Frank et al v. Walker et al
Filing
294
ORDER signed by Judge Lynn Adelman on 7/19/2016 Granting 278 Motion for Preliminary Injunction; Granting Motion to file a supplemental complaint; Granting Motion for class certification; Granting 289 Motion to Seal Document; Denying 290 Motion to Strike; Dismissing as Moot claims involving veterans' ID cards. (cc: all counsel) (lls)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
______________________________________________________________________
RUTHELLE FRANK, et al., on behalf of
themselves and all others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
v.
Case No. 11-C-1128
SCOTT WALKER, in his official capacity as
Governor of the State of Wisconsin, et al.,
Defendants.
______________________________________________________________________
DECISION AND ORDER
The plaintiffs, a number of individuals who are eligible to vote in Wisconsin, filed
this suit in 2011, alleging that Wisconsin’s law requiring them to present photo
identification at the polls, 2011 Wis. Act 23 (“Act 23"), violates the Constitution and
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Following a trial on the claims alleged in this and a
companion case, I concluded that Act 23 placed an undue burden on the plaintiffs’
voting rights and therefore violated the Fourteenth Amendment. I also concluded that
Act 23 violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Having found these violations, I
entered an injunction prohibiting the defendants from enforcing the photo ID
requirement. Frank v. Walker, 17 F. Supp. 3d 837 (E.D. Wis. 2014). The defendants
appealed, and the Seventh Circuit reversed. Frank v. Walker, 768 F.3d 744 (7th Cir.
2014) (“Frank I”).
On remand, the plaintiffs sought relief in connection with certain claims that I did
not resolve in my first decision. I issued a decision denying relief on those claims on
October 19, 2015. The plaintiffs appealed, challenging two aspects of my decision.
First, the plaintiffs challenged my conclusion that Frank I precluded me from considering
1
the plaintiffs’ claim for relief on behalf of persons who cannot obtain Act 23-qualifying ID
with reasonable effort. Second, the plaintiffs challenged my conclusion that Act 23’s
exclusion of veterans’ ID cards from the list of IDs that may be used for voting did not
violate the Equal Protection Clause.
While the plaintiffs’ appeal was pending, Wisconsin amended Act 23 to require
election officials to accept veterans’ IDs. See 2015 Wis. Act 261, § 2. Because the
parties agreed that this rendered the plaintiffs’ claim regarding the refusal to accept
such IDs moot, the Seventh Circuit vacated my decision on that claim and remanded
with instructions to dismiss it as moot. See Frank v. Walker, 819 F.3d 384, 385 (7th Cir.
2016) (“Frank II”). In accordance with that instruction, I will in this order dismiss that
claim as moot.
As to the plaintiffs’ other argument, the Seventh Circuit held that its decision in
the first appeal did not preclude me from considering the plaintiffs’ claim for relief on
behalf of those who cannot obtain ID with reasonable effort. It therefore vacated my
dismissal of that claim and remanded the case for further proceedings. Id. at 385–88.
Now that the case has been remanded a second time, the plaintiffs have filed a
motion to supplement their complaint, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(d), a motion to certify a
class, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 23, and a motion for a preliminary injunction, see Fed. R. Civ.
P. 65(a).
The motion for a preliminary injunction seeks an order requiring the
defendants to offer voters who do not possess an ID and who cannot obtain one with
reasonable effort the option of receiving a ballot by executing an affidavit to that effect.1
1
Throughout this opinion, I refer to the relief the plaintiffs seek as an “affidavit” option.
However, in legal jargon, “affidavit” usually refers to a statement that is sworn before an
officer, such as a notary. The affidavit that the plaintiffs request will not be notarized or
sworn, and thus it might be more accurate to refer to the affidavit as a “declaration,”
2
The plaintiffs also seek an order requiring the defendants to publicize this affidavit
option by sending individualized notice to all registered voters who, according to DMV
records, might not possess qualifying ID.
I will grant the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and will order the
defendants to implement an affidavit option in time for the general election on
November 8, 2016.
As explained in more detail below, although most voters in
Wisconsin either possess qualifying ID or can easily obtain one, a safety net is needed
for those voters who cannot obtain qualifying ID with reasonable effort. The plaintiffs’
proposed affidavit option is a sensible approach that will both prevent the
disenfranchisement of some voters during the pendency of this litigation and preserve
Wisconsin’s interests in protecting the integrity of its elections. I will also grant the
plaintiffs’ motion to file a supplemental complaint and their motion for class certification.
However, I will not require the defendants to mail individualized notice of the affidavit
option to certain voters.
I.
I begin with the plaintiffs’ motion to file a supplemental complaint.
The sole
purpose of this pleading is to add three named plaintiffs and potential class
representatives to the case: Melvin Robertson, Leroy Switlick, and James Green. The
proposed supplemental complaint alleges that these individuals do not possess Act 23qualifying ID, that they face significant barriers to obtaining ID, and that the requirement
to present ID at the polls prevented them from voting in Wisconsin elections during
2016. See Decl. of Sean J. Young Ex. 1, ECF No. 280-1.
which is a statement made under penalty of perjury that is not notarized or sworn to.
However, because the parties use the term “affidavit,” I will as well.
3
The defendants contend that I should not allow these individuals to be added as
plaintiffs because their claims will be addressed as part of a separate lawsuit that is
pending in the Western District of Wisconsin, One Wisconsin Institute, Inc., et al. v.
Judge Gerald C. Nichol, et al., W.D. Wis. Case No. 15-C-0324.
The defendants
contend that adding the new plaintiffs to this case would be duplicative and inefficient.
However, Robertson, Switlick and Green are not parties to the One Wisconsin case. It
is true that they may benefit from any relief granted in One Wisconsin, but that is also
true of the individuals who are already named as plaintiffs in this case. If I were to deny
Robertson, Switlick and Green leave to join this case, they would still have a right to file
their own, separate suit, and thus not allowing them to become parties in this case
would only increase the risk of duplicative litigation. It is better to have their claims and
the claims of the existing plaintiffs, all of which are virtually identical, litigated as part of
a single action. For that reason, I will grant the plaintiffs’ motion to file a supplemental
complaint.
II.
I next address the defendants’ argument that no plaintiff has standing to seek an
affidavit option on behalf of persons who lack ID and cannot obtain ID with reasonable
effort. To have standing, a plaintiff must show that he has suffered an injury in fact that
is fairly traceable to the defendants’ conduct and that is likely to be redressed by a
favorable judicial decision. See, e.g., Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560–
61 (1992).
The plaintiffs have put forth the following individuals as plaintiffs with standing to
pursue an affidavit option: Ruthelle Frank, Shirley Brown, DeWayne Smith, Melvin
Robertson, Leroy Switlick, and James Green. Pls.’ Br. at 24, ECF No. 279. So long as
4
one of these individuals has standing, the claim may proceed rather than be dismissed
for lack of standing. See Crawford v. Marion County Election Bd., 553 U.S. 181, 189
n.7 (2008).
The defendants point out that two of these plaintiffs, Brown and Smith, have
obtained ID, and contend that therefore their claims are moot. A claim becomes moot
only when it is impossible for a court to grant any effectual relief whatever to the
prevailing party. Knox v. Serv. Employees Int’l Union, Local 1000, __ U.S. __, 132
S. Ct. 2277, 2287 (2012). Here, because Brown and Smith have obtained ID, they
would not benefit from the relief that the plaintiffs currently seek, i.e., an order requiring
the defendants to allow those who lack ID to obtain a ballot by signing an affidavit
stating that they have been unable to obtain ID with reasonable effort. Thus, such an
order would not be effectual relief for them.
However, these plaintiffs still have a
sufficient stake in this case to remain plaintiffs. That is because the plaintiffs intend to
argue on appeal that Frank I was wrongly decided and that Act 23 should be enjoined in
its entirety. See Pls.’ Br. at 6 n.4, ECF No. 279. As I noted in my original decision,
those who possess IDs have standing to seek an injunction that prevents them from
having to show their IDs at the polls to receive a ballot. Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at 866.
But, for purposes of this order, I will assume that Brown and Smith do not have standing
to seek an affidavit option and examine whether any of the other plaintiffs do.
The defendants contend that the claim of Ruthelle Frank, who does not possess
an ID, is moot because she was able to vote by absentee mail in this year’s elections
without having to show ID under Act 23’s “indefinitely confined” exception.
That
exception provides that a person “who is indefinitely confined because of age, physical
illness or infirmity or is disabled for an indefinite period may by signing a statement to
5
that effect” vote by absentee ballot without presenting ID. Wis. Stat. §§ 6.86(2)(a),
6.87(4)(b)2.
However, Frank prefers to vote in person and has voted absentee only
because she lacks ID and therefore cannot vote in person. See Frank Dep. at 12–13,
ECF No. 280-4. Thus, Frank continues to suffer an injury in fact, i.e., the inability to
vote in person, that is caused by the photo-ID requirement, and that would be redressed
by the creation of an affidavit option. She therefore continues to have standing to seek
the requested injunctive relief.
The remaining plaintiffs, Robertson, Switlick and Green, also have standing to
seek an order creating an affidavit option. These plaintiffs do not currently possess IDs,
have been unable to vote in recent elections, and allege that they cannot with
reasonable effort obtain IDs. The defendants contend that these plaintiffs do not have
standing because they have not shown that they tried to obtain IDs under the Wisconsin
DMV’s most recent procedures. However, while the plaintiffs’ failure to apply for IDs
under the current procedures may be relevant to the merits of their claims, it does not
deprive them of standing to seek an affidavit option, which if granted would prevent
them from having to apply for IDs at all. Moreover, Leroy Switlick did attempt to obtain
an ID as recently as April 2016 but was unsuccessful. Decl. of Leroy Switlick ¶¶ 8–10,
ECF No. 280-6.
This would have been after the DMV instituted most of its new
procedures but before a recent emergency rule (discussed below) went into effect in
May 2016. Having to reapply for an ID every time the DMV changes its procedures
would itself require more than reasonable effort, and thus Switlick undoubtedly has
standing to seek an affidavit remedy. This reasoning also applies to Melvin Robertson,
who attempted to obtain an ID before 2014. Decl. of Melvin Robertson ¶ 7, ECF No.
6
280-5. Accordingly, I conclude that Robertson, Switlick and Green have standing to
seek an order creating an affidavit option.
III.
Next, I address the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification. The plaintiffs propose
to certify a class defined as eligible Wisconsin voters without acceptable forms of
identification for voting and who have one or more of the following barriers to obtaining
ID: (1) name mismatches or other errors in a document needed to obtain ID; (2) a need
to obtain an underlying document from an agency other than the DMV in order to obtain
ID; and/or (3) one or more underlying documents necessary to obtain ID cannot be
found. See Pls. Prop. Order at 1–2, ECF No. 278-1. However, the affidavit remedy the
plaintiffs seek on behalf of this class would apply to a broader class of persons, namely,
to all those who face a “reasonable impediment” to obtaining acceptable ID. The order
they seek would direct the defendants to:
Create an affidavit in simple language that would allow voters without
acceptable identification for voting to cast a regular ballot at the polling
place or an absentee ballot, by affirming that they face a “reasonable
impediment” to obtaining acceptable identification. The form should have
boxes that a voter may check for “lack of transportation,” “disability or
illness,” “lack of birth certificate,” “work schedule,” “family responsibilities,”
and “other reasonable impediment.”
See id. at 2. To bring the class definition in line with the proposed remedy, I will define
the proposed class as all those eligible to vote in Wisconsin who cannot with reasonable
effort obtain a qualifying photo ID. Most of the members of this class will also fit into
one of the plaintiffs’ three categories, since individuals in those categories are the ones
most likely to encounter reasonable impediments.
See Frank II, 819 F.3d at 386
(describing the members of the plaintiffs’ three categories as those who cannot “obtain
a qualifying photo ID with reasonable effort”).
7
Having defined the proposed class, I turn to whether it may be certified under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. A district court may certify a class of plaintiffs if the
proposed class satisfies all four requirements of Rule 23(a)—numerosity, commonality,
typicality, and adequacy of representation—and any one of the conditions of Rule 23(b).
Oshana v. Coca-Cola Co., 472 F.3d 506, 513 (7th Cir. 2006).
For the reasons
explained below, I conclude that these elements are satisfied.
A.
I first address the four Rule 23(a) requirements.
Numerosity. Under Rule 23(a)(1), a class may be certified only if “the class is so
numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable.” I find that the proposed class
satisfies this requirement. Although it is true that the vast majority of Wisconsin voters
already possess qualifying ID, and although it may be true that many voters who do not
already possess qualifying ID can obtain one with ease, there can be no doubt that
some voters in Wisconsin still face high hurdels to obtaining ID. As explained in more
detail below, the DMV has already denied IDs to more than 50 applicants who sought
IDs under the DMV’s current rules, and it is likely that many others will be unable to
obtain ID with reasonable effort. Moreover, it is clearly impracticable to join all such
individuals as plaintiffs. There is no way to identify every person in the state who
currently faces high hurdles to obtaining ID. Indeed, many individuals likely will not
even realize that they fall within the class definition until they attempt to obtain ID and
discover the hurdles that affect them. For example, a person might believe that it will be
easy to obtain an ID only to discover, upon getting to the DMV, that his or her
documentation is not acceptable. This person will benefit from the relief sought by the
class but could not have been joined as a named plaintiff. A related point is that new
8
class members will be created while the case is pending, as people turn eighteen, move
to Wisconsin, or otherwise become eligible to vote here and discover that they cannot
obtain ID with reasonable effort. It is not possible to identify all of these individuals in
advance and join them as named plaintiffs. Accordingly, Rule 23(a)(1) is satisfied.
Commonality. Rule 23(a)(2) provides that a class may be certified only if “there
are questions of law or fact common to the class.”
This requires the plaintiff to
demonstrate that the class members “have suffered the same injury.” Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc. v. Dukes, 564 U.S. 338, 349–50 (2011) (quoting Gen. Tel. Co. of Southwest v.
Falcon, 457 U.S. 147, 157 (1982)). This, in turn, requires the plaintiff to show that the
class’s claims “depend upon a common contention” that is central to the validity of every
class member’s claim and which can be resolved on a classwide basis, i.e., in one
stroke. Id. at 350. Here, I conclude that plaintiffs have satisfied this standard. One
common question is this: Does Act 23, as applied to those who cannot with reasonable
effort obtain qualifying ID, violate the Constitution as it was understood in decisions
such as Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780 (1983), and Burdick v. Takushi, 504
U.S. 428 (1992)? If the answer to this common question is yes, then another common
question arises: Is the proper remedy for this violation of the class members’ rights an
injunction requiring the creation of an affidavit option in the form that the plaintiffs have
sought?
Typicality. Rule 23(a)(3), in pertinent part, requires that “the claims . . . of the
representative parties [be] typical of the claims . . . of the class.” The Seventh Circuit
has interpreted this requirement to mean that the named representatives’ claims must
“have the same essential characteristics as the claims of the class at large.” De La
Fuente v. Stokely-Van Camp, Inc., 713 F.2d 225, 232 (7th Cir. 1983); accord Munro v.
9
Target Corp., 580 F.3d 485, 492 (7th Cir. 2009). The court has stated that “[a] plaintiff’s
claim is typical if it arises from the same event or practice or course of conduct that
gives rise to the claims of other class members and his or her claims are based on the
same legal theory.” De La Fuente, 713 F.2d at 232 (quoting H. Newberg, Class Actions
§ 1115(b) at 185 (1977)); accord Oshana v. Coca-Cola Co., 472 F.3d 506, 514 (7th Cir.
2006). The court has also stated that “[t]he typicality requirement may be satisfied even
if there are factual distinctions between the claims of the named plaintiffs and those of
other class members.” De La Fuente, 713 F.2d at 232; accord Oshana, 472 F.3d at
514.
In the present case, I conclude that the claims of class representatives Frank,
Robertson, Switlick and Green are typical of the claims of the class.
The named
plaintiffs’ claims share the same essential characteristics as the claims of the class at
large. Those characteristics are (1) the lack of a qualifying ID, and (2) the existence of
a high hurdle to obtaining such ID. The class representatives’ claims are also based on
the same legal theory as the class’s claims, i.e., violation of the Constitution as
understood in Anderson and Burdick.
Adequacy of representation. Rule 23(a)(4) requires the representative parties to
demonstrate that they will “fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.” This
requirement focuses on matters such as whether the class representatives have
retained appropriate counsel and whether the representatives have interests that
conflict with the interests of the class. See, e.g., Retired Chicago Police Ass’n v. City of
Chicago, 7 F.3d 584, 598 (7th Cir. 1993). In the present case, the defendants do not
dispute that Frank, Robertson, Switlick and Green are adequate class representatives,
10
and it appears to me that they and their counsel will fairly and adequately protect the
interests of the class. Therefore, I conclude that Rule 23(a)(4) is satisfied.
B.
I next examine whether one of the conditions in Rule 23(b) is satisfied. Here, the
plaintiffs seek certification under either Rule 23(b)(1) or Rule 23(b)(2). I conclude that
certification is proper under Rule 23(b)(2) and for that reason will not discuss Rule
23(b)(1).
Rule 23(b)(2) permits class certification if “the party opposing the class has acted
or refuses to act on grounds that apply generally to the class, so that final injunctive
relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting the class as a whole.”
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2); Chicago Teachers Union, Local No. 1 v. Bd. of Educ., 797 F.3d
426, 441 (7th Cir. 2015). “Colloquially, 23(b)(2) is the appropriate rule to enlist when the
plaintiffs’ primary goal is not monetary relief, but rather to require the defendant to do or
not do something that would benefit the whole class.” Chicago Teachers Union, 797
F.3d at 441. Rule 23(b)(2) is generally considered to be the appropriate procedural
vehicle for certifying civil-rights claims seeking injunctive relief. Id.
Here, the defendants have acted or failed to act on grounds that apply generally
to the class, in that Act 23 applies to all of those who cannot with reasonable effort
obtain qualifying ID. Moreover, the general requirements for obtaining qualifying ID are
the same for all class members. Although the class members do not all face the same
high hurdles to obtaining ID, the plaintiffs have not asked the court to fashion different
remedies for each hurdle.
Rather, the plaintiffs seek an injunction requiring the
defendants to allow all class members to vote by presenting an affidavit in lieu of photo
ID. This would be an adequate remedy for the entire class, and thus final injunctive
11
relief would operate in favor of the class as a whole.
Certification is therefore
appropriate under Rule 23(b)(2).
C.
The defendants also contend that class certification should be denied because
the proposed class is vague or indefinite, i.e., that it is not “ascertainable.” See Alliance
to End Repression v. Rochford, 565 F.2d 975, 977–78 (7th Cir. 1977). I disagree. The
class is defined as all eligible Wisconsin voters who cannot with reasonable effort obtain
qualifying ID. Although one may contend that the term “reasonable effort” is indefinite,
as applied to the facts of this case it is definite enough. The essential point is that the
class includes anyone who does not currently possess qualifying ID and who, to obtain
one, would have to do more than retrieve a birth certificate and related documents from
his or her desk drawer and make a single trip to the DMV.
The class would also
include those who cannot, without going to unreasonable lengths, make a single trip to
the DMV, such as those with health problems who find travel difficult and those who
cannot afford the costs of transportation to the DMV.
To administer this case, it is not necessary to define the class with greater
precision. Because the class is being certified under Rule 23(b)(2), there will be no
need to identify specific class members so that they may receive notice and an
opportunity to opt out. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c)(2); 1 William B. Rubenstein, et al.,
Newberg on Class Actions § 3:7 (5th ed. 2011) (explaining that definiteness is less
important in Rule 23(b)(2) cases, where class members do not have notice and opt-out
rights); 5 James Wm. Moore, Moore’s Federal Practice–Civil § 23.21[5] (3d ed. 2016)
(same). Moreover, the lack of greater definiteness will not impede the adjudication of
the class’s claims or the implementation of the affidavit remedy. It is not necessary to
12
identify all class members who cannot with reasonable effort obtain ID in order to
determine whether any person who cannot is entitled to relief. Likewise, the defendants
do not need to identify any class members in advance to implement the affidavit
procedure. Rather, the defendants merely need to make the affidavit forms available to
all voters and allow those who complete them to receive a ballot without producing an
ID. Thus, the class is definite enough to make all aspects of this case administrable.
See Moore, supra, § 23.21[5] (“Because [in a Rule 23(b)(2) class] the defendant is
obligated to comply with any orders granting injunctive or declaratory relief and the
representative plaintiffs may enforce compliance, the court may not need to identify
each individual who might be entitled to relief.”).
IV.
Having certified a class, I turn to the plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction.
To obtain a preliminary injunction, the plaintiffs must make an initial showing that (1)
they will suffer irreparable harm in the period before the final resolution of their claim; (2)
traditional legal remedies are inadequate; and (3) the claim has some likelihood of
success on the merits. BBL, Inc. v. City of Angola, 809 F.3d 317, 323–24 (7th Cir.
2015). If the plaintiffs make this showing, the court weighs the factors against one
another, assessing whether the balance of harms favors the plaintiffs or whether the
harm to the defendants or the public is sufficiently weighty that the injunction should be
denied. Id.
In the present case, the first two factors of the initial showing are clearly satisfied.
Those who cannot with reasonable effort obtain qualifying ID will be unable to vote in
any elections that occur between now and when their claims are finally resolved. At
least two elections will occur during that period: the partisan primary on August 9, 2016,
13
and the general election on November 8, 2016. However, additional elections are likely
to occur before the plaintiffs’ claims are finally resolved, including a statewide election
on February 21, 2017. See Decl. of Michael Haas ¶ 44, ECF No. 286. If the plaintiffs
were unable to vote in these elections, traditional legal remedies, such as monetary
damages, would be inadequate.
Thus, whether the plaintiffs are entitled to a
preliminary injunction turns on their likelihood of success on the merits and whether the
balance of harms favors the issuance of an injunction. I consider these issues below.2
A.
Under the framework set forth in Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780 (1983),
and Burdick v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428 (1992), a voting regulation will violate the
constitutional rights of a plaintiff where the regulation imposes an undue burden on the
plaintiff’s voting rights. To determine whether a regulation imposes an undue burden,
the court balances the burdens faced by the plaintiff against the state’s interests in the
regulation, “taking into consideration ‘the extent to which those interests make it
necessary to burden the plaintiff’s rights.’” Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434 (quoting Anderson,
460 U.S. at 789).
In the present case, the defendants contend that Act 23 furthers its interests in
detecting and deterring voter-impersonation fraud and in promoting public confidence in
the integrity of elections. These interests have been recognized as important enough to
2
The defendants have filed a motion to strike some of the evidence that the plaintiffs
have filed in support of their motion for a preliminary injunction. See ECF No. 290.
That evidence consists largely of declarations and discovery materials that were
gathered during the course of the One Wisconsin case in the Western District of
Wisconsin. The defendants have not cited any Federal Rule of Civil Procedure, local
rule of this court, or other legal authority that supports their motion. Nor am I aware of
any rule or authority that would support striking this evidence. Accordingly, the motion
to strike will be denied.
14
justify the burdens that Act 23 places on the vast majority of Wisconsin’s voters, who
either already possess qualifying ID or can obtain qualifying ID with reasonable effort.
See Frank I, 768 F.3d at 749–51. The question presented at this stage of the case is
whether the state’s interests are sufficient to require some voters to expend more than
reasonable effort to obtain qualifying ID, and to disenfranchise those voters who cannot
obtain ID not matter how hard they try. See Frank II, 819 F.3d at 386–87.
1.
The defendants do not contend that the Constitution permits Wisconsin to deny
access to a ballot to those who cannot with reasonable effort obtain qualifying ID.
Rather, they contend that all eligible voters in the state who employ reasonable effort
will obtain qualifying ID—specifically, a Wisconsin state ID card issued by the Wisconsin
Department of Transportation’s Division of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”). I thus begin by
discussing the evidence in the record that pertains to the DMV’s procedures for issuing
these IDs to voters who need them. I then address whether those procedures ensure
that all voters who employ reasonable effort will obtain qualifying ID. As the discussion
below indicates, while the DMV’s latest procedures may make it easy for the majority of
applicants to obtain a state ID card, there will still be some who will be unable to obtain
ID with reasonable effort.
A safety net, such as the plaintiffs’ affidavit option, is
necessary to protect the voting rights of these individuals.
a.
The basic requirements for obtaining a free state ID card for voting purposes are
set out in a Wisconsin administrative regulation, Trans 102.15. See Wis. Admin. Code
§ Trans 102.15. This regulation requires applicants to present proof of six items: (1)
15
name, (2) date of birth, (3) United States citizenship,3 (4) identity, (5) Wisconsin
residency, and (6) social security number. See § Trans 102.15(3), (3m), (4), (4m) & (5).
To prove name, date of birth and United States citizenship, most applicants will need to
produce a birth certificate. §§ Trans 102.15(3)(a)1–2, (3m)(a)1; Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d
at 856. To prove identity, most applicants will need to produce a social security card.
§ Trans 102.15(4)(a)13; Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at 856–57.
To prove Wisconsin
residency, an applicant must produce a document that lists the applicant’s address,
such as a utility bill or paystub. § Trans 102.15(4m). To prove social security number,
the person generally needs no documentation but must provide the number to the
DMV. § Trans 102.15(5).
In my original opinion in this case, which I issued in April 2014, I made extensive
findings about the burdens a person may encounter when trying to prove the six items
required by Trans 102.15. See Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at 855–62. However, since the
date of that opinion, Wisconsin has made several changes to this rule in an attempt to
make the process of obtaining ID easier. The DMV has also adopted various informal
practices that have not been codified in the rule but which are designed to further
reduce the burdens associated with obtaining ID for voting purposes.
Under the current system, to obtain a free state ID card, a person begins by
gathering whatever documentation he or she has and bringing them to a DMV customer
service center. There are 92 service centers, or field offices, in the state. Each county
3
To receive a state ID card, a person does not have to be a United States citizen.
Rather, a person who is not a citizen may receive a state ID card if he or she is a legal
permanent resident or is otherwise legally present in the United States. See Wis.
Admin. Code § Trans 102.15(3m). However, to be qualified to vote, a person must be a
United States citizen. See Wis. Stat. § 6.02. Thus, if a person applies for a free state
ID card to use for voting purposes, the person must prove U.S. citizenship.
16
has a service center that is open at least 20 hours per week. If a person arrives at a
service center, completes an application for a free state ID card, and produces all of the
necessary documentation to prove the six items required by Trans 102.15, the DMV will
issue the person an ID. Decl. of Kristina Boardman ¶ 9, ECF No. 287.4 If, however, the
person arrives at the DMV and is either missing a required document or the documents
are not in order (such as because the person’s name is different or spelled differently on
a supporting document), the person will have to rely on one of the DMV’s procedures for
handling these problems.
One of the DMV’s procedures is known as the ID Petition Process, or “IDPP.”
This process is used when the ID applicant does not have a birth certificate or other
document needed to prove name, date of birth, and/or United States citizenship. The
authority for the DMV to use this process is found in § Trans 102.15(5m), which was
recently amended by way of an emergency rule promulgated by the Department of
Transportation and approved by Wisconsin’s governor. See Emergency Rule 1618,
§§ 6–9 (effective May 13, 2016).5 However, the DMV has been applying this procedure
since September 2014. Boardman Decl. ¶ 12.
To use the ID petition process, an individual must go to a DMV service center, fill
out an application for a free state ID card, and also complete a petition (known as “Form
MV3012”) to be issued an ID without producing documents that prove name, date of
birth, and citizenship. The person must also present documents to prove identity and
Wisconsin residency. Boardman Decl. ¶ 13. Once this happens, an employee at the
4
Kristina Boardman is the Administrator of the DMV.
5
The emergency rule can be found on the Internet by entering “Emergency Rule 1618”
into a search engine. Copies of the rule have been filed with the court. See ECF No.
280-24.
17
DMV service center scans any documents that the applicant brought to the DMV and
transmits them to the DMV’s central office in Madison. The central office will then
attempt to verify the applicant’s name, date of birth, and U.S. citizenship by contacting
various federal, state, and local agencies. The DMV does not charge the applicant a
fee for using the petition process, and the goal of the process is to verify the applicant’s
qualifications without requiring the applicant to make trips to other agencies or to pay a
fee to obtain documents like a birth certificate.
The ID petition process is performed in stages. In the first stage, DMV’s central
office attempts to quickly verify the applicant’s qualifications by finding his or her birth
certificate through contact with public agencies. If the central office is successful, it will
mail an ID card to the applicant’s address.
However, if the central office is
unsuccessful, the petition enters the second stage, where it is referred to the DMV’s
Compliance, Audit and Fraud Unit, which goes by the acronym “CAFU.” Boardman
Decl. ¶ 20. Once the petition reaches CAFU, an investigator is assigned to the case.
The investigator then employs “investigatory skills developed in other aspects of
CAFU’s work” to verify the applicant’s name, date of birth, and citizenship. Id. ¶ 23.
These investigators are not restricted in the information they can consider and will often
talk to family members, hospitals, and school districts to verify the applicant’s
qualifications. An investor may also contact the applicant and ask him or her to provide
additional information. CAFU’s primary goal is to locate the applicant’s birth certificate.
But if it cannot find one, CAFU will try to find one of the documents that may be
accepted as a birth-certificate substitute under the DMV’s “extraordinary proof” process.
See Wis. Admin. Code § Trans 102.15(5m)(b)3. These documents include: a baptismal
certificate, a hospital birth certificate, a delayed birth certificate, a census record, an
18
early school record, a family bible, and a doctor’s record of post-natal care. Id. After
CAFU concludes its investigation, it makes a recommendation to the Director of the
DMV’s Bureau of Field Service (currently Jim Miller). The Director then makes the final
decision on the petition. Boardman Decl. ¶ 29. The administrative rule, as amended by
Emergency Rule 1618, states that a petition must be granted if the Director “concludes,
on the basis of secondary documentation or other corroborating information, that it is
more likely than not that the name, date of birth or U.S. citizenship provided by the
applicant is correct.” Emergency Rule 1618, § 8. If the Director denies the petition, the
applicant does not receive an ID.
The May 2016 emergency rule also created a process under which the DMV
must issue a temporary identification card “receipt” to any person who applies for a
state ID card to use for voting purposes and who needs to use the ID petition process.
See Emergency Rule 1618, § 10 (creating § Trans 102.15(6m)). The receipt is a sheet
of paper that contains the person’s name, signature, photograph, and other information
(such as the date of issuance and an expiration date). See Ex. 1020, ECF No. 287-8.
An unexpired identification card receipt is a form of qualifying ID under Act 23 and thus
can be used for voting. See Wis. Stat. § 5.02(6m)(d). The emergency rule provides
that the DMV must issue the receipt “not later than the sixth working day after the
applicant” files the petition to use the ID petition process (i.e., Form MV3012), and that
the receipt must be issued by first-class mail. Emergency Rule 1618, § 10. Thus, if a
person applies for a state ID card for voting purposes, also submits Form MV3012, and
also supplies sufficient proof of identity and Wisconsin residency, the DMV will mail the
person a temporary ID receipt within approximately six days. The person may then use
the ID for voting purposes while he or she is waiting for the DMV’s central office and/or
19
CAFU to verify his or her name, date of birth, and U.S. citizenship. The DMV also has
an internal policy under which, during the week of an election, it will mail a temporary ID
receipt to an applicant on the same day that the application is made. Boardman Decl.
¶ 44. The purpose of this internal policy is to get a temporary ID receipt into the hands
of a voter who did not have qualifying ID on election day in time to allow the voter to
validate his or her provisional ballot by 4 p.m. on the Friday after the election.6 Id.
A temporary ID receipt expires after 60 days.
Wis. Stat. § 343.50(1)(c).
However, the Emergency Rule requires the DMV to mail a new receipt to an applicant
10 days before the receipt expires. Emergency Rule 1618, § 10. The DMV states that
it will generally send two renewals to an applicant, such that all applicants will have a
valid ID receipt for a total of 180 days. Boardman Decl. ¶ 41. Moreover, a person will
continue getting additional renewal ID receipts so long as the person’s ID petition is
under review. Id. The DMV will stop issuing renewal receipts only if it determines that
the applicant committed fraud, it determines that the person is not eligible for a
permanent ID, the applicant does not respond to DMV requests for further information
related to the investigation, or the person requests that the DMV cancel the ID petition
process. Id.
In addition to the ID petition process, the DMV has adopted two new procedures
for processing ID applications in which there is a discrepancy between the name on a
birth record or other underlying document and the name the applicant uses. First, the
DMV will disregard a single-letter discrepancy in the applicant’s first, middle, or last
6
Under Wisconsin law, if a person does not have qualifying ID on election day, he or
she may cast a provisional ballot. Wis. Stat. § 6.79(3)(b). The ballot will not be counted
unless the person presents qualifying ID to the municipal clerk or board of election
commissioners by 4 p.m. on the Friday following the election. Wis. Stat. § 6.97(3)(b).
20
name. See Boardman Decl. ¶ 36. Thus, if the person uses the first name “Shaun” but
an underlying document lists his first name as “Shawn,” the person will still be issued an
ID without having to use any formal exception process.
(The DMV’s policy of
disregarding single-letter discrepancies is not codified in the Administrative Code.)
Second, if an individual has a different name, or a name that is significantly different
from the name on his or her birth record, then a person can fill out a document that the
DMV keeps on hand entitled “Affidavit of Common Law Name Change.”
This
procedure, which was recently codified as part of the May 2016 emergency rule, see
Emergency Rule 1618 §§ 1–3, is designed for cases in which a person has used a
name that is different from the one that appears on his or her birth certificate for many
years but has not had the name officially changed by a court order or other formal
means. Under Wisconsin common law, if the person has consistently and continuously
used the name, then the name is considered to have been legally changed even though
no formal procedure was used.
See State v. Hansford, 219 Wis. 2d 226, 245–46
(1998). The DMV’s affidavit procedure allows the applicant to make this fact known to
the DMV.
The DMV’s form affidavit contains a space for a notary signature, but
according to the defendants, a DMV employee may notarize the form for free.
Boardman Decl. ¶ 38; but see Young Decl. Ex. 41(applicant tells CAFU agent that he
cannot get name-change affidavit notarized and agent does not advise applicant that
notary services are available at the DMV). After the person submits the affidavit, the
DMV will do “research” and then either approve or deny the name-change request. See
Boardman Decl. Ex. 1018 at 2 (internal DMV document stating that “approval process
may take up to 2 weeks while research is completed” and that DMV will “send the
customer a letter approving or denying the request to change their name”).
21
Presumably, if the name change is approved, the DMV will also send the person an ID
card. However, I have been unable to locate anything in the record that explains when
an ID will be issued after a person submits an Affidavit of Common Law Name Change.
b.
Having explained the DMV’s current procedures for issuing state ID cards, I next
consider whether they result in all voters who employ reasonable effort obtaining
qualifying ID. I conclude that although many individuals who need qualifying ID will be
able to obtain one with reasonable effort under these procedures, there will still be some
who will not. Indeed, because there are likely thousands of eligible voters in Wisconsin
who lack qualifying ID, see Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at 854, it is virtually self-evident that
some of them will either need to exercise extraordinary effort to obtain qualifying ID or
be unable to obtain ID no matter how hard they try. However, as explained below, the
evidence produced so far also supports this conclusion.
The record contains evidence about the results of the DMV’s ID petition process,
which, as explained above, is used when an applicant for an ID cannot produce a birth
certificate or other record that proves name, date of birth, and citizenship. According to
the defendants, between September 15, 2014 and May 12, 2016, applicants filed 1,389
petitions.
Boardman Decl. ¶ 32.
Of those, 1,132 petitions were granted.
Of the
remaining 257 petitions, 67 remain “pending.” Id. Ex. 1017. This leaves 190 petitions
that were resolved without issuing an ID to the applicant. Of these, 98 are listed as
“cancelled by the customer,” 40 were suspended based on the lack of response from
the applicant, and 52 were flat denials. Id. The defendants state that one petition was
denied because it was determined that the person was not a U.S. citizen. Boardman
22
Decl. ¶ 33. No evidence in the record suggests that the remaining denials involved
applications by individuals who are not eligible to vote in Wisconsin.
From the evidence in the record pertaining to the denied ID petitions, I find that it
will be impossible or nearly impossible for some class members to obtain a free state ID
card. The record contains reports and other internal DMV documents reflecting that
several ID petitions were denied because the applicant was unable to provide, and
CAFU was unable to locate, satisfactory information proving name, date of birth, and/or
citizenship. For example, one report pertains to a woman was born in Cook County,
Illinois, and who did not have a copy of her birth certificate. Young Decl., Ex. 59. The
DMV was unable to locate her birth records, and when a CAFU investigator contacted
Cook County Hospital, he was told that the hospital would not release information over
the phone and would only release information to the applicant for a fee. The CAFU
investigator then contacted the applicant and asked her to provide one of the other
documents accepted as a birth-certificate substitute, such as a baptismal certificate.
The applicant informed the investigator that she did not have any of those documents
and had no way to obtain them. The investigator told her that he would keep trying. A
few months later, the applicant called the DMV and expressed frustration that it had not
verified her qualifications and issued her an ID. Eventually, the DMV denied the petition
because it could not verify the applicant’s qualifications and the applicant could not
provide the DMV with any further leads. Reports and internal DMV emails pertaining to
other applicants indicate that other petitions were denied for similar reasons.
See
Young Decl. Ex. 60 (petition denied because CAFU could not find birth record and
applicant did not have access to documents accepted as birth-certificate substitute); id.
Ex. 56 (same); id. Ex. 45 (petition denied because CAFU could not find birth record and
23
applicant did not respond to request to produce birth-certificate substitute); id. Ex. 44
(same).
Other reports suggest that individuals will be unable to obtain ID without going to
unreasonable lengths. In one case, CAFU could not find a birth certificate for a person
who was born in Tennessee, but it could find a birth certificate and social security
number that seemed to match the individual but which contained a different last name
than the one she currently used. The CAFU investigator eventually determined that,
most likely, the name discrepancy stemmed from the fact that the applicant had been
adopted and her original birth certificate had been voided. The investigator determined
that the only solution to the problem was for the applicant to find court documents or
adoption papers from Tennessee that supported her current name. The investigator
informed the applicant of this fact and gave her the number for a Tennessee postadoption service. When the applicant did not contact CAFU with further information, her
application for a state ID card was denied. See Young Decl. Exs. 39 & 61. In this case,
it appears that it may have been possible for the applicant to obtain an ID. However, to
obtain the ID, the applicant would have had to exert unreasonable effort in tracking
down adoption papers and court records from Tennessee.
In another case involving a name mismatch, the applicant’s name was spelled
differently on his Mississippi birth certificate than it was on his social security card. Id.
Ex. 42. The applicant considered the name on the birth certificate to be a misspelling.
When the applicant’s daughter brought the birth certificate to the DMV, the employees
at the counter informed her that she would have to return to Mississippi to get the name
corrected. The daughter informed CAFU that the people at the counter “were very
nasty to her.” However, the CAFU investigator asked her to return to the DMV and
24
have the employees at the counter scan the birth certificate so it could be sent to the
investigator. The daughter did this but experienced additional problems with staff at her
local DMV. (The daughter told the investigator that the process “has been the biggest
headache.”) About a month after the petition was submitted, the investigator informed
the applicant’s daughter that the applicant would need to either request a name
correction through the Social Security Administration or initiate court proceedings to
legally change his name.
When the daughter informed the investigator that the
applicant was not willing to do either of these things, the investigator recommended that
the DMV send the applicant a denial letter.
However, someone at the DMV then
advised the investigator that the applicant could use the common law name-change
affidavit. The investigator relayed this information to the daughter. The daughter then
submitted the affidavit, but the DMV rejected it because the applicant’s “old name”
(which he had not used for 74 years) was misspelled on the affidavit and because the
daughter had signed the affidavit rather than the applicant. The daughter advised the
DMV that she had power of attorney for her father, who recently had a stroke and could
not write. The DMV then sent the daughter a copy of the affidavit with the old name
correctly spelled and advised her to sign and return the affidavit along with proof that
she had power of attorney for her father. When the DMV received no further response
from the applicant or his daughter, it denied the petition. By this time, the daughter had
been trying for five months to obtain an ID for her father.
In this case, the applicant may have eventually been able to obtain ID. However,
doing so would have involved an unreasonable amount of effort.
The applicant’s
daughter made numerous contacts with the DMV over a five-month period, including
two in-person trips that the daughter found unpleasant, and sending in a name-change
25
affidavit that the DMV rejected. Although the daughter did not respond after the DMV
mailed her a second name-change affidavit and requested proof that she had power of
attorney for her father, by that point the daughter had already exerted more than
reasonable effort on her father’s behalf.
Next, I find that errors made by DMV staff will result in applicants being unable to
obtain ID with reasonable effort. It is virtually self-evident that in a large bureaucracy
like the DMV—which has 92 separate locations and between 350 and 370 employees at
those locations, see Boardman Decl. ¶ 7—errors will be made. Some of these errors
will prevent applicants from obtaining ID with reasonable effort. One error that seems to
happen frequently is counter staff’s failure to inform an ID applicant who lacks a birth
certificate that he or she can use the ID petition process. See Young Decl. Exs. 20, 57.
If an applicant who lacks a birth certificate is not informed of the petition process, he is
likely to conclude that he cannot obtain an ID and may give up, even if he might have
been able to obtain an ID easily if he had been told about the petition process. A
related error that has occurred is CAFU’s failing to inform applicants with name
mismatches that they could use the common law name-change affidavit and obtain
notary services for free at the DMV. See Young Decl. Exs. 41 at p.2 (applicant informs
CAFU investigator that he cannot get affidavit notarized and investigator does not
advise him that notary services are available at DMV) & 42 (CAFU recommends
denying ID to applicant with name mismatch without realizing that applicant could use
name-change affidavit).
Other errors may result in an applicant having to make a
second trip to the DMV to complete the application process. See id. Exs. 65 & 72;
Boardman Decl. ¶ 34 (noting that DMV staff members sometimes fail to scan or copy an
applicant’s documents, and that when this happens the applicant must return to the
26
DMV to supply the necessary information a second time).
This second trip would
involve more than reasonable effort for many voters, especially those with limited time
and limited access to transportation.
Another burden for those who use the ID petition process is keeping in touch with
the CAFU investigator over the period of weeks or months that it takes the investigator
to verify the applicant’s qualifications. In some cases, this will be a substantial burden.
For example, one CAFU report documents a case in which an applicant had to stay in
touch with an investigator over a three-month period. See Young Decl. Ex. 41. During
that time, the applicant spoke on the phone with the investigator nine times, made two
in-person visits to his local DMV, made calls to other agencies in an effort to track down
documents, and asked his nephew to scan and email documents to the DMV.
Eventually, the applicant was issued an ID, but only after exerting more than reasonable
effort. If this applicant had been homeless, he would almost certainly have failed to
obtain an ID. Although the DMV states that it is able to mail documents to a homeless
person though a shelter, food pantry, or social-services agency, see Boardman Decl.
¶ 31, it would be nearly impossible for a homeless person to make nine phone calls to a
CAFU investigator over a three-month period. The DMV has acknowledged that is
difficult for CAFU to keep in touch with applicants. See Dep. of Susan Schilz at 34:14–
35:5 (attached as Ex. 37 to Young Decl.).
Another problem is that the DMV’s new procedures do not relieve an applicant
from having to produce a document that proves his or her identity. See Wis. Admin.
Code § Trans 102.15(4) (requiring proof of identity); Boardman Decl. ¶ 13 (person using
27
ID petition process must still provide proof of identity and Wisconsin residency).7 As I
found during the trial on the plaintiffs’ original claims, to satisfy this requirement, a
person will generally need to produce a social security card. Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at
856–57. However, to obtain a social security card, a person generally must present
photo ID to the Social Security Administration. Id. Obviously, a person applying for a
free photo ID for voting will not already have a photo ID, and thus it will be nearly
impossible for a person who needs a free photo ID and does not already possess his or
her social security card to prove identity.8 See Frank II, 819 F.3d at 386. The DMV
does accept other documents as proof of identity, such as a valid state ID card or
driver’s license from another jurisdiction, military discharge papers, or a marriage
certificate, see Wis. Admin. Code § Trans 102.15(4)(a), but many applicants who lack
ID will also lack these documents. Moreover, the DMV does not have any procedure in
place that is analogous to the IDPP in which DMV employees will track down proof of
7
Emergency Rule 1618, § 4 exempts a person applying for a free ID for voting
purposes from having to provide his or her social security number, which would
otherwise be required under Trans 102.15(5). However, the Emergency Rule does not
relieve the person from having to prove identity under Trans 102.15(4), which, as
discussed in the text, generally requires an applicant to produce a social security card.
8
The administrator of the DMV states that a temporary ID card receipt can be used to
obtain “birth records and source documents from other jurisdictions that require a photo
ID with an application.” Boardman Decl. ¶ 45. However, under DMV rules, a person
cannot obtain a temporary ID card receipt without proof of identity, and thus a person
who must obtain a social security card to use as proof of identity will not be eligible for a
temporary ID card receipt. See id. ¶ 40 (temporary ID card receipt issued to those who
enter IDPP) & ¶ 13 (to enter IDPP, a person must produce proof of identity and
Wisconsin residency). Moreover, even if a person without proof of identity could obtain
a temporary ID card receipt, the evidence suggests that the Social Security
Administration will not issue a social security card to those who present such a receipt
as their only form of identification. See Young Decl. Ex. 17 at p.6 (Social Security
Administration flyer stating that “DMV receipt” cannot be used to obtain a replacement
social security card).
28
identity on behalf of an applicant. Thus, I find that the proof-of-identity requirement will
result in some eligible Wisconsin voters being unable to obtain ID with reasonable effort.
Another category of eligible voters who will be unable to obtain ID with
reasonable effort is those who cannot reasonably make even a single trip to the DMV.
See Crawford, 553 U.S. at 198 (implying that, for some voters, making even a single trip
to the DMV is an undue burden on the right to vote). This category includes those who
because of health reasons cannot travel easily, those without reasonable access to
transportation to the DMV, and those who cannot afford to miss work for the time
required to make a trip to the DMV.
See Decl. of Rachel Fon, ECF No. 280-12
(explaining that health problems and poverty have made it impossible for her to obtain
ID “without going through a great amount of effort”). The defendants point out that
Wisconsin law allows those who are “indefinitely confined because of age, physical
illness or infirmity,” and those who are “disabled for an indefinite period,” to vote by
absentee ballot without proof of identification. See Wis. Stat. §§ 6.86(2)(a); 6.87(4)(b)2.
However, assuming that this removes any undue burden on the voting rights of those
who meet the definitions of “indefinitely confined” or “disabled for an indefinite period,” it
does nothing to help the other members of this category, including those whose health
problems do not result in “confinement” or rise to the level of a disability, and those who
simply cannot afford a trip to the DMV. Thus, transportation barriers will result in some
eligible voters being unable to obtain ID with reasonable effort.
Finally, those who find themselves without qualifying ID on election day might be
unable to obtain ID in time to have their ballots counted without going to unreasonable
lengths. This category of eligible voters includes those who reasonably believe that
they already possess qualifying ID, only to discover at the polls that their ID is
29
unacceptable. See Decl. of Alexandra Kirschner ¶ 6, ECF No. 280-15 (arrived at polls
believing that she could use out-of-state driver’s license as proof of identification); Decl.
of Miguel Angel Vega ¶ 6, ECF No. 280-21 (same); Decl. of Neil Albrecht ¶ 9, ECF No.
280-8 (executive director of the Milwaukee election commission described how he
personally observed two voters attempt to vote using IDs that had expired outside the
acceptable expiration range). As I previously noted, under Wisconsin law, these voters
may cast a provisional ballot, but they must validate the ballot by presenting qualifying
ID to a municipal clerk or city election commission by 4 p.m. on the Friday following the
election.
See Wis. Stat. §§ 6.79(3)(b); 6.97(3)(b).
Because elections are held on
Tuesdays, these voters will have about three days to get to the DMV, obtain qualifying
ID, and then get to the office of the municipal clerk or election commission. Even voters
who have in their possession everything they need to obtain an ID from the DMV may
be unable, with reasonable effort, to jump through these hoops within three days.
However, those who need to use the ID petition process will face higher hurdles. These
voters will be able to validate their provisional ballots only after receiving temporary ID
card receipts in the mail. Thus, these voters must get to the DMV immediately, apply
for an ID through the petition process, and then hope that the temporary ID card receipt
arrives in the mail within a day or two. If it does, then the voter must immediately get to
the office of the municipal clerk or election commission to validate his or her provisional
ballot. Not all such voters will be able to complete this process in time. See Kirschner
Decl. ¶ 6, ECF No. 280-15 (unable to validate provisional ballot in time); Vega Decl. ¶ 6,
ECF No. 280-21 (same).
Before moving on, I note that the defendants contend that no voter will face
undue burdens under the DMV’s current procedures because, according to them,
30
“[a]nyone who goes to a Wisconsin DMV office and applies for a free state ID will be
mailed, within six days, either an ID card or photo receipt that is valid for voting.” Defs.’
Br. at 1, ECF No. 285. The defendants then contend that, for this reason, no eligible
voter who employs reasonable effort will fail to obtain qualifying ID.
However, as
discussed above, the record does not support the defendants’ contention that anyone
who goes to the DMV and applies for an ID will receive either an ID or a temporary ID
card receipt. Those who do not supply sufficient proof of identity and proof of Wisconsin
residency will not receive even a temporary ID card receipt. Boardman Decl. ¶ 40
(temporary ID card receipt issued to those who enter ID petition process) & ¶ 13 (to
enter ID petition process, a person must produce proof of identity and Wisconsin
residency). Moreover, the defendants’ contention overlooks the possibility that DMV
staff will err and fail to inform applicants who lack underlying documentation about the
ID petition process and related procedures.
These applicants will be turned away
without receiving even a temporary ID card receipt. The defendants also overlook those
who cannot with reasonable effort make even a single trip to the DMV to begin the ID
petition process and be mailed a temporary ID card receipt, as well as those who do not
realize they lack qualifying ID until election day and who cannot reasonably be expected
to obtain a temporary ID card receipt and validate a provisional ballot within three days.
In any event, even if it were true that every eligible voter in Wisconsin who needs
ID could with reasonable effort obtain a temporary ID card receipt in time for the next
election, it would not follow that the plaintiffs are not entitled to relief. Obviously, a
temporary ID card receipt will at some point expire and not be renewed. What every
class member will eventually need is an actual ID card, not just an ID card receipt. As
demonstrated above, some eligible voters who apply for an ID using the petition
31
process will eventually be denied an ID card because the DMV will be unable to verify
their qualifications. When their temporary ID cards expire, these individuals will be
unable to vote, potentially for the rest of their lives. Unquestionably, some mechanism
needs to be in place to preserve the voting rights of these individuals.
The defendants contend that even if temporary ID card receipts are not
permanent solutions, they at least make it unnecessary to grant a preliminary injunction,
since every voter who goes to the DMV today and applies for an ID will receive a
temporary ID card receipt that is likely to be valid for 180 days, a period that
encompasses both the August primary and the November general election. Again,
however, I stress that some voters will be unable to obtain even a temporary ID card
receipt with reasonable effort. But even if all could, preliminary relief would still be
needed to prevent irreparable harm to some voters. Although an ID card receipt issued
today is likely to be valid for 180 days, it would expire before February 21, 2017, the
date of the first statewide election scheduled to occur after the November general
election. It is not likely that the plaintiffs’ claims will be finally resolved before then.
Preliminary relief is therefore needed to ensure that the plaintiffs’ voting rights are not
denied during that election and any other elections that may occur before this case is
over.
2.
Having concluded that, even under the DMV’s current procedures, many voters
will be unable to obtain qualifying ID with reasonable effort, I turn to the question of
whether the state’s interests are sufficient to require some voters to employ more than
reasonable effort to obtain an ID to vote. Here, the state’s interests must be measured
against the specific remedy that the plaintiffs seek, which is an injunction requiring the
32
defendants to implement an affidavit option.
See Crawford, 553 U.S. at 199–200
(noting that, under the Anderson/Burdick framework, a court must take into account the
specific relief sought by the plaintiffs).
As I previously noted, the state’s interests in requiring photo ID are preventing
voter-impersonation fraud and promoting voter confidence.9 These interests have been
found sufficient to require most voters to present photo ID. Crawford, 553 U.S. at 191–
97; Frank I, 768 F.3d at 749–50. However, no court has found that these interests are
sufficient to prevent a person who cannot obtain ID with reasonable effort, or who
cannot obtain ID at all, from voting. And I find, for the reasons explained below, that
these interests would not be undermined to any significant extent by allowing voters
who cannot obtain ID with reasonable effort to present an affidavit in lieu of photo
identification. Thus, I conclude that the state’s interests do not outweigh the burdens
placed on the plaintiffs’ voting rights, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to an affidavit
remedy. See Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434 (quoting Anderson, 460 U.S. at 789).
In assigning weight to the state’s interests under the Anderson/Burdick balancing
test, I recognize that those interests are important and that Act 23 serves those interests
to some extent.
However, the interests do not justify disenfranchising voters who
cannot with reasonable effort obtain ID. As I found in my original opinion in this case,
there is virtually no voter-impersonation fraud in Wisconsin. Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at
847–50. And the defendants have produced no evidence suggesting that the public’s
confidence in the electoral process would be undermined by excusing those voters who
9
The defendants also contend that Act 23 furthers the state’s interests in promoting
orderly election administration and accurate recordkeeping. However, the defendants
have not identified any way in which Act 23’s photo ID requirement serves these
interests other than by detecting and preventing voter fraud. Thus, I do not separately
discuss these interests.
33
cannot obtain ID with reasonable effort from presenting ID.10 Indeed, Wisconsin already
allows some to vote without presenting photo ID—those who claim to be indefinitely
confined or disabled. See Wis. Stat. §§ 6.86(2)(a); 6.87(4)(b)2. Moreover, many states
that have voter photo-identification requirements allow those who lack IDs to vote by
signing an affidavit or other statement to that effect rather than by presenting ID, and
the defendants do not suggest that the laws of those states fail to prevent fraud and
promote voter confidence. See Idaho Code § 34-1114; Ind. Code § 3-11.7-5-2.5(c); La.
Rev. Stat. § 18:562; Mich. Comp. Laws § 168.523(2); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163166.13(c)(2); S.C. Code § 7-13-710(D)(1)(b). It is true that some of the states that
accept affidavits or statements in lieu of photo ID require the use of provisional ballots
and other procedures for challenging the ballots cast by those who do not present ID.
However, some states do not. See Idaho Code § 34-1114; La. Rev. Stat. § 18:562.
The defendants here have not argued that the use of provisional ballots is necessary to
protect the state’s interests.
The defendants do contend that allowing voters to use affidavits in lieu of IDs
whenever they “subjectively” determine that they are unable to obtain ID with
reasonable effort “without any process for verifying that reason” would undermine the
integrity of Wisconsin elections. Defs.’ Br. at 21, 24, ECF No. 285. However, the
defendants produce no evidence that supports the notion that allowing a few voters to
present an affidavit while the vast majority present a photo ID would undermine the
integrity of Wisconsin elections, even if the voters who use affidavits are permitted to
10
The Supreme Court recently reiterated that where a state law burdens a constitutional
right, the state must produce evidence supporting its claim that the burden is necessary
to further the state’s claimed interests. Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, No. 15274, slip op. at 19–21 (June 27, 2016).
34
determine for themselves what constitutes a reasonable impediment and there is no
process for verifying that reason. And it seems to me that even if some voters who use
affidavits give false reasons or reasons that do not qualify as reasonable impediments
(such as “not wanting to pose for a photo”) the state’s interests would not be seriously
undermined.
Just about any voter who does not face a reasonable impediment to
obtaining ID will prefer to get the ID rather than take the time to fill out a bogus affidavit
every time he or she goes to the polls. Thus, the number of affidavits listing insufficient
or false reasons should be very tiny. Also, someone who wishes to use the affidavit to
commit fraud will likely list a legitimate reason on the affidavit rather than call attention
to himself or herself by listing a clearly insufficient reason. So coming up with a finite list
of recognized reasonable impediments is not likely to do anything to prevent fraud or to
promote public confidence in elections. Finally, the states that already use “reasonable
impediment” affidavits allow voters to subjectively determine what qualifies as a
reasonable impediment and do not have procedures in place for challenging the
sufficiency of the reasons given. See North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP v.
McCrory, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2016 WL 1650774, at *120 (M.D.N.C. April 25, 2016);
South Carolina v. U.S., 898 F. Supp. 2d 30, 34, 36–37 (D.D.C. 2012).11 This strongly
suggests that such procedures are not required to protect the states’ interests in
preventing fraud and promoting voter confidence. I also note that the defendants have
not explained how they would go about investigating whether a reason given by a voter
on the affidavit is true or whether it qualifies as a reasonable impediment. Nor have
11
Under the laws of North and South Carolina, “state and county officials may not
review the reasonableness of the voter’s explanation”; rather, they may only review the
explanation for falsity. South Carolina, 898 F. Supp. 2d at 34; see McCrory, 2016 WL
1650774, at *120 (explaining that North Carolina’s reasonable-impediment procedure is
virtually identical to South Carolina’s).
35
they proposed that I incorporate any specific procedures into the affidavit option that
would assist the defendants in verifying the reason given or in adjudicating whether it
qualifies as a reasonable impediment.
The defendants point out that I previously determined that an affidavit remedy
would be inappropriate because it would require me to re-write Act 23 and partially
manage the state’s election officials. See Frank, 17 F. Supp. 3d at 863. However, I
made that determination in the context of choosing between enjoining Act 23 in its
entirety and fashioning a different remedy. I reasoned that the difficulty of implementing
an affidavit remedy weighed in favor of enjoining the law as to all voters. Id. However,
now that such an injunction is off the table, I must create a safety net to prevent those
who cannot obtain ID with reasonable effort from losing the right to vote. 12
The
defendants have not proposed their own solution to this problem, and thus the only
potential remedy is the plaintiffs’ affidavit procedure. Even if that approach is not ideal,
it is better than leaving the plaintiffs with no relief at all.
B.
For the reasons stated above, I conclude that the plaintiffs are very likely to
succeed on their claim that Act 23 is unconstitutional as applied to those who cannot
obtain ID with reasonable effort, and that the appropriate remedy is to allow those
voters to present an affidavit in lieu of photo identification. In the discussion above, I
also implicitly addressed the public interest and the balance of harms and determined
that those factors weigh in favor of preliminary relief, in that I determined that the state’s
12
In describing the affidavit option as a “safety net,” I do not mean to imply that it is
preferable to an injunction invalidating Act 23 in its entirety. I continue to believe, for the
reasons expressed in my original opinion, that enjoining the photo ID requirement in its
entirety is the proper remedy.
36
interests in requiring photo ID do not justify disenfranchising the plaintiffs while this
litigation is pending. In this section, I address some remaining arguments made by the
defendants regarding the public interest and the balance of harms.
First, the defendants contend that it would be difficult for the state’s electionadministration officials to implement an affidavit remedy in time for the August and
November elections.
As I explain in Part IV.C, I agree that it is not possible to
implement the affidavit remedy in time for the election on August 9, and therefore I will
not include that election within the scope of the injunction. However, the defendants
have not shown that it would be difficult to implement the remedy in time for the general
election on November 8. To implement the affidavit remedy, the defendants need only
direct elections officials to print a stack of affidavits in the form that I will specify, make
them available at the polls and to those who vote absentee, and accept properly
completed affidavits from voters in lieu of photo ID. As discussed above, any reason
the voter deems a reasonable impediment must be accepted, and thus election officials
will not have to receive training on what constitutes a reasonable impediment. Rather,
election officials must only make sure the voter signs his name and either checks a box
on the form or writes something in the space for identifying other reasonable
impediments. The municipal clerks of Wisconsin’s largest municipalities have submitted
declarations stating that it would be practical to accomplish these tasks in time for the
November election.
Decl. of
Neil Albrecht ¶¶ 14–16 (municipal clerk for City of
Milwaukee states that affidavit option could be implemented in time for November
election); Decl. of Maribeth Witzel-Behl ¶¶ 16–17 (municipal clerk for City of Madison
states that affidavit option could be implemented in time for November election).
37
One aspect of carrying out my order that will impose a more significant burden on
the defendants is informing voters of the affidavit option. As explained in more detail in
Part IV.D of this opinion, I will not grant the plaintiffs’ request for an order requiring the
defendants to send individualized notice of the affidavit option to voters who may lack
qualifying ID. However, the defendants will still have to revise their publicity materials
relating to the photo ID requirement to include information about the affidavit option and
will also have to train election officials to inform voters at the polls about this option.
This will require the election-administration defendants to exercise significant effort.
See Decl. of Michael Haas ¶¶ 30–42. Still, I find that it is practical to complete these
tasks in time for the November election. Id. ¶ 42 (indicating that it is likely possible to
implement the affidavit option in time for November election). Moreover, I find that,
under the balance of harms, requiring the defendants to put forth this effort prior to the
final resolution of the plaintiffs’ claims is justified by the plaintiffs’ strong likelihood of
success on the merits and the certainty that many of the plaintiffs would suffer
significant irreparable harm (i.e., disenfranchisement) if preliminary relief were not
granted.
The defendants also contend that preliminary relief is inappropriate because of
the possibility of voter confusion.
That is, the defendants contend that if I grant a
preliminary injunction creating an affidavit option, and then the plaintiffs lose at trial and
the injunction is dissolved, some voters will mistakenly think that they may still vote by
presenting an affidavit rather than an ID. Voter confusion is of course a risk. However,
as I have found, the plaintiffs have a strong likelihood of success on the merits, and thus
the affidavit option is not likely to be dissolved after trial. Moreover, any confusion that
arises will likely only affect those voters who would be unable to vote without the
38
affidavit option. Those who already have IDs will use them whether or not the affidavit
option is available, as will those who can obtain ID with reasonable effort. Only those
who cannot obtain ID with reasonable effort will suffer if they erroneously believe that
the affidavit option is still available after trial. But disenfranchising those voters while
this litigation is pending would be worse than causing them to be confused after trial,
when they would likely be unable to vote anyway due to their inability to obtain ID with
reasonable effort. So again, the balance of harms favors preliminary relief.
Finally, the defendants contend that I should not grant preliminary relief because
they are unsure whether they have the power to implement an affidavit option. Defs.’
Br. at 23, ECF No. 285. The defendants point out that Wisconsin’s “municipal clerks,”
who are not defendants in this case, are the officials who have “charge and supervision”
of the state’s elections. Wis. Stat. § 7.15(1). The defendants then question whether
they have authority under state law to require these clerks to accept affidavits from
voters in lieu of photo ID.
Under Wisconsin election law, a “municipal clerk” is defined as “the city clerk,
town clerk, village clerk and the executive director of the city election commission and
their authorized representatives.” Wis. Stat. § 5.02(10). There are approximately 1,900
such clerks in Wisconsin. See Trial Testimony of Kevin Kennedy at 888; Declaration of
Michael Haas ¶ 12, ECF No. 286. Obviously, it would be impractical to join all of these
clerks as defendants, and it is not necessary to do so. The defendants in this case
include the Governor of the State of Wisconsin and the members of the state’s Elections
Commission, which, until recently, was known as the Government Accountability Board.
39
See 2015 Wis. Act 118; Haas Decl. ¶ 1 n.1.13 These defendants possess authority
under Wisconsin law to require municipal clerks to implement the affidavit remedy.
First, the governor, as the chief executive of the state, has the power to require
municipal clerks, who are creatures of state law, to implement a court order issued
under the U.S. Constitution and that concerns the state’s election laws. Indeed, the
defendants submit no evidence and develop no legal argument indicating that the
governor lacks this power.
Rather, the defendants merely question whether the
Elections Commission has this power. See Defs.’ Br. at 23; see generally Haas Decl.
But the Elections Commission clearly has this power as well. State law vests the
commission with “the responsibility for the administration of [the Wisconsin Statutes
governing elections] and other laws relating to elections.” Wis. Stat. § 5.05(1). Carrying
out a federal court’s order concerning the state’s election procedures would qualify as
administering the state’s election laws and “other laws relating to elections” (which
includes federal laws relating to elections). Municipal clerks, who lack the power to
administer election laws but only have the power to conduct elections in accordance
with those laws, see Wis. Stat. § 7.15(1), could not disobey the commission’s directive
to make affidavits available to voters and to accept them in lieu of photo ID. The
administrator of the Elections Commission points out that the commission might not
have authority under state law to pass a formal administrative rule implementing the
affidavit requirement. Haas Decl. ¶¶ 15–17. However, such a rule is unnecessary.
Although the commission has rulemaking authority, see Wis. Stat. § 5.05(1)(f), that is
13
The plaintiffs have not named the members of the new Elections Commission as
defendants. However, because those members are successors to the members of the
Government Accountability Board, who have been named as defendants in their official
capacities, they are automatically substituted as parties. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d).
40
just one manifestation of its general authority to administer election laws. Pursuant to
its general authority, the commission may direct municipal clerks to implement a court
order pertaining to the state’s election procedures and federal law.
I also note that the defendants had no difficulty implementing the injunctive relief
that I granted in 2014. If the defendants were able to direct municipal clerks to stop
requiring voters to present photo ID at the polls in 2014, then they will be able to direct
municipal clerks to allow voters to cast a ballot by presenting an affidavit in lieu of photo
ID in 2016.
Accordingly, I reject the defendants’ suggestion that uncertainty over
whether they have power to require municipal clerks to implement an affidavit remedy is
a reason not to grant that remedy in the first place.
C.
In this section, I explain why I will not require the defendants to implement the
affidavit option for the August 9 primary. First, the plaintiffs have not argued that it
would be practical to implement the option in time for this election, which is only a few
weeks away. Second, the Administrator of the Elections Commission, who would have
primary responsibility for implementing the affidavit option, states that it is not possible
to implement that remedy by the date of the election. Haas Decl. ¶¶ 8–12, 41. Aside
from the sheer administrative difficulty of implementing the affidavit option by August 9,
there is the fact that, as a practical matter, the August election has already begun:
municipal clerks began mailing absentee ballots to voters on June 10, 2016, and the
deadline for mailing absentee ballots was June 23, 2016.
Haas Decl. ¶¶ 9–10.
Moreover,
25,
in-person
early
voting
begins
on
July
2016.
See
http://www.gab.wi.gov/voters/absentee (viewed July 19, 2016). Given these facts, the
possibility of disrupting the administration of the August election is too great to require
41
the defendants to change the rules applicable to that election now. I realize that this will
cause some class members irreparable harm because they will be unable to vote in the
August primary, but under the balance of harms, the harm to the defendants and to the
public that would be caused by requiring implementation by August 9 outweighs the
harm to these class members. Accordingly, I will order the defendants to implement the
affidavit option in time for the November general election.
D.
Next, I address the plaintiffs’ request that the preliminary injunction require the
defendants to “send an individualized mailing to all registered voters who do not appear
in the DMV database as having acceptable photo ID, informing them about the voter ID
law and the affidavit option.”
ECF No. 278-1 at 2.
I am not convinced that
individualized notice to voters is required to prevent irreparable harm. The Elections
Commission is already planning an advertising campaign relating to the photo ID
requirement, Haas Decl. ¶¶ 30–35, and that campaign will now have to include
information about the affidavit option. The commission will also have to train elections
officials to inform voters about the affidavit option. While it might also be useful to send
individualized notice of the affidavit option to voters who might need it, I do not believe
that this step is necessary. At this point, I will leave it to the Elections Commission to
decide how best to publicize the affidavit option. Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ request for
an order requiring individualized notice will be denied.
E.
Finally, I must specify the form of the affidavit and other details concerning the
implementation of the affidavit option. I have modeled the form of the affidavit on North
42
Carolina’s “reasonable impediment declaration.” See Young Decl. Ex. 2, ECF No. 2802. The affidavit must contain the following language:
I declare under penalty of perjury that I am the individual identified below,
and that I have been unable to obtain acceptable photo identification with
reasonable effort. This is due to the following reason(s):
__ Lack of transportation
__ Lack of birth certificate or other documents needed to obtain photo ID
__ Work schedule
__ Disability or illness
__ Family responsibilities
__ Other (please identify): ______________________________________
The affidavit shall have a space for the voter to print his or her name, a space for the
voter’s signature, and a space for a date. The affidavit does not have to be notarized or
sworn before any officer.
The Elections Commission may include spaces on the
affidavit that are to be completed by election officials for administrative purposes, such
as a space for identifying the polling location at which the affidavit was received.
The defendants shall ensure that copies of the affidavit are available at the polls
and also to those who vote by absentee ballot. Any voter who completes and submits
an affidavit shall receive a regular ballot, even if that voter does not show acceptable
photo identification. No person may challenge the sufficiency of the reason given by the
voter for failing to obtain ID. Finally, the defendants shall include the affidavit option in
any publicity materials related to the photo ID requirement, shall train poll workers to
inform voters who arrive at the polls without qualifying ID about the affidavit option, and
shall otherwise make reasonable efforts to ensure that voters are made aware of the
affidavit option.
43
V.
For the reasons stated, IT IS ORDERED that the plaintiffs’ motion for a
preliminary injunction (ECF No. 278) is GRANTED. All defendants and their officers,
agents, servants, employees, and attorneys, and all those acting in concert or
participation with them, or having actual or implicit knowledge of this order by personal
service or otherwise, are directed to implement the affidavit option, in the manner
specified in this opinion, in time for the general election on November 8, 2016, and all
elections that occur after that date, while this preliminary injunction is in force.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the plaintiffs’ motion to file a supplemental
complaint (ECF No. 278) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification (ECF
No. 278) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the plaintiffs’ claims involving veterans’ ID cards
are DISMISSED as MOOT.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the defendants’ motion to file confidential court
records under seal (ECF No. 289) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the defendants’ motion to strike (ECF No. 290)
is DENIED.
Dated at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, this 19th day of July, 2016.
s/Lynn Adelman
LYNN ADELMAN
District Judge
44
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