Court Opinion

ID: 4694506
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-06-10 23:08:17.056762+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:29.870261
License: Public Domain

06/10/2021

                                      OP 21-0125
                                                                                       Case Number: OP 21-0125

         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                     2021 MT 149

BOB BROWN, DOROTHY BRADLEY, VERNON FINLEY,
MAE NAN ELLINGSON, and the LEAGUE OF WOMEN
VOTERS OF MONTANA,

          Petitioners,

    v.

GREG GIANFORTE, Governor of Montana,

          Respondent,

   and

MONTANA STATE LEGISLATURE,

         Intervenor and Respondent.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING:            Petition for Original Jurisdiction

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

           For Petitioners:

                  A. Clifford Edwards, Edwards & Culver, Billings, Montana

                  James H. Goetz, Goetz, Baldwin & Geddes, P.C., Bozeman, Montana

           For Respondent:

                  Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, David M.S. Dewhirst,
                  Solicitor General, J. Stuart Segrest, Civil Bureau Chief, Aislinn W. Brown,
                  Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

                  Anita Milanovich, Office of the Montana Governor, Helena, Montana

           For Intervenor:

                  Emily Jones, Talia G. Damrow, Jones Law Firm, PLLC, Billings, Montana
         For Amicus Montana Trial Lawyers Association:

               Colin Gerstner, Gerstner Adam Law PLLC, Billings, Montana

               Seamus Molloy, Knight Nicastro Mackay, Missoula, Montana

         For Amicus Montana Defense Trial Lawyers:

               Sean Goicoechea, Moore, Cockrell, Goicoechea & Johnson, P.C., Kalispell,
               Montana

         For Amicus Mountain States Legal Foundation:

               Cody J. Wisniewski, Mountain States Legal Foundation, Lakewood,
               Colorado

         For Amicus Montana Family Foundation:

               Jon Metropoulos, Metropoulos Law Firm, Helena, Montana

               KD Feedback, Toole & Feedback, PLLC, Lincoln, Montana

                                           Submitted on Briefs: May 12, 2021

                                                         Decided: June 10, 2021

Filed:

                        cir-641.—if
               __________________________________________
                                 Clerk

                                       2
Justice James Jeremiah Shea delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1     In this original proceeding, Petitioners challenge the constitutionality of Senate Bill

140 (“SB 140”), a bill passed by the 2021 Montana Legislature and signed into law by the

Governor. SB 140 abolishes Montana’s Judicial Nomination Commission and the process

that had previously been in place to screen applicants for vacancies on the Supreme Court

and the District Courts and replaced it with a process by which any person who otherwise

satisfies the eligibility requirements for a Supreme Court Justice or District Court Judge

can be considered for appointment by the Governor provided they obtain letters of support

from three Montana adults.

¶2     We address the following issues:

       Issue One: Do the Petitioners have standing to challenge the constitutionality of
       SB 140?

       Issue Two: Whether urgency or emergency factors justify an original proceeding in
       this Court pursuant to M. R. App. P. 14(4)?

       Issue Three: Does SB 140 violate Article VII, Section 8(2) of the
       Montana Constitution?1

¶3     We conclude the Petitioners have standing to challenge the constitutionality of

SB 140, and that urgent or emergency factors justify an original proceeding in this Court.

We therefore grant the petition for writ and assume original jurisdiction over Petitioners’

1
  Although Petitioners frame their constitutional challenge as “whether SB 140 is unconstitutional
under Article VII of the Montana Constitution,” it can more precisely be framed as whether SB 140
is unconstitutional under Article VII, Section 8(2) of the Montana Constitution, which provides
that when a vacancy occurs on the Supreme Court or one of the District Courts, “the governor shall
appoint a replacement from nominees selected in the manner provided by law.”
                                                3
constitutional challenge.   We conclude that SB 140 does not violate Article VII,

Section 8(2) of the Montana Constitution.

                                    BACKGROUND

¶4    The original Montana Constitution of 1889 provided that in case of a vacancy on

the Supreme Court, or any of the District Courts, the vacancy “shall be filled by

appointment, by the governor of the State.” Mont. Const. art. VIII, § 34 (1889). This

procedure was changed by ratification of the 1972 Constitution, which provided that in

case of judicial vacancies, the Governor would appoint a replacement from nominees

selected in a manner provided by law. Mont. Const. art. VII, § 8.

¶5    Pursuant to the newly ratified Constitution, the 1973 Legislature passed

Senate Bill 28 (“SB 28”), which was codified at § 3-1-1001, MCA, et seq., and provided

for the creation of a “Judicial Nomination Commission.” The Commission was composed

of seven members, appointed to staggered four-year terms: four lay members were

appointed by the Governor, two attorney members were appointed by the Supreme Court,

and the final member was a sitting district court judge. The procedure enacted by SB 28

provided that when there was a judicial vacancy, any individual who satisfied the

constitutional requirements to serve as a Supreme Court Justice or District Court Judge

could submit an application to the Commission for that position. After a public comment

period, the Commission would then screen the applicants and forward a list of three to five

nominees from which the Governor could appoint a replacement to fill the vacancy. The

appointee would then stand for election at the next election and, if elected, for all

                                            4
subsequent elections in the regular course. Depending on the timing of the appointment,

the appointee may also be subject to Senate confirmation.2

¶6     The commission system enacted in 1973 remained the procedure for filling judicial

vacancies until this year, when the 2021 Legislature passed SB 140. SB 140 abolished the

Judicial Nomination Commission and replaced it with a procedure by which any individual

who otherwise satisfies the constitutional requirements to serve as a Supreme Court Justice

or District Court Judge may apply directly to the Governor. After a public comment period,

the Governor may appoint any applicant who has received a letter of support from at least

three Montana adults. As with the previous system, the appointee would then stand for

election at the next election and, if elected, for all subsequent elections in the regular course

and, depending on the timing of the appointment, the appointee may also be subject to

Senate confirmation.

                                 STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶7     The determination of a party’s standing is a question of law that we review de novo.

Cmty. Ass’n for N. Shore Conservation, Inc. v. Flathead Cty., 2019 MT 147, ¶ 18,

396 Mont. 194, 445 P.3d 1195. We exercise plenary review over matters of constitutional

interpretation. Nelson v. City of Billings, 2018 MT 36, ¶ 8, 390 Mont. 290, 412 P.3d 1058.

2
   Senate confirmation is required for every interim appointment except in two specific
circumstances: (1) if the appointment is made while the Senate is not in session and the term to
which the appointee is appointed expires prior to the next legislative session, or (2) if a general
election will be held prior to the next legislative session and the appointment is made prior to the
candidate filing deadline for primary elections, in which case the position is subject to election at
the next primary and general elections. Section 3-1-1013(2)(a)–(b), MCA (2019).
                                                 5
                                       DISCUSSION

¶8      Issue One: Do the Petitioners have standing to challenge the constitutionality of
        SB 140?

¶9      “Standing is a threshold jurisdictional requirement that limits Montana courts to

deciding only cases or controversies (case-or-controversy standing) within judicially

created prudential limitations (prudential standing). . . . Case-or-controversy standing

limits the courts to deciding actual, redressable controversy, while prudential standing

confines the courts to a role consistent with the separation of powers.” Bullock v. Fox,

2019 MT 50, ¶ 28, 395 Mont. 35, 435 P.3d 1187 (citations omitted).

¶10     In order to establish case-or-controversy standing, Petitioners must “clearly allege

past, present, or threatened injury to a property or civil right.” Bullock, ¶ 31. The question

is not whether the issue itself is justiciable, but whether the Petitioners are the proper party

to seek redress in this controversy. In that regard, the injury Petitioners allege must be

“concrete, meaning actual or imminent, and not abstract, conjectural, or hypothetical;

redressable; and distinguishable from injury to the public generally.” Bullock, ¶ 31.

¶11     The individual Petitioners in this case are all Montana residents, voters, and

taxpayers. Petitioners cite a number of cases in which this Court has found standing in

cases    involving   constitutional   challenges    based    on    purported    violations   of

Article VII: Committee for an Effective Judiciary v. State, 209 Mont. 105, 679 P.2d 1223

(1984); Jones v. Judge, 176 Mont. 251, 577 P.2d 846 (1978); Keller v. Smith,

170 Mont. 399, 401, 553 P.2d 1002, 1004 (1976); Yunker v. Murray, 170 Mont. 427,

554 P.2d 285 (1976); Reichert v. State ex rel. McCulloch, 2012 MT 111, 365 Mont. 92,

                                               6
278 P.3d 455. In all of these cases, Petitioners note, this Court has found standing based

on the challenging parties’ status as electors, citizens, and/or taxpayers.

¶12    Respondents respond that the individual Petitioners’ status as Montana residents,

voters, and taxpayers is insufficient to confer standing in this case. The Governor argues

that the cases cited by Petitioners are distinguishable from the present case because

“SB 140 has nothing to do with judicial elections, unlike those challenges to judicial

election laws where this Court has accepted original jurisdiction.”           Similarly, the

Legislature argues that the individual Petitioners’ status as Montana residents and voters is

insufficient because “[v]oters have no right to select nominees for appointment to judicial

vacancies or to determine how nominees are selected.”

¶13    Respondents are correct that SB 140 has nothing to do with judicial elections. It

does, however, have to do with the process by which judicial vacancies are filled. Critical

to the constitutionality of that process is the manner by which the nominees are selected to

fill that vacancy. Among other criteria, SB 140 provides that in order to be considered a

nominee for a judicial vacancy, an applicant must “receive[] a letter of support from at least

three adult Montana residents by the close of the public comment period.” While the

Legislature may be correct that “[v]oters have no right to . . . determine how [judicial]

nominees are selected” (emphasis added), in fact all adult Montana residents, regardless of

their voter registration status, are integral to the process of determining how judicial

nominees are selected.

                                              7
¶14    Moreover, if we were to hold SB 140 unconstitutional, a judge appointed pursuant

to its provisions would not be vested with judicial power and therefore would not be a

judge at all. This Court has addressed judicial appointments in a number of previous cases;

our reasoning and analysis of those matters is instructive here. In Blodgett v. Orzech,

2012 MT 134, 365 Mont. 290, 280 P.3d 904, we considered whether a substitute justice of

the peace was properly appointed according to statute and able to oversee a trial. In

Potter v. Dist. Court of the Sixteenth Judicial Dist., 266 Mont. 384, 880 P.2d 1319 (1994),

we considered whether a substitute justice of the peace was properly appointed and thus

able to issue search warrants. And in Pinnow v. Mont. State Fund, 2007 MT 332,

340 Mont. 217, 172 P.3d 1273, we considered the substitution of a district court judge for

a Worker’s Compensation Court judge. These cases demonstrate important propositions.

First, the statutes through which a person is vested with judicial authority set forth

intelligible standards and are subject to judicial review. Although Orzech, Potter, and

Pinnow considered only the compliance with statutory requirements, it is axiomatic that if

a court can interpret a statute, it also can review its constitutionality. See Driscoll v.

Stapleton, 2020 MT 247, ¶ 11 n.3, 401 Mont. 405, 473 P.3d 386; see generally Marbury v.

Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 167, 177-78 (1803); Gen. Agric. Corp. v. Moore, 166 Mont. 510,

515-16, 534 P.2d 859, 862-63 (1975).

¶15    More pertinent to the discussion of an “injury” sufficient to confer standing, these

cases illustrate that if an appointing statute is not followed, judicial power never vests in

the appointee. Simply put, the appointed person is not a judge and any judicial acts he or

she purports to make are void. Orzech, ¶ 22 (“[U]nless the procedures required . . . are

                                             8
followed, then no substitute justice is appointed, and the person seeking to exercise the

powers of a judge as his substitute has no authority or jurisdiction to do so. That person is,

quite simply, not a judge as he has not been vested by law with the power to perform the

functions of a judge.”) (citing Pinnow, ¶ 24; Potter, 266 Mont. at 393, 880 P.2d at 1325).

Therefore, any party appearing before a judge has standing to argue that the judge was not

vested properly with judicial authority and thus cannot perform the functions of a judge.

¶16    Here, we are concerned not with a substitute justice of the peace who may handle a

small number of cases or issue a few warrants, nor with a judge overseeing a single workers

compensation matter. Rather, the appointed judge will be a district court judge whose

rulings will impact hundreds of litigants, criminal defendants, and third parties. If we were

to conclude that Petitioners lack standing, once a judge is appointed pursuant to SB 140

any person appearing before that judge or subject to his or her authority would have

standing to challenge SB 140’s constitutionality. As a practical matter, should SB 140 be

found unconstitutional through the normal course of litigation and appeals after an

appointed judge presides in the case, motions, briefs, or hearings in any affected cases

would need to be re-heard, and warrants, orders, or sentences the judge issued would be

voided. Needless to say, resolving such a situation would come at great expense in time

and money to the county, the judicial system, and the individual litigants.

¶17    Even more, the practical aspects of that situation are overshadowed by the

constitutional and due process implications. In this nation, both at the federal and state

level, all legal authority is derived first and foremost from the constitution and then from

the statutes implementing its provisions. A judge’s authority is wide and far-reaching: the

                                              9
judge may compel payments of fees and awards, divest litigants of their property, declare

a defendant’s guilt or innocence, sentence offenders to prison, separate families, and

otherwise strip people of the civil and political rights to which they are guaranteed. Judges

may perform these acts only so long as they are vested by law—as prescribed by the

constitution—with judicial authority.3

¶18    As it stands, the only current judicial vacancy is in Cascade County. No Petitioner

lives there or claims to have any matter pending in that county. A district court, however,

has statewide jurisdiction, §§ 3-5-302, -303, MCA, and its orders in many cases may affect

individuals who have no desire of their own to file suit or otherwise appear before the court.

Money can be regained, orders overruled, and certain rights restored, but the fundamental

violation of a person’s rights to due process, individual dignity, and liberty that would

occur should a “judge” with no vested judicial authority, acting in the name of the State,

compel that person to act or not act, or adjudicate rights regarding property or the law, is

irreparable.

¶19    Were Petitioners correct in their argument that SB 140 is unconstitutional, in the

near future there would be a person in Cascade County with no vested authority acting—

in the literal sense—as a judge. The seriousness of such a “judge” unlawfully wielding

authority that may affect the Petitioners is a sufficiently clear threat to Petitioners’ property

3
  This authority goes beyond whether or not a judge’s rulings are legally correct, biased, or
otherwise improper. Even if the rulings are subject to appeal, a person not vested with judicial
authority pursuant to the law and the constitution has no authority to compel action or to order a
deprivation of liberty or property.
                                               10
or civil rights to meet the case-or-controversy requirement for standing and one that this

Court can resolve by ruling on the merits of Petitioners’ claim.

¶20    Having concluded that Petitioners have satisfied case-or-controversy standing, we

next consider whether Petitioners’ challenge exceeds prudential standing limitations.

Prudential standing is a form of “judicial self-governance” that discretionarily limits the

exercise of judicial authority consistent with the separation of powers. Heffernan v.

Missoula City Council, 2011 MT 91, ¶ 32, 360 Mont. 207, 255 P.3d 80. “[C]ourts generally

should not adjudicate matters ‘more appropriately’ in the domain of the legislative or

executive branches or the reserved political power of the people.” Larson v. State,

2019 MT 28, ¶ 18 n.6, 394 Mont. 167, 434 P.3d 241 (citing Heffernan, ¶¶ 32-33).

¶21    The Montana Constitution provides that “[n]o person or persons charged with the

exercise of power properly belonging to one branch shall exercise any power properly

belonging to either of the others, except as in this constitution expressly directed or

permitted.” Mont. Const. art. III, § 1. An issue is not properly before the judiciary when

“there is a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate

political department or a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for

resolving” the issue. Nixon v. United States, 506 U.S. 224, 228, 113 S. Ct. 732, 735 (1993).

However, “not every matter touching on politics is a political question.” Japan Whaling

Ass’n v. Am. Cetacean Soc’y., 478 U.S. 221, 229, 106 S. Ct. 2860, 2865 (1986).

¶22    The Governor argues that we should reject jurisdiction under the doctrine of

prudential standing because “the Montana Constitution unambiguously grants authority to

the Legislature to determine how nominees for a judicial vacancy are presented to the

                                            11
Governor,” citing Article VII, Section 8(2). The Governor argues that it would therefore

violate the separation of powers for this Court to second-guess those determinations. We

disagree.

¶23    “Both the United States Supreme Court and this Court recognize that

non-self-executing clauses of constitutions are non-justiciable political questions.”

Columbia Falls Elem. Sch. Dist. No. 6 v. State, 2005 MT 69, ¶ 15, 326 Mont. 304,

109 P.3d 257 (citing Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 82 S. Ct. 691 (1962)). “To determine

whether a provision is self-executing, we ask whether the Constitution addresses the

language to the courts or to the Legislature.” Columbia Falls Elem. Sch. Dist., ¶ 16.

Article VII, Section 8(2) directs the Legislature to prescribe a manner by which nominees

are selected for appointment by the Governor to a judicial vacancy; it is therefore

non-self-executing. However, once the Legislature has acted, or “executed,” a provision

that implicates individual constitutional rights, courts can determine whether that

enactment fulfills the Legislature’s constitutional responsibility. Columbia Falls Elem.

Sch. Dist., ¶ 17 (citing City of Boerne v. Flores, 521 U.S. 507, 117 S. Ct. 2157 (1997)

(determining, under the First Amendment, that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of

1993 violates the Constitution despite Congress specifically implementing the Act through

Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, that provides that “the Congress shall have power

to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.”)).

       Provisions that directly implicate rights guaranteed to individuals under our
       Constitution are in a category of their own. That is, although the provision
       may be non-self-executing, thus requiring initial legislative action, the
       courts, as final interpreters of the Constitution, have the final “obligation to

                                              12
       guard, enforce, and protect every right granted or secured by the
       Constitution . . . .”

Columbia Falls Elem. Sch. Dist., ¶ 18 (quoting Robb v. Connolly, 111 U.S. 624, 637,
4 S. Ct. 544, 551 (1884).

¶24    Although the Governor is correct that the Montana Constitution grants the authority

to the Legislature to determine how nominees for a judicial vacancy are presented to the

Governor, that authority must nevertheless be exercised in compliance with the provisions

of the Constitution. The very heart of this dispute is whether SB 140 comports with the

provisions of Article VII, Section 8(2) of the Montana Constitution. Since Marbury, it has

been accepted that determining the constitutionality of a statute is the exclusive province

of the judicial branch. It is circular logic to suggest that a court cannot consider whether a

statute complies with a particular constitutional provision because the same constitutional

provision forecloses such consideration. We therefore conclude that prudential standing

does not bar our consideration of the petition.

¶25    Issue Two: Whether urgency or emergency factors justify an original proceeding in
       this Court pursuant to M. R. App. P. 14(4)?

¶26    This Court accepts original jurisdiction “when urgency or emergency factors exist

making litigation in the trial courts and the normal appeal process inadequate and when the

case involves purely legal questions of statutory or constitutional interpretation which are

of state-wide importance.” M. R. App. P. 14(4). Original proceedings are appropriate only

where: “(1) constitutional issues of major statewide importance are involved; (2) the case

involves purely legal questions of statutory and constitutional construction; and (3) urgency

                                             13
and emergency factors exist making the normal appeal process inadequate.” Hernandez v.

Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs, 2008 MT 251, ¶ 9, 345 Mont. 1, 189 P.3d 638 (citation omitted).

¶27    Petitioners contend that all three factors are satisfied in this case. They note that

this is an issue of statewide importance because it impacts the appointment process for

Supreme Court Justices and District Court Judges statewide; the case involves purely an

interpretation of Article VII, Section 8 of the Montana Constitution and whether the

procedure set forth in SB 140 complies; and urgency and emergency factors exist making

the normal appeal process inadequate because SB 140 is effective immediately, thus any

judicial vacancies will be filled by a process which Petitioners contend is unconstitutional.

Petitioners further note that, at the time of filing their Petition, there were three judicial

appointments whose confirmations were pending before the Senate.

¶28    Of the three criteria, Respondents address only the final criterion: whether urgency

and emergency factors exist making the normal appeal process inadequate. The Governor

responds that Petitioners’ concerns are speculative because, as of the time the Governor’s

response brief was filed, there were no judicial vacancies which would be subject to the

SB 140 process. Regarding the three judicial appointments that were pending confirmation

at the time of the Governor’s brief, the Governor noted: “Petitioners’ true concerns arise

only if the Senate rejects those appointments, and the Governor then appoints individuals

who were not among those forwarded by the Judicial Nomination Commission.” Similarly,

the Legislature responded that Petitioners’ fears of a judge being appointed by way of an

ostensibly unconstitutional appointment process will never be realized if the three

                                             14
appointees pending before the Senate at the time of the Legislature’s brief are confirmed

because “[t]here are no other current vacancies.”

¶29    In the time since both Respondents’ briefs were filed, the Senate has rejected the

appointment of one of the three appointees, thus creating a vacancy in the Eighth Judicial

District. The process for filling that vacancy pursuant to SB 140 has begun. To the extent

that Petitioners’ concerns that a judicial vacancy may be filled via the SB 140 process may

have been speculative, they obviously are not speculative any longer.

¶30    As discussed above, if Petitioners’ constitutional challenge to SB 140 was

ultimately sustained, it would render any rulings by an individual appointed to the current

vacancy in the Eighth Judicial District void ab initio. In that event, rulings of life-altering

gravity, including criminal sentences, civil judgments, and termination of parental rights,

would be ordered by an individual with “no more authority than any other member of the

general public,” while a challenge filed in district court worked its way to this Court in the

normal appeal process. Pinnow, ¶ 25. This is a wholly untenable situation. Thus, urgency

or emergency factors exist making litigation in the trial courts and the normal appeal

process inadequate.

¶31    Issue Three: Does SB 140 violate Article VII, Section 8(2) of the Montana
       Constitution?

¶32    “Statutes are presumed to be constitutional, and it is the duty of this Court to avoid

an unconstitutional interpretation if possible.” Hernandez, ¶ 15 (citing Montanans for the

Responsible Use of the School Trust v. State ex rel. Bd. of Land Comm’rs, 1999 MT 263,

¶ 11, 296 Mont. 402, 989 P.2d 800; State v. Nye, 283 Mont. 505, 510, 943 P.2d 96,

                                              15
99 (1997)). The party challenging a statute’s constitutionality bears the heavy burden of

proving the statute is unconstitutional “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Molnar v. Fox,

2013 MT 132, ¶ 49, 370 Mont. 238, 301 P.3d 824.

¶33    When interpreting constitutional provisions, we apply the same rules as those used

in construing statutes. Nelson v. City of Billings, 2018 MT 36, ¶ 14, 390 Mont. 290,

412 P.3d 1058. But just as with statutory interpretation, constitutional construction should

not “lead to absurd results, if reasonable construction will avoid it.” Nelson, ¶ 16 (citing

Grossman v. Mont. Dep’t of Natural Res., 209 Mont. 427, 451, 682 P.2d 1319,

1332 (1984)). “The principle of reasonable construction ‘allows courts to fulfill their

adjudicatory mandate and preserve the [Framers’] objective.’” Nelson, ¶ 16 (citation

omitted). Thus:

       Even in the context of clear and unambiguous language . . . we have long
       held that we must determine constitutional intent not only from the plain
       meaning of the language used, but also in light of the historical and
       surrounding circumstances under which the Framers drafted the
       Constitution, the nature of the subject matter they faced, and the objective
       they sought to achieve.

Nelson, ¶ 14 (citations omitted).

¶34    The constitutional provision at the heart of this dispute, Article VII, Section 8(2),

provides in relevant part: “For any vacancy in the office of supreme court justice or district

court judge, the governor shall appoint a replacement from nominees selected in the

manner provided by law.”         Petitioners contend that SB 140 violates Article VII,

Section 8(2) to the extent that it abolished the Judicial Nomination Commission and

replaced it with a different procedure by which judicial nominees may be selected.

                                             16
Petitioners point to the 1972 Constitutional Convention transcripts as evidence that the

delegates intended to require a commission-type of selection process. While we also deem

it appropriate in this case to consider the Constitutional Convention transcripts to determine

the Framers’ intent in the drafting of Article VII, Section 8(2), Nelson, ¶ 14, our

consideration does not lead us to the same conclusion as Petitioners—that the commission

process was the only agreed-upon method by which judicial nominees could be selected.

¶35    The Convention transcripts reveal drastically divergent views as to how judicial

vacancies should be filled. While some delegates envisioned a commission process that

would supply a limited number of names from which the Governor’s appointment must be

made, others advocated for a system that would vest even greater discretion in the Governor

in making appointments than that which was prescribed by the 1889 Constitution.

¶36    Most notable of those who would vest essentially unfettered power in the Governor

to make judicial appointments was Delegate Joyce.           Delegate Joyce introduced an

amendment that not only would have retained the direct appointment system of the

1889 Constitution, but would have eliminated the requirement that the Governor’s

appointee be confirmed by the senate. Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim

Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1104. Advocating for his amendment, Delegate

Joyce stated:

       Mr. Chairman. Getting to the heart of the matter on the commission system,
       may I submit to the delegates this consideration. In the first place, no matter
       how astute or how brilliant or how able or how fairly the Legislative
       Assembly may set up a commission to select these nominees, you cannot take
       the human element out of the situation. . . . [I]t seems to me that we’re just
       beating around the bush by having a commission and we ought to leave it up
       to the discretion of whoever is Governor to pick who he wants to fill that

                                             17
       vacancy. He can appoint any number of commissions, consult with the bar,
       consult with anybody he wants as to who he wants to select. And, of course,
       we are always limited as to who wants the job. And so it will, inevitably,
       narrow down to some people vying for the job. And I think we can trust the
       Governor to pick whom he thinks is the best man. . . . [I]t seems to me that
       the committee system doesn’t add anything at all to it and that the Governor,
       if we elect capable, honest, sincere governors, will make a choice of who he
       thinks will be a good judge on the bench of either the District or the Supreme
       Court.

Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV,

pp. 1104-05. Though not part of his proposed amendment, the only other modification to

the direct appointment process that Delegate Joyce advocated for was a requirement that

the Governor provide reasonable notice before making the appointment “to see if there

wouldn’t be a great hullabaloo go up around the state.”            Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1105.

¶37    Delegate Joyce’s motion that would have retained the direct appointment process

and eliminated the senate confirmation requirement was defeated by a vote of 69 to 26.

Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV,

p. 1106. It illustrates, though, that contrary to Petitioners’ contention that “all delegates

envisioned a judicial nomination commission/committee,” this was far from the case. In

fact, among the delegates who voted for Delegate Joyce’s proposal, some questioned

whether a nominating commission could be fair and independent:

       DELEGATE HOLLAND: “How can we guarantee that this commission—
       the ones that name the candidates—won’t be dominated by some special
       interest group?”
                                     .   .   .

                                             18
      DELEGATE DAVIS: You can say what you want, any select committee’s
      going to be a committee of the establishment. There’s just no other way to
      get around it . . .
                                      .    .   .

      DELEGATE MCKEON: I’m afraid, Mr. Chairman, that any committee,
      whether it be select, blue-ribbon or whatnot, will not be a committee whose
      interests are the interests of the people.

Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol IV,

pp. 1092, 1093, 1096.

¶38   To be sure, there were proponents of a commission system as well. Notable among

the committee/commission proponents was Delegate Berg. Delegate Berg advocated for

what he referred to as a “blue-ribbon system,” in which a committee or commission would

submit a limited number of nominees to the Governor.            Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV, pp. 1088-95. The Governor

then would be required to appoint from the list of nominees. Advocating for his proposal,

Delegate Berg stated:

      Now, there’s been a good deal of criticism about the so-called blue-ribbon
      committee that would be created by the Legislature. I suggest to you that
      that committee, committing two to three or four names to the Governor, is
      going to give the Governor a fairly wide selection of nominees, and he can
      select what he wants—whom he wants—from that committee. But, at least,
      you have the assurance that that nominee has been screened, that he does
      meet the qualifications of what you want in a good judge. This is a feature
      you do not have now, and I must recall to you that this proposition will be
      used not only on the selection of district judges, but, more importantly, on
      the selection of Supreme Court judges. That is, nominees, candidates for the
      Supreme Court judge—or the Supreme Court justice will have been screened
      for their qualifications to sit on that bench.

Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV,

p. 1094.

                                           19
¶39    What emerged from these diametrically opposed proposals was a compromise,

proposed    by    Delegate    Melvin,    that        neither   required    the   creation   of   a

commission/committee, nor precluded it. The Melvin amendment passed unanimously,

and is what ultimately became Article VII, Section 8(2).                  Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV, pp. 1113-14.

¶40    Petitioners argue that “[a]lthough the Constitution left the details to the Legislature,

the transcripts leave no doubt that the framers envisioned a separate ‘commission’ to

evaluate and nominate the ‘nominees.’” In this case, however, the devil is in the details.

Petitioners rely on statements by individual delegates—some of which are statements

criticizing the idea of a nominating commission—and make the unsupported leap that [i]t

was clear . . . that all delegates understood that the proposal envisioned a separate

‘commission/committee’ to be established to select a list of ‘nominees.’” (Emphasis in

original.) And yet neither the words “commission” nor “committee” appear anywhere in

Article VII, Section 8(2).

¶41    Both the language of Article VII, Section 8(2), and the circumstances and objectives

evinced from the Constitutional Convention debates, make clear that while some individual

delegates supported a committee or commission to screen candidates for a judicial vacancy,

others voiced distrust in such a commission and supported a process that would have vested

virtually unfettered discretion in the Governor. As is the nature of compromise, the result

was a system that was not entirely what either side wanted—a process that neither

mandated a commission/committee, nor precluded it, but rather delegated the process for

                                                20
selecting nominees to the Legislature in broad language that the selection of nominees be

“in the manner provided by law.”

¶42    Although the Constitution delegates the process for selecting judicial nominees to

the Legislature, the process itself is not without constitutional bounds. The delegates may

have disagreed as to what would be the best process for making judicial appointments, but

the clear constitutional intent of Article VII, Section 8(2) was a process that would result

in the appointment of good judges. As summed up by Delegate Garlington: “There is clear

agreement on the part of all that we do need good judges. . . . The question is how to recruit

them.” Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972,

Vol. IV, p. 1032.

¶43    “We have long held that we must determine constitutional intent not only from the

plain meaning of the language used, but also in light of the historical and surrounding

circumstances under which the Framers drafted the Constitution, the nature of the subject

matter they faced, and the objective they sought to achieve.” Nelson, ¶ 14. The manifest

constitutional objective of Article VII, Section 8(2) was the appointment of good judges.

The fact that the process does not require a commission to achieve that objective does not

mean that any process will be constitutionally sound. We therefore must still consider

whether SB 140 achieves the constitutional objective the Framers sought to achieve by the

enactment of Article VII, Section 8(2).

¶44    Although there are some key differences between SB 140 and the commission

process it replaces, many aspects of the SB 140 process are not appreciably different. Both

processes require applicants to be lawyers in good standing who satisfy the qualifications

                                             21
set forth by law for holding judicial office; both processes provide for a period of time for

the submission of applications, followed by a public comment period of at least 30 days;

both processes allow the Governor no more than 30 days to make the appointment, after

which time the appointment shall be made by the Chief Justice; finally, both processes

require Senate confirmation for all interim appointments and election for the remainder of

the term.

¶45    Where the respective processes diverge is the “selection” process by which an

“applicant” for a judicial vacancy becomes a “nominee” who the Governor may consider

for appointment to the position. The commission process provided that after screening the

applicants for the position, the Commission was required to submit to the governor a list

of “not less than three or more than five nominees for appointment to the vacant position.”

Section 3-1-1010(1), MCA (2019). The list of nominees must be accompanied by a written

report indicating the vote on each nominee, the content of the application submitted by

each nominee, letters and public comments received regarding each nominee, and the

Commission’s reasons for recommending each nominee for appointment. The report must

give specific reasons for recommending each nominee. Section 3-1-1010(2), MCA (2019).

¶46    In contrast to the commission process, the selection process of SB 140 requires that

an applicant “receives a letter of support from at least three adult Montana residents by the

close of the public comment period,” in order to be considered a nominee eligible for

appointment by the Governor. Petitioners describe this process as “a crude attempt” to

replace the commission process that provided “a list of nominees carefully vetted by an

independent source.” At the end of the day, however, it is not the task of this Court to

                                             22
assess the relative “crudeness” of the process; it is to assess the constitutionality of the

process within the requirements of Article VII, Section 8(2).

¶47    Petitioners equate the absence of a commission to screen the candidates with the

lack of a vetting process. But this argument ignores the very public vetting to which all

applicants for a judicial vacancy are subjected during the public comment period. Indeed,

it could be argued that SB 140 meets the Convention delegates’ concern about selecting

“good judges” by incorporating at least part of Delegate Joyce’s objective—allowing the

Governor to make a direct appointment after providing reasonable notice “to see if there

wouldn’t be a great hullabaloo go up around the state.”           Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 29, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1105. As any individual

who might consider applying for a judicial appointment is no doubt aware, the internet is

a hullabaloo-friendly place. Thus, it can hardly be said that the lack of a nominating

commission means that applicants for judicial vacancies will not be subject to a vetting

process.

¶48    Petitioners’ argument also ignores the vetting to which the appointee will be

subjected by the Senate in order to be confirmed. Finally, Petitioners’ argument ignores

the most critical vetting process—the vetting by the voters to which the appointee will

ultimately be subjected at the next election.

¶49    As for the requirement that an applicant receive a letter of support from three adult

Montana residents in order to be considered a “nominee” eligible for appointment to the

bench, Petitioners argue that this is nothing more than “equating an ‘applicant’ with the

term ‘nominee’ [and] does not salvage constitutionality.” Although it could be argued that

                                                23
this lowers the bar for an applicant to be forwarded to the Governor for consideration, it

must be noted that under the commission process, an applicant could be forwarded onto

the Governor for consideration with no public support. And while an applicant in the

commission process with no public support would still have to be recommended by at least

four members of the Commission, § 3-1-1008, MCA (2019), it is also true that the

necessary four votes could come solely from members who had been appointed by the

Governor. Section 3-1-1001(1)(a), MCA (2019).

¶50    This in no way is intended to impugn the hard work and dedicated service that

Commission members have put in over the past forty-eight years. As Petitioners correctly

point out, the Judicial Nomination Commission has been in place since 1973. During this

time, its members have included appointees from all over the State, who have been

appointed by governors of both parties and this Court, as well as selected by the

district court judges from across the State, seeking to honor the constitutional objective of

recruiting good judges to serve the citizens of Montana. During the debate over SB 140,

some contended that the Commission should continue unaltered, some contended that it

should be modified, and some contended that it should be abolished. In the final analysis,

however, it is not the function of this Court to determine which process we think is the

better process for making judicial appointments—it is to determine whether the process

prescribed by SB 140, which is presumed to be constitutional, complies with the language

and constitutional intent of Article VII, Section 8(2). We conclude that it does.

                                             24
                                         CONCLUSION

¶51    Petitioners have standing to bring this petition. Urgency or emergency factors

justify an original proceeding in this Court pursuant to M. R. App. P. 14(4). We therefore

grant the petition for writ and assume original jurisdiction over Petitioners’ constitutional

challenge. For the reasons stated above, we conclude that SB 140 does not violate

Article VII, Section 8(2) of the Montana Constitution.

                                                  /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA

We Concur:

/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
/S/ JIM RICE
/S/ MATTHEW WALD
District Court Judge Matthew Wald
sitting for Chief Justice Mike McGrath

Justice Jim Rice concurring.

¶52    I concur with the Court’s decision, but write to address the extraordinary, indeed,

extraconstitutional, actions taken by the Legislature and the Department of Justice during

the pendency of this proceeding.

¶53    On April 12, 2021, a letter addressed to me as Acting Chief Justice in this

proceeding, OP 21-0125, was delivered to the Court by the Department of Justice in its

stated role as counsel for the State Legislature, regarding the Temporary Order issued by

the Court on April 11, temporarily quashing a legislative subpoena issued to the Court

Administrator, pending briefing on the matter. The letter expressed displeasure with the

                                             25
Court’s Order, cited the Separation of Powers provision of the Montana Constitution,

Art. III, § 1, and advised:

       [t]he Legislature does not recognize this Court’s Order as binding and will
       not abide it. The Legislature will not entertain the Court’s interference in the
       Legislature’s investigation of the serious and troubling conduct of members
       of the Judiciary. The subpoena is valid and will be enforced.

Letter from Montana Department of Justice to Acting Chief Justice, April 12, 2021.

¶54    Obviously contemptuous, the letter was followed by another letter from the

Attorney General on behalf of the Legislature on April 18, 2021, addressed to the Justices

of this Court, this one disputing the Order entered in this matter by the Court on April 16,

2021, and describing the Court’s statement therein that the Court would provide due

process in the matter as “ludicrous” and “wholly outside the bounds of rational thought.”

Letter from Montana Attorney General to Justices of the Montana Supreme Court,

April 18, 2021. It likewise insisted that, despite the Court’s order, “[t]he Legislature has

issued valid subpoenas” that would continue to be enforced.

¶55    The Department of Justice’s citation in its April 12 letter to the Separation of Powers

provision of the Montana Constitution was ironic, given that the citation was offered as

justification for the Legislature’s improper intrusion upon “the exercise of power properly

belonging to” the Judiciary. Mont. Const. art. III, § 1. It falls within the Judiciary’s power,

not the Legislature’s, to resolve “litigation challenging the constitutional authority of one

of the three branches.” Driscoll v. Stapleton, 2020 MT 247, ¶ 11 n. 3, 401 Mont. 405, 473

P.3d 386 (quoting Zivotofsky v. Clinton, 566 U.S. 189, 196, 132 S. Ct. 1421, 1428 (2012)).

The April 11, 2021 Temporary Order, with which the Legislature and Department of

                                              26
Justice refused to comply, addressed such a constitutional issue. See Temporary Order,

p. 2, April 11, 2021, OP 21-0125 (stating that “McLaughlin argues that the subpoena

exceeds the scope of legislative authority, violating the separation of powers . . . .”). The

Separation of Powers provision is not a grant of power, but a limitation upon power,

specifically, upon the inappropriate exercise of power by a branch beyond that respectively

granted under Articles V, VI, and VII of the Montana Constitution. See Larry M. Elison

& Fritz Snyder, The Montana State Constitution: A Reference Guide 89-90 (2001) (stating

that “[p]ower granted to one branch of government cannot be exercised by another” and

collecting cases, including those addressing legislative “intrusions on judicial powers.”).

¶56    The surprising thing about the Department of Justice’s letters was the ignorance of

history and long-established legal precedent they embodied, because, since the early 1800s,

“the idea that the Supreme Court had the power to pass upon constitutional questions and

that its decisions were final and binding upon the other two departments of government

ha[s] been . . . widely accepted.” Alfred H. Kelly & Winfred A. Harbison, The American

Constitution: Its Origins and Development 317 (5th ed. 1976). Although Marbury v.

Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803) (providing that “[i]t is emphatically the

province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is”) is commonly and

correctly cited as the source ruling concerning this judicial authority, see Driscoll, ¶ 11 n.3,

the principle precedes Marbury in our constitutional history. The Judiciary’s power to

judge the legality of the actions of the other two branches or “departments” was a precept

publicly advanced to the country’s citizens as explanatory of the system of government

                                              27
contemplated under the proposed Constitution, and in support of its adoption. As explained

by Alexander Hamilton in 1788, prior to the adoption of the Constitution:

       the courts were designed to be an intermediate body between the people and
       the legislature, in order, among other things, to keep the latter within the
       limits assigned to their authority. The interpretation of the laws is the proper
       and peculiar province of the courts. A constitution is, in fact, and must be
       regarded by the judges, as a fundamental law. It must therefore belong to
       them to ascertain its meaning, as well as the meaning of any particular act
       proceeding from the legislative body.

The Federalist No. 78, 498 (Robert Scigliano ed., Random House, Inc. 2000) (emphasis

added).1, 2

¶57    The reason for conferring this weighty power upon an independent judiciary was,

simply but significantly, to protect liberty.        “[L]iberty of the people can never be

endangered” by the courts of justice, Hamilton explained, “so long as the judiciary remains

1
  It is notable that Hamilton was the “big government” proponent of his day, advocating for a
strong central government with broadly construed powers. See Kelly & Harbison, supra, at 169
(stating that “Hamilton presented what was to become the classic exposition of the doctrine of the
broad construction of federal powers under the Constitution.”). Nevertheless, he urged that the
judiciary should have the final say about the validity of actions taken by the other branches of
government.
2
  The Federalist Papers are frequently cited as constitutional authority by the U.S. Supreme Court.
See Trump v. Mazars USA, LLP, ___ U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct. 2019 (2020); Allen v. Cooper, ___ U.S.
___, 140 S. Ct. 994 (2020); Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Ass’n, ___ U.S. ___, 138 S.
Ct. 1461 (2018); National Labor Relations Bd. v. SW Gen., Inc., ___ U.S. ___, 137 S. Ct. 929
(2017); Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado, ___ U.S. ___, 137 S. Ct. 855 (2017); Evenwel v. Abbott, ___
U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. 1120 (2016); Comptroller of the Treasury of Maryland v. Wynne, 575 U.S.
542, 135 S. Ct. 1787 (2015); Williams-Yulee v. Florida Bar, 575 U.S. 433, 135 S. Ct. 1656 (2015);
Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Ctr., Inc., 575 U.S. 320, 135 S. Ct. 1378 (2015); National Labor
Relations Bd. v. Canning, 573 U.S. 513, 134 S. Ct. 2550 (2014); Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian
Cmty., 572 U.S. 782, 134 S. Ct. 2024 (2014); and Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 569 U.S.
108, 133 S. Ct. 1659 (2013).

                                                28
truly distinct from both the legislature and the Executive.” Hamilton, supra, at 497.

Hamilton made this point regarding both other branches, but particularly regarding the

legislative branch:

       “there is no liberty, if the power of judging be not separated from the
       legislative and executive powers.” It proves, in the last place, that as liberty
       can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but would have everything
       to fear from its union with either of the other two departments . . . .

       The complete independence of the courts of justice is peculiarly essential in
       a limited Constitution. By a limited Constitution, I understand one which
       contains certain specified exceptions to the legislative authority; such, for
       instance, as that it shall pass no bills of attainder, no ex-post-facto laws, and
       the like. Limitations of this kind can be preserved in practice no other way
       than through the medium of the courts of justice, whose duty it must be to
       declare all acts contrary to the manifest tenor of the Constitution void.
       Without this, all the reservations of particular rights or privileges would
       amount to nothing.

Hamilton, supra at 497 (emphasis added).

¶58    However, as Hamilton further explained, the Judiciary has only “judgment” to offer,

that is, the Judiciary is provided no mechanism to enforce its own decrees, and thus, the

Judiciary “must ultimately depend upon the aid of the executive arm for the efficacious

exercise” of its power. Hamilton, supra, at 496. This reality is what makes the Attorney

General’s defiance of the Court’s orders in this case so disruptive of our constitutional

system—the Judicial branch often must rely upon the Executive branch for execution of its

orders and conveyance of the “judgment” the Judiciary has been constitutionally

empowered to provide. By repeatedly refusing to comply, the Attorney General engages

in actions that are destructive to our democratic system of government. “[T]he executive

is as much bound to recognize the Court’s decision as any other individual; otherwise the

                                              29
very judicial capacity of the Court itself is virtually destroyed.” Kelly & Harbison, supra,

at 318. Unfortunately, the Attorney General is not the first to choose this dark pathway.

¶59    President Andrew Jackson famously declared, in response to the U.S. Supreme

Court’s decision in Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Peters) 515 (1832), with which he

strongly disagreed, “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.” Kelly

& Harbison, supra, at 287. So accepted in 1832 was the principle of the Court’s power of

judicial review and the binding nature of its decisions upon the other branches of

government, that leading statesmen of the day, including Henry Clay and Daniel Webster,

attacked Jackson’s stand as subversive to our constitutional democracy and a violation of

“first principles.” Kelly & Harbison, supra, at 317. But Jackson refused to relent,

asserting, “[t]he Congress, the Executive, and the Court must each for itself be guided by

its own opinion of the Constitution”—the same position taken by the Department of Justice

in its letters of April 12 and April 18. Kelly & Harbison, supra, at 317. The results of

Jackson’s extraconstitutional stand were calamitous.

¶60    In Worcester, laws passed by the State of Georgia purporting to govern the lands of

the Cherokee Nation of Georgia—attractive lands within the western region of Georgia

desired by governing authorities and citizens alike—were challenged as being

unconstitutional. The Supreme Court struck down Georgia’s laws, declaring the Cherokee

Nation was sovereign and that it occupied its own territory “in which the laws of Georgia

can have no force, and which the citizens of Georgia have no right to enter, but with the

assent of the Cherokees themselves, or in conformity with treaties, and with the acts of

congress.” Worcester, 31 U.S. (6 Peters) at 561. The Court explained that Georgia’s laws

                                            30
       interfere forcibly with the relations established between the United States and
       the Cherokee nation, the regulation of which, according to the settled
       principles of our constitution, are committed exclusively to the government
       of the union.

       They are in direct hostility with treaties, repeated in a succession of years,
       which mark out the boundary that separates the Cherokee country from
       Georgia; guaranty to them all the land within their boundary; solemnly
       pledge the faith of the United States to restrain their citizens from trespassing
       on it; and recognize the pre-existing power of the nation to govern itself.

       They are in equal hostility with the acts of congress for regulating this
       intercourse, and giving effect to the treaties.

Worcester, 31 U.S. (6 Peters) at 561-62.

¶61    However, despite the Supreme Court’s clear directives that Georgia’s law violated

federal law and treaties, and that the national government was duty bound to defend against

this encroachment upon the Cherokees’ land, Jackson refused to honor the decision. Led

by his usurpation, the Court’s decision was openly flouted, and defiance was popularly

applauded. While the decision, if enforced, would have protected the Cherokees and

strengthened their efforts to resist the pressure of land-hungry encroachers, Jackson

ensured that it was not, instead permitting Georgia to continue its efforts and insisting upon

relocation of the Cherokees under the Indian Removal Act of 1830, 21-148 Stat. 411, by

which Indian tribes who “surrendered” their ancestral homelands were granted land in the

western United States. Thus, the Cherokees were forced into the Treaty of New Echota,

see 2 Charles J. Kappler, Indian Affairs Laws and Treaties 439-49 (2d ed. 1904), which

took their Georgia lands and subjected them to immediate forcible relocation to Oklahoma

by the U.S. Army, a brutal journey in which thousands of Cherokees lost their lives, and

which has become known to history as The Trail of Tears. This tragic suffering was rooted

                                              31
in the arrogance of one man demanding to have his own way, Constitution be damned.

While the tears of human suffering fell directly at the feet of Andrew Jackson, what is

important for us today is this: “[t]hose who fail to learn from history are condemned to

repeat it.”3 And we have seen history repeated in the Attorney General’s extralegal actions

taken in this case.

¶62    Of course, under our constitutional system of government, there are legally

permissible responses to a court decision one disagrees with. The law is a vast body of

knowledge, about which there can be fair disagreement over its correct application in a

particular case. When judges disagree about the law’s application, they publicly state their

disagreement and provide the legal reasoning therefor. For interested parties, disagreement

with the Court’s decisions can be answered by seeking rehearing by the court in the

particular case, the passage of responsive legislation, amendment of the constitution, or, in

Montana, the selection of different judges during elections. Sending the Court letters in

defiance of its orders is not a legally available option under the Montana Constitution.

¶63    Lastly, there is the matter of the Legislature’s intervention in this matter and the

subsequent statement made in its briefing. Following the letter of April 12, conveying the

refusal of the Department of Justice and the Legislature to comply with the Court’s

Temporary Order, the Legislature, represented by other counsel, filed a motion to intervene

3
   Laurence Geller CBE, Churchill’s Shakespeare, at the Folger Library, Washington D.C.
(transcript at https://perma.cc/X94L-V55G) (citing a 1948 address to the House of Commons by
Winston Churchill, paraphrasing philosopher George Santayana).

                                             32
in this matter. To obtain opposing counsel’s consent to its intervention, the Legislature

committed “to abide by and comply with all orders of the Court.” See Order, p. 2, April 14,

2021, OP 21-0125. Based expressly upon that commitment, this Court exercised its

discretion to grant the Legislature’s motion to intervene.

¶64    However, after obtaining intervention, the Legislature reneged on its commitment,

stating in its filing that what it really meant by its promise to comply with “all orders” of

the Court was merely “to abide by orders that the Court has proper jurisdiction to issue”—

apparently as that would be subjectively determined by someone other than this Court,

perhaps by the Legislature itself or by the Department of Justice.            Montana State

Legislature’s Summary Response to Petition, p. 1, n.1, April 14, 2021, OP 21-0125

(emphasis added). The Legislature thus clearly demonstrated it had gained intervention

into this proceeding by misrepresenting its position to this Court, and to opposing counsel

as well. These actions were dishonest and contemptuous. Perhaps individual legislators

active in this matter had no knowledge that these actions were taken on their behalf, or on

the Legislature’s behalf.    However, the Legislature’s intervention counsel, who are

experienced advocates, surely knew. And they know better than to engage in such

duplicitous actions.

¶65    The rightful consequence of these actions would be to revoke the Legislature’s

intervention, strike its brief, and to view with caution any future requests made of this Court

by the Legislature. Similar sanctions would likewise be appropriately imposed upon the

Department of Justice for its contemptuous actions herein. My initial thought was to ask

the Court to impose these sanctions, but a second thought prevailed: until the Legislature

                                              33
and the Department of Justice can demonstrate a proper understanding of the Judiciary’s

constitutional authority, there is little hope they could comprehend contempt of it.

¶66    I concur.

                                                  /S/ JIM RICE

Justice Laurie McKinnon, dissenting.

¶67    I dissent from the Court’s decision that SB 140 is constitutional.

¶68    Before addressing the construction of the constitutional provision at issue and the

particulars of the Framers’ intent, some preliminary observations for purposes of context

are warranted. Article VII, Section 8(2) must be considered in its entirety and consistent

with the intent of the Framers.     While “in the manner provided by law” gives the

Legislature discretion to develop a selection process for interim vacancies, that discretion

must be exercised consistent with the constitutional provision as a whole, and with the

intent of the Framers to provide a merit selection process for interim vacancies. The merit

selection process unanimously agreed upon for interim vacancies was part of a larger

conversation amongst the Framers about whether, in general, judges should be elected—

the prevailing and majority proposal—or selected based upon merit—the minority proposal

known as the “Missouri Plan.” While proponents of the merit process lost the war

respecting judicial selection as a whole, they won the battle for interim vacancies.

However, it is important to place the Framers’ debate in proper context. Because of

Montana’s biennial election cycle, it was impossible to fill an interim vacancy by election,

                                             34
the preferred method. As the Framers were united in their position that placing power in

the governor to make judicial appointments posed a threat to the independence of

Montana’s judiciary, a selection process based on merit, the only reasonable type of vetting

process, was the best solution short of an election. As they developed the judiciary article,

the Framers repeatedly referred to Montana’s history of big business, political corruption,

outside influences, and control of Montana’s courts by the executive branch.1 They were

united in their conviction that the judiciary must be independent and protected from

executive overreach. While the Framers unanimously agreed that a merit selection process

was preferable to direct gubernatorial appointments, they likewise understood that

commissions were also subject to political influences.           See Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1027 (“. . . you cannot

pick a committee in the State of Montana that will be totally free of that kind of

influence.”). While leaving employment of the merit selection process in the Legislature’s

hands, the Framers’ intent was clear that the nominees from whom the governor could

appoint would be vetted based on merit—the only way to protect against a direct

gubernatorial appointment.       Unfortunately, fifty years after the 1972 Constitutional

Convention, this Court reaches a conclusion contrary to the Framers’ intent and which

enables what the Framers clearly sought to prevent—a direct gubernatorial appointment.

1
  “With statehood, Montana’s judiciary transitioned from federal appointees unfamiliar with
mining law to elected officials all too familiar with the corporate overreach and corruption that
came to be known as the War of the Copper Kings.” A Past and Future of Judicial Elections: The
Case of Montana, Anthony Johnstone, 16 J. App. Prac. & Process 47, 53 (2015).
                                               35
SB 140 is not a merit based nomination process and does nothing to prevent direct

appointments by the governor—and the Court should call it for what it is. It quite simply

allows the governor to make a direct appointment from self-nominated applicants.

¶69    Turning now to rules of construction and the constitutional provision itself, we apply

the same rules used in construing statutes as we do when construing a constitutional

provision. Nelson, ¶ 14. “As with statutory interpretation, constitutional construction

should not lead to absurd results, if reasonable construction will avoid it.” Nelson, ¶ 16

(internal citations omitted). We must look to the entire provision and attempt to give effect

to each word contained therein and construe the provision consistently. Section 1-2-101,

MCA. Article VII, Section 8(2) provides: “[T]he governor shall appoint a replacement

from nominees selected in the manner provided by law” (emphasis added). The plain

language of this provision requires that “nominees”2 be “selected” by a process provided

by the Legislature. It is clear the Legislature’s discretion is not unbridled, rather it is limited

by the requirement that there be both a selection process and that applicants become

nominees. The plain language does not permit the governor to consider an entire pool of

applicants, as there would not be a “selection” of “nominees” as required by the words or

plain language of this constitutional provision. Accordingly, “nominees selected” provides

a limitation on the Legislature’s discretion when it exercises its authority to make laws.

2
  “Nominee” is defined as, “Someone who is proposed for an office, membership, award, or like
title or status. An individual seeking nomination, election, or appointment is a candidate. A
candidate for election becomes a nominee after being formally nominated.” Nominee, Black’s Law
Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (emphasis in original).
                                                36
SB 140 violates the plain language of Article VII, Section 8(2) because it merely

establishes an application process, not a selection process for nominees from which the

governor may appoint. There is no selection of nominees if the governor can consider the

entire pool of self-nominating applicants. The requirement that an applicant have three

letters from an adult Montana resident does not establish a manner for selecting nominees;

it merely establishes an additional requirement for the application, which is customary for

any job application process. The entire impetus for changing the judiciary article in the

1972 Constitutional Convention was to replace the governor’s sole discretion to fill

vacancies set forth in the 1889 Constitution with a system that provided a list of qualified

nominees derived through an independent vetting process. To conclude, as the Court does,

that these three letters satisfy the constitutional requirement that the governor appoint from

“nominees selected,” is akin to saying the Emperor is wearing new clothes when the

Emperor is not and, as noted by a young boy, the Emperor is really naked.3

¶70      While the plain language of the constitutional provision restricts the discretion of

the Legislature as described, the intent of the Framers controls the Court’s interpretation

of a constitutional provision. Nelson, ¶ 14. “Even in the context of clear and unambiguous

language, however, we have long held that we must determine constitutional intent not

only from the plain meaning of the language used, but also in light of the historical and

surrounding circumstances under which the Framers drafted the Constitution, the nature of

the subject matter they faced, and the objective they sought to achieve.” Nelson, ¶ 14.

3
    “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” Hans Christian Andersen, Fairy Tales Told for Children (1837).
                                               37
Moreover, “[i]n determining the meaning of the constitution, the Court must keep in mind

that it is not the beginning of law for the state, but a constitution assumes the existence of

a well understood system of law which is still to remain in force and to be administered,

but under constitutional limitation.” Nelson, ¶ 15 (quoting Grossman v. Mont. Dep’t of

Natural Res., 209 Mont. 427, 451-52, 682 P.2d 1319, 1332). The constitution refers to

many terms and concepts that it does not define. Nelson, ¶ 15 (quoting State ex rel. Hillis

v. Sullivan, 48 Mont. 320, 326, 137 P. 392, 394). The Court examines these concepts in

the context of the “‘previous history’ of this community [and] ‘the well-understood

system’ then in use.” Nelson, ¶ 15 (quoting Hillis, 48 Mont. at 326, 137 P. at 394).

¶71    To provide context to the Framers’ intent when drafting the 1972 judiciary article,

it is necessary to trace the development of Montana’s judiciary article. As a territory,

Montana judges were appointed by the President in Washington D.C. While likely learned

and capable jurists, they had federal connections and harbored eastern values. They were

unfamiliar with the lives, struggles, and ambitions of the territory’s inhabitants. More

particularly, they were unfamiliar with mining law and mining interests, which was fast

becoming a lucrative business at the “richest hill on earth” in Butte. In Montana’s first

attempt at a constitution in 1884, Montanans responded to these outside influences by

providing that justices of the Supreme Court would be “elected by the people” for a six-

year term and would be required to live in the Territory for two years. The provision for

judicial selection by election and the residency requirement were a response to the

grievances Montanans held against foreign judges appointed by the executive.

                                             38
¶72    The proposed 1884 Constitution failed to be ratified and it was not until the

1889 Constitution that Montana acquired statehood and had a judiciary article within its

own constitution. The 1889 Constitution remained committed to the election of Montana

judges “by the people” and retained the residency requirement. Significant here, the 1889

Constitution provided that in the case of vacancy in the position of Justice of the Supreme

Court, the district court, or the clerk of the Supreme Court, the position “shall be filled by

appointment, by the governor of the State.” Mont. Const. art. VIII, § 34 (1889). Soon after

ratification, the wealthy corporate mining interests exerted their influence over government

and also threatened the independence of the courts. These corporations were owned by

outside stakeholders and benefitted their foreign interests, even though Montana citizens

were the ones who worked and died in Butte’s mines. Montana’s rich resources would

always subject Montanans to the needs and demands of large corporations owned,

dominated, and run by outside interests, in part because of the extensive amount of capital

needed to mine, explore, and develop these resources. Soon these mining interests began

a campaign to control state government, including its judiciary, and often advanced

agendas inconsistent with the interests of local Montana farmers, ranchers, miners, and the

working class. See Patrick v. State, 2011 MT 169, 361 Mont. 204, 257 P.3d 365. The

“Copper King” era, as it has been called, and Montana’s long history of political corruption,

overreach by the branches of government, and control of its government institutions by

outside influences plays a significant role in the development of Montana’s judiciary. In

my opinion, those influences continue to be exerted on the judiciary today and threaten the

judiciary’s independence.

                                             39
¶73   The 1965 reapportionment of the State Legislature created the 1967 Legislature,

which commissioned a study to ascertain whether the 1889 Constitution was adequately

serving the needs of the people. Voters responded and, in a 1970 referendum, elected to

convene the 1972 Constitutional Convention. This remarkable event in Montana’s history

would again bring under scrutiny Montana’s judiciary article and, in particular, how judges

are selected. As Delegate Jim Garlington explained, “There is clear agreement on the part

of all that we do need good judges . . . . The question is how to recruit them.” Montana

Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1032.

Delegate Cedor Aronow spoke of the importance of an independent judiciary:

      [I]t is dreadfully important . . . that the courts be made independent, be made
      strong, be made unafraid to act for fear of reprisal from one of the other
      branches of the government. And it is only in that manner that we can
      guarantee to our people the liberties that we wish them to have.

      The court should also be made strong enough and independent enough that
      they have no fear of striking down an unconstitutional legislative act. They
      should have no fear of saying to the Executive branch of government,
      “You’ve gone too far; you’ve impugned upon the rights of individuals.”

Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV,

pp. 1069-70. Montana’s history of political corruption and overreach of the judiciary was

aptly described by Delegate John Schiltz,

      As I say, it’s not a good system as we have it, but I submit to you that in this
      State of Montana, where we have different problems from the problems they
      have in Missouri or any other state; where we have strong corporate
      influences; where, if I can elect a Governor and, through that office, nominate
      and appoint the district and the Supreme Court judges, I can run this state. I
      can own it.

                                            40
Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV,

p. 1026 (emphasis added).          This history provides important context to the

1972 Constitutional Convention when, ultimately, the Framers decided to change the 1889

Constitution by removing the appointment power of the governor in the case of judicial

interim vacancies.

¶74    At the 1972 Constitutional Convention, the Framers debated whether Montana

judges should be popularly elected or selected under a merit based process known as the

Missouri Plan. The majority proposal, which supported election of judges, provided that

interim vacancies of the Supreme Court would be filled by the governor and district court

vacancies would be filled by the county commissioners within the judicial district.

However, the minority was dissatisfied by the unlimited gubernatorial appointive power of

judges and proposed limiting the governor’s power to appointing from nominees selected

by a committee, created by and dependent upon the Legislature. It was believed such a

system would afford an effective check and balance. The minority plan also envisioned

creating a vetting committee. “The object here was to insure as nearly as possible that this

committee will not be dominated by one party to the other. Likewise, we were concerned

about this committee being dominated by some vested interest . . . .”             Montana

Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1023.

¶75    In the end, the Framers unanimously agreed to change the 1889 Constitution and

limit the governor’s appointment power by requiring the governor to appoint “from”

“nominees” who were “selected.” The Framers, however, left the details of the nomination

selection process to the Legislature, expressing concern that there needed to be flexibility

                                            41
to address changing circumstances. There was still distrust among some of the Framers

that partisan interests would control a committee or commission. However, there is little

doubt that all delegates understood that the proposal for selection of interim judges

envisioned a commission or committee which would “select” and “nominate” individuals

to be considered by the governor for appointment. See, e.g., Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1090 (Hanson, expressing

concern that a committee could be fair and free of outside influences); Montana

Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, pp. 1090-91

(Holland: “How can we guarantee that this commission—the ones that name the

candidates—won’t be dominated by some special interest group?”); Montana

Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1093

(Davis: “You can say what you want, any select committee’s going to be a committee of

the establishment. There’s just no other way to get around it . . . ,”); Montana Constitutional

Convention, Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1094 (Berg: “I suggest to

you that that committee, committing two to three or four names to the governor, is going

to get the governor a fairly wide selection of nominees, and he can select . . . whom he

wants—from that committee.”); Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript,

February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1096 (McKeon: “I’m afraid, Mr. Chairman, that any

committee, whether it be select, blue ribbon or whatnot, will not be a committee whose

interests are the interests of the people . . . .”); Montana Constitutional Convention,

Verbatim Transcript, February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1104 (Joyce: “[N]o matter how astute

or how brilliant or how able or how fairly the Legislative Assembly may set up a

                                              42
commission to select these nominees, you cannot take the human element out of the

situation.”). Nonetheless, the foremost concern amongst the delegates was to avoid a

system in which one branch of government would attain more power than another. In his

opening statements, Delegate Holland indicated that, “When you have a constitutional

provision, the reservoir of powers are with the people and, naturally, to have a functioning

society, you’re going to have to give some powers to the Legislature and some to the court

and some to the Executive. But you only want to give them so much power as you need to

function . . . .”         Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim Transcript,

February 26, 1972, Vol. IV, p. 1011.

¶76    The result of the 1972 Constitutional Convention was a revised judiciary article that

continued to provide for the election of judges as in the 1889 Constitution, but rejected the

1889 Constitution’s provision allowing for the governor to make direct appointments for

interim vacancies. Although the process for selecting nominees was not written into the

1972 Constitution and was left to the discretion of the Legislature, there is little doubt that

the intent of the Framers was to eliminate the direct appointment power of the governor

and provide a selection process based upon merit. In 1973, the Legislature responded and

created the Judicial Nomination Commission and established a nonpartisan process to

select nominees from which the governor could make an appointment. “Not satisfied with

the current process of unlimited gubernatorial appointive power of judges,” those who

favored the minority report suggested a committee that was “bi-partisan in nature.” See A

Past and Future of Judicial Elections: The Case of Montana, Anthony Johnstone, 16 J.

App. Prac. & Process 47, 72. Still there was concern about the governor having the power

                                              43
to appoint a majority of the nominating commission. See A Past and Future of Judicial

Elections: The Case of Montana, Anthony Johnstone, 16 J. App. Prac. & Process 47, 73

(“‘the Legislature tossed the mechanics of the appointment of judges right into the political

kettle’ by giving the governor the power to appoint the majority of the nominating

commission.”).

¶77    This Court held in Keller v. Smith, 170 Mont. 399, 553 P.2d 1002, 1007 (1976), that

“[p]erhaps the best indication of the intent of the framers is found in the explanatory notes

as prepared by the Constitutional Convention.” The Convention Notes “express[ ] the

intent of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention and the meaning they attached to

the new constitution they formed and adopted.” Keller, 170 Mont. at 406, 553 P.2d at

1007. Here, the Voter Information Pamphlet for the 1972 Constitution, provided:

       When there is a vacancy (such as death or resignation) the governor appoints
       a replacement but does not have unlimited choice of lawyers as under the
       1889 constitution. He must choose his appointee from a list of nominees and
       the appointment must be confirmed by the senate—a new requirement.

This confirms the Framers’ intent that the new provision would no longer allow the

governor to have plenary power to fill a vacancy; rather, the governor would make an

appointment from “nominees” who were “selected” by an independent process determined

by the Legislature. The Convention notes confirm the Framers intended to change the 1889

Constitution to remove authority from the governor to make direct appointments and to

provide a process for vetting applicants—a process that can only reasonably be based on

merit and qualifications.

                                             44
¶78    Constitutional intent was again expressed in 1992 when Article VII, Section 8 was

modified by voter initiative. The 1992 Voter Information Pamphlet stated: “The governor

is limited to appointments from a list recommended by a Judicial Nominating Committee

which is required by the Constitution, and whose membership and rules are established by

the legislature.” Appointments of justices had increased since 1972 and “commentators

described ‘justices who resigned before completion of a term so that a politically allied

governor could appoint a replacement,’ and others who ‘endured under personally adverse

conditions to prevent a replacement being appointed by an unfriendly governor.’” A Past

and Future of Judicial Elections: The Case of Montana, Anthony Johnstone, 16 J. App.

Prac. & Process 47, 76.       The 1992 Voter Information Pamphlet on Constitutional

Amendment 22 harkened back to the concern of the 1972 Framers. Proponents and

opponents indicated:

       Proponents: This amendment seeks to bolster the constitution in guaranteeing
       the right of all Montanans to vote and participate in electoral system while
       maintaining the balance of powers between the three branches of government
       by eliminating the potential for improper use of the appointment process.

       Opponents: Safeguards addressing proponent concerns are already in place.
       The Governor is limited to appointments from a list recommended by a
       Judicial Nominating Committee which is required by the Constitution, and
       whose membership and rules are established by the legislature.

This Court recognized the significance of voter information pamphlets as an expression of

the meaning of a constitutional provision in State ex rel. Mont. Citizens for the Preservation

of Citizens’ Rights v. Waltermire, 227 Mont. 85, 89-90, 738 P.2d 1255, 1257-58 (1987).

¶79    This Court in Keller also held that legislative determinations are indicative of

constitutional intent. Immediately following ratification of the 1972 Constitution, the

                                             45
Montana Legislature convened in 1973 and enacted legislation, SB 28, to implement

Article VII, Section 8, respecting interim vacancies. It established the Judicial Nomination

Commission to vet and select nominees for appointment by the governor for interim

vacancies.    This legislation, which was so temporally close to the Constitutional

Convention, is very enlightening as to the Framers’ intent. The commission established in

1973 had been in effect for nearly fifty years.

¶80    Finally, this Court, in State ex rel. Racicot v. District Court, 243 Mont. 379, 387,

794 P.2d 1180, 1185 (1990), has already expressed what the constitutional intent was of

Article VII, Section 8(2):

       The minority proposal [ultimately adopted by the Framers] provided for the
       selection of justices and judges through a system of appointment. The
       Judicial Nominating Committee would review the records of candidates and
       present the governor with a list of the most qualified nominees. From the
       list, the governor would select a nominee to be confirmed or rejected by the
       Senate. A confirmed appointee could face a contested election in the first
       primary following Senate approval. Thereafter, the appointee would run in
       an approval-or-rejection contest in a general election for each
       succeeding . . . . The delegates were informed that the appointment method
       of systematically screening judicial candidates “is more conducive to
       attaining a qualified, capable judiciary than the elective method whereby
       candidates are chosen more for political appeal than merit.” (quoting Mont.
       Constitutional Convention Comm’n., Mont. Constitutional Convention
       Study No. 14: The Judiciary, at 141).

Accordingly, this Court recognized that the Framers’ intent underlying the new provision

was to establish a screening process for attaining qualified judges.

¶81    Given the well-established and recognized requirement that the intent of the Framers

is controlling, Nelson, ¶ 14, I cannot ignore rules of construction for interpreting that intent:

the Convention notes; the 1973 and 1992 Voter Information Pamphlets; temporally close

                                               46
legislative determinations of intent such as SB 28; our precedent interpreting the Framers’

intent; and the debate that occurred amongst the Framers in 1972. While the Framers did

not require that a commission be the method for selecting applicants and acknowledged

that commissions were equally susceptible to partisan control, it is clear the Legislature

was to exercise its discretion to implement a screening process based upon merit to provide

qualified nominees to the governor for appointment.

¶82    Instead of applying well-established rules of construction to ascertain legislative

intent, the Court relies primarily on Delegate Joyce’s comments during the Constitutional

Convention to suggest that control of judicial appointments by the executive branch

remained a viable option considered by the Framers.            However, Delegate Joyce’s

suggestion that the governor have direct appointment power was rejected by the Framers

out of concern for maintaining the separation of power and placing too much power in the

executive branch of government. And, ultimately, even Delegate Joyce changed his mind

as the vote for the new constitutional provision was 88 in favor, and 0 against. Moreover,

in Keller, this Court cautioned against selective use of excerpts from the transcripts:

       We remark in passing that we have not relied on the minutes of the
       Constitutional Convention proceedings as indicative of the intent of the
       delegates. We have purposely refrained from using this basis of
       interpretation as excerpts from various portions of the minutes, among other
       things, can be used to support either position, or even a third position . . . .

Keller, 170 Mont. at 408-9, 553 P.2d at 1008. Instead, the Court in Keller relied on rules

of construction to ascertain the delegates’ intent such as the Voter Information Pamphlets

(Convention notes), legislative determination of intent, and precedent.

                                             47
¶83    The Court equates the public comment period of SB 140 to a vetting process which

presumably will expose unqualified candidates. Opinion, ¶ 45. However, while public

comment satisfies Montana’s constitutional right to know and participate in government, I

fail to see how either a public comment period or three letters of reference are a screening

process, as contemplated by the Framers, to obtain qualified judicial nominees for

appointment by the governor. More importantly, the ability of the public to comment on

an applicant does not convert SB 140 into a screening process based on merit and does

little to advance the Framers’ intent to change the 1889 Constitution and limit the

governor’s appointment power to appoint “from” “nominees” who are “selected.”

¶84    In my opinion, by giving the governor plenary power to select judges, SB 140 poses

precisely the threat to the independence of Montana’s judiciary that Montana has

historically been burdened with and that the 1972 Framers sought to prevent. This Court’s

failure to call SB 140 for what it is gives a green light to a partisan branch of government

to select judges who are charged with the responsibility of providing a check on that power.

While perhaps this design exists in other states and federally, the 1972 Framers did not

want it to exist in Montana.         Obviously, this Court will have to consider the

constitutionality of statutes enacted by the Legislature and signed into law by the governor.

Principals of separation of power and our constitutional design provide that the necessary

check on partisan power and overreach is through an independent and nonpartisan

judiciary. The Court’s decision today weakens that balance. There is little question in my

mind that the Framers, burdened with a history of political corruption and overreach and

committed to a qualified and independent judiciary, were united in their conviction that the

                                             48
governor should no longer have plenary authority to make a direct appointment, as in the

1889 Constitution.4 Foremost on the Framers’ minds was an independent judiciary and

ensuring that power was not disproportionately placed in one branch of government. In

my opinion, SB 140 is inconsistent with the plain language of Article VII, Section 8, and

what was at the core of the Framers’ convictions—to preserve the integrity and

independence of Montana’s judiciary in light of our significant history of political

corruption and overreach into the courts.

¶85    I respectfully dissent.

                                                     /S/ LAURIE McKINNON

4
 “Montana’s answer reflects a territorial suspicion of outside influence, a progressive-era concern
about corporate corruption, and an extraordinary deep deliberation among ordinary citizens about
competing models for judicial selection in the formation of its 1972 constitution.” A Past and
Future of Judicial Elections: The Case of Montana, Anthony Johnstone, 16 J. App. Prac. & Process
47, 130.
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