Title: Leo v. Myers
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: S44794
State: Oregon
Issuer: Oregon Supreme Court
Date: February 12, 1998

Filed: February 12, 1998 

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON

SUSAN LEO,		

	Petitioner, 

	v.		

HARDY MYERS, Attorney General,
State of Oregon,	

	Respondent.

(SC S44794, S44798, S44797)

(consolidated for argument and opinion)

	On petitions to review ballot titles.

	Argued and submitted January 7, 1998.

	Scott J. Kaplan, ACLU Foundation of Oregon, Inc., Portland,
argued the cause and filed the petitions for petitioner.

	Richard D. Wasserman, Assistant Attorney General, Salem,
argued the cause for respondent.  With him on the responses	were
Hardy Myers, Attorney General, and Michael D. Reynolds, Solicitor
General.

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

	GILLETTE, J.

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

	Van Hoomissen, J., dissented and filed an opinion.

	*Fadeley, J., retired January 31, 1998, and did not
participate in this decision

		GILLETTE, J.

		These three ballot title review proceedings are
consolidated for purposes of argument and opinion.  The cases
involve three different, but closely related, ballot measures. 
In each, petitioner(1) challenges the legal sufficiency of one or more parts of a ballot title
certified by the Attorney General.  For the reasons that follow, we modify the ballot title certified
by the Attorney General for each measure and, as modified, certify the various ballot titles.

		The three proposed measures have been denominated by the Secretary of State as
Measure 55, Measure 56, and Measure 57.  Each would amend Article VII (amended), section 1,
of the Oregon Constitution, by adding the words emphasized in boldface(2) to that section:

	"The judicial power of the state shall be vested in one supreme court and
in such other courts as may from time to time be created by law.  The judges of
the supreme and other courts shall be elected by the legal voters of the state or of
their respective districts for a term of six years, and shall receive such
compensation as may be provided by law, which compensation shall not be
diminished during the term which they are elected.  No law or rule shall limit
freedom of speech by candidates for any judicial office.  Freedom of speech
shall include, but shall not be limited to, the right to express views on judicial
issues and the performance of judges.  No designation of incumbency or
reference to current or prior judicial position shall be permitted on the ballot
in a contested election.  If an incumbent judge has no opposition, voters shall
be given a choice as to whether they wish to retain the judge for an additional
term.  The choice shall be clearly stated on the ballot next to the incumbent
judge's name.  If a majority of those voting do not vote to retain the
incumbent judge, a new election, in which the incumbent judge will not be
eligible, shall be held."

		The texts of the three proposed measures vary in the following respects:

Measure 56

		Measure 56 contains only the wording emphasized above.

Measure 57

		Measure 57, in addition to the emphasized wording, would add the following
additional sentence to section 1 of Article VII (amended): 

	"All judicial positions shall be filled by election, including any position that
becomes vacant during a term of office."  

The apparent purpose of that additional provision is to remove gubernatorial authority to appoint
persons to fill judicial vacancies.  At present, such authority is provided by Article V, section 16,
of the Oregon Constitution.(3)

Measure 55

		Measure 55 contains both the wording of Measure 56, emphasized above, and also
the additional wording of Measure 57.  However, Measure 55 restores to a limited degree the
gubernatorial appointment power, but also limits appointed judges' tenure, by adding the
following subsection:

		"(2) Notwithstanding subsection (1), the governor may, in a manner
provided by law, appoint a person to fill a vacant position, provided that no
person shall serve more than six months without election."

		From the foregoing summary, it may be seen that the three proposed measures
represent a basic theme in two parts (Measure 56), which then is augmented in two slightly
different ways (Measures 55 and 57):  

		(1) All judicial positions, whether vacant or having an incumbent, are to be filled
by election.(4)  

		(2) And, in the campaigning for election to a judicial position, judicial candidates
shall be free to express themselves as fully as if they were candidates for non-judicial, and even
partisan, offices.(5)  

		With the foregoing general observations in mind, we turn to the specific
challenges made by petitioner against each of the proposed measures.  For the sake of internal
clarity, this opinion shall address each measure in the same order in which we earlier have
summarized it, i.e., we deal first with Measure 56 (the "basic measure"); followed by Measure 57
(the "basic measure," plus elimination of gubernatorial appointment); and, finally, discuss
Measure 55 (the "basic measure," coupled with provisions that first take away and then, to a
limited extent, restore the gubernatorial power of appointment).

Measure 56 (the "basic measure")

		The Attorney General's certified caption for this proposed measure states: 

	"AMENDS CONSTITUTION: EXPANDS JUDICIAL CANDIDATES' SPEECH
RIGHTS; CHANGES PROCESS FOR RETAINING JUDGES."  

Petitioner asserts that the foregoing caption is inadequate, for the purposes of ORS
250.035(1)(a), because it fails reasonably to identify the "subject" of the measure.  We agree with
that proposition, but on a more narrow basis than most of petitioner's alternative theories as to
why that is so.  

		The Attorney General's caption highlights both parts of the measure.  If a measure
essentially has only two parts and they both may be highlighted within the 10-word limitation on
captions, such an approach may be acceptable.  See, e.g., Crumpton v. Keisling, 317 Or 322,
325-26, 855 P2d 1107 (1993) (recognizing principle).  The Attorney General has attempted to do
that with respect to Measure 56.  However, use of the rubric, "speech rights," in one part of the
caption conceals, rather than reveals, the sweep of the proposed measure.  Ambiguous mention of
an "expansion" of "speech rights" of judges does nothing to suggest the fundamental alteration
that the proposed measure would make in the judicial campaign process.  As we have indicated,
the measure would free judicial candidates to engage in political activity as fully as if they were
candidates for offices outside the judicial branch.  That is a subject of the measure that the ballot
must portray accurately.  The failure of the Attorney General's caption to do so means that the
caption is inadequate under ORS 250.035(1)(a).  A modification is necessary.

		On the other hand, the other half of the Attorney General's caption, viz.,
"CHANGES PROCESS FOR RETAINING JUDGES," is adequate.  The measure would alter the
method by which one kind of incumbent judge may be retained.  At present, a judge who is
unopposed need only receive more votes than any individual write-in candidate in order to retain
the judge's position.  The proposed measure would turn an election in which a judge was
unopposed into a referendum on whether that judge should be retained.(6)  We thus conclude that
the essential message of that part of the Attorney General's ballot title caption may be sustained. 
However, in order to accommodate the modification that we earlier have indicated will be
required, some modification to this half of the ballot title caption also will be necessary.  

		The Attorney General's caption is modified to read as follows:

AMENDS CONSTITUTION: EXPANDS JUDICIAL 
CANDIDATES' POLITICAL CAMPAIGNING RIGHTS; 
CHANGES JUDICIAL RETENTION PROCESS

		It follows from the foregoing that we must modify both the Attorney General's
"yes" and "no" result statements to reflect the change in the caption.  The Attorney General
certified the following result statements:

		"RESULT OF 'YES' VOTE: 'Yes' vote expands judicial candidates'
campaign speech rights, changes process for judicial elections involving
incumbents.

		"RESULT OF 'NO' VOTE: 'No' vote retains judicial candidates' existing
speech rights, existing process for judicial elections involving incumbents."

We modify them respectively as follows:

		RESULT OF "YES" VOTE: "Yes" vote changes judicial retention process;
allows judicial candidates full political activity in campaigning.

		RESULT OF "NO" VOTE: "No" vote retains present judicial retention
process, present limitations on judicial candidates' campaigning for office.

		The Attorney General's certified summary of the proposed measure states:

		"SUMMARY: Amends Oregon Constitution.  Measure would allow
judicial candidates to express their views on performance of judicial duties,
personally solicit campaign contributions.  Measure thus would override current
limits on judicial candidates' speech.  Measure would prohibit ballot from
identifying judicial candidate as incumbent in contested election.  When
incumbent judge is unopposed, voters would have choice, stated on ballot,
whether to retain judge for additional term.  Incumbent judge must receive
majority vote to win election.  Otherwise, new election would be held, in which
incumbent judge would be ineligible."

		With respect to the Attorney General's summary, petitioner argues that it fails to
convey the significance of the expansion in campaign rights for judicial candidates.  We agree
that its description is not precisely the same as that which we have held to be appropriate with
respect to the other two parts of the ballot title.  However, we believe that the Attorney General's
summary, when read as a whole, encompasses all the various effects of the proposed measure
while still managing, through example and illustration, to capture the essence of the change to
judicial campaigning.  We thus cannot say that the summary fails to comply substantially with
the requirements of law.  ORS 250.035(2)(d).

		The Attorney General's ballot title for Measure 56 is modified in the respects
heretofore set out in this opinion.  Pursuant to ORS 250.085(5), we certify the following ballot
title for Measure 56 to the Secretary of State:

AMENDS CONSTITUTION: EXPANDS JUDICIAL 
CANDIDATES' POLITICAL CAMPAIGNING RIGHTS; 
CHANGES JUDICIAL RETENTION PROCESS

		RESULT OF "YES" VOTE: "Yes" vote changes judicial retention process;
allows judicial candidates full political activity in campaigning.

		RESULT OF "NO" VOTE: "No" vote retains present judicial retention
process, present limitations on judicial candidates' campaigning for office.

		SUMMARY: Amends Oregon Constitution.  Measure would allow
judicial candidates to express their views on performance of judicial duties,
personally solicit campaign contributions.  Measure thus would override current
limits on judicial candidates' speech.  Measure would prohibit ballot from
identifying judicial candidate as incumbent in contested election.  When
incumbent judge is unopposed, voters would have choice, stated on ballot,
whether to retain judge for additional term.  Incumbent judge must receive
majority vote to win election.  Otherwise, new election would be held, in which
incumbent judge would be ineligible.

Measure 57

		As noted, Measure 57 consists of the "basic measure," coupled with elimination of
the gubernatorial power to fill vacant judicial positions by appointment.  While presented in a
different order than the caption and result statements certified for Measure 56, the Attorney
General's certified caption and result statements for Measure 57 do not differ substantially from
those relating to the other measure.  They state:

"AMENDS CONSTITUTION: CHANGES
PROCESS FOR SELECTING JUDGES; EXPANDS
JUDICIAL CANDIDATES' SPEECH RIGHTS

		"RESULT OF 'YES' VOTE: 'Yes' vote changes process for filling judicial
vacancies, retaining incumbents; expands judicial candidates' speech rights.

		"RESULT OF 'NO' VOTE: 'No' vote keeps existing judicial candidates'
speech rights, process for filling judicial vacancies, retaining incumbents."

		Petitioner challenges both the caption and the result statements, and we hold that
they are inadequate for the same reasons expressed with respect to the caption and result
statements for Measure 56.  In addition, we note that the Attorney General has chosen in this
caption to drop any reference to judicial retention and to substitute, instead, a reference to the
proposed measure's abolition of gubernatorial authority to fill a judicial vacancy by appointment. 
Sometimes, such choices are unavoidable:  The stringent word limitation of the caption
necessitates picking and choosing among various subjects in a multiple subject measure,
highlighting some at the expense of others.  However, if the word limitation does not compel
choices of that kind, they should not be made.  See Crumpton, 317 Or at 326 (discussing
principle).  Here, in our view, no such sacrifice of one subject for another is necessary.  We
certify the following caption for Measure 57:

AMENDS CONSTITUTION: CHANGES JUDICIAL SELECTION,
RETENTION; EXPANDS JUDICIAL CANDIDATES'
POLITICAL CAMPAIGNING RIGHTS

		The foregoing change in the caption necessitates conforming changes in the result
statements for Measure 57.  They are modified as follows:

		RESULT OF "YES" VOTE: "Yes" vote changes judicial selection,
retention processes; allows judicial candidates full political activity in
campaigning.

		RESULT OF "NO" VOTE: "No" vote retains present judicial selection,
retention processes, present limitations on judicial candidates' campaigning
activities.

		We turn to the summary.  The Attorney General certified the following summary
for Measure 57:

		"SUMMARY: Amends constitution.  Currently, judges are elected for 6-year terms, governor fills vacancies by appointment; appointments last until next
general election.  Measure requires judicial positions that become vacant during
term of office to be filled by election.  Allows judicial candidates to express views
on performance of judicial duties, personally solicit campaign contributions, thus
overriding current limits on judicial candidates' speech.  Ballot cannot identify
judicial candidate as incumbent in contested election.  Unopposed judicial
candidate must receive majority vote; otherwise, new election held, and
incumbent is ineligible."

		Petitioner's attack on the summary for Measure 57 is essentially the same as his
attack on that for Measure 56.  We reject it for similar reasons:  Although it might be possible to
fashion a better summary, the one certified by the Attorney General satisfies the pertinent
statutory criteria.

		Pursuant to ORS 250.085(5), we certify the following ballot title for Measure 57
to the Secretary of State:

AMENDS CONSTITUTION: CHANGES JUDICIAL SELECTION,
RETENTION; EXPANDS JUDICIAL CANDIDATES'
POLITICAL CAMPAIGNING RIGHTS

	RESULT OF "YES" VOTE: "Yes" vote changes judicial selection, retention
processes; allows judicial candidates full political activity in campaigning.

		RESULT OF "NO" VOTE: "No" vote retains present judicial selection, retention
processes, present limitations on judicial candidates' campaigning activities.

		SUMMARY: Amends constitution.  Currently, judges are elected for 6-year terms, governor fills vacancies by appointment; appointments last until next
general election.  Measure requires judicial positions that become vacant during
term of office to be filled by election.  Allows judicial candidates to express views
on performance of judicial duties, personally solicit campaign contributions, thus
overriding current limits on judicial candidates' speech.  Ballot cannot identify
judicial candidate as incumbent in contested election.  Unopposed judicial
candidate must receive majority vote; otherwise, new election held, and
incumbent is ineligible.

Measure 55

		As noted, Measure 55 consists of the "basic measure," coupled with provisions
that first eliminate and then restore, in a limited way, the gubernatorial power to fill judicial
vacancies by appointment.  The Attorney General's certified caption uses slightly different words
but is, in all material respects, the same as the caption certified for Measure 57.  Petitioner
challenges that caption and we hold that it is inadequate for the reasons stated with respect to the
caption for Measure 57.  The issue then becomes one of remedy.

		As we read them, Measures 55 and 57 are about precisely the same subjects, even
if they deal with those subjects in slightly different ways.  (The difference is that Measure 57
would eliminate outright the gubernatorial power to fill certain judicial vacancies by
appointment, while Measure 55 would limit the duration of such appointments, rather than
eliminate them outright.)  The similarities between the two measures are sufficiently pervasive
that it would be inappropriate to create different captions for each, solely for the purpose of
highlighting the difference.  See Rooney v. Kulongoski (Elections Division #13), 322 Or 15, 22-23, 902 P2d 1143 (1995) (ballot titles may resemble each other, or even be identical, if to do so
probably will not create confusion).  We do not perceive any likelihood in the present case that
certifying a caption that is identical to that already certified with respect to Measure 57 would
cause confusion.  We therefore certify a caption for Measure 55 that is the same as that certified
for Measure 57.

		Turning to the result statements, the Attorney General certified the following:

		"RESULT OF 'YES' VOTE: 'Yes' vote changes judicial election process,
expands judicial candidates' speech rights, limits appointed judges' terms.

		"RESULT OF 'NO' VOTE: 'No' vote retains existing judicial election
process, judicial candidates' speech rights, terms for appointed judges."

		As already noted, it ordinarily is the practice of this court, when it has modified a
caption, "to make conforming changes to the Result Statements."  Phillips v. Myers, 325 Or 221,
227, 936 P2d 964 (1997).  Petitioner urges us to do that here, and we shall.  In doing so, we
retain the Attorney General's choice to mention the additional focus of Measure 55, viz., the
tenure of appointed judges.

		The Attorney General certified the following summary with respect to Measure
55:

		"SUMMARY: Amends constitution.  Currently, judges are elected for 6-year terms, governor fills vacancies by appointment; appointment lasts until next
general election, and appointee may run for full term.  Measure allows appointed
judges to serve only six months without election.  Allows judicial candidates to
express views on performance of judicial duties, personally solicit campaign
contributions, thus overriding current limits on judicial candidates' speech.  Ballot
cannot identify opposed judicial candidate as incumbent.  Unopposed judicial
candidate must receive majority vote; otherwise, new election held, and
incumbent is ineligible."

Petitioner's attack on the summary is essentially the same as that which she advanced with
respect to the summary for Measure 57, and we reject it for the same reason:  Although it might
be possible to fashion a better summary, the one certified by the Attorney General satisfies the
pertinent statutory criteria.

		Pursuant to ORS 250.085(5), we certify the following ballot title for Measure 55
to the Secretary of State:

AMENDS CONSTITUTION: CHANGES JUDICIAL SELECTION,
RETENTION; EXPANDS JUDICIAL CANDIDATES' 
POLITICAL CAMPAIGNING RIGHTS

		RESULT OF "YES" VOTE: "Yes" vote changes judicial selection,
retention processes; expands judicial candidates' campaigning; limits appointed
judges' terms.

		RESULT OF "NO" VOTE: "No" vote retains judicial selection, retention
processes, limits on judicial campaigning, terms for appointed judges.

		SUMMARY: Amends constitution.  Currently, judges are elected for 6-year terms, governor fills vacancies by appointment; appointment lasts until next
general election, and appointee may run for full term.  Measure allows appointed
judges to serve only six months without election.  Allows judicial candidates to
express views on performance of judicial duties, personally solicit campaign
contributions, thus overriding current limits on judicial candidates' speech.  Ballot
cannot identify opposed judicial candidate as incumbent.  Unopposed judicial
candidate must receive majority vote; otherwise, new election held, and
incumbent is ineligible.

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

	Leo v. Myers

		VAN HOOMISSEN, J., dissenting

		I respectfully dissent.  In my view, the Attorney
General's certified ballot titles substantially comply with the
requirements of ORS 250.035.  ORS 250.085(5).

1. 		Petitioner is an elector who, pursuant to the provisions
of ORS 250.067(1), timely submitted written comments respecting the
Attorney General's proposed ballot titles for each of the proposed
measures.  She therefore is entitled to maintain the present
proceedings.

2. 		For the convenience of the reader, we here reproduce
the entire section 1 of Article VII (amended), in order to
provide a proper context within which to consider the various
proposed measures.

3. 	Article V, section 16, of the Oregon Constitution,
provides:

		"When * * * at any time a vacancy occurs in any 
	* * * state office, or in the office of judge of any
court, the governor shall fill such vacancy by
appointment, which shall expire when a successor has
been elected and qualified.  When any vacancy occurs in
any elective office of the state or of any district or
county thereof, the vacancy shall be filled at the next
general election, provided such vacancy occurs more
than sixty-one (61) days prior to such general
election."

4. 		Of course, it presently is true that all judicial
offices are filled -- either immediately or after a hiatus due to
an interim gubernatorial appointment -- by election.  But each of
the proposed measures works significant alterations in that
process.

5. 	If there were any doubt about the foregoing
proposition, it disappears when one considers the statement in
the "Preamble" to each of the proposed measures that the measure
"is designed to ensure that judicial elections are truly
democratic contests where voters actually have a choice."

6. 		The method by which some other sitting judges who are
opposed may be retained would remain unchanged in terms of the
way in which the votes were counted, but the proposed measure's
alteration in the scope of permissible activity in connection
with any such contested election justifies the use of the word
"CHANGE" with respect to those retention elections, as well.