 (Ala. 1994) (quoting in turn Town
    of Warrior v. Blaylock, 
    275 Ala. 113
    , 114, 
    152 So. 2d 661
    , 662
    (1963))) (emphasis added in Stamps). This Court has
    emphasized that declaratory-judgment actions must "settle a
    'bona fide justiciable controversy.' " Baldwin County v. Bay
    Minette, 
    854 So. 2d 42
    , 45 (Ala. 2003) (quoting Gulf South
    Conference v. Boyd, 
    369 So. 2d 553
    , 557 (Ala. 1979)). The
    controversy must be " 'definite and concrete,' " must be " ' real
    and substantial,' " and must seek relief by asserting a claim
    opposed to the interest of another party " ' upon the state of
    facts which must have accrued.' " Baldwin County, 
    854 So. 2d at 45
     (quoting Copeland v. Jefferson County, 
    284 Ala. 558
    ,
    561, 
    226 So. 2d 385
    , 387 (1969)). " ' Declaratory judgment
    proceedings will not lie for an "anticipated controversy." ' "
    Creola Land Dev., Inc. v. Bentbrooke Housing, L.L.C., 
    828 So. 2d 285
    , 288 (Ala. 2002) (quoting City of Dothan v. Eighty-Four
    West, Inc., 
    738 So. 2d 903
    , 908 (Ala. Civ. App. 1999)).' "
    8
    SC-2022-0836
    Etowah Baptist Ass'n v. Entrekin, 
    45 So. 3d 1266
    , 1274-75 (Ala. 2010)
    (quoting Bedsole v. Goodloe, 
    912 So. 2d 508
    , 518 (Ala. 2005)).
    Furthermore, this Court has recognized that a declaratory-
    judgment action cannot serve as a substitute for a quo warranto action.
    "[T]he exclusive remedy to determine whether a party is usurping a
    public office is a quo warranto action pursuant to § 6-6-591, Ala. Code
    1975, and not an action seeking a declaratory judgment." Riley v.
    Hughes, 
    17 So. 3d 643
    , 646 (Ala. 2009) (footnote omitted). As explained
    in Riley, "[a] declaratory-judgment action cannot be employed where quo
    warranto is the appropriate remedy because the declaratory judgment
    would violate public policy," 
    17 So. 3d at 646
    , and is, therefore, not
    justiciable:
    " 'This remedy [quo warranto,] "looks to the
    sovereign power of the state with respect to the use
    or abuse of franchises -- which are special
    privileges -- created by its authority, and which
    must, as a principle of fundamental public policy,
    remain subject to its sovereign action in so far as
    the interests of the public, or any part of the public,
    are affected by their usurpation or abuse."
    " 'Our statute has extended the right to
    institute such proceeding to a person giving
    security for costs of the action. But, in such case,
    the action is still prerogative in character, brought
    in the name of the State, on the relation of such
    9
    SC-2022-0836
    person, who becomes a joint party with the State.
    The giving of security for the costs of the action is
    the condition upon which the relator is permitted
    to sue in the name of the State. Without such
    security, he usurps the authority of the State.
    " '….
    " 'As indicated, it is the policy of the law of
    Alabama that [quo warranto] proceedings should
    be had in the name of the State, and instituted in
    the manner designated by statute.
    " 'To sanction a private action inter partes
    with the same objective would operate a virtual
    repeal of the quo warranto statute.
    " '….
    " 'The Declaratory Judgment Law was never
    intended to strike down the public policy involved.'
    "Birmingham Bar Ass'n v. Phillips & Marsh, 
    239 Ala. 650
    ,
    657-58, 
    196 So. 725
    , 732 (1940) (citations omitted).
    "Where a controversy presented in a declaratory-
    judgment action is not justiciable, this Court may notice the
    defect ex mero motu."
    Riley, 
    17 So. 3d at 646-47
    .
    In Sierra Club, an environmental organization brought an action
    for a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief against the Alabama
    Environmental     Management       Commission      ("the    Environmental
    Management      Commission")     and     the   Alabama     Department   of
    10
    SC-2022-0836
    Environmental Management ("ADEM"), challenging the qualifications,
    appointments, and confirmations of three members of the Environmental
    Management Commission. The three members thereafter challenged the
    circuit court's subject-matter jurisdiction to enter a consent judgment in
    that action, arguing that a quo warranto action was the sole method to
    review the legality of their appointments. This Court agreed, rejecting
    the environmental organization's claim that the case was about
    "procedure" and not whether the three members were to be permanently
    removed from office:
    "A declaratory judgment action is not appropriate in this case
    because, contrary to [the environmental organization's]
    contentions, this case is not merely one concerning the
    interpretation of a statute. Rather, it directly concerns
    whether [the three members] are unlawfully exercising their
    positions as commissioners …. The question whether [the
    three members] were properly or improperly appointed and
    confirmed strikes directly at the heart of their qualifications
    for those offices. Because their qualifications for service in
    office are being questioned, the writ of quo warranto is [the
    environmental organization's] only proper remedy in this
    case. …. To suggest otherwise -- that the qualifications of [the
    three members] are not at issue -- is to ignore [the
    environmental organization's] attempts to remove them from
    office or, at least, require them to submit to another
    confirmation process.
    "Although Rule 57, Ala. R. Civ. P., provides for the use
    of declaratory judgment actions, Rule 81[, Ala. R. Civ. P.,]
    states that the rules are applicable 'to the extent that the
    11
    SC-2022-0836
    practice in such matters is not provided by statute'; it then
    notes that quo warranto proceedings 'or actions in the nature
    thereof' fall under this rule. Rule 81(a)(23). … [T]he Alabama
    legislature provided for the use of the writ of quo warranto in
    § 6-6-591[, Ala. Code 1975]. In contrast to the writ of quo
    warranto, the declaratory judgment procedure is designed to
    settle a justiciable controversy where each side has standing
    to engage the power of the courts for a determination of that
    controversy. In this case, however, the only question at issue
    at this time is the legality of the appointments of [the three
    members]. The consequence of an action to test whether they
    are entitled to hold these offices requires that the petitioner
    have standing. [The environmental organization] would have
    standing to petition the trial court for a writ of quo warranto,
    on behalf of the State, to determine the legality of these
    appointments. It does not have standing to file a declaratory
    judgment action under these circumstances. Even under our
    Rules of Civil Procedure, a declaratory judgment action is not
    convertible to a quo warranto action."
    
    674 So. 2d at 58
    .
    In this case, Hudson argues that her action was not initiated with
    the direct purpose of removing Tuten from office but, rather, to challenge
    the constitutionality of the Act under which a judgeship was removed
    from the 10th Judicial Circuit. She contends that her action only
    "collaterally implicates Judge Tuten's authority to occupy an unlawfully
    created [judicial] seat." Hudson's brief at 17. We cannot overlook,
    however, the fact that Hudson's action named Tuten as a defendant and
    sought a judgment declaring that Tuten's appointment was "invalid and
    12
    SC-2022-0836
    unconstitutional" and a permanent injunction prohibiting Tuten from
    "exercising any authority as a circuit judge." Moreover, the relief Hudson
    sought from Governor Ivey -- appointing a person to fill the judgeship in
    the 10th Judicial Circuit that has been reallocated to the 23d Judicial
    Circuit and is currently occupied by Tuten -- necessarily contemplates
    the removal of Tuten from his judicial office. In other words, this action
    is not one merely concerning the interpretation of a statute; rather,
    Hudson directly challenges Tuten's exercise of his judicial office. Under
    our law, such claims must be brought as a quo warranto action.
    Hudson further posits that a quo warranto action will not afford her
    the complete relief she seeks, i.e., an adjudication on the purported
    unconstitutionality of the Act and a declaration that the reallocation of
    the judgeship was, therefore, void. We note, however, that a quo warranto
    action would not preclude a determination as to the constitutionality of
    the Act or the legality of the Commission's reallocation of a judgeship.
    Indeed, Hudson's challenge to Tuten's appointment and exercise of
    powers relates directly to the purported constitutional infirmities of the
    Act.
    "It is fully settled in this State that statutory quo
    warranto is the appropriate remedy to test the existence of a
    13
    SC-2022-0836
    de jure office, the same as to oust a usurper intruding into an
    office; and in adjudicating the existence of such office vel non,
    the court may determine the constitutionality of the act
    purporting to create the same."
    Corprew v. Tallapoosa Cnty., 
    241 Ala. 492
    , 493-94, 
    3 So. 2d 53
    , 54 (1941).
    Nor is a trial court precluded from issuing appropriate injunctive relief
    in a quo warranto action. See Tyson v. Jones, 
    60 So. 3d 831
    , 843 (Ala.
    2010) (rejecting argument that a circuit court lacked jurisdiction to issue
    injunctive relief in a quo warranto action).
    Conclusion
    Hudson's action expressly sought relief concerning whether Judge
    Tuten lawfully holds or exercises his judicial office. Therefore, under
    Alabama law, Hudson's exclusive remedy was to petition for a writ of quo
    warranto. We, thus, affirm the judgment of the trial court dismissing
    Hudson's declaratory-judgment action for want of subject-matter
    jurisdiction, and we pretermit discussion of the constitutionality of the
    Act or Hudson's standing to seek declaratory relief.2
    AFFIRMED.
    2We   also do not address at this time the issue, raised for the first
    time in Hudson's reply brief, whether Hudson could pursue a stand-alone
    declaratory-judgment action against the Commission addressing only the
    Act's constitutionality.
    14
    SC-2022-0836
    Shaw, Wise, Bryan, Sellers, and Mendheim, JJ., concur.
    Mitchell, J., concurs specially, with opinion.
    Parker, C.J., and Cook, J., recuse themselves.
    15
    SC-2022-0836
    MITCHELL, Justice (concurring specially).
    I concur in the decision to affirm the trial court's judgment. 3 I write
    separately to explain my concerns with certain aspects of Tiara Young
    Hudson's submissions to the trial court and to this Court.
    I.
    As the main opinion makes clear, Hudson's complaint states only
    one claim: a nondelegation challenge to the statute that authorizes the
    Judicial Resources Allocation Commission ("JRAC") to create and
    eliminate judgeships. Hudson does not allege a violation of the 14th
    Amendment to the United States Constitution, nor does she bring any
    claim for which racial discrimination (or any other type of discrimination)
    3As  the main opinion notes, our precedents establish that a petition
    for the writ of quo warranto is the "exclusive" mechanism for seeking to
    expel a public official from office. Riley v. Hughes, 
    17 So. 3d 643
    , 646
    (Ala. 2009). Since Hudson's complaint expressly demands Judge Patrick
    Tuten's ouster from office, our precedents dictate that Hudson was
    required to seek relief through a quo warranto action (which comes with
    heightened procedural strictures) rather than a declaratory-judgment
    proceeding. See 
    id.
     Our caselaw has also held that "the unavailability of
    a declaratory-judgment action as a substitute for a quo warranto action"
    means that any declaratory-judgment action that should have been
    brought as a quo warranto action suffers from "a jurisdictional defect,"
    which renders the case nonjusticiable. 
    Id. at 648
    . Hudson never asks us
    to reconsider these (or, indeed, any) aspects of our quo warranto caselaw
    and has therefore failed to identify any reversible error.
    16
    SC-2022-0836
    is an element. Yet the statements of fact in Hudson's complaint and
    opening brief begin by highlighting the fact that Hudson is "a Black
    female." C. 19; Hudson's brief at 6. Hudson then goes on to describe the
    races of various people who are involved in the case, even though their
    races also have nothing to do with the legal claim stated in her complaint
    or the questions presented on appeal.
    It appears that Hudson spends so much time focusing on race -- her
    own race, the races of JRAC's members, and the racial demographics of
    Jefferson and Madison Counties -- to insinuate that JRAC's decision to
    reallocate the Jefferson County judgeship to Madison County was
    motivated by bigotry rather than by objective consideration of the factors
    listed in § 12-9A-1(d), Ala. Code 1975. But Hudson stops short of actually
    arguing that point or presenting any evidence in support of it. On the
    contrary, Hudson's counsel conceded below that JRAC's reallocation
    decision was based on the race-neutral "fact that all the studies show that
    Madison County is most in need and Jefferson County was the least in
    need" of circuit judgeships based on the two counties' respective
    caseloads. T. 27, C. 820. To turn around after making such a concession
    17
    SC-2022-0836
    and insinuate that the reallocation decision was motivated by racism
    reveals, at a minimum, questionable professional judgment.
    Hudson's implicit accusations of racism are particularly puzzling
    given that her own filings use overtly biased language when referring to
    different racial groups. Those filings capitalize "Black" every time it
    appears but do not capitalize "white" anytime it appears, even when the
    two words appear side-by-side in the same sentence. See, e.g., Hudson's
    brief at 6, 8; C. 6, 9, 11, 12, 19, 21. The persistence of this pattern
    suggests that it is not an accident but instead a deliberate choice, the
    effect of which is to signal that certain races deserve heightened respect
    while others do not.
    That signaling may be fashionable in certain circles, 4 but it has no
    place in our legal system. Our system of justice "is color-blind, and
    4See,   e.g., Explaining AP Style on Black and white, Associated
    Press       (July      20,     2020),      currently      available      at:
    www.apnews.com/article/9105661462 (explaining that "AP's style is now
    to capitalize Black in a racial, ethnic or cultural sense" but stating that
    "AP style will continue to lowercase the term white in racial, ethnic and
    cultural senses" because white people lack shared "history and culture"
    and because "white people's skin color plays into systemic inequalities
    and injustices"); Nancy Coleman, Why We're Capitalizing Black, N.Y.
    Times        (July      5,    2020),       currently      available      at:
    www.nytimes.com/2020/07/05/insider/capitalized-black.html               and
    archived at: https://perma.cc/747M-335G ("our policy will now capitalize
    18
    SC-2022-0836
    neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens." Plessy v. Ferguson,
    
    163 U.S. 537
    , 559 (1896) (Harlan, J., dissenting). Displays of racial bias
    would be shameful no matter the source, but they are especially troubling
    coming from a legal organization (the Southern Poverty Law Center) that
    purports to advance racial equality. It should -- but apparently does not
    -- go without saying that the act of singling out certain races for special
    'Black' but not 'white' "); Mike Laws, Why we capitalize "Black" (and not
    "white"), Colum. Journalism Rev. (June 16, 2020), currently available at:
    www.cjr.org/analysis/capital-b-black-styleguide.php and archived at:
    https://perma.cc/3RCA-BKJW (arguing that it should be "take[n] as a
    given that Black ought to be capitalized," while "white" should not be,
    and mocking "fusspot grammarians" who believe that the two races
    should be treated equally when it comes to capitalization).
    In my own writing, I do my best to follow the rule I was taught in
    grade school: capitalize proper nouns and adjectives while leaving
    common nouns and adjectives lowercase. Since black and white have
    traditionally been treated as common adjectives, I prefer to leave them
    both lowercase. In contrast, I capitalize proper adjectives like African,
    European, and Asian. Others take the view that any descriptor for a
    racial or ethnic group should be treated as a proper adjective and that,
    as a result, black and white should be capitalized whenever they refer to
    groups of people. Our Court of Criminal Appeals, for example, has done
    this. See, e.g., Smith v. State, [Ms. CR-17-1014, Sept. 2, 2022] ___ So. 3d
    ___, ___ (Ala. Crim. App. 2022) ("The struck jury consisted of nine White
    members and three Black members."). I have no issue with that approach
    as long as it's applied to all groups equally. But that is not the approach
    taken by Hudson's attorneys, who have rejected any evenhanded rule and
    instead use capitalization in a way that signals heightened regard for
    favored groups at the expense of other groups.
    19
    SC-2022-0836
    favor or disfavor does nothing to advance our nation's shared
    commitment to "equality before the law." 
    Id. at 562
    .
    II.
    Racialized language is not the only example of inappropriate
    material in Hudson's brief. Hudson's attorneys also chose to list their
    preferred personal pronouns in their briefs' signature blocks, even
    though that information has no relevance to their client's legal
    arguments or to the attorneys' ability to practice before the Court. I don't
    recall seeing this practice in any briefs previously filed with our Court,
    and I regard this novel use of the signature block as improper. Lawyers
    sign pleadings in order to verify those pleadings, not to convey
    biographical details about themselves.
    The Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure exempt "signature
    blocks" from a brief's word count, see Ala. R. App. P. 28(j) and 32(c), based
    on the manifest presumption that signature blocks will be used only to
    convey   information    necessary    to    enable   attorneys   to   receive
    correspondence and to verify the attorneys' ability to practice before the
    Court (such as the attorneys' names, bar numbers, email and physical
    addresses, and phone numbers). Extraneous information -- including
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    information about attorneys' personal histories or their membership in
    political, religious, sexual, racial, or other identity groups -- is
    inappropriate. Inclusion of such information can create the appearance
    that an attorney is attempting to circumvent word-count limitations or,
    more seriously, to curry favor based on the attorneys' political views or
    identity-group memberships (imagine an advocate who puts a "✝" or
    "><>" next to his or her name when practicing before a panel of all
    Christian judges).
    Counsel in future cases should be aware that inclusion of irrelevant
    information in a brief's signature block may result in that brief's being
    stricken as noncompliant. Our Court may also benefit from adopting
    amendments to the Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure and other
    rules of court that make this explicit.
    ***
    One unfortunate consequence of the recent trend toward lawyer-
    driven litigation is that it tends to elevate ideological signaling over
    substantive legal arguments. This case is an example. The legal disputes
    here are about subject-matter jurisdiction and nondelegation principles;
    they have nothing to do with race, sex, or professions of gender identity.
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    Yet repeated references to these latter characteristics are made
    throughout Hudson's filings in this case, for no apparent reason other
    than to make an ideological point. I caution attorneys practicing in our
    courts not to repeat these tactics in future cases.
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