Court Opinion

ID: 4587232
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-17 21:05:58.947256+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:59:07.060284
License: Public Domain

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THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

 

Request of the House of Representatives
No. 2020-0414

OPINION OF THE JUSTICES
(Quorum under Part II, Article 20)

Argued: October 29, 2020
Opinion Issued: November 17, 2020

On September 17, 2020, the clerk of the New Hampshire House of
Representatives notified the associate justices of the supreme court that a
“request for an opinion of the justices pursuant to Part II, Article 74 of the New
Hampshire Constitution was adopted by the House of Representatives on
September 16, 2020” upon the following question of law: “Would holding a
session of the New Hampshire House of Representatives remotely, either wholly
or in part, whereby a quorum could be determined electronically, violate Part II,
Article 20 of the New Hampshire Constitution?”

Upon receipt of the request, we invited “any legislator, attorney,
organization, interested party, or member of the public” to submit memoranda
addressing the above question. Upon receipt of those memoranda, we asked
each party submitting a memorandum to notify the court in writing whether
the party requested oral argument. Oral argument was held on October 29,
2020.

To the Honorable House:

Having considered the oral and written submissions we received, the
following response is respectfully returned:

 
The House has asked a single question: whether holding a House session
remotely, either wholly or in part, whereby a quorum could be determined
electronically, would violate Part II, Article 20 of the New Hampshire
Constitution. We answer this question in the negative.

Before explaining our answer, we address two preliminary issues. First,
we observe that our advisory duty under Part II, Article 74 does not ordinarily
require us “to furnish an opinion when the question submitted is not pending
and awaiting action in the body propounding the inquiry.” Opinion of the
Justices, 93 N.H. 474, 475 (1944). “It is our conviction, however, that the
reasons which require adherence to this rule do not exist in the present
instance.” Id. Here, an “unforeseeable emergency” caused by the COVID-19
pandemic resulted in the House conducting business remotely. Id. (quotation
omitted); see The General Court of New Hampshire,
http: / /www.gencourt.state.nh.us (last visited Nov. 16, 2020) (stating that
“[djue to the COVID-19 pandemic, the General Court is conducting legislative
activities remotely with the exception of publicly noticed sessions in the House
or Senate Calendar”); see also Exec. Order No. 2020-04 (March 13, 2020)
(Governor’s declaration of a state of emergency due to COVID-19); Exec. Order
No. 2020-21 (October 30, 2020) (extending the state of emergency declared in
executive order number 2020-04 through November 20, 2020).

Moreover, the question propounded in this matter “relates to the
constitutional authority of the [House] itself,” and, thus, “may be of use to the
present Legislature in the performance of its official duty.” Opinion of the
Justices, 93 N.H. at 475. In answering the House’s question, “we do not intend
to depart from the settled interpretation of [Part I], Article 74] of the
Constitution or to set a precedent for future advisory opinions.” Opinion of the
Justices, 105 N.H. 125, 127 (1963).

Second, we note that two private individuals ask us to consider whether
holding House sessions remotely, either wholly or in part, whereby a quorum
could be determined electronically, would violate Part I, Articles 8 and 31 and
Part I], Articles 3, 8, and 21 of the State Constitution. We decline to answer
their question for the following reasons.

As we have often noted, Part II, Article 74 “empowers the justices of the
supreme court to render advisory opinions, outside the context of concrete,
fully-developed factual situations and without the benefit of adversary legal
presentations, only in carefully circumscribed situations.” Opinion of the
Justices (Appointment of Chief Justice), 150 N.H. 355, 356 (2003). “The bodies
authorized to . . . obtain [advisory] opinions are limited by [Part II, Article 74] to
the branches of the Legislature and the Governor and Council.” Piper v.
Meredith, 109 N.H. 328, 330 (1969). Part II, Article 74 does not authorize the
justices to render advisory opinions to private individuals. Id. Nor does “the
constitutional duty of the justices of the supreme court to give advisory
opinions . . . include answering legal questions that require resolving questions
of fact.” Opinion of the Justices (Domicile for Voting Purposes), 167 N.H. 539,
942 (2015).

Moreover, as justices have previously explained, it is not “within our
province to speculate upon whether other constitutional issues might be
raised.” Opinion of the Justices, 101 N.H. 518, 522-23 (1957); see Opinion of
the Justices, 131 N.H. 583, 590 (1989). Nonetheless, we observe that, at oral
argument, although the attorney arguing in support of an affirmative answer to
the question presented expressed concern that remote House sessions
diminish public access to legislative proceedings, attorneys arguing in support
of a negative answer to the question countered that remote House sessions
may actually enhance such access.

We turn now to the question the House has asked us to answer. Part I,
Article 20 of the New Hampshire Constitution provides: “A majority of the
members of the house of representatives shall be a quorum for doing business:
But when less than two-thirds of the representatives elected shall be present,
the assent of two-thirds of those members shall be necessary to render their
acts and proceedings valid.”

“When our inquiry requires us to interpret a provision of the
constitution, we must look to its purpose and intent.” Bd. of Trustees, N.H.
Judicial Ret. Plan v. Sec’y of State, 161 N.H. 49, 53 (2010). We first look to the
natural significance of the words used by the framers. Id. “The simplest and
most obvious interpretation of a constitution, if in itself sensible, is most likely
to be that meant by the people in its adoption.” Id. (quotation omitted). “While
the constitution as it now stands is to be considered as a whole as if enacted at
one time, to ascertain the meaning of particular expressions it may be
necessary to give attention to the circumstances under which they became
parts of the instrument.” Id. at 53-54 (quotation omitted). “By reviewing the
history of the constitution and its amendments, the court endeavors to place
itself as nearly as possible in the situation of the parties at the time the
instrument was made, that it may gather their intention from the language
used, viewed in the light of the surrounding circumstances.” Baines v. N.H.
Senate President, 152 N.H. 124, 133 (2005) (quotation omitted).

The language of Part II, Article 20 has been a part of the New Hampshire
Constitution since 1784. See 6 Sources and Documents of U.S. Constitutions
344, 351 (William F. Swindler ed., 1976). New Hampshire adopted its first
constitution in 1776, after the State became independent of British rule.
Warburton v. Thomas, 136 N.H. 383, 388 (1992). The New Hampshire
Constitution of 1776 “was the first written constitution adopted in America by

any of the colonies.” Manual of the Constitutional Convention of 1918 61
(1918).

The first constitution vested all governing power in the legislature and
provided for neither a governor nor an independent judiciary. Warburton, 136
N.H. at 388. It also did not include a provision regarding the quorum of the
house of representatives required to do business. See 6 Sources and
Documents of U.S. Constitutions, supra at 342-43. This temporary
constitution continued in force until 1784 when a permanent constitution was
approved. Warburton, 136 N.H. at 388; 6 Sources and Documents of U.S.
Constitutions, supra at 357.

 

 

In 1778, a second constitutional convention was held and, although it
produced a revised constitution, that constitution was rejected by the citizenry.
W. F. Dodd, The First State Constitutional Conventions, 1776-1783, 2 The Am.
Pol. Sci. Rev. 545, 548-49 (1908). The 1778 constitutional convention voted,
after a long debate, “that there should be a bi-cameral legislature,” consisting
of a “Council” and a “House of Representatives.” Manual of the Constitutional
Convention of 1918, supra at 64. “The 1778 convention produced a document
saying only Protestants could vote, a person had to possess 300 pounds to sit
in the Legislature, and centered all state authority within its two branches.”
Leon W. Anderson, A History of the New Hampshire Constitution 1 in The
Constitution of New Hampshire (Office of Sec’y of State of N.H. 1973).
However, the 1778 constitution did contain a quorum clause, as follows: “A
quorum of the council and a quorum of the house of representatives shall
consist of a majority of each house.” Manual of the Constitutional Convention
of 1918, supra at 68.

Another constitutional convention began in 1781 and “continued in
existence for over two years.” James Fairbanks Colby, Manual of the
Constitution of the State of New Hampshire 46 (1902). During that time, “two
constitutions were framed, submitted to the people, and rejected,” before a
third proposed constitution was recommended and approved by the citizenry,
effective June 1784. Id. “Unfortunately the journal of this convention was not
preserved, and consequently the records of its proceedings are very meager.”
Id. at 91.

Under the draft 1781 constitution, the legislature was to include a 50-
member house, apportioned by county. Manual of the Constitutional
Convention of 1918, supra at 71; N.H. CONST. pt. II (proposed 1781). The
proposed constitution provided that two-thirds of the members of the house

 

 
“elected, provided the said two thirds do not amount to a less number than
thirty, shall make a quorum for doing business.” N.H. CONST. pt. II (proposed
1781). The address to the citizenry from the convention explaining the draft
constitution did not mention the quorum provision. See Colby, supra at 99-
109. After the 1781 draft was rejected, the convention reconvened to revise the
draft. Manual of the Constitutional Convention of 1918, supra at 77. The
1782 draft “made the size of the house variable instead of fixed at 50.” Manual
of the Constitutional Convention of 1918, supra at 77.

The permanent constitution ultimately approved by the citizenry, which
became effective in 1784, did not limit the number of the members of the house
of representatives, and included the quorum clause as it exists today. 6
Sources and Documents of U.S. Constitutions, supra at 350-51. “Pursuant to
a mandate in the 1784 constitution, a Constitutional Convention was called in
1791 to review the experience under the permanent constitution and
recommend any changes.” Warburton, 136 N.H. at 389. No changes were
recommended or made to the language of the quorum clause. See Manual of
the Constitutional Convention of 1918, supra at 97, 102-03, 113-16; see also
N.H. CONST. pt. II, art. 20 (1792).

The language of the first clause of Part II, Article 20 (“A majority of the
members of the house of representatives shall be a quorum for doing
business”) is nearly identical to that found in the Federal Quorum Clause. The
Federal Quorum Clause provides:

Each house shall be the judge of the elections, returns and
qualifications of its own members, and a majority of each shall
constitute a quorum to do business; but a smaller number may
adjourn from day to day, and may be authorized to compel the
attendance of absent members, in such manner and under such
penalties as each house may provide.

U.S. CONST. art. I, § 5, cl. 1 (emphasis added). Because of the similarity in
language, we find the history of the Federal Quorum Clause, adopted in 1787,
after the first permanent New Hampshire Constitution was adopted,
instructive. See 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787 592 (Max
Farrand ed., 1911); see also Baines, 152 N.H. at 134-35 (examining the history
of the Federal Origination Clause when interpreting the origination clause in
the State Constitution); Pollard v. Gregg, 77 N.H. 190, 192 (1914) (giving weight
to federal interpretation of the Federal Quorum Clause when interpreting
Quorum Clause of the State Constitution), superseded by statute on other
grounds as stated in In re Juvenile 2005-2 12, 154 N.H. 763, 767 (2007).

The language of the Federal Quorum Clause, Article 1, Section 5, Clause
1 of the Federal Constitution, was settled in September 1787. See 2 The

 
Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, supra at 592; see also John Bryan
Williams, How to Survive a Terrorist Attack: The Constitution’s Majority
Quorum Requirement and the Continuity of Congress, 48 Wm. & Mary L. Rev.
1025, 1041 (2006). “By the time of the 1787 Convention, the legislative bodies
of the thirteen states generally operated under majority quorum requirements.”
Williams, supra at 1038 n.36. “When the Committee [of Detail] reported back
to the Convention on August 6th with a draft based on the Convention’s earlier
debates, it included a section in Article VI establishing that a majority of
members of each House constituted a quorum to do business.” Williams,
supra at 1037; see 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, supra at
179-80. “The Convention had not debated the issue before this time, so it
appears that the members of the Committee [of Detail], as they did in other
sections, took this language from contemporary state constitutions.” Williams,
supra at 1037-38.

“The Constitutional Convention considered several different quorum
rules, debating in some detail how the different schemes would affect the
representative bodies they sought to create.” Williams, supra at 1046. “One of
the central themes of the debate over the quorum requirement concerned the
logistical difficulties and delays contemporary legislatures had in assembling a
majority of their members.” Williams, supra at 1038. “Many delegates feared
that a high quorum requirement in a national legislature would be an
insurmountable obstacle to the efficient conduct of business.” Williams, supra
at 1038; see 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, supra at 251.
The convention had experienced this itself. See Williams, supra at 1038 n.37.
When it opened on May 14, 1787, only two complete state delegations were
present. Williams, supra at 1038. The convention could not convene for
business until 11 days later when the seventh state delegation arrived.
Williams, supra at 1038.

“The proponents of a lower quorum requirement made another
argument: that a majority quorum requirement might be high enough to
encourage members of Congress to engage in quorum-busting maneuvers
(what they called ‘secessions).” Williams, supra at 1039. “Their argument was
that if a house had once reached a majority to do business, but many members
were still absent, a minority group large enough to deprive the house of a
majority could hold the Congress hostage by threatening secession.” Williams,
supra at 1039; see 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, supra at
251-52. “In response to these concerns over the high potential costs of a
majority requirement, several delegates proposed setting a baseline quorum
number in the Constitution, but then giving the houses discretion to later
adjust the quorum number through legislation.” Williams, supra at 1039.

However, “[t]he majority of delegates . . . favored a constitutionally fixed
majority quorum requirement, arguing that, in spite of the higher costs it

 
imposed on the decision-making process, it provided Americans a guarantee
that a small group of unrepresentative people could not take actions binding
the whole country.” Williams, supra at 1040; see 2 The Records of the Federal
Convention of 1787, supra at 251-52. A delegate from Virginia argued that in a
country “embracing so great a diversity of interests, it would be dangerous to
the distant parts to allow a small number of members of the two Houses to
make laws.” 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 17 87, supra at 121,
251-52; see 1 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, at 1 (Max
Farrand ed., 1911) (identifying delegates from Virginia). He cautioned that “[ijf
the Legislature should be able to reduce the number at all, it might reduce it as
low as it pleased & the U. States might be governed by a Juncto....”! 2 The
Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, supra at 252. Thus, “the
convention rejected the English Parliament model of a numerically small
quorum, which would reduce the costs of doing business, but would not
provide what [the framers] thought was an adequate representational
guarantee.” Williams, supra at 1046.

As this history reveals, the framers of the Federal Constitution intended
the majority quorum requirement to ensure that legislation would not pass
with “too small a number to represent the whole inhabitants of the United
States,” 5 Debates on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution in the
Convention 292-93 (Jonathan Elliot ed. 1845), and to guarantee that
congressional members residing far from the seat of government would not be
excluded from its work, 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787,
supra at 251-52.

As the United States Supreme Court has explained when discussing the
Federal Quorum Clause:

The two houses of Congress are legislative bodies representing
larger constituencies. Power is not vested in any one individual,
but in the aggregate of the members who compose the body, and
its action is not the action of any separate member or number of
members, but the action of the body as a whole; and the question
which has over and over again been raised is, what is necessary to
constitute the official action of this legislative and representative
body.

United States v. Ballin, 144 U.S. 1, 7 (1892).

 

' According to a dictionary of the time, “juncto” had the same meaning as “junto,” and both words
referred to “a company of conspirators, or a factious assembly of [malcontents], met together
either to exercise that authority, which their rebellion has put into their power, or to consult of
ways and means of carrying on and supporting their present and future designs.” N. Bailey, The

New Universal Etymological English Dictionary (7th ed. 1776).
Justices of this court have similarly explained with respect to Part II,
Article 20:

The State Constitution ... provides that neither the house of
representatives, nor the senate may act in the absence of a
specified quorum. Left unstated, yet implicit in this constitutional
scheme, is the requirement that the legislative authority of the
government may be exercised only by a quorum of the two bodies
of the General Court. Although the legislature may delegate a
portion of the legislative authority to an administrative agency
which is not subject to this requirement, it may not delegate its
lawmaking authority to a smaller legislative body and thereby
evade the requirement for action by a majority of a quorum of both
legislative bodies.

Opinion of the Justices, 121 N.H. 552, 560 (1981) (citation omitted).

The evident principal aim of the majority quorum requirement in the first
clause of Part II, Article 20, and the two-thirds quorum requirement in the
second clause, “is to ensure that a certain number of members are present”
before the House “can transact business.” Williams, supra at 1032; see Ballin,
144 U.S. at 5 (explaining that under the Federal Quorum Clause, “when a
majority are present the house is in a position to do businessJ;] [iJts capacity to
transact business is then established”); see also 2 Samuel Johnson, A
Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed. 1773) (defining a “quorum” as
“such a number of any officers as is sufficient to do business’).

 

Within the meaning of Part II, Article 20, “present” means “[n]ot absent ;
being face to face ; being at hand.” 2 Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the
English Language, supra. As a practical matter in the eighteenth century,
physical presence was required for there to be a quorum, and because of
distance and travel, it could take time for a quorum to be present. For
instance, although Congress met for the first time on March 4, 1789, both
houses had to adjourn because neither had a quorum on that date. Howard M.
Wasserman, The Trouble with Shadow Government, 52 Emory L.J. 281, 301
(2003). Over the next month, both houses of the federal legislature had to
adjourn repeatedly because of the lack of a quorum. Id. at 301-02. The House
did not achieve a quorum until April 1, and the Senate did not achieve a
quorum until April 6. Id. at 302.

“We may assume” that the framers of the State Constitution, in adopting
Part I, Article 20, “did not have specifically in mind” virtual presence “any
more than [the framers of the Federal Constitution] contemplated the
application of the commerce clause to interstate telephone, telegraph and
wireless communication, which are concededly within it.” Tashjian v.
Republican Party of Connecticut, 479 U.S. 208, 226 (1986) (quotation omitted)
(recognizing that the framers of the Federal Constitution, in adopting the
Qualifications Clause, were “not contemplating the effects of that provision
upon the modern system of party primaries”); see Kyllo v. United States, 533
U.S. 27, 29, 33-34 (2001) (writing for the court, Justice Scalia observed that
“[i]t would be foolish to contend that the degree of privacy secured to citizens
by the Fourth Amendment has been entirely unaffected by the advance of
technology”).

“But in determining whether a provision of the Constitution applies toa
new subject matter, it is of little significance that it is one with which the
framers were not familiar.” Tashjian, 479 U.S. at 226 (quotation omitted); see
Lopez v. United States, 373 U.S. 427, 459 (1963) (Brennan, J., dissenting)
(“The Constitution would be an utterly impractical instrument of contemporary
government if it were deemed to reach only problems familiar to the technology
of the eighteenth century... .”). “For in setting up an enduring framework of
government they undertook to carry out for the indefinite future and in all the
vicissitudes of the changing affairs of [the citizenry], those fundamental
purposes which the instrument itself discloses.” Tashjian, 479 U.S. at 226
(quotation omitted); cf. The Federalist No. 59, at 306 (Alexander Hamilton)
(George W. Carey and James McClellan eds., 2001) (“It will not be alleged, that
an election law could have been framed and inserted in the constitution, which
would have been applicable to every probable change in the situation of the
country.”).

As long as the requisite number of representatives is “present,” either in
person or virtually, meaning that the requisite number is “at hand” and “[njot
absent,” Part II, Article 20 is satisfied. 2 Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the
English Language, supra; see Pollard, 77 N.H. at 192 (holding that the phrase
“members of the house of representatives” in the first clause of Part II, Article
20 “refers to those members elected who are qualified and recognized as
constituting the body of the house for the transaction of business, and does not
include deceased persons, or persons who have resigned, or who have been
removed since their election as representatives”). Moreover, the State
Constitution, like the Federal Constitution, “prescribe[s] no method” for
determining whether a quorum is present. Ballin, 144 U.S. at 6. The State
Constitution, like the Federal Constitution, commits to each house of the
legislature the authority to adopt its own rules of proceedings. See N.H.
CONST. pt. II, art. 22; U.S. CONST. art. I, § 5, cl. 2. Thus, “it is... within the
competency of the house to prescribe any method which shall be reasonably
certain to ascertain” the presence of a quorum. Ballin, 144 U.S. at 6.
For all of the above reasons, we conclude that holding a House session
remotely, either wholly or in part, whereby a quorum could be determined
electronically, would not violate Part II, Article 20 of the New Hampshire
Constitution.

 

Goss
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P. BASSETT
S bciate Justice

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ANNA BARBARA HANTAMA M NCONT
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PATRICK E. DONOVAN
Associate Justice

 

James S. Cianci, house legal counsel, filed a memorandum and argued
orally on behalf of the New Hampshire House of Representatives in support of a
negative answer to the question presented.

lan R. A. Oxenham, of Plainfield, filed a memorandum and argued orally
on behalf of Representative Lee Oxenham of the New Hampshire House of
Representatives in support of a negative answer to the question presented.

Paul Twomey, of Epsom, filed a memorandum and argued orally on
behalf of Representative Robert “Renny” Cushing and former Representative
Mindi Messmer of the New Hampshire House of Representatives in support of a

negative answer to the question presented.

10

 
Representative David R. Coursin, MD, of Northwood, of the New
Hampshire House of Representatives, filed a memorandum in support of a
negative answer to the question presented.

Joseph A. Hoell, Jr., of Milford, Secretary, The New Hampshire Firearms
Coalition Inc., filed a memorandum in support of an affirmative answer to the
question presented, and Penny S. Dean, of Concord, argued orally on his
behalf.

Andrew J. Manuse, Chairman ReOpenNH, joined in the memorandum

submitted by Joseph A. Hoell, Jr.

1]