No Bans on Choice, American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri, and Sara E. Baker v. John R. Ashcroft, in his official capacity as Missouri Secretary of State ( 2022 )


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  •                 SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    NO BANS ON CHOICE, AMERICAN                       )           Opinion issued February 8, 2022
    CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF                          )
    MISSOURI, and SARA E. BAKER,                      )
    )
    Respondents,                     )
    )
    v.                                                )           No. SC98879
    )
    JOHN R. ASHCROFT, in his official                 )
    capacity as Missouri Secretary of State           )
    )
    Appellant.                       )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COLE COUNTY
    The Honorable Jon E. Beetem, Judge
    Amidst a ballot referendum campaign, Sara Baker, the ACLU of Missouri, and No
    Bans on Choice (collectively, “Challengers”) filed suit against the Missouri Secretary of
    State. The lawsuit challenged the constitutional validity of sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2, 1 which prohibit the collection of referendum petition signatures before the
    Secretary has certified the referendum’s “official ballot title” and affixed it to the petition.
    The circuit court issued a declaratory judgment invalidating sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2 because those provisions “interfere with and impede” the right of referendum
    1
    All statutory references are to RSMo 2016, unless otherwise specified.
    and, therefore, conflict with article III, sections 49 and 52(a) of the Missouri Constitution.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    Background
    I. Referendum Process
    The voters of Missouri first adopted a constitutional amendment establishing the
    right of referendum more than 100 years ago in 1908. Marsh v. Bartlett, 
    121 S.W.2d 737
    , 742 (Mo. 1938). 2 The right of referendum is now contained in article III, sections
    49 and 52(a) of the Missouri Constitution. Article III, section 49 states: “The people
    reserve power to propose and enact or reject laws and amendments to the constitution by
    the initiative, independent of the general assembly, and also reserve power to approve or
    reject by referendum any act of the general assembly, except as hereinafter provided.”
    Article III, section 52(a) further provides:
    A referendum may be ordered ... by petitions signed by five percent of the
    legal voters in each of two-thirds of the congressional districts in the state ....
    Referendum petitions shall be filed with the secretary of state not more than
    ninety days after the final adjournment of the session of the general assembly
    which passed the bill on which the referendum is demanded.
    (Emphasis added). 3 The General Assembly is permitted to enact “reasonable
    implementations” of the referendum process. State ex rel. Upchurch v. Blunt, 810
    2
    Missouri is one of 24 states that allows citizens to petition for elections on legislative
    enactments through a “popular referendum” without any involvement by the legislature.
    Initiative, Referendum, and Recall, Nat’l Conf. of State Legislatures,
    http://www.ncsl.org/legislatures-elections/elections/initiative-referendum-and-recall-
    overview.aspx (last visited Feb. 7, 2022).
    3
    Article III, section 20(a) of the Missouri Constitution designates May 30 as the date of the final
    adjournment of the General Assembly. Article III, section 52(a)’s deadline for filing referendum
    petitions within 90 days of the final adjournment of the legislative session coincides with article
    III, section 29 of the Missouri Constitution, which states that, with certain listed exceptions, laws
    
    2 S.W.2d 515
    , 516 (Mo. banc 1991). A framework for exercising the right of referendum
    was enacted by the legislature in chapter 116.
    To initiate the process, the referendum proponent must first submit the proposed
    petition “in the form in which it will be circulated” to the Secretary, who must then send
    it to the Attorney General to conduct an independent review of its form and provide
    comments within 10 days. Sections 116.332.1, .3. The Secretary has the ultimate
    authority to approve or reject the form of the petition and must do so within 15 days after
    the petition was first submitted and following the Attorney General’s review. Sections
    116.332.3, .4. If the petition is approved, the Secretary is given 23 days to prepare a
    “summary statement” of the measure, and the State Auditor must prepare a “fiscal note”
    and “fiscal note summary.” Sections 116.334.1, 116.175.2. The Attorney General must
    then issue an opinion about the form and content of the summary statement and fiscal
    note summary. Sections 116.175.4, 116.334.1. Within three days of receiving the
    Attorney General’s approval for both summaries, the Secretary must combine those
    summaries to create the “official ballot title,” which must be placed on the ballot measure
    if it is put before the voters. Sections 116.010(4), 116.180. In sum, it may take up to 51
    days from the time the proponent first submits the proposed petition until the official
    ballot title is certified.
    passed by the General Assembly shall take effect 90 days after the final adjournment of the
    General Assembly. Together, these three provisions designate August 28 as both the deadline
    for filing referendum petitions and the date on which laws passed during the previous session of
    the General Assembly take effect.
    3
    Until 1997, proponents were able to circulate the referendum petition for
    signatures before the ballot title was certified. But, in that year, the legislature amended
    chapter 116 and enacted sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 to prohibit the circulation of
    referendum petitions before the official ballot title is certified and affixed to the petition.
    As a result of this legislation, a referendum proponent may be delayed up to 51 days
    before collecting signatures to have the measure placed on the ballot.
    II. 2020 Referendum Effort
    The General Assembly passed House Bill No. 126 on May 17, 2019, the last day
    to pass legislation during the 2019 session, and the bill was signed by Governor Parson
    on May 24. 4 Four days later, Baker, on behalf of the ACLU, submitted a proposed
    referendum petition on HB 126 to Secretary of State Ashcroft, seeking to place it on the
    ballot for the 2020 general election. On June 6, 2019, the Secretary notified Baker and
    the ACLU he was rejecting the proposed referendum petition because HB 126 contained
    an emergency clause, requiring some of its provisions to become effective immediately.
    The Secretary concluded the emergency clause exempted the entire bill from the
    referendum process because legislation may not be challenged via referendum after it
    becomes effective. See State ex rel. Moore v. Toberman, 
    250 S.W.2d 701
    , 706 (Mo. banc
    1952).
    Baker and the ACLU sued the Secretary, alleging such constitutional grounds
    were not a sufficient basis for rejecting the proposed petition. The circuit court ruled in
    4
    HB 126 repealed sections 188.027 and 188.052 and enacted sections 188.026, 188.027, and
    188.052 in lieu thereof.
    4
    Secretary to immediately approve the sample sheet of the referendum petition as
    sufficient as to form pursuant to section 116.332.4 and proceed with the official ballot
    title certification process. ACLU v. Ashcroft, 
    577 S.W.3d 881
    , 899-900 (Mo. App. 2019).
    At that time, the Secretary and Attorney General had 36 days to complete the certification
    process pursuant to sections 116.334.1, 116.175.2, 116.175.4, and 116.180. The ACLU
    asked the court of appeals to shorten the statutory timeframe for certification to offset the
    delay caused by the emergency litigation, but the court ruled it had “no authority to
    modify the provisions of that statute, including the times therein permitted for
    performance.” Ashcroft, 577 S.W.3d at 900 n.21. 5
    State officials ultimately used all 36 days to complete the official ballot title
    certification. The Secretary did not certify the official ballot title and approve the petition
    for signature circulation until August 14, 2019. As a result, Baker and the ACLU were
    left with 14 days to circulate the petition and submit 107,510 signatures to the Secretary
    in accordance with article III, section 52(a). 6 On August 22, Challengers filed suit in the
    circuit court against the Secretary, arguing sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 violated the
    Missouri Constitution in that they conflicted with the right of referendum under article
    III, sections 49 and 52(a). Baker and the ACLU ultimately failed to collect the requisite
    signatures within the 14-day timeframe, and the referendum was not placed on the ballot.
    5
    The ACLU filed an emergency motion for rehearing or transfer, arguing those statutory
    timeframes were unconstitutional as applied in the case. The court of appeals overruled the
    motion. The ACLU then applied to this Court for transfer, which this Court denied.
    6
    Article III, section 52(a) requires referendum petitions to be signed by 5 percent of registered
    voters in two-thirds of Missouri’s congressional districts to be placed on the ballot.
    5
    The circuit court subsequently issued a declaratory judgment that sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2 were unconstitutional because they conflicted with article III, sections 49 and
    52(a) in that they “interfere with and impede” the right of referendum. 7
    Standard of Review
    If a statute conflicts with a constitutional provision, this Court must declare that
    statute invalid. Upchurch, 810 S.W.2d at 516. The validity of a statute is a question of
    law reviewed de novo. Trenton Farms RE, LLC v. Hickory Neighbors United, Inc., 
    603 S.W.3d 286
    , 290 (Mo. banc 2020). A statute is presumed valid and will not be declared
    unconstitutional unless it clearly contravenes a constitutional provision. 
    Id.
    Analysis
    The issue before this court is whether sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 violate the
    right to referendum as found in article III, sections 49 and 52(a) of the Missouri
    Constitution. In establishing the right of referendum, the people of Missouri
    constitutionally reserved a share of the legislative power for themselves. State ex rel.
    Barrett v. Dallmeyer, 
    245 S.W. 1066
    , 1068 (Mo. banc 1922). 8 The purpose of this right
    7
    This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to article V, section 3 of the Missouri Constitution.
    8
    Immediately following its creation, the referendum was widely used. David C. Valentine,
    Constitutional Amendments, Statutory Revision and Referenda Submitted to the Voters by the
    General Assembly or by Initiative Petition, 1910-2008, Report 25-2008, at 3,
    https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/bitstream/handle/10355/2524/ConstitutionalAmend
    mentsStatutoryRevision.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y. While it has been used more sparingly
    in the decades since, when the right to referendum is employed, voters are more often than not
    inclined to exercise the power reserved for them; 24 of the 26 referenda put before the voters
    between 1914 and 2008 have resulted in the rejection of bills enacted by the General Assembly.
    Id. at 2. Voters also struck down the General Assembly’s “right to work” bill in the only
    referendum put on the ballot since 2008. Scott Neuman, Missouri Blocks Right-to-Work Law,
    NPR, Aug. 8, 2018, https://www.npr.org/2018/08/08/636568530/missouri-blocks-right-to-work-
    law (last visited Feb. 7, 2022).
    6
    is to “provide the people a means of giving expression to a legislative proposition[.]”
    Toberman, 
    250 S.W.2d at 706
    . The referendum process ensures that “those who have no
    access to or influence with elected representatives may take their cause directly to the
    people.” Missourians to Protect the Initiative Process v. Blunt, 
    799 S.W.2d 824
    , 827
    (Mo. banc 1990). The referendum also exists to serve as a check on the legislature. State
    ex rel. Drain v. Becker, 
    240 S.W. 229
    , 230-31 (Mo. banc 1922).
    Legislation to implement the referendum process is presumed to be
    constitutionally valid. Rekart v. Kirkpatrick, 
    639 S.W.2d 606
    , 608 (Mo. banc 1982). But
    laws enacted to implement the referendum process must be invalidated when they
    “interfere with or impede a right conferred by the constitution[.]” 
    Id.
     In other words,
    “[m]inor details may be left for the legislature without impairing the self-executing nature
    of constitutional provisions ... but all such legislation must be subordinate to the
    constitutional provision and in furtherance of its purposes, and must not ... attempt to
    narrow or embarrass it.” Musser v. Conrod, 
    496 S.W.2d 8
    , 11 (Mo. banc 1973).
    The circuit court concluded sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 unconstitutionally
    “interfere with and impede” the right of referendum. 9 It determined that, by prohibiting
    9
    The Secretary asserts several arguments for why the circuit court should not have reviewed
    Challengers’ claim on the merits. First, the Secretary argues Challengers’ claim was barred by
    res judicata and waiver due to Baker and the ACLU’s previous litigation against the Secretary.
    Res judicata requires the new claim to arise out of the same act, contract or transaction as the
    previous claim. Kesterson v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    242 S.W.3d 712
    , 716 (Mo. banc
    2008). But the prior litigation arose out of the Secretary’s rejection of the proposed referendum
    petition, which was an entirely separate issue from the validity of sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2. While the parties did challenge the ballot title provisions to the extent they could in
    the course of the prior lawsuit, the constitutional validity of those provisions was not reviewed
    on the merits. See ACLU v. Ashcroft, 577 S.W.3d at 900 n.21. Similarly, Challengers’ claim
    was not waived because the time constraints on circulation imposed by sections 116.180 and
    7
    proponents from circulating a petition before the official ballot title is certified and
    affixed to the petition, the challenged statues “dramatically reduce the time available for
    the circulation of a referendum petition, both in theory and in practice.” In reaching its
    decision, the circuit court cited three of this Court’s prior decisions to support the
    proposition that the State “may not constitutionally delay the circulation of a referendum
    petition for the purpose of certifying a ballot title.”
    In the first case cited by the circuit court, Boeving v. Kander, 
    496 S.W.3d 498
    , 507
    (Mo. banc 2016), this Court explained that the Missouri Constitution “only authorizes
    legislation detailing the requirement for an ‘official ballot title’ at the time [a] proposed
    constitutional amendment is put before the voters” and that there is “no similar express
    constitutional authorization” for legislation requiring an official ballot title before the
    petition may be circulated for signatures. This Court explicitly noted, however, that the
    question of whether such a pre-circulation ballot title requirement would be
    constitutionally permissible was not presented in the case. Id. at 508.
    116.334.2 did not affect Baker and the ACLU until after the court of appeals ordered the
    Secretary to commence the ballot title certification process. As such, the parties did not fail to
    present their constitutional question “at the earliest possible moment that good pleading and
    orderly procedure will admit ....” Meadowbrook Country Club v. Davis, 
    384 S.W.2d 611
    , 612
    (Mo. banc 1964) (internal quotation omitted).
    The Secretary also argues Challengers’ claim was not justiciable. Challengers, however,
    clearly had standing to challenge sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 in the midst of their
    referendum campaign. While the claim may have been rendered moot once the deadline to
    submit signatures to the Secretary came to pass, the time-sensitive nature of the referendum
    process would place the claim squarely within the mootness exception of “capable of repetition,
    yet evading review.” See State ex rel. Reser v. Rush, 
    562 S.W.2d 365
    , 367 (Mo. banc 1978)
    (“The problem presented is one which is ‘capable of repetition, yet evading review,’ and needs to
    be resolved and put to rest. Accordingly, notwithstanding the suggestion of mootness, we will
    decide the case on the merits, being of opinion that the questions involved are matters of public
    rights or interests under conditions which may be repeated any time.” (internal citation omitted)).
    8
    In the second case, Union Electric Co. v. Kirkpatrick, 
    678 S.W.2d 402
    , 405 (Mo.
    banc 1984), this Court held that, although the proponent’s title on a proposed ballot
    initiative did not express clearly the subject matter of the proposal, petition signers could
    not have been deceived or misled at this stage of the initiative process because the full act
    appeared on the back of each petition. In the third case, United Labor Committee of
    Missouri v. Kirkpatrick, 
    572 S.W.2d 449
    , 454 (Mo. banc 1978), this Court noted that
    previous decisions “discussed the importance of the initiative and referendum,
    emphasizing that procedures designed to effectuate these democratic concepts should be
    liberally construed to avail the voters with every opportunity to exercise these rights.”
    United Labor held: “The ability of the voters to get before their fellow voters issues they
    deem significant should not be thwarted in preference for technical formalities.” 
    Id.
    Together, these cases suggest that an official ballot title is not necessary to prevent
    individuals from being deceived at the petition-signing stage and that the ability to
    exercise the constitutional right of referendum should not be “interfered with or impeded”
    by a pre-circulation ballot title requirement.
    The Secretary contends sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 leave sufficient time to
    gather signatures in “virtually all circumstances.” But Challengers argue the process of
    procuring the official ballot title prior to circulation is quite time-consuming. As the
    circuit court explained, the full signature-collection period for a referendum on a measure
    passed on the last day of the legislative session is only 90 days, and sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2 “permit the government to take away 51 of those days.” The Secretary points
    to testimony presented by Challengers indicating an organization could feasibly collect
    9
    the requisite number of signatures within 39 days under the worst-case scenario. But not
    every citizen who may wish to utilize the right of referendum has access to the same
    resources as Challengers. For example, Baker testified that, in the time leading up to the
    signature-collection stage, she solicited contributions from donors who had sufficient
    available funds to pay a firm that specializes in signature-gathering. And the circuit court
    found “every day the time for signature collection on a referendum petition is reduced,
    the cost of gathering enough signatures to get the referendum before voters will go up.”
    The Missouri Constitution guarantees the right of referendum to all Missouri citizens, not
    just those capable of raising the necessary funds to complete a signature-collection effort
    within the tightest of timeframes.
    In practice, the pre-circulation ballot title requirement has indeed proved to be a
    hinderance to the referendum process. The circuit court determined the average amount
    of time the State took to certify official ballot titles between 2016 and 2020 ranged from
    35 to 47 days. For bills passed on the last day of session, this delay constitutes from
    more than one-third to more than one-half of the 90 days allotted for petition circulation.
    Further, since the challenged statutes were enacted in 1997, only one referendum
    campaign, the 2018 challenge to the “right-to-work” bill, collected enough timely
    signatures to have the measure placed on the ballot. That campaign also benefitted from
    the challenged legislation being signed by the governor on February 6, 2017, which was
    113 days before the final adjournment of the legislative session and, therefore, 203 days
    before the deadline to file a referendum petition under article III, section 52(a).
    10
    The legislature inherently has the power to reduce the time to circulate a
    referendum petition on any particular piece of legislation by delaying the passage of that
    legislation until the end of the legislative session. But by significantly reducing the
    allotted circulation period even further, sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 afford the
    legislature the opportunity to “interfere with or impede” the right of referendum by, in
    effect, controlling the viability of any referendum. The dissent notes that the legislature
    may pass legislation before the end of the legislative session and accordingly leave
    referendum proponents more than 90 days to circulate a petition for signatures, even
    when state officials use the full 51 days to complete the official ballot title certification
    process. But regardless of if or when the legislature chooses to pass legislation during its
    session, sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 “interfere with and impede” the right of
    referendum because they give the legislature the power to make any referendum effort
    untenable.
    The Secretary argues that, to declare sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 invalid, this
    Court must determine that a referendum proponent could never successfully collect
    enough timely signatures to have a measure placed on the ballot. See State v. Jeffrey, 
    400 S.W.3d 303
    , 308 (Mo. banc 2013) (“Generally, to prevail in a facial challenge, the party
    challenging the statute must demonstrate that no set of circumstances exists under which
    the statute may be constitutionally applied.”). 10 But the standard for determining if a law
    10
    While the Secretary argued before the circuit court that sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 do not
    conflict with the Missouri Constitution, the Secretary never asserted that the Challengers must
    show there are no set of circumstances under which sections 116.180 and 116.334 could be
    constitutionally applied to prevail on their claim. As such, the Secretary arguably failed to
    11
    violates article III, sections 49 and 52(a) is whether the law “interferes with or impedes”
    the right of referendum, not whether it “interferes with or impedes” any particular
    referendum effort. See Rekart, 
    639 S.W.2d at 608
    . A law need not prevent every
    individual referendum effort from being successful to “interfere with or impede” the right
    of referendum itself. Consequently, because sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 “interfere
    with and impede” the right of referendum, they can never be constitutionally applied.
    As this Court has emphasized, the establishment of the constitutional right of
    referendum was a fundamental expression of the power held by the people:
    Under our system, that intangible thing we call “government,” the existence
    of which is least felt when best administered, has its origin in and draws its
    life and inspiration from the people. They frame and adopt the organic law,
    which defines the limits of legislative action; they incorporate therein
    whatever provisions they may deem proper. Thus empowered, as are the
    people in all governments organized as is ours, the inevitable conclusion
    follows that if they determine, as they have in the adoption of the initiative
    and referendum, to limit the province or modify the purview of the
    Legislature in the adoption or rejection of laws, there is no power that can
    say them nay.
    ....
    To any one familiar with the power for good or ill which the Legislature may
    wield, it cannot but be regarded as an act of prudence that the people, the
    repository of all power, and vitally interested in all that pertains to the
    conduct of public affairs, should reserve unto themselves the right to correct
    any evils which may result from unwise legislation.
    preserve this argument for appellate review. See State v. Davis, 
    348 S.W.3d 768
    , 770 (Mo. banc
    2011) (“Because an appellate court is not a forum in which new points will be considered ... only
    those objections or grounds of objection which were urged in the trial court, without change and
    without addition, will be considered on appeal.” (internal quotation omitted)). Nevertheless, this
    Court will assume, arguendo, that the argument was properly preserved and address it on the
    merits.
    12
    Becker, 240 S.W. at 230-31. The legislature must not be permitted to use procedural
    formalities to interfere with or impede this constitutional right that is so integral to
    Missouri’s democratic system of government.
    Conclusion
    Sections 116.180 and 116.334.2’s prohibition on collecting referendum petition
    signatures prior to the Secretary’s certification of the official ballot title “interferes with
    and impedes” the constitutional right of referendum reserved to the people by
    unreasonably shortening the timeframe for petition circulation. As such, the circuit
    court’s judgment declaring those statutes constitutionally invalid is affirmed.
    ______________________________
    Mary R. Russell, Judge
    Wilson, C.J., Breckenridge, Draper, Ransom, JJ., concur;
    Powell, J., dissents in separate opinion filed;
    Fischer, J., concurs in opinion of Powell, J.
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    NO BANS ON CHOICE, AMERICAN                      )
    CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF                         )
    MISSOURI, and SARA E. BAKER,                     )
    )
    Respondents,                     )
    )
    v.                                               )      No. SC98879
    )
    JOHN R. ASHCROFT, in his official                )
    capacity as Missouri Secretary of State,          )
    )
    Appellant.                       )
    DISSENTING OPINION
    I respectfully dissent because Sara Baker, the ACLU of Missouri, and No Bans on
    Choice (collectively, “Challengers”) have not demonstrated sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2 are facially invalid. 1 While Challengers’ referendum rights may have been
    interfered with or otherwise impeded in the past, Challengers do not seek relief from the
    application of sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 during their previous ballot referendum
    campaign. As the principal opinion notes, Challengers specifically requested in their
    petition, and the circuit court ultimately granted, declaratory relief outright invalidating
    1
    All statutory references are to RSMo 2016.
    both statutes in all situations. Challengers, therefore, do not challenge the application of
    the statutes as they were applied to them in the past. Rather, Challengers mount a facial
    challenge seeking to invalidate the applications of the statutes for everyone going forward.
    Because circumstances exist in which sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 may be applied
    without interfering with or impeding the constitutional right of referendum guaranteed in
    article III, sections 49 and 52(a) of the Missouri Constitution, Challengers’ facial challenge
    seeking to invalidate these statutes must be rejected.
    Analysis
    “This Court reviews the constitutional validity of statutes de novo.” Fowler v. Mo.
    Sheriffs’ Ret. Sys., 
    623 S.W.3d 578
    , 584 (Mo. banc 2021) (internal quotation omitted). The
    Court presumes a statute is constitutional, finding it unconstitutional only if “it clearly and
    undoubtedly contravenes the constitution.” Adams By and Through Adams v. Children’s
    Mercy Hosp., 
    832 S.W.2d 898
    , 903 (Mo. banc 1992), overruled on other grounds by Watts
    v. Lester E. Cox Med. Ctrs., 
    376 S.W.3d 633
    , 636 (Mo. banc 2012). “In order to mount a
    facial challenge to a statute, the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists
    under which the [statute] would be valid.” Donaldson v. Mo. State Bd. of Registration for
    the Healing Arts, 
    615 S.W.3d 57
    , 66 (Mo. banc 2020) (alteration in original). Courts
    should rarely tolerate facial challenges to the constitutional validity of a statute:
    Facial challenges are disfavored for several reasons. Claims of facial
    invalidity often rest on speculation. As a consequence, they raise the risk of
    premature interpretation of statutes on the basis of factually barebones
    records. Facial challenges also run contrary to the fundamental principle of
    judicial restraint that courts should neither anticipate a question of
    constitutional law in advance of the necessity of deciding it nor formulate a
    rule of constitutional law broader than is required by the precise facts to
    2
    which it is to be applied. Finally, facial challenges threaten to short circuit
    the democratic process by preventing laws embodying the will of the people
    from being implemented in a manner consistent with the Constitution. We
    must keep in mind that [a] ruling of unconstitutionality frustrates the intent
    of the elected representatives of the people.
    Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party, 
    552 U.S. 442
    , 450-51 (2008)
    (alteration in original) (internal quotation and citation omitted).
    Article III, section 52(a) provides, “Referendum petitions shall be filed with the
    secretary of state not more than ninety days after the final adjournment of the session of
    the general assembly which passed the bill on which the referendum is demanded.” The
    Missouri Constitution therefore, guarantees referendum proponents only 90 days to collect
    the necessary signatures to place the referendum on the ballot because referendum-
    contested legislation may be passed on the last day of the legislative session. While the
    legislature may neither “impede” nor “interfere” with the right of referendum, Rekart v.
    Kirkpatrick, 
    639 S.W.2d 606
    , 608 (Mo. banc 1982), the legislature has the power to enact
    reasonable, practical regulations to address the realities of implementing a constitutional
    right. State ex rel. Upchurch v. Blunt, 
    810 S.W.2d 515
    , 516 (Mo. banc 1991) (noting the
    legislature may “enact reasonable implementations of a constitutional directive”). As long
    as legislatively enacted regulations to the referendum process do not limit the 90 days set
    aside to collect signatures and submit petitions to the Secretary of State, the regulations
    would not interfere with or impede the time period guaranteed by the right of referendum
    and would be presumably reasonable and practical. Adams, 
    832 S.W.2d at 903
     (The Court
    presumes a statute is constitutional, finding it unconstitutional only if “it clearly and
    undoubtedly contravenes the constitution.”).
    3
    Of course, the legislature may pass legislation before the end of the legislative
    session. Referendum proponents accordingly would enjoy in excess of the 90 days to
    collect signatures and comply with the relevant statutory regulations, even if state actors
    took the full 51 days Missouri statutes permit for reviewing and certifying the ballot title. 2
    In such a circumstance, the referendum regulations would neither impede nor interfere with
    the 90 days set aside by the Missouri Constitution to collect signatures and submit the
    referendum petitions to the Secretary of State.         Because the legislature may enact
    reasonable, practical regulations to the referendum process and circumstances exist in
    which sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 would not impede or interfere with the right of
    referendum, Challengers’ facial challenge lacks merit, and the circuit court erred in
    invalidating these statutes.
    The principal opinion insinuates the Secretary of State (“State”) failed to preserve
    its facial challenge argument by neglecting to raise the argument before the circuit court.
    The mere suggestion that the State’s facial challenge argument is unpreserved and
    unreviewable is untenable for many reasons. First, the State did answer Challengers’
    claims, vehemently asserting the statutes were constitutional. 3 Admittedly, the State cited
    no caselaw pertinent to facial constitutional challenges, but this omission is
    inconsequential. Even if the State had utterly failed to contend sections 116.180 and
    116.334.2 were constitutional, which it did not, this Court could not eschew its duty to
    2
    See §§ 116.332.1, .3, .4; § 116.334.1; §§ 116.175.2, .4; § 116.010(4); § 116.180.
    3
    The State did so in its motion to dismiss, the affirmative defenses listed its answer to
    Challengers’ amended petition, and its pretrial brief.
    4
    conduct de novo review applying controlling precedent to the circuit court’s judgment
    declaring sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 unconstitutional and invalidating acts of the
    legislature. 4 As the principal opinion concedes, “[t]his Court reviews the constitutional
    validity of statutes de novo.” Fowler, 623 S.W.3d at 584 (internal quotation omitted). It
    also presumes statutes are constitutional. Adams, 
    832 S.W.2d at 903
    . Challengers, not the
    State, have the burden of rebutting this presumption and demonstrating the reasons their
    claim merits the relief requested. 
    Id.
     In conducting de novo review of a properly presented
    challenge to the constitutional validity of a statute, this Court has no authority to relieve
    Challengers of that burden of persuasion by requiring the State, or any other party, to make
    arguments supporting the validity of the statute.
    These principles reflect this Court’s constitutional function: “It is emphatically the
    province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” Marbury v. Madison,
    
    5 U.S. 137
    , 177 (1803) (holding American courts may invalidate laws and statutes in
    conflict with the United States Constitution); see also Mo. Const. art. V, sec. 1 (“The
    judicial power of the state shall be vested in a supreme court[.]”); Mo. Const. art. V, sec. 3
    (“The supreme court shall have exclusive appellate jurisdiction in all cases involving the
    validity of … a statute or provision of the constitution of this state[.]”). This Court cannot,
    and should not, relinquish its constitutional duty to review the validity of a statute merely
    4
    A court could not raise constitutional challenges sua sponte on behalf of the party seeking
    to strike down the statute. Such an act would put this Court in a position of advocacy,
    hinder its constitutional purpose of impartial review, and, therefore, would violate
    separation of powers. See e.g., White v. U. S. Pipe & Foundry Co., 
    646 F.2d 203
    , 204 (5th
    Cir. 1981). The Court, however, does not act as an advocate when it independently
    retrieves caselaw supporting constitutional validity in a de novo review.
    5
    because the State failed to identify the proper standard of review of a facial challenge in its
    argument to the circuit court. If this were possible, the State could collude with other
    litigants to orchestrate outcomes by declining to faithfully defend statutes and narrowing
    the scope of the caselaw reviewable by this Court. 5 The State, acting through the Attorney
    General, would become the ultimate arbiter of a statute’s constitutional validity. 6 The
    Missouri Constitution charges this Court, not the Attorney General or any other member
    of the executive branch, with exercising its judicial power to review a proper challenge to
    the constitutional validity of a statute. Mo. Cont. art. V, § 1. This review necessarily
    includes considering this Court’s precedents regardless of whether the State, or any other
    party supporting the constitutional validity of a statute, has properly presented and briefed
    the circuit court on the law related to facial challenges.
    5
    Say, for example, a group of litigants filed an action mounting a facial challenge to a
    statute on the grounds that it violated the right to have an abortion guaranteed by Roe v.
    Wade, 
    410 U.S. 113
     (1973). If the State, acting through the Attorney General, agreed with
    the litigants’ viewpoint and purposefully limited its defense of the statute by raising only
    irrelevant arguments and abstained from mentioning law pertinent to facial challenges,
    would this Court be precluded from conducting its own review of the merits of the litigants’
    constitutional claims?
    6
    Such action would likely also violate article II, section I of the Missouri Constitution,
    which prohibits each branch of government from exercising powers granted to a different
    branch.
    6
    Conclusion
    For these reasons, I disagree with the principal opinion’s analysis and conclusion
    that sections 116.180 and 116.334.2 facially violate the right of referendum contained in
    article III, sections 49 and 52(a) of the Missouri Constitution. I would reject Challengers’
    arguments and reverse the circuit court’s judgment.
    ___________________
    W. Brent Powell, Judge
    7