Saucedo et al v. NH Secretary of State et al
Filing
72
///ORDER granting in part and denying in part 48 Motion for Summary Judgment; granting in part and denying in part 52 Motion for Summary Judgment; denying 56 Motion to Strike 54 Memorandum to Motion and/or Objection . Doc. no. 48 is granted with respect to Count I, and is otherwise denied. Summary judgment on Counts II and III is denied in light of the complete relief afforded to plaintiffs on Count I, and summary judgment on Count IV is denied because the clai m is moot. Counts II, III, and IV are dismissed without prejudice. Doc. no. 52 is granted on Count IV to the extent that Count IV is dismissed without prejudice as moot, and is otherwise denied. So Ordered by Judge Landya B. McCafferty.(gla)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Mary Saucedo, et al.
v.
Civil No. 17-cv-183-LM
Opinion No. 2018 DNH 160
William Gardner, Secretary of State
of the State of New Hampshire,
in his official capacity, et al.
O R D E R
This case concerns New Hampshire’s signature-match
requirement for absentee ballots.
The act of signing one’s name
is often viewed as a rote task, a mechanical exercise yielding a
fixed signature.
A person’s signature, however, may vary for a
variety of reasons, both intentional and unintentional.
Unintentional factors include age, physical and mental
condition, disability, medication, stress, accidents, and
inherent differences in a person’s neuromuscular coordination
and stance.
Variations are more prevalent in people who are
elderly, disabled, or who speak English as a second language.
For the most part, signature variations are of little
consequence in a person’s life.
But in the context of absentee voting, these variations
become profoundly consequential.
The signature-match
requirement in RSA 659:50, III requires every local election
moderator to compare the signature on a voter’s absentee-ballot
application to the signature on an affidavit that the voter
sends with the absentee ballot.
If the signature on the
affidavit does not appear “to be executed by the same person who
signed the application,” the moderator must reject the voter’s
ballot.
RSA 659:50, III.
The purpose of the requirement is to
ensure that the same person executes both the absentee-ballot
application and the affidavit.
In recent elections, however,
the signature-match requirement has disenfranchised hundreds of
absentee voters.
As will become evident, this signature-matching process is
fundamentally flawed.
Not only is the disenfranchised voter
given no right to participate in this process, but the voter is
not even given notice that her ballot has been rejected due to a
signature mismatch.
Moreover, moderators receive no training in
handwriting analysis or signature comparison; no statute,
regulation, or guidance from the State provides functional
standards to distinguish the natural variations of one writer
from other variations that suggest two different writers; and
the moderator’s assessment is final, without any review or
appeal.
Plaintiffs Mary Saucedo, Maureen P. Heard, and Thomas
Fitzpatrick are among the 275 absentee voters whose ballots were
rejected in the 2016 General Election as a result of RSA 659:50,
III.
They bring suit against defendants William M. Gardner (New
2
Hampshire’s Secretary of State), and the New Hampshire Secretary
of State’s Office, alleging constitutional claims under 42
U.S.C. § 1983, and a claim under the Americans with Disabilities
Act (“ADA”).
Before the court are the parties’ cross-motions
for summary judgment, as well as plaintiffs’ motion to strike.
For the following reasons, plaintiffs’ motion for summary
judgment is granted in part, defendants’ cross-motion for
summary judgment is granted in part, and plaintiffs’ motion to
strike is denied.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A movant is entitled to summary judgment if it “shows that
there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and [that
it] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
P. 56(a).
Fed. R. Civ.
In reviewing the record, the court construes all
facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to
the nonmovant.
Kelley v. Corr. Med. Servs., Inc., 707 F.3d 108,
115 (1st Cir. 2013).
“On issues where the movant does not have the burden of
proof at trial, the movant can succeed on summary judgment by
showing ‘that there is an absence of evidence to support the
nonmoving party’s case.’”
OneBeacon Am. Ins. Co. v. Commercial
Union Assur. Co. of Canada, 684 F.3d 237, 241 (1st Cir. 2012)
(quoting Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 325 (1986)).
3
If the moving party provides evidence to show that the nonmoving
party cannot prove a claim, the burden shifts to the nonmoving
party to show that there is at least a genuine dispute as to a
factual issue that precludes summary judgment.
Woodward v.
Emulex Corp., 714 F.3d 632, 637 (1st Cir. 2013).
BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed, unless otherwise noted.
As stated above, plaintiffs are voters who attempted to vote by
absentee ballot in the 2016 General Election.
Plaintiff Saucedo
voted by absentee ballot due to a disability (blindness), and
plaintiffs Fitzpatrick and Heard voted by absentee ballot
because they were out of the state on Election Day.
They
brought suit in May 2017, after learning that their absentee
ballots had been rejected.
All of their ballots were rejected
on the basis of the signature-match requirement in RSA 659:50,
III.
Defendant Gardner, as the Secretary of State, is the
“Chief Election Officer” under state law.
RSA 652:23.
Among
other things, defendants produce absentee-voting forms and
documents, and provide election information and materials to
local officials and the public.
See RSA 652:22; RSA 652:23; RSA
657:4; RSA 657:7.
The court begins by describing the general procedure by
which absentee ballots are processed and counted in New
4
Hampshire, before discussing how that procedure played out in
the 2016 General Election.
Then, the court summarizes the
evidence the parties have proffered in support of their
competing motions for summary judgment.
I. Absentee Voting in New Hampshire
New Hampshire authorizes absentee voting for certain
categories of voters—namely, those who cannot appear at the
polls because they are: (1) absent from the municipality on
Election Day; (2) observing a religious commitment; (3) unable
to vote in person due to physical disability; or (4) unable to
appear because of an employment obligation.
RSA 657:1.
The first step in the absentee-voting process is for a
voter to apply for the absentee ballot.
The Secretary of State
creates application forms and distributes them to
municipalities.
RSA 657:4, I; RSA 657:5.
A voter may request a
form from a town or city clerk, or from the Secretary of State.
RSA 657:6.
Alternatively, a voter may receive a ballot from the
town or city clerk simply by providing a written statement
containing all of the necessary information.
RSA 657:6.
In the absentee-ballot application, the voter must identify
the reason that she is qualified to vote by absentee ballot, and
must provide basic biographical information—including name,
address, phone number, and email address, though the phone
5
number and email address are optional sections.
What is most
relevant here is that the application requires the voter to sign
her name.
Prior to and in the 2016 General Election, there was
no notice on the application that the application signature
would be compared with another signature; instead, below the
signature line was the following statement: “Voter must sign to
receive an absentee ballot.”
Doc. no. 49-9 at 2.
However, as a result of amendments to the absentee-ballot
statutory scheme in 2017, the application now contains the
following statement below the signature line: “The applicant
must sign this form to receive an absentee ballot. The signature
on this form must match the signature on the affidavit envelope
in which the absentee ballot is returned, or the ballot may be
rejected.”
RSA 657:4, I.
In addition, there is a new section,
which provides notice that “[a]ny person who assists a voter
with a disability in executing this form shall make a statement
acknowledging the assistance on the application form to assist
the moderator when comparing signatures on election day.”
Id.
Below the notice, there are lines for the assistant to print and
sign her name.
Upon receipt of a properly executed application, the clerk
provides the voter with: (1) an absentee ballot; (2) an
6
affidavit envelope; and (3) a return envelope.1
RSA 657:7, I-III.
RSA 657:15, I;
The voter marks the ballot and places the
ballot in the affidavit envelope.
RSA 657:17.
On the face of
the affidavit envelope is an affidavit that the voter must
execute.
The affidavit requires the voter to again certify that
she is voting by absentee ballot for a qualifying reason, and
requires that the voter print and sign her name.
As a result of
1
The Secretary of State’s Office also publishes a notice
titled “NOTICE OF REQUIREMENTS TO USE ABSENTEE BALLOT.” See
doc. no. 49-19 at 17. Prior to 2016, this notice stated in
pertinent part:
The moderator will compare the signature on the
written request for an absentee ballot to the
signature on the Absentee Ballot Affidavit Envelope
and your absentee ballot will be counted only if it
appears that the same person signed both documents.
Therefore, it is important to use the same signature
on each form.
Id. After the 2017 amendments to the statute, the notice
provides:
The signature on this affidavit must match the
signature on the application for an absentee ballot.
Your absentee ballot will be counted ONLY if it
appears the same person signed both forms.
Therefore, it is important to use the same signature
on both forms. . . . The two signatures are not
compared when the voter receives assistance, provided
the person assisting the voter [fills out the
relevant sections acknowledging such assistance].
Doc. no. 49-25 at 2. The Secretary of State’s Office encourages
municipalities to send this notice to voters with their other
absentee-ballot materials, but they are not required to do so.
Some municipalities, including Hudson, Laconia, and Manchester,
do not send the form to voters.
7
the 2017 amendments to the statute, below the signature line is
the following notice:
The signature on this affidavit must match the
signature on the application for an absentee ballot or
the ballot may be rejected. A person assisting a blind
voter or voter with a disability who needs assistance
executing this affidavit shall make and sign a
statement on this envelope acknowledging the
assistance in order to assist the moderator when
comparing signatures on election day.
RSA 657:7, II.
Below, there is a space for an assistant to
print and sign her name.
See doc. no. 54-7 at 1.
After executing the affidavit, the voter places the
affidavit envelope in the return envelope, and submits the
package to the town or city clerk.
RSA 657:17.
The clerk
attaches the voter’s application to the received absentee-ballot
package, but does not open or otherwise process the package
prior to Election Day.
RSA 657:18.
On Election Day, the clerk delivers the absentee-ballot
packages to the local moderator.
RSA 657:23.
The moderator is
a local, elected position with a two-year term.
RSA 40:1.
Among other things, the moderator oversees the “conduct of
voting” and the implementation of New Hampshire’s election
statutes in her municipality.
RSA 659:9.
Moderators “are not
employees of the Department of State” and are only accountable
to local voters.
Doc. no. 54 at 2, 31.
8
Generally, moderators begin processing absentee ballots at
1:00 p.m. on Election Day, though they may open the return
envelopes prior to that time.
See RSA 659:49, I; RSA 659:49-b.
Processing is done in public view.
The moderator begins
processing absentee ballots “by clearly announcing that he or
she is about to open the envelopes which were delivered to him
or her.”
RSA 659:50.
The moderator then removes each affidavit
envelope from the return envelope and compares the signature on
the affidavit with the signature on the voter’s application.
An absentee ballot is accepted if: (1) the name of the
voter is on the voter checklist; (2) the affidavit “appears to
be properly executed”; (3) the “signature on the affidavit
appears to be executed by the same person who signed the
application, unless the voter received assistance because the
voter is blind or has a disability”; and (4) the “signatures
appear to be the signatures of a duly qualified voter who has
not voted at the election.”
RSA 659:50, I-IV.
If all of these
requirements are met, and the ballot is not challenged by
another voter, see RSA 659:51, I, the moderator opens the
affidavit envelope and takes out the absentee ballot to be
counted.
The moderator may begin counting accepted absentee
ballots after polls close.
RSA 659:49, I.
If one of the
requirements is not met, the moderator rejects the ballot, marks
9
the affidavit envelope with the reason for rejection, and does
not open the affidavit envelope.
RSA 659:53.
There is no procedure by which a voter can contest a
moderator’s decision that two signatures do not match, nor are
there any additional layers of review of that decision.
other words, the moderator’s decision is final.
In
Moreover, no
formal notice of rejection is sent to the voter after Election
Day.
Rather, after the election, a voter may determine whether
and why her absentee ballot was rejected via a website
maintained by the Secretary of State.
See RSA 657:26.
Defendants remove this information from the website ninety days
after the election, however.
II.
The Signature-Match Requirement
As noted above, each local moderator is tasked with
comparing the signature on the affidavit with the signature on
the application to determine whether “[t]he signature on the
affidavit appears to be executed by the same person who signed
the application.”
RSA 659:50, III.
As a result of the 2017
amendments to the statute, voters receiving assistance with the
execution of their voting materials due to blindness or
disability are exempt from the requirement.
Id.
On its face, RSA 659:50, III gives no guidance on the
questions that inevitably arise in applying the requirement,
10
including what stylistic variations suggest that two signatures
were made by different individuals, and what threshold number of
variations is required to conclude that the signature on the
affidavit does not “appear to be” executed by the same person
who signed the application.
No other state statute or
regulation elaborates the standard set forth in RSA 659:50, III,
and there does not appear to be any authoritative case law on
the subject.
The record discloses only two sources that provide
additional guidance to moderators: the Secretary of State’s
Office and, in the 2016 General Election, the New Hampshire
Attorney General’s Office.
The Secretary of State’s Office
publishes an Election Procedure Manual, which offers the
following:
The test for whether the application and affidavit
appear to be signed by the same person is whether this
is more likely than not. Absentee ballots should be
rejected because the signatures do not match only if
the differences in the signatures are significant.
. . .
Moderators should exercise careful judgment when
rejecting an absentee ballot because the signature of
the voter on the affidavit does not appear to be
signed by the same person who signed the absentee
ballot application. The test is whether it is more
likely than not that the same person signed both
forms. It is a natural and common occurrence that a
person’s signature will change over time and will have
differences even when the person writes out his or her
signature several times, one immediately after
another. A moderator deciding to reject an absentee
ballot because the signatures do not match should be
11
prepared to explain to the Attorney General’s Office
or a Superior Court judge what specific
characteristics on the two signatures were the basis
of the decision that they were more likely than not
signed by different people. While signature
verification is an important safeguard against voting
fraud, as with all safeguards, the analysis starts
with a presumption of validity and the decision to
disenfranchise a voter must be made only when there is
sufficient evidence to justify that act.
Doc. no. 49-19 at 14, 16.
The Secretary of State’s Office also
conducts optional trainings for moderators prior to elections,
at which it reiterates, but does not further elaborate on, the
guidance set forth in the manual.
(deposition of David Scanlan).
Doc. no. 49-3 at 77, 79
The Secretary of State does not
regularly monitor rates of rejection due to signature mismatch
to ensure moderators’ compliance with the statute, see id. at
178, 180-83, and has never engaged in a review of any
statistical anomalies related to the requirement, id. at 185.
Prior to the 2016 General Election, the Attorney General’s
Office issued a memorandum to local election officials, which
contained the following guidance:
In determining whether signatures match, the moderator
should decide whether it is more likely than not that
the same person signed both forms. The more likely
than not standard does not require a perfect
match. . . . Moderators should be aware that a
person’s signature often varies depending on the
circumstances, and it is often hard to tell whether
two signatures were written by the same person.
Because a mistake will deprive a citizen of his/her
constitutional right to vote, moderators should take
12
great care before ruling a ballot invalid because of
signature differences.
Doc. no. 49-20 at 5.
In essence, the guidance provided to moderators constitutes
a burden of proof (more likely than not), and a requirement that
signature comparison be done based on objective criteria
(whatever those criteria may be).
But moderators receive no
training in handwriting analysis, and they are not screened for
conditions, such as poor eyesight, that may impede their ability
to discern subtle variations in signatures.
The assumption
seems to be that the substantive task of signature comparison is
one of common sense.
Defendants have also provided affidavits from a number of
local election officials to show “how cities and towns actually
implement RSA 659:50.”2
Doc. no. 54 at 8.
Defendants state that
the practices of these officials are consistent with the
practices of election officials statewide.
See doc. no. 58 at
7.
Plaintiffs move to strike these affidavits on the ground
that defendants did not disclose the witnesses in their initial
disclosures. Because this evidence, if anything, merely
supports plaintiffs’ claims, the court denies plaintiffs’
motion. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1) (“[A] party is not allowed
to use . . . [an undisclosed] witness to supply evidence on a
motion . . . unless the failure [to disclose] was substantially
justified or is harmless”).
2
13
There are three practices that are worth highlighting.
First, moderators normally have a team of volunteers that help
them compare signatures and determine whether signatures match
for purposes RSA 659:50, III.
Nevertheless, while volunteers
may help a moderator reach a decision, the final decision “rests
with the moderator.”
Doc. no. 54 at 10.
Second, in deciding whether to accept an absentee ballot,
moderators “consider all of the evidence available to them,
including their personal knowledge of the voter or the personal
knowledge of another election official.”
Id. at 11.
For
example, one moderator states that, because he “know[s] the
addresses of the assisted living facilities” in his town, he
takes “that into account as a factor when conducting a signature
match,” and allows “for more variability in signatures in these
cases.”
Doc. no. 54-15 at 2.
Another moderator stated that, in
one instance, he rejected a ballot based on an assistant
moderator’s personal knowledge of the voter.
The assistant
moderator had previously seen the voter’s signature on medical
documents, and the signature on the affidavit was inconsistent
with the signature on the medical documents.
At the hearing, defendants clarified how moderators
consider extrinsic evidence.
They explain that state law
contemplates a two-step process, citing RSA 659:53 and RSA
14
659:54 in support.3
At the first step, a moderator compares the
signature on the affidavit envelope to the signature on the
application to determine whether the documents were executed by
the same person, as required by RSA 659:50, III.
This
determination is made solely based on the signatures themselves
and without reference to extrinsic evidence.
If the moderator
determines that the signatures do not pass muster under RSA
659:50, III based on an examination of the signatures alone,
there is a second step: the moderator proceeds to determine
whether there is any extrinsic evidence available to the
moderator or the assistants that would allow the moderator to
conclude that the same person did, in fact, execute both
documents.
At the hearing, defense counsel gave the example of
an absentee voter who has his affidavit envelope notarized.
Third, the affidavits show that moderators conceive of the
relevant standard differently.
One moderator stated that she
RSA 659:53 describes the procedure a moderator should
follow if she “finds that the absentee voter is not entitled to
vote.” Defendants infer from this language that the moderator
must assess available extrinsic evidence—that is, make a
“finding”—before rejecting a ballot due to a signature mismatch.
Defendants bolster this interpretation by reference to RSA
659:54, which provides that “[n]o absentee ballot shall be
rejected by the moderator for any immaterial addition, omission,
or irregularity in the preparation or execution of any writing
or affidavit required herein.” Defendants contend that,
together, these provisions empower a moderator to take into
account available extrinsic evidence before rejecting a ballot
due to a signature mismatch.
3
15
will not reject an absentee ballot “unless the signatures on the
request form and affidavit envelope are drastically different.”
Doc. no. 54-13 at 2 (emphasis added).
By contrast, another
averred that he does “not reject sets of signatures on the basis
that they don’t look the same, but only if there are no
characteristics which suggest that they could both have been
signed by the same person.
In some instances, we are satisfied
if one or two letters . . . share a characteristic style.”
Doc.
no. 54-14 at 2 (emphasis added).
III.
Statistics from the 2016 General Election
In the 2016 General Election, .35% of all absentee ballots
submitted were rejected due to a signature mismatch (275
rejections out of 78,430 absentee ballots).4
at 9.
See doc. no. 49-22
This extremely low rate of rejection due to a signature
mismatch is consistent with the rates seen in the 2012 and 2014
General Elections.
However, there were some variances between polling places
in the 2016 General Election.
74% of New Hampshire’s polling
places had no rejections due to a signature mismatch (236 of
318).
Of the 26% that did, rates varied, sometimes
The parties vary in their calculations of the exact
figures, but the dispute is immaterial. The parties do not
disagree that the rate of rejection due to a signature match is
extremely low. In the 2016 General Election, well under 1% of
the overall number of absentee ballots submitted were rejected.
4
16
significantly, both between municipalities and within them.
For
example, in Portsmouth Ward 3, 5.21% of all absentee ballots
were rejected due to a signature mismatch; in Portsmouth Ward 2,
the rate was .43%; in Bedford, .88%; in Hudson, 1.68%; in
Manchester Ward 4, 2.17%; in Manchester Ward 6, .23%.
generally doc. no. 49-23.
of these disparities.
See
The parties dispute the significance
Plaintiffs argue that these figures
demonstrate the lack of uniform application of the signaturematch requirement, while defendants assert that, absent further
statistical analysis, any differences could be attributed to
other variables.
Defendants provide some statistics of their own.
Defendants compared, for the 2016 General Election, the
municipalities whose election officials attended the training
session held by the Secretary of State’s Office and
municipalities whose officials did not.
They found that six of
the eight towns with the highest rates of rejection due to
signature mismatch had failed to attend the training.
Defendants also found that the towns whose officials did not
attend had a higher rate of rejection due to signature mismatch—
more than double per town.
On this basis, defendants contend
that this demonstrates that there is no fundamental flaw in the
statute, and that, at most, more training is required.
17
Plaintiffs challenge defendants’ analysis of the numbers as
“based on a meaningless calculation.”
Doc. no. 62 at 5.
They
argue, among other things, that analyzing rejections on a per
town basis, without consideration of total absentee ballots cast
and rejected in each town, masks disparities in rejection rates
among towns.5
IV.
Dr. Mohammed
Finally, plaintiffs retained an expert, Linton Mohammed,
Ph. D, to support their claims.
Mohammed’s opinions.
Defendants do not dispute Dr.
Dr. Mohammed is a forensic document
examiner, specializing in handwriting and signature
identification.
He opines that a person’s signature may vary
for a variety of reasons, both intentional and unintentional.
Unintentional factors include age, physical and mental
condition, disability, stress, accidental occurrences, inherent
variances in neuromuscular coordination, and stance.
Variations
are more prevalent in writers who are elderly, disabled, ill, or
who speak English as a second language.
Dr. Mohammed explains
that, in order to account for these variations and make an
accurate determination, one needs extensive training, adequate
Plaintiffs also move to strike the evidence relating to
these statistics. Because this evidence is not material to the
legal analysis, the court denies plaintiffs’ motion. See doc.
no. 56 at 15 nn.13-14 (explaining defects in defendants’
statistical evidence).
5
18
magnification and lighting equipment, sufficient time, and
excellent eyesight.
Furthermore, a forensic document examiner
will normally require at least ten exemplar signatures to
compare to a questioned signature.
Dr. Mohammed opines that in applying RSA 659:50, III,
moderators will likely make erroneous determinations.
Lay
moderators do not have the training, time, equipment, or number
of exemplars necessary to make a proper determination.
In
addition, Dr. Mohammed states that laypeople erroneously tend to
focus on the “eye-catching” features of single letters, rather
than the holistic features of the signature, like alignment and
slant.
Dr. Mohammed opines that holistic features are the more
significant characteristics in signature comparison.
Defendants also rely upon Dr. Mohammed’s opinion.
They
cite his statement that “a signature is developed as a form of
identification” to argue that the signature-match requirement
serves to identify a voter and prevent voter fraud.
54-11 at 24.
Doc. no.
Plaintiffs challenge this inference, contending
that Dr. Mohammed’s point was merely to articulate the
difference between a signature and handwriting generally, not to
suggest that the signature-match requirement identifies the
voter.
Defendants also highlight Dr. Mohammed’s testimony
regarding the different styles of signatures.
19
Dr. Mohammed
divides signatures into one of three categories: text-based,
mixed-style, and stylized.
A text-based signature is one where
the letters can be fully read; a mixed-style signature is one
where some, but not all, of the characters can be read; and a
stylized signature is “basically a pattern and there’s . . . no
characters [one] can read within that signature.”
Id. at 42-43.
Dr. Mohammed determined that 94 of the rejected voters from the
2016 General Election used different styles in their affidavits
and applications.
Defendants contend that this finding shows
that these voters were correctly disenfranchised because they
failed to comply with the notice on the absentee-ballot
instructions—that a ballot “will be counted only if it appears
that the same person signed both documents.”
2.
Doc. no. 54-8 at
Plaintiffs respond that moderators are not trained to
evaluate signature styles and that, in any case, state law does
not require that a voter “use the same signature style” when
voting by absentee ballot.
Doc. no. 62 at 9.
DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs bring four claims challenging RSA 659:50, III.
The first three are grounded in the U.S. Constitution.
Plaintiffs contend that the statute facially violates their
procedural due process rights (Count I), their fundamental right
to vote (Count II), and their right to have their votes treated
20
uniformly, under the principles enunciated in Bush v. Gore, 531
U.S. 98 (2000) (Count III).
On behalf of Ms. Saucedo,
plaintiffs also bring an ADA claim.
Because the parties express some disagreement over how the
court should analyze plaintiffs’ claims, given that they are
facial challenges to RSA 659:50, III, the court will provide
some clarification before addressing the merits.
“The Supreme Court has articulated two formulations of the
standard for assessing facial challenges to statutes.”
Libertarian Party of N.H. v. Gardner, 843 F.3d 20, 24 (1st Cir.
2016).
“In United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 107 S.Ct.
2095, 95 L.Ed.2d 697 (1987), the Court held that a facial
challenge can only succeed where the plaintiff ‘establishes that
no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be
valid.’”
Id.
Alternatively, a plaintiff bringing a facial
challenge to a statute must establish that it lacks any “plainly
legitimate sweep.”
(1st Cir. 2012).
Hightower v. City of Boston, 693 F.3d 61, 77
The First Circuit recently relied on the
latter formulation in a ballot-access case.
F.3d at 24.
See Gardner, 843
But see Pharm. Research & Mfrs. of America v.
Concannon, 249 F.3d 66, 77 (1st Cir. 2001) (citing Salerno test
favorably).
These standards may obscure the relevant inquiry, however,
as they could be taken to suggest that a court’s task is to
21
“conjure up” hypothetical situations “in which application of
the statute might be valid.”
United States v. Sup. Ct. of N.M.,
839 F.3d 888, 917 (10th Cir. 2016).
But, as courts have noted,
the Supreme Court “has often considered facial challenges simply
by applying the relevant constitutional test to the challenged
statute, without trying to dream up whether or not there exists
some hypothetical situation in which application of the statute
might be valid.”
Bruni v. City of Pittsburgh, 824 F.3d 353, 363
(3d Cir. 2016) (collecting cases); see also Doe v. City of
Albuquerque, 667 F.3d 1111, 1124 (10th Cir. 2012).
Therefore, in practice, “[a] facial challenge is best
understood as a challenge to the terms of the statute, not
hypothetical applications, and is resolved simply by applying
the relevant constitutional test to the challenged statute.”
Sup. Ct. of N.M., 839 F.3d at 917 (internal quotation marks and
citation omitted); see also Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State
Republican Party, 552 U.S. 442, 449-50 (2008) (“In determining
whether a law is facially invalid, we must be careful not to go
beyond the statute's facial requirements and speculate about
‘hypothetical’ or ‘imaginary’ cases.”); Ezell v. City of
Chicago, 651 F.3d 684, 698 (7th Cir. 2011).
22
I.
Procedural Due Process (Count I)
Plaintiffs first argue that RSA 659:50, III violates the
requirements of procedural due process because it lacks any predeprivation process: voters receive neither prior notice of, nor
an opportunity to cure, a rejection due to a signature mismatch.
Defendants respond that the “extremely slight risk of an
erroneous deprivation,” in conjunction with the “significant
burden on the State” to create additional procedures, support
the conclusion that RSA 659:50, III does not violate procedural
due process.
Doc. no. 54 at 22.
“To establish a procedural due process violation, [a]
plaintiff must identify a protected liberty or property interest
and allege that the defendants, acting under color of state law,
deprived [him] of that interest without constitutionally
adequate process.”
González-Droz v. González-Colón, 660 F.3d 1,
13 (1st Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted).
“No
rigid taxonomy exists for evaluating the adequacy of state
procedures in a given case; rather, due process is flexible and
calls for such procedural protections as the particular
situation demands.”
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Still, “[t]he basic guarantee of procedural due process is that,
before a significant deprivation of liberty or property takes
place at the state's hands, the affected individual must be
forewarned and afforded an opportunity to be heard at a
23
meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.”
Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Under Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319 (1976),
“determining what process is due requires balancing three
factors: first, the private interest that will be affected by
the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous
deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and
the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute
procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government's interests.”
Collins v. Univ. of N.H., 664 F.3d 8, 17 (1st Cir. 2011)
(internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
In addition,
the Mathews court emphasized that “procedural due process rules
are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding
process as applied to the generality of cases, not the rare
exceptions.”
Mathews, 424 U.S. at 344.
As a result, and given
that this is a facial challenge, the court conducts its analysis
by reference to the statute’s facial requirements and the
undisputed, material facts relevant to the signature-matching
process generally.
Two cases are particularly helpful to the court’s analysis.
The first is Zessar v. Helander, No. 05-C-1917, 2006 WL 642646
(N.D. Ill. Mar. 13, 2006), in which the Northern District of
Illinois considered an Illinois statute imposing a signature-
24
match requirement for absentee voters.6
The process for
obtaining and casting an absentee ballot in Illinois was similar
to that in New Hampshire.
A voter received an absentee ballot
by executing and sending an absentee-ballot application to the
appropriate authority.
Id. at *1.
After marking the ballot,
the voter placed the ballot inside an envelope, on which was a
certification form that the voter would sign and date.
Id.
On
Election day, the package was delivered to the appropriate
precinct, and the election judge “cast” the ballot for the
absentee voter.
Id. at *2.
A ballot could be rejected if the
signature on the application did not correspond to the signature
on the ballot envelope or on the voter’s registration card.
Unlike New Hampshire law, a voter was mailed a notice after the
election if his ballot was rejected.
Id. at *3.
Illinois law
also had a procedure for provisional voting that could extend up
to fourteen days after the election.
Id. at *4.
The plaintiff in Zessar, whose vote was rejected due to a
signature mismatch, sued a number of local and state officials,
arguing that the lack of notice and an opportunity to cure for
rejected voters was unconstitutional as a matter of procedural
due process.
See id. at *5.
The district court agreed.
On the
The Seventh Circuit subsequently vacated the district
court’s decision on the ground that it had become moot with the
passage of new absentee-voting legislation in Illinois. See
Zessar v. Keith, 536 F.3d 788 (7th Cir. 2008).
6
25
first Mathews factor, it found that, while “[t]he right to vote
by absentee ballot is not, in and of itself, a fundamental
right,” a voter has a sufficient liberty interest once “the
State permits voters to vote absentee.”
Id.
On the second factor, the Zessar plaintiff suggested that
voters should receive immediate notice of the rejection,
followed by an informal administrative hearing in front of an
election authority to confirm that the absentee ballot belongs
to the voter.
Id. at *8.
The defendants responded that such
procedures would be “hugely disproportionate” to the problem,
and questioned whether they would even be effective for absentee
voters who are absent from their residences for an extended
period.
Id.
The Zessar court agreed that there was not a
“tremendous” risk of erroneous deprivation, given that only
approximately .43% of all absentee ballots returned to election
authorities were rejected for any reason.7
See id.
Nevertheless, the court found that the probable value of
additional procedures was great in light of the otherwise
irremediable denial of absentee voters’ right to vote.
On the third factor, defendants argued that election
authorities “face a cascade of statutory obligations in the time
Specifically, 1,100 absentee ballots were rejected out of
the “253,221 absentee ballots [that] were returned to election
authorities and 191,177 absentee ballots [that] were counted.”
Id. at *8.
7
26
period leading up to and following the election,” which would
make additional procedures “an untenable burden.”
The Zessar court was not persuaded.
Id. at *9.
The court did recognize
that new procedures would pose “some additional administrative
and fiscal burden on the election authorities,” but even so, the
procedures would be fairly circumscribed affairs, given that
election authorities have already verified that absentee voters
are entitled to vote prior to issuing the absentee ballots.
For
that reason, the court found that any burden “would [not] be so
great as to overwhelm plaintiff's interest in protecting his
vote.”
Id.
Other courts have reached similar conclusions to that of
the Zessar court.
See Raetzel v. Parks/Bellemont Absentee
Election Bd., 762 F. Supp. 1354 (D. Ariz. 1990) (concluding that
Arizona absentee-voting statute, which failed to provide
absentee voters with any post-deprivation notice or opportunity
to be heard when their votes were challenged and rejected, did
not afford adequate procedural due process); La Follette v.
Padilla, No. CPF-17-515931 (Cal. Super. Ct. Mar. 5, 2018)
(concluding that provision of California Election Code, which
required election officials to reject a ballot if the signatures
did not “compare,” was facially unconstitutional because it
failed to provide pre-deprivation notice or an opportunity to
cure), available at doc. no. 49-4.
27
Lemons v. Bradbury, 538 F.3d 1098 (9th Cir. 2008), is the
only case the court could find in which a signature-match
requirement was upheld against a procedural due process
challenge based on the fundamental right to vote.8
There, the
Ninth Circuit upheld Oregon’s procedure for verifying signatures
on referendum petitions.
Oregon voters may approve legislation
by referendum, and a referendum qualifies for statewide vote
upon submission of a petition with a sufficient number of
signatures.
Lemons, 538 F.3d at 1100.
In order to verify the
petition signatures, the Secretary of State uses a statistical
sampling method, whereby approximately five percent of the
submitted signatures are cross-referenced with voter
registration records.
Id.
“genuine,” it is counted.
If a petition signature is
Id.
The plaintiffs argued that this procedure violated, among
other things, their right to procedural due process.
1101.
Id. at
The Ninth Circuit disagreed, despite holding that
Oregon’s regulations on the referendum process “implicate the
There are a few other cases in which courts have upheld
such requirements against procedural due process challenges, but
those courts gave less weight to the rights at issue than is
given to the right to vote. See Protect Marriage IL v. Orr, 458
F. Supp. 2d 562, 573-75 (N.D. Ill. 2006) (denying procedural due
process claim relating to petition signature-match requirement,
and reasoning that “petition signers do not have a fundamental
right to have their advisory question placed on the ballot”);
State ex rel. Potter v. Harris, No. E2007-00806, 2008 WL
3067187, at *8-10 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 4, 2008).
8
28
fundamental right to vote.”
Id. at 1102.
The court determined
that the value of additional procedures was negligible.
1105.
Id. at
The court reasoned that the verification process was
“already weighted in favor of accepting questionable
signatures,” citing a number of elements of Oregon’s procedure:
(1) voters were notified on the referendum cover sheets that
they must sign their name as they did on their voter
registration; (2) the public could observe the process and
object to signature-verification decisions; (3) all rejected
signatures were subject to multiple layers of review; and (4)
officials limited their review to a comparison between the
petition signature and registration signature.
While the Ninth Circuit found additional procedures of
negligible value, it assigned great weight to the administrative
burden of additional procedures.
Election officials might
process more than 100,000 signatures in each election cycle, and
it could take several minutes to “identify [each] signer, find
the corresponding voter registration card, determine whether the
signer is an active, registered voter, and then compare the
signatures.”
Id. at 1104.
The court therefore rejected the
plaintiffs’ claim, noting that “[r]equiring the state to provide
thousands of petition signers with individual notice that their
signatures have been rejected and to afford them an opportunity
to present extrinsic evidence during the short thirty-day
29
verification period would impose a significant burden on . . .
elections officials.”
Id. at 1104-05.
With these cases in mind, the court weighs the Mathews
factors in the present case.
a. Private Interest
Plaintiffs argue that the individual interest at issue is
the fundamental right to vote.
Defendants respond that “the
rights claimed by Plaintiff[s] should be afforded less weight
than traditionally afforded the right to vote” because there is
no right to vote by absentee ballot.
Doc. no. 66 at 4.
The court accords this factor significant weight.
It is
beyond dispute that “[t]he right to vote is of the most
fundamental significance under our constitutional structure.”
Ayers-Schaffner v. DiStefano, 37 F.3d 726, 727 (1st Cir. 1994)
(internal quotation marks omitted); see also Griffin v. Burns,
570 F.2d 1065, 1075 (1st Cir. 1978) (noting that the right of
suffrage is “a fundamental political right” because it is
“preservative of all rights”).
While “there is no corresponding
fundamental right to vote by absentee ballot,” Griffin v.
Roupas, No. 02-C-5270, 2003 WL 22232839, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Sept.
22, 2003), the privilege of absentee voting is certainly
“deserving of due process,” Raetzel, 762 F. Supp. at 1358;
accord Zessar, 2006 WL 642646, at *5; Doe v. Walker, 746 F.
30
Supp. 2d 667, 681 (D. Md. 2010).
Having induced voters to vote
by absentee ballot, the State must provide adequate process to
ensure that voters’ ballots are fairly considered and, if
eligible, counted.
b. Risk of Erroneous Deprivation and Probable Value of
Other Procedures
The parties dispute both elements of this factor.
Plaintiffs assert that the risk of erroneous deprivation is
“great” and that such risk could be easily remedied through
additional procedures like a “simple telephone call.”
48-1 at 34, 40.
Doc. no.
Defendants counter that the risk is “extremely
slight” and that plaintiffs’ alternative is not workable.
Doc.
no. 54 at 19, 22.
Defendants are correct that, based on the data available to
the court, the overall rates of rejection due to a signature
mismatch have been low in recent general elections.
rates should be put into perspective.
But those
In the first place, even
rates of rejection well under one percent translate to the
disenfranchisement of dozens, if not hundreds, of otherwise
qualified voters, election after election.
See doc. no. 49-3 at
193-94 (deposition of David Scanlan) (stating that there is no
indication that, in 2016 General Election, voters rejected due
to signature mismatch were otherwise ineligible to vote).
Given
how close some races are in New Hampshire, that is a risk with
31
real consequences.
See, e.g., doc. no. 48-1 at 47 (noting one
state senate race in 2016 that was decided by only seventeen
votes).
More importantly, the task of handwriting analysis by
laypersons, as it is contemplated under RSA 659:50, III, is
fraught with error.
Dr. Mohammed opines that individuals will
naturally vary their signatures as a result of a number of
intentional and unintentional factors.
To account for such
variations when conducting handwriting analysis, a person needs
sufficient knowledge, training, equipment, and experience.
The
procedure under RSA 659:50, III, however, imposes none of these
safeguards.
Among other things, Dr. Mohammed notes that neither
state law nor any guidance from state agencies sets forth
functional standards for comparing signatures and assessing
variations; election officials are not required to undergo any
training in handwriting analysis;9 moderators are not screened
for disabilities that may impair the ability to make such
comparisons; moderators are not required to have proper
magnification or lighting equipment; and moderators do not have
sufficient time to conduct each comparison.
Dr. Mohammed’s
The Secretary of State does hold trainings at which the
statute is discussed, but Deputy Secretary of State David
Scanlan testified that these trainings do no more than reiterate
the guidance set forth in the Election Procedure Manual. See
doc. no. 49-3 at 77 (deposition of David Scanlan).
9
32
uncontroverted conclusion is that, as a result, election
officials are likely to make erroneous signature-comparisons.
In fact, laypersons are more likely “to wrongly determine that
authentic signatures are not genuine than to make the opposite
error.”
Doc. no. 49-21 at 8.
The absence of functional standards is problematic, and the
likelihood of error resulting therefrom is only compounded by
the lack of meaningful review or oversight.
There is no
feedback mechanism to ensure that moderators are applying
appropriate standards: neither voters nor the general public may
object to a determination; there is no appeal or review process;
and the Secretary of State does not regularly monitor rates of
rejection to ensure that moderators are properly applying RSA
659:50, III.
Furthermore, the absence of direct notice to
affected voters is not only troubling in itself, see Gorman v.
Univ. of Rhode Island, 837 F.2d 7, 12 (1st Cir. 1988) (stating
that notice is one of the “essential requisites of procedural
due process”), it also impairs voters’ ability to monitor the
conduct of moderators.
In law and in practice, the ultimate
determination is left to the sole discretion of the moderator
and is almost entirely insulated from meaningful scrutiny.
As
Dr. Mohammed’s undisputed conclusions establish, that total
reliance on untrained laypersons entails tangible risks.
659:50, III is thus a far cry from the procedure upheld in
33
RSA
Lemons, where the public could object to determinations and
there were multiple layers of review.
Lemons, 538 F.3d at 1104.
It cannot be emphasized enough that the consequence of a
moderator’s decision—disenfranchisement—is irremediable.
Zessar, 2006 WL 642646, at *8-9.
See
The one caveat is the
procedure by which moderators evaluate extrinsic evidence to
determine whether a ballot should be accepted notwithstanding a
signature mismatch.
But the evidence before the court shows
that this safety valve as it currently exists is haphazard at
best, since it is limited to the personal knowledge of, and
information immediately available to, election officials.
The
instance where a moderator confirmed a rejection based on an
assistant’s knowledge of the voter’s signature, which she had
seen on medical documents, is illustrative.
Defendants counter that the risk of rejection will be
significantly lower in future elections because the new absentee
ballot application and affidavit envelope provide notice to the
voter that the signatures must match.
In support of this
conclusion, they rely on Dr. Mohammed’s analysis of signature
styles in the 2016 General Election, which shows that 94 of the
rejected ballots had signatures with different styles.
Defendants argue that the new forms will “put voters on notice
that they must use the same signature style when signing each
34
document.”
Doc. no. 54 at 22.
This is beside the point,
however, because even excluding those 94 ballots, it still means
that dozens, if not hundreds, of rejected voters used the same
signature style and were still rejected in the 2016 General
Election.
Nor does mere notice ameliorate any of the problems
identified by Dr. Mohammed that contribute to the risk of
erroneous deprivation.
The natural variations in a person’s
handwriting—many of which are unintentional or uncontrollable,
like mental or physical condition—when combined with the absence
of functional standards, training, review, and oversight, create
a tangible risk of erroneous deprivation.
Cf. League of United
Latin Am. Citizens of Iowa v. Pate, No. CVCV056403 (Iowa Dist.
Ct. July 24, 2018), available at doc. no. 71-1 at 18 (stating
that “there is potential for erroneous determinations of a
mismatch” under Iowa signature-match requirement for absentee
ballots, where election officials had “unbridled discretion to
reject ballots based on signatures they find do not match,” but
did not have “official guidance or handwriting expertise”),
aff’d in part, No. 18-1276 (Iowa Aug. 10, 2018), available at
doc. no. 71-2 (affirming temporary injunction of Iowa signaturematch requirement based on Iowa Constitution).
On the other hand, additional procedures would provide a
tangible benefit.
Plaintiffs point out that the absentee-ballot
35
application already provides sections to allow a voter to submit
her phone number and email address.
They contend that a
procedure whereby a moderator simply reaches out to the voter in
one form or another would be of great value.
The court agrees.
As defendants stated at the hearing, moderators already
engage in a process of considering extrinsic evidence to, in
defense counsel’s words, “salvage” a ballot that could otherwise
be rejected.
Necessarily, the premise of such a process is that
the consideration of extrinsic evidence can be useful in
determining whether the same person executed both the affidavit
envelope and application.
Plaintiffs seek no more than to open
up that process to allow for consideration of evidence from the
best source—the voter.10
solution.
To be sure, it may not be a perfect
Because many absentee voters are voting by absentee
ballot due to work, religious commitment, or disability, they
may not be available at the time the moderator is reviewing the
Defendants argue that a phone call would be inadequate
because a moderator would not be able to verify a voter’s
identity over the phone. In making that argument, defendants
move the goalposts. In its current form, RSA 659:50, III does
not verify a voter’s identity. Rather, its purpose is to ensure
that the same person signs both the application and affidavit
envelope; the signatures are not otherwise cross-referenced with
a genuine exemplar of the voter’s signature. Regardless,
defendants’ contention falls flat because they themselves assert
that moderators may disregard mismatched signatures on the basis
of other extrinsic evidence. Plaintiffs’ suggested procedures
do no more than enhance that process.
10
36
signatures.
Some may not be reachable by phone, and others may
not have access to email.
But with proper notice to voters that
they may be contacted, a phone call or similar measure would
make the process a more constructive exercise.
As it stands
currently, moderators consider limited and far less probative
extrinsic evidence.
In addition, there is evidence in the
record that moderators consider evidence submitted with the
affidavit envelope in deciding whether to accept an absentee
ballot.11
That could provide an option to absentee voters who
know they will be unreachable on Election Day and wish to ensure
that their ballots will be accepted.
For example, one section of the 2016 Election Procedure
Manual describes the procedures that should be taken if a voter
has a physical disability that prevents the voter from signing
her name:
11
The best practice would be for the clerk to appoint
someone neutral to take the absentee ballot to the
voter and to verify that the stamped name is
legitimate as the voter’s signature. The clerk’s
appointee should countersign both the application and
the affidavit envelope next to the stamped signature
or submit a written and notarized statement to
accompany the sealed affidavit envelope verifying that
the voter himself or herself caused the ballot to be
marked and the affidavit to be stamped with the
voter’s signature.
Doc. no. 54-9 at 115 (emphasis added); see also doc. no. 49-3 at
104 (deposition of David Scanlan) (stating that, prior to
enactment of exemption to RSA 659:50, III, if a disabled voter
needed assistance to complete her affidavit envelope, the
assistant should have made a notation on the envelope “that the
voter was unable to sign the ballot and a brief explanation as
to why and then submit that to the moderator”).
37
In short, based on the undisputed facts in the record,
“[i]t is apparent that the risk of erroneous deprivation of the
protected interest in absentee voting is not enormous, but the
probable value of an additional procedure is likewise great in
that it serves to protect the fundamental right to vote.”
Zessar, 2006 WL 642646, at *9.
c. Government’s Interests
The third factor involves consideration of the government’s
interests, which may include “the function involved and the
fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or
substitute procedural requirement would entail.”
U.S. at 335.
Mathews, 424
Defendants argue that RSA 659:50, III furthers the
State’s interest in preventing voter fraud and protecting public
confidence in the integrity of the electoral process.
Further,
defendants contend that, because the New Hampshire Constitution
requires that all votes be counted on Election Day, it would be
“extremely burdensome” to require moderators “to seek out and
verify the identity of hundreds of absentee voters.”
Doc. no.
54 at 20.
The court agrees that the State has legitimate interests in
preventing voter fraud and protecting public confidence in
elections.
See Crawford v. Marion Cty. Election Bd., 553 U.S.
181, 194-97 (2008).
That being said, in comparison to the two
38
instances of absentee-voter fraud that defendants cite as
support, one in the 2012 General Election and the other in the
2016 General Election, hundreds of voters (approximately 740 by
plaintiffs’ estimate) were disenfranchised under RSA 659:50, III
in the 2012, 2014, and 2016 General Elections.12
48-1 at 21-22.
See doc. no.
Furthermore, plaintiffs point out that neither
instance of absentee-voter fraud was uncovered through the
signature-matching process.
In any case, the court fails to see how additional
procedures would harm these interests.
Moderators already
consider limited forms of extrinsic evidence.
Additional
procedures would simply allow for more probative extrinsic
evidence to be considered.
Thus, if anything, additional
procedures further the State’s interest in preventing voter
fraud while ensuring that qualified voters are not wrongly
disenfranchised.
See Fla. Democratic Party v. Detzner, No.
4:16cv607, 2016 WL 6090943, at *7 (N.D. Fla. Oct. 10, 2016)
(“[L]etting mismatched-signature voters cure their vote by
In discussing the existence of absentee voter fraud,
defendants also state that “the signature match process
prevented at least 6 ballots from being cast that were signed by
a person with a different name than the person who had requested
the ballot.” Doc. no. 54 at 26. However, RSA 659:50, IV would
appear to have required rejection of those ballots regardless of
the signature-match requirement. See RSA 659:50, IV (requiring
that the “signatures appear to be the signatures of a duly
qualified voter who has not voted at the election”).
12
39
proving their identity further prevents voter fraud—it allows
supervisors of elections to confirm the identity of that voter
before their vote is counted.”).
Likewise, improving the
currently opaque, unreviewable process by which moderators
compare signatures and consider extrinsic evidence would only
serve to enhance voter confidence in elections.
Two of the
plaintiffs have expressed their anger and frustration at the
treatment of their votes under the current system.
See doc. no.
48-2 at 2-3; doc. no. 48-3 at 3.
Next, contrary to defendants’ argument, plaintiffs’
proposed procedures would not entail significant administrative
burdens.
Moderators already engage in a practice of considering
extrinsic evidence before rejecting a ballot due to a signature
mismatch.
Consequently, this is a case not of foisting wholly
novel procedures on state election officials, but of simply
refining an existing one to allow voters to participate and to
ensure that the process operates with basic fairness.
While the current procedure would need to be expanded so
that moderators could reach out to voters, no individual
district is likely to be materially impacted.
In the 2016
General Election, for example, 74% of polling places would not
have been impacted at all, because they did not reject any
ballots due to a signature mismatch.
40
Only 5 of New Hampshire’s
318 polling places had ten or more such rejections.
That
procedures already exist which could be readily extended to
provide basic guarantees of due process to voters militates
against defendants’ argument.
See Detzner, 2016 WL 6090943, at
*7 (finding statute requiring rejection of absentee ballot based
on signature mismatch unconstitutional, where, among other
things, voters who failed to sign their ballot received
opportunity to cure, but voters whose signatures did not match
received no such opportunity); La Follette, doc. no. 49-4, at 4
(same).
Defendants respond that the analysis is not so simple.
They posit that, “[i]f plaintiffs’ argument was extended to its
logical conclusion, . . . then notice and an opportunity to cure
could be required for every absentee ballot rejected for any
reason,” further burdening moderators.
court is not persuaded.
Doc. no. 66 at 5.
The
The court’s conclusion rests on a
careful, context-sensitive balancing of the Mathews factors.
See, e.g., Mathews, 424 U.S. at 334 (“(D)ue process is flexible
and calls for such procedural protections as the particular
situation demands.”).
The need for additional process with
respect to RSA 659:50, III does not inevitably lead to the
conclusion that other reasons for rejection will demand similar
process.
41
Defendants make two final arguments that merit only brief
comment.
First, on the basis of their statistical evidence
allegedly showing the success of their trainings, defendants
argue that at most moderators merely applied the statute
unconstitutionally in 2016.
They argue that the proper remedy
would be to require them to conduct additional training for
those moderators who have higher rejection rates.
not persuaded.
The court is
Defendants’ statistical evidence is insufficient
for the reasons articulated by plaintiffs in their briefing.
Furthermore, additional training would not be a useful exercise,
since defendants merely reiterate the limited guidance set forth
in the Election Procedure Manual.
See note 9, supra.
Second, defendants argue that plaintiffs cannot succeed on
a facial challenge because they do not dispute that the absentee
ballots of some voters—specifically, those who (1) omit
signatures, (2) use the wrong name on a document, or (3) use a
digital signature—were correctly rejected.
But “[t]he proper
focus of the constitutional inquiry is the group for whom the
law is a restriction, not the group for whom the law is
irrelevant.”
City of Los Angeles, California v. Patel, 135 S.
Ct. 2443, 2451 (2015). Voters in those categories would be
rejected regardless of RSA 659:50, III, as they would fail to
meet independent requirements of RSA 659:50.
42
See RSA 659:50, II
(requiring that the affidavit be properly executed); RSA 659:50,
IV (requiring that the signatures appear to be the signatures of
a duly qualified voter).
For the same reason, defendants are
incorrect when they argue that striking down RSA 659:50, III
would prevent moderators from rejecting ballots that are
unsigned or signed by a person with a different name than the
voter.
d. Conclusion
“Procedural due process guarantees fair procedure, not
perfect, error-free determinations.”
Aurelio v. R.I. Dep’t of
Admin., Div. of Motor Vehicles, 985 F. Supp. 48, 56 (D.R.I.
1997) (internal quotation marks omitted).
One could, by taking
in isolation various facets of the current process, conclude
that RSA 659:50, III passes constitutional muster.
But taken as
a whole, and in light of the fundamental importance of the right
to vote, the current process for rejecting voters due to a
signature mismatch fails to guarantee basic fairness.
The
infirmity with the statute begins with vesting moderators with
sole, unreviewable discretion to reject ballots due to a
signature mismatch.
Such discretion becomes constitutionally
intolerable once other factors are taken into account: the
natural variations in voters’ signatures combined with the
absence of training and functional standards on handwriting
43
analysis, and the lack of any review process or compliance
measures.
And there is an easy fix—an existing procedure that,
with minor refinement, could reduce the risk that qualified
voters are wrongly disenfranchised and bolster the State’s
interests in preventing voter fraud and safeguarding voter
confidence in elections.
Therefore, in light of the undisputed, material facts in
the record, plaintiffs are entitled to summary judgment on their
procedural due process claim.
The court grants plaintiffs’
request for declaratory relief insofar as RSA 659:50, III is
unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United
States Constitution.
The court also grants plaintiffs’ request for permanent
injunctive relief.
Outside of their arguments on the merits,
defendants do not argue that the elements for a permanent
injunction are not satisfied.
See Esso Standard Oil Co. v.
López-Freytes, 522 F.3d 136, 148 (1st Cir. 2008) (listing
elements for permanent injunction).
The court concludes that
plaintiffs have demonstrated an entitlement to permanent
injunctive relief.
Because “a successful facial attack means
the statute is wholly invalid and cannot be applied to anyone,”
Ezell, 651 F.3d at 698, the court enjoins defendants from
enforcing RSA 659:50, III.
Although the enforcement of the
44
provision falls primarily on local election officials, i.e.,
nonparties, the court is confident that the Secretary of State
will take appropriate steps to ensure that this injunction is
enforced.
II.
Remaining Claims (Counts II, III, IV)
Having resolved Count I in plaintiffs’ favor, the court
declines to go further and address plaintiffs’ remaining claims.
This is because plaintiffs are afforded complete relief by
virtue of their success on their procedural due process claim:
they will receive the declaratory relief they request and
corresponding injunctive relief.
This is not to say that plaintiffs’ remaining
constitutional claims are “moot” in the technical sense.
A case
does not become moot for purposes of Article III merely because
a court finds that the plaintiff is entitled to relief under one
of a number of alternative theories.
See Novella v. Westchester
Cty., 661 F.3d 128, 149 (2d Cir. 2011) (“[I]t is cases rather
than reasons that become moot with the meaning of Article III.”
(internal quotation marks omitted)); Air Line Pilots Ass’n,
Int’l v. UAL Corp., 897 F.2d 1394, 1397 (7th Cir. 1990)
(“Whether a court gives one or ten grounds for its result is not
a question to which Article III prescribes an answer.”).
But
courts also use the term “moot” to “refer to an issue that need
45
not be decided in light of the resolution in the same opinion of
another issue.”
UAL Corp., 897 F.2d at 1397.
The decision to
reach or avoid an unnecessary issue falls within the court’s
discretion, and will depend on the circumstances presented.
See
Novella, 661 F.3d at 149; Clark v. Dep’t of Army, 997 F.2d 1466,
1470 (Fed. Cir. 1993), superseded by statute on other grounds as
recognized in Kewley v. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 153 F.3d
1357, 1361-62 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
“Courts recognize that it may
be valuable to decide alternative grounds, even though not all
are necessary, and also understand that there may be excellent
reasons to avoid alternative grounds.”
13B Charles Alan Wright,
Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice &
Procedure § 3533 (3d ed.) (collecting cases).
In this case, the court concludes that it is neither
necessary nor prudent to reach plaintiffs’ other constitutional
claims.
In Count II, plaintiffs target the same basic defects
in the statute as they do in Count I, albeit under the auspices
of a different test.
And although Count III presents a distinct
question, as it rests on the alleged lack of uniformity wrought
by RSA 659:50, III, it raises sensitive legal questions,
including the applicability of Bush v. Gore to this context, the
standard by which such a claim should be evaluated on a facial
challenge, etc.
While these claims may not be moot under
Article III, the same considerations undergirding the
46
constitutional rule—judicial economy and the reluctance to opine
on abstract propositions—support the court’s decision here.
See
Thomas R.W. v. Mass. Dep’t of Educ., 130 F.3d 477, 479 (1st Cir.
1997); Soto v. City of Cambridge, 193 F. Supp. 3d 61, 69 (D.
Mass. 2016).
By contrast, plaintiffs’ ADA claim is moot under Article
III.
As a result of the 2017 amendments to RSA 659:50, III, an
absentee voter who receives assistance “because the voter is
blind or has a disability” is exempt from the requirement.
659:50, III.
RSA
In her deposition, Ms. Saucedo testified that she
will “definitely” rely on her husband’s assistance when she
votes in the future.
Doc. no. 49-5 at 7 (brackets omitted).
Therefore, Ms. Saucedo—the only plaintiff with a disability—is
and will be exempt from RSA 659:50, III, and consequently no
longer has a legally cognizable interest in the outcome of the
ADA claim.
See Horizon Bank & Trust Co. v. Massachusetts, 391
F.3d 48, 53 (1st Cir. 2004) (“A case is moot when the issues are
no longer live or the parties no longer have a legally
cognizable interest in the outcome.”).
Put differently, because
the court can no longer give any effectual relief to Ms. Saucedo
on this claim, the claim is moot and the court may not entertain
it.
See id.; cf. Steir v. Girl Scouts of the USA, 383 F.3d 7,
16 (1st Cir. 2004) (“A federal court may not entertain a claim
47
by any or all citizens who no more than assert that certain
practices of officials are unlawful.” (internal brackets
omitted)).
For these reasons, the court does not address Counts II,
III, and IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, plaintiffs’ motion for
summary judgment (doc. no. 48) is granted with respect to Count
I, and is otherwise denied.
Summary judgment on Counts II and
III is denied in light of the complete relief afforded to
plaintiffs on Count I, and summary judgment on Count IV is
denied because the claim is moot.
Counts II, III, and IV are
therefore dismissed without prejudice.
Defendants’ cross-motion
for summary judgment (doc. no. 52) is granted on Count IV to the
extent that Count IV is dismissed without prejudice as moot, and
is otherwise denied.
Plaintiffs’ motion to strike (doc. no. 56)
is denied.
As to relief under Count I, the court grants plaintiffs’
request for declaratory relief insofar as RSA 659:50, III is
unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United
States Constitution.
The court also grants plaintiffs’ request
48
for permanent injunctive relief, and defendants are hereby
permanently enjoined from enforcing RSA 659:50, III.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________
Landya McCafferty
United States District Judge
August 14, 2018
cc:
Counsel of Record
49
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?