Save Our Stadiums, Daniel Pardock, Tamara Rood, Daniel Twelmeyer, and Katie Pilcher v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, Kyrstin Delagardelle, Heather Anderson, Rob Barron, Dwana Bradley, Teree Caldwell-Johnson, Kalyn Cody, and Kelli Soyer ( 2022 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 21–0999
    Submitted October 13, 2022—Filed November 18, 2022
    Amended November 18, 2022
    SAVE OUR STADIUMS, DANIEL PARDOCK, TAMARA ROOD, DANIEL
    TWELMEYER, and KATIE PILCHER,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    DES MOINES INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, KYRSTIN
    DELAGARDELLE, HEATHER ANDERSON, ROB BARRON, DWANA
    BRADLEY, TEREE CALDWELL-JOHNSON, KALYN CODY, and KELLI
    SOYER,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeffrey Farrell, Judge.
    The plaintiffs appeal the district court’s summary judgment dismissing
    claims challenging the defendant school district’s refusal to grant their petition
    for a public referendum on funding for an athletic stadium. AFFIRMED.
    Waterman, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all participating
    justices joined. Christensen, C.J., and Mansfield and May, JJ., took no part in
    the consideration or decision of the case.
    Gary Dickey (argued) of Dickey, Campbell & Sahag Law Firm, PLC, Des
    Moines, for appellant.
    Janice M. Thomas (argued), Lamson Dugan & Murray LLP, West Des
    Moines, Blake R. Hanson (until withdrawal), and Benjamin J. Kenkel (until
    2
    withdrawal) of Bradshaw, Fowler, Proctor & Fairgrave, P.C., Des Moines, for
    appellees.
    3
    WATERMAN, Justice.
    Citizens collected signatures for a petition to force a public referendum on
    the financing of a school district’s proposed athletic stadium. The school board
    deemed the number of signatures insufficient to force a referendum, and the trial
    court    agreed.   The   resulting   appeal   presents   a   question   of   statutory
    interpretation: how to determine the number of signatures needed to trigger the
    public referendum under Iowa Code section 423F.4(2)(b) (2020), which requires
    signatures totaling at least “thirty percent of the number of voters at the last
    preceding election of school officials under section 277.1.” That election included
    both city and school officials on the ballot, and the parties disagree whether the
    “voters” to be counted include all those who voted at the election or rather only
    those who marked their ballot for the uncontested at-large school board seat. If
    the former, the petition fell short; if the latter, it met the signature requirement.
    The school district told the plaintiffs in advance that all voters must be
    counted; the plaintiffs turned in their petition thirty minutes before the deadline
    with fewer signatures. The district determined the petition was facially invalid
    and declined to accept it or proceed with the referendum. The plaintiffs
    commenced this declaratory judgment action to force the referendum. The trial
    court agreed with the school district’s interpretation and granted summary
    judgment denying relief. We retained the plaintiffs’ appeal.
    On our review, we determine that all voters at the election must be
    counted, and the plaintiffs’ petition was facially invalid as lacking the requisite
    number of signatures. We conclude that the school district breached a directory
    4
    duty under Iowa Code section 277.7 to return the rejected petition, but the
    plaintiffs are required to show prejudice to obtain judicial relief for that technical
    violation, which they cannot do after they effectively ran out the clock with no
    time left to obtain more signatures. Their due process claims fail. We affirm the
    summary judgment.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The facts are largely undisputed. On November 13, 2019, the Des Moines
    Independent Community School District (the District) announced its plans to
    partner with Drake University to build an outdoor athletic stadium on Drake’s
    campus. Drake would contribute $4.5 million, while the District would
    contribute $15 million in sales tax revenue under the Secure and Advanced
    Vision for Education (SAVE) program. On May 19, 2020, the District’s board
    unanimously passed a resolution that approved the project. The resolution
    informed eligible voters they could challenge the appropriation of SAVE funds:
    Eligible electors of the school district have the right to file with the
    Board Secretary a petition pursuant to Iowa Code § 423F.4(2)(b), on
    or before close of business on June 2, 2020, for an election on the
    proposed use of SAVE Revenue. The petition must be signed by
    eligible electors equal in number to not less than one hundred or
    thirty percent of those voting at the last preceding election of school
    officials under 
    Iowa Code § 277.1
    , whichever is greater.
    A valid petition forces either rescission of the resolution or a public
    referendum on the resolution. To be valid, the petition must be filed within fifteen
    days of the resolution and include the number of signatures equal to 30% of “the
    number of voters at the last preceding election of school officials under
    section 277.1.” 
    Id.
     § 423F.4(2)(b).
    5
    The parties agree that the election on November 5, 2019, is the last
    preceding election of school officials. That election included voting for school
    board and city council positions. The contested races were for city council seats
    and district-based school board seats in which only a portion of the electorate
    could vote, while the only at-large school board position in which all eligible
    voters could vote was uncontested and drew fewer votes.
    District residents organized Save Our Stadiums (SOS) to gather signatures
    for a petition seeking a referendum under section 423F.4(2)(b). Daniel Pardock,
    one of the individual plaintiffs in this action, contacted Thomas Ahart, the
    District’s superintendent, on the morning of May 29, 2020, to ascertain the
    requirements for the petition. Pardock specifically asked how many signatures
    were needed. The superintendent replied that afternoon that 7,501 signatures
    were needed. The superintendent also noted that the petition should be
    submitted by the close of business—5:00 p.m.—on June 2 and that the District
    would make every effort to review the petition before its board meeting on July 7.
    On June 2, the final day to submit a petition, SOS presented a petition to
    the school board secretary at 4:30 p.m. The petition contained 7,120
    signatures—381 fewer than the minimum the superintendent had said were
    required. SOS, however, took the position that it only needed 30% of the votes
    cast in the uncontested at-large school board election. Under that theory, 5,353
    signatures would trigger a public referendum.
    Iowa Code section 277.7 sets forth the procedure to be followed by the
    school district when it receives a petition on a public measure:
    6
    1. A petition filed with the school board to request an election
    on a public measure shall be examined before it is accepted for filing.
    If the petition appears valid on its face it shall be accepted for filing.
    If it lacks the required number of signatures it shall be returned to
    the petitioners.
    2. Petitions which have been accepted for filing are valid
    unless written objections are filed. Objections must be filed with the
    secretary of the school board within five working days after the
    petition was filed. The objection process in section 277.5 shall be
    followed for objections filed pursuant to this section.
    District officials reviewed SOS’s petition after June 2. They determined
    that the petition lacked the minimum number of signatures to trigger a public
    referendum under section 423F.4(2)(b). To reach that conclusion, the District
    looked to the total number of voters who turned out at the November 5, 2019
    election (25,009). Signatures totaling 30% of that figure—7,502—were needed to
    trigger a referendum. Accordingly, the district did not accept the petition for
    filing. The district described the action taken as follows:
    Upon receipt of Plaintiffs’ Petition, Chief Financial Officer Shashank
    Aurora performed a facial review of the Petition, simply seeking to
    ascertain the total number of signatures it contained. The initial
    count showed Petitioners fell well below the required number under
    Iowa law, making it facially invalid and insufficient to force a
    referendum on the resolution, thus [the Board] never accepted it for
    filing.
    The District took no further action after it determined that the petition’s 7,120
    signatures were insufficient to trigger a referendum. The District did not return
    the petition to SOS, notwithstanding the directive to do so in Iowa Code
    section 277.7(1).
    The individual plaintiffs and SOS (collectively SOS) commenced this
    declaratory judgment seeking an adjudication that their petition included
    7
    enough signatures to trigger a public referendum, that the District failed to abide
    by the procedural requirements of section 277.7, and that the District violated
    their due process rights. SOS sought a writ of mandamus and injunction to force
    the public referendum. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
    The district court granted the District’s motion and denied SOS’s motion. The
    court ruled that “[t]he District correctly refused to accept the petition because
    the number of signatures did not reach the amount needed to trigger a special
    election.” The court found the district technically violated section 277.7(1) by
    failing to return the petition to SOS but determined no relief was warranted
    because SOS could not show any resulting prejudice given the lack of time
    remaining to obtain enough additional signatures. The court ruled as a matter
    of law the due process claim failed because SOS could not show the district’s
    conduct shocked the conscience. SOS appealed, and we retained the appeal.
    II. Standard of Review.
    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment for correction of
    errors at law. Young v. Iowa City Cmty. Sch. Dist., 
    934 N.W.2d 595
    , 601 (Iowa
    2019). We review constitutional issues de novo. 
    Id.
     We review rulings on
    statutory interpretation for correction of errors at law. EMC Ins. Grp. v. Shepard,
    
    960 N.W.2d 661
    , 668 (Iowa 2021).
    III. Analysis.
    SOS raises three issues in this appeal: (1) whether the district court erred
    in determining the number of signatures required to trigger the referendum,
    (2) whether the district court erred by denying relief based on the school district’s
    8
    failure to return the petition to SOS, and (3) whether the district court erred in
    rejecting SOS’s constitutional due process claim. In our view, the case turns on
    the resolution of the principal fighting issue: how to determine “the number of
    voters at the last preceding election of school officials.” Iowa Code § 423F.4(2)(b).
    We address that issue first.
    A. Whether the District Court Correctly Calculated the Number of
    Signatures Required Under Iowa Code § 423F.4(2)(b). Voters elect school
    officials in a hybrid election that also includes voting for city council positions.
    Beginning with the election on November 5, 2019—the election that the parties
    agree is “the last preceding election of school officials”—voters could in the same
    election cast votes for city council members as well as school board members.
    The parties disagree about who the “voters at the last preceding election of school
    officials” includes—anyone who voted in the election or rather only those who
    voted for a school official, or specifically, those who voted in the uncontested race
    for the at-large school board seat.
    Undervoting causes vote totals to differ across the individual races in the
    same hybrid election. At every election, some voters cast votes in certain races
    or ballot measures but leave others blank.1 A survey of the vote tallies at the
    November 5, 2019 election illustrates the phenomenon. Only 17,843 votes were
    cast in the race for the at-large school board seat, but a total of 25,009 voters
    1David   Axelrod & Mike Murphy, More than 30 Percent of Voters Fail to Complete Their
    Ballots. Don’t Be One of Them, Vox (Nov. 7, 2016, 2:40 PM), https://www.vox.com/the-big-
    idea/2016/11/7/13553496/down-ballot-vote-local-elections-informed-voter
    [https://perma.cc/TH2N-QZV3].
    9
    cast votes at the election.2 Which number represents the total number of voters
    at the last preceding election of school officials? SOS urges the former; the
    District the latter.
    The parties agree that there is a universe of total votes or voters that is to
    be multiplied by 30% to determine the statutory threshold to trigger a rescission
    or public referendum of the spending plan. Id. SOS argues we should use the
    number of votes cast in the at-large school board election (17,843), requiring
    only 5,353 signatures for a valid petition. The District argues the district court
    correctly used the total number of voters at the election (25,009), requiring 7,502
    signatures, and correctly ruled that the petition submitted with fewer signatures
    was invalid on its face.
    We begin our analysis with the text of the statute. Borst Bros. Constr. v.
    Fin. of Am. Com., LLC, 
    975 N.W.2d 690
    , 699 (Iowa 2022). We interpret statutes
    as a whole. State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    889 N.W.2d 467
    , 473 (Iowa 2017).
    Section 423F.4(2)(b) provides:
    For bonds subject to the requirements of paragraph “a”, if at any
    time prior to the fifteenth day following the hearing, the secretary of
    the board of directors receives a petition containing the required
    number of signatures and asking that the question of the issuance
    of such bonds be submitted to the voters of the school district, the
    board shall either rescind its adoption of the resolution or direct the
    county commissioner of elections to submit the question to the
    registered voters of the school district at an election held on a date
    specified in section 39.2, subsection 4, paragraph “c”. The petition
    must be signed by eligible electors equal in number to not less than
    one hundred or thirty percent of the number of voters at the last
    preceding election of school officials under section 277.1, whichever
    is greater. If the board submits the question at an election and a
    2This   gives an undervoting rate of 28.7%.
    10
    majority of those voting on the question favors issuance of the
    bonds, the board shall be authorized to issue the bonds.
    Iowa Code § 423F.4(2)(b) (emphasis added). We read related statutes together.
    Kolzow v. State, 
    813 N.W.2d 731
    , 736 (Iowa 2012). Because it is referenced
    expressly, we also consider section 277.1:
    The regular election shall be held biennially on the first
    Tuesday after the first Monday in November of each odd-numbered
    year in each school district for the election of officers of the district
    and merged area and for the purpose of submitting to the voters any
    matter authorized by law.
    
    Iowa Code § 277.1
    .
    Reading these statutes together, there was never a time when the statutory
    minimum number of signatures required by section 423F.4(2)(b) would have
    been calculated at a stand-alone election of school officials. Elections had been
    combined by the legislature in 2017, effective July 1, 2019. 2017 Iowa Acts
    ch. 155, §§ 8–9 (codified at 
    Iowa Code § 277.1
     (2020)). In 2019, the legislature
    enacted the 30% requirement, also effective July 1, 2019. 2019 Iowa Acts
    ch. 166, § 17 (codified at Iowa Code § 423F.4(2)(b) (2020)). So, when the
    legislature enacted the 30% requirement, the elections had already been
    combined and the legislature understood which voters it was using as its base—
    voters at the combined election. See Simon Seeding & Sod, Inc. v. Dubuque Hum.
    Rts. Comm’n, 
    895 N.W.2d 446
    , 467 (Iowa, 2017) (“We assume ‘when a legislature
    enacts statutes it is aware of the state of the law.’ ” (quoting Rhoades v. State,
    
    880 N.W.2d 431
    , 446 (Iowa 2016))). Iowa Code section 49.41, allowing the same
    person to seek both a school and a municipal office “at the same election,” also
    became effective on July 1, 2019. 2017 Iowa Acts ch. 155, §§ 23, 44 (codified at
    11
    Iowa Code Sec. 49.41(1)(a) (2020)). The legislature thereby ensured that the
    voters at the election of school officials could simultaneously vote for city officials
    at the same election.
    SOS argues we should interpret these statutes liberally in favor of the right
    to vote in a public referendum. SOS relies on Devine v. Wonderlich for this
    proposition, a case that did not involve a public referendum. 
    268 N.W.2d 620
    (Iowa 1978) (en banc). In Devine, we emphasized that, due to the fundamental
    nature of the right to vote in elections for public office, statutes must be
    construed liberally in favor of voters. 
    Id. at 623
    . But more recently we have
    declined to apply a liberal construction to public referendum statutes. Young,
    934 N.W.2d at 605 (holding school district was not required to hold referendum
    on demolition of elementary school building). We distinguished Devine by
    contrasting referenda cases:
    We do not in any way retreat from Devine. But the context of
    this case before us is different. Here, we are not dealing with
    regulation of the voting process in an election of our governmental
    representatives. Instead, we are trying to divine the boundary
    between the power our legislature has allocated to the voters on the
    one hand and school boards on the other.
    While democratic values may be promoted in referenda, the
    school board is comprised of democratically elected officials
    empowered to conduct the school district’s business through the
    deliberative process. Both the actions of the voters through the
    referendum process and decisions of elected officials in a
    deliberative setting have been established by the legislature and are
    entitled to respect. We are not inclined to expansively read the power
    of the voters at the expense of the deliberative processes of the
    elected school board through a rule of construction. We think a
    straight up interpretation of the applicable statutes is a better
    approach than one that puts a thumb on the scale in favor of the voters
    acting through referenda. After all, the voters have elected the school
    board members too.
    12
    Id. (emphasis added). We give effect to the referendum process just as the
    legislature has specified by statute. Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Theory of Legal
    Interpretation, 
    12 Harv. L. Rev. 417
    , 419 (1899) (“We do not inquire what the
    legislature meant; we ask only what the statute means.”). For these reasons, we
    decline to give section 423F.4(2)(b) a liberal construction. Rather, in construing
    this statute, we give its words their ordinary meaning. Com. Bank v. McGowen,
    
    956 N.W.2d 128
    , 133 (Iowa 2021).
    As noted, the election at issue included both city officials and school
    officials on the ballot. Section 423F.4(2)(b) requires counting “voters” (people),
    not the votes cast in a particular race. See Iowa Code § 423F.4(2)(b). A “voter” is
    a person—one “who engages in the act of voting.” Voter, Black’s Law Dictionary
    (11th ed. 2019). It follows that the plural “voters” would be the people who engage
    in the act of voting at the election.
    Section 423F.4(2)(b) requires a count of the “voters at” the election. Iowa
    Code § 423F.4(2)(b) (emphasis added). Idiomatically, it is telling that “voters” is
    paired with the preposition “at” before “the last preceding election of school
    officials.” Id. This conveys a spatial meaning where we consider the people
    (voters) at a particular place (the election of school officials).3 The election at
    issue here included multiple races for city council seats and school board
    positions. See Iowa–Ill. Gas & Elec. Co. v. City of Bettendorf, 
    41 N.W.2d 1
    , 5 (Iowa
    3We   are mindful of the bizarre consequences that can result when judges break phrases
    down into their components, analyze each component, and then synthesize the whole. See
    Bostock v. Clayton County, 
    140 S. Ct. 1731
    , 1755–56 (2020) (Alito, J., dissenting). But holding
    to the original public meaning of the words of the statute at the time it was enacted ensures that
    we will not fall into the same trap.
    13
    1950) (“[An election] is the statutory method whereby qualified voters or electors
    pass upon various public matters submitted to them—the election of officers,
    national, state, county, township—the passing upon various other questions
    submitted for their determination.”). A voter who is present at the election of city
    officials is also present at the election of school officials, and vice versa. Indeed,
    a candidate may seek both a municipal office and a school office “at the same
    election.” 
    Iowa Code § 49.41
    . We agree with the district court and the school
    district that the total number of voters at the election is to be counted, not the
    votes cast in the at-large school board race.4
    Section 423F.4(2)(b) does not say “thirty percent of the number of votes in
    the last preceding election of school officials.” That choice of words would better
    support SOS’s interpretation. Instead, the language enacted requires a count of
    “voters at” that election, which includes those casting votes for city officials.
    Our holding avoids the textual and practical problems inherent in SOS’s
    interpretation that counts only the votes cast for the uncontested at-large seat.
    The election of school officials—officials plural—involves more than the election
    of one at-large board member. The Des Moines School Board is comprised of
    seven members: four elected from geographically divided districts and three
    4We   acknowledge that absentee voting is a popular mode of voting. Iowa voters cast more
    absentee ballots than traditional ballots in the general election of November 3, 2020. Press
    Release, Off. of the Iowa Sec’y of State, MEDIA RELEASE: Iowa Shatters General Election Turnout
    Record (Nov. 4, 2020), https://sos.iowa.gov/news/2020_11_04.html [https://perma.cc/U4KJ-
    5DEC]. But voters who choose to cast an absentee ballot do not affect our construction of section
    423F.4(2)(b). Absentee voters are still “at” the election because they “pass upon various public
    matters submitted to them.” Iowa–Ill. Gas & Elec. Co., 
    41 N.W.2d at 5
    . There is no single, magical
    location where a voter must appear to be included in the count under section 423F.4(2)(b). In
    the modern age, the precinct-by-precinct polling place, the county courthouse, and the kitchen
    table are all places to mark the ballot.
    14
    at-large members.5 A voter who casts a vote in the election for a district member
    but fails to cast a vote in the at-large election qualifies as a voter at the election
    of school officials. But due to undervoting, that voter at the election of school
    officials would go uncounted in SOS’s preferred method of interpreting
    section 423F.4(2)(b).
    This is more than an academic concern. The at-large school board election
    on November 5, 2019, was uncontested, and as the district court observed, the
    uncontested races saw far more undervotes compared to the contested races.
    Indeed, the two uncontested district races had totals of 2,914 and 3,313 votes
    while the contested district race had a total of 8,450 votes. It is reasonable to
    conclude that voters undervoted in the uncontested at-large election. Given the
    phenomenon of undervoting, the legislature reasonably chose to count voters at
    the election instead of votes cast for specific races.
    And although SOS refers to “the at-large school board director’s race,” this
    framing hides the ball. (Emphasis added.) Given the current composition of the
    District’s board, the 2025 election of school officials will feature two at-large
    elections.6 Under SOS’s theory that section 423F.4(2)(b) looks to the number of
    votes cast in the at-large election, which at-large election’s vote total would
    5School    Board        Elections,        Des      Moines      Pub.        Schs.,
    https://www.dmschools.org/board/elections/   [https://perma.cc/6U38-4CVE] (last   visited
    Nov. 10, 2022).
    6Two   of the three at-large board members’ terms of office expire in 2025. Maria
    Alonzo-Diaz, Des Moines Pub. Schs., https://www.dmschools.org/board/school-board-
    members/maria-alonzo-diaz/ [https://perma.cc/E4TT-S2DR] (last visited Nov. 10, 2022);
    Jackie Norris, Des Moines Pub. Schs., https://www.dmschools.org/board/school-board-
    members/jackie-norris/ [https://perma.cc/5GAH-C5TQ] (last visited Nov. 10, 2022).
    15
    determine the number of signatures needed for a valid petition after the 2025
    election becomes “the last preceding election of school officials”? Iowa Code
    § 423F.4(2)(b). The phenomenon of undervoting indicates that the answer to that
    question could matter—especially if one of the races is contested and the other
    uncontested. “Generally, we try to interpret statutes so they are reasonable and
    workable.” Iowa Dist. Ct., 889 N.W.2d at 473. SOS’s interpretation is neither.
    There are other practical problems with attempting to separate the number
    of voters in the school board races. It is too late to perform a manual recount of
    the ballots cast by all 25,009 voters at the November 5, 2019 election. See 
    Iowa Code § 50.13
    (1) (providing for the destruction of ballots six months after
    election). SOS proposes using the “tally books” to determine the number of voters
    who voted in the city election only and thus should be excluded from the total
    number of voters. The tally books, however, show only vote totals; they contain
    no ballot-by-ballot breakdown of how many voters voted for both city and school
    races, only for school races, and only for city races, allowing the last group to be
    excluded from the total number of voters at the last election of school officials.
    This further demonstrates the better approach is to count all voters at the
    November 5, 2019 election.
    For these reasons, we hold the district court correctly affirmed the
    District’s determination that the petition lacked sufficient signatures and was
    facially invalid.
    B. Whether the District Court Correctly Denied Relief for the
    District’s Technical Violation of Section 277.7. The district court ruled that
    16
    the school district violated Iowa Code section 277.7(1) by failing to return the
    petition to SOS, but denied relief because SOS failed to show any resulting
    prejudice. We agree with the district court’s resolution.
    As we just explained above, the District correctly determined that SOS’s
    petition was facially invalid because it lacked the requisite number of signatures
    to trigger a public referendum. Accordingly, the District could not accept the
    petition for filing or move forward with a public referendum. Yet SOS demands
    relief (including a public referendum) simply because the District failed to return
    the petition to SOS. See 
    id.
     (“A petition filed with the school board to request an
    election on a public measure shall be examined before it is accepted for filing.
    . . . If it lacks the required number of signatures it shall be returned to the
    petitioners.”). The question is whether this statutory violation entitles SOS to
    relief. We think not, given the undisputed facts.
    SOS agrees that the District could take a reasonable time to examine and
    return the petition. It is undisputed that SOS submitted its petition on June 2,
    2020, the last day, thirty minutes before the District’s 5:00 p.m. deadline. SOS
    does not claim the District was required to review and return the petition that
    same day. But even if the District had immediately returned the petition, SOS
    cannot show it would or could have gathered the remaining signatures required
    by 5:00 p.m., or even by midnight. For that reason, the district court correctly
    found SOS was not prejudiced by the District’s failure to return the petition. By
    running out the clock, SOS put itself in this bind. Even the District’s immediate
    return of the petition would have made no difference.
    17
    Section 277.7(1) imposed a duty on the District to return SOS’s petition.
    
    Id.
     (“If [the petition] lacks the required number of signatures it shall be returned
    to the petitioners.” (emphasis added)); see 
    id.
     § 4.1(30)(a) (“The word ‘shall’
    imposes a duty.”). Duties can be either mandatory or directory. See In re Det. of
    Fowler, 
    784 N.W.2d 184
    , 190 (Iowa 2010). We have described directory duties as
    follows:
    [T]he general rule [is] that statutory provisions fixing the time, form
    and mode of proceeding of public functionaries are directory
    because they are not of the essence of the thing to be done but are
    designed to secure system, uniformity and dispatch in public
    business. Such statutes direct the thing to be done at a particular
    time but do not prohibit it from being done later when the rights of
    interested persons are not injuriously affected by the delay.
    Taylor v. Dep’t of Transp., 
    260 N.W.2d 521
    , 523 (Iowa 1977). That is what we
    have here. Section 277.7(1) fixes “the time, form and mode of proceeding of
    public functionaries.” 
    Id.
     Simply put, it tells whom to do what and when: the
    board is to return the petition after it has determined that the petition lacks
    sufficient signatures. Section 277.7(1) prescribes a directory duty. By contrast,
    the mandatory duty—to provide a public referendum in response to a valid
    petition—is found in section 423F.4(2)(b).
    The difference between a directory and mandatory duty determines the
    remedies available:
    “The difference between [mandatory and directory duties] lies in the
    consequence for failure to perform the duty.” A mandatory duty “is
    essential to the main objective of the statute . . . and a violation will
    invalidate subsequent proceedings under it.” If a duty is directory, a
    failure to perform the duty will not invalidate subsequent
    proceedings unless the individual has suffered prejudice as a result
    of the violation.
    18
    In re Det. of Fowler, 
    784 N.W.2d at 190
     (omission in original) (citations omitted)
    (quoting Taylor, 
    260 N.W.2d at
    522–23). Because the duty in question is
    directory, SOS must demonstrate that it was prejudiced by the District’s failure
    to return the petition. 
    Id.
    SOS cannot demonstrate that it has suffered prejudice. SOS lacked time
    to collect additional signatures to validate its petition; its rights were not affected
    by the District’s failure to return the petition. Even if the District had returned
    the petition immediately, thirty minutes was not enough time to collect another
    381 signatures. And SOS cannot claim that it was prejudiced by being misled or
    misinformed—SOS knew the District would require more signatures based on
    the superintendent’s May 29 email.
    Alternatively, SOS argues that the District’s failure to return the petition
    constituted its “acceptance” of the petition for filing. SOS contends this de facto
    acceptance of the petition makes it per se valid. 
    Id.
     § 277.7(2) (“Petitions which
    have been accepted for filing are valid unless written objections are filed.”). Under
    this theory, SOS argues that the District either should have filed written
    objections to the petition or gone ahead and referred the matter for a public
    referendum. Because the District did not file written objections challenging the
    validity of the petition, SOS argues that the District accepted the petition as a
    matter of law, the petition is valid, and the matter must go to a public
    referendum. We disagree. The District never accepted the petition for filing by its
    action or inaction. It examined the petition and found the number of signatures
    19
    insufficient. It would have violated the statute to accept a deficient petition for
    filing.
    SOS advances no authority for the proposition that we should validate a
    facially invalid petition after the submission deadline expired simply because the
    District failed to return it. SOS proposes a false choice between returning the
    petition and accepting it for filing. In this case, the District properly declined to
    accept SOS’s petition that lacked sufficient signatures. Because the deadline
    expired the same day SOS submitted the petition with inadequate time to cure
    the deficiency, any obligation to return the petition was moot. See Maghee v.
    State, 
    773 N.W.2d 228
    , 233 (Iowa 2009) (defining mootness as “when the
    contested issue has become academic or nonexistent and the court’s opinion
    would be of no force or effect in the underlying controversy”). SOS is entitled to
    no relief in the absence of prejudice.
    C. Whether the District Court Correctly Rejected SOS’s Due Process
    Claim. Finally, SOS argues that a denial of the right to vote on the expenditure
    of the SAVE funds amounts to a denial of its individual residents’ due process
    rights. But because SOS fell short of the number of signatures required to trigger
    a public referendum, it triggered no right to challenge the District’s use of the
    SAVE funds at a public referendum. Referendum cases are not “right to vote”
    cases:
    The right to vote in a general election, i.e., the right to participate in
    representative government, is a fundamental constitutional right
    that may not be abridged absent a compelling state interest. A
    referendum, however, is a form of direct democracy. Our
    constitution insures a representative form of government, not a
    direct democracy. Where a statute provides for an expression of
    20
    direct democracy, such as by initiative or referendum, it does so as
    a matter of legislative grace; the right to participate in such a process
    is not fundamental to our Constitution.
    Bowers v. Polk Cnty. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    638 N.W.2d 682
    , 692 (Iowa 2002)
    (quoting Kelly v. Macon–Bibb Cnty. Bd. of Elections, 
    608 F. Supp. 1036
    , 1038 n.1
    (D. Ga. 1985)); see also John Doe #1 v. Reed, 
    561 U.S. 186
    , 212 (2010)
    (Sotomayor, J., concurring) (“[Initiatives and referenda] are not compelled by the
    Federal Constitution. It is instead up to the people of each State . . . to decide
    whether and how to permit legislation by popular action. States enjoy
    ‘considerable leeway’ . . . to specify the requirements for obtaining ballot access
    . . . .”); Eggers v. Evnen, 
    48 F.4th 561
    , 565 (8th Cir. 2022) (collecting cases and
    noting “we have repeatedly stated that the right to place initiatives on the state
    ballot ‘is not a right guaranteed by the United States Constitution, but is a right
    created by state law.’ ”).
    We see no “wholesale deprivation of the right to vote,” as SOS claims,
    because SOS itself failed to submit a valid petition to trigger a statutory right to
    a public referendum. The failure of SOS’s statutory claim to a public referendum
    is fatal to its due process claim, which presupposes the deprivation of a right to
    the referendum.
    We also agree with the district court that SOS cannot show that the
    District’s conduct “shocks the conscience” as required to recover under a
    substantive due process theory. Lennette v. State, 
    975 N.W.2d 380
    , 393–94 (Iowa
    2022) (“A substantive due process violation is not easy to prove. The claim ‘is
    reserved for the most egregious governmental abuses against liberty or property
    21
    rights, abuses that “shock the conscience or otherwise . . . offend judicial notions
    of fairness . . . [and that are] offensive to human dignity.” ’ ” (alteration and
    omissions in original) (citation omitted) (quoting Blumenthal Inv. Trs. v. City of
    West Des Moines, 
    636 N.W.2d 255
    , 265 (Iowa 2001))). It hardly shocks the
    conscience to decline to act on a facially invalid petition for a public referendum.
    We affirm the district court’s summary judgment dismissing the due process
    claims.
    IV. Disposition.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s summary judgment
    dismissing SOS’s claims.
    AFFIRMED.
    All justices concur except Christensen, C.J., and Mansfield and May, JJ.,
    who take no part.