Title: Huss v. Myers

State: oregon

Issuer: Oregon Supreme Court

Document:

Filed: June 18, 1998

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON

WALTER HUSS,

	Petitioner,

	v.

HARDY MYERS, Attorney General,
State of Oregon,

	Respondent.

(SC S45219)

	On petition to review ballot title.

	Argued and submitted May 12, 1998.

	Terrance L. McCauley, Estacada, argued the cause and filed
the petition on behalf of petitioner.

	Philip Schradle, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, argued
the cause on behalf of respondent.  With him on the answering
memorandum were Hardy Myers, Attorney General, and Michael D.
Reynolds, Solicitor General.

	Before Carson, Chief Justice, and Gillette, Van Hoomissen,
Durham, Kulongoski, and Leeson, Justices.

	KULONGOSKI, J.

	Ballot title certified.  This decision shall become
effective in accordance with ORAP 11.30(10).

	Durham, J., concurred and filed an opinion.

		KULONGOSKI, J.

		The issue in this original ballot title proceeding is
whether the Attorney General's certified ballot title for
proposed initiative 79 violates ORS 250.035(6).  Petitioner
asserts that the certified ballot title for proposed initiative
79 impermissibly resembles the previously filed ballot title for
proposed initiative 28, submitted for the same election, and that
ORS 250.035(6) requires this court to modify the ballot title for
proposed initiative 79 to eliminate that resemblance.

		The Attorney General certified the following ballot
title for proposed initiative 79:

"AMENDS CONSTITUTION: ESTABLISHES 2.2 PERCENT 'GROSS
RECEIPTS TAX;' PROHIBITS OTHER REVENUE SOURCES

"RESULT OF 'YES' VOTE:  'Yes' vote establishes 2.2
percent 'Gross Receipts Tax;' prohibits other state,
local revenue-generating sources.

"RESULT OF 'NO' VOTE:  'No' vote rejects 2.2 percent
'Gross Receipts Tax;' retains current state, local
revenue-generating sources.

"SUMMARY:  Amends Constitution.  Imposes 2.2 percent
tax on gross consideration received as:  employment
compensation, rent, business interest/dividends,
insurance premiums, commissions, proceeds from
sale/barter of property/services.  Exempts retirement,
pension, disability payments.  Exempts certain
incidental transactions, sales of goods/services for
use outside state, security sales, intergovernmental
transactions.  Prohibits other state and local taxes,
fees and assessments, with listed exceptions.  Allows
additional local 'gross receipts tax,' user charges,
fines, gifts, certain listed revenue sources. 
Abolishes government bonding authority.  Provides for
revenue distribution.  Changes school funding."

The previously certified ballot title for proposed initiative 28
provides:

"AMENDS CONSTITUTION:  ESTABLISHES GROSS RECEIPTS TAX,
PROHIBITS OTHER STATE AND LOCAL TAXES

"RESULT OF 'YES' VOTE:  'Yes' vote establishes 2.5
percent gross receipts tax on transactions; prohibits
other state, local taxes.

"RESULT OF 'NO' VOTE:  'No' vote rejects 2.5 percent
gross receipts tax on transactions; retains current
state, local taxes.

"SUMMARY:  Amends Constitution.  Eliminates all state,
local taxes, fees, assessments, bonding authority, with
listed exceptions.  Establishes 2.5 percent tax on
consideration received for sales or other exchanges of
materials, goods, services, labor, real estate,
personal property or things of value.  Exempts certain
banking transactions, gifts, certain noncommercial
transactions, pensions, insurance benefits, sales of
goods/services for use outside state.  Requires 60
percent vote, plus majority vote in majority of
counties/precincts voting, to increase tax, adopt local
tax, repeal or amend provision.  Provides for revenue
distribution."

		In Carlson v. Myers, 327 Or ___, ___, ___ P2d ___ (June
18, 1998) (slip op at 12), this court held that the term
"resemble," as used ORS 250.035(6), has its "plain, natural, and
ordinary meaning."  PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries, 317 Or
606, 611, 859 P2d 1143 (1993).  Specifically, "resemble" means
"to be like or similar, so as to suggest another or to give the
appearance of another."  Carlson, 327 Or at ___ (slip op at 12)
(internal quotation marks omitted).

		Assuming, without deciding, that the ballot titles at
issue here resemble one another, such resemblance is not fatal. 
As we explained in Carlson, 327 Or at ___ (slip op at 18), ORS
250.035(6) does not prohibit unconditionally all resemblance
between or among ballot titles.  Rather, the statute prohibits
resemblance between or among ballot titles if such resemblance
would cause voter confusion.  Id. at ___ (slip op at 18).  The
ballot titles under consideration here describe accurately two
proposed ballot measures dealing with the same issue:  the
establishment by initiative of a gross receipts tax as a
replacement for all other state and local revenue sources. 
Where, as here, similar ballot titles accurately reflect the
extensive similarities between two proposed initiative measures,
those accurate ballot titles do not create a risk of voter
confusion.  Gray v. Myers, 327 Or ___, ___, ___ P2d ___ (June 18,
1998) (slip op at 3). 

		Petitioner also asserts that the ballot title certified
by the Attorney General for proposed initiative 79 does not
substantially comply with the requirements of ORS 250.035 as
required by ORS 250.085(5), because the Attorney General failed
to discuss in the summary the "legislature's power to control
distribution of local gross receipts tax revenue" and the
"complete reorganization of school funding" undertaken by
proposed initiative 79.  That argument is not well taken.  As
petitioner concedes, proposed initiative 79 contains "so many
important provisions that, given ballot title word limitations,
it is impossible to cover all important effects" of the measure. 
Given the statutory word limitations, the Attorney General's
certified ballot title for proposed initiative 79 "substantially
complies" with the requirements of ORS 250.035.  ORS 250.085(5).

		We certify the Attorney General's ballot title for
proposed initiative 79.  

		Ballot title certified.  This decision shall become
effective in accordance with ORAP 11.30(10).

	DURHAM, J., concurring.	Huss v. Myers

	I concur in the majority's decision to certify the
Attorney General's ballot title for initiative 79, but not for
the reason expressed by the majority.  The majority asserts that
no voter confusion will result from the certification of similar
ballot titles for initiatives 28 and 79.(1)  I disagree.  However,
for the reasons expressed in my concurring opinion in Carlson v.
Myers, 327 Or ____, ____, ____ P2d ____ (1998) (Durham, J.,
concurring), I am satisfied that the Attorney General's ballot
title complies substantially with applicable statutory
requirements.  ORS 250.085(5).

	Due to the limitations of the English language, the
Attorney General cannot satisfy the requirements of ORS
250.035(2) to (5) and, at the same time, eliminate all
resemblance between the ballot titles for initiatives 28 and 79,
in literal compliance with the text of ORS 250.035(6).  The
Attorney General's ballot title confines the degree of
resemblance to the minimum.  The ballot title otherwise complies
with ORS 250.035(2) to (5).  Accordingly, I agree that this court
should certify it.

	I concur.

1. 	The majority assumes that measures 28 and 79 resemble
each other, within the meaning of ORS 250.035(6), but does not so
hold.  I adopt the same assumption.