JACK POTTER V. CITY OF LACEY, No. 21-35259 (9th Cir. 2022)
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In an action involving federal and state constitutional challenges to the City of Lacey’s recently passed RV Parking Ordinance, the Ninth Circuit certified the following question to the Washington Supreme Court:
Is the right to intrastate travel in Washington protected under the Washington State Constitution, or other Washington law? If Washington state law protects the right to intrastate travel, does the RV Parking Ordinance codified in LMC Section 10.14.020– 045 violate Plaintiff’s intrastate travel rights? In certifying the question, the court noted that it is well established that adjudication of federal constitutional claims should be avoided when alternative state grounds are available, even when the alternative ground is one of state constitutional law.
Because this issue was complex and involved policy considerations that were best left to the State of Washington’s own courts, the court concluded that it was prudent to certify this question to the Washington Supreme Court so that it could determine its own law in the first instance.
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Court Description: Civil Rights. In an action involving federal and state constitutional challenges to the City of Lacey’s recently passed RV Parking Ordinance, the panel certified the following question to the Washington Supreme Court: Is the right to intrastate travel in Washington protected under the Washington State Constitution, or other Washington law? If Washington state law protects the right to intrastate travel, does the RV Parking Ordinance codified in LMC §§ 10.14.020– 045 violate Jack Potter’s intrastate travel rights? In certifying the question, the panel noted that it is well- established that adjudication of federal constitutional claims should be avoided when alternative state grounds are available, even when the alternative ground is one of state constitutional law. Here, the certified question was outcome determinative—if Washington law required the panel to invalidate the ordinance because it violated plaintiff’s right to intrastate travel under state law, then the panel would not need to adjudicate the federal claims. Although the Washington Supreme Court had concluded that a right to intrastate travel existed under the United States Constitution, it has never decided whether this right exists under the Washington State Constitution or any other source of POTTER V. CITY OF LACEY 3 Washington law. Because this issue was complex and involved policy considerations that were best left to the State of Washington’s own courts, the panel concluded that it was prudent to certify this question to the Washington Supreme Court so that it could determine its own law in the first instance. Dissenting, Judge Bennett stated that the RV Parking Ordinance does not violate any conception of the right to intrastate travel, even assuming that such right exists— whether under the Washington or federal constitution. The majority therefore erred in (1) certifying two questions of state law that do not meet the requirements for Washington law because their answers are non-dispositive; (2) ignoring that there is already a definitive answer to the certified question under existing law; and (3) invoking constitutional avoidance to avoid rejecting the near-frivolous constitutional challenges under the Fourth and Eighth Amendments.
The court issued a subsequent related opinion or order on October 17, 2024.
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