IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION ONE
FILO FOODS, LLC; BF FOODS, LLC;
ALASKA AIRLINES, INC.; and THE No. 70758-2-1
WASHINGTON RESTAURANT
ASSOCIATION, DIVISION ONE
Respondents,
PUBLISHED OPINION r-3 <—>
v.
t-n -r-
CITY OF SEATAC, 03
FILED: February 10, 2014
Respondent,
SEATAC COMMITTEE FOR GOOD
en
JOBS,
Petitioner.
Leach, C.J. — The First Amendment to the United States Constitution
protects statutorily created initiative rights. It requires this court to subject any
burden on the exercise of these rights to exacting scrutiny. Petitioner SeaTac
Committee for Good Jobs (Committee) seeks discretionary review of a trial court
decision prohibiting the placement of an initiative measure on the ballot and
striking the signatures of those registered voters who signed supporting petitions
multiple times. Because the statute requiring this result impermissibly burdens
the First Amendment rights of these voters, the trial court committed error that
No. 70758-2-1 / 2
substantially altered the status quo. As a result, we previously accepted review
and reversed the trial court. We now explain.
FACTS
In June 2013, the Committee, a coalition of individuals, businesses,
neighborhood associations, immigrant groups, civil rights organizations, people
of faith, and labor organizations, circulated a proposed ballot initiative entitled
"Ordinance Setting Minimum Employment Standards for Hospitality and
Transportation Industry Employers" (Proposition One). This initiative proposed
an ordinance setting minimum employment standards for hospitality and
transportation employers, including an hourly minimum wage of $15.
The Committee collected 2,506 signatures on supporting petitions and
filed them with the City of SeaTac (City). The SeaTac Municipal Code (SMC)
required that the proposed petitions be supported by at least 1,536 signatures to
qualify for the November 2013 general election ballot. As required by the SMC,
the City submitted the petitions to the King County Department of Elections, as
ex officio supervisor of city elections, to determine the sufficiency of the
signatures. On June 30, 2013, the King County Elections Supervisor validated
1,780 signatures, enough to qualify Proposition One for the ballot. On June 28,
2013, the city clerk issued a certificate of sufficiency.
On July 2, 2013, Filo Foods LLC, BF Foods LLC, Alaska Airlines Inc., and
The Washington Restaurant Association (Challengers) filed a challenge to the
certificate of sufficiency. The Challengers could not confirm that the City would
No. 70758-2-1 / 3
convene its petition review board before the time to seek judicial review of the
certificate of sufficiency expired. Therefore, they filed this action on July 8, 2013,
and scheduled a hearing for July 19, 2013. The City then confirmed that its
board would convene the afternoon of July 19, 2013. As a result, the trial court
denied the Challengers' requested relief without prejudice to return if dissatisfied
with the City's actions.
At the board's hearing, the Challengers attacked the validity of many
signatures. The board agreed with the Challengers in part and struck 201
signatures accepted by King County. But the board rejected the Challengers'
attack on 61 signatures of people who signed the petition multiple times. The
board determined that 1,579 signatures supported the petition, 43 more than the
minimum number required. On July 23, 2013, the city clerk issued a final
certificate of sufficiency.
The City placed the ordinance on the city council's agenda for action on
July 23, 2013. The council declined to adopt the ordinance but called for it to be
placed on the November 5, 2013, ballot. The Challengers then sought writs of
review, mandate, and prohibition in the trial court. The Challengers raised a
single issue: did RCW 35A.01.040(7) require that the City strike all signatures,
including the original, of each person who signed the petition two or more times?
On August 26, 2013, the trial court entered a detailed order granting the
Challengers' requested writs. The trial court characterized the issue before it as
the "constitutionality and enforceability of RCW 35A.01.040(7)." The court found
No. 70758-2-1/4
the statute both constitutional and enforceable. Its decision removed Proposition
One from the November 5, 2013, ballot.
The Committee sought emergency discretionary review in this court. After
receiving briefing and hearing oral argument, this court entered an order
reversing the trial court on September 6, 2013. That order stated that an opinion
explaining the reasons for this decision would follow in due course. This opinion
provides that explanation.
CRITERIA FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
The Committee seeks discretionary review under RAP 2.3(b)(2): "The
superior court has committed probable error and the decision of the superior
court substantially alters the status quo or substantially limits the freedom of a
party to act." The parties agree the superior court's decision substantially
changed the status quo. It removed Proposition One from the ballot, depriving
the voters of SeaTac the opportunity to vote for or against it. As explained
below, the trial court erred. Therefore, we granted review and reversed the trial
court.
ANALYSIS
The Committee asks this court to decide if a statute that denies a
registered voter signing a petition multiple times the right to have one signature
counted violates the First Amendment. The City contends the Committee cannot
raise this issue because it failed to do so in the trial court. Because RAP 2.5(a)
allows us to consider for the first time on appeal a "manifest error affecting a
No. 70758-2-1 / 5
constitutional right," we address the constitutionality of RCW 35A.01.040(7) in the
context of the First Amendment.
A statute that voids all initiative signatures of a person signing the initiative
more than once burdens that individual's First Amendment rights.1 An individual
expresses a view on a political matter by signing an initiative petition.2 The
signature generally expresses the view that the law proposed by the initiative
should be adopted but may express the more limited political view that the voters
should decide the question.3 In either case, this expression of a political view
implicates the signer's First Amendment rights.4
Although the federal constitution does not guarantee the right to an
initiative, once a state creates an initiative procedure, the state may not place
restrictions on the exercise of the initiative that unduly burden First Amendment
rights.5 SeaTac is a noncharter code city. Washington has conferred upon code
cities the right to provide for the exercise of the powers of initiative and
referendum.6 SeaTac has granted these powers to its voters.7 RCW 35.17.240-
1 See Taxpayers United for Assessment Cuts v. Austin, 994 F.2d 291, 298
(6th Cir. 1993) (holding a Michigan statute excluding the signatures of any
person signing a petition twice to be rationally related to Michigan's interest in
protecting against fraud in its initiative system).
2 Doe v. Reed, 561 U.S. 186, 130 S. Ct. 2811, 2817, 177 L. Ed. 2d 493
(2010).
3 Reed, 130 S. Ct. at 2817.
4 Reed. 130 S. Ct. at 2817.
5 Mever v. Grant, 486 U.S. 414, 420, 108 S. Ct. 1886, 100 L. Ed. 2d 425
(1988).
6RCW35A.11.080.
7 SMC 1.10.040.
No. 70758-2-1 / 6
.360 governs the exercise of the initiative power by SeaTac voters.8 In addition,
RCW 35A.01.040 imposes requirements for all petitions, including initiative
petitions, to be signed and filed with a code city. This includes the requirement at
issue in this case: "Signatures, including the original, of any person who has
signed a petition two or more times shall be stricken."9 We must decide if this
provision unduly burdens the First Amendment rights of SeaTac voters who
signed Proposition One.
United States Supreme Court precedent indicates that we should review
RCW 35A.01.040 under an "exacting scrutiny" standard. Three cases provide
this direction. The Court first addressed the standard for reviewing state
regulation of ballot initiatives in 1988. In Meyer v. Grant,10 the Court
unanimously applied an "exacting scrutiny" review standard to a Colorado law
prohibiting the payment of initiative petition circulators.
A decade later, the Court again addressed First Amendment issues in a
challenge to post-Meyer Colorado laws regulating ballot initiatives. In Buckley v.
American Constitutional Law Foundation, Inc..11 the Court considered First
Amendment challenges to Colorado's registration, badge, and disclosure
requirements for ballot initiative circulators. Writing for a five-justice majority,
Justice Ginsburg cautioned, "'[N]o litmus-paper test' will separate valid ballot-
8RCW35A.11.100.
9RCW 35A.11.040(7).
10 486 U.S. 414, 420, 108 S. Ct. 1886, 100 L Ed. 2d 425 (1988).
11 525 U.S. 182, 183, 119 S. Ct. 636, 142 L. Ed. 2d 599 (1999).
No. 70758-2-1 / 7
access provisions from invalid interactive speech restrictions, and this Court has
come upon 'no substitute for the hard judgments that must be made.'"12 She also
noted that the Court has allowed states "considerable leeway to protect the
integrity and reliability of the ballot-initiative process."13
Most recently, in Doe v. Reed,14 the Court considered the applicable
standard of review in the context of a First Amendment challenge to a request for
referendum petitions made under the Washington Public Records Act, chapter
42.56 RCW. The Court observed the relevancy of the electoral context to its
First Amendment review.15 It also noted the significant flexibility allowed states in
implementing their own voting systems. Following its precedents considering
First Amendment challenges to disclosure requirements in the electoral context,
the Court held the "exacting scrutiny" standard applicable.16
The Reed Court stated that the "exacting scrutiny" standard required "'a
substantial relation' between the disclosure requirement and a 'sufficiently
important' governmental interest."17 To survive this scrutiny, "'the strength of the
governmental interest must reflect the seriousness of the actual burden on First
12 Buckley, 525 U.S. at 183 (alteration in original) (quoting Storerv. Brown.
415 U.S. 724, 730, 94 S. Ct. 1274, 39 L. Ed. 2d 714 (1974)).
13 Buckley. 525 U.S. at 183.
14 561 U.S. 186, 130S. Ct. 2811,2815, 177 L Ed. 2d 493 (2010).
15 Reed. 130 S. Ct. at 2818.
16 Reed. 130 S. Ct. at 2818.
17 Reed. 130 S. Ct. at 2818 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
Citizens United v. Fed. Election Comm'n. 558 U.S. 310, 130 S. Ct. 876, 914, 175
L.Ed. 2d 753 (2010)).
No. 70758-2-1 / 8
Amendment rights.'"18 The Court noted that a state's interest in preserving
electoral integrity extended "to efforts to ferret out invalid signatures caused not
by fraud but by simple mistake, such as duplicate signatures."19 Thus, we must
measure the strength of this interest against the burden RCW 35A.01.040 places
on First Amendment rights.
In Sudduth v. Chapman.20 the Washington Supreme Court measured the
strength of this interest against the burden placed on our state's constitutional
rights of initiative and referendum by a statute denying voters who signed a
petition more than once the right to have one signature counted and found it
wanting. In Suddeth. the court considered the constitutionality of RCW
29.79.200, which provided, "'Ifthe secretary of state finds the same name signed
to more than one petition[,] he shall reject the name as often as it appears.'"21
Article II, section 1 of the Washington Constitution reserves the power of the
initiative to the people. The State contended that RCW 29.79.200 especially
facilitated the initiative process and therefore did not exceed the legislature's
authority. The court rejected this argument.
The court stated,
Were there some showing of facts upon which the legislature
could reasonably have found that this provision was necessary to
facilitate the initiative process and guard its integrity, we would, of
18 Reed. 130 S. Ct. at 2818 (quoting Davis v. Fed. Election Comm'n. 554
U.S. 724, 128 S. Ct. 2759, 2775, 171 L. Ed. 2d 737 (2008)).
19 Reed, 130 S. Ct. at 2819.
20 88 Wn.2d 247, 252, 558 P.2d 806 (1977).
21 Sudduth. 88 Wn.2d at 249.
-8-
No. 70758-2-1 / 9
course, be obliged to defer to the legislative judgment; but since no
state of facts which would justify it has been proposed, in order to
protect the right of the people which was reserved by them in their
constitution, we must hold this portion of RCW 29.79.200 to be in
excess of the legislative authority granted.[22]
The court noted that the State made no claim the challenged provision was
necessary to guard against fraud and mistake.23 It then observed that while 20
states have constitutions providing for initiative and referendum, its research had
not disclosed any comparable statute.24
The court quoted the following observation:
"In view of the multiplicity of petitions which are circulated
before each election, it is not surprising that some honest citizens
may become so confused by the number of petitions presented to
them that they may inadvertently sign two or more for the same
measure. This, of course, is carelessness on their part, but if they
are legally entitled to sign, we think one signature should be
allowed and the others stricken."[25]
We find Suddeth controlling. While the State's interest in preserving electoral
integrity extends to ferreting out duplicate signatures caused by mistake, striking
all—instead of counting the first and striking the duplicates—overburdens voters'
First Amendment rights.
The trial court distinguished Suddeth on the basis that it addressed a
statute burdening the constitutional right of the people to enact statewide
legislation, while RCW 35A.01.040(7) only burdens a statutory right of the people
to enact city or county legislation. But the United States Supreme Court has
22 Sudduth. 88 Wn.2d at 252.
23 Sudduth. 88 Wn.2d at 251.
24 Sudduth. 88 Wn.2d at 251.
25 Sudduth. 88 Wn.2d at 252 (quoting Whitman v. Moore. 59 Ariz. 211,
228, 125 P.2d 445 (1942)).
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No. 70758-2-1/10
recognized First Amendment protection for the exercise of state-created initiative
rights even though the United States Constitution does not guarantee these
rights.26 Thus, once a state creates initiative rights by statute, those rights enjoy
First Amendment protection. The First Amendment protection does not depend
upon a constitutional origin for the initiative right.
CONCLUSION
The First Amendment protects statutorily created initiative rights. Any
burden on the exercise of these rights is subject to exacting scrutiny. To guard
against fraud and mistake, the State does not need to deny a voter who signs
petitions more than once the right to have one signature counted. Therefore, we
hold the provision of RCW 35A.01.040(7) requiring the striking of all of a voter's
signatures unconstitutional.
J^e^£c<^^ J (-—
WE CONCUR:
J/9