Judges: DUSTIN McDANIEL, Attorney General
Filed Date: 9/5/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
Mr. Robert S. Shafer, Esquire Friday, Eldredge Clark 2000 Regions Center 400 West Capitol Avenue Little Rock, AR 72201-3522
Dear Mr. Shafer:
I am writing in response to your request for certification, pursuant to A.C.A. §
A PROPOSED ACT PROVIDING THAT A MINOR MAY NOT BE ADOPTED OR PLACED IN A FOSTER HOME IF THE INDIVIDUAL SEEKING TO ADOPT OR TO SERVE AS A FOSTER PARENT IS COHABITING WITH A SEXUAL PARTNER OUTSIDE OF A MARRIAGE WHICH IS VALID UNDER THE CONSTITUTION AND LAWS OF THIS STATE; STATING THAT THE FOREGOING PROHIBITION APPLIES EQUALLY TO COHABITING SAME-SEX AND OPPOSITE-SEX PARTNERS; STATING THAT THE ACT WILL NOT AFFECT *Page 2 THE GUARDIANSHIP OF MINORS; DEFINING "MINOR" TO MEAN AN INDIVIDUAL UNDER THE AGE OF EIGHTEEN (18) YEARS; PROVIDING THAT THE DIRECTOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES SHALL PROMULGATE REGULATIONS CONSISTENT WITH THE ACT; PROVIDING THAT THE ACT APPLIES PROSPECTIVELY BEGINNING ON JANUARY 1, 2009; AND MAKING THE FOLLOWING FINDINGS AND DECLARATIONS ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE OF THIS STATE: FIRST, THAT CHILDREN IN NEED OF ADOPTION OR FOSTER CARE ARE AMONG THE MOST VULNERABLE MEMBERS OF SOCIETY; SECOND, THAT MARRIAGE, AS DEFINED BY THE CONSTITUTION AND LAWS OF THIS STATE, IS THE IDEAL HOME ENVIRONMENT FOR THE REARING OF CHILDREN; THIRD, THAT COHABITATION OUTSIDE OF MARRIAGE CREATES A HOME ENVIRONMENT ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED RISKS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, CHILD ABUSE, DRUG AND ALCOHOL ABUSE, INSTABILITY, AND POVERTY; AND FOURTH, THAT IT IS IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF CHILDREN IN NEED OF ADOPTION OR FOSTER CARE TO BE REARED IN HOMES IN WHICH ADOPTIVE OR FOSTER PARENTS ARE NOT COHABITING OUTSIDE OF MARRIAGE
The Attorney General is required, pursuant to A.C.A. §
In this regard, A.C.A. §
The purpose of my review and certification is to ensure that thepopular name and ballot title honestly, intelligibly, and fairly setforth the purpose of the proposed amendment or act. See Arkansas Women'sPolitical Caucus v. Riviere,
The popular name is primarily a useful legislative device. Pafford v.Hall,
The ballot title must include an impartial summary of the proposed amendment or act that will give the voter a fair understanding of the issues presented. Hoban v. Hall,
Having analyzed your proposed initiated act, as well as your proposed popular name and ballot title under the above precepts, I have several concerns regarding the language used. I am concerned initially over the omission of an enacting clause from the language of your proposed initiated act. I also have concerns about a discrepancy between the language of your proposed popular name and the text of your measure. Finally, I am concerned about the inclusion and summarization of what appears to be "preamble" language in your proposed ballot title. I must therefore reject your proposed popular name and ballot title under A.C.A. §
As an initial matter, I must note that the text of your initiated act does not contain a required enacting clause. The introductory language of your proposed act instead begins with the following language: "Section 1. Findings. The people of Arkansas find and declare: (a) That children in need of adoption or foster care are among the most vulnerable members of society. . . ."
Arkansas Constitution Amendment
The Arkansas Constitution thus clearly requires the inclusion of an enacting clause in your proposed initiated act. Your submission to this office, however, is not in its final "petition" format. It may be your intention to add an enacting clause when the language of your proposed initiated act is incorporated into a formal petition. The language of the constitution requires the enacting clause to be included in the "style of [the] bill," however. Your submitted text is presumably the entire language of your proposed "bill." Because this language does not include an enacting clause and because an act initiated without such a clause would be subject to challenge, voters may be misled as to the effectiveness of the measure. I therefore find it necessary to point out the potential omission.
With regard to your proposed popular name, I must note that it appears to deviate somewhat from the language of the text of your measure and from the summarization of your measure in your proposed ballot title. The popular name you propose is "An Act Providing That Unmarried,Cohabiting Sexual Partners, Both Same-Sex and Opposite-Sex, May NotAdopt Or Be Foster Parents Of Children Less Than Eighteen Years Old." (Emphasis added). This language refers to the ability of unmarried "partners" to adopt or be foster parents. The language of the text of your measure, however, refers to the ability of an individual to adopt or be a foster parent. Section 2(a) states in this regard that "A minor may not be adopted or placed in a foster home if the individual seeking to adopt or to serve as a foster parent is cohabiting with a sexualpartner outside of a marriage which is valid under the constitution and laws of this state." (Emphasis added). I am concerned, therefore, that the language of your proposed popular name may lead to confusion or mislead the voters. In this regard voters reading the popular name may be led to believe that your measure prohibits only the "joint" adoption or fostering of minors by unmarried partners and not the individual adoption or fostering of such persons, where that individual also cohabits for purposes of your measure.1 *Page 6 Finally, I am concerned about the inclusion in your proposed ballot title of language summarizing your measure's "findings" and declarations. Section 1 of the text of your measure provides as follows:
Section 1. Findings
The people of Arkansas find and declare:
(a) That children in need of adoption or foster care are among the most vulnerable members of society;
(b) That marriage, as defined by the constitution and laws of this state, is the ideal home environment for the rearing of children;
(c) That cohabitation outside of marriage creates a home environment associated with increased risks of domestic violence, child abuse, drug and alcohol abuse, instability, and poverty; and
(d) That it is in the best interests of children in need of adoption or foster care to be reared in homes in which adoptive or foster parents are not cohabiting outside of marriage.
Your proposed ballot title includes language substantially repeating these findings and declarations. This fact concerns me in light of language in Plugge v. McCuen,
In considering petitioners' arguments in view of the foregoing rules, we are also met with those cases indicating that a preamble or title simply is not a part of a measure. See McMahan v. Bd. of Trustees U. of A.,
255 Ark. 108 ,499 S.W.2d 56 (1973); Roscoe v. Water and Sewer Imp. Dist. No. 1,216 Ark. 109 ,224 S.W.2d 356 (1949); Oliver v. Southern Trust Co.,138 Ark. 381 , 212 S.W. 77 (1919). A title or preamble of an act is in no sense controlling, and is only properly considered if the act itself is ambiguous. McMahan,255 Ark. at 110 ,499 S.W.2d at 57 .Here, petitioners' concerns regarding the proposed amendment's preamble are misplaced. In fact, if the preamble had been included, some of its language may have raised more questions in voters' minds than it resolved. Clearly, the preamble is not a part of the text of the proposed amendment and for this reason alone, we hold its verbiage should not have been included in the amendment's ballot title.
Id. at 657.
I am concerned, similarly, that the "findings" language of your measure should not be included in the ballot title.2 Although the primary effect of the Plugge court's *Page 8 ruling is that preamble language is not required to be included, the court also noted that the inclusion of the preamble language "may have raised more questions in voters' minds than it resolved." Gratuitous inclusion of preamble language in a ballot title may therefore be problematic. This is particularly true, in my opinion, where the language may be viewed as lending partisan coloring to the merits of the proposal.
For example, in Johnson v. Hall,
We think it can safely be said that all citizens are against the operation of trains that do not carry sufficient crews to reasonably assure safety. We cannot conceive that anyone would vote the contrary of this proposition, viz, to permit the operation of trains with unsafe and inadequate crews. The amendment itself seeks to declare that to operate trains with inadequate crews, (meaning, of course, a crew less than that provided in the act), "is detrimental to the safety and welfare of the people. * * *" But there has been no prior determination that this assertion is always true. Actually, this is a fact question, depending upon the circumstances in each case. Such reasoning is in the nature of "begging the question," which is defined as "founding a conclusion on a basis that needs to be proved as much as the conclusion itself." Here, the voter is urged to support a measure which provides for a particular crew in the operation of trains, because to operate with a smaller crew is, according to the ballot title, "unsafe and inadequate" — but the "unsafe and inadequate" remains to be proved. As was stated in Bradley v. Hall,
220 Ark. 925 ,251 S.W.2d 470 , "In studying his ballot, the voter is not bound by the rule of caveat emptor. He is *Page 9 entitled to form his own conclusions, not to have them presented to him ready-made."
Id. at 403.
The Arkansas Supreme Court in Johnson v. Hall therefore struck the ballot title, concluding that it "so obviously contain[ed] strong partisan coloring. . . ." See also, Arkansas Women's Political Caucus v.Riviere,
I am concerned similarly, that the "Findings" set out in your measure should not be included in the ballot title for your measure. I appreciate that the inclusion of this language in your ballot title more completely summarizes the substance of your measure. Voters who are deciding whether to adopt your measure may wish to know that they are making and declaring the listed findings. Such preamble language, however, is "no part of the measure," is "in no sense controlling" and is of no legal effect save perhaps shedding light on any ambiguities in the text. Plugge, supra. Additionally, it may be viewed as lending partisan coloring to the merits of your Act. On balance, therefore, its inclusion is more problematic than its omission.
My office, in the certification of ballot titles and popular names, does not concern itself with the merits, philosophy, or ideology of proposed measures. I have no constitutional role in the shaping or drafting of such measures. My statutory mandate is embodied only in A.C.A. §
The failure to include an enacting clause in the language of your proposed act and the problems recited above concerning your proposed popular name and ballot title prevent me from certifying your submission at this time. My statutory duty, under these circumstances, is to reject your proposed popular name and ballot title, stating my reasons therefor, and to instruct you to "redesign" the proposed measure, popular name and ballot title. See A.C.A. §
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL Attorney General
Bradley v. Hall , 220 Ark. 925 ( 1952 )
McMahan v. Board of Trustees of the University of Arkansas , 255 Ark. 108 ( 1973 )
Pafford v. Hall , 217 Ark. 734 ( 1950 )
Bailey v. McCuen , 318 Ark. 277 ( 1994 )
Finn v. McCuen , 303 Ark. 418 ( 1990 )
Prewitt v. Warfield, County Judge , 203 Ark. 137 ( 1941 )
Gaines v. McCuen , 296 Ark. 513 ( 1988 )
Donovan v. Priest , 326 Ark. 353 ( 1996 )
Christian Civic Action Committee v. McCuen , 318 Ark. 241 ( 1994 )
Plugge Ex Rel. Arkansas for Representative Democracy v. ... , 310 Ark. 654 ( 1992 )
Becker v. McCuen , 303 Ark. 482 ( 1990 )
Arkansas Women's Political Caucus v. Riviere , 283 Ark. 463 ( 1984 )
U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Hill , 316 Ark. 251 ( 1994 )
Roscoe v. Water & Sewer Improvement District No. 1 , 216 Ark. 109 ( 1949 )
Hoban v. Hall , 1958 Ark. LEXIS 774 ( 1958 )
Moore v. Hall , 229 Ark. 411 ( 1958 )
Chaney v. Bryant , 259 Ark. 294 ( 1976 )
Becker v. Riviere , 270 Ark. 219 ( 1980 )