Court Opinion

ID: 4995603
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-29 16:09:56.531317+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:16:52.583524
License: Public Domain

09/29/2021

           IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                                                                     Case Number: OP 21-0377

                                       OP 21-0377
                                                                     FILED
 MONTANA SHOOTING SPORTS
 ASSOCIATION,
                                                                      SEP 2 8 2021
                                                                   Bowen Greenwood
                                                                 Clerk of Supreme Court
                                                                    State of Montana
              Petitioner,

      v.
                                                                   ORDER
 MONTANA FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
 COURT, LEWIS & CLARK COUNTY, THE
 HONORABLE MICHAEL F. MCMAHON,
 DISTRICT JUDGE,

              Respondent.

       Petitioner Montana Shooting Sports Association (MSSA), via counsel, seeks a
writ of supervisory control over the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County,
to reverse its July 16, 2021 Order Denying Intervention Motions and Briefing Schedule in
Cause No. BDV-2021-598. In the underlying case, the Board of Regents of Higher
Education of the State of Montana (BOR) petitioned for declaratory judgment regarding
the constitutionality of portions of House Bill 102 that regulate firearms within the
Montana University System (MUS) on the basis that these provisions unconstitutionally
infringe on BOR's authority under Article X, Section 9(2), of the Montana Constitution.
MSSA sought intervention of right under M. R. Civ. P. 24(a) and the District Court denied
its motion.
       At the Court's invitation, both the State and BOR have responded.         The State
supports MSSA's petition. BOR opposes it.
       Supervisory control is an extraordinary remedy that may be invoked when the case
involves purely legal questions and urgent or emergency factors make the normal appeal
process inadequate. M. R. App. P. 14(3). The case must meet one of three additional
criteria: (a) the other court is proceeding under a mistake of law and is causing a gross
injustice; (b) constitutional issues of state-wide importance are involved; or (c) the other
court has granted or denied a motion for substitution of a judge in a criminal case.
M. R. App. P. 14(3)(a)-(c). Whether supervisory control is appropriate is a case-by-case
decision.   Stokes v. Mont. Thirteenth Judicial Dist. Court, 2011 MT 182, ¶ 5,
361 Mont. 279, 259 P.3d 754 (citations omitted).
       Before reaching the substance of MSSA's legal arguments on the question of
whether the District Court erred in denying its motion to intervene, we first consider
whether the matter is appropriate for this Court to assume supervisory control.
       First, MSSA asserts that the matter presented on petition is the purely legal question
of whether MSSA has the right to intervene under Rule 24(a)(2), which provides that on a
timely motion to intervene, the court must permit intervention by anyone who "claims an
interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action, and is so
situated that disposing of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede the
movant's ability to protect its interest, unless the existing parties adequately represent that
interest." MSSA relies on Sportsmen for 1-143 v. Mont. Fifteenth Judicial Dist. Court,
2002 MT 18, 308 Mont. 189, 40 P.3d 400, in which this Court determined that the trial
court's denial of Sportsmen's right to intervene presented a purely legal question of
"whether the primary proponent of a ballot initiative has a legally protectable interest
sufficient to allow it to intervene in a case challenging the resulting statute."
Sportsmen for 1-143, ¶ 6. MSSA alleges that in the present case, it "played a nearly
identical role" to Sportsmen because it was involved in drafting H_B 102 and was "a party
to negotiations between state representatives and agents of the MUS."
       BOR responds that this case does not present a purely legal question. BOR relies
upon Mont. Quality Educ. Coalition v. Mont. Eleventh Judicial Dist. Court,
No. OP 16-0494 (Mont. Oct. 27, 2016), which it asserts is on point with the present case.
In MQEC, we denied a petition for writ of supervisory control where the trial court had
denied the petitioners' motion to intervene in a case challenging the validity of an

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administrative rule. We based our denial on the absence of a purely legal question,
explaining:
       [T]he presence of factual issues is demonstrated in the Coalition's petition:
       the Coalition argues that its interests and those of its members are not
       adequately protected by the Department, that its motion to intervene was
       timely, and that the Coalition has an interest in the case that may be impaired
       or impeded by its disposition. The District Court ruled, however, that the
       expressed interests of the coalition are adequately represented by the parties
       to the case.

BOR argues that the same lack of a purely legal question exists here, where the
District Court found that the State could adequately protect any interest MSSA may have
in the case and that MS SA did not have an interest that may be impaired or impeded by the
disposition of the case.        BOR contends that this case is distinguishable from
Sportsmen for 1-143 because there, the issue presented—whether "the primary proponent
of a ballot initiative has a legally protectable interest sufficient to allow it to intervene in a
case challenging the resulting statute," Sportsmenfor 1-143, ¶ 6—is a purely legal question,
while here, "the rulings of 'adequacy of representation' by the State and 'no impairment'
of interests are fact-based and 'discretionary,' precluding supervisory control."
(Emphasis BOR' s.)
       MSSA asserts that its support of HB 102 makes its role in the current litigation
equivalent to that of Sportsmen's support of Initiative 143. However, the Montana Quality
Education Coalition was similarly involved in the development of the administrative rule
at issue in MQEC. BOR argues that MSSA reads Sportsmen for 1-143 too broadly and that
the decision is limited to primary supporters of ballot measures: "[T]he sponsors of a ballot
initiative have a different ownership-type interest in the outcome than do mere lobbyists
seeking passage of laws through the normal legislative process." BOR notes that under
Article III, Section 4, of the Montana Constitution, "[t]he people may enact laws by
initiative," while under Article V, the Legislature has the authority to pass bills to make
laws. MSSA is not the sponsor of a ballot measure, but merely a lobbyist.

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       We agree with BOR the key difference between this Court's determinations in
Sportsmen for 1-143 and MQEC lies in the distinction between the role of primary
proponent of a ballot initiative versus the role of lobbyist. The question presented in
Sportsmenfor 1-143 was a purely legal one while the question presented in MQEC required
the trial court to make factual determinations to investigate whether MQEC's interests were
adequately represented by the parties to the case. In this case, the District Court had to
make the same type of factual determination as did the trial court in MQEC. Therefore,
the ruling was discretionary and not susceptible to this Court's review on a writ of
supervisory control. Hill v. Mont. Fifth Judicial Dist. Court, No. OP 21-0352, Order
(Mont. Aug. 31, 2021) (standards for supervisory control not met where petition does not
raise an issue that is purely one of law but involves a matter of discretion).
       Moreover, as BOR points out, MSSA has been granted the opportunity to submit an
amicus brief and MSSA's petition fails to explain why this participation would provide
insufficient opportunity to MSSA to present its position to the District Court. In its
response brief, the State argues that the opportunity to submit an amicus brief is inadequate
because in granting leave for MSSA to participate as amicus, the district court "prohibited
any discussion of ' federal or state firearm rights,' which is the issue MSSA seeks to
discuss[.]" However, in the order at issue here, the District Court noted, "This case is
merely about whether the Legislature or the Executive branch, via the Regents, has the
exclusive constitutional authority to regulate firearms on MUS campuses and other
locations." (Footnote omitted.) In MQEC, we noted that denial of the Coalition's motion
to intervene did not preclude its participation because it could present its position in an
amicus brief. The same opportunity exists in this case for MSSA to present its position to
the extent it is relevant to the dispute at issue before the District Court.
       IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that MSSA's Petition for a Writ of Supervisory
Control is DENIED and DISMISSED.

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      The Clerk is directed to provide immediate notice of this Order to all counsel of
record in the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, Cause
No. BDV-2021-598, and t,ht. Honorable Michael F. McMahon. presiding.
      DATED this LC day of September, 2021.

                                                           Chief Justice

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