Filed Date: 4/10/2023
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/10/2023
The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Chief Clerk for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion. 1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 2 Opinion Number: 3 Filing Date: April 10, 2023 4 NO. S-1-SC-39546 5 INDIGENOUS LIFEWAYS, 6 NEW MEXICO SOCIAL JUSTICE 7 EQUITY INSTITUTE, and 8 THREE SISTERS COLLECTIVE, 9 Petitioners, 10 v. 11 NEW MEXICO COMPILATION COMMISSION 12 ADVISORY COMMITTEE, 13 Respondent, 14 and 15 MICHELLE LUJAN GRISHAM, 16 in her official capacity as Governor 17 of the State of New Mexico, 18 Intervenor-Real Party in Interest. 19 ORIGINAL PROCEEDING 20 Butt Thornton & Baehr, P.C. 21 Sarah L. Shore 22 Albuquerque, NM 23 for Petitioners 1 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General 2 Mark W. Allen, Assistant Attorney General 3 Scott C. Cameron, Assistant Attorney General 4 Santa Fe, NM 5 for Respondent 6 Holly Agajanian, Chief General Counsel 7 Kyle P. Duffy, Deputy General Counsel 8 Santa Fe, NM 9 for Intervenor Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham 10 Fuqua Law & Policy, PC 11 Scott Fuqua 12 Santa Fe, NM 13 for Amici Curiae Retake Our Democracy and Indivisible Albuquerque 1 OPINION 2 VIGIL, Justice. 3 I. INTRODUCTION 4 {1} The New Mexico Constitution prohibits logrolling1 by directing: “If two or 5 more [constitutional] amendments are initiated by the legislature, they shall be so 6 submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each of them separately.” N.M. Const. 7 art. XIX, § 1. A constitutional amendment proposed by the Legislature and approved 8 by the electorate in the 2020 general election made a number of changes governing 9 the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission (Commission or PRC). N.M. 10 Const. art. XI, §§ 1-2. Those changes included alterations to the selection, 11 qualifications, and terms of Commission members, id. § 1, and revision to the PRC’s 12 constitutionally assigned responsibilities, id. § 2. The issue we address here is 13 whether the amendment is void because it violates the constitutional prohibition 14 against logrolling. 1 “The legislative practice of including several propositions in one . . . proposed constitutional amendment so that the legislature or voters will pass all of them, even though these propositions might not have passed if they had been submitted separately. Many state constitutions have single-subject clauses that prohibit this practice.” Logrolling, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). 1 {2} Petitioners are three nonprofit organizations who represent the rights of 2 Native Americans. Petitioners ask this Court to declare the ratification of the 3 constitutional amendment a nullity and to issue a writ of mandamus directing 4 Respondent Advisory Committee of the New Mexico Compilation Commission 5 (Advisory Committee) to remove the amendment from the Constitution. The 6 Advisory Committee responds that Petitioners’ challenge is untimely and 7 improperly raised against the committee through a petition for writ of mandamus, 8 but takes no position on the merits. Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, who was 9 granted leave to intervene in these proceedings, joins the Advisory Committee’s 10 timeliness arguments and additionally argues that the amendment is constitutional. 11 {3} After hearing oral arguments, we denied the petition for writ of mandamus, 12 holding that the petition was timely, but that the amendment did not violate Article 13 XIX, Section 1. 14 II. BACKGROUND 15 {4} During the 2019 legislative session, the Legislature passed a senate joint 16 resolution proposing to make several changes to the sections of our Constitution that 17 create and govern the PRC. See 2019 N.M. Laws, Constitutional Amendment 1 18 (Amendment 1). Amendment 1 would change the method of selecting Commission 19 members. Id. § 1(A)-(B). Previously, Article XI, Section 1 provided that the PRC 2 1 was to consist of “five members elected from districts provided by law for staggered 2 four-year terms beginning on January 1 of the year following their election.” N.M. 3 Const. art. XI, § 1 (1996, amended 2020). The Legislature proposed to amend the 4 section to provide that, beginning on January 1, 2023, the PRC would consist of 5 three members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. 6 Amendment 1, § 1(A)-(B). Commission members would be selected from a list of 7 nominees submitted to the Governor by a nominating committee, and would serve 8 six-year, staggered terms. Id. § 1(B)-(C). Additionally, the Legislature proposed to 9 amend provisions addressing the removal, qualifications, and continuing education 10 requirements of Commission members. Id. § 1(D)-(E). 11 {5} The Legislature also proposed to amend the PRC’s constitutionally defined 12 responsibilities. Id. § 2. When originally created, the PRC was tasked with regulating 13 a variety of public service companies, including public utilities, transportation 14 companies, telecommunications companies, business corporations, and insurance 15 companies. N.M. Const. art. XI, § 2 (1996, amended 2020). In 2012, voters approved 16 an amendment to remove business corporations and insurance companies from 17 within the PRC’s purview. See 2012 N.M. Laws, Constitutional Amendment 3, § 1; 18 N.M. Const. art. XI, § 2 (1996, amended 2012). Amendment 1 would further refine 19 the PRC’s responsibilities to include the regulation of public utilities and “other 3 1 public service companies in such manner as the legislature shall provide.” 2 Amendment 1, § 2; N.M. Const. art. XI, § 2. 3 {6} The proposed changes to Article XI, Sections 1 and 2 were submitted to the 4 electorate in a single-ballot question. See N.M. Sec’y of State, 2020 General Election 5 Voter Guide at 6, (Nov. 3, 2020) (2020 Voter Guide), 6 https://www.sos.state.nm.us/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/2020-Voter-Guide- 7 English-FINAL.pdf (last visited March 22, 2023). The question was identified as 8 Constitutional Amendment 1, with the following title: 9 Proposing To Amend The Constitution Of New Mexico To Provide 10 That The Public Regulation Commission Consist Of Three Members 11 Appointed By The Governor From A List Of Professionally Qualified 12 Nominees Submitted To The Governor By A Nominating Committee 13 As Provided By Law And That The Commission Is Required To 14 Regulate Public Utilities And May Be Required To Regulate Other 15 Public Service Companies. 16 Id. In accordance with NMSA 1978, Section 1-16-7(B) (2019) and The Form of 17 Ballot Question, 1.10.16.8(H) NMAC, this language tracked verbatim the title of the 18 senate joint resolution proposing Amendment 1. Compare 2020 Voter Guide, with 19 Amendment 1. 20 {7} Amendment 1 was subject to widespread scrutiny and debate before the 21 election. The Secretary of State also prepared and published the 2020 Voter Guide, 22 which recited Amendment 1’s ballot title, described the amendment’s purpose, 4 1 summarized some of the arguments for and against the amendment, and reproduced 2 a redline version of Article XI, Sections 1 and 2 showing the proposed changes. 2020 3 Voter Guide at 6-16. 4 {8} During the 2020 legislative session, the Legislature passed a comprehensive 5 set of implementing laws in anticipation of Amendment 1’s approval. See2020 N.M. 6
Laws, 2d Sess., ch. 9, §§ 15-23. Amendment 1 was ratified at the November 2020 7 general election, with a sound majority voting in favor of the amendment. See N.M. 8 Sec’y of State, 2020 General Election Official Results, 9 https://electionresults.sos.state.nm.us/Default.aspx?eid=2782 (last visited March 22, 10 2023) (follow the “Statewide Offices & Questions” hyperlink). Following 11 Amendment 1’s approval, the amendment was compiled into the New Mexico 12 Constitution. See N.M. Const. art. XI, §§ 1-2. 13 III. DISCUSSION 14 {9} Petitioners filed the petition at issue after the 2020 general election, shortly 15 before the changes in the PRC were to take effect on January 1, 2023. Petitioners 16 seek a writ of mandamus against the Advisory Committee directing the committee 17 to advise and approve the removal of Amendment 1 from the Constitution. As 18 grounds for this requested relief, Petitioners argue that Amendment 1 is null and 19 void and that its purported ratification is a nullity because the amendment was 5 1 submitted to voters in violation of the constitutional prohibition against logrolling in 2 Article XIX, Section 1. Petitioners advance two theories for this claimed 3 constitutional violation. 4 {10} First, Petitioners argue that Amendment 1 logrolled multiple independent 5 measures into a single-ballot question, accusing the Legislature of “piggybacking 6 the repeal of fundamental democratic rights on unrelated measures likely to be 7 popular with voters.” Petitioners thus claim that the amendment violates the single- 8 measure rule explicit in Article XIX, Section 1. Second, Petitioners assert that the 9 ballot title identifying Amendment 1 was misleading. Petitioners argue that this 10 allegedly misleading title violates a requirement of ballot clarity or accuracy that 11 they ask this Court to recognize as implicit within Article XIX, Section 1. 12 {11} Before reaching the merits of Petitioners’ challenge, we address a question 13 raised by the Advisory Committee about the propriety of mandamus relief. We also 14 address the Advisory Committee’s and the Governor’s arguments about the 15 timeliness of the petition.2 Concluding that there is no procedural bar to our 16 consideration of the petition, we then address the petition on its merits. 2 We do not reach an additional argument raised by amici regarding the potential for appointments to the nominating committee to be made in violation of the emoluments clause, N.M. Const. art. IV, § 28. This argument is not relevant to the issues raised in the parties’ briefs. See Rule 12-320(A) NMRA. 6 1 A. Procedural Issues 2 1. Jurisdiction in mandamus 3 {12} Our Constitution grants this Court original jurisdiction in “mandamus against 4 all state officers, boards and commissions” and the power to issue extraordinary 5 writs in the exercise of its jurisdiction. N.M. Const. art. VI, § 3. “This Court on 6 several occasions has recognized that mandamus is an appropriate means to prohibit 7 unlawful or unconstitutional official action.” State ex rel. Clark v. Johnson, 1995- 8 NMSC-048, ¶ 19,120 N.M. 562
,904 P.2d 11
. We may exercise our jurisdiction in 9 mandamus when a petition 10 presents a purely legal issue concerning the non-discretionary duty of a 11 government official that (1) implicates fundamental constitutional 12 questions of great public importance, (2) can be answered on the basis 13 of virtually undisputed facts, and (3) calls for an expeditious resolution 14 that cannot be obtained through other channels such as a direct appeal. 15 State ex rel. Sandel v. N.M. Pub. Util. Comm’n,1999-NMSC-019
, ¶ 11,127 N.M. 16
272,980 P.2d 55
. “Although relief by mandamus is most often applied to compel 17 the performance of an affirmative act by another where the duty to perform the act 18 is clearly enjoined by law, the writ may also be used in appropriate circumstances in 19 a prohibitory manner to prohibit unconstitutional action.” State ex rel. Sugg v. 20 Toulouse Oliver,2020-NMSC-002
, ¶ 7,456 P.3d 1065
(internal quotation marks 21 and citations omitted). 7 1 {13} Petitioners’ objective is to excise Amendment 1 from the Constitution; to that 2 end, they seek a declaration that the amendment is null and void and its ratification 3 is a nullity for failure to comply with Article XIX, Section 1. The petition thus 4 satisfies all three prerequisites for the exercise of our mandamus jurisdiction: (1) it 5 presents a fundamental constitutional question of great public importance, (2) that 6 may be answered on the basis of virtually undisputed facts, and (3) which, given the 7 timing of the petition, demands a swift resolution. See Sandel,1999-NMSC-019
, ¶ 8 11. 9 {14} The Advisory Committee, however, questions whether an exercise of our 10 mandamus jurisdiction is appropriate, arguing that Petitioners have not shown that 11 the committee possesses a clear, existing, and nondiscretionary duty to advise and 12 approve removal of Amendment 1 if the amendment was indeed improperly ratified. 13 We also question whether the Advisory Committee would be able to afford 14 Petitioners meaningful relief. Petitioners’ sole citation for the existence of such a 15 duty is State ex rel. League of Women Voters v. Advisory Comm. to the N.M. 16 Compilation Comm’n,2017-NMSC-025
, ¶¶ 17-18,401 P.3d 734
(LOWV). But 17 LOWV does not support the duty Petitioners urge in this case. In LOWV, we 18 recognized the Advisory Committee’s nondiscretionary duty to advise and approve 19 the compilation of duly ratified constitutional amendments. Id. ¶ 18. However, this 8 1 duty is clearly distinguishable from a duty to advise and approve the removal of a 2 constitutional amendment that is compiled but later determined to have been unduly 3 ratified. See id. ¶. 4 {15} Nevertheless, we need not resolve this question. We do not doubt this Court’s 5 power to order that an improperly ratified amendment is a nullity. See State ex rel. 6 Clark v. State Canvassing Bd.,1995-NMSC-001
, ¶¶ 1, 28,119 N.M. 12
,888 P.2d 7
458 (issuing a writ of mandamus to the State Canvassing Board, directing the board 8 to “treat the purported ratification” of an amendment found in violation of Article 9 XIX, Section 1 “as a nullity”). Further, although Petitioners may have failed to 10 identify the governmental entity with the duty to implement our ruling, this Court is 11 not precluded from granting necessary relief. Our rules recognize that “[i]f the 12 petitioner is entitled to a writ or relief other than that requested in the petition, the 13 petition shall not be denied, and the Court shall grant the writ or relief to which the 14 petitioner is entitled.” Rule 12-504(C)(4) NMRA. Thus, this Court has, in the past, 15 added a party to a mandamus proceeding “for the purpose of implementing our 16 ruling.” State ex rel. Cisneros v. Martinez,2015-NMSC-001
, ¶ 6 & n.1,340 P.3d 17
597 (joining the Secretary of the Department of Finance and Administration as a 18 party to implement the Court’s order). 9 1 {16} We note that the Governor has already intervened and zealously participated 2 in these proceedings. Amendment 1 tasks the Governor with appointing the three 3 new members of the PRC. If this Court deemed it necessary, the Court could issue a 4 writ to the Governor prohibiting those appointments. Sugg,2020-NMSC-002
, ¶ 7. 5 In light of the Governor’s active defense of Amendment 1, we see no reason to delay 6 consideration of the petition. 7 2. Timeliness of the petition 8 {17} The Advisory Committee and the Governor argue that the petition is untimely, 9 because it is barred by the thirty-day limitations period of the Election Code, NMSA 10 1978, § 1-14-3 (1971), or by the equitable doctrine of laches. We hold that the 11 petition is timely. 12 a. The Election Code 13 {18} According to NMSA 1978, Sections 1-16-1 and -2(A)(1) (2019), the election 14 of any ballot question involving a legislatively-proposed constitutional amendment 15 “shall be called, conducted and canvassed in accordance with the Election Code.” 16 Section 1-14-3 provides that “[a]ny action to contest an election . . . shall be filed no 17 later than thirty days from issuance of the certificate of nomination or issuance of 18 the certificate of election to the successful candidate.” We have explained that 19 challenges to “the whole process or any part” of an election, or claims which “seek 10 1 to alter the certified result of the election,” are to be construed as election contests 2 subject to the procedures of the Election Code. Dinwiddie v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 31985-NMSC-099
, ¶ 7,103 N.M. 442
,708 P.2d 1043
. This procedural exclusivity 4 “accords with the need for speedy resolution of election contests; contestants are not 5 permitted to proceed under the rules of civil procedure because the procedure set 6 forth in those rules takes too much time.” Gunaji v. Macias,2001-NMSC-028
, ¶ 26, 7130 N.M. 734
,31 P.3d 1008
. 8 {19} The Advisory Committee argues that Petitioners challenge only the 9 procedures used in presenting Amendment 1 to the electorate and reasons that the 10 petition therefore presents an untimely election contest barred by the limitations of 11 the Election Code. We disagree with this characterization of this petition. “A legal 12 challenge to governmental action is not converted into an election contest simply 13 because the action at issue followed an election.” Glaser v. LeBus, 2012-NMSC- 14 012, ¶ 11,276 P.3d 959
. Petitioners do not challenge the processes used in calling, 15 conducting, or canvassing the 2020 general election or seek to alter the certified 16 result. Rather, Petitioners challenge only whether Amendment 1 satisfies the 17 requirements for voter ratification of a constitutional amendment under Article XIX, 18 Section 1. We cannot fairly characterize Petitioners’ challenge to Amendment 1 as 19 an election contest. See LOWV,2017-NMSC-025
, ¶ 14 (explaining that a petition 11 1 for a writ of mandamus which does not seek to alter the certified results of any 2 election, but “clarity about the meaning and effect of the uncontested certified results 3 of the elections” does not present an election contest under Section 1-14-3). 4 {20} In addition, Section 1-14-3 may not apply to a writ of mandamus proceeding 5 brought to this Court in its original jurisdiction under Article VI, Section 3 of the 6 New Mexico Constitution. Pursuant to our jurisdiction and power of superintending 7 control, “this Court possesses unquestioned power to make rules touching pleading, 8 practice and procedure.” State v. Arnold,1947-NMSC-043
, ¶ 7,51 N.M. 311
, 1839 P.2d 845
; see also id. ¶ 11 (concluding that rules affecting the time and manner of 10 taking an appeal “are procedural and within this [C]ourt’s rule making power”). 11 “Since the Constitution provides for separate and equal branches of government in 12 New Mexico, any legislative measure which affects pleading, practice or procedure 13 in relation to a power expressly vested by the Constitution in the judiciary, such as 14 quo warranto [or mandamus], cannot be deemed binding.” State ex rel. Anaya v. 15 McBride,1975-NMSC-032
, ¶ 16,88 N.M. 244
,539 P.2d 1006
. Our original 16 jurisdiction and power in mandamus is not subject to a thirty-day limit. See Rule 12- 17 504 (governing petitions for extraordinary writs). 18 {21} We will not construe this petition for writ of mandamus challenging the 19 ratification of a constitutional amendment as an election contest subject to the thirty- 12 1 day limitations of the Election Code. Thus, we reaffirm that “the issue of whether 2 logrolling or joinder of multiple amendments indeed has taken place is . . . a 3 justiciable constitutional question, notwithstanding the absence of any challenge to 4 the constitutionality until after the voters have approved the amendment.” State ex 5 rel. Chavez v. Vigil-Giron,1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 7,108 N.M. 45
,766 P.2d 305
. 6 b. Laches 7 {22} The Governor additionally argues that the petition is barred by laches. Laches 8 is an equitable defense that prevents “litigation of a stale claim where the claim 9 should have been brought at an earlier time and the delay has worked to the prejudice 10 of the party resisting the claim.” Garcia v. Garcia,1991-NMSC-023
, ¶ 30,111 N.M. 11
581,808 P.2d 31
. We agree that the doctrine of laches may, in appropriate 12 circumstances, bar a challenge made under Article XIX, Section 1. See, e.g., Miller 13 v. Burk,188 P.3d 1112
, 1125 (Nev. 2008) (applying laches to a challenge to the 14 clarity of an amendment’s ballot brought twelve years after an election). 15 {23} “However, laches is not favored and should be applied only where a party has 16 been guilty of inexcusable neglect in enforcing [the party’s] rights.” State ex rel. 17 Dep’t of Hum. Servs. v. Davis,1982-NMSC-139
, ¶ 4,99 N.M. 138
,654 P.2d 1038
. 18 Moreover, we hesitate to apply laches to bar a challenge to the ratification of a 19 constitutional amendment. “Caution in the application of laches to bar a 13 1 constitutional claim is invoked . . . because it would be the epitome of inequity to 2 allow an unconstitutional law to remain in effect merely because someone slumbered 3 on his or her rights.” 27A Am. Jur. 2d Equity § 119 (2019). 4 {24} We also see no reason to apply laches to the current petition. When Petitioners 5 filed the petition, the PRC’s nominating committee was preparing a list of nominees 6 for submission to the Governor, but the major changes worked by Amendment 1 7 were yet to take effect. Although Petitioners have not articulated a reason for the 8 nearly two-year delay in bringing this petition, the Governor also has not identified 9 any real prejudice caused by the delay. “[T]he party asserting the defense [of laches] 10 must demonstrate prejudice, and for such purposes, prejudice cannot be inferred 11 merely from the passage of time.” Brown v. Taylor,1995-NMSC-050
, ¶ 12, 12012 N.M. 302
,901 P.2d 720
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). 13 Accordingly, we reject the Governor’s laches defense and proceed to consider the 14 merits of the petition. 15 B. The Single-Measure Rule or Logrolling 16 {25} The substantive issue at the heart of this case is whether the Legislature 17 violated the single-measure rule contained in Article XIX, Section 1. Petitioners 18 claim that Amendment 1 included at least seven independent measures. Petitioners 19 particularly question the rationality of joining a measure that changed Commission 14 1 members from elected to appointed officials with the other measures that, for 2 example, reduced the number of Commission members or narrowed the PRC’s area 3 of constitutional responsibility. 4 {26} Article XIX, Section 1 is designed “to prevent ‘logrolling,’ a legislative 5 practice of joining together two or more independent measures so those who support 6 any one measure will feel obliged to vote for the others in order to secure passage of 7 the measure they favor.” Chavez,1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 6. “[T]he particular vice in 8 logrolling . . . lies in the fact that such is inducive of fraud, and that it becomes 9 uncertain whether either two or more propositions could have been carried by vote 10 had they been submitted singly.” City of Raton v. Sproule,1967-NMSC-141
, ¶ 17, 1178 N.M. 138
,429 P.2d 336
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The 12 single-measure rule of Article XIX, Section 1 thus guards against the evils of 13 logrolling, “ensur[ing] that the voters are provided with the means to fully and 14 accurately express their will on each and every issue that is presented to them as 15 guaranteed by the New Mexico Constitution.” State Canvassing Bd., 1995-NMSC- 16 001, ¶ 27. 17 {27} Our Court has articulated a rational basis standard for assessing whether an 18 amendment is single or multiple, as “[t]he separation of powers doctrine . . . dictates 19 that strong deference should be shown to the legislature.” Chavez,1988-NMSC-103
, 15 1 ¶¶ 7, 12. Under this standard, “a constitutional amendment, which embraces several 2 subjects or items of change, will be upheld as valid, and may be submitted to the 3 electorate as one general proposition, if all the subjects or items of change contained 4 in the amendment are germane to one general object or purpose.” Sproule, 1967- 5 NMSC-141, ¶ 19. 6 {28} In Sproule, we warned of the “tendency to rephrase, or to enlarge upon the 7 language of the rule, in order to demonstrate that the result reached under the 8 particular facts of the case is consistent with a logical and correct application of the 9 rule to those facts.” Id. ¶ 20. The effects of this tendency are evident in the parties’ 10 arguments, as each of the parties emphasizes a different rephrasing of our standard 11 to support their respective positions. Petitioners, for example, emphasize language 12 in State Canvassing Board suggesting that the various changes in a measure must 13 share a “rational linchpin of interdependence” or be part of “an interlocking package 14 necessary to effectuate” the desired reform.1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 16. The Governor, 15 on the other hand, emphasizes language in Chavez suggesting that the various 16 changes need only be “germane to an overarching theme” and joined by a “rational 17 linchpin.”1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 14. While we find such rephrasing illustrative of our 18 standard, we nevertheless reaffirm that the standard remains one of a rational basis, 16 1 requiring only that “the subjects or items of change contained in the amendment [be] 2 germane to one general object or purpose.” Sproule,1967-NMSC-141
, ¶ 19. 3 {29} We will not invalidate an amendment under the single-measure rule simply 4 because of “[t]he fact that two points of change are involved, the fact that either 5 might have been presented to the electorate separately, [or] the fact that there may 6 be reasons why an elector might have desired one change, and not the other.”Id.
¶ 7 21. “Rather, the question to be answered is whether the legislature reasonably could 8 have determined that a proposed amendment embraces but one object.” Chavez, 91988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 9. This is because, “as the branch of government empowered to 10 initiate constitutional amendments, the legislature should be afforded substantial 11 deference to determine both the overall object of a proposed amendment and the 17 1 changes incidental to and necessarily connected with the object intended.”3Id.
¶ 6 2 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). 3 {30} Our analysis of whether an amendment embraces multiple measures is highly 4 fact-dependent. State Canvassing Bd.,1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 12. For example, in 5 Sproule, this Court held that changes made by an amendment “in regard to special 6 elections and the provisions enlarging the number of voters at both regular and 7 special elections” were properly submitted in a single ballot because the changes 8 were germane to “elections for the purpose of incurring municipal indebtedness.” 91967-NMSC-141
, ¶ 22 (emphasis omitted). Similarly, in Chavez, we held that an 10 amendment making sweeping changes to “the qualifications and merit selection of 11 judges, their numbers, their districting, and the selection of their chief administrative 3 Petitioners urge this Court to apply a “heightened scrutiny” to Amendment 1 because the amendment removed the right of voters to elect Commission members. Petitioners do not supply authority for that heightened scrutiny, however, and we similarly have found no support for applying a more restrictive standard. Application of such heightened scrutiny also would be contrary to the rational basis review applied by this Court in Sproule and Chavez, as both of these opinions involved amendments affecting the rights of voters. See Chavez,1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 5 (explaining that the amendment established “a method other than by partisan election to select and retain” judicial officers); Sproule,1967-NMSC-141
¶¶ 15, 22 (describing the amendment’s effects on the right to vote in elections to incur municipal indebtedness). 18 1 officers” was a single measure because those various changes were all germane to 2 the object or purpose of judicial reform.1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 14. 3 {31} In contrast, we held an amendment void for violating the single-measure rule 4 in State Canvassing Board,1995-NMSC-001
, ¶¶ 24, 28. The amendment in State 5 Canvassing Board joined a popular measure reaffirming an existing public right to 6 conduct a state lottery with a controversial measure creating a private right to wager 7 on slot machines and other video games of chance. Id. ¶¶ 17-23. Even though both 8 measures were relevant to the overarching theme of gambling, the distinctions 9 between “the rights created, the means of implementation, and the subject matter” 10 of a public lottery and private gambling revealed that the two measures were not 11 rationally joined. Id. ¶ 24. Additionally, the State Canvassing Board Court noted 12 that the ballot measure submitting the amendment was misleading, as the language 13 “serve[d] to highlight the state lottery aspect of the amendment while downplaying 14 the fact that the amendment create[d] a private right to wager on video games of 15 chance.” Id. ¶ 26. Thus, Justice Ransom emphasized in his specially concurring 16 opinion that in the discharge of the Court’s constitutional duties “we must believe 17 that neither the legislature nor the people in fact thought a mere advisory vote in 18 support of a state-operated lottery should be dependent upon the grant of a private 19 constitutional right to video gaming.” Id. ¶ 30 (Ransom, J., specially concurring). 19 1 Under the circumstances, we held that the two changes were not germane to a single 2 object or purpose and should have been submitted to the electorate in separate ballot 3 questions. Id. ¶ 24. 4 {32} In the present case, we determine that the several changes made by 5 Amendment 1 are all germane to one general object or purpose. We are struck by 6 the many similarities between the amendment at issue in Chavez and the amendment 7 at issue here. Amendment 1 and the Chavez amendment both made multiple changes 8 to the selection, retention, and qualifications of public officials and both 9 amendments limited the rights of voters to select the officials in question. See 10 Chavez,1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 5 (listing the changes made by the Chavez amendment 11 as including “a method other than by partisan election to select and retain” judges, 12 additional professional requirements for members of the judiciary, and an increase 13 in the number of judges and judicial districts). While Amendment 1 also narrows the 14 PRC’s area of constitutional responsibility, we view this additional change as still 15 germane to the Legislature’s object or purpose of reforming the PRC. 16 {33} Of course, we acknowledge that each of the several changes proposed by 17 Amendment 1 could have been submitted separately to the voters. We also 18 acknowledge that some voters may have preferred one change and opposed another. 19 We express no opinion on the merits or wisdom of the changes made by Amendment 20 1 1. See State Canvassing Bd.,1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 27 (suggesting that, in considering 2 whether an amendment violates Article XIX, Section 1, a court should not reach 3 “any decision regarding the legality or desirability of” an amendment). We conclude 4 only that the Legislature’s choice to join the various changes together in a single- 5 ballot measure was not irrational. “[I]t comports better with the doctrine of 6 separation of powers to decide what rationally may be joined rather than what 7 rationally may be separated.” Chavez,1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 11. 8 {34} We also do not see any of “the problems inherent in the vice of logrolling” in 9 Amendment 1 that motivated our Court in State Canvassing Board, 1995-NMSC- 10 001, ¶¶ 24, 26, to invalidate the multiple measures at issue in that case. The State 11 Canvassing Board Court concluded that the amendment there “logrolled . . . two 12 independent objects by piggybacking the passage of one on the popularity of the 13 other.” Id. ¶ 26. In contrast, Amendment 1 does not surreptitiously ride a 14 controversial measure on the back of a popular one. The entirety of Amendment 1 15 was widely debated before the election, and all of the chief effects of the 16 amendment—including and especially the transition to appointed Commission 17 members and the reduction of the PRC’s responsibilities—were well known to the 18 public. See 2020 Voter Guide at 6-16 (explaining the effects of, as well as the 19 arguments for and against, Amendment 1); N.M. Legis. Council Serv., Summary of 21 1 Arguments for and Against the Constitutional Amendments Proposed by the 2 Legislature in 2019 and 2020 at 3-10 (July 2020), 3 https://www.nmlegis.gov/Publications/New_Mexico_State_Government/Constituti 4 onal_Amendment/Constitutional_Amendments_2020.pdf (same) (last visited 5 March 22, 2023). We note that the many changes made to the judiciary in the 6 amendment challenged in Chavez were subject to similar widespread and open 7 debate.1988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 3. Further, and as discussed more fully below, we 8 believe that the title of Amendment 1 sufficiently communicated the purpose of the 9 amendment and was not misleading, so there is little chance that the voters were 10 “lured . . . into casting their votes” in favor of Amendment 1 based solely on the 11 popularity of a separate measure. State Canvassing Bd.,1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 26. 12 {35} We therefore hold that Amendment 1 does not violate the single-measure rule 13 in Article XIX, Section 1 of the New Mexico Constitution. 14 C. The Ballot Title 15 {36} Petitioners also challenge Amendment 1 based on its ballot title. Arguing that 16 Article XIX, Section 1 embraces an implicit requirement of ballot accuracy, 17 Petitioners assert that Amendment 1’s title misled voters because it did not specify 18 that Commission members would no longer be elected, detail various aspects of the 19 PRC’s membership that were changing, or list the PRC’s previous area of 22 1 responsibility. The Governor “does not dispute that New Mexico law supports some 2 sort of implicit accuracy requirement,” but argues that the title does not need to 3 “educate the voters on every detail and necessary consequence of ratifying the 4 proposed amendment.” 5 {37} New Mexico appellate courts have not recognized a separately enforceable 6 requirement of ballot title accuracy under Article XIX, Section 1. This Court in State 7 Canvassing Board agreed “that a ballot title should be intelligible, and impartial . . . 8 and ‘be free from any misleading tendency whether of amplification, of omission, 9 or of fallacy.’”1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 25 (quoting Plugge v. McCuen,841 S.W.2d 139
, 10 140 (Ark. 1992), overruled on other grounds by Bailey v. McCuen,884 S.W.2d 938
, 11 942 (Ark. 1994)). However, the State Canvassing Board Court spoke of this 12 requirement only in the context of its holding on the single-measure rule, explaining 13 that “the title of the amendment, while technically proper, exacerbated the problems 14 inherent in the vice of logrolling.”1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 26. Petitioners have not given 15 us sufficient reasons for departing from that approach. Thus, we consider only 16 whether Amendment 1’s ballot language was misleading insofar as it is pertinent to 17 our ruling on Petitioners’ logrolling claim. 18 {38} In submitting an amendment to electors for ratification, voters must be 19 provided with such information about the amendment as to allow the voters “to make 23 1 an intelligent choice, fully aware of the consequences of their vote.” 16 Am. Jur. 2d 2 Const. Law § 38 (2009); see also Bailey,884 S.W.2d at 942
(“[A] ballot title must 3 be intelligible, honest, and impartial so that it informs the voters with such clarity 4 that they can cast their ballots with a fair understanding of the issues presented.”); 5 Kahalekai v. Doi,590 P.2d 543
, 552-53 (Haw. 1979) (requiring a ballot to be in 6 “such form and language as not to deceive or mislead the public”); Dacus v. Parker, 7466 S.W.3d 820
, 825-26 (Tex. 2015) (“[T]he ballot must identify the measure by its 8 chief features, showing its character and purpose.” (emphasis omitted)). A ballot title 9 submitting a constitutional amendment to the electorate thus “cannot either ‘fly 10 under false colors’ or ‘hide the ball’ as to the amendment’s true effect.” Armstrong 11 v. Harris,773 So. 2d 7
, 16 (Fla. 2000). However, in due deference to the principle 12 of separation of powers, we agree that “the form and manner of submitting the 13 question of a constitutional amendment to the people [is to be] left to the judgment 14 and discretion of the legislature,” which judgment must not be overturned except 15 when the ballot title is “so unreasonable and misleading as to be a palpable evasion 16 of the constitutional requirement to submit the law to a popular vote.” Breza v. 17 Kiffmeyer,723 N.W.2d 633
, 636 (Minn. 2006) (internal quotation marks and citation 18 omitted). 24 1 {39} In view of this deferential standard, we conclude that Amendment 1’s title did 2 not mislead voters so as to “exacerbate[] the problems inherent in the vice of 3 logrolling.” State Canvassing Bd.,1995-NMSC-001
, ¶ 26. In State Canvassing 4 Board, we explained that the wording “‘and certain games of chance’” in that 5 amendment’s title misled voters because the wording “does not alert the voter as to 6 the nature or scope of the second prong of the amendment regarding video gaming.” 7Id.
In contrast, the title of Amendment 1 alerts voters as to the nature and scope of 8 the proposed changes to Article XI, Sections 1 and 2. Amendment 1’s title specifies 9 that the amendment provides for a PRC that will “consist of three members 10 appointed by the Governor.” 2020 Voter Guide at 6. The title also indicates that the 11 PRC will have responsibility over “public utilities” and other public service 12 companies that it “may be required to regulate.”Id.
The title thus informs voters as 13 to the two main changes made by Amendment 1, both of which are germane to the 14 central purpose of reforming the PRC. 15 {40} As Petitioners note, this language does not explicitly state that Commission 16 members were previously elected. The title also does not identify other implications 17 of the amendment, such as the fact that Commission members may not reside in 18 different state districts. The title also does not list the PRC’s previous areas of 19 constitutionally assigned responsibilities. But the Legislature’s decision to omit 25 1 these details is not unreasonable and does not render the ballot title misleading. 2 Rather, the title accurately characterizes the chief purpose and effects of Amendment 3 1. We deem this sufficient under the circumstances. 4 {41} As in Chavez, we emphasize, 5 It is incumbent upon members of the public to educate and familiarize 6 themselves with the contents and effect of proposed amendments 7 before expressing themselves at the polls. This is a non-delegable 8 responsibility which is magnified, rather than diminished, by the 9 complexity of amendments presented to them. Where information 10 placed before the electorate is neither deceptive nor misleading, and 11 they are given sufficient time within which to familiarize themselves 12 with the contents and effect of proposed amendments, they will be 13 deemed to have cast informed ballots. 141988-NMSC-103
, ¶ 10 (text only)4 (quoting Kahalekai,590 P.2d at 553
). The 15 electorate was given ample time to consider the changes proposed by Amendment 16 1. The electorate was also provided with accurate information about Amendment 1’s 17 potential effects in other official supplementary materials, such as the Secretary of 18 State’s 2020 Voter Guide. See 2020 Voter Guide at 6-16; see also N.M. Const. art. 19 XIX, § 1 (requiring the Secretary of State to “provide notice of the content and 20 purpose of legislatively approved constitutional amendments . . . to inform electors 4 The “text only” parenthetical as used herein indicates the omission of all of the following—internal quotation marks, ellipses, and brackets—that are present in the quoted source, leaving the quoted text itself otherwise unchanged. 26 1 about the amendments in the time and manner provided by law”). Finally, Petitioners 2 have not presented any evidence suggesting that voters were misled about the nature 3 or scope of Amendment 1. See Miller,188 P.3d at 1124-25
(noting that the 4 challengers to an amendment had not provided any evidence of voter 5 misunderstanding, “[o]ther than pointing to the ballot question’s language and 6 posing hypotheticals”). Thus, Petitioners give us no reason to doubt that the 7 electorate cast informed votes. 8 {42} Accordingly, we defer to the Legislature’s judgment and discretion in fixing 9 the title of Amendment 1. This conclusion supports our holding that the amendment 10 embraced a single measure under Article XIX, Section 1. 11 IV. CONCLUSION 12 {43} Petitioners have not shown that the 2020 ballot measure proposing to amend 13 the constitutional provisions governing the PRC violated the logrolling prohibition 14 in Article XIX, Section 1. In accord with our prior order, we therefore deny the 15 petition for writ of mandamus. 16 {44} IT IS SO ORDERED. 17 18 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Justice 19 WE CONCUR: 27 1 2 C. SHANNON BACON, Chief Justice 3 4 DAVID K. THOMSON, Justice 5 6 JULIE J. VARGAS, Justice 7 8 BRIANA H. ZAMORA, Justice 28
Bailey v. McCuen , 318 Ark. 277 ( 1994 )
State ex rel. Cisneros v. Martinez , 2015 NMSC 1 ( 2014 )
Glaser v. LeBus , 276 P.3d 959 ( 2012 )
Gunaji v. MacIas , 130 N.M. 734 ( 2001 )
State Ex Rel. Clark v. Johnson , 120 N.M. 562 ( 1995 )
State v. Arnold , 51 N.M. 311 ( 1947 )
Dinwiddie v. Board of County Commissioners , 103 N.M. 442 ( 1985 )
Miller v. Burk , 124 Nev. 579 ( 2008 )
Kahalekai v. Doi , 60 Haw. 324 ( 1979 )
State Ex Rel. Department of Human Services v. Davis , 99 N.M. 138 ( 1982 )
Armstrong v. Harris , 773 So. 2d 7 ( 2000 )
State Ex Rel. Chavez v. Vigil-Giron , 108 N.M. 45 ( 1988 )
Plugge Ex Rel. Arkansas for Representative Democracy v. ... , 310 Ark. 654 ( 1992 )
State ex rel. League of Women Voters v. Advisory Comm. to ... , 2017 NMSC 25 ( 2017 )
State Ex Rel. Sandel v. New Mexico Public Utility Commission , 127 N.M. 272 ( 1999 )