Girod v. Kroger

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Justia Opinion Summary

Petitioners sought review of the Attorney General's certified ballot title for Initiative Petition 26 (2012), arguing that the ballot title did not satisfy the requirements of ORS 250.035(2). Initiative Petition 26 would amend a number of statutory provisions pertaining to the commercial harvest and sale of fish caught in Oregon waters. As the Supreme Court noted in reviewing the ballot title for a different initiative petition concerning commercial fishing, those statutes "exist[ed] as part of a complex web of laws," including an interstate compact between Oregon and Washington, statutes and regulations of both states, federal law, treaties with Native American tribes, and various court orders. Upon review, the Supreme Court found that the initiative's caption overstated the effect of the proposed measure by asserting that it would eliminate "non-tribal commercial fishing." Petitioners argued, and the Attorney General did not appear to disagree, that some commercial fishing -- of some species, in some Oregon waters, using some gear -- has occurred or was then occurring and that it would not be prohibited by Initiative Petition 26. Accordingly, the reference in the caption to the "elimination" of non-tribal commercial fishing needed to be changed. The caption also referred to only the Columbia River, thus understating the scope of the proposed measure, which would ban non-tribal commercial gillnetting of all fish in all Oregon "inland waters." That description, too, needed to be changed. The Court did not address petitioners' other challenges to the caption, and remanded the matter back to the Attorney General for modification.

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Filed: February 16, 2012 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FRED GIROD, ROD MONROE, and DAVID SCHAMP, Petitioners, v. JOHN R. KROGER, Attorney General, State of Oregon, Respondent. (SC S059996) En Banc On petition to review ballot title filed December 22, 2011, considered and under advisement January 25, 2012. Gregory A. Chaimov, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Portland, filed the petition and reply memorandum for petitioners. Jeff J. Payne, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, filed the answering memorandum for respondent. With him on the answering memorandum were John R. Kroger, Attorney General, and Anna M. Joyce, Solicitor General. BALMER, J. The ballot title is referred to the Attorney General for modification. 1 BALMER, J. 2 Petitioners seek review of the Attorney General's certified ballot title for 3 Initiative Petition 26 (2012), arguing that the ballot title does not satisfy the requirements 4 of ORS 250.035(2). We review a certified ballot title to determine whether it 5 substantially complies with those statutory requirements. See ORS 250.085(5) (stating 6 standard of review). For the reasons that follow, we refer the ballot title to the Attorney 7 General for modification. 8 Initiative Petition 26 would amend a number of statutory provisions 9 pertaining to the commercial harvest and sale of fish caught in Oregon waters. As we 10 recently noted in reviewing the ballot title for a different initiative petition concerning 11 commercial fishing, those statutes "exist as part of a complex web of laws," including an 12 interstate compact between Oregon and Washington, statutes and regulations of both 13 states, federal law, treaties with Native American tribes, and various court orders. Girod 14 v. Kroger, 351 Or 389, 392, ___ P3d___ (2011). We summarized those legal authorities 15 in Girod, id. at 392-94, and will not repeat that discussion here, except as required to 16 address petitioner's arguments. 17 Initiative Petition 26 begins with several "findings" concerning the state of 18 wild salmon and steelhead runs in Oregon, the role of gillnets in the decline of those fish 19 populations, and the benefits of banning the use of gillnets. Section 2 would amend ORS 20 508.775 to make it unlawful "to use a gillnet to take salmon, steelhead, or other fish in 21 the inland waters of the state of Oregon." It also would amend that statute to prohibit any 22 "wholesaler, canner or buyer" from buying any fish taken by gillnet from Oregon's inland 1 1 waters. Section 2 would exempt from those prohibitions persons fishing pursuant to 2 tribal fishing rights. Section 3 provides that the proposed measure does not affect the 3 interstate compact, "fishing management agreements between the United States, Indian 4 tribes and states," or "[a]ny tribal fishing rights [or] the right to use any fishing gear in 5 furtherance of tribal fishing rights[.]" Section 4 defines "gillnet" and "[i]nland waters." 6 Section 5 would amend ORS 508.775 to eliminate the requirement that three members of 7 the Oregon Commercial Fishery Permit Board be representatives of the Columbia River 8 gillnet salmon fishing industry. The remaining sections make conforming changes to 9 various other statutes. 10 11 The Attorney General certified the following ballot title for Initiative Petition 26: 12 13 14 "Eliminates Oregonians' Columbia River non-tribal commercial fishing; prohibits Oregonians' purchase of nontribal Columbia River fish 15 16 17 18 "Result of 'Yes' Vote: 'Yes' vote eliminates non-tribal Oregon, but not Washington, commercial fishing in Columbia River; prohibits Oregonians from buying fish caught in Columbia River by non-tribal persons. 19 20 21 22 "Result of 'No' Vote: 'No' vote retains laws allowing non-tribal commercial fishing in Columbia River by Oregon/Washington fishers; retains laws allowing Oregonians to purchase non-tribal Columbia River fish. 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 "Summary: Currently, Oregon and Washington commercial fishers may catch salmon in the Columbia River only with gillnets. Current law allows 'wholesaler, canner or buyer' to purchase or receive salmon/other fish caught with gillnets; allows issuance of up to 200 Columbia River gillnet fishing permits, allows renewing and transferring current permits. Measure eliminates non-tribal Oregon commercial fishing for salmon/other fish by banning gillnets in Oregon's 'inland waters' (defined), including the 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 Columbia River. Washington-permitted commercial fishers may continue fishing with gillnets on Columbia River. Measure prohibits Oregonians from purchasing non-tribally caught fish taken from Columbia River or other Oregon 'inland waters'; repeals current laws governing Columbia River commercial gillnet fisheries. Measure does not affect tribal fishing rights or tribal rights to use gillnets. Other provisions." 7 Petitioners challenge each part of the ballot title. As to the caption, 8 petitioners assert first that the caption does not reasonably identify the "subject matter" of 9 the proposed measure as required by ORS 250.035(2)(a). Petitioners argue that the 10 proposed measure would "ban the use of one type of commercial fishing gear -- gillnets -- 11 currently being used in Oregon's inland waters, including in non-tribal Columbia River 12 commercial fisheries." They contend that the caption fails to identify that subject 13 because it inaccurately states that the proposed measure would eliminate all Oregon non- 14 tribal commercial fishing in the Columbia River. Petitioners note that "non-tribal 15 commercial fishing for non-salmon species is currently taking place and is legal in the 16 Columbia River." (Emphasis added.) Similarly, petitioners argue that the caption is 17 inaccurate in stating that the proposed measure would prohibit the purchase of all non- 18 tribal Columbia River fish, when the prohibition applies only to gillnet-caught fish and 19 not fish caught by other means. Petitioners also assert that the reference in the caption to 20 the Columbia River is inaccurate because the ban on the use of non-tribal commercial 21 gillnets applies in all Oregon inland waters. They acknowledge, however, that the 22 "principal change" that the measure proposes is to ban such fishing in Oregon, 23 "particularly the Columbia River." 24 The Attorney General responds that gillnets are the only current legal 3 1 method for commercial salmon fishing in the Columbia River and, therefore, banning that 2 gear "eliminates commercial fishing for Oregon fishers in the Columbia River[.]" In 3 support of that statement, the Attorney General cites statutes that limit commercial 4 salmon and sturgeon fishing in the Columbia River except by gillnets and that prohibit 5 commercial steelhead fishing. Although he acknowledges that some small amount of 6 commercial fishing for other species or in other waters has been or could be permitted, he 7 argues that the certified caption accurately states the "actual major effect" of the proposed 8 measure and thus identifies its "subject matter." See Terhune v. Myers, 342 Or 475, 479- 9 80, 154 P3d 1284 (2007) (stating that test); see also Pelikan/Tauman v. Myers, 342 Or 10 383, 389, 153 P3d 117 (2007) ("[W]hen the effects of a measure are not reasonably 11 subject to dispute, the Attorney General may (and sometimes must) go beyond the terms 12 of the measure and mention those effects in the ballot title." (Citation omitted.)). 13 We agree, at least in part, with petitioners. The proposed measure would 14 change Oregon law -- specifically ORS 508.775(1), which currently allows the 15 commercial use of gillnets in some circumstances -- to make it unlawful "to use a gillnet 16 to take salmon, steelhead, or other fish in the inland waters of the state of Oregon." The 17 Attorney General may be correct that the most significant practical impact of the 18 proposed measure would be on commercial salmon fishing in the Columbia River, 19 although we are not in a position, given the record before us, to agree or disagree with 20 that proposition. And we agree that it is the Attorney General's task to describe the 21 "actual major effect" of a proposed measure, Terhune, 342 Or at 480, and not simply the 22 wording changes that the proposed measure will make to current statutes. That said, the 4 1 certified caption here, in our view, both overstates and understates the effect that 2 Initiative Petition 26 would have on existing law. 3 The caption overstates the effect of the proposed measure by asserting that 4 it would eliminate "non-tribal commercial fishing." Petitioners argue, and the Attorney 5 General does not appear to disagree, that some commercial fishing -- of some species, in 6 some Oregon waters, using some gear -- has occurred or is occurring now and that it 7 would not be prohibited by Initiative Petition 26. Accordingly, the reference in the 8 caption to the "elimination" of non-tribal commercial fishing must be changed. The 9 caption also refers to only the Columbia River and thus understates the scope of the 10 proposed measure, which would ban non-tribal commercial gillnetting of all fish in all 11 Oregon "inland waters." That description, too, must be changed. We reject without 12 discussion petitioners' other challenges to the caption. 13 Petitioners next assert that the "yes" and "no" vote result statements do not 14 substantially comply, respectively, with the requirements of ORS 250.035(2)(b) and ORS 15 250.035(2)(c) because they do not accurately describe "the result if the state measure is 16 approved" or "the result if the state measure is rejected." Petitioners first argue that the 17 "yes" statement shares the defects of the caption because it states that a "yes" vote 18 "eliminates non-tribal Oregon * * * commercial fishing in Columbia River." Petitioners 19 contend, as discussed above, that the proposed measure eliminates commercial 20 gillnetting, but does not eliminate all commercial fishing, and that the proposed measure 21 applies to all Oregon inland waters, not only the Columbia River. They make similar 22 arguments with respect to the "no" vote result statement. For the reasons set out above, 5 1 we agree. The "yes" and "no" result statements must be changed in those respects. We 2 reject without discussion petitioners' other challenges to the "yes" and "no" result 3 statements. 4 Finally, petitioners challenge the summary on several grounds. We agree 5 with petitioners that the summary must be modified in two ways. First, for the reasons 6 discussed above, the summary is overbroad and inaccurate in stating that the proposed 7 measure "eliminates" non-tribal Oregon commercial fishing. Second, the summary is 8 inaccurate in stating that the proposed measure "prohibits Oregonians from purchasing 9 non-tribally caught fish taken from Columbia River or other Oregon 'in-land waters,'" 10 because at least some fish caught by non-gillnet means may be purchased by Oregonians. 11 The summary thus does not accurately state the "effect" of the proposed measure as 12 required by ORS 250.035(2)(d) and must be referred to the Attorney General for 13 modification. We reject without discussion petitioners' other challenges to the summary. 14 The ballot title is referred to the Attorney General for modification. 6

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