Montanans Opposed to I-166 v. State , 365 Mont. 520 ( 2012 )


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  •                                                                                            August 10 2012
    OP 12-0439
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2012 MT 168
    _________________
    MONTANANS OPPOSED TO I-166, a Political
    Committee, SENATOR DAVE LEWIS,
    Individually, and as an Elected Member of the
    Montana Legislature, PHIL LILLEBERG,
    Individually, and as an Owner of FP, INC., a
    Montana Corporation,
    Petitioners,                                      OPINION
    and
    v.                                                               ORDER
    STATE OF MONTANA HONORABLE STEVE
    BULLOCK, in his capacity as Attorney General
    and the HONORABLE LINDA McCULLOCH, in
    her capacity as the Secretary of State,
    Respondents.
    ¶1     Petitioners brought an original proceeding in this Court pursuant to § 13-27-316,
    MCA, attacking the validity of Initiative 166. They request that this Court rule that the
    Attorney General and the Secretary of State did not comply with their responsibilities under
    law when they failed to act to bar I-166 from appearing on the general election ballot. I-166
    is a ballot initiative that would establish that the policy of the State of Montana is that
    corporations are not entitled to constitutional rights and are not persons. It “charges” elected
    officials to implement the policy in part by acting to prohibit corporate political campaign
    spending and to limit political spending in elections. It further “charges” Montana’s
    1
    congressional delegation with proposing an amendment to the United States Constitution
    establishing that corporations are not human beings entitled to constitutional rights.
    ¶2     The Montana Constitution, Art. III, sec. 4, empowers the people to enact laws by
    initiative on all matters except appropriations and local or special laws. Proponents of an
    initiative must gather a sufficient number of signatures on petitions that support placing the
    matter on the ballot. Prior to gathering signatures the proponents must submit to the
    Secretary of State the proposed text of the ballot issue along with a draft statement of the
    purpose of the initiative and a separate statement of the implications of a vote for or against
    the issue. The Secretary of State must submit the measure to the Legislative Services
    Division for review and thereafter to the Attorney General for review. Upon review by
    Legislative Services and upon approval of the Attorney General, the Secretary of State then
    notifies the proponents of the measure, who may begin gathering signatures. Section 13-27-
    202, MCA.
    ¶3     The Attorney General’s review is limited to determining the sufficiency of the ballot
    statements and a review of the ballot issue for legal sufficiency. Section 13-27-312, MCA.
    The statements must explain the purpose of the measure in 100 words or less and the
    implications of votes for or against, in 25 words or less. Section 13-27-312(2), MCA. The
    Attorney General’s legal sufficiency review determines whether the proposal complies with
    the applicable statutory and constitutional requirements. The legal sufficiency review
    specifically “does not include consideration of the substantive legality of the issue if
    approved by the voters.” Section 13-27-312(7), MCA.
    2
    ¶4     In the case of I-166, the Secretary of State received the proposal and submitted it to
    Legislative Services and then to the Attorney General for review. The Attorney General
    revised the proponents’ statement of purpose but otherwise notified the Secretary of State
    that the proposal met the required legal sufficiency review. Upon notification by the
    Attorney General the Secretary of State notified the proponents of I-166 that they could
    begin gathering signatures, as provided in § 13-27-202. MCA.
    ¶5     The current petitioners, opponents of I-166, contend that the ballot statements do not
    comply with law and that the Attorney General should not have approved them. They also
    contend that the initiative itself is unlawful on several grounds including that it is a
    resolution and not a law; that it improperly amends the Montana Constitution; and that it
    improperly directs elected representatives how to vote. They sued under § 13-27-316(2),
    MCA, which allows opponents of a ballot issue to contest the adequacy of the explanatory
    statements and of the Attorney General’s determination of legal sufficiency. They seek no
    other relief.
    ¶6     As previously explained, the Attorney General’s review for legal sufficiency is
    limited by law to determining whether the petition for a ballot issue complies with the
    statutory and constitutional requirements “governing submission of the proposed issue to the
    electors.” It does not include consideration “of the substantive legality of the issue if
    approved by the voters.” Section 13-27-312(7), MCA. However, the petitioners in this case
    seek to have this Court require that the Attorney General undertake precisely the substantive
    legal review that is excluded by law. By statute, the Attorney General had no power to
    3
    review the substantive legality of I-166. The petition does not allege nor does this Court find
    that the petition was legally insufficient as to the requirements for submission of a proposed
    ballot issue.
    ¶7      We have reviewed the explanatory statements that were approved by the Attorney
    General. Section 13-27-312(4), MCA, requires that the statements of purpose and of the
    implication of a vote must be “true and impartial” and must be in “easily understood
    language and may not be arguments or written so as to create prejudice for or against the
    issue.” The petitioners request that this Court either reject the statements approved by the
    Attorney General, or re-write them. Upon review of the statements we determine that they
    meet the requirements of § 13-27-312(2) and (4), MCA.
    ¶8      Petitioners have not requested any other relief, see e.g. Harper v. Waltermire, 
    213 Mont. 425
    , 
    691 P.2d 826
     (1984), and we decline to consider any such issues not properly
    pled.
    ¶9      For the reasons stated above, the petition is denied.
    DATED this 10th day of August, 2012.
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    We concur:
    /S/ PATRICIA COTTER
    /S/ JIM RICE
    /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
    /S/ BRIAN MORRIS
    4
    Justice Beth Baker, concurring.
    ¶10    I concur with the Court’s decision to reject the petition in this case and to allow I-166
    to appear on the November 2012 general election ballot. I also concur in the Court’s
    determination that the Attorney General’s ballot language fairly represents the text of the
    measure and therefore meets the requirements of § 13-27-312(2) and (4), MCA.
    ¶11    The key issue is whether the petition states a claim that may be entertained in a pre-
    election original proceeding before this Court. While striving to give liberal construction to
    constitutional and statutory initiative and referendum provisions in order “to maintain the
    maximum power in the people,” the Court previously has invalidated proposed ballot issues
    that are beyond the power that the people reserved to themselves in Article III, Sections 4
    and 5, of the Montana Constitution. Chouteau County v. Grossman, 
    172 Mont. 373
    , 378,
    
    563 P.2d 1125
    , 1128 (1977) (invalidating county referendum proposal that concerned an
    administrative rather than legislative function); Harper, 213 Mont. at 428-29, 
    691 P.2d at 828-29
     (invalidating initiative that proposed a legislative resolution compelling the
    legislature to reach a specific result).
    ¶12    Since those cases were decided, the legislature has acted several times over the years
    to clarify when legal challenges may keep an initiative or referendum off the ballot. Section
    3-2-202(3)(a), MCA, under which the petition in this case was filed, now makes clear that
    this Court has original jurisdiction to review “the attorney general’s legal sufficiency
    determination in an action brought pursuant to 13-27-316.” Under § 13-27-316(2), MCA,
    5
    Petitioners here have requested the Court to alter the Attorney General’s ballot statements
    and to overrule his determination that the petition is legally sufficient.
    ¶13    Consistent with its obligation to construe the statutes to promote, rather than to curtail,
    the people’s right of direct democracy, the Court interprets the Attorney General’s “legal
    sufficiency” review authority narrowly. Thus, the Court refuses to read § 13-27-312(7),
    MCA, as conferring power on the Attorney General to reject a citizen-initiated ballot
    measure for constitutional deficiency. (Opinion, ¶ 6.) The Dissent argues that the Attorney
    General has power to declare a proposed initiative or referendum facially unconstitutional
    and to prohibit its placement on the ballot. (Dissent, ¶ 40.) While I believe that it is the
    judicial branch of government, not the executive, that determines whether a ballot measure is
    facially unconstitutional, I do not confine my decision in this case to the Court’s rationale
    that the petitioners simply failed to request the proper form of relief.
    ¶14    “[W]hen the legislature has prescribed a specific process for a court challenge to a
    ballot measure, we have refused to intervene prior to the election if that process was not
    followed.” Reichert v. State, 
    2012 MT 111
    , ¶ 95, 
    365 Mont. 92
    , 
    278 P.3d 455
     (Baker, J.,
    concurring and dissenting) (citing State ex rel. Mont. Citizens for the Preservation of
    Citizens’ Rights v. Waltermire, 
    224 Mont. 273
    , 278, 
    729 P.2d 1283
    , 1286 (1986)). In
    contrast to the law at the time Harper and Grossman were decided, the statutes now reflect a
    clear preference to defer ruling on the constitutionality of a proposed initiative petition until
    after the results of the election at which it is submitted to the voters. The governing statutes
    expressly preserve “the right to challenge a ballot issue enacted by a vote of the people.”
    6
    Section 3-2-202(5), MCA. See also § 13-27-316(6), MCA (“This section does not limit the
    right to challenge a constitutional defect in the substance of an issue approved by a vote of
    the people.”). (Emphasis added.)
    ¶15    Petitioners’ claim that I-166 is beyond the power of initiative and referendum
    challenges an alleged constitutional defect in the substance of the measure. Whether or not
    the Court possesses original jurisdiction in a proper proceeding to invalidate a proposed
    ballot measure prior to the election (§ 3-2-202(1), MCA), I would hold in this case that
    Petitioners’ challenge to I-166 does not meet the Court’s own requirements for discretionary
    exercise of its original jurisdiction (M. R. App. P. 14(2) and (4)) and must await the final
    election results in November. At that time, if the measure is approved by the voters,
    Petitioners may proceed by filing a complaint for declaratory judgment in district court and
    by pursuing the “normal appeal process” in this Court. M. R. App. P. 14(4). That process is
    better suited for the development and informed consideration of constitutional questions such
    as those raised in the petition. I do not read the Court’s decision today to foreclose such a
    challenge if the measure is approved in the general election.
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    7
    Justice James C. Nelson, dissenting.
    ¶16    I respectfully dissent from the Court’s decision to deny relief. I agree, rather, with the
    arguments of Petitioners and would order the Secretary of State not to place I-166 on the
    2012 general election ballot or, if the ballots have already been printed with the measure, not
    to count the votes. See Reichert v. State, 
    2012 MT 111
    , ¶¶ 1, 13, 
    365 Mont. 92
    , 
    278 P.3d 455
    . Before detailing my legal analysis, I have three observations.
    I. Contempt
    ¶17    First, aside from the fatal legal problem plaguing I-166 (discussed below), this
    initiative is, at bottom, simply a feel-good exercise exhibiting contempt for the federal
    government and, particularly, the United States Supreme Court.1 Obviously, corporations
    are not “human beings,” and the fact that Montana voters may (or may not) have heartburn
    with the notion of corporations as “persons” imbued with constitutional rights is largely
    irrelevant. Make no mistake, I share the pain of my fellow Montanans. See Western
    Tradition, ¶ 132 (Nelson, J., dissenting). And if Montana wants to change its laws to provide
    that corporations are not persons and are without constitutional rights, it certainly can do
    that. But the I-166 exercise—at least that portion of the initiative directing Montana’s
    elected and appointed officials how to act at the state level—is not going to alter these
    concepts at the federal level or in our sister states. Indeed, I suspect that amending
    1
    One could refer to this as “thumbing Montana’s nose” at the feds. Regardless of the
    nomenclature, however, the intent is the same. I thus refer to this measure as “the I-166
    exercise.” It is a sequel to the “Made in Montana” approach that failed in Western Tradition
    8
    Montana’s laws in this fashion would put Montana corporations at a distinct disadvantage in
    interstate commerce and, likely, cause Montana businesses to incorporate elsewhere.
    ¶18    The fact is that corporations are “persons” imbued with certain constitutional rights
    because the Supreme Court has said so. First Natl. Bank v. Bellotti, 
    435 U.S. 765
    , 780 n. 15,
    
    98 S. Ct. 1407
    , 1418 n. 15 (1978) (“It has been settled for almost a century that corporations
    are persons within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.”); but see Bellotti, 
    435 U.S. at 822-23
    , 
    98 S. Ct. at 1439-40
     (Rehnquist, J., dissenting). The I-166 exercise, even if adopted,
    is not going to change that. Likewise, the Supreme Court has also said, unequivocally, that
    the protections of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution extend to
    corporations, Citizens United v. FEC, ___ U.S. ___, 
    130 S. Ct. 876
    , 899-900 (2010) (citing
    numerous cases dating back as far as the 1950s), and that the government cannot prohibit
    corporations from making independent expenditures to influence elections and ballot issues,
    Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 886, 913
    . Again, the I-166 exercise, even if adopted, is not
    going to change that.
    ¶19    Montana challenged the applicability of Citizens United to Montana in the Western
    Tradition case, citing Montana’s “unique” experience with political corruption and its 1912
    Corrupt Practices Act. But Montana lost—summarily, no less:
    The question presented in this case is whether the holding of Citizens United
    applies to the Montana state law. There can be no serious doubt that it does.
    See U.S. Const., Art. VI, cl. 2. Montana’s arguments in support of the
    Partn. v. Mont. Atty. Gen., 
    2011 MT 328
    , 
    363 Mont. 220
    , 
    271 P.3d 1
    , rev’d sub nom. Am.
    Tradition Partn. v. Bullock, ___ U.S. ___, 
    132 S. Ct. 2490
     (2012) (per curiam).
    9
    judgment below either were already rejected in Citizens United, or fail to
    meaningfully distinguish that case.
    Am. Tradition, 
    132 S. Ct. at 2491
    . Thus, this Court’s decision in Western Tradition—
    prominently cited at § 2(4) of I-166—is not the law of this State. And for the text of I-166 to
    imply, as it clearly does, that Montana’s “uniqueness” argument and this Court’s decision in
    Western Tradition are still in play is patently false and misleading. The Supreme Court in
    American Tradition unequivocally rejected Montana’s “uniqueness” argument, the
    applicability of Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act, and this Court’s decision to the contrary.
    The Supreme Court held that Citizens United applies to Montana. Citizens United states that
    “[c]orporations and other associations, like individuals, contribute to the discussion, debate,
    and the dissemination of information and ideas that the First Amendment seeks to foster.”
    Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 900
     (internal quotation marks omitted). Like it or not, this is
    the law of the land and Montana is going to have to comply with it.
    II. False Promises
    ¶20    Second, and a point seemingly lost on those promoting the I-166 exercise, the
    Supreme Court did not rely on corporate “personhood” in its decision in Citizen United.
    Rather, the Supreme Court relied on the propositions, first, that expenditures (by a person or
    an organization) on political communication are a form of “speech,” and second, that
    “citizens [have the right] to inquire, to hear, to speak, and to use information to reach
    consensus.” Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 898
     (emphasis added). It should be noted that
    these propositions were not created in Citizens United. Rather, they can be traced to Buckley
    10
    v. Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    , 
    96 S. Ct. 612
     (1976) (per curiam), and Bellotti, 
    435 U.S. 765
    , 
    98 S. Ct. 1407
    . Notably, the Supreme Court observed in Bellotti that
    [t]he court below framed the principal question in this case as whether and to
    what extent corporations have First Amendment rights. We believe that the
    court posed the wrong question. The Constitution often protects interests
    broader than those of the party seeking their vindication. The First
    Amendment, in particular, serves significant societal interests. The proper
    question therefore is not whether corporations “have” First Amendment rights
    and, if so, whether they are coextensive with those of natural persons. Instead,
    the question must be whether [the statute at issue] abridges expression that the
    First Amendment was meant to protect.
    
    435 U.S. at 775-76
    , 
    98 S. Ct. at 1415
    . The Bellotti Court stated further that “[t]he inherent
    worth of the speech in terms of its capacity for informing the public does not depend upon
    the identity of its source, whether corporation, association, union, or individual,” 
    435 U.S. at 777
    , 
    98 S. Ct. at 1416
    , and that “the First Amendment goes beyond protection of the press
    and the self-expression of individuals to prohibit government from limiting the stock of
    information from which members of the public may draw,” 
    435 U.S. at 783
    , 
    98 S. Ct. at 1419
    (emphasis added).
    ¶21    Hence, the Supreme Court broke no new ground in Citizens United when it defined
    the constitutional protection of speech from the perspective of the listener. “[I]t is inherent
    in the nature of the political process that voters must be free to obtain information from
    diverse sources in order to determine how to cast their votes,” and the First Amendment does
    not allow “the exclusion of a class of speakers from the general public dialogue.” Citizens
    United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 899
    . Quite the contrary, the First Amendment protects the “open
    marketplace” of ideas, Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 899
    , and prohibits restrictions on
    11
    political speech based on the speaker’s identity, Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 902-03
    .
    Because voters must be free to obtain information from diverse sources, it is a violation of
    the First Amendment to control expression by distinguishing among different speakers and
    the subjects upon which they may speak. Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 898-99
    . The
    Supreme Court held that this country’s law and tradition require more expression, not less,
    Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 911
    , and that “[w]hen Government seeks to use its full power,
    including the criminal law, to command where a person may get his or her information or
    what distrusted source he or she may not hear, it uses censorship to control thought,”
    Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 908
     (emphasis added).
    ¶22    It is undoubtedly easier to sell the proposition that corporations are not “human
    beings” or “persons” than it would be to persuade the electorate that the government may, in
    fact, restrict the sources from which voters may get their information. Yet, in terms of what
    these two actually accomplish, there is a world of difference. It is apparent that adoption of
    the latter proposition (by Congress and three-fourths of the state legislatures) is what’s
    needed to overturn Bellotti and Citizens United. Any amendment designed to negate these
    precedents would need to exclude corporate expenditures from the definition of protected
    “speech” under the First Amendment. Adopting the former proposition that corporations are
    not “persons,” in contrast, accomplishes absolutely nothing for First Amendment purposes—
    apart from wasting the electorate’s time and resources.
    ¶23    Viewed in the context of what Citizens United actually held, therefore, it is evident
    that this initiative, as presently written, is little more than a source of false hope for many
    12
    voters and an illegal—not to mention futile—attempt to end-run the Citizens United
    decision. As with Montana’s first attempt to do that, I suspect that if the I-166 exercise
    remains on the ballot and is challenged before the Supreme Court, it will suffer the same
    summary rejection as did this Court’s decision in Western Tradition.
    ¶24    Charging Montana’s congressional delegation with the obligation of offering an
    amendment to the United States Constitution to, among other things, overturn Citizens
    United is an equally misguided feel-good exercise in contempt. Realistically, in today’s
    political climate, a proposal to amend the federal Constitution (a nearly impossible task
    under the most favorable circumstances) in order to overturn a Supreme Court decision that
    is wildly popular with at least one of the major political parties, with one of the major fringe
    parties, and, most importantly, with the very corporations that already effectively control
    Congress has less of a chance at success than the proverbial snowball has of surviving in
    Hades. It (the constitutional amendment) is not going to happen, and the attorneys and
    public officials promoting the I-166 exercise would have to candidly admit that. Leading
    voters to think otherwise is not only disingenuous, but just plain silly. An arguably more
    productive focus would be on strengthening the disclosure laws. If voters have the right to
    obtain information from diverse sources in order to make informed choices, as the Supreme
    Court has said, then they also have a corresponding right to know who is providing the
    information and the ability to judge the credibility, motives, and agenda of the speaker.
    Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 914
    .
    13
    ¶25    Even assuming, for the sake of discussion, that a federal constitutional amendment
    were to be adopted, such an amendment would necessarily have to amend the First
    Amendment itself—or even “repeal” it, as was done to the Eighteenth Amendment. See U.S.
    Const. amend. XXI, § 1 (“The eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the
    United States is hereby repealed.”). The First Amendment, adopted in 1791, protects five
    freedoms: religion, speech, the press, to peaceably assemble, and to petition for redress of
    grievances. Important for our purposes here, it provides that “Congress shall make no law
    . . . abridging the freedom of speech.” So, if the object of the I-166 exercise is to have
    Congress and the states change this provision so as not only to permit restrictions on
    corporate contributions and expenditures, but also to “accomplish a level playing field in
    election spending” (see I-166, § 3(1)), then it will be necessary to make significant revisions
    to the First Amendment’s currently broad and unqualified protection of “freedom of speech.”
    Personally, I like the First Amendment the way it is, and I would not want anyone—
    especially a politically polarized and dysfunctional Congress—tinkering with it. God only
    knows what might come out of that effort.
    III. Petitioners’ Hypocrisy
    ¶26    As for my third observation, Petitioners’ challenge, while legally sound, would be
    more palatable if it were not so palpably hypocritical. As the 2011 session of the Montana
    Legislature demonstrated time and again, there are some in that esteemed body who
    14
    apparently believe it is part of their job descriptions to propose or adopt resolutions and bills2
    (and issue press releases and other pronouncements) which effectively thumb Montana’s
    nose at the federal government and federal law. See Western Tradition, ¶ 71 (Nelson, J.,
    dissenting). Most thinking Montanans view this grandstanding for what it actually is:
    political pandering which accomplishes nothing substantive and which wastes the valuable
    state resources and limited time of the elected officials involved. Yet, here we are in court
    with Petitioners rising up in righteous indignation against the same sort of I-166 exercise.
    Apparently there is no shame. But then, to be right, the law does not require contrition or
    regret. As noted, Petitioners are legally correct.
    ¶27    Petitioners advance five meritorious arguments: I-166 is a resolution, not a law; I-166
    requires elected officials to vote in a particular predetermined manner; I-166 is a resolution
    compelling Montana’s congressional delegation to propose an amendment to the United
    States Constitution; I-166 contains more than one subject; and the statements prepared or
    approved by the Attorney General do not meet the requirements of law. I am satisfied,
    however, that the first argument is sufficient to resolve this case. The I-166 exercise facially
    2
    A partial listing of these sorts of resolutions and bills include: HJR1 (remove
    gray wolf from endangered species list); HJR4 (opposing designation of national
    monuments without consent from the state of Montana); SJR4 (urging Congress to adopt
    a balanced budget amendment); SJR6 (regarding the use of federal lands); SJR7
    (opposing definitions in the federal Water Pollution Control Act); SJR12 (regarding oil
    and gas lease development on federal lands); HB414 (providing for federal mandate
    accountability); SB 114 (requiring federal law enforcement to communicate with county
    sheriffs); and SB254 (providing state eminent domain authority for federal lands).
    Ironically, SB404, a bill that would have required constitutional analysis of bill draft
    requests, died in committee.
    15
    violates Article III, Section 4 of the Montana Constitution. My analysis below is focused on
    this issue.
    IV. I-166 Does Not Comply with Constitutional Requirements
    ¶28    As this Court recently stated, pre-election judicial review of initiatives should not be
    routinely conducted, so as to protect and preserve the rights which Montanans have reserved
    to themselves to change the laws or the Constitution through the initiative process. Reichert
    v. State, 
    2012 MT 111
    , ¶ 59, 
    365 Mont. 92
    , 
    278 P.3d 455
    . However, this Court reserves the
    right to declare patently defective measures invalid. Reichert, ¶ 59 (citing State ex rel. Steen
    v. Murray, 
    144 Mont. 61
    , 69, 
    394 P.2d 761
    , 765 (1964), State ex rel. Harper v. Waltermire,
    
    213 Mont. 425
    , 428, 
    691 P.2d 826
    , 828 (1984), Harper v. Greely, 
    234 Mont. 259
    , 268, 
    763 P.2d 650
    , 656 (1988), and Cobb v. State, 
    278 Mont. 307
    , 311, 
    924 P.2d 268
    , 270 (1996)).
    Indeed, we have held that where a measure is facially defective, placing it on the ballot does
    nothing to protect voters’ rights and instead “creates a sham out of the voting process by
    conveying the false appearance that a vote on the measure counts for something, when in fact
    the measure is invalid regardless of how the electors vote.” Reichert, ¶ 59.
    ¶29    First and foremost, the I-166 exercise (the complete text of which is attached at the
    end of this Dissent) does not propose the enactment of any law. Indeed, as the Attorney
    General readily and repeatedly concedes, the I-166 exercise is framed in terms of stating a
    “policy” and “philosophy” and then “direct[ing]” and “charg[ing]” Montana’s elected and
    appointed officials with “promot[ing]” and “carrying out” that policy and philosophy. See
    16
    I-166, §§ 3, 4. The policy and philosophy dictate that “corporations are not human beings
    with constitutional rights,” that corporations should be prohibited “from making
    contributions to or expenditures on the campaigns of candidates or ballot issues,” and that
    there should be “a level playing field in election spending.” I-166, § 3. As already noted,
    these propositions contradict well-settled federal constitutional law.3 Furthermore, the
    initiative charges Montana’s congressional delegation with “proposing a joint resolution
    offering an amendment” to the federal Constitution which establishes that corporations are
    not human beings with constitutional rights, which establishes that corporate campaign
    contributions and expenditures may be prohibited, and which achieves “a level playing field
    in election spending.” In sum, the I-166 exercise does not enact new law or repeal existing
    law—nor does it even purport to do so. Rather, it simply charges elected and appointed
    officials at the state level with violating the law already established by the Supreme Court
    and our congressional delegation at the federal level with pursuing a course of conduct that
    is not only misguided, but also virtually certain to fail. The I-166 exercise, even if adopted,
    cannot change federal law; it does not change state law; and it does not change the law of
    any sister state. Rather, the I-166 exercise simply does into the wind what most Montana
    children learn to avoid early in life.
    3
    With respect to the “level playing field” policy, the Supreme Court has rejected the
    notion “ ‘that government may restrict the speech of some elements of our society in order to
    enhance the relative voice of others.’ ” Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 904
     (quoting Buckley,
    
    424 U.S. at 48-49
    , 
    96 S. Ct. at 649
    ).
    17
    ¶30    More to the point, Article III, Section 4 of the Montana Constitution reserves to the
    people of this State the right to “enact laws by initiative on all matters except appropriations
    of money and local or special laws.” A “law” is “a solemn expression of the will of the
    supreme power of the state.” Section 1-1-101, MCA. “The will of the supreme power is
    expressed by: (1) the constitution; (2) statutes.” Section 1-1-102, MCA. Whereas a
    “policy” represents “[t]he general principles by which a government is guided in its
    management of public affairs,” the “law” represents the actual “regime that orders human
    activities and relations through systematic application of the force of politically organized
    society.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1178 (Bryan A. Garner ed., 7th ed., West 1999). “The
    organic law is the constitution of government and is altogether written. Other written laws
    are denominated statutes. The written law of this state is therefore contained in its
    constitution and statutes and in the constitution and statutes of the United States.” Section
    1-1-105, MCA. Statutes which create and affect corporations are public statutes. Section
    1-1-106, MCA. The Code also recognizes the decisions of this country’s courts as law.
    Sections 1-1-107, -108, -109, MCA.
    ¶31    As noted already, Article III, Section 4 reserves to the people the right to enact laws
    by citizen initiative. Clearly, Montana’s blackletter law does not define “law” as including
    “policies” and “philosophies” that one party or special interest group may wish the
    government and elected officials to pursue. Article III, Section 4 does not empower the
    people to pass policies or enact philosophies, or to direct governmental officials to pursue
    such policies or philosophies—setting aside the fact that, here, such direction is to actually
    18
    violate established federal constitutional law and precedent. The power to enact laws by the
    initiative process does not include the power to enact what amounts to a legislative
    resolution. Harper, 213 Mont. at 429, 
    691 P.2d at 828-29
    . And, charitably speaking, that is
    all the I-166 exercise is—a feel-good expression of contempt directed against the federal
    government and federal constitutional law. Even if enacted, the I-166 exercise would not be
    a “law.”
    ¶32    The Attorney General offers the meager assertion that I-166 could be read as enacting
    “a statutory policy statement, not merely a resolution,” and that “[s]tatutory policy
    statements occur throughout the Code.” The Attorney General cites § 2-15-142, MCA, as an
    example.4 Section 2-15-142, MCA, however, was not enacted by citizen initiative. It was
    enacted by the Legislature itself. See Laws of Montana, 2003, ch. 568, § 2. In making this
    argument, the Attorney General fails to recognize that the issue here is not whether the
    Legislature has the power to enact “statutory policy statements.” It is whether citizens have
    that power in the form of citizen initiatives. Plainly, they do not. Mont. Const. art. III, § 4.
    Their power is limited to enacting “laws,” not “statutory policy statements.”
    ¶33    Even if we assume, for the sake of argument, that the I-166 exercise constitutes the
    proposal of a “law,” there is another fundamental problem that condemns the initiative to
    obvious facial unconstitutionality. It is a firmly established principle of law that a statute or
    “law” is void on its face if it fails to give a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice that his
    19
    contemplated conduct is forbidden. No person should be required to speculate as to whether
    his contemplated course of action may be subject to criminal penalties. State v. Taylor, 
    2000 MT 202
    , ¶ 29, 
    300 Mont. 499
    , 
    5 P.3d 1019
    .
    ¶34    Here, the problem is manifest. First, if an elected or appointed public official violates
    I-166 as “law,” then that person can be prosecuted for a misdemeanor crime. See I-166, § 8
    (stating that the initiative is “intended to be codified as an integral part of Title 13 and the
    provisions of Title 13 apply to” the initiative); § 13-35-103, MCA (stating that “[a] person
    who knowingly violates a provision of the election laws of this state for which no other
    penalty is specified is guilty of a misdemeanor”). Second, and more problematic, it is not
    reasonably clear what I-166, as “law,” would require.
    ¶35    Under § 3(1) of the initiative, in order to effectuate the policy and philosophy that
    corporations (a) are not human beings (no court has ever said they were), (b) are not entitled
    to constitutional rights (the Supreme Court has said they are), and (c) should not be permitted
    to make campaign contributions or expenditures for or against candidates and ballot issues
    (the Supreme Court has said they may), elected and appointed officials in Montana are
    “charged to promote actions that accomplish a level playing field in election spending.”
    Some “general” directives then follow at § 3(2) which are in the nature of policy
    statements—and nearly all of which, again, have been rejected by the Supreme Court. For
    example, these policy statements include that money is not speech; that constitutional rights
    4
    This statute directs state agencies to consider certain guiding principles when
    formulating or implementing policies or administrative rules that have direct tribal
    20
    belong to human beings, not corporations; that corporate use of wealth is corrosive and
    distorting; that there should be a level playing field in campaign spending; and that there
    should be limits on “large” contributions to or expenditures for the benefit of any campaign
    by any source. If the I-166 exercise were to be construed as an actual “law,” how would any
    public official of ordinary intelligence have fair notice that his or her contemplated act (or
    failure to act) is unlawful, so that he or she could avoid violating the law and being subjected
    to possible criminal sanctions?      The public official’s task in this regard is virtually
    impossible. At the outset, in order to comply with the supposed I-166 “law,” the public
    official will have to violate extant federal law, as already discussed. Then, the public official
    will have to make sense of I-166’s amorphous and vague terms, phrases, and concepts—
    including “level playing field,” “large” contributions and expenditures, and “promoting”
    actions that accomplish the stated policies. I-166 provides no guidelines, no definitions, and
    no parameters. What, for example, is too “large” a campaign contribution? $300? $10,000?
    $5,000,000? Maybe $300 is too large in Teton County, but $5,000,000 is not too large in
    Yellowstone County. Who knows? And, what, exactly, is the official supposed to do about
    a too “large” campaign contribution? How, exactly, is the public official to “level the
    playing field” and reduce the “corrosive and distorting” effects of “immense” aggregations
    of corporate wealth?
    ¶36    Assuming I-166 to be a “law,” a public official who fails to correctly interpret these
    terms may be subject to prosecution for the offense of failing to “promote” I-166’s policy.
    implications. Section 2-15-142, MCA.
    21
    Likewise, if a member of Montana’s congressional delegation does not encourage and
    promote the futile constitutional amendment heretofore discussed, the offending senator or
    representative may be charged with a misdemeanor. But is anyone—the Attorney General
    included—really naïve enough to believe this could happen? Good grief! It is ludicrous in
    the extreme to argue that I-166, as “law,” would give any public official fair notice of what
    he or she is supposed to do or not do. While I-166, as “law,” may direct people how to
    think—a dubious proposition in its own right—it gives them no fair notice at all of how to
    act in a fashion so as to avoid the criminal penalties that may result from its violation. Thus,
    even if the I-166 exercise is deemed a proposed “law” for purposes of saving it under Article
    III, Section 4, the initiative is facially, unalterably, and inseverably void for constitutional
    vagueness.
    ¶37    I understand the frustration with the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United. I
    understand the frustration with the ability of corporate America to control elections and
    legislative and executive branches of state and federal government. And I understand the
    frustration with the certain knowledge that soon corporate America will be in control of the
    judicial branch of government as well. However, shooting popcorn at a brick wall will
    accomplish nothing, even if it makes one feel good. Those who aim to change the situation
    are going to have to get a different gun.
    ¶38    In sum, this Court reserves the right to declare patently defective measures invalid.
    See Reichert, ¶ 59, and cases cited therein. Indeed, we have very recently held that placing a
    facially defective measure on the ballot does nothing to protect voters’ rights and instead
    22
    creates a sham out of the voting process by conveying the false appearance that a vote on the
    measure counts for something, when in fact the measure is invalid regardless of how the
    electors vote. Reichert, ¶ 59. That is the case here. The I-166 exercise is a sham; it is
    nothing but an exercise in feel-good contempt of the federal government and federal law.
    The proposed initiative does not seek to enact “law.” It seeks, rather, to enact unenforceable
    political policies and philosophies. Therefore, the I-166 exercise cannot constitutionally be
    proposed as a ballot measure under Article III, Section 4 of Montana’s Constitution. And
    even if, assuming for the sake argument, the I-166 exercise is deemed to be a proposed
    “law,” the “law” is facially, unalterably, and inseverably void for constitutional vagueness.
    V. The Court’s Approach
    ¶39    As a final matter, I note my disagreement with the Court’s conclusion that we cannot
    grant relief.
    ¶40    The Court concludes that the Attorney General’s “legal sufficiency” determination is
    limited under § 13-27-312(7), MCA, to a non-substantive review of the ballot language.
    Opinion, ¶ 6. To the contrary, the plain language of this statute defines “legal sufficiency” to
    mean “that the petition complies with statutory and constitutional requirements governing
    submission of the proposed issue to the electors.” As discussed above, the problem here is
    that the citizen-initiative process is available under Article III, Section 4 of the Montana
    Constitution only to enact “laws.” Mont. Const. art. III, § 4(1) (“The people may enact laws
    by initiative on all matters except appropriations of money and local or special laws.”
    (emphasis added)). This constitutional process is not available to have the people enact
    23
    “policies” and philosophies and to charge public officials with encouraging misguided,
    impossible, and (at least under federal law) patently illegal acts. All that the I-166 exercise
    purports to do is (1) set forth a policy and (2) direct elected and appointed officials to
    promote that policy. See I-166, §§ 3, 4. Accordingly, the I-166 exercise on its face does not
    “compl[y] with . . . constitutional requirements governing submission of the proposed issue
    to the electors,” and the Attorney General should have rejected the measure as being facially
    unconstitutional under § 13-27-312(7), MCA.
    ¶41    Presumably, under the Court’s approach, if some group got sufficient signatures to put
    on the ballot an initiative which adopted a policy and philosophy that, contrary to Loving v.
    Va., 
    388 U.S. 1
    , 
    87 S. Ct. 1817
     (1967), Caucasians should not inter-marry with Native
    Americans or African Americans and which charged state and local officials with working
    diligently to carry out that policy, then, so long as the Attorney General found no fault with
    the ballot language, this patently and facially unconstitutional measure would have to be put
    to the vote. I cannot agree with such a cabined and absurd interpretation of § 13-27-312(7),
    MCA.
    VI. Conclusion
    ¶42    Based on the foregoing, I would grant the Petitioners’ petition and order the Secretary
    of State not to place I-166 on the 2012 general election ballot or, if the ballots have already
    been printed with the measure, not to count the votes.
    ¶43    I dissent.
    24
    /S/ JAMES C. NELSON
    [Appendix to Dissent on the following 4 pages.]
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