RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
File Name: 08a0104p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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CITIZENS FOR TAX REFORM and JEFFREY P.
Plaintiffs-Appellees, -
LEDBETTER,
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No. 07-3031
,
v. >
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Defendants, -
JOSEPH DETERS et al.,
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Intervenor Defendant-Appellant. -
STATE OF OHIO,
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
No. 05-00212—Susan J. Dlott, District Judge.
Argued: November 30, 2007
Decided and Filed: March 5, 2008
Before: SILER, GIBBONS, and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges.
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: William P. Marshall, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OHIO,
Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. David R. Langdon, LANGDON & HARTMAN, Cincinnati, Ohio,
for Appellees. ON BRIEF: William P. Marshall, Sharon A. Jennings, OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OHIO, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. David R. Langdon, Curt C.
Hartman, LANGDON & HARTMAN, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellees. Todd P. Graves, GRAVES,
BARTLE & MARCUS, Kansas City, Missouri, for Amicus Curiae.
1
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 2
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OPINION
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McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. As with the law in general,1 the First Amendment is a jealous
mistress. It enables the people to exchange ideas (popular and unpopular alike), to assemble with
the hope of changing minds, and to alter or preserve how we govern ourselves. But in return, it
demands that sometimes seemingly reasonable measures enacted by our governments give way.
The State of Ohio enacted a provision making it a felony to pay anyone for gathering
signatures on election-related petitions on any basis other than the time worked. It did so for the
sensible purpose of reducing fraudulent signatures. The provision, however, runs afoul of the First
Amendment because it creates a significant burden on a core political speech right that is not
narrowly tailored. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment against
the State.
I
The district court set forth the background of this case:
Ohio Revised Code (“O.R.C.”) § 3599.111 (“the Statute”) states in relevant
part as follows:
(B) No person shall receive compensation on a fee per signature or
fee per volume basis for circulating any declaration of candidacy,
nominating petition, initiative petition, referendum petition, recall
petition, or any other election-related petition that is filed with or
transmitted to a board of elections, the office of the secretary of state,
or other appropriate public office.
* * *
(D) No person shall pay any other person for collecting signatures on
election-related petitions or for registering voters except on the basis
of time worked.
Plaintiffs Citizens 2for Tax Reform (“CTR”) and Jeffrey P. Ledbetter, a former
Treasurer of CTR, filed a Verified Complaint on April 1, 2005 challenging the
constitutionality of the O.R.C. § 3599.111 on the grounds that the prohibition of
payment to petition circulators on a per-signature or per-volume basis violated their
core political speech rights. (Doc. 1.) Plaintiffs named as defendants Joseph T.
Deters, the Hamilton County, Ohio prosecutor, and Mathias H. Heck, Jr., the
Montgomery County, Ohio prosecutor, both in their official capacities only, as
persons responsible for the enforcement of the Statute. (Id.)
Prior to the effective date of the Statute, CTR had engaged a political
consulting firm on the basis of a fixed fee contract to secure the necessary signatures
1
See Joseph Story, Inaugural Address as Dane Professor of Law at Harvard University, on the Subject of the
Value & Importance of Legal Studies (Aug. 5, 1829).
2
Collectively referred to herein as “CTR.”
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 3
to qualify a proposed constitutional amendment for the November 2005 Ohio general
election. Pursuant to the contract, CTR was to pay the firm $1.70 per signature for
a total of approximately 450,000 signatures. After the Statute became effective, CTR
was not permitted to pay circulators on a per-signature or on any per-volume basis.
The political consulting firm was no longer willing to collect signatures pursuant to
the agreed-upon fixed-fee contract and it estimated that the cost for gathering the
signatures would increase by more than $300,000. Plaintiffs asserted that the Statute
increased the cost of qualifying their proposed amendment, made it more difficult to
raise money necessary to fund the initiative effort, and that they had refrained from
attempting to qualify the proposed amendment for the ballot so long as the Statute
was in force. (Id.)
The Ohio Attorney General moved to intervene as a defendant in this action
on March 11, 2005 in order to defend the constitutionality of § 3599.111 and the
Court issued a Notation Order permitting the intervention on March 12, 2005.
(Doc. 7.)
On March 19, 2005, Chief Judge Sandra Beckwith issued a Temporary
Restraining Order enjoining the enforcement of O.R.C. § 3599.111. (Doc. 16.) Chief
Judge Beckwith found that Plaintiffs “have introduced actual evidence that tends to
show that the restriction on payment of petition circulators on a per-signature basis
limits their ability to retain effective circulators and reduces the likelihood that they
will succeed in placing their initiative on the November 2005 ballot.” (Id. at 9.) She
further found that the State of Ohio did not adduce evidence of the necessity of the
law to prevent fraud. She stated that the State’s evidence that fraud occurred when
circulators were paid on a per-signature basis in Ohio was not sufficient to establish
that the per-signature basis was cause of or an incentive to the fraud. (Id.) The State
had not proven “that compensation on a per-signature basis generates fraud at a
greater rate than other forms of compensation.” (Id.)
On May 4, 2005, March 22, 2006, and April 16, 2006, the Court issued
Agreed Orders extending the temporary restraining order until October 15, 2005,
extending it to cover the amendments to the law that took effect on May 2, 2005, and
extending it pending a final disposition in this case. (Docs. 20, 42, 46.)
Citizens for Tax Reform v. Deters, 462 F. Supp. 2d 827, 828-30 (S.D. Ohio 2006) (“CTR”)
(footnotes in original omitted).
Deters and Heck moved for summary judgment based on the intervention in the case by the
State of Ohio. As CTR did not oppose the motion, the district court granted them summary
judgment and dismissed them from the case. Id. at 830.
CTR and the State of Ohio filed cross motions for summary judgment. The State also filed
a motion to dismiss based on mootness. The district court denied the State’s motion to dismiss,
concluding that the State had not proven that CTR had disbanded and, even if it had, CTR’s case
was saved from mootness under the exception for wrongs that are “capable of repetition, yet evading
review.” Citizens for Tax Reform v. Deters, No. 05-212, 2006 WL 3420242, at *1 (S.D. Ohio Nov.
27, 2006).
On the cross motions, the district court held that the Statute was unconstitutional. The
district court found that CTR had established that the “Statute burdens their core political speech
rights.” CTR, 462 F. Supp. 2d at 832. Specifically, it agreed with a prior district court judge’s
issuance of a temporary restraining order in the case based on CTR’s showing “that the Statute limits
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 4
[its] ability to retain effective circulators and reduces the likelihood that petition proponents will be
able to place their petitions on the ballot.” Id. The State countered that the Statute was justified as
a means to combat irregularities and fraud in the election process. The district court dismissed much
of the State’s evidence, however, as inconclusive or irrelevant. It concluded, “[W]hile the State of
Ohio’s evidence might show that fraud has occurred when the payment per-signature method is
used, it has not isolated the form of payment as being the cause of or an incentive to wide spread
petition signature fraud in Ohio.” Id. at 838.
The State timely appealed the district court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment.
II
A. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56
The court reviews de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Bender v. Hecht’s
Dep’t Stores, 455 F.3d 612, 619 (6th Cir. 2006), cert. denied, 127 S. Ct. 2100 (2007). Summary
judgment should be granted when “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and
any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). To survive summary judgment, the
non-movant must provide evidence beyond the pleadings “set[ting] out specific facts showing a
genuine issue for trial.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e).
B. Balancing First Amendment Rights Against the Regulation of Elections
1. In General
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads in part, “Congress shall make no law
. . . abridging the freedom of speech, . . . or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” The Fourteenth Amendment extends these
prohibitions against the States. Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U.S. 88, 95 (1940). One of the main
interests embodied in the First Amendment is that of a free, sovereign people using the power of
persuasion, rather than force, to govern itself. Accordingly, the Supreme Court has held that the
First Amendment places a high value on the right to engage freely “in discussions concerning the
need for [political] change,” including change accomplished through petitions and elections. Meyer
v. Grant, 486 U.S. 414, 421 (1988).
First Amendment rights to free speech, to assemble, and to petition the government are not,
of course, without boundary. With respect to elections, Article I, Section 4 of the Constitution
grants to States the authority to determine “The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections.”
As the Supreme Court explained in Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, 520 U.S. 351 (1997),
“[I]t is . . . clear that States may, and inevitably must, enact reasonable regulations of parties,
elections, and ballots to reduce election- and campaign-related disorder,” id. at 358 (citing Burdick
v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428, 433 (1992) (“[A]s a practical matter, there must be a substantial regulation
of elections if they are to be fair and honest and if some sort of order, rather than chaos, is to
accompany the democratic process.” (internal quotation marks omitted))). “States allowing ballot
initiatives have considerable leeway to protect the integrity and reliability of the initiative process,
as they have with respect to election processes generally.” Buckley v. Am. Constitutional L. Found.,
525 U.S. 182, 191 (1999) (citations omitted). When the boundaries of First Amendment rights push
up against a State’s authority to regulate elections, cases like the present one arise.
CTR asserts that Ohio’s requirement that circulators be paid only on the basis of their time
worked (the “per-time-only” requirement) places a severe burden on its First Amendment rights.
The State counters that the burden is not severe and, even if it is, the burden is justified by the need
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 5
to counter election fraud. In Timmons, the Supreme Court set forth the following framework for
resolving these types of competing interests:
When deciding whether a state election law violates First and Fourteenth
Amendment associational rights, we weigh the character and magnitude of the
burden the State’s rule imposes on those rights against the interests the State
contends justify that burden, and consider the extent to which the State’s concerns
make the burden necessary. Regulations imposing severe burdens on plaintiffs’
rights must be narrowly tailored and advance a compelling state interest. Lesser
burdens, however, trigger less exacting review, and a State’s important regulatory
interests will usually be enough to justify reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions.
No bright line separates permissible election-related regulation from unconstitutional
infringements on First Amendment freedoms.
520 U.S. at 358-59 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Buckley, 525 U.S. at
192 (“We have several times said no litmus-paper test will separate valid ballot-access provisions
from invalid interactive speech restrictions; we have come upon no substitute for the hard judgments
that must be made.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
2. Character and Magnitude of the Burden
a. Prior Decisions
The State of Ohio argues that its per-time-only requirement imposes, at most, only a
moderate burden on CTR’s rights. It faults CTR for failing to show, in the State’s words, that the
ban would cause “a significant, quantitative decrease in the number of circulators available” or that
it “would decrease the number of issues successfully placed on the ballot.” Appellant’s Br. at 18.
It asserts that we should apply a “less exacting review” and that, under this review, the requirement
meets the standard for a “reasonable, nondiscriminatory restriction[].” Timmons, 520 U.S. at 358.
CTR argues, on the other hand, that the cumulative effect of the Statute on the petition process
severely burdens CTR’s core political speech rights.
The Supreme Court first addressed the issue of payment to petition circulators in Meyer v.
Grant. The State of Colorado had banned proponents of petitions from paying circulators, among
other restrictions. The Court subjected Colorado’s payment ban to “exacting scrutiny.” Meyer, 486
U.S. at 420 (citations omitted). The Court determined that the ban restricted political expression in
two fundamental ways: (1) it “limit[ed] the number of voices who will convey [the petitioner’s]
message and the hours they can speak and, therefore, limits the size of the audience they can reach”;
and (2) “it makes it less likely that [the petitioner] will garner the number of signatures necessary
to place the matter on the ballot, thus limiting [the petitioner’s] ability to make the matter the focus
of the statewide discussion.” Id. at 422-23.
The State of Colorado defended the measure in part by pointing out all of the other avenues
of expression left open to petitioners. The Court rejected the argument, explaining that simply
because more-burdensome avenues of speech existed did not mean that Colorado could simply shut
down a less-burdensome one: “Colorado’s prohibition of paid petition circulators restricts access
to the most effective, fundamental, and perhaps economical avenue of political discourse, direct
one-on-one communication.” Id. at 424. The Court concluded that the burden Colorado had to
overcome to justify its ban was “well-nigh insurmountable.” Id. at 425.
Several years later the State of Colorado was again before the Supreme Court to justify
several new petition regulations. In Buckley v. American Constitutional Law Foundation, the Court
looked at three provisions: “(1) the requirement that initiative-petition circulators be registered
voters”; “(2) the requirement that they wear an identification badge”; and “(3) the requirement that
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 6
proponents of an initiative report the names and addresses of all paid circulators and the amount paid
to each circulator.” 525 U.S. at 186. Using again the “exacting scrutiny” it applied in Meyer, id. at
204, the Court struck down all three as too heavy a burden in comparison to the State’s purported
justifications of deterring fraud and corruption, id. at 205.
Since the Meyer and Buckley decisions, three circuits have considered whether bans on
per-signature payments meet constitutional muster. The Eighth Circuit was the first when it
considered North Dakota’s ban in Initiative & Referendum Institute v. Jaeger, 241 F.3d 614 (8th Cir.
2001) (“IRI”). The court found the ban constitutional. It based its holding on the respective
strengths of the proofs submitted:
Examining the record in this case, we conclude that the State has produced
sufficient evidence that the regulation is necessary to insure the integrity of the
initiative process. In 1987, the Legislature passed § 16.1-01-12(11) in response to
problems that occurred with an initiative that had been placed on the ballot in
November 1986. State Representative Linderman stated, in regard to a 1986
signature campaign, that “students were being paid 25¢/signature. There were
reported irregularities-taking names out of the phone book, etc.” The limited
legislative history available shows that the legislators were aware of, and
contemplated, the bill’s effect on the circulation of petitions, but that they were more
concerned with the testimony they had heard regarding signature fraud.
Furthermore, as mentioned in the previous section on the residency
requirement, in 1994 approximately 17,000 petition signatures were invalidated. A
subsequent investigation revealed that payment per signature was an issue in the
1994 incident.
The appellants have produced no evidence that payment by the hour, rather
than on commission, would in any way burden their ability to collect signatures. The
appellants have only offered bare assertions on this point. While it may be argued
that such assertions may establish an unacceptable burden on signature-gathering
where the state cannot offer any evidence demonstrating the need to prohibit
commission payments, Cf. Meyer, 486 U.S. at 424, 426, 108 S.Ct. 1886, when the
state introduces evidence justifying the ban on commission payments as a necessary
means to prevent fraud and abuse (as the state has in this case), initiative sponsors
may not rest on bare assertions alone.
Id. at 618.
The Ninth Circuit addressed a similar per-signature ban passed by Oregon voters in Prete
v. Bradbury, 438 F.3d 949 (9th Cir. 2006). After an abbreviated bench trial, the district court held
that Oregon’s ban did not unconstitutionally burden petitioners’ core political speech rights. Id. at
953. The Ninth Circuit affirmed. After reviewing the standard set forth by the Supreme Court in
Meyer and Buckley, the court distinguished Oregon’s per-signature ban from the total ban on
payments in Meyer. Id. at 962. It described Oregon’s ban as simply “prohibit[ing] one method of
payment.” Id. It also read Buckley as modifying Meyer:
To the extent Meyer may be read to indicate that any resulting decrease in the pool
of available circulators is sufficient to constitute a “severe burden” under the First
Amendment, in Buckley the Court refined its analysis and made clear that the degree
of the decrease resulting from the measure is properly considered in determining the
severity of the burden.
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 7
Id. at 962-63 (citation omitted, emphasis in original). The court found that the district court did not
clearly err in rejecting the petitioner’s evidence of circulators leaving or refusing to work in Oregon
as “unsupported speculation.” Id. at 964. The two primary affiants, William Arno of Arno Political
Consultants (“APC”) and Tracy Taylor of Taylor Petition Management, LLC, had little experience
in Oregon, and thus could not offer a reliable estimate of the ban’s effect on the cost of signature
gathering in the state. Id. at 965. Likewise, their assertions regarding the effect the ban had on the
validity rate of signatures carried little weight with the court. Id. at 966.
The court recognized that “from an economic perspective, eliminating one method of
payment (but not every method, a la Meyer) for petition circulators could result in some barriers to
entry in the signature procurement market.” Id. at 967. Paying circulators by the signature “can be
more productive of signatures than paying an hourly wage.” Id. The court noted, however, that
whether the measure actually created any barriers to entry was “a question of historical fact,” and
it did not find clear error with the district court’s determination that no such barriers existed. Id.
Even had the petitioners made the requisite showing, the barriers would have established only a
“lesser burden” under the First Amendment. Id. at 968. This is because Oregon’s ban was “quite
limited in its proscription, barring only payment of petition circulators on the basis of the number
of signatures gathered. It does not prohibit adjusting salaries or paying bonuses according to validity
rates or productivity . . . which could likely counter any barriers to entry.” Id. Thus, concluding that
the petitioners had established only a “lesser burden” on their rights, the court subjected the
per-signature ban to a “less exacting review” and ultimately upheld the ban. Id.
Finally, the Second Circuit followed the Eighth and Ninth Circuits in rejecting a petitioner’s
claim that a per-signature ban violated the Constitution. In Person v. New York State Board of
Elections, 467 F.3d 141 (2d Cir. 2006), the court joined its two sister circuits in “find[ing] the record
presented to [it] provides insufficient support for a claim that the ban . . . is akin to the complete
prohibition on paying petition circulators” as in Meyer “or that the alternative methods of payment
it leaves available are insufficient,” id. at 143 (citations omitted). The court concluded that the
petitioner’s argument that paying circulators on a per-signature basis was the best economic
incentive was insufficient to show an unconstitutional burden “when balanced against the state’s
interest in preventing fraud in the gathering of signatures.” Id.
Several guide posts can be gleaned from these Supreme Court and circuit court decisions
regarding the character and magnitude of the burden created by Ohio’s per-time-only requirement.
First, the question is fact-intensive, given the “sliding scale” analysis outlined by the Supreme Court
in Meyer, Buckley and other decisions. Lee v. Keith, 463 F.3d 763, 768 (7th Cir. 2006) (describing
the Supreme Court’s flexible approach in similar First Amendment cases as a “sliding scale”). Bans
on paying circulators, whether outright or partial, can impact political expression in at least three
related but distinct ways: (1) a ban can reduce the number and hours of voices which will convey
the message; (2) it can limit the size of the audience of the petition; and (3) it can lower the
likelihood that a measure will qualify for the statewide ballot. A circulator plays a crucial role in
the petition process because the circulator both has to express the petitioner’s desire for political
change and has to discuss the merits of the proposed change. Finally, although the availability of
other payment methods might reduce the burden, the extent to which the more effective means are
foreclosed is an important consideration.
b. Character and Magnitude of Ohio’s Per-Time-Only Requirement
A review of the record evidence shows that Ohio’s per-time-only requirement would make
proposing and qualifying initiatives more expensive, primarily because of the inefficiencies inherent
in a per-time-only system. The evidence also shows that so-called professional circulators would
likely not work under a per-time-only system (or at least would choose a per-signature system if
given the option). The evidence is mixed on how validity rates are affected. Moreover, CTR has
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 8
not pointed to any evidence showing that, outside a relatively small number of professional
circulators, there exists a substantial number of people or a demonstrable percentage of Ohio’s
population who would participate under a per-signature system but not under a per-time-only
system.
There is little dispute that operating under a per-time-only system will increase the costs of
both proposing an initiative and qualifying it for the ballot. First, the ban eliminates the opportunity
for a petitioner to enter into a fixed-price contract with a political consulting firm, signature
coordinator, or circulator. Under a per-signature payment scheme, CTR can contract, for example,
for 500,000 signatures at a fixed price of $1.50 per signature. The petitioner knows how much
money it will need to raise at the outset to qualify its initiative. Under Ohio’s per-time-only
provision, however, the petitioner cannot enter into a fixed price contract to pay circulators per
signature. O.R.C. § 3599.111. Moreover, § 3599.111 does not define the term “person.” Section
1.59(C) of the Ohio criminal code states: “As used in any statute, . . . ‘Person’ includes an
individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, and association.” Thus, a petitioner
is prohibited from paying a political consulting firm, signature coordinating firm, or any other
business entity to gather a specific number of signatures for a fixed price. In other words, the ban
works up and down the chain from petitioner to consulting firm to signature coordinating firm to
circulator. Thus, the per-time-only provision adds an element of risk to the petition process which
would otherwise be absent.
In addition to the increased risk, petitioners get fewer signatures for their money, according
to CTR. Per-hour circulators are less efficient at gathering signatures than are per-signature
circulators. The cause for this drop in efficiency is hardly novel: basic economic theory instructs
that a producer will seek to maximize the output for which she gets paid until the cost to her of
producing another marginal unit equals the payment she receives for it. Under the per-time-only
provision, the output for which the circulator is to get paid would not be signatures, but rather time
worked. Thus, the circulator would have an incentive to work as many hours as possible up to the
point the wage earned for the marginal unit of time equaled the marginal cost to her of working that
unit of time. The circulator’s primary focus would be on the amount of time worked, not the quality
of work product produced.
CTR further asserts that the best, most professional coordinators and circulators are not
interested in working under a per-time-only system. They purportedly can earn more money
working on a per-signature basis than they can under any other system. Tracy Taylor testified that
his top coordinators that qualified his last two Ohio issues refuse to go to Ohio on an hourly basis.
This reluctance on the part of some professional coordinators and circulators also makes economic
sense. If, for example, the professional circulators are more efficient than the average circulator in
the sense that they can gather more valid signatures within a given unit of time, they will be
financially better off working under a system that rewards them based on their efficiency, rather than
a system which pays them based on something for which they do not have a comparative advantage,
quantity of time worked.
According to CTR, the cumulative effect of the inefficiencies caused by a per-time-only
system increases the amount of time it takes to collect signatures, further exacerbating the risk of
unforeseen costs. As a result, CTR contends that it and other firms are not only less likely to qualify
their proposed initiatives for the ballot, but are less likely even to try. The State counters by pointing
to the relatively stable numbers of qualifying petitions in Oregon before and after it enacted its
per-signature ban in 2002. The Oregon numbers suffer, however, from a similar defect in
Colorado’s experience that the Supreme Court pointed out in Meyer: the statistic “does not reject
the possibility that even more petitions would have been successful if paid circulators had been
available, or, more narrowly, that [petitioners] would have had greater success if they had been able
to hire extra help.” 486 U.S. at 418 n.3.
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CTR has also presented evidence that circulators paid by the time worked yield lower
validity rates than circulators paid by the signature. The evidence is limited, however, and
inconclusive. For example, Michael Arno stated in a declaration that his company’s validity rates
dropped in all three of its petition drives it handled in Oregon after the per-signature ban went into
effect in that state. Lee Albright, the owner of a petition management company, testified that his
firm collected signatures for an initiative in Oregon after the ban. His firm ended up collecting twice
the number of signatures needed to get the initiative on the ballot because he was afraid that the
amateur petition circulators would collect too many invalid signatures. However, Ohio has
submitted evidence from Oregon’s Secretary of State that the average validity rate on petitions
actually increased from 69.63% in 2002 to 72.35% in 2004. At best, CTR has raised a question of
fact whether validity rates are lower under a per-time-only scheme.
Finally, there is little in the record to suggest that a substantial number of people in Ohio
would be dissuaded from participating in the petition process because of a ban on all payment not
based on time worked. This is not a case like in Buckley where approximately 35% of the state’s
population was categorically prohibited from participating. 525 U.S. at 193-94 & n.15. Nor has
CTR proffered, for example, a broad-based survey to show a demonstrable decrease in the pool of
potential circulators.
Accordingly, a review of the record confirms that there is no genuine issue of material fact
(1) that Ohio’s per-time-only requirement would make proposing and qualifying initiatives more
expensive; and (2) that professional coordinators and circulators would likely not work under a
per-time-only system. As to the validity rates and the available statewide pool of circulators,
however, the matters are at best issues of fact.
c. Where Does § 3599.111 Fit Along the Sliding Scale?
If the Supreme Court’s decision in Meyer lies at one end of the spectrum and the IRI, Prete
and Person decisions lie at the other, then this case falls somewhere in between. Ohio’s partial ban
on payment is not as draconian as the complete ban in Meyer. However, it has a couple of features
that distinguish it from those considered in the other circuit court decisions.
One difference between the present case and IRI, Prete and Person is that Ohio’s ban is more
restrictive. North Dakota, Oregon and New York all banned payments made on a per-signature
basis; Ohio, on the other hand, has banned all remuneration to circulators except on a per-time basis.
The difference is not academic. As the Ninth Circuit recognized in Prete, Oregon’s ban on
per-signature payments left open various other means of payment besides one based solely on the
time worked:
Allowable practices include: paying an hourly wage or salary, establishing either
express or implied minimum signature requirements for circulators, terminating
circulators who do not meet the productivity requirements, adjusting salaries
prospectively relative to a circulator’s productivity, and paying discretionary bonuses
based on reliability, longevity and productivity, provided no payments are made on
a per signature basis.
Prete, 438 F.3d at 952 n.1 (quoting Or. Admin. R. 165-014-0260); see also Person, 467 F.3d at 143
(noting that New York’s statute “specifically prohibits only the per-signature payment to election
workers”); IRI, 241 F.3d at 616 (reviewing North Dakota’s provision which prohibits payment “on
a basis related to the number of signatures obtained”).
This is a significant distinction. Under a plain reading of § 3599.111, CTR (or its
subcontractors) could not give a bonus to a circulator based on productivity or longevity. CTR
could not set a minimum signature requirement because, in order to earn a day’s wages, for example,
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 10
a circulator would both have to work a certain number of hours and have to collect a certain number
of signatures, thereby partially tying earnings to the number of signatures. Arguably, CTR could
not terminate a circulator who consistently did not collect enough signatures because, again, to earn
a wage (and keep the job) the circulator would, among other things, have to collect a minimum
number of signatures. Furthermore, CTR could not base a circulator’s earnings on the geographic
area covered (pay per city block, for example). It is even unclear whether CTR could pay a salary
to a circulator unless it strictly limited the hours worked. If, instead, a salaried circulator were
responsible for completing a number of duties each day or week regardless of the number of hours
worked (i.e., the typical plight of the salaried worker), then in a sense the circulator would be
compensated on a basis other than strictly time worked. This added difficulty with motivating a
workforce reinforces CTR’s argument that proposing and qualifying initiatives would be
significantly more expensive under § 3599.111.
Another difference between § 3599.111 and the other state provisions is the penalty for a
violation. The New York provision makes a violation a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year
of imprisonment, a fine of $100 to $500, or both. Person, 467 F.3d at 143 (citing N.Y. Elec. L.
§ 17-122(1), violation of which is a misdemeanor); N.Y. Elec. L. § 17-166 (stating that penalty for
any such misdemeanor violation). Similarly, the North Dakota provision makes a violation a
misdemeanor punishable by up to one year of imprisonment, a fine up to $2,000, or both. IRI, 241
F.3d at 616 (citing N.D. Cent. Code § 16.1-01-12(11), violation of which is a class A misdemeanor);
N.D. Cent. Code § 12.1-32-01(5) (describing the penalty for a class A misdemeanor). Violation of
the Oregon provision is punishable by a minimum of a $100 civil fine. Prete, 438 F.3d at 952 n.1.
In contrast, anyone who was to violate § 3599.111 would be guilty of a felony punishable by
imprisonment between six and twelve months, a fine up to $2,500, or both. O.R.C. § 3599.111(E)
(stating that violation of the Ohio provision constitutes a felony of the fifth degree); O.R.C.
§ 2929.14(A)(5) (describing the penalty for a felony of the fifth degree).
With the broader ban on the types of payment and harsher criminal sanctions for violations,
Ohio’s provision lies closer to the complete ban in Meyer than the partial bans in the other circuit
court cases.3 As the Supreme Court explained in Meyer, “The First Amendment protects
[petitioners’] right not only to advocate their cause but also to select what they believe to be the most
effective means for so doing.” 486 U.S. at 424. While petitioners are not constitutionally guaranteed
an endless variety of means, when their means are limited to volunteers and to paid hourly workers
who cannot be rewarded for being productive and arguably cannot be punished for being
unproductive, they carry a significant burden in exercising their right to core political speech.
3. The State’s Interest in Eliminating Fraud
When a State places a severe or significant burden on a core political right, like here, it faces
a “well-nigh insurmountable” obstacle to justify it. Meyer, 486 U.S. at 425; cf. Buckley, 525 U.S.
at 192 n.12. The provision must be narrowly tailored and advance a compelling state interest.
Timmons, 520 U.S. at 358; Meyer, 486 U.S. at 423-24. Although a State need not present “elaborate,
empirical verification” of the weight of its purported justification when the burden is moderate, see
Timmons, 520 U.S. at 364, it must come forward with compelling evidence when the burden is
higher, see Buckley, 525 U.S. at 203-04; Meyer, 486 U.S. at 425-28.
3
We take no position on the hypothetical question of whether, if Ohio were to enact a partial ban similar to
Oregon’s, North Dakota’s or New York’s, that partial ban would be subject to the less exacting review of Timmons. The
constitutional analysis is, as we have noted, fact- and context-intensive. There may be significant differences between
how Ohio and those other States govern and operate their respective petition drives and elections which would make
even a lesser ban in Ohio subject to the more exacting scrutiny of Meyer. But, again, as the question is not before us,
we will address the matter no further.
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 11
While eliminating election fraud is certainly a compelling state interest, § 3599.111 is not
narrowly drawn. First, there is no evidence in the record that most, many, or even more than a de
minimis number of circulators who were paid by signature engaged in fraud in the past. The State
points primarily to the 2004 presidential election, when circulators trying to get Ralph Nader on the
ballot engaged in fraud. The circulators were paid on a per-signature basis. CTR, 462 F. Supp. 2d
at 834. While this is evidence that circulators who were paid per-signature engaged in fraud, it does
not prove that the per-signature feature actually caused or significantly contributed to the circulators’
fraudulent acts. At most, the evidence of fraud associated with the Nader election effort and other
elections is evidence of correlation, not causation.
Of course, just as CTR argues that per-signature payment creates a better incentive for hard,
efficient work and valid signatures, it cannot escape the flip-side of the argument: the payment also
creates an economic incentive to engage in fraud by padding signatures (whether by forgery, false
certification or false pretense). Just as the Supreme Court took judicial notice in Meyer that “it is
often more difficult to get people to work without compensation than it is to get them to work for
pay,” 486 U.S. at 423, we can take judicial notice that there is an incentive to inflate the measure
of output when payment is directly tied to that output. If a person gets paid by the hour, there is an
incentive to pad hours; if a person gets paid by the signature, there is an incentive to pad signatures.
That is not to say, of course, that someone faced with the incentive to pad signatures will
actually act upon it. That is an empirical question, one for which there is little in the record to
answer. The State has not, for example, pointed to evidence from Oregon suggesting a marked
decrease in the level of election fraud since its per-signature ban was enacted. While there is some
evidence that validity rates have increased, see supra, there are many non-fraudulent reasons why
signatures are rejected (e.g., insufficient information about the signer, illegible handwriting). The
State’s correlation evidence is relevant, if only circumstantial, evidence, but it is a far cry from
showing that the provision is narrowly tailored (or even reasonably tailored) to the State’s legitimate
interest in reducing election fraud. As explained in Meyer, courts should not be “prepared to assume
that a professional circulator—whose qualifications for similar future assignments may well depend
on a reputation for competence and integrity—is any more likely to accept false signatures than a
volunteer who is motivated entirely by an interest in having the proposition placed on the ballot.”
486 U.S. at 426.
Moreover, Ohio already has criminalized election fraud, specifically with regard to false
signatures. See O.R.C. § 3599.28 (making false signatures on election-related documents a felony
of the fifth degree). This and other criminal provisions of Ohio election law are the types of
protections that the Supreme Court has found “adequate” to deter improper conduct with regard to
petition circulation, “especially since the risk of fraud or corruption, or the appearance thereof, is
more remote at the petition stage of an initiative than at the time of balloting.” Meyer, 486 U.S. at
427 (citations omitted).
Accordingly, under the exacting scrutiny of Meyer and Buckley, Ohio’s per-time-only
requirement is not sufficiently tied to its otherwise legitimate interest.
III
The State of Ohio argues in large measure that CTR’s evidence of increased costs establishes
not a free-speech problem, but a business problem. Yet, the State largely misses the point that free
speech can be costly. By making speech more costly, the State is virtually guaranteeing that there
will be less of it. Because its ban on all forms of payment to circulators except based on the amount
of time worked would create a significant burden on CTR’s and other petitioners’ core political
speech rights, the State must justify it with a compelling interest and narrowly tailored means. It
No. 07-3031 Citizens for Tax Reform et al. v. Deters et al. Page 12
fails to raise a genuine issue of material fact that § 3599.111 is narrowly tailored. Therefore, we
AFFIRM summary judgment in favor of CTR.