Commonwealth v. Williams ( 2018 )


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  • PRESENT: All the Justices
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    OPINION BY
    v. Record No. 170122                                        JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN
    March 1, 2018
    ERICA W. WILLIAMS
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY
    William N. Alexander II, Judge Designate
    In this appeal, we consider whether the circuit court erred by dismissing a petition to
    remove an elected officer, pursuant to Code § 24.2-233, et seq., on the grounds that the petition
    was not signed under penalty of perjury by a number of registered voters equal to ten percent of
    the votes cast in the prior election for that office.
    BACKGROUND
    On May 6, 2016, voters of Montgomery County filed a petition in the Circuit Court of
    Montgomery County to remove Erica W. Williams (Williams) from her elected position as Clerk
    of that court (Petition). In a document entitled “Grounds for Removal,” the Petition alleged that
    Williams had “neglected her duty, misused her office, or been incompetent in the performance of
    her duties[,] and her neglect of duty, misuse of office, or incompetence in the performance of her
    duties has had a material adverse effect upon the conduct of the office,” after Williams fired
    approximately half of the personnel in the Clerk’s office due to their failure to support her 2015
    reelection campaign.
    The Petition included 50 signatures of registered voters in Montgomery County who
    signed “under penalty of perjury” that the statement, “you believe sufficient grounds exist under
    Virginia law to remove Erica Williams from the office of Clerk of Court of Montgomery County,
    Virginia,” is “true and correct.” The Petition also included over 1,800 signatures of registered
    voters. 1 These voters did not sign under penalty of perjury.
    Pursuant to the terms of Code § 24.2-230, et seq. (the Removal Statutes), the circuit court
    issued a rule to show cause why Williams should not be removed from her position as clerk.
    On October 3, 2016, by special appearance through counsel, Williams filed a motion to
    quash the rule to show cause. She alleged that the Commonwealth 2 failed to comply with Code
    §§ 24.2-233 and -235 on various grounds, including that only 50 people signed the Petition under
    penalty of perjury, instead of the required ten percent of the total number of voters who voted in
    the prior election.
    The circuit court held a hearing on October 17, 2016. Williams argued that the rule to
    show cause should be quashed for the reasons stated in her motion, including that portions of the
    Petition did not incorporate the Grounds for Removal, and that the 1,800 signatures on those
    pages were not made under penalty of perjury. In response, the Commonwealth argued that only
    one signature under penalty of perjury was required on the Petition according to an opinion of
    the Attorney General, 1989 Op. Atty. Gen. Va. 221, 1989 Va. AG LEXIS 11 (Jan. 25, 1989). It
    asserted that the signatures of ten percent of the registered voters did not need to be made under
    penalty of perjury under Code § 24.2-233, and that a petition only needed to be signed under
    penalty of perjury by those making it under Code § 24.2-235. Williams responded that the ten
    1
    Approximately 18,000 people voted in the prior election for clerk of the circuit court.
    Code § 24.2-233 requires that a petition for removal of an officer “be signed by a number of
    registered voters who reside within the jurisdiction of the officer equal to ten percent of the total
    number of votes cast at the last election for the office that the officer holds.”
    2
    Although the process for removal of an elected officer begins with a petition for
    removal signed by voters, pursuant to Code § 24.2-237, the “attorney for the Commonwealth
    shall represent the Commonwealth in any trial under” the Removal Statutes.
    2
    percent of voters who sign the Petition under Code § 24.2-233 constitute the “petitioners” who
    must sign the Petition under penalty of perjury under Code § 24.2-235.
    The circuit court issued an order, on October 26, 2016, regarding the motion to quash. It
    found that, “[d]espite the use of different forms with different formats,” the Petition was a single
    filing, and that the Petition set forth the grounds for removal with sufficient accuracy and detail
    under Code § 24.2-233. However, the court granted the motion to quash and dismissed the
    Petition “solely on the basis that the [P]etition was not signed by the petitioners under penalty of
    perjury as required by Virginia Code § 24.2-235,” because “[a]ll of the petitioners did not sign
    the [P]etition under penalty of perjury.”
    The Commonwealth appeals the granting of the motion to quash and the dismissal of the
    Petition. The following assignment of error was granted:
    The Trial Court erred in dismissing a petition for removal of an elected official
    pursuant to Code Section 24.2-233 et seq. on the grounds that the entire ten
    percent of registered voters signing the petition must do so under penalty of
    perjury.
    ANALYSIS
    The Commonwealth argues that the circuit court erred by incorrectly merging the
    separate requirements of Code § 24.2-233, which requires a removal petition to be signed by a
    number of registered voters equal to ten percent of the votes cast in the prior election, and Code
    § 24.2-235, which requires that the removal petition be “signed by the person or persons making
    it under penalty of perjury.” It claims that the Attorney General previously opined that these two
    statutes serve two different purposes and do not require that the signatures needed to meet the ten
    percent threshold be made under penalty of perjury, because the perjury signature requirement is
    to protect the official against frivolous charges, whereas the ten percent signature requirement is
    to ensure public credence in the removal petition. It contends that the General Assembly
    3
    acquiesced in the Attorney General’s interpretation of these statutes because it did not thereafter
    make substantive changes to the statutes. 3
    The assignment of error addresses the circuit court’s interpretation of the Removal
    Statutes. A potentially erroneous legal conclusion based on the interpretation of a statute
    presents “a pure question of law which we review de novo.” Conyers v. Martial Arts World of
    Richmond, Inc., 
    273 Va. 96
    , 104, 
    639 S.E.2d 174
    , 178 (2007).
    When the language of a statute is unambiguous, we are bound by the plain
    meaning of that language. Furthermore, we must give effect to the legislature’s
    intention as expressed by the language used unless a literal interpretation of the
    language would result in a manifest absurdity. If a statute is subject to more than
    one interpretation, we must apply the interpretation that will carry out the
    legislative intent behind the statute.
    
    Id.
     (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
    Furthermore, because “a proceeding to remove a public officer [is] ‘highly penal in
    nature[,]’ . . . the statute [governing such a proceeding] must be strictly construed,” which means
    that those seeking the removal of the elected official must comply fully with the statutory
    requirements, and can neither add to nor subtract from those requirements. Commonwealth ex
    rel. Davis v. Malbon, 
    195 Va. 368
    , 377, 
    78 S.E.2d 683
    , 688-89 (1953) (concluding that the
    removal of an official could only be based on the grounds enumerated in the removal statutes);
    see also 3232 Page Ave. Condo. Unit Owners Ass’n v. City of Va. Beach, 
    284 Va. 639
    , 645, 
    735 S.E.2d 672
    , 675 (2012) (explaining that eminent domain statutes are strictly construed, that
    therefore “a locality must comply fully with the statutory requirements when attempting to
    3
    The General Assembly recodified the statutes governing the removal of public officers
    in 1993 without making substantial changes to the language relied upon in the opinion of the
    Attorney General. 1993 Acts ch. 641.
    4
    exercise this right,” and that the plain meaning of the statutes determined those statutory
    requirements).
    Article 7 of Chapter 2 of Title 24.2 of the Code of Virginia provides the process for the
    removal of “all elected or appointed Commonwealth, constitutional, and local officers, except
    officers for whose removal the Constitution of Virginia specifically provides.” Code § 24.2-230.
    Code § 24.2-233 specifically provides for the removal of elected officers by a circuit court in a
    process initiated by petition:
    Upon petition, a circuit court may remove from office any elected officer
    or officer who has been appointed to fill an elective office, residing within the
    jurisdiction of the court:
    1. For neglect of duty, misuse of office, or incompetence in the
    performance of duties when that neglect of duty, misuse of office, or
    incompetence in the performance of duties has a material adverse effect
    upon the conduct of the office;
    ....
    The petition must be signed by a number of registered voters who reside
    within the jurisdiction of the officer equal to ten percent of the total number of
    votes cast at the last election for the office that the officer holds.
    Code § 24.2-233 (emphases added). 4
    Code § 24.2-235 governs the procedure in the circuit court for the removal of an officer:
    A petition for the removal of an officer shall state with reasonable
    accuracy and detail the grounds or reasons for removal and shall be signed by the
    person or persons making it under penalties of perjury. . . .
    4
    In contrast, Code § 24.2-234 provides for the removal of an appointed officer:
    Any officer appointed to an office for a term established by law may be removed
    from office, under the provisions of § 24.2-233, upon a petition filed with the
    circuit court in whose jurisdiction the officer resides signed by the person or a
    majority of the members of the authority who appointed him, if the appointing
    person or authority is not given the unqualified power of removal.
    5
    As soon as the petition is filed with the court, the court shall issue a rule
    requiring the officer to show cause why he should not be removed from office, the
    rule alleging in general terms the cause or causes for such removal. . . . Upon
    return of the rule duly executed, unless good cause is shown for a continuance or
    postponement to a later day in the term, the case shall be tried on the day named
    in the rule and take precedence over all other cases on the docket. If upon trial it
    is determined that the officer is subject to removal under the provisions of § 24.2-
    233, he shall be removed from office.
    Code § 24.2-235 (emphasis added).
    The plain language of Code § 24.2-235 requires that a petition for removal under Code
    § 24.2-233 “be signed by the person or persons making it under penalties of perjury.” The only
    actor described relative to a petition filed under Code § 24.2-233, and thus the only actor
    “making” such a petition identified within the limits of the statutes, is the group who must sign
    the petition, which is the “number of registered voters who reside within the jurisdiction of the
    officer equal to ten percent of the total number of votes cast at the last election for the office that
    the officer holds.” Reading Code §§ 24.2-233 and -235 together, we conclude that the text of the
    statutes requires that the signatures of ten percent of the registered voters on a petition for the
    removal of an elected officer must be signed under penalty of perjury.
    We recognize that Code § 24.2-235, which prescribes the procedure for removal of an
    officer upon a petition filed under either Code §§ 24.2-233 or -234, provides for the signature of
    the “person or persons” making a petition for removal. However, the use of the singular
    “person” acknowledges that, under Code § 24.2-234, an appointed officer may be removed upon
    a petition “signed by the person or a majority of the members of the authority who appointed
    him.” (Emphasis added.) Code § 24.2-235 accordingly provides for the making of a petition by
    one person, when that one person appointed an officer, as well as for the making of a petition by
    multiple people, whether they are the majority of the members of the authority that appointed the
    6
    officer, or a number of registered voters equal to ten percent of votes cast in the last election for
    the elected officer who is the subject of the removal petition. See Code §§ 24.2-233 or -234.
    We note that our holding in Johnson v. Woodard, 
    281 Va. 403
    , 
    707 S.E.2d 325
     (2011),
    did not address these distinctions in Code § 24.2-235 among those “making” a petition, nor did it
    address the statutory requirements for the signing of a petition by those “making” the petition.
    Those issues were not relevant to the resolution of that case. To the extent we implied a
    distinction between the makers and signers of a petition in that case, see id. at 406, 
    707 S.E.2d at 326
    , such comments were dicta and do not control our decision here. Manu v. GEICO Cas. Co.,
    
    293 Va. 371
    , 382, 
    798 S.E.2d 598
    , 604 (2017) (noting that a statement in an opinion was dicta
    when the statement related to an issue the Court was not asked to decide).
    In deciding this matter, we have also given respectful consideration to the opinion of the
    Attorney General concerning the interpretation of the predecessor statutes to Code §§ 24.2-233
    and -235 (former Code §§ 24.1-79.5 and -79.7, respectively). 1989 Op. Atty. Gen. Va. 221,
    1989 Va. AG LEXIS 11; Beck v. Shelton, 
    267 Va. 482
    , 492, 
    593 S.E.2d 195
    , 200 (2004) (“While
    it is not binding on this Court, an Opinion of the Attorney General is entitled to due
    consideration.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). We recognize that, in that
    opinion, the Attorney General concluded that “the language of [Code § 24.2-235] concerning the
    person or persons making a removal petition refers to the person or persons responsible for
    drafting the statement of the grounds for removal,” and that “registered voters who sign a
    removal petition are not required to do so under penalties of perjury.” 1989 Va. AG LEXIS 11,
    at *8-9. However, we are not bound to follow this interpretation, and do not find the Attorney
    General’s interpretation persuasive in this instance concerning the requirements of Code §§ 24.2-
    233 and -235.
    7
    We conclude that the Attorney General opinion did not strictly limit its analysis to the
    language of the Removal Statutes, because the Attorney General distinguished between those
    who sign a petition for the removal of an elected officer and those who draft the statement of the
    grounds for removal that is part of such a petition, but the statutes contain no such distinction.
    See, e.g., Williams v. Augusta Cty. Sch. Bd., 
    248 Va. 124
    , 127-28, 
    445 S.E.2d 118
    , 120 (1994)
    (finding unpersuasive opinions of the Attorney General concerning the interpretation of a statute
    when they did not address subsequent statutory amendments and recodifications, and proceeding
    to interpret a statute according to its language). Instead, the statutes describe one petition that
    “shall . . . detail the grounds or reasons for removal and shall be signed by the person or persons
    making it under penalties of perjury.” Code § 24.2-235. There is no statutory support for the
    proposition that a petition can be “made” by anyone other than the individuals identified in Code
    §§ 24.2-233 and -234.
    Moreover, to the extent that the General Assembly may have acquiesced in the Attorney
    General’s opinion by not making substantive changes to the Removal Statutes when it recodified
    them in 1993, any such acquiescence does not override the plain language of the statutes. See,
    e.g., Hampton Rds. Sanitation Dist. Comm’n v. City of Chesapeake, 
    218 Va. 696
    , 701-02, 
    240 S.E.2d 819
    , 822-23 (1978) (noting that it was unnecessary to resort to alleged legislative
    acquiescence when a statute was unambiguous).
    CONCLUSION
    The Petition failed to comply with the requirement dictated by the text of Code §§ 24.2-
    233 and -235 that the signatures of petitioners, who are registered voters equal to ten percent of
    the votes cast in the last election, be made under penalty of perjury. The circuit court did not err
    8
    by granting the motion to quash the rule to show cause and dismissing the Petition. Accordingly,
    we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    Affirmed.
    JUSTICE McCULLOUGH, with whom JUSTICE POWELL JOINS, dissenting.
    Virginia has long been blessed with many talented and conscientious officials who ably
    labor for the public good. Human fallenness being what it is, however, accountability
    mechanisms are necessary to protect Virginians in the rare instances when their public officials
    go astray. Because I disagree with the majority’s interpretation of the applicable statutes, and
    because I fear that the majority’s interpretation will have baleful consequences on the
    accountability of our public officials, I respectfully dissent.
    For the majority, the act of signing the petition means that the signer is also a “maker” of
    the petition. First, as to the “making” of the petition, Code § 24.2-235 provides that
    A petition for the removal of an officer shall state with
    reasonable accuracy and detail the grounds or reasons for removal
    and shall be signed by the person or persons making it under
    penalties of perjury.
    The persons making the petition are the moving parties behind the petition, those who have
    crafted or made the allegations in the petition for removal. They must sign it under penalty of
    perjury.
    Second, obviously recognizing that a few disappointed partisans or malcontents should
    not disrupt the smooth functioning of government, the General Assembly requires that the
    persons making the petition obtain support in the form of signatures before a court will inquire
    into the alleged malfeasance of the elected or appointed official. Code § 24.2-233 provides that
    9
    The petition must be signed by a number of registered voters who
    reside within the jurisdiction of the officer equal to ten percent of the total
    number of votes cast at the last election for the office that the officer
    holds.
    This signature requirement could not be more plain. It says nothing about signing under penalty
    of perjury. The majority erroneously imports that requirement, as it exists only in the language
    of Code § 24.2-235, into Code § 24.2-233.
    The majority’s interpretation renders the phrase “by the person or persons making it”
    entirely superfluous. Under the majority’s reading, Code § 24.2-235 means, with that language
    stricken:
    A petition for the removal of an officer shall state with reasonable
    accuracy and detail the grounds or reasons for removal and shall be
    signed by the person or persons making it under penalties of
    perjury.
    We ordinarily resist a construction of the statutes that would render a portion of the statute
    superfluous. “Words in a statute should be interpreted, if possible, to avoid rendering words
    superfluous.” Cook v. Commonwealth, 
    268 Va. 111
    , 114, 
    597 S.E.2d 84
    , 86 (2004) (collecting
    cases). This is so because, as we have long recognized, we must assume that in enacting
    legislation, “the [General Assembly] did not intend to do a vain and useless thing.” Williams v.
    Commonwealth, 
    190 Va. 280
    , 293, 
    56 S.E.2d 537
    , 543 (1949). Similarly, we regularly reject
    invitations to “read into [a] statute language that is not there,” because of the long-established
    rule that “[c]ourts cannot add language to [a] statute the General Assembly has not seen fit to
    include.” Wakole v. Barber, 
    283 Va. 488
    , 495-96, 
    722 S.E.2d 238
    , 242 (2012) (quoting Jackson
    v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 
    269 Va. 303
    , 313, 
    608 S.E.2d 901
    , 906 (2005)); see also Holsapple v.
    Commonwealth, 
    266 Va. 593
    , 599, 
    587 S.E.2d 561
    , 564-65 (2003) (same). In addition, we have
    10
    acknowledged on many occasions that “when the General Assembly has used specific language
    in one instance, but omits that language or uses different language when addressing a similar
    subject elsewhere in the Code, we must presume that the difference in the choice of language
    was intentional.” RGR, LLC v. Settle, 
    288 Va. 260
    , 295, 
    764 S.E.2d 8
    , 28-29 (2014) (quoting
    Zinone v. Lee's Crossing Homeowners Ass’n, 
    282 Va. 330
    , 337, 
    714 S.E.2d 922
    , 925 (2011)).
    Read together then, and applying the interpretive principles noted above, Code §
    24.2-235 requires the persons making the petition to state with some precision the grounds for
    removal of an appointed or elected official, and sign the petition under penalty of perjury. The
    persons making the petition must then obtain the number of signatures required under Code §
    24.2-233 to ensure that the petition is not devoid of support in the population of that jurisdiction.
    In this reading, the “under penalty of perjury” signing requirement, which appears only in the
    statute addressing the making of the petition, Code § 24.2-235, is not read into or otherwise
    imported into Code § 24.2-233, which addresses only the number of signatures of registered
    voters that the makers of the petition need to obtain as a prerequisite of filing the petition so that
    a court may consider it.
    It is hard to believe that the General Assembly was unaware of the practical difficulties of
    recalling an elected or appointed official. First, the makers of the petition must step forward and
    allege what the public official has done. These individuals are subject to a perjury prosecution
    for any lies or fabrications. Perjury is no small matter. It constitutes a Class 5 felony, Code §
    18.2-434, punishable by up to 10 years in prison. See Code § 18.2-10(e). Then those persons
    who are seeking the removal of the public official must obtain a large number of signatures,
    11
    which is no easy feat. ∗ Although the number of signatures in rural counties may be smaller
    owing to a smaller population, limited population density presents its own set of challenges.
    Furthermore, in obtaining the required number of signatures success only means a hearing, it
    does not necessarily mean that removal of the official will result.
    As a practical matter, few citizens closely follow the actions of their local elected
    officials. Ten percent of the number of citizens who voted at the last election might be willing to
    sign a petition if they become persuaded that a court needs to inquire into plausible allegations of
    malfeasance or incompetence leveled by what appears to them to be concerned citizens. Asking
    these persons, most of whom will know nothing about the particular allegations raised, to sign
    under penalty of perjury will act as a significant deterrent to garnering the necessary number of
    signatures. I fear that grafting a requirement into Code § 24.2-233 that signatories consisting of
    ten percent of the votes cast sign under penalty of perjury will present an insurmountable
    obstacle for the recall of wayward officials. In turn, the lessened fear of accountability may
    increase the temptation to misbehave.
    Finally, if the persons making the petition are properly understood to be those who have
    crafted the allegations of misconduct, it is realistic to believe the “persons making” the petition
    could be charged with perjury when they make willfully false allegations in the petition. But it is
    completely unrealistic to expect thousands or even tens of thousands of citizens who have signed
    ∗  According to figures drawn from the State Board of Elections’ website, the following
    total votes were cast in the most populous counties in Virginia for the most recent elections for
    Clerk of Court (the position at issue in this case): 180,706 votes (Fairfax County, 2015); 25,794
    votes (Prince William County, 2017); 35,558 votes (Virginia Beach City, 2011); 64,797 votes
    (Loudoun County, 2015); and 57,898 votes (Chesterfield County, 2015). In those jurisdictions,
    for example, a petition for removal would require 18,071 signatures, 2,579 signatures, 3,556
    signatures, 6,480 signatures, and 5,790 signatures, respectively – all under penalty of perjury
    under the majority’s gloss on the statutes.
    12
    a petition for removal to be prosecuted for perjury if the allegations in the petition turn out to be
    false. If that is a fanciful prospect, then, it is fair to ask, exactly what is the point of making the
    residents of the county who are not the instigators or “persons making” the petition sign it under
    penalty of perjury?
    In my view, the Attorney General’s longstanding construction of the statute was the
    correct one, and I would adhere to it.
    13