The Court entered the following order on this date:
¶ 1 This court has pending before it a certification by the court of appeals in a petition for leave to appeal a non-final order and accompanying motion for temporary relief in Case No. 2011AP613-LV (L.C.# 2011CV1244), pursuant to Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.61. The petition for leave to appeal a non-final order and motion arise out of a Dane County Circuit Court case in which Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne alleged violations of the Open Meetings Law, Wis. Stat. § 19.81 et seq., in connection with the enactment of 2011 Wisconsin Act 10 (the Act), commonly known as the Budget Repair Bill;
¶ 2 This court also has pending before it a petition for supervisory/original jurisdiction pursuant to Wis. Stat. §§ (Rules) 809.70 and 809.71 in Case No. 2011AP765-W filed on behalf of the State of Wisconsin and State of Wisconsin ex rel. Michael D. Huebsch, Secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Administration; Peter Barca has moved to dismiss this petition; Mark Miller and Ismael Ozanne have moved to file supplemental briefs;
¶ 3 On June 6, 2011, this court held oral argument in Case No. 2011AP765-W and Case No. 2011AP613-LV; wherein this court heard argument addressing whether the court should accept either the certification or the petition for supervisory/original jurisdiction or both; the court also heard argument on the merits of the pending matters. Based on the written submissions to the court and the oral arguments held on June 6, 2011;
¶ 4 IT IS ORDERED that the certification and motions for temporary relief in Case No. 2011AP613-LV are denied.
¶ 5 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the petition for original jurisdiction in Case No. 2011AP765-W is granted, State ex rel. La Follette v. Stitt, 114 Wis.2d 358, 338 N.W.2d 684 (1983), and all motions to dismiss and for supplemental briefing are denied.
¶ 6 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that all orders and judgments of the Dane County Circuit Court in Case No. 2011CV1244 are vacated and declared to be void ab initio. State ex rel. Nader v. Circuit Court for Dane Cnty., No. 2004AP2559-W, unpublished order (Wis. S.Ct. Sept. 30, 2004) (wherein this court vacated the prior orders of the circuit court in the same case).
¶ 7 This court has granted the petition for an original action because one of the courts that we are charged with supervising has usurped the legislative power which the Wisconsin Constitution grants exclusively to the legislature. It is important for all courts to remember that Article IV, Section 1 of the Wisconsin Constitution provides: "The legislative power shall be vested in a senate and assembly." Article IV, Section 17 of the Wisconsin Constitution provides in relevant part: "(2). . . No law shall be in force until published. (3) The legislature shall provide by law for the speedy publication of all laws."
¶ 8 In Goodland v. Zimmerman, 243 Wis. 459, 10 N.W.2d 180 (1943), the court focused on fundamental separation of powers principles and addressed whether a
¶ 9 Although all orders that preceded the circuit court's judgment in Case No. 2011CV1244 may be characterized as moot in some respects, the court addresses whether a court can enjoin publication of a bill. The court does so because whether a court can enjoin a bill is a matter of great public importance and also because it appears necessary to confirm that Goodland remains the law that all courts must follow. State v. Cramer, 98 Wis.2d 416, 420, 296 N.W.2d 921 (1980) (noting that we consider questions that have become moot "where the question is one of great public importance . . . or of public interest," or "where the problem is likely to recur and is of sufficient importance to warrant a holding which will guide trial courts in similar circumstances"). Accordingly, because the circuit court did not follow the court's directive in Goodland, it exceeded its jurisdiction, invaded the legislature's constitutional powers under Article IV, Section 1 and Section 17 of the Wisconsin Constitution, and erred in enjoining the publication and further implementation of the Act.
¶ 10 Article IV, Section 17 of the Wisconsin Constitution vests the legislature with the constitutional power to "provide by law" for publication. The legislature has set the requirements for publication. However, the Secretary of State has not yet fulfilled his statutory duty to publish a notice of publication of the Act in the official state newspaper, pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 14.38(10)(c). Due to the vacation of the circuit court's orders, there remain no impediments to the Secretary of State fulfilling his obligations under § 14.38(10)(c).
¶ 11 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that we have concluded that in enacting the Act, the legislature did not employ a process that violated Article IV, Section 10 of the Wisconsin Constitution, which provides in relevant part: "The doors of each house shall be kept open except when the public welfare shall require secrecy." The doors of the senate and assembly were kept open to the press and members of the public during the enactment of the Act. The doors of the senate parlor, where the joint committee on conference met, were open to the press and members of the public. WisconsinEye broadcast the proceedings live. Access was not denied.
¶ 12 It has been argued to the court that the legislature amended Article IV, Section 10 of the Wisconsin Constitution by its enactment of the Open Meetings Law. That argument is without merit. Article XII, Section 1 of the Wisconsin Constitution establishes the requirements that must be met in order to amend the Wisconsin Constitution through action initiated in the legislature. Article XII, Section 1 requires that both houses of the legislature pass the proposed amendment in two successive sessions of the legislature, and then the proposed amendment must be submitted to the people. It is only when the people have approved and ratified a proposed amendment initiated in the legislature that a constitutional amendment occurs. Milwaukee Alliance Against Racist & Political Repression v. Elections Bd., 106 Wis.2d 593, 603, 317 N.W.2d 420 (1982). It is beyond dispute that the Open Meetings Law, Wis. Stat. § 19.81 et seq., was not adopted by the constitutional process required by Article XII, Section 1 of the Wisconsin Constitution.
¶ 13 It also is argued that the Act is invalid because the legislature did not follow certain notice provisions of the Open Meetings Law for the March 9, 2011 meeting of the joint committee on conference. It is argued that Wis. Stat. § 19.84(3) required 24 hours notice of that meeting and such notice was not given. It is undisputed that the legislature posted notices of the March 9, 2011 meeting of the joint committee on conference on three bulletin boards, approximately 1 hour and 50 minutes before the start of the meeting. In the posting of notice that was done, the legislature relied on its interpretation of its own rules of proceeding. The court declines to review the validity of the procedure used to give notice of the joint committee on conference. See Stitt, 114 Wis.2d at 361, 338 N.W.2d 684. As the court has explained when legislation was challenged based on allegations that the legislature did not follow the relevant procedural statutes, "this court will not determine whether internal operating rules or procedural statutes have been complied with by the legislature in the course of its enactments." Id. at 364, 338 N.W.2d 684. "[W]e will not intermeddle in what we view, in the absence of constitutional directives to the contrary, to be purely legislative concerns." Id. The court's holding in Stitt was grounded in separation of powers principles, comity concepts and "the need for finality and certainty regarding the status of a statute." Id. at 364-65, 338 N.W.2d 684.
¶ 14 The court's recent decision in Milwaukee Journal Sentinel v. Wisconsin Department of Administration, 2009 WI 79, 319 Wis.2d 439, 768 N.W.2d 700, provides no support for the invalidation of the Act. In Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, a party contended that by ratifying a union contract the legislature also amended the Public Records Law to be consistent with Article 2/4/4 of the contract. Id., ¶ 34. In order to answer the question presented, the court reviewed the enactment of the ratifying statute to see whether Article 2/4/4 of the contract was enacted by bill and was published as Article IV, Section 17(2) of the Wisconsin Constitution requires. Id., ¶¶ 22, 34. The court concluded that the legislature did not take the additional constitutionally required actions that were necessary for amendment of the Public Records Law. Id., ¶¶ 24, 35. In so doing, the court did not review whether the legislature followed its own procedural rules in ratifying the contract, and the court did not invalidate any law. The
¶ 15 The court's decision on the matter now presented is grounded in separation of powers principles. It is not affected by the wisdom or lack thereof evidenced in the Act. Choices about what laws represent wise public policy for the State of Wisconsin are not within the constitutional purview of the courts. The court's task in the action for original jurisdiction that we have granted is limited to determining whether the legislature employed a constitutionally violative process in the enactment of the Act. We conclude that the legislature did not violate the Wisconsin Constitution by the process it used.
¶ 16 Chief Justice Shirley S. Abrahamson, Justice Ann Walsh Bradley and Justice N. Patrick Crooks concur in part and dissent in part from this order.
¶ 17 DAVID T. PROSSER, J. (concurring).
¶ 17 I join this court's order but write separately to provide additional background and analysis.
¶ 18 This case is an offshoot of the turbulent political times that presently consume Wisconsin. In turbulent times, courts are expected to act with fairness and objectivity. They should serve as the impartial arbiters of legitimate legal issues. They should not insert themselves into controversies or exacerbate existing tensions. In the present dispute, different parties claim to speak for the State. It is the inescapable responsibility of this court to determine the law to facilitate a resolution of the dispute.
¶ 19 Accordingly, a majority of the court has determined that this litigation qualifies for and should be accepted as an original action under Article VII, Section 3(2) of the Wisconsin Constitution. The litigation presents issues of exceptional constitutional importance. It is of high public interest. It implicates the powers of all three branches of government. It affects most public employees in Wisconsin as well as taxpayers. Although the defendants in State ex rel. Ozanne v. Fitzgerald, 2011AP613-LV, might be able to appeal the decision of the circuit court, the identity and posture of the defendants makes such an appeal problematic in the short term without the intervention of one or more additional parties. The time required to sort out this procedure and follow the court's traditional briefing schedule would deny the petitioners timely relief by delaying the case until the court's next term, at the earliest. The majority deems this unacceptable considering the gravity of the issues and the urgency of their resolution. I am satisfied that this case satisfies several of the court's criteria for an original action publici juris, Petition of Heil, 230 Wis. 428, 440, 284 N.W. 42 (1939), and that there are no issues of material fact that prevent the court from addressing the legal issues presented. Wis. Prof'l Police Ass'n v. Lightbourn, 2001 WI 59, 243 Wis.2d 512, 627 N.W.2d 807; State ex rel. La Follette v. Stitt, 114 Wis.2d 358, 338 N.W.2d 684 (1983); State ex rel. Lynch v. Conta, 71 Wis.2d 662, 239 N.W.2d 313 (1976).
¶ 20 Simply stated, no matter how long we waited to consider a perfect appeal, the legal issues before the court would not change. Whether the case is decided now or months from now at the height of the fall colors, the court would be required to answer the same difficult questions. Delaying the inevitable would be an abdication of judicial responsibility; it would not advance the public interest.
¶ 21 On February 15, 2011, the Assembly's Committee on Assembly Organization introduced January 2011 Special Session Assembly Bill 11, at the request of Governor Scott Walker. Governor Walker said that this "budget repair bill" was intended to address the state's fiscal situation in both the 2009-2011 biennium ending June 30, 2011, and the 2011-2013 biennium beginning July 1. The proposed legislation included provisions requiring additional public employee contributions for health care and pensions, curtailing collective bargaining rights for most state and local public employees, and making appropriations. Because the Bill contained appropriations, three-fifths of all the members of each house had to be present for any vote on passage to constitute a quorum. Wis. Const. art. VIII, § 8.
¶ 22 Special Session Assembly Bill 11 was referred to the Joint Committee on Finance on February 15 where a public hearing was held that day. On the following day, the Joint Committee took executive action. The Bill was amended and passed with an emergency statement attached, pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 16.47(2). The Bill was immediately calendared for debate in the Assembly on February 17.
¶ 23 According to its paper history, January 2011 Special Session Assembly Bill 11 was debated on February 17 and again on February 22. It was passed on February 22 and immediately messaged to the Senate. It was not received in the Senate, however, until February 25. The discrepancy in the paper record between Assembly messaging and Senate receipt is explained by the fact that the Bill engendered approximately 61 consecutive hours of debate on the February 22 Assembly Calendar. At least 128 Amendments were debated in the Assembly before the Bill was passed.
¶ 24 On February 25, the Senate read Special Session Assembly Bill 11 for the first time, referred it to the Committee on Senate Organization, withdrew it from that committee, and read it a second and third time. However, the Senate was unable to proceed because of the absence of the constitutional quorum necessary to act on a bill containing appropriations.
¶ 25 A companion bill to January 2011 Special Session Assembly Bill 11 had been introduced in the Senate on February 14 by the Committee on Senate Organization. See January 2011 Special Session Senate Bill 11. This Bill also was referred to the Joint Committee on Finance, given a public hearing on February 15, and favorably reported by the committee on February 16. It was placed on the Senate Calendar for debate on February 17.
¶ 26 On February 17, the Senate Bill was read a second time, amended, and ordered to a third reading. However, as with the Assembly Bill eight days later, the Senate could go no further because all 14 Democratic Senators had absented themselves from the chamber before the session began. The 14 senators left the state and did not publicly reappear in Madison until March 12. As noted, this action deprived the Senate of a quorum to act on any appropriation bill.
¶ 27 Governor Walker's proposed legislation created controversy and division. In the weeks following introduction of the two identical "budget repair bills," the Wisconsin State Capitol was the center of demonstrations against the governor. The building was taken over by protesters. By and large, the protesters did not impede the work of state government but their presence dominated the Capitol scene and captured international attention.
¶ 28 After several weeks of impasse, majority Republicans developed a strategy to
¶ 29 The Senate adopted the conference committee report on the evening of March 9. The Assembly adopted the conference committee report on March 10. The governor signed the Bill on March 11, 2011.
¶ 30 The conference committee meeting of March 9, 2011, and the subsequent litigation challenging the legality of that meeting are the subject of this original action.
¶ 31 Article IV, Section 17 of the Wisconsin Constitution reads in part:
¶ 32 Wisconsin Stat. § 35.095 is entitled "Acts."
¶ 33 Wisconsin Stat. § 991.11, entitled "Effective date of acts," reads: "Every act. . . which does not expressly prescribe the time when it takes effect shall take effect on the day after its date of publication as designated under s. 35.095(3)(b)." This is the date designated by the Secretary of State.
¶ 34 Wisconsin Stat. § 14.38 outlines additional duties of the Secretary of State. Subsection (10) reads in part that the Secretary of State shall:
¶ 35 Following the passage of January 2011 Special Session Assembly Bill 11 and its approval by the governor, Secretary of State Douglas La Follette announced that he would designate March 25, 2011, the last day within the 10 working days after enactment allowed by statute, as the date for publication of the Act. He indicated that his reason for not designating an earlier date was to allow critics of the Act time to challenge the Act in court.
¶ 36 On March 16, Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne filed suit in Dane
¶ 37 On March 17 the Dane County Circuit Court, Maryann Sumi, Judge, set a hearing on Ozanne's motion for a temporary restraining order. On March 18 the court held the hearing and granted Ozanne's motion to restrain implementation of 2011 Wisconsin Act 10 pending further hearing. Thereafter, Secretary La Follette rescinded his prior designation of March 25 as the date of publication. On March 31 Judge Sumi issued an amended order to the effect that 2011 Wisconsin Act 10 had not been published and is not in effect.
¶ 38 On May 26 Judge Sumi filed findings of fact and conclusions of law and an opinion voiding 2011 Wisconsin Act 10.
¶ 39 The first and most obvious issue presented by this case is whether the Dane County Circuit Court, or any court in Wisconsin, may enjoin the publication of an act to prevent that act from becoming law. The answer is "no."
¶ 40 This precise issue was settled in Goodland v. Zimmerman, 243 Wis. 459, 10 N.W.2d 180 (1943). In that case, the governor of Wisconsin sought to enjoin the secretary of state from publishing an act of the legislature that the governor had vetoed. Governor Goodland sought an injunction on grounds that the Assembly had failed to override his veto by the constitutionally required vote of two thirds of all members present. In other words, Governor Goodland sought to prevent publication of the act on constitutional grounds. Goodland, 243 Wis. at 464-65, 10 N.W.2d 180. The court unanimously rejected his position.
¶ 41 The court was definitive that "the legislative process is not complete unless and until an enactment has been published as required by the constitution and by statute." Id. at 466, 10 N.W.2d 180 (emphasis added). Then the court added:
Id. Only after a law has been published may a person who is injured by the law challenge it in court. Id.
¶ 42 The court provided a textbook discussion of the separation of powers:
Id. at 466-67, 10 N.W.2d 180 (emphasis added).
¶ 43 In short, "no court has jurisdiction to enjoin the legislative process at any point." Id. at 468, 10 N.W.2d 180 (citing cases from Wisconsin and other jurisdictions).
¶ 44 Goodland was decided nearly 70 years ago, but it remains fundamental law. In State ex rel. Althouse v. City of Madison, 79 Wis.2d 97, 255 N.W.2d 449 (1977), this court cited State ex rel. Martin v. Zimmerman, 233 Wis. 16, 288 N.W. 454 (1939), with approval, noting that "the [Martin] court pointed out that the question of the validity of [an] act could not be entertained by any court prior to its enactment." Althouse, 79 Wis.2d at 112, 255 N.W.2d 449. Justice Nathan Heffernan then quoted from Goodland at length and observed that, "If a court could enjoin publication of a bill, the [Goodland] court reasoned, it, not the legislature, would be determining what the law should be." Althouse, 79 Wis.2d at 113, 255 N.W.2d 449. Turning back to Goodland, Justice Heffernan repeated the statement that "no court has jurisdiction to enjoin the legislative process at any point." Id.
¶ 45 Goodland also was cited approvingly by Justice Abrahamson in State v. Washington, 83 Wis.2d 808, 816, 266 N.W.2d 597 (1978) to support the principle that Article IV, Section 1 and Article V, Section 1 of the Wisconsin Constitution are construed to "prohibit one branch of government from exercising the powers granted to other branches."
¶ 46 The majority of this court now concludes that the circuit court exceeded its authority in prohibiting publication of 2011 Wisconsin Act 10. This is not a close question. Wisconsin law in this regard is longstanding and completely in line with the law in other jurisdictions. See Murphy v. Collins, 20 Ill.App.3d 181, 312 N.E.2d 772 (1974); Vinson v. Chappell, 3 N.C. App. 348, 164 S.E.2d 631 (1968); State v. Sathre, 110 N.W.2d 228 (N.D.1961); Collins v. Horten, 111 So.2d 746 (Fla.Dist. Ct.App.1959); Maryland-Nat'l Capital Park & Planning Comm'n v. Randall, 209 Md. 18, 120 A.2d 195 (1956); Randall v. Twp. Bd. of Meridian, 342 Mich. 605, 70 N.W.2d 728 (1955); Kuhn v. Curran, 184 Misc. 788, 56 N.Y.S.2d 737 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. 1944); State ex rel. Carson v. Kozer, 126 Or. 641, 270 P. 513 (1928); State ex rel. Flanagan v. South Dakota Rural Credits B., 45 S.D. 619, 189 N.W. 704 (1922).
¶ 47 Attacking the constitutionality of an act after it has been published is quite different from attacking its validity before it becomes law. This must be acknowledged. Nonetheless, no useful purpose would be served by inviting a new series of challenges to 2011 Wisconsin Act 10 after publication of the Act has been completed.
¶ 48 In my view, this case is governed by Stitt. In the Stitt case, the court was
¶ 49 The court's response was blunt:
Stitt, 114 Wis.2d at 364, 365, 338 N.W.2d 684 (quoting 1 Sutherland Statutory Construction § 7.04, at 264 (4th ed.)) (emphasis added).
¶ 50 The court also quoted a passage from McDonald v. State, 80 Wis. 407, 411-12, 50 N.W. 185 (1891), where the court concluded that "no inquiry will be permitted to ascertain whether two houses have or have not complied strictly with their own rules in their procedure upon the bill." Stitt, 114 Wis.2d at 366, 338 N.W.2d 684.
¶ 51 In sum, "the legislature's adherence to the rules or statutes prescribing procedure is a matter entirely within legislative control and discretion, not subject to judicial review unless the legislative procedure is mandated by the constitution." Id. at 365, 338 N.W.2d 684 (emphasis added).
¶ 52 When the circuit court voided 2011 Wisconsin Act 10, it scrutinized the Wisconsin Open Meetings Law and concluded that there had been two violations of the law:
¶ 53 The circuit court acknowledged that Senate Chief Clerk Robert Marchant had advised Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald that no advance notice of the Joint Committee on Conference was required because the Senate and Assembly were in special session. The court acknowledged that Marchant relied on Senate Rule 93(2), which provides that, when in special session, "notice of a committee meeting is not required other than posting on the legislative bulletin board[.]" Finding of Fact No. 15.
¶ 54 But the court found that, "No Joint Rule in effect on March 9, 2011, conflicts with the requirements of the Open Meetings Law that a public notice of every meeting of a governmental body must set forth the time, date, place and subject matter of the meeting, in a form reasonably likely to inform members of the public and news media, and that the notice shall be given at least 24 hours before the meeting." Finding of Fact No. 19. Thus, the court concluded: "There is no rule adopted by the legislature, applicable to the March 9, 2011, meeting of the Joint Committee of Conference, that conflicts with any requirement of the Open Meetings Law, within the meaning of Wis. Stat. § 19.87(2)." See Conclusions of Law ¶ 79.
¶ 55 I am troubled by the circuit court's apparent indifference to this court's holding in Stitt. The circuit court enjoined the publication of an act passed by the legislature, preventing it from becoming law. It justified this action by relying on statutory provisions that apply to the legislature except when the legislature says they do not.
¶ 56 Wisconsin Stat. § 19.87 entitled, "Legislative meetings," contains four exceptions. Subsection (1) reads in part as follows: "Section 19.84 shall not apply to any meeting of the legislature or a subunit thereof called solely for the purpose of scheduling business before the legislative body." Wis. Stat. § 19.87(1). The circuit court could not determine whether the Joint Committee of Conference failed to comply with subsection (1) without "inquiring" deeply into legislative procedure, contrary to this court's decision in Stitt.
¶ 57 Subsection (2) provides: "No provision of this subchapter which conflicts with a rule of the senate or assembly or joint rule of the legislature shall apply to a meeting conducted in compliance with such rule." Wis. Stat. § 19.87(2). The circuit court second-guessed not only four legislative leaders but also the Senate Chief Clerk—an attorney—when it determined that no senate or assembly rule, including Senate Rule 93 (on which the Senate Chief Clerk relied), governed the notice requirements of the special session conference committee. The circuit court, in effect, told the Senate Chief Clerk that he did not know what the Senate rule meant.
¶ 58 The circuit court concluded that the legislature should have provided public notice of the special session conference committee 24 hours in advance. The court did not acknowledge that thousands of demonstrators stormed and occupied the State Capitol within a few hours of the notice that a conference committee meeting would be held.
¶ 59 The circuit court found that 20 seats were set aside for the public in the Senate Parlor, but it did not report that the entire proceedings were broadcast on WisconsinEye and events were observed
¶ 60 The circuit court determined that the Senate Parlor did not provide adequate public access under Wis. Stat. § 19.87(3), but it overlooked the fact that conference committees on state budgets routinely met in the Senate and Assembly Parlors until the State Capitol was renovated in the 1990s.
¶ 61 The circuit court voided 2011 Wisconsin Act 10 on the basis of a committee meeting that lasted less than five minutes—in a room packed with reporters and television cameras. This reality was captured on television and in photographs, one of which appeared on the front page of the Wisconsin State Journal on March 10, 2011 (see attached).
¶ 62 The circuit court has retained jurisdiction over the prosecution of four legislative leaders for alleged violations of the Open Meetings Law, but the additional remedy it imposed in voiding 2011 Wisconsin Act 10 effectively punished the executive branch as well as legislators who were not involved in the meeting.
¶ 63 The actions of the circuit court exceeded the court's authority and must be vacated.
¶ 64 The Dane County District Attorney and the circuit court contend that these concerns are all overcome by the Open Meetings Law itself. The circuit court held that, "The Open Meetings Law, Wis. Stat. § 19.81 et seq., is based upon the constitutional requirement, applicable to the Wisconsin Legislature, that `[t]he doors of each house shall be kept open except when the public welfare shall require secrecy.'" Wis. Const. art. IV, § 10.
¶ 65 This proposition does not withstand careful examination.
¶ 66 Article IV, Section 10 was part of the original constitution approved in 1848. The provision reads in full:
¶ 67 The manifest purpose of this provision is to prevent state legislative business from being conducted in secret except in extremely limited circumstances. The provision itself does not establish notice requirements for governmental meetings. It does not dictate the size or location of governmental meeting rooms. It does not apply to the executive branch or the judiciary or to local governments. And it certainly does not bar locking the doors of the Senate or Assembly or the Capitol during non-business hours. Applying the spirit of this constitutional provision to additional governmental meetings in Wisconsin has been a legislative undertaking.
¶ 68 The first open meetings law was enacted in 1959. Chapter 289, Laws of 1959. This means that more than a century passed before the legislature acted to effectively promote openness. The first law provided no notice requirements.
¶ 69 In 1976 this court decided Lynch v. Conta, which involved a private meeting of 11 members of the Joint Committee on Finance on March 11, 1975, during consideration of the state budget. The case involved Wis. Stat. § 66.77 (1975). The Lynch case led to changes in the Open Meetings Law at a special session of the legislature in June 1976. Chapter 426, Laws of 1975.
¶ 70 The special session bill that was approved in 1976 incorporated language from two Assembly amendments to 1975
¶ 71 The rhetoric contained in the statute's "Declaration of Policy" does not transform the Open Meetings Law into a codification of Article IV, Section 10. There is no documentary support for such a proposition. Constitutional commands cannot be changed at the whim of the legislature; statutory provisions may.
¶ 72 Only a clear constitutional violation would justify voiding 2011 Wisconsin Act 10—and then only after the Act was published. There is no constitutional violation in this case.
¶ 73 For these reasons, briefly stated, I join the court's order.
¶ 74 I agree that the Budget Repair Bill is not in effect. I further agree that the certification by the court of appeals should be denied.
¶ 75 Moreover, I agree that the challenge to the legality of the Budget Repair Bill, a bill that significantly affects all the people of this state, presents important fundamental constitutional issues about the separation of powers; the roles of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government; and judicial review.
¶ 76 It is exactly because the issues in the present case are of such constitutional and public policy importance that I do not join the order.
¶ 77 In a case in which the court is called upon to review the legitimacy of the legislative process, it is of paramount importance that the court adhere to the Wisconsin Constitution and its own rules and procedures, lest the legitimacy of the judicial process and this court's decision be called into question.
¶ 78 The Dane County Circuit Court took the time and made the effort to consider the issues carefully and write a 48-page decision, including findings of fact and conclusions of law, explaining and supporting its reasoning. In contrast, this court gives this important case short shrift. Today the majority announces for the first time that it is accepting the case. And today the majority decides the case.
¶ 79 In rendering a decision, a court is to provide not merely an answer but also a reasoned, accurate explanation. A reasoned, accurate explanation is not an inconsequential nicety that this court may disregard for the sake of convenience or haste. It is the cornerstone of the legitimacy of judicial decision-making.
¶ 80 At first glance, the order appears to provide some support for broad conclusions reached on fundamental and complex issues of law. But on even casual reading, the explanations are clearly disingenuous, based on disinformation.
¶ 81 Justice Prosser's concurrence is longer than the order. The concurrence consists mostly of a statement of happenings. It is long on rhetoric and long on story-telling that appears to have a partisan slant. Like the order, the concurrence reaches unsupported conclusions.
¶ 82 In hastily reaching judgment, Justice Patience D. Roggensack, Justice Annette K. Ziegler, and Justice Michael J. Gableman author an order, joined by Justice David T. Prosser, lacking a reasoned, transparent analysis and incorporating numerous errors of law and fact. This kind of order seems to open the court unnecessarily to the charge that the majority has reached a pre-determined conclusion not based on the facts and the law, which undermines the majority's ultimate decision.
¶ 83 Justice N. Patrick Crooks explains the flaws in the order's and concurrence's attempt to recast the petition for supervisory writ as an original action. He explains why this court should decide this case in an orderly appellate review of the circuit court's order with a full opinion. I join his writing.
¶ 84 I write to emphasize that in a case turning on separation of powers and whether the legislature must abide by the Open Meetings Law and the Wisconsin Constitution in adopting the Budget Repair
¶ 85 A court's failure to follow rules and a court's failure to provide a sufficient, forthright, and reasoned analysis undermine both the court's processes and the decision itself. Only with a reasoned, accurate analysis can a court assure the litigants and the public that a decision is made on the basis of the facts and law, free from a judge's personal ideology and free from external pressure by the executive or legislative branches, by partisan political parties, by public opinion, or by special interest groups.
¶ 86 At its most basic level this case is about the need for government officials to follow the Wisconsin Constitution and the laws.
¶ 87 The District Attorney's challenge to the Budget Repair Bill asserts that the Open Meetings Law is a codification of the mandates expressly provided for in the Wisconsin Constitution. The District Attorney relies on Article IV, Section 10, "[t]he doors of each house shall be kept open," and also on Article I, Section 4: "The right of the people peaceably to assemble, to consult for the common good, and to petition the government, or any department thereof, shall never be abridged."
¶ 88 The legislature declared in the Open Meetings Law that the legislature would comply with the Law to the fullest extent "in conformance with article IV, section 10" of the Wisconsin Constitution.
¶ 89 Nevertheless, the Attorney General asserts that the legislature need not abide by the Open Meetings Law; that the legislature can choose when and if it will follow the Open Meetings Law; and that courts cannot enforce the Open Meetings Law against the legislature and any of its committees.
¶ 90 The legislature must play by the rules of the Wisconsin Constitution and the laws.
¶ 91 Playing by the rules and playing fair are integral to public trust and confidence in our government officials—legislative, executive, and judicial. Public trust and confidence in the integrity of the judicial branch is engendered by a court's issuing a reasoned public decision based on public records after public arguments. The judicial branch claims legitimacy by the reasoning of its decisions. "Any step
¶ 92 Trust and confidence in the integrity of the judicial branch as an institution is critical at all times but especially when a case has high public visibility, is mired in partisan politics, and is emotionally charged. The need for reasoned judgment is at its greatest in a case such as this one, in which substantial public policy and budgetary decisions of the coordinate branches may be affected.
¶ 93 That the judiciary has the power of judicial review, that is, the power to interpret the Constitution and hear challenges to the constitutionality of legislative enactments, without pressure from the executive or legislative branches, is a fundamental principle of the United States and Wisconsin Constitutions.
¶ 94 This fundamental principle of judicial review was described in Federalist No. 78,
¶ 95 Ascertaining the meaning of the Wisconsin Constitution and whether the enactment of the Budget Repair Bill complies with constitutional directives is the essence of the present case. And the court must do so adhering to the Constitution, laws, and its own rules of procedure.
¶ 96 The order and Justice Prosser's concurrence are based on errors of fact and law. They inappropriately use this court's original jurisdiction, make their own findings of fact, mischaracterize the parties' arguments, misinterpret statutes, minimize (if not eliminate) Wisconsin constitutional guarantees, and misstate case law, appearing to silently overrule case law dating back to at least 1891. This case law recognizes a court's power to review legislative actions in enacting laws when constitutional directives are at issue.
¶ 97 The order mistakenly asserts that the State of Wisconsin and Secretary Huebsch filed "a petition for supervisory/original jurisdiction pursuant to Wis.
¶ 98 This court's authority for review is derived from the Wisconsin Constitution, which provides that the court has two types of jurisdiction: appellate and original.
¶ 99 There is nothing "original" or "in the first instance" here. By commencing an original action on the court's own motion to review the final judgment of the circuit court, the order and Justice Prosser's concurrence are blending the separate and distinct concepts of original and appellate jurisdiction.
¶ 100 Why is this important? By blending what are under our constitutional authority separate and distinct jurisdictions—original and appellate—the order and concurrence attempt to skirt the normal standards of appellate review. Faced with no record, they conjure their own facts—something this court should never
¶ 101 If this court wishes to take jurisdiction of the factual and legal issues presented in this matter, the legitimate and constitutional route is through an appeal. And indeed Justice Prosser reviews the circuit court's decision as if this case were an appeal.
¶ 102 The order states: "The doors of the senate and assembly were kept open to the press and members of the public during the enactment of the Act. The doors of the senate parlor, where the joint committee on conference met, were open to the press and members of the public. WisconsinEye broadcast the proceedings live.
¶ 103 Footnote 1 of the order implies that these findings of fact are supported by the transcripts of the hearings before the circuit court, which were filed in "appendices accompanying the various motions and petitions filed herein."
¶ 104 Justice Crooks, at ¶ 143 n. 15, powerfully explains that reliance on information in transcripts not in the record before this court is a departure from settled precedent.
¶ 105 In his concurrence, Justice Prosser makes his own factual findings. Indeed, most of his concurrence is a statement of happenings. Yet Justice Prosser asserts in 119 "that there are no issues of material fact that prevent the court from addressing the legal issues presented."
¶ 106 Where do all of these facts come from? Not from the certification proceedings (which the order denies) or from the petition for supervisory writ (which the court transforms into an original action). Not from the decision or final judgment of the Dane County Circuit Court. Indeed, some of the "findings of fact" are in direct contravention of the facts found by the circuit court. By casting this as an original action, the four justices are able to skirt facts that may impede the rush to their ultimate destination.
¶ 107 The four justices are entitled to their opinions, but they are not entitled to their own facts. This court is not a fact-finding court.
¶ 108 If findings of fact are required in the exercise of our original jurisdiction, there are procedures for getting those facts. Instead of adhering to those procedures, the four justices set forth their own version of facts without evidence. They should not engage in this disinformation.
¶ 109 No party argues to the court, as the order claims, that "the legislature amended Article IV, Section 10 of the Wisconsin Constitution by its enactment of the Open Meetings Law." The order builds a straw house so that it can blow it down.
¶ 110 Justice Prosser suggests that the argument of the parties is that the Open Meetings Law is a codification of Article IV, Section 10 of the Wisconsin Constitution such that the statutes amend the Constitution. Justice Prosser too builds a straw house to blow down with uncontested, accepted blackletter law that the Wisconsin Constitution cannot be changed by statute.
¶ 111 The order and concurrence fail to examine carefully the arguments of the Secretary of State about the respective roles of the Secretary of State and the Legislative Reference Bureau in the publication of legislative acts, the printing of notice in the official state newspaper, and the effective date of a statute. See Wis. Stat. §§ 14.38(10), 35.095(3)(b), 991.11.
¶ 112 This constitutional provision, Article IV, Section 10 of the Wisconsin Constitution, has never before been interpreted by this court or any Wisconsin court. The order interprets and dismisses the constitutional provision in four short sentences without citation or rationale—an unsupported, four-sentence interpretation of a fundamental constitutional guarantee ensured by the people of Wisconsin!
¶ 113 After stating its own factual findings, the order dismisses the significant constitutional argument with four words: "Access was not denied." By this interpretation, the constitutional right of the people to know what its legislature is doing has been significantly minimized, if not eliminated.
¶ 114 Instead of the order's four-sentence analysis of this important constitutional provision, Justice Prosser sets forth a two-paragraph analysis. He goes further than the order with a novel interpretation of this constitutional provision. He states that the "manifest purpose" of Article IV, Section 10 of the Wisconsin Constitution is "to prevent state legislative business from being conducted in secret except in extremely limited circumstances." From whence cometh Justice Prosser's "manifest purpose?" He doesn't say.
¶ 115 The order and Justice Prosser's concurring opinion treat the answers to the significant questions of law presented as clear and beyond dispute, controlled by uncontroverted precedent. The order and the concurrence do not tell the full legal story.
¶ 116 The court of appeals certified the legal questions to this court because the answers are not clear and our precedent is conflicting. The court of appeals determined that clarification is required regarding "the interaction between the Open Meetings Law and a line of cases dealing with the separation of power doctrine," citing to four cases: Goodland v. Zimmerman, 243 Wis. 459, 10 N.W.2d 180 (1943); State ex rel. Lynch v. Conta, 71 Wis.2d 662, 239 N.W.2d 313 (1976); State ex rel. La Follette v. Stitt, 114 Wis.2d 358, 338 N.W.2d 684 (1983); and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel v. Wisconsin Dep't of Admin., 2009 WI 79, 319 Wis.2d 439, 768 N.W.2d 700.
¶ 117 "In sum," the court of appeals stated, "Goodland and Stitt appear to favor the Secretary of State's position [the position now forwarded by the State of Wisconsin and Secretary Huebsch] that courts lack authority to invalidate legislation enacted in violation of the Open Meetings Law or, at the least, to do so before publication. In contrast, Lynch and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel support the District Attorney's view."
¶ 118 Neither the order nor the concurrence comes to grips with the issue in the
¶ 119 First, the order misrepresents Milwaukee Journal Sentinel v. Wisconsin Department of Administration, 2009 WI 79, 319 Wis.2d 439, 768 N.W.2d 700, as not involving the legislature's compliance with a statute. In the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel case, the court declared that it had jurisdiction to determine whether the legislature complied with Wis. Stat. § 111.92(1)(a), a statute governing legislative procedure, because that statute furthered the constitutional directives found in Article IV, Section 17(2) of the Wisconsin Constitution.
¶ 120 Second, the order fails to acknowledge that the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel case explained that a court will interpret and apply a procedural statute to determine whether the legislative action complies "with constitutional directives":
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 319 Wis.2d 439, ¶¶ 19, 20, 768 N.W.2d 700 (footnote omitted).
¶ 121 Justice Prosser fails to mention the case.
¶ 122 The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel case was based on at least three earlier cases, all concluding that a court may require the legislature to comply with a legislative procedural rule or statute if the procedural rule or statute furthers a constitutional directive.
¶ 123 The order and Justice Prosser's concurrence put in jeopardy Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and prior case law that declares that a court may determine whether legislative action in enactment of a law complies with a relevant constitutional directive.
¶ 124 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (and its precursors) correctly state the applicable principles of judicial review, the doctrine
¶ 125 In sum, the litigants and the public deserve more than the majority's hasty judgment.
¶ 126 Each person must abide by the law. Each branch of government must abide by the law. This court must ensure that the law governing judicial decision-making is followed. Justice Brandeis stated these principles eloquently as follows:
See State ex rel. Lynch v. Conta, 71 Wis.2d 662, 695, 239 N.W.2d 313 (1976), in which the court was asked to enforce an earlier version of the Open Meetings Law. The court observed that the "time-honored precept, established in Marbury v. Madison, [provides that] the judiciary may review the acts of the legislature for any conflict with the Constitution" (emphasis added).
As early as McDonald v. State, 80 Wis. 407, 411-12, 50 N.W. 185 (1891), substantially similar language appeared: "The bill for ch. 488 was therefore regularly passed, and the chapter is a valid law, unless it comes within the provisions of sec. 8, art. VIII, of the [Wisconsin] constitution" (emphasis added).
Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438, 485, 48 S.Ct. 564, 72 L.Ed. 944 (1928) (Brandeis, J., dissenting).
¶ 127 The resoluteness called for by Justice Brandeis is no less applicable to the observance of the fundamental principles of the courts in our system of government. Unreasoned judgments breed contempt for the law. The majority, by sacrificing honest reasoning, leads us down a pernicious path. The order today departs from fundamental principles. It fails to abide by the court's Constitutional authority and its own rules and procedures and harms the rights of the people from whom our authority derives.
¶ 128 For the reasons stated, I do not join the order.
¶ 129 I am authorized to state that Justices ANN WALSH BRADLEY and N. PATRICK CROOKS join this writing.
N. PATRICK CROOKS, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
¶ 130 These matters exemplify the importance of compliance with procedural rules and the rule of law to the legitimacy of our government. Just as there is a right way and a wrong way to proceed with the legislative process, there is a right way and a wrong way to accept the significant issues presented for review. I dissent in part because, in taking these matters as an original action and swiftly vacating the circuit court's orders without sufficient examination, the majority has proceeded the wrong way.
¶ 132 Specifically, this case raises the following questions: (1) Is the Open Meetings Law
¶ 133 There is no question that these issues are worthy of this court's review. But procedures matter—to the courts, the legislature, and the people of Wisconsin. There is a right way to address these issues and a wrong way. The majority chooses the wrong way by refusing to take this case through the appropriate procedural mechanism, and by rushing to issue an order without sufficient examination or a complete record. I concur in part because I agree with the majority's decision to address these important questions. I dissent in part due to the majority's decision to utilize inappropriately this court's original jurisdiction and due to its issuing a hasty order without sufficient consideration, and without adequately addressing all of the parties' arguments. I am convinced that these significant issues should be addressed through a direct appeal, which would allow this court to more fully resolve, with the benefit of a complete record, the complex legal and factual issues at stake.
¶ 134 In addition to the procedural morass that the majority's terse, hasty order attempts to sweep under the rug, there are important legal issues pertaining to the merits of these cases that it fails to fully resolve. To explain just what these issues are, I first provide an overview of the legal landscape.
¶ 135 At the center of these matters, and at the heart of the Open Meetings Law, is the mandate in Wisconsin's constitution that "[t]he doors of each house shall be kept open except when the public welfare shall require secrecy."
¶ 136 Relevant to this case, the legislature required meetings of a "governmental body" be properly noticed and open to the public.
¶ 137 It is this court's obligation to harmonize the existing precedent and to apply this explicit statutory language to give effect to the legislative intent. The core legal issues presented by this case are not as easily resolved as the majority's order suggests: (1) Are the Open Meetings Law's access or notice provisions as constitutionally based requirements enforceable against the legislature or its committees? (2) If so, is declaring an act void among the sanctions a court may impose regarding a legislative action taken in violation of this law? (3) Does a court have the authority to enjoin the publication, implementation, or effectiveness of an act, where some part of the legislative process was conducted in violation of the Open
¶ 138 In Goodland v. Zimmerman, this court provided that "the court has power to declare invalid an act of the legislature which contravenes constitutional provisions. That principle . . . is no longer open to debate."
¶ 139 In State ex rel. La Follette v. Stitt, we stated that courts will not review or void an act of the legislature based on its failure to comply with its own procedural rules, unless those rules embody a constitutional requirement.
¶ 140 All of these highly important questions, which define the respective authority and duty of the legislature and the courts, are left without complete answers and thorough discussion. These cases implicate this court's obligation to interpret, apply and develop the law. The tough questions raised by an examination of the relevant precedent could be resolved by a thoughtful application of the plain language of the Open Meetings Law to this precedent. Instead, the majority brushes these questions aside in its hasty decision and fails to fully examine our precedent. "Adherence to precedent must then be the rule rather than the exception if litigants are to have faith in the even-handed administration of justice in the courts."
¶ 141 For both practical and institutional reasons, the right way to go about answering these weighty and significant questions would be for these issues to be presented to this court as a direct appeal of the final judgment entered by the circuit court for Dane County.
¶ 142 The practical reasons that a direct appeal makes the most sense are based on the desirability of deciding these issues with all the available information, and in the most focused and efficient way. They have to do with the nuts and bolts of the process of receiving cases for various types of review at this court. These matters did not come to us as a direct appeal of a judgment but rather through two separate methods: an appeal and certification of a temporary order and a rarely used process, a supervisory writ, provided by statute, both filed before the circuit court's findings, conclusions and judgment.
¶ 143 Due to the unusual posture, we have no access to the complete record that was compiled in the circuit court that included the transcripts of the days of testimony taken in the circuit court,
¶ 144 The ready availability of a direct appeal by aggrieved parties makes this all the more puzzling. The majority does not really come to grips with the obvious fact that an appeal is an available remedy here. As many of the parties to these cases have argued, it would be a simple matter for an aggrieved party to intervene in this matter and file an ordinary appeal, which would proceed the usual way.
¶ 145 But as compelling as those practical reasons are, the greater reason that a direct appeal is the best way is that it is
¶ 146 Conversely, there are many infirmities in the alternatives that are argued by the State. There are two cases before us that we considered taking for review. I agree with the majority that one of them, the certification from the court of appeals concerning the issuance of a temporary restraining order in State ex rel. Ozanne v. Fitzgerald, is now moot, since a final judgment has been issued. Accepting the certification is therefore no longer an appropriate course of taking jurisdiction.
¶ 147 These cases should not be converted into a petition for an original action and taken using our original jurisdiction for several reasons: there is nothing that merits the use of that power in this instance. Such an exercise brings more of the case than we need in order to answer the central issues and bogs us down with requiring resolution of the remaining disputed factual matters.
¶ 148 "Because this court is not a fact-finding tribunal, it generally will not exercise its original jurisdiction in matters involving contested issues of fact."
¶ 149 These cases exemplify the importance of compliance with procedural rules and the rule of law in maintaining the legitimacy of our government. Just as there is a right way and a wrong way to proceed with the legislative process, there is a right way and a wrong way to accept these issues for review. I dissent in part because, in taking these matters as an original action and swiftly vacating the circuit court's orders without sufficient examination the majority has proceeded in the wrong way.
¶ 150 I concur in part because I agree with the majority that it is imperative that this court address the weighty and complicated questions presented here. It is of great significance to the people of Wisconsin whether the legislature is required to follow the Open Meetings Law, which apparently it has tied to the Wisconsin Constitution, and if so, how it may be held accountable. It is important not only here where the Act at issue, 2011 Wisconsin Act 10, was hotly debated, but in every case where the legislature acts on behalf of the people. Those who would rush to judgment on these matters are essentially taking the position that getting this opinion out is more important than doing it right and getting it right. As this court recently stated and as the Honorable Maryann Sumi repeated in her decision in regard to those matters, "The right of the people to monitor the people's business is one of the core principles of democracy."
¶ 151 Specifically, this case raises the following questions: (1) Is the Open Meetings Law
¶ 152 There is no question that these issues are worthy of this court's review. But procedures matter—to the courts, the legislature, and the people of Wisconsin. There is a right way to address these issues and a wrong way. The majority chooses the wrong way by refusing to take this case through the appropriate procedural mechanism, and by rushing to issue an order without sufficient examination or a complete record. I concur in part because I agree with the majority's decision to address these important questions. I dissent in part due to the majority's decision to utilize inappropriately this court's original jurisdiction and due to its issuing a hasty order without sufficient consideration, and without adequately addressing
¶ 153 For these reasons, I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part.
¶ 154 I am authorized to state that Chief Justice SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON and Justice ANN WALSH BRADLEY join this concurrence/dissent.
This case is not an original action in any sense of the phrase. The Dane County Circuit Court has already issued a final determination regarding each and every question of fact and question of law that is addressed in the order.
This court has previously taken original jurisdiction in two cases despite an identical case pending before the circuit court. In both cases the issue was narrow and an emergency existed with no other remedy available; an appeal could not be taken timely to get the person on the ballot within the statutory framework for printing ballots; review was necessary to protect Wisconsin citizens' right to vote for the candidate of their choosing. See State of Wisconsin ex rel. Nader v. Circuit Court for Dane County, No. 2004AP2559-W, unpublished order (2004); State ex rel. Barber v. Circuit Court for Marathon County, 178 Wis. 468, 190 N.W. 563 (1922).
In the present case, there is no such exigency. First, the issues presented raise fundamental constitutional principles relating to the powers of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government, as well as questions regarding the scope of the rights of the people of this State to know about the actions taken by their government and their right to access the legislative process. The issues are not narrow, and the issues involve conflicting precedent.
Second, there is no "emergency." The Attorney General asserts that an emergency exists because each day the alleged breach of separation of powers is not resolved irreparable damage is done to the representative government of this State. But if that assertion meets the definition of "emergency," then any time any party asserts that a law or an action is unconstitutional it would constitute an "emergency" for this court to decide. That's not the law of the state or country.
The "ordinary course" of an appeal could afford the petitioners any warranted relief. In the alternative, the legislature could pass the Budget Repair Bill in conformance with the Open Meetings Law, rendering the circuit court's determinations ineffective. This court could still decide the important separation of powers issues presented.
All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2009-10 version unless otherwise indicated.
Justice Prosser's concurrence likewise relies on numerous factual assertions, some of which are based on the circuit court's findings of fact in Ozanne, and others whose source is unexplained. It cannot be both ways—either these are purely legal questions that require no factual findings outside of the circuit court's findings of fact (which control unless found to be clearly erroneous) or this court needs a record and a resolution of disputed facts.