Title: In re Petition for Emergency Remedy of Bd. of Elections

State: maryland

Issuer: Maryland Supreme Court

Document:

In re Petition for Emergency Remedy by the Maryland State Board of Elections, No. 21, 
September Term, 2022.  
 
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW – SEPARATION OF POWERS – JUDICIAL 
FUNCTION 
 
Section 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Law Article provides that in emergency circumstances 
falling short of a declared state of emergency that interfere with the electoral process, a 
circuit court that is petitioned by a board of elections may “take any action the court 
considers necessary to provide a remedy that is in the public interest and protects the 
integrity of the electoral process.”  Section 8-103(b)(1) does not violate the separation of 
powers guaranteed by Article 8 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights because the task 
delegated to the court by the statute constitutes a judicial function.  The Court based that 
conclusion on consideration of two factors it has traditionally used to determine whether a 
task is a judicial function:  (1) whether the task is of a nature that has traditionally been 
delegated to the judicial branch; and (2) whether the legislative body has provided 
sufficient guidance limiting the court’s discretion so that the court is not called upon to 
make a decision based on policy, expediency, or politics. 
 
 
STATUTORY 
INTERPRETATION 
– 
DEFINITION 
OF 
EMERGENCY 
CIRCUMSTANCES IN ELECTION LAW ARTICLE § 8-103(b)(1)  
 
The Circuit Court for Montgomery County did not err in its determination that the 
combination of the anticipated volume of absentee ballots in the November 2022 general 
election and the limited capacity of the local boards of election to timely canvass those 
ballots constituted “emergency circumstances” that “interfere with the electoral process” 
for purposes of § 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Law Article.   
 
 
 
Circuit Court for Montgomery County 
Case No. C-15-CV-22-003258 
 
 
 
  IN THE SUPREME COURT 
Argued:  October 7, 2022 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OF MARYLAND* 
 
No. 21 
 
September Term, 2022 
 
            ______________________________________ 
 
 
 
IN RE PETITION FOR EMERGENCY 
REMEDY BY THE MARYLAND STATE 
BOARD OF ELECTIONS 
 
 
 ______________________________________   
  
 
Fader, C.J., 
Watts, 
Hotten, 
Booth, 
Biran, 
Eaves, 
Adkins, Sally, D. (Senior Justice, 
Specially Assigned), 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Opinion by Fader, C.J. 
Biran, J., concurs 
______________________________________ 
 
 
 
Filed: March 29, 2023 
 
 
* At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional 
amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to the Supreme Court 
of Maryland.  The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials 
Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this 
document is authentic. 
 
Gregory Hilton, Clerk 
2023-03-29 11:15-04:00
 
This appeal presents a challenge to an order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery 
County that permitted local boards of election to begin “canvassing” absentee ballots more 
than a month before the November 2022 general election.  Canvassing ballots includes “the 
entire process of vote tallying, vote tabulation, and vote verification or audit, culminating 
in the production and certification of the official election results.”  Md. Code Ann., Elec. 
Law § 11-101(c)(1) (2022 Repl.).  Under current Maryland law, although voters can submit 
absentee ballots weeks before election day, local boards of election are prohibited from 
opening them, and thus beginning the canvassing process, until after election day.  Id. 
§ 11-302(b)(1).   
In connection with the November 8, 2022 general election, the State Board of 
Elections (the “State Board”), filed a petition asking the circuit court to authorize local 
boards of election to begin canvassing absentee ballots on October 1, 2022.  The State 
Board sought that authority under § 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Law Article, which 
provides that “[i]f emergency circumstances, not constituting a declared state of 
emergency, interfere with the electoral process, the State Board . . . may petition a circuit 
court to take any action the court considers necessary to provide a remedy that is in the 
public interest and protects the integrity of the electoral process.”  According to the State 
Board, emergency circumstances existed because of the State’s combined experience with 
absentee ballots during the 2020 primary and general elections and the 2022 primary 
election, as well as historical trend data.  Those experiences and data led the State Board 
to conclude that the volume of absentee ballots it was likely to receive during the 2022 
general election could not be processed timely if local boards could not start canvassing 
2 
 
the ballots until after the election.  The State Board further alleged that the ensuing delay 
would render the State incapable of complying with statutory requirements related to the 
certification of election results and would undermine the integrity of the electoral process. 
Daniel Cox, a candidate for governor in the November 8, 2022 general election and 
then-member of the Maryland House of Delegates, intervened and opposed the State 
Board’s petition.  Candidate Cox opposed the petition on two bases:  (1) § 8-103(b)(1) 
violates the separation of powers guaranteed by Article 8 of the Maryland Declaration of 
Rights by delegating to the courts the nonjudicial function of regulating the timing of 
elections; and (2) the problems forecasted by the State Board did not constitute “emergency 
circumstances” because they were foreseeable. 
The circuit court held that § 8-103(b)(1) is constitutional, determined that the State 
Board had proven the existence of emergency circumstances, and permitted the State Board 
to begin canvassing absentee ballots on October 1, 2022.   
After Candidate Cox appealed to the Appellate Court of Maryland (then named the 
Court of Special Appeals),1 the State Board sought certiorari review in this Court, which 
we granted.  In re Petition for Emergency Remedy, 482 Md. 7 (2022).  In a per curiam 
order issued after oral argument, we affirmed.  In re Petition for Emergency Remedy, 482 
Md. 12 (2022) (per curiam).  We now explain the basis for our order.   
 
1 At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a 
constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland 
to the Appellate Court of Maryland.  The name change took effect on December 14, 2022. 
3 
 
BACKGROUND 
A. 
Statutory and Regulatory Scheme 
1. Absentee Ballots Generally 
There are three ways to vote in Maryland:  (1) in-person on election day, Elec. Law 
§ 10-301; (2) in-person during the early voting period, id. § 10-301.1; and (3) by absentee 
ballot, id. §§ 9-301 – 9-312.  Our focus here is on voting by absentee ballot.2  Absentee 
voting was first introduced in Maryland in the State’s 1864 constitution, to permit Union 
soldiers to vote.  Dan Friedman, The Maryland State Constitution 86-87 (G. Alan Tarr ed., 
2011).  Provision for absentee voting was left out of the 1867 Constitution initially but was 
added in by amendment in 1918, limited at that time only to “qualified voters serving in 
the ‘Military or Naval Service of the United States.’”  Id. at 87.  Further constitutional 
amendments permitted the General Assembly to extend the right:  (1) in 1954, to “anyone 
who was physically absent from the state at the time of an election,” id.; (2) in 1956, to 
“disabled voters,” id.; and (3) in 1974, to any “qualified voters who are unable to vote 
 
2 In 2020, the General Assembly adopted § 9-301(c) of the Election Law Article, 
which requires the State Board and local boards of election to “refer to absentee ballots as 
‘mail-in ballots’ and absentee voting as ‘mail-in voting’ in all communications with voters 
and the general public.”  2020 Md. Laws chs. 36 & 37; Elec. Law § 9-301(c)(1).  That 
change was intended to “bring clarity to the absentee voting process” considering the 
expansion of absentee voting to any qualified voters.  Election Law – References to 
Absentee Voting in Communications – Mail-In Voting: Hearing on S.B. 145 Before the 
Educ., Health & Env’t Affs. Comm., 2020 Leg., 441st Sess. (statement of Sen. Hester, 
Member, Educ., Health & Env’t Affs. Comm.).  Such communications are also required to 
include a statement acknowledging that “mail-in voting” is still “referred to as absentee 
voting in the Maryland Constitution, the Annotated Code of Maryland, and the Code of 
Maryland Regulations.”  Elec. Law § 9-301(c)(2).  In this opinion, we will follow those 
sources of law in continuing to refer to “absentee voting” and “absentee ballots.” 
4 
 
personally,” Md. Const. Art. I, § 3 (1974).3  Finally, in 2008, the General Assembly was 
given the power to extend the right to any “qualified voters who might otherwise choose 
to vote by absentee ballot.”4  2007 Md. Laws ch. 513.  
As amended, Article I, § 3(a) authorizes the General Assembly:  
to provide by suitable enactment for voting by qualified voters of the State 
of Maryland who are absent at the time of any election in which they are 
entitled to vote, for voting by other qualified voters who are unable to vote 
personally, or for voting by qualified voters who might otherwise choose to 
vote by absentee ballot, and for the manner in which and the time and place 
at which such voters may vote, and for the canvass and return of their votes. 
The General Assembly has carried out that power by adopting Election Law 
§§ 9-301 – 9-312, which govern absentee voting generally, and Election Law § 11-302, 
which governs the canvassing of absentee ballots.   
2. Absentee Ballots Canvassing 
A registered voter who wishes to cast an absentee ballot must request one, which 
can be done by mail or online until the week before the election, or in person as late as 
election day.  Id. § 9-305.  As of June 2021, voters may also request to be placed on a 
“permanent absentee ballot list.”  Id. § 9-311.1.  Once a local board validates a voter’s 
 
3 Consistent with the constitutional limitations, until 2006, a voter’s ability to cast 
an absentee ballot was also limited by statute to circumstances in which the voter was either 
absent from the jurisdiction on election day or unable to go to the polls for an identified 
reason.  See Elec. Law § 9-304 (2003).  In 2006, the General Assembly amended § 9-304 
to eliminate those limitations and provide that “[a]n individual may vote by absentee ballot 
except to the extent preempted under an applicable federal law.”  2006 Md. Laws ch. 6; 
see also Elec. Law § 9-304 (Repl. 2022).   
4 The same 2008 constitutional amendment that extended the General Assembly’s 
power to authorize absentee voting to any qualified voters also permitted the General 
Assembly to authorize early voting.  See 2007 Md. Laws ch. 513.   
5 
 
eligibility to vote absentee and ballots are available, the local board must provide the voter 
an absentee ballot as soon as practicable.  Id. §§ 9-306, 9-309.   
Although absentee ballots may be returned at any time after they are received, 
§ 11-302(b)(1) prohibits a local board of elections from opening an absentee ballot 
envelope “prior to 8 a.m. on the Wednesday following election day.”  Once canvassing 
begins, the local boards are required to “release a report of the unofficial results of the 
absentee ballot vote tabulation” each day.  Id. § 11-302(e).  To be counted, an absentee 
ballot must be (a) received by a local board, dropped off at a polling place, or deposited 
into a ballot drop box before the polls close on election day, or (b) sent by the United States 
Postal Service on or before election day and received no later than “10 a.m. on the second 
Friday after an election.”  Md. Code Regs. (“COMAR”) 33.11.03.08B (2022); see Elec. 
Law § 11-302(c).   
The time-consuming process of canvassing absentee ballots is spelled out in detail 
by regulation.  That process must “[b]e conducted separately from the review, inspection, 
and tabulation of polling place ballots,” but still “in the same manner as for polling place 
ballots, insofar as those procedures are appropriate.”  COMAR 33.11.04.01A(2), (3).  Each 
local board, acting “in its role as a board of canvassers,” is responsible for canvassing 
absentee ballots from its jurisdiction.  Id. 33.11.04.02 (2022).  The election director begins 
by sending batches of “a controllable number of ballots” to each “team” of reviewers.  Id. 
33.11.04.05A.  For each ballot, the assigned team is charged with (1) verifying the 
timeliness of the ballot and that the oath is signed and the envelope is sealed, (2) opening 
each envelope by a “means that will not damage the contents,” and then (3) placing “the 
6 
 
envelope with the mailing address face down on the table without removing the contents.”  
Id. 33.11.04.05B–D.  The team then removes the contents “one at a time, taking care that 
each envelope remains face down.”  Id. 33.11.04.05E.  The team must separate any voter 
assistance certificates into separate stacks and verify that no more than one ballot is in any 
envelope, before setting the envelopes aside.  Id. 33.11.04.05G–H.  The team then inspects 
“each ballot for compliance and tabulating acceptability.”  Id. 33.11.04.07A.  Any issues 
that arise while opening the envelopes or during initial review or ballot inspection are 
referred to the local board to decide whether to reject or accept the ballot.  Id. 33.11.04.06, 
.08. 
Once a team has completed a batch, the election director must file the return 
envelopes, place “the ballots in appropriate groups for tabulation,” and give the team a new 
batch for processing.  Id. 33.11.04.07D.  The local board is required to group ballots 
according to whether they are (1) acceptable for tabulation, (2) acceptable to the board but 
objected to by a contesting party, or (3) rejected by the board.5  Id. 33.11.04.09A.  The 
votes from the ballots in each of the first two groups are tabulated separately and then 
reported and included in the unofficial vote totals.  Id. 33.11.04.09B.  Once removed from 
their envelopes, ballots must be tabulated “without unreasonable delay.”  Id. 33.11.04.10.   
3. Post-Election Deadlines 
Section 11-308(a) of the Election Law Article requires that “[w]ithin 10 days after 
any election, and before certifying the results of the election, each board of canvassers shall 
 
5 The regulations contain extensive provisions relating to grounds for rejection of 
absentee ballots.  COMAR 33.11.05.01 – .08. 
7 
 
verify the vote count in accordance with the regulations prescribed by the State Board for 
the voting system used in that election.”  Once the required verification process is 
completed, each local board of canvassers must certify the accuracy of the results, and that 
they have been verified, to the Governor, the State Board, and the clerk of the local circuit 
court.  Id. §§ 11-308(b), 11-401.  The transmittal of the certification is to “be made on the 
second Friday after a primary or general election or, if the canvass is completed after that 
date, within 48 hours after the completion of the canvass.”  Id. § 11-401(c)(1).  Circuit 
court clerks are required to record the certified local election results.  Id. § 11-401(d).   
Based on the expected timing of the certification, several Maryland counties have 
set the terms of their respective offices to begin on the first Monday in December.  See, 
e.g., Montgomery County Code, Part I, art. I, § 105 & art. II, § 202 (providing that terms 
of office for members of the Montgomery County Council and County Executive begin on 
the first Monday in December); Charter for Prince George’s County, art. III, § 306 & art. 
IV, § 404 (providing the same for members of the Prince George’s County Council and 
County Executive); Charter of Baltimore County, art. II, § 203 & art. IV, § 402(a) 
(providing the same for members of the Baltimore County Council and County Executive); 
Charter of Frederick County, Maryland, art. II, § 206(a) & art. IV, § 404(a) (providing the 
same for members of the Frederick County Council and County Executive).   
The Board of State Canvassers is required to convene to certify the results of the 
statewide election within 35 days of the election, Elec. Law §§ 11-502(a) & 11-503(a), and 
the certification triggers a three-day deadline to file a petition for a recount, id. § 12-101(d).   
8 
 
Finally, the United States Congress is required to “assemble . . . at noon on the 3d 
day of January.”  U.S. Const. amend. XX, § 2.  
4. Emergencies 
Subtitle 1 of Title 8 of the Election Law Article contains three sections addressed 
generally to all Maryland elections.  The first two, §§ 8-101 and 8-102, generally charge 
local boards with conducting elections, charge the State Board with supervising elections, 
require uniformity in elections, and establish requirements for providing notice of relevant 
information to registered voters.   
Section 8-103 addresses two types of emergencies.  First, pursuant to § 8-103(a), if 
the Governor declares a state of emergency “that interferes with the electoral process, the 
emergency proclamation may” postpone the election or specify alternate voting locations 
or systems.   
Second: 
If emergency circumstances, not constituting a declared state of emergency, 
interfere with the electoral process, the State Board or a local board, after 
conferring with the State Board, may petition a circuit court to take any action 
the court considers necessary to provide a remedy that is in the public interest 
and protects the integrity of the electoral process. 
Elec. Law § 8-103(b)(1).  This is the provision at the center of the present dispute. 
5. Recent Legislative Activity 
Three developments in the last two legislative sessions are relevant to our discussion 
below.  First, during the 2021 legislative session, the General Assembly enacted two 
changes to make absentee balloting more accessible:  (1) providing for the placement of 
9 
 
secure drop boxes to collect absentee ballots; and (2) creating a permanent absentee ballot 
list.  2021 Md. Laws, ch. 56; see also Elec. Law §§ 2-304, 2-305, 9-311.1.   
Second, during the 2022 legislative session, the General Assembly passed two 
companion bills that would have amended § 11-302(b)(1) of the Election Law Article to, 
among other things:  (1) permit local boards to begin canvassing absentee ballots eight days 
before the first day of early voting;6 but (2) preclude local boards from tabulating absentee 
ballots before the polls close on election day.  S.B. 163, 2022 Leg., 444th Sess. (Md. 2022) 
§ 1; H.B. 862, 2022 Leg., 444th Sess. (Md. 2022) § 1.7  Governor Lawrence J. Hogan, Jr. 
vetoed the bills.  In a letter explaining his vetoes, Governor Hogan lauded the change that 
would have permitted earlier processing of absentee ballots, saying it “would allow hard 
working election officials to get a much needed head start on the deluge of ballot envelopes 
that, under current law, must wait until after Election Day for processing.”  His vetoes, he 
stated, were addressed not to that portion of the bills but to the legislation’s failure to add 
“basic security measures such as signature verification” and protections against “ballot 
collecting.”   
 
6 Early voting centers are open from “the second Thursday before a primary or 
general election through the Thursday before the election.”  Elec. Law § 10-301.1(d)(1).  
For the 2022 general election, the second Thursday before election day was October 27, 
2022, and eight days before that was Wednesday, October 19, 2022. 
7 The legislation contained an uncodified provision that would have permitted 
tabulation of absentee vote totals before the polls closed only during the 2022 statewide 
primary election.  See S.B. 163, § 2; H.B. 862, § 2. 
10 
 
B. 
Absentee Ballots in the 2020 Primary and General Elections and the 
2022 Primary Election 
Both the 2020 primary and general elections were held during a declared state of 
emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  As relevant here, that had two chief 
consequences for those elections.  First, absentee voting was strongly encouraged, and 
voters made significantly greater use of it than ever before.  Pursuant to a series of 
emergency executive orders issued by Governor Hogan, the 2020 elections were conducted 
principally by absentee ballot.  In the June 2020 primary election, 97% of votes were cast 
by absentee ballot.  In the November 2020 general election, 1,528,327 ballots, 51.7% of 
total non-provisional ballots,8 were cast by absentee ballot.  See 2020 Presidential General 
Election: Total Voter Turnout, State Bd. Elections, https://perma.cc/V7B6-GJZX (last 
visited Mar. 20, 2023).  By comparison, absentee ballots comprised 6.5% of total ballots 
cast in the 2016 presidential general election9 and 5.3% of the total ballots cast in the 2018 
gubernatorial general election, which was the highest of the three most recent gubernatorial 
general elections before 2022.10   
Second, using authority granted pursuant to the state of emergency, the State Board 
suspended the application of § 11-302(b)(1) of the Election Law Article for the 2020 
 
8 Consistent with the way the State Board has identified percentages, provisional 
ballots are not included in any of the ballot totals identified in this opinion.   
9 Official Turnout (By Party and County), Election: 2016 Presidential General 
Election, State Bd. Elections, https://perma.cc/UL3S-CT4F (last visited Mar. 20, 2023). 
10 Official Turnout (By Party and County), Election: 2018 Gubernatorial General 
Election, State Bd. Elections, https://perma.cc/U4FZ-2H5C (last visited Mar. 20, 2023).  
11 
 
general election.  The State Board permitted each local board to begin processing absentee 
ballots on October 1, 2020.   
Governor Hogan announced the end of the COVID-19 state of emergency in June 
of 2021.  Exec. Order No. 21-06-15-01 (terminating various emergency orders).  The July 
19, 2022 gubernatorial primary was thus the first election to occur outside of a declared 
state of emergency in nearly four years.  In the primary, 346,113 absentee ballots were cast, 
comprising 34.8% of all ballots.11  Although much lower than during the 2020 presidential 
primary, those numbers were an order of magnitude greater than the highest total from the 
three previous gubernatorial primary elections, which was 30,122 absentee ballots cast, 
comprising 3.5% of the total, in the 2018 primary.12  
The increase over the 2018 primary was particularly stark in some of the State’s 
larger jurisdictions, including Prince George’s County (1,138% increase); Montgomery 
County (606% increase); Baltimore County (1,330% increase); Baltimore City (1,205% 
increase); Anne Arundel County (1,538% increase); Howard County (1,737% increase); 
and Frederick County (1,671% increase). 
With § 11-302(b)(1) of the Election Law Article no longer suspended by executive 
order, local boards were required to wait until after election day to open absentee ballots.  
As we discuss further below, that led to delays in reporting results in some jurisdictions.  
 
11 Official Turnout (By Party and County), Election: 2022 Gubernatorial Primary 
Election, State Bd. Elections, https://perma.cc/4KTJ-MMGH (last visited Mar. 20, 2023).  
12 Official Turnout (By Party and County), Election: 2018 Gubernatorial Primary 
Election, State Bd. Elections, https://perma.cc/R3V3-TGUK (last visited Mar. 20, 2023).   
12 
 
Those delays ultimately caused Maryland to miss some statutory deadlines related to 
finalizing the general election ballot.13   
C. 
Procedural Background 
On September 2, 2022, the State Board filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery 
County what it styled a “Petition for Emergency Remedy to Permit Early Canvassing and 
Tabulation of Mail-In Ballots for the 2022 Gubernatorial General Election.”  In the petition, 
the State Board included factual allegations concerning the relatively sparse use of absentee 
ballots before the 2020 election cycle, the significant use of them during the 2020 election 
cycle, and their continued substantial use in the 2022 primary election.  According to the 
State Board, the 2022 primary had served “as a stress test of the State’s new electoral 
paradigm,” and the results showed that the system was not up to the challenge unless local 
boards could start canvassing absentee ballots before the upcoming election.   
The State Board focused on three points in making its case that an order allowing 
local boards to begin canvassing absentee ballots before the election day for the 2022 
general election was necessary to preserve the integrity of the electoral process.  First, it 
explained why it expected to be inundated with large numbers of absentee ballots in the 
2022 general election, including:  (1) the State’s experience with the 2022 primary election 
demonstrated that increased use of absentee ballots was not exclusively a pandemic 
 
13 The deadlines missed after the 2022 primary election, none of which are relevant 
to a general election, are established to enable the State Board to comply with the 
requirement to timely “certify and publicly display” the general election ballot.  See Elec. 
Law § 9-207(a)(2).  They include deadlines for primary winners to decline a nomination, 
id. § 5-801(b)(2)(i), and for appropriate political bodies to fill any vacated nominations, id. 
§§ 5-1002 – 1004.  
13 
 
phenomenon; (2) the General Assembly had recently made it easier to vote absentee; and 
(3) based on trends from the last three gubernatorial election cycles, in which three-to-four 
times as many absentee ballots were cast in general elections as in the primaries, “one could 
reasonably anticipate that local boards of election will receive between 1,000,000 and 
1,300,000 mail-in ballots during the upcoming general election.”   
Second, the State Board explained that it would take an extended period for local 
boards to count the anticipated volume of absentee ballots.  In addition to setting forth the 
elaborate, time-consuming, largely manual requirements for canvassing absentee ballots 
discussed above, the State Board presented affidavits from representatives of five local 
boards, which explained in differing levels of detail the difficulties they expected to 
encounter if unable to begin canvassing absentee ballots early.  For example, the Acting 
Election Director of the Montgomery County Board of Elections averred that:  (1) in spite 
of the return to full availability of in-person voting for the 2022 primary, Montgomery 
County still received seven times more absentee ballots than in 2018; (2) Montgomery 
County already had 72,774 voters on its permanent absentee ballot list, including nearly 
11,000 for receipt of web delivery ballots, which are even more time-intensive to process 
than paper delivery absentee ballots; (3) during the primary absentee ballot canvass, 
Montgomery County was able to process approximately 10,000 regular absentee ballots 
per day and approximately 3,000 web delivery ballots per day; (4) based on the number of 
absentee ballots received in the 2022 primary election, the local board was forecasting 
approximately 150,000 absentee ballots in the general election; (5) the local board expected 
to “need three weeks or more of continuous canvassing . . . just to complete the canvass 
14 
 
part of the election process”; and (6) the local board did not have the capacity to “simply 
hire additional staff to process ballots more quickly,” due to a lack of physical space, an 
inability to begin the process of allowing a voter to cure deficient web delivery ballots until 
ballots are opened, the limited number of permanent board staff available to supervise 
canvassing, and budget limitations, among other reasons.   
Third, the State Board identified election-related dates and deadlines it would be in 
jeopardy of missing if it had to wait to begin the canvass until after election day, including 
those identified above in Part A.3.   
In its petition, the State Board requested that the circuit court issue an order:  
(1) suspending the application of § 11-302(a), (b)(1), and (e) for the 2022 general 
election;14 (2) allowing local boards of canvassers to meet to canvass absentee ballots 
(including tabulating those ballots) no earlier than 8:00 a.m. on October 1, 2022; and 
(3) permitting local boards of elections to release an unofficial report of absentee ballot 
tabulations no earlier than when polls close on election day and, after that, at the end of 
each canvassing day.   
Candidate Cox moved to intervene as a party defendant, which the circuit court 
granted.  Although Candidate Cox stipulated to the accuracy of the facts alleged in the 
 
14 In this opinion, we focus on Election Law § 11-302(b)(1), which contains the 
prohibition on canvassing absentee ballots until the day following election day.  The other 
provisions the State Board asked the court to suspend are:  (1) § 11-302(a), which requires 
that each local board of elections meet to canvass absentee ballots “[f]ollowing an 
election”; and (2) § 11-302(e), which requires each local board, “[a]t the end of each day 
of canvassing,” to “prepare and release a report of the unofficial results of the absentee 
ballot vote tabulation.”  The first is complementary to § 11-302(b)(1) and the second had 
to be suspended to prevent release of voting results before election day. 
15 
 
petition, he argued that the relief requested was nonetheless unavailable, because 
(1) Election Law § 8-103(b)(1) is unconstitutional and (2) the factual circumstances 
identified by the State Board did not constitute emergency circumstances because they 
were entirely foreseeable and, indeed, foreseen.   
After a hearing, the court held that § 8-103(b)(1) did not violate the separation of 
powers required by Article 8 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights and that the facts 
presented by the State Board and stipulated to by Candidate Cox constituted emergency 
circumstances.  The circuit court granted the State Board’s petition and entered an order 
providing the remedy it had requested.   
Candidate Cox noted an appeal.  Before briefing in the Appellate Court, the State 
Board filed a petition for a writ of certiorari and a request for expedited review with this 
Court, both of which we granted.  In re Petition for Emergency Remedy, 482 Md. 7 (2022).  
On October 7, 2022, following oral argument, we issued an order affirming the circuit court 
in all respects.  In re Petition for Emergency Remedy, 482 Md. 12 (2022) (per curiam).  We 
now explain the basis for that order.  
DISCUSSION 
 
Standard of Review 
We review the circuit court’s legal conclusions, including its construction of 
§ 8-103(b)(1) and its determination of constitutionality, without deference.  See Md. Rule 
8-131(c); see also Mayor & City Council of Ocean City v. Comm’rs of Worcester County, 
475 Md. 306, 311-12 (2021) (“Our interpretation of the Maryland Constitution is a question 
of law; therefore, we review a circuit court’s interpretation of the Maryland Constitution 
16 
 
under a de novo standard.”); Wheeling v. Selene Fin. LP, 473 Md. 356, 373 (2021) (“Where 
questions of law and statutory interpretation are presented, this Court reviews them de 
novo[.]”).  Because Candidate Cox stipulated to the facts presented by the State Board, 
there are no disputed factual findings for us to review.  However, the circuit court’s 
determination of whether the stipulated facts rise to the level of emergency circumstances 
is a mixed question of law and fact, which is entitled to “deferential review” by this Court.  
See, e.g., Liddy v. Lamone, 398 Md. 233, 247 (2007); Gore Enter. Holdings, Inc. v. 
Comptroller, 437 Md. 492, 504-05 (2014).   
When evaluating the constitutionality of a statute, “[w]e begin with a presumption 
that the statute is constitutional.”  Mahai v. State, 474 Md. 648, 661 (2021) (quoting Walker 
v. State, 432 Md. 587, 626 (2013)).  To overcome that presumption, the party challenging 
the statute must demonstrate “a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution, not a 
doubtful and argumentative implication.”  Mahai, 474 Md. at 662 (quoting Anderson v. 
Baker, 23 Md. 531, 628 (1865)). 
I. 
Candidate Cox contends that § 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Law Article violates the 
separation of powers guaranteed by Article 8 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights 
because it impermissibly delegates to the courts the nonjudicial function of regulating the 
timing and manner of elections.  The State Board contends that § 8-103(b)(1) does not 
offend Article 8 because adjusting the timeline of an election is a judicial function.  We 
agree with the State that § 8-103(b)(1) is constitutional, although our reasoning is a bit 
different. 
17 
 
A.  
The General Assembly Can Delegate Only Judicial Functions to 
the Judiciary. 
The Constitution of Maryland, unlike the United States Constitution, contains an 
express guarantee of the separation of powers among the respective branches of 
government.  Article 8 of the Declaration of Rights provides: 
That the Legislative, Executive and Judicial powers of Government ought to 
be forever separate and distinct from each other; and no person exercising 
the functions of one of said Departments shall assume or discharge the duties 
of any other. 
More than 170 years ago, this Court explained that “[t]he evident purpose of the 
declaration [of separation of powers] is to parcel out and separate the powers of 
government[.]”  Sugarloaf Citizens Ass’n, Inc. v. Gudis, 319 Md. 558, 569 (1990) (quoting 
Wright v. Wright’s Lessee, 2 Md. 429, 452-53 (1852)).  Doing so preserves to each branch 
of government its essential functions, protected from encroachment by either of the others, 
so that each may serve as a check and balance on the power of the others.  McCulloch v. 
Glendening, 347 Md. 272, 283-84 (1997).  The separation of powers thus serves as a 
fundamental building block of our constitutional structure that is critical to protecting 
against too great an aggregation of power in any one branch.  See, e.g., Dep’t of Transp. v. 
Armacost, 311 Md. 64, 77-78 (1987) (“Steeped in the political theories of Montesquieu 
and Locke, those who framed the constitutions of our states and of the federal government 
believed that separating the functions of government and assigning the execution of those 
functions to different branches was fundamental to good government and the preservation 
of civil liberties.”); Att’y Gen. v. Waldron, 289 Md. 683, 688 (1981) (identifying the 
purpose of the separation of powers doctrine as “not to avoid friction, but, by means of the 
18 
 
inevitable friction incident to the distribution of the governmental powers among three 
departments, to save the people from autocracy” (quoting Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 
52, 293 (1926) (Brandeis, J., dissenting))); Robey v. Prince George’s County, 92 Md. 150, 
161 (1900) (stating that permitting the same officers to exercise the functions of multiple 
branches of government “would be a menace to civil liberty”).  
Although fundamental, the doctrine of separation of powers is not rigid and does 
not adhere to “clear lines of demarcation.”  McCulloch, 347 Md. at 283 (internal quotation 
marks omitted).  The three branches are thus not “wholly separate and unmixed[.]”  Murphy 
v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 478 Md. 333, 370 (2022) (quoting Crane v. Meginnis, 1 G. & J. 
463, 476 (1829)); see also McCulloch, 347 Md. at 284 (“[T]he separation of powers 
doctrine does not require absolute separation between the branches of government.”).  
Recognizing that the functions of each branch of government must necessarily overlap to 
some degree, we have stated that the doctrine should be applied with a “sensible degree of 
elasticity,” and not “with doctrinaire rigor.”  Dep’t of Nat. Res. v. Linchester Sand & Gravel 
Corp., 274 Md. 211, 220 (1975); see also Murphy, 478 Md. at 371.  Nevertheless, “this 
constitutional ‘elasticity’ cannot be stretched to a point where, in effect, there no longer 
exists a separation of governmental power[.]”  Linchester, 274 Md. at 220.  Thus, no branch 
of government may intrude on the core functions of either of the others.  Waldron, 289 Md. 
at 688-89. 
One way in which we have consistently maintained separation of the Judiciary from 
the core functions of the other branches is by “repeatedly [holding] that ‘Article 8 prohibits 
the courts from performing nonjudicial functions.’”  Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 569 (quoting 
19 
 
Reyes v. Prince George’s County, 281 Md 279, 295 (1977)); see also, e.g., Duffy v. 
Conaway, 295 Md. 242, 254 (1983) (“[A] court has no jurisdiction to perform a nonjudicial 
function, and any enactment which attempts to confer such a function on a court is 
unconstitutional.”); Cromwell v. Jackson, 188 Md. 8, 28 (1947) (“[W]hen this Court is of 
opinion that the Legislature has exceeded its authority in placing a non-judicial function 
on the Court, we should not hesitate in declaring the Act void.”); Prince George’s County 
Comm’rs v. Mitchell, 97 Md. 330, 340 (1903) (holding unconstitutional a statute that 
indirectly required “[j]udges to discharge non-judicial functions”); Bd. of Supervisors of 
Election for Wicomico County v. Todd, 97 Md. 247, 263-64 (1903) (stating that “[c]ourts 
and [j]udges provided for in our system shall, not only, not be required but shall not be 
permitted to exercise any power or to perform any trust or to assume any duty not pertaining 
to or connected with the administering of the judicial function”); Beasley v. Ridout, 94 Md. 
641, 659 (1902) (stating that “[j]udges cannot be compelled to perform services not of a 
judicial nature”); Baltimore City v. Bonaparte, 93 Md. 156, 162 (1901) (holding that the 
“Legislature had no authority to impose” a nonjudicial function on judges).  Thus, even 
when the General Assembly expressly delegates a task to the Judiciary, as it has done in 
§ 8-103(b)(1), the delegation complies with Article 8 only if the task to be performed 
constitutes a judicial function.15   
 
15 In discussing separation of powers vis-à-vis judicial action in Murphy v. Liberty 
Mutual Insurance Co., this Court identified “four broad categories” of cases in which we 
have “addressed the Judiciary’s place in Maryland’s system of government”: 
(1) those involving a legislative attempt to assign to the courts a task that had 
nothing to do with adjudicating cases . . . ; (2) those involving actions taken 
20 
 
In considering whether a particular task is a judicial function, our focus is on the 
act, not the person performing it.  See Schisler v. State, 394 Md. 519, 573-74 (2006) (stating 
that the “character” of a function “is dependent on its qualities, not on the mere accident as 
to the person who has been designated to do it” (quoting Robey, 92 Md. at 161-62)).  
Recognizing that there is no “precise definition” of judicial function that can be applied in 
every case, Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 570, our caselaw reflects two factors we have used to 
determine whether a task is a judicial function:  (1) whether the task is of a nature that has 
traditionally been performed by the judicial branch, see, e.g., Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 570; 
Linchester, 274 Md. at 226; Todd, 97 Md. at 252; and (2) whether the legislative body has 
provided sufficient guidance limiting the court’s discretion so that the court is not called 
upon to make a decision based on policy, expediency, or politics, see, e.g., Sugarloaf, 319 
Md. at 568-70, 572 (1990); Cromwell, 188 Md. at 24-28; Talbot County v. Miles Point 
Prop., LLC, 415 Md. 372, 391-92 (2010); Schisler, 394 Md. at 574.   
First, we have considered whether the delegated task requires a court to:  (1) act in 
a manner that is inconsistent with the “standards or rules normally applied by courts in the 
 
by, or requested of, a particular court in a particular proceeding that 
encroached upon a legislative or executive function; (3) those that concern 
whether the adoption of a particular rule by the Court of Appeals exceeded 
the Court’s authority under Article IV, § 18(a) to adopt rules and regulations 
concerning “the practice and procedure” in the courts; and (4) those 
involving whether a particular rule or other action by the Judiciary exceeded 
the rulemaking authority of the Court of Appeals under that same section 
concerning “the administration” of the courts. 
478 Md. at 373-74 (footnotes omitted).  Here, we are concerned with the first category, 
involving express legislative delegation. 
21 
 
exercise of their usual judicial functions,” Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 570 (quoting Beasley, 94 
Md. at 658-59); or (2) exercise powers “not within the ‘ordinary or recognized powers’” 
of a court, Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 570 (quoting Close v. Southern Md. Agr. Assoc., 134 Md. 
629, 642 (1919)).  In Linchester, we collected examples of delegated tasks we had found 
to not constitute judicial functions, including to: 
approve accounts of county officers before payment, Robey v. Prince 
George’s County, 92 Md. 150 (1900); perform duties tantamount to a board 
of review in assessing property for tax purposes, Baltimore City v. 
Bonaparte, 93 Md. 156 (1901); appoint a board of visitors to supervise the 
county jail, Beasley v. Ridout, 94 Md. 641 (1902); provide for referendum 
concerning issuance of liquor licenses, Board of Supervisors v. Todd, 97 Md. 
247 (1903); issue licenses permitting pari-mutuel betting on horse races, 
Close v. Southern Md. Agr. Asso., 134 Md. 629 (1919); and issue liquor 
licenses, Cromwell v. Jackson, 188 Md. 8 (1947).   
274 Md. at 226 (Atlantic Reporter parallel cites omitted).  In Todd, for example, we 
concluded that a law requiring a court “to order an election” on the question of whether to 
permit issuance of a liquor license was unconstitutional because it did not relate in any way 
to a judicial proceeding or judicial determination.16  97 Md. at 253.   
Second, we have considered whether the delegating legislative body has provided 
sufficient guidance for the court’s exercise of its discretion such that it is not called upon 
 
16 In a somewhat related inquiry, we have considered whether tasks performed by 
administrative agencies rely on individual grounds and adjudicative facts as opposed to 
general grounds and legislative facts.  See Talbot County, 415 Md. at 386-87.  Adjudicative 
facts generally include “questions of who did what, where, when, how, why, [and] with 
what motive or intent[.]”  Id. at 387-88 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting 
Montgomery County v. Woodward & Lothrop, Inc., 280 Md. 686, 712 (1977)).  Legislative 
facts, by contrast, are typically “general facts which help the tribunal decide questions of 
law and policy and discretion.”  Id. at 388 (quoting Woodward & Lothrop, 280 Md. at 712).  
The more a task delegated to a court is based on individual grounds and adjudicative facts 
that resolve a specific dispute, the more likely it is to be viewed as a judicial function.   
22 
 
to render a decision based on policy, expediency, or politics.  Thus, in Sugarloaf, we held 
unconstitutional a Montgomery County Code provision that allowed a court, in certain 
circumstances where there had been an ethical breach, to void an official act “if the court 
deems voiding the action to be in the best . . . interest of the public.”  319 Md. at 566 
(omitting emphasis added in Sugarloaf) (quoting Montgomery County Code § 19A-22(b)).  
We concluded that it was improper to provide a court with the “unguided discretion” to 
decide whether to allow an official act to stand based solely on the court’s assessment of 
whether voiding the act was in the public interest.  319 Md. at 572.  That, our predecessors 
held, was a “question[] of policy and expediency” that was a legislative, not a judicial, 
function.  Id.   
We reached a similar decision in Cromwell, which concerned a law that delegated 
to judges the task of determining whether to issue liquor licenses.  188 Md. at 11, 13.  The 
law required judges “to pass upon at least ten questions.”  Id. at 25.  Several of the 
questions, such as those calling for determinations as to whether the petitioners lived or 
owned property in the vicinity and whether they believed statements in the application to 
be true, were not problematic because they were “questions of fact and law upon which the 
[j]udge is required to exercise . . . judgment after hearing the evidence.”  Id.  The remaining 
questions were of a different kind.  They asked, for example, whether the applicant was “a 
fit person” for a liquor license; whether the place where liquor would be sold was “a proper 
one”; and whether there was a “[p]roper allocation of licenses” in the area.  Id. at 25-26.  
Those questions were “not questions of law or of fact, nor mixed questions of law and 
23 
 
fact.”  Id. at 26.  Instead, they were questions of “public policy or expediency depending 
upon many matters,” with “no rule to guide the [c]ourt” in rendering a decision.  Id.   
Notably, the Court contrasted one of the impermissible questions posed by the law 
it struck down—whether an individual is “a fit person” for a liquor license—with the 
superficially similar question, addressed regularly by courts, of whether an individual is fit 
to have custody of a child.  Id. at 26.  As to the latter question, the Court reasoned, courts 
had a “firmly established,” “definite guide” for the exercise of their discretion, applicable 
“in all cases,” which is that “the welfare of the [child] is the primary consideration in 
determining whether a person is fit to have custody[.]”  Id. at 26-27.  The difference lay 
not in the terminology of the question, as both inquiries focused on the fitness of the 
individual, but on the existence of guidance for the exercise of the court’s discretion. 
B. 
The Task Delegated to the Circuit Court by Election Law 
§ 8-103(b)(1) Is a Judicial Function. 
Before applying the two complementary factors to determine whether the task 
delegated by § 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Law Article is a judicial function, we must be 
clear on what that task is.  We therefore return to the text of § 8-103(b)(1): 
If emergency circumstances, not constituting a declared state of emergency, 
interfere with the electoral process, the State Board or a local board, after 
conferring with the State Board, may petition a circuit court to take any action 
the court considers necessary to provide a remedy that is in the public interest 
and protects the integrity of the electoral process. 
The provision has four components.  The first three define the preconditions to court action:  
(1) there must be “emergency circumstances” that do not rise to the level of “a declared 
24 
 
state of emergency”; (2) those circumstances must “interfere with the electoral process”; 
and (3) the State Board or a local board must “petition a circuit court” to intervene.  
The fourth component is the circuit court’s authority, if the three preconditions are 
satisfied, to impose a remedy that both “is in the public interest” and “protects the integrity 
of the electoral process.”  Inasmuch as a remedy that protects electoral integrity is 
necessarily in the public interest to the extent that it does so, and considering the context 
provided by the preconditions, we interpret these dual requirements as authorizing a 
remedy that both (1) protects electoral integrity by addressing the emergency 
circumstances at issue, and (2) is not otherwise contrary to the public interest.   
Applying the two complementary factors discussed above, we conclude that 
§ 8-103(b)(1) assigns a judicial function.  First, the task is of a nature that has traditionally 
been performed by the judicial branch, both procedurally and substantively.  Section 
8-103(b)(1) contemplates a decidedly judicial proceeding:  initiated by a petition; implicitly 
allowing for the opposition of an adversarial party; setting forth statutory factors that can 
be established by evidentiary proof of adjudicatory facts; and, if harm meeting the statutory 
threshold is proven, calling for the fashioning of an appropriate remedy.  Specifically, the 
court is called upon to determine whether particular emergency circumstances identified 
by a board of elections (1) exist and (2) interfere with the electoral process; as well as 
whether the court can impose a remedy that will (3) protect the integrity of the electoral 
process from the impending threat and (4) not be contrary to the public interest generally.  
The court is thus called upon to resolve discrete issues based on adjudicatory facts, not 
25 
 
“general facts which help the tribunal decide questions of law and policy and discretion.”  
Talbot County, 415 Md. at 387-88 (quoting Woodward & Lothrup, 280 Md. at 712).   
With respect to substance, the Election Law Article is replete with provisions 
permitting, contemplating, or requiring court intervention when necessary to ensure the 
integrity of the electoral process.  Subtitle 2 of Title 12 of the Election Law Article, titled 
“Judicial Review of Elections,” “applies to an[y] issue arising in an election conducted 
under this article.”  Elec. Law § 12-201.  Section 12-202(a) permits a registered voter to 
“seek judicial relief from any act or omission relating to an election, whether or not the 
election has been held[,]” based on an allegation that the act or omission is inconsistent 
with the Election Law Article or other law, or “may change or has changed the outcome of 
the election.”  In any such proceeding in which a court determines that an “act or omission 
materially affected the rights of interested parties or the purity of the elections process” 
and changed, or may change, the outcome of an election, the court is authorized to impose 
an appropriate remedy.  Id. § 12-204.  Such a remedy may include declaring void the result 
of an election already held, or postponing and rescheduling an election not yet held.  Id.  
Consistent with the overarching concern of maintaining the integrity of the electoral 
process, all such judicial proceedings must be expedited.  Id. § 12-203.17   
 
17 See also, e.g., Elec. Law § 3-602(c), (d) (providing for judicial review of 
determinations concerning voter eligibility, and requiring the State Board to make any 
corrections required by court order); id. § 5-305(b), (d) (permitting a registered voter to file 
a petition in circuit court challenging the residency of a candidate and requiring expedited 
judicial review); id. § 6-209 (providing for judicial review of decisions related to 
sufficiency of petitions to appear on the ballot); id. § 9-207(b) (permitting the Supreme 
Court of Maryland, on petition of the State Board, to postpone the date for certifying and 
publicly displaying the ballot “in extraordinary circumstances”); id. § 9-209 (providing for 
26 
 
Similarly, many pages of the Maryland Reports are filled with decisions 
adjudicating election disputes and weighing whether judicial action was required to protect 
the integrity of the electoral process.  See, e.g., Ademiluyi v. Egbuonu, 466 Md. 80, 136-37 
(2019) (enjoining the State Board from certifying a general election ballot because a listed 
candidate was not qualified); Cabrera v. Penate, 439 Md. 99, 101 (2014) (ordering an 
ineligible candidate’s name removed from a primary election ballot); Fritszche v. 
Maryland State Bd. of Elections, 397 Md. 331, 347 (2007) (concluding that the Supreme 
Court was compelled by precedent to exclude votes contained in noncompliant absentee 
ballots “in order to safeguard the election process”); Oglesby v. Williams, 372 Md. 360, 
364, 384 (2002) (declaring a candidate ineligible for failure to satisfy constitutional 
residency requirements); Montgomery County v. Bd. of Supervisors of Elections for 
Montgomery County, 311 Md. 512, 513-17 (1988) (enjoining the Board of Supervisors of 
Elections from placing certain proposed questions amending a county charter on the 
general election ballot because they conflicted with a public general law); Lamb v. 
Hammond, 308 Md. 286, 308-09 (1987) (holding that ballots that did not comply with 
statutory requirements could not be canvassed); Fowler v. Bd. of Supervisors of Elections 
for Prince George’s County, 259 Md. 615, 618-19 (1970) (choosing not to invalidate an 
election for irregularities because no individual voter was disenfranchised); Valle v. 
 
“judicial review of the content and arrangement, or to correct any administrative error,” on 
the ballot once certified); id. § 9-404(c) (implicitly recognizing the right of a court, by 
order, to “extend[] the time for closing the polls”); id. § 11-303(d)(4)(iii) (implicitly 
recognizing the right of a court, by order, to “extend[] the time for closing the polls”); id. 
§ 11-304 (authorizing appeals from a local board’s decision to reject or not reject an 
absentee ballot).  
27 
 
Pressman, 229 Md. 591, 596-99 (1962) (invalidating a nomination of a candidate for 
State’s Attorney made by a body lacking the statutory power to nominate); Smith v. 
Hackett, 129 Md. 73, 76-77 (1916) (holding that votes cast at a polling place located outside 
the voters’ precinct were properly counted because the election supervisors, not the voters, 
were responsible for the improper location).  Indeed, the prospect of judicial intervention 
is a primary check ensuring the integrity of the electoral process. 
Second, the terms of § 8-103(b)(1) provide more than sufficient guidance to render 
a court’s decision an exercise in judicial, rather than legislative, discretion.  Specifically, 
the court may impose a remedy only if it finds the existence of emergency circumstances 
that interfere with an election, and its remedy must protect the integrity of the electoral 
process by addressing those specific emergency circumstances.  Candidate Cox’s contrary 
contention focuses almost exclusively on the requirement that the court’s remedy be “in 
the public interest,” equating that requirement to the flawed ordinance in Sugarloaf, which 
permitted a court to void an official action if it found that doing so would be “in the public 
interest.”  See Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 573.  Candidate Cox’s reliance on that similarity in 
language is misplaced.  As an initial matter, the sole criterion in the ordinance at issue in 
Sugarloaf was whether voiding the official action would be in the public interest, 
seemingly leaving the matter entirely to how the court felt about the official action.  Here, 
by contrast, § 8-103(b)(1) also requires that any remedy protect the integrity of the electoral 
process.  And unlike the ordinance in Sugarloaf, which permitted the court to make the 
permanent policy decision to void or maintain an official action, § 8-103(b)(1) necessarily 
contemplates a temporary remedy narrowly tailored to addressing an immediate threat. 
28 
 
Furthermore, contrary to Candidate Cox’s argument, there is nothing inherently 
nonjudicial in considering whether a remedy is in the public interest.  Indeed, Rule 
15-504(a)(2)(D) requires that a court determining whether to grant a temporary restraining 
order consider, as one of four factors, whether granting the order would be “contrary to the 
public interest.”  We impose the same obligation on a court determining whether to issue 
a preliminary injunction.  See, e.g., Ademiluyi, 466 Md. at 114 (quoting Eastside Vend 
Distribs., Inc. v. Pepsi Bottling Grp., Inc., 396 Md. 219, 240 (2006)); State v. Falcon, 451 
Md. 138, 157 (2017) (quoting Schade v. Md. State Bd. of Elections, 401 Md. 1, 36 (2007)); 
accord Ramirez v. Collier, 142 S. Ct. 1264, 1275 (2022) (identifying one of four factors 
that a party seeking a preliminary injunction in federal court must establish as “that an 
injunction is in the public interest” (quoting Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 
U.S. 7, 20 (2008))).  
The problem in Sugarloaf was thus not that the court was directed by the ordinance 
to consider the public interest.  The problem was that the court was directed to make what 
was essentially a legislative determination based solely on the court’s view of whether the 
official action was in the public interest.  Sugarloaf, 319 Md. at 572-73.  Here, by contrast, 
the circuit court’s task in determining whether to impose a short-term remedy to address 
emergency circumstances affecting the integrity of an impending election is a judicial 
function.  There is nothing inappropriate in the General Assembly directing the court to 
also consider the public interest in fashioning its remedy.   
29 
 
In sum, the task the General Assembly delegated in § 8-103(b)(1) is a judicial 
function.  That delegation thus does not offend Article 8 of the Declaration of Rights and 
§ 8-103(b)(1) is not facially unconstitutional. 
C. 
The Circuit Court’s Remedy Is Not Unconstitutional as Applied.  
Candidate Cox contends that even if § 8-103(b)(1) is not facially unconstitutional, 
it is unconstitutional as it was applied in this case because the circuit court’s remedy had 
the effect of voiding a gubernatorial veto.  We disagree. 
As noted, in 2022, the General Assembly passed Senate Bill 163 and House Bill 
862, which would have permitted local boards to begin canvassing absentee ballots eight 
days before the beginning of early voting.  Governor Hogan vetoed the bills.  In doing so, 
however, he issued a statement that lauded the aspect of the bills that would have permitted 
early ballot canvassing.  His veto, he said, was addressed to the lack of additional ballot 
security measures.  Candidate Cox contends that the circuit court’s ruling has effectively 
and impermissibly overridden Governor Hogan’s veto. 
To be sure, it is not the role of a court to wade into a dispute between the political 
branches to impose an outcome different from that produced by the political process 
prescribed by our State Constitution.  That is not what occurred here.  The remedy imposed 
by the circuit court was a temporary, emergency measure that had effect in only one 
election, not a modification of State law with lasting effect, and it was imposed pursuant 
to an express statutory authorization that was itself passed by a General Assembly and 
signed by a Governor.  See 1998 Md. Laws ch. 585.  Moreover, even as to the November 
2022 election itself:  (1) as we will explain in more detail below, the emergency 
30 
 
circumstances pursuant to which the court acted did not exist, at least not to their full extent, 
at the time of the Governor’s vetoes; and (2) the Governor favored permitting the early 
canvassing of absentee ballots, even absent emergency circumstances.  In short, this was 
not a circumstance in which the court was asked to, or did, weigh in to tip the scales in a 
policy dispute between the political branches.  
II. 
Candidate Cox also contends that even if § 8-103(b)(1) is constitutional, the circuit 
court erred in finding that “emergency circumstances” existed that justified the court’s 
intervention.  We will first discuss the meaning of “emergency circumstances,” as used in 
§ 8-103(b)(1), before turning to the court’s determination that such circumstances existed 
and justified relief here.   
A. 
Statutory Construction of “Emergency Circumstances” 
The goal of statutory construction “is to ascertain and effectuate the actual intent of 
the General Assembly.”  Thornton Mellon LLC v. Adrianne Dennis Exempt Tr., 478 Md. 
280, 313 (2022) (quoting Mercer v. Thomas B. Finan Ctr., 476 Md. 652, 694 (2021)).  
“[T]o determine [the General Assembly’s] purpose or policy, we look first to the language 
of the statute, giving it its natural and ordinary meaning.  We do so on the tacit theory that 
the General Assembly is presumed to have meant what it said and said what it meant.”  
Peterson v. State, 467 Md. 713, 727 (2020) (quoting Bellard v. State, 452 Md. 467, 481 
(2017)).  In interpreting a statute’s plain language, we “[r]ead[] the statute as a whole . . . 
to ‘ensure that no word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, 
meaningless or nugatory.’”  Spevak v. Montgomery County, 480 Md. 562, 572 (2022) 
31 
 
(quoting Moore v. RealPage Util. Mgmt., Inc., 476 Md. 501, 510 (2021)).  In doing so, 
“[o]ur inquiry is not confined to the specific statutory provision at issue on appeal.  Instead, 
‘[t]he plain language must be viewed within the context of the statutory scheme to which 
it belongs, considering the purpose, aim or policy of the Legislature in enacting the 
statute.’”  Berry v. Queen, 469 Md. 674, 687 (2020) (internal citation and some quotation 
marks omitted) (quoting Johnson v. State, 467 Md. 362, 372 (2020)). 
If the plain language of a statute is unambiguous, “we need not look beyond the 
statutory language to determine the General Assembly’s intent,” Peterson, 467 Md. at 727 
(quoting Bellard, 452 Md. at 481), although “we often find it prudent” to do so, Berry, 469 
Md. at 687. 
In its petition, the State Board argued that the anticipated volume of absentee ballots 
in the November 2022 general election, combined with the limited capacity of the local 
boards to canvass those ballots, satisfied the conditions for court intervention pursuant to 
§ 8-103(b)(1).  Taking the contrary position, Candidate Cox argued that those 
circumstances did not constitute “emergency circumstances” for purposes of § 8-103(b)(1).  
Our analysis therefore “begins by discerning the ordinary and popular meaning,” Berry, 
469 Md. at 688, of “emergency circumstances.” 
The ordinary meaning of “circumstances” is not controversial.  A “circumstance” is 
“a fact or condition connected with or relevant to an event or action.”  Circumstance, New 
Oxford American Dictionary 315 (3d ed. 2010).18  The focus of the parties’ arguments is 
 
18 See also Circumstance, Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 225 (11th ed. 
2014) (defining “circumstance” as “a condition, fact, or event accompanying, conditioning, 
32 
 
on the meaning of “emergency,” which dictionaries generally define by reference to the 
dual concepts of (1) urgency, i.e., a situation requiring immediate attention to prevent harm, 
and (2) lack of foreseeability, i.e., a situation that was unexpected or unforeseen.  See, e.g., 
Emergency, Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 407 (11th ed. 2014) (defining 
“emergency” as “an unforeseen combination of circumstances or the resulting state that 
calls for immediate action” and “an urgent need for assistance or relief”); Emergency, New 
Oxford American Dictionary 567 (3d ed. 2010) (defining “emergency” as “a serious, 
unexpected, and often dangerous situation requiring immediate action”); Emergency, 
Black’s Law Dictionary 660 (11th ed. 2019) (defining “emergency” as “[a] sudden and 
serious event or an unforeseen change in circumstances that calls for immediate action to 
avert, control, or remedy harm;” or “[a]n urgent need for relief or help”).  According to the 
popular, ordinary definitions of the terms, therefore, “emergency circumstances” are 
unexpected or unforeseen conditions that require immediate attention to prevent harm.19   
The statutory context in which the relevant terms appear is consistent with the 
breadth of that definition.  See 75-80 Properties, L.L.C. v. Rale, Inc., 470 Md. 598, 624 
(2020) (stating that the “meaning of the plainest language is controlled by the context in 
 
or determining another[.]”); Circumstance, Black’s Law Dictionary 306 (11th ed. 2019) 
(defining “circumstance” as “[a]n accompanying or accessory fact, event, or condition, 
such as a piece of evidence that indicates the probability of an event”). 
19 Black’s Law Dictionary also includes a definition of “emergency circumstances,” 
by cross-reference to “exigent circumstances,” that is consistent with our interpretation: 
A situation that demands unusual or immediate action and that may allow 
people to circumvent usual procedures . . . .  Also termed emergency 
circumstances . . . 
Exigent Circumstances, Black’s Law Dictionary 306 (11th ed. 2019). 
33 
 
which it appears” (quoting Md. Dep’t of the Env’t v. County Comm’rs of Carroll County, 
465 Md. 169, 203 (2019))).  Section 8-103 contains two subsections.  Subsection (a) applies 
“[i]n the event of a state of emergency, declared by the Governor in accordance with the 
provisions of law, that interferes with the electoral process[.]”  Elec. Law § 8-103(a).  In 
that context, emergency has a specific meaning defined by statute:  “the imminent threat 
or occurrence of severe or widespread loss of life, injury, or other health impacts, property 
damage or destruction, social or economic disruption, or environmental degradation from 
natural, technological, or human-made causes.”20  Md. Code Ann., Pub. Safety § 14-101(c) 
(2022 Repl.) (defining “emergency”); id. § 14-107(a)(1) (“If the Governor finds that an 
emergency has developed or is impending due to any cause, the Governor shall declare a 
state of emergency by executive order or proclamation.”).  During a declared state of 
emergency, the Governor has the authority to postpone an election or specify alternate 
voting locations or systems.  Elec. Law § 8-103(a).   
Section 8-103(b)(1) applies to “emergency circumstances, not constituting a 
declared state of emergency.”  Thus, “emergency circumstances” for purposes of 
§ 8-103(b)(1) are circumstances that, while emergencies, fall below the threshold required 
 
20 The current definition of “emergency” for purposes of a declared state of 
emergency was enacted effective October 1, 2021, pursuant to Chapter 288 of the 2020 
Laws of Maryland.  Before October 1, 2021, § 14-101(c) of the Public Safety Article 
defined an emergency as “the threat or occurrence of:  (1) a hurricane, tornado, storm, 
flood, high water, wind-driven water, tidal wave, earthquake, landslide, mudslide, 
snowstorm, drought, fire, explosion, and any other disaster in any part of the State that 
requires State assistance to supplement local efforts in order to save lives and protect public 
health and safety; or (2) an enemy attack, act of terrorism, or public health catastrophe.”  
Pub. Safety § 14-101(c) (2011 Repl.).   
34 
 
to declare a state of emergency.  The statute does not otherwise provide insight into the 
meaning of “emergency circumstances.”21   
Although legislative history is scant, what exists also supports a broad interpretation 
of “emergency circumstances” that is consistent with its plain meaning.  The predecessor 
statute to § 8-103 was adopted by the General Assembly in 1998 as part of a comprehensive 
revision of the State’s election laws.  See 1998 Md. Laws ch. 585.  According to a drafter’s 
note, the relevant language in Senate Bill 118 (1998), which became Chapter 585 of the 
1998 Laws of Maryland, was adopted “to address the potential problem of a wide range of 
‘emergencies.’”  S.B. 118, 1998 Leg., 412th Sess. (Md. 1998) at 118.  That language, in 
turn, seems to have originated in a report of a commission formed to revise the former 
Article 33, then Maryland’s Election Code, see Comm’n to Revise the Election Code, 
Report of the Commission to Revise the Election Code 56 (Dec. 1997), and also appeared 
in a bill analysis prepared by the Senate Economic and Environmental Affairs Committee, 
see Bill Analysis, Senate Economic and Environmental Affairs Committee, in Bill File for 
S.B. 118, 1998 Leg., 412th Sess. (Md. 1998).  Other than that thrice-repeated phrase 
 
21 The term “emergency circumstances” is used in other places in the Maryland 
Code in a manner that is consistent with our interpretation.  See, e.g., Md. Code Ann., Env’t 
§ 9-406(b) (2014 Repl.; 2022 Supp.) (permitting action by the Secretary to provide safe 
drinking water “[i]f, in the judgment of the Secretary, emergency circumstances exist with 
respect to a need for safe drinking water”); Md. Code Ann., Pub. Safety § 12-808(c) (2022 
Repl.) (permitting an owner or lessee to register an elevator unit with less than 60 days’ 
notice “[u]nder emergency circumstances”); id. § 12-909(f)(1) (providing exception to 
requirement to provide 30 days’ notice before installation of a boiler or pressure vessel 
“[u]nder emergency circumstances”); Md. Code Ann., Health-Gen. § 19-126 (2019 Repl.) 
(requiring decisions on an application for a certificate of need to be consistent with the 
State health plan and other standards “except in emergency circumstances posing a threat 
to public health”). 
35 
 
suggesting an intent for the provision to operate broadly, the legislative history also does 
not shed light on the meaning of “emergency circumstances.” 
In sum, based on plain language and context, and consistent with legislative history, 
“emergency circumstances” for purposes of § 8-103(b)(1) includes any unexpected or 
unforeseen conditions that require immediate attention to prevent harm, but that do not rise 
to the level of urgency or threatened harm required for a declared state of emergency.   
B. 
The Circuit Court Did Not Err in Concluding that the Anticipated 
Volume of Absentee Ballots in the November 2022 General 
Election Constituted “Emergency Circumstances” for Purposes 
of § 8-103(b)(1). 
Candidate Cox contends that the anticipated volume of absentee ballots expected to 
be cast in the November 2022 general election could not have constituted emergency 
circumstances as of September 2, 2022, when the State Board filed its petition, because the 
problem had been foreseen in time to have made a legislative change during the General 
Assembly’s 2022 session.  As support for that view, Candidate Cox points primarily to:  
(1) the General Assembly’s passage of Senate Bill 163 and House Bill 862 in 2022; 
(2) Governor Hogan’s veto letter, which noted that permitting pre-election day absentee 
ballot canvassing “would allow hard working election officials to get a much needed head 
start on the deluge of ballot envelopes” (emphasis added); and (3) the experience of the 
2020 elections.   
The State Board concedes that it was foreseeable that there would be an increased 
volume of absentee ballots cast in 2022 as compared to pre-pandemic elections.  The State 
Board contends, however, that “[e]lection officials could not have reasonably anticipated 
36 
 
the degree to which voters would continue to use mail-in ballots after the COVID-19 health 
emergency had passed” and that the magnitude of the increased volume of ballots “and its 
effect on the electoral system statewide was entirely unknown” until after the July 2022 
primary election.  The circuit court agreed with the State Board.  We find no error in that 
determination.   
As noted, to constitute “emergency circumstances,” the conditions at issue must 
reflect both urgency and a lack of foreseeability.  Here, urgency is not disputed, but the 
record concerning foreseeability is mixed.  On the one hand, Candidate Cox is plainly 
correct that it was foreseeable that there would be an increased volume of absentee ballots 
cast in 2022, as compared to all pre-pandemic elections, based on the successful use of 
absentee ballots by many Marylanders in the 2020 primary and general elections and laws 
passed in 2021 making it even easier to vote that way.  Candidate Cox is also correct that 
the General Assembly, the Governor, and the State Board all foresaw a benefit in 
permitting canvassing of absentee ballots before election day to accommodate the 
increased volume and avoid post-election delays.   
On the other hand, the record also supports the State Board’s position that the full 
extent of the anticipated increased volume of absentee ballots, and its accompanying 
disruption, did not become apparent until after the 2022 primary election.  The 2020 
primary and general elections both occurred within the first year of the COVID-19 
pandemic, at a time when many businesses and government entities remained closed and 
many people were venturing out of their houses only seldomly.  Even so, the percentage of 
Marylanders who voted by absentee ballot dropped from approximately 97% in the June 
37 
 
2020 primary to approximately half in the November 2020 general election.  The July 2022 
primary election took place more than 20 months after the 2020 general election, more than 
a year after the Governor’s emergency declaration was lifted, and at a time when in-person 
voting options had largely returned to pre-pandemic norms.  Given the unprecedented 
circumstances that had accompanied the 2020 elections, it was thus not unreasonable to 
expect that the percentage of absentee ballots cast would again drop significantly. 
The percentage of votes cast by absentee ballot during the 2022 primary election 
did indeed fall as compared to the 2020 general election, but not nearly to pre-pandemic 
levels.  Moreover, as discussed above, processing those ballots led to significant delays in 
releasing election results.  Given the historical trend of the number of absentee ballots cast 
increasing three-to-fourfold between a primary election and the succeeding general 
election, the experience of the 2022 primary election caused the State Board to forecast the 
likelihood of a volume of absentee ballots cast in that year’s general election that would 
overwhelm the ability of local boards to process them, resulting in long delays in releasing 
results, missed statutory deadlines, and decreased public confidence in the integrity of the 
election.  See, e.g., Richard H. Pildes, Election Law in an Age of Distrust, 74 Stan. L. Rev. 
Online 100, 107 (May 2022) (“[W]e cannot ignore the continuing risk that the longer it 
takes to resolve the vote count, the more distrust will feed on that delay.”).  Significantly, 
there is no evidence in the record that contradicts the State Board’s evidence that it was 
unaware of the full scope of the anticipated volume of absentee ballots to be cast in the 
November 2022 general election, or of the likely consequences of that volume, until after 
the July 2022 primary election. 
38 
 
For the foregoing reasons, we find no error in the circuit court’s determination that 
the conditions confronting the State Board at the time it filed its petition constituted 
“emergency circumstances . . . [that] interfere with the electoral process.”  The circuit court 
thus correctly rejected Candidate Cox’s challenge to the court’s authority to impose “a 
remedy that is in the public interest and protects the integrity of the electoral process.”  For 
that reason, we affirmed the circuit court’s judgment. 
To provide guidance for future proceedings under § 8-103(b)(1), we offer one final 
note.  In the circuit court and on appeal, Candidate Cox challenged the authority of the 
circuit court to impose a remedy.  He did not, however, challenge any specific aspect of 
the remedy requested by the State Board or imposed by the circuit court.  As a result, we 
have no opportunity here to assess the appropriateness of the particulars of the remedy.  
However, because such proceedings do not require participation of an opposing party who 
might be able to seek further review in future proceedings, we make two observations.  
First, as the State Board conceded at oral argument, any remedy a circuit court imposes 
pursuant to § 8-103(b)(1) must necessarily be tailored to address only the particular 
“emergency circumstances . . . [that] interfere with the electoral process.”  Second, 
considering the extraordinary and potentially non-adversarial nature of proceedings under 
§ 8-103(b)(1), it is incumbent upon a court to scrutinize the evidentiary support for a 
petition to ensure that the petitioning board carries its burden not only as to the 
circumstances justifying court intervention but also as to the particulars of the remedy 
sought.  The court’s ruling on a petition should therefore explain the basis for the court’s 
39 
 
conclusion that its remedy is appropriately tailored to address the particular emergency 
circumstances at issue without going further than is necessary under the circumstances. 
CONCLUSION 
In summary, we hold that:  (1) § 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Law Article does not 
violate the separation of powers guaranteed by Article 8 of the Maryland Declaration of 
Rights, either on its face or as applied in this case; and (2) the circuit court did not err in 
determining that the State Board carried its burden of demonstrating that the anticipated 
volume of absentee ballots to be cast in the November 2022 general election constituted 
“emergency circumstances, not constituting a declared state of emergency, [that] interfere 
with the electoral process,” see Elec. Law § 8-103(b)(1). 
For those reasons, we affirmed the opinion and order of the Circuit Court for 
Montgomery County entered on September 26, 2022. 
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE SUPREME COURT 
 
OF MARYLAND* 
 
No. 21 
 
September Term, 2022 
______________________________________ 
 
IN RE: PETITION FOR EMERGENCY 
REMEDY BY THE MARYLAND STATE 
BOARD OF ELECTIONS 
______________________________________ 
 
Fader, C.J. 
Watts 
Hotten 
Booth 
Biran 
Eaves 
Adkins, Sally D. (Senior Justice, 
Specially Assigned), 
 
 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Concurring Opinion by Biran, J. 
______________________________________ 
 
Filed: March 29, 2023 
 
* At the November 8, 2022 general election, the 
voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional 
amendment changing the name of the Court of 
Appeals of Maryland to the Supreme Court of 
Maryland. The name change took effect on 
December 14, 2022.
Circuit Court for Montgomery County 
Case No. C-15-CV-22-003258 
Argued: October 7, 2022 
 
 
I join the Opinion for the Court in full. As Chief Justice Fader explains, Intervenor 
Daniel Cox challenged only the authority of the circuit court to impose a remedy in the 
circumstances presented by this case. He did not challenge the specifics of the remedy that 
the circuit court ordered. I write separately to underscore the Court’s statement that any 
remedy a circuit court imposes under Election Article § 8-103(b)(1) “must necessarily be 
tailored to address only the particular emergency circumstances that interfere with the 
electoral process.” Slip op. at 38 (cleaned up).   
The State Board of Elections (the “Board”) requested that, to address the emergency 
it identified, the circuit court issue an order permitting the canvassing and tabulation of 
absentee ballots to begin on October 1, 2022. The circuit court issued an order that included 
the October 1 start date.  
At oral argument before this Court – which occurred on October 7, 2022 – counsel 
for the Board stated that few absentee ballots had arrived at the local boards as of that date. 
Based on past experience, the Board believed that the number of absentee ballots arriving 
at the local boards would increase “exponentially” once early (in-person) voting began on 
October 27. When asked why, therefore, a start date for canvassing and tabulating of 
absentee ballots of October 1 was necessary to address the emergency, counsel for the 
Board stated that the local boards needed all of October to plan how to allocate their space 
and staff in order to perform all the necessary tasks related to the general election. 
In my view, the local boards needed no emergency relief as of October 1 to begin 
planning how to allocate their space and staff for the rest of October. If the circuit court 
had ordered canvassing and tabulating of absentee ballots to begin no earlier than October 
- 2 - 
15, 2022 or another date around that time, it seems likely that the local boards would have 
been able to perform their work as effectively as they did with a start date of October 1. 
Thus, I am skeptical that the October 1 date went no farther than necessary to address the 
emergency that confronted the State’s election officials.  
If, in the future, the Board petitions a circuit court for emergency relief under 
§ 8-103(b)(1) of the Election Article, the Board should provide the circuit court with 
evidence establishing that the requested relief is tailored to address the present emergency. 
If the circuit court finds that there is an emergency that warrants relief, the court should 
then make findings as to whether the requested relief is tailored to address the emergency 
and, if it is not, the court should grant different relief that is so tailored.