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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT . DISTRICT OF SOUTH DAKOTA CENTRAL DIVISION ā” INSTITUTE FOR FREE SPEECH, _ 3:18-CV-03017-RAL ā” Plaintiff oe OPINION AND ORDER DENYING VS. PLAINTIFFāS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND DEFERRING RULING JASON.RAVNSBORG, IN HIS OFFICIAL ON DEFENDANTSā MOTION FOR CAPACITY AS SOUTH DAKOTA | SUMMARY JUDGMENT | ATTORNEY GENERAL; AND STEVE . . BARNETT, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SOUTH DAKOTA SECRETARY OF STATE, ā” Defendants. _ Plaintiff Institute for Free Speech (IFS) on October 8, 2018, filed a verified complaint against South Dakotaās Attorney General and Secretary of State claiming that IFS wanted to publish on its website an analysis of two South Dakota ballot measures up for vote in 2018 and that two South Dakota statutesāSDCL §§ 12-27-1(11) and 12-27-16āimpeded that publication ā” 4 ā” _and in turn violated IFSās rights under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. Doc. 1. IFS sought a declaration that its conduct was not regulable under these statutes and that ā” the statutes were unconstitutional. IFS on October 9, 2018, moved for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction enjoining South Dakota from enforcing the statutes against it. Doc. 4. This Court coordinated with counsel for IFS and the Defendants to schedule and hold a hearing on October 12, 2018, on IFSās request for injunctive relief. Defendants took the position that the statutes did not apply to what IFS was proposing to do. Doc. 21 at 5. IFS represented that its mission was defending the First Amendment and that āIFSās publication will not urge passage or defeat of either measureā and characterized its publications as āacademic works.ā Doe. 1 at 9G 2, 12, 18. On October 16, 2018, this Court issued an Opinion and Order Concerning Motion ā” for Injunctive Relief granting IFSās motion for a preliminary injunction āsuch that Defendants are enjoined from using SDCL § 12-27-16 to prosecute IFS for posting its analysis [of the ballot measures] to its own website and issuing a press release of the analysis to South Dakota media and that IFS is not bound to comply with § 12-27-16 so long as its analysis is what IFS represented it to be.ā Doc. 21 at 13. . Little did this Court realize at the time that IFSās principal goal was not to publish an āacademic workā that āwill not urge passage or defeat of eithet [ballot] measure,ā as IFS had represented. The day after this Courtās grant of a preliminary injunction, IFS published an article on its website that described one of the ballot measures as āāan outright ban on speechā and as being ā” āag unconstitutional as it is unwise.ā! Doc. 44-1 at 2-3. IFSās publication described the other - āmeasure to āinfringe on important First Amendment rightsā and as creating āa recipe for a powerful but rudderless agency.ā Doc. 44-1 at 8, 11. Although IFSās publication did not expressly call for voters to vote against the ballot initiatives, a fair reading of the publication is that it was designed to advocate against the ballot measures, or to try to bring IF Sās activity within SDCL § 12-27-16 to allow IFS to continue its challenge to that statute to this Court, or to do both. IFS after the election filed an Amended Verified Complaint, again alleging that §§ 12-27- | 1(11) and 12-27-16 are unconstitutional. Doc. 27, Somewhat schizophrenically, Defendantsā answer continued to maintain that IFS will not be prosecuted under SDCL § 12-27-16, Doc, 28 at 1Though beside the point as far as this decision, IFS may have predicted accurately on the constitutionality of one of the measures. . See SD Voice v. Noem, 380 F. Supp. 34939 (DS.D. 2019). {| 6, but also objected to IFSās characterization of its published analysis āas not urging passage orā defeatā of the ballot measures because āTal review of the analysis shows the publication to urge the defeat of those measures,ā Doe, 28 at ā”ā”ā” Defendants have instituted no enforcement action of any kind against IFS, and indeed this Courtās preliminary injunction has remained in place. IFS then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings or alternatively for summary judgment, Doc. 32, and the Defendants filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, Doc. 48. This Court held oral argument to probe whether IFS has standing to make the challenge it raises and whether the statutory language with which IFS primarily takes issueā§ 12-27-16(1)(c)āeven applies to IFS. Because IFS does not have standing at this time, this Court denies IFSās motion for summary judgment and defers ruling on Defendantsā motion for summary judgment pending information on whether Defendants contest entry of a permanent injunction. . I. Procedural History, Facts, and Claims IFS is a Virginia-headquartered 501(c)(3) entity which purports to be a nonpartisan, educational charity dedicated to defending the First Amendment rights of free speech and press. Doc. 1 at 9 12; Doc. 27 at ā” 12; Doc, 44-1 at 2n.7,13. Since its founding in 2005, IFS, formerly known as the Center for Competitive Politics, Doc. 44-1 at 2 n.7, has focused its efforts on campaign finance and other compelled disclosure proposals and laws, Doc, 34 at 74; Doc. 43 at 4. IFS boasts in its publication on the South Dakota ballot measures of having āsecured judgments in federal court striking down laws in Colorado, Utah, and South Dakotaā and being ācurrently involved in litigation against California, Connecticut, Missouri, Massachusetts, Tennessee and the federal government.ā Doc. 44-1 at 2.7 This case began ostensibly because IFS wanted to publish an analysis oftwo measureson _ South Dakotaās 2018 general election ballotāproposed Constitutional Amendment W? ā” (Amendment W) and Initiated Measure 24? (IM 24). Doc. 1 at 1 6; Doc. 34 at J 6; Doe. 43 at 16. IFS filed this suit in October 2018 claiming that it was concerned that its analysis would fall within. . - South Dakota statutes regulating āindependent communication expenditures.ā Doc. 1 at 76; Doc. 34 at | 6; Doc. 43 at] 6. One of the two statutes IFS claims to be unconstitutional is SDCL § 12- 27~1-(11), which defines an independent communication expenditure as: an expenditure, including the payment of money or exchange of other valuable consideration or promise, made by a person, entity, or political committee for a communication concerning a candidate oO or a ballot question which is not made to, controlled by, coordinated with, requested by, or made upon consultation with that candidate, political committee, or agent of a candidate or political committee. -The term does not include administration and solicitation of any | ā” contribution for a political action committee established by an entity and associated expenses, nor the use of an entityās real or personal property located on its business premises for such purposes. The - term does not include any communication by a person made inthe regular course and scope of the personās business or ministry or any communication made by'a membership organization solely to any member of the organization and the member's family[.] _ SDCL § 12-27-1(11). IFS contends § 12-27-11(1) is unconstitutionally vague in seeking to regulate campaign expenditures not associated with a candidate or political committee extending to communications āconcerning a candidate or a ballot question.ā The other statute IFS claims to be unconstitutional is SDCL § 12-27-16. Section 12-27-16 establishes disclaimer and disclosure requirements for communications funded by independent ā” communication expenditures, Section 12-27-16(1) contains the disclaimer requirements, IFSās āAmendment W did not pass. ā” 3IM 24 passed, but has been held to be unconstitutional. S.D. Voice, 380 F. Supp. 3d 939. āIn campaign finance parlance, a ādisclosureā law is one that requires persons or groups to report _ information to a public agency. Citizens United v. FEC, 558 U.S. 310, 366 (2010); Majors v. briefing makes clear that its constitutional challenge is to § 12-27-16(1)(c), requiring those making more than $100 in independent communication expenditures to disclose their top five contributors. Section 12-27-16(1) in its entirety provides: (1) Any person or entity that makes a payment or promise of payment ā” totaling more than one hundred dollars,° including donated goods or services for an independent communication expenditure that concerns a candidate, public office holder, ballot question, or political party shall append to or include in each communication a disclaimer that clearly and forthrightly: (a) Identifies the person or entity making the independent ā” communication expenditure for that communication; (b) States the mailing address and website address, if applicable, of the person or entity; and (ce) If an independent expenditure is undertaken by an entity not including a candidate, public office holder, political party, or political committee, the following notation must be included: āTop Five Contributors,ā including a listing of the names of the five persons making the largest contributions in aggregate to the entity during the twelve months preceding that communication. An ā independent communication expenditure made by a person or entity shall include the following: āThis communication is independently funded and not made in consultation with any candidate, public - . office holder, or political committee.ā SDCL § 12-27-16(1). An initial violation of § 12-27-16(1) is a class 2 misdemeanor. Id. A second violation within a calendar year is a Class 1 misdemeanor. Id. Subsections (2) through (5) of § 12- 27-16 contain the disclosure requirements, stating that persons or entities making a communication that falls within subdivision (1) must disclose certain information to the state. §-12-27-16(2)-(5). - Abell, 361 F.3d 349, 354 (7th Cir. 2004). A ādisclaimerā law, on the other hand, requires that political communications include the identity of the speaker and perhaps other information. Citizens United, 558 U.S. at 366; Majors, 361 F.3d at 354. āIn its prior Opinion and Order Concerning Motion for Injunctive Relief, this Court questioned whether IFSās writing, posting, and disseminating its analysis would involve a payment of more - than $100 or simply be part of the overhead of an entity ostensibly staffed to āresearch[] constitutional and practical implications of federal and āstate compelled disclosure laws.ā IFS apparently expended more than $100, and Defendants do not contest this fact. Doc. 27 at 24; see also Doc. 34 at 11; Doc. 43 at § 11. Section 12-27-16ās disclosure and: disclaimer requirements do not apply to all communications concerning a ballot question. The term ācommunicationā does not include: (a) Any news article, editorial endorsement, opinion or commentary -writing,.or letter to the editor printed in a newspaper, magazine, flyer, pamphlet, or other periodical not owned or controlled by a . candidate or political committee; . (b) Any editorial endorsement or opinion aired by a broadcast facility not owned or controlled by a candidate or political committee, = (c) Any communication by a personĀ® made in the regular course and scope of the personās business or ministry or any communication - made by a membership entity solely to members of the entity and the membersā families; oe (d) Any communication that refers to any candidate only as part of the popular name of a bill or statute; and , (e) Any communication used for the purpose of polling if the poll question does not expressly advocate for or against a candidate, public office holder; ballot question, or political party. SDCL § 12-27-16(6). Defendants originally thought § 12-27-16(6)(a) to exempt IFSās proposed __ analysis, but Defendantsā position was based on what appeared to be a misreading of that - subsection.ā - definition of āpersonā under § 12-27-1(16) means āa natural person,ā thereby excluding ā”ā”ā”ā” "Section 12-27-16(6)(a) excludes from the term ācommunicationā and thus from statutory criminal liability ā[a]ny news article, editorial endorsement, opinion or commentary writing, or letter tothe - editor printed in a newspaper, magazine, flyer, pamphlet, or other periodical not owned ā”ā” controlled by a candidate or political committee,ā Defendants previously suggested that there are two halves to § 12-27-16(6)(a) such that it could be read as exempting first āany news article, editorial endorsement, opinion or commentary writingā and second a āletter to the editor printed ā” in a newspaper, magazine, flyer, pamphlet, or other periodical not owned or controlled bya candidate or political committee.ā Defendantsā prior reading of § 12-27-16(6)(a) created nonsense to the second half of the provision; while a āletter to the editor printed in a newspaper, magazineā makes sense, āa letter to the editor printed in . . . [a] flyer, pamphlet .. .ā makes no sense. §12- _ 27-16(6)(a). āNonsensical interpretations of . . . statutes[] are disfavored.ā FutureSource LLC v. Reuters Ltd., 312 F.3d 281, 284 (7th Cir. 2002). Section 12-27-16(6)(a) properly read in full exempts a ānews article, editorial endorsement, opinion or commentary writing, or letter to the editorā when such writings are āprinted in a newspaper, magazine, flyer, pamphlet, or other periodical not owned or controlled by a candidate or political committee.ā IFS published what could be considered a ācommentary writingā on its website and transmitted it to media outlets. Section 12-27-16(6)(a) is noticeably silent in protecting from criminal liability an āindependent: communication expenditureā on a website or electronic format or so transmitted to media outlets. 4 6 . In an effort to establish standing to challenge the statutes, IFS alleges that it plans to run āsubstantially and materially similarā analyses of possible future South Dakota campaign finance ballot measures. Doc. 34 at J 12; Doc. 43 at | 12. Campaign finance ballot questions were before ā” _ the South Dakota electorate in 2008, 2016, and 2018. Doc. 34 at {{ 10; Doc. 43 at | 10. However, the South Dakota Secretary of Stateās website, which both parties agreed was proper subject matter for judicial notice,ā shows no ballot measures on the 2020 South Dakota ballot concerning campaign finance issues, and South Dakota law will change in 2020 in ways designed to make . more difficult to get such measures on the ballot. See H.B. 1094, 2019 Reg. Sess., 94th Leg. (S.D. S.D. Secāy of State, Potential 2020 Ballot Questions, sdsos.gov/elections-voting/upcoming: elections/general-information/2020-ballot-questions.aspx (last visited Sept. 24, 2019). IFS nevertheless claims that ācampaign finance policy is a āperennialā issue in South Dakota and | ālikelyā to be on the ballot for years to come. Doc. 34 at § 10; Doc. 43 at 7 10. . Count One of IFSās amended complaint alleges that applying §§ 12-27-1(11) and 12-27- 16 to analyses IFS might publish āto publicize its political views regarding South Dakota proposed ballot measuresā would violate the First Amendment. Doc. 27 at f] 59, 87. Count Two asserts that § 12-27-1(11) should be declared facially void for vagueness.ā Doc, 27 at 9103. In the āprayers for reliefā section of its amended complaint, IFS asks this Court to declare that its āeāoweeeoeuwc os, . Federal courts are āwithout power to adopt a narrowing construction of a state statute unless such a construction is reasonable and readily apparent.ā Boos v. Barry, 485 U.S.'312, 330 (1988) oral argument and in response to this Courtās inquiry, both IFS and Defendants agreed that this ā” Court could take judicial notice of the content of the Secretary of Stateās website. This Court does so under Rule 201 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. . *Although the heading for Count II says that §§ 12-27-1(1 1) and 12-27-16 should both be declared _ vague, the substantive paragraphs of Count II only refer to § 12-27-1(11). . 9 proposed future analyses are not regulable under §§ 12-27-1( 11) and 1 2-27-16.and that § 12-27- 1) is facially vague.'° Doc. 27 at 20-21. IFS has now moved for judgment on the pleadings or, in the alternative, summary judgment. Doc. 32. IFS argues that the disclaimer requirements in § 12-27-16(1)(c) violate the. First Amendment and that 12-27-1(11)ās definition of āindependent communication expenditureā is unconstitutionally vague. The State opposes IFSās motion, arguing that § 12-27-16(1) passes constitutional muster, that § 12-27-1(11) is sufficiently specific, and that IFS lacks standing to taise any claim. Doc. 41. The State has also filed a cross-motion for summary judgment raising these same arguments. Docs, 48, 49. Il. Standard of Review . This Court will treat IFSās motion as one for summary judgment because both parties have filed statements of undisputed material facts and the State has filed a summary judgment motion ofits own. Under Rule 56(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is proper ā” when āthe movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.ā Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). On summary judgment, the evidence is āviewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.ā True v. Nebraska, 612 676, 679 (8th Cir. 2010) (quoting Cordry v. Vanderbilt Mortg & Fin., Inc., 445 F.3d 1106, 1109 (8th Cir. 2006)). There is a genuine issue of material fact if a āreasonable jury [could] return a verdict for either partyā on a particular issue. Mayer v. Countrywide Home Loans, 647 F.3d 789, 791 (8th Cir. 2011). A party opposing a properly made and supported motion for summary . judgment must cite to particular materials in the record supporting the assertion that a fact is āprayers for reliefā section also asks this Court to declare that §§ 12-27-1(11) and 12-27-16 are unconstitutional as applied to IFSās analysis of Amendment W and IM 24. genuinely disputed. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1); Gacek v. Owens & Minor Distrib., Inc., 666 F.3d 1142, 1145 (8th Cir. 2012). āMere allegations, unsupported by specific facts or evidence beyond the nonmoving partyās own conclusions, are insufficient to withstand a motion for summary judgment,ā Thomas Vv. Corwin, 483 F.3d 516, 327 (8th Cir. 2007): see also Reasonover v. St. Louis Cty., 447 F.3d 569, 578 (8th Cir, 2006) (āEvidence, not contentions,. avoids summary ā” judgment.ā) (quoting Mayer v. Nextel W. Corp., 318 F.3d 803, 809 (8th Cir. 2003)). Summary judgment is not āa disfavored procedural shortcut, but rather an integral part of the Federal ā” Rules as a whole, which are-designed āto secure the just, speedy and inexpensive determination of every action.ā Celotex Corp _ v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 327 (1986) (quoting Fed.R. Civ.P.1). āTIL. Justiciability Analysis oo A. Standing and Ripeness Requirement . . āArticle II of the Constitution limits federal courtsā jurisdiction to certain āCasesā and ā” āControversies. Clapper v. Amnesty Intāl USA, 568'U.S. 398, 408 (2013). Courts implement this limit through different justiciability doctrines, including standing and ripeness, ā” DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 547 U.S. 332, 352 (2006). Broadly speaking, the standing inquiry concerns whether the plaintiff is the appropriate party to bring a particular suit, Raines Vv Byr d, 521 U.S. 811, 818 (1997); Flast.v. Cohen, 392 U.S, 83, 99-100 (1968). The three requirements. for.standing are: (1) an injury in fact; (2) a causal connection between the injury and the law being challer go and (3) a likelihood that a favorable decision will redress the injury. Steel Co. v. . Citizens for a Better Envāt, 523 U.S. 83, 102-03 (1998). āRipeness, on the other hand, concerns whether a claim Is being brought at the proper time. See Vogel v. Foth & Van Dyke Assocs., 266 F 3Ā¢ 838, 840 (8th Cir. 2001). Claims are not ripe when they rest on ācontingent future events that may not occur as anticipated, or indeed may not occur at all.ā Texas v. United States, 523 U.S. ~ 296, 300 (1998) (citation and internal marks omitted). Ripeness often overlaps with the injury-in- fact requirement of standing, particularly when plaintiffs challenge a statute that has yet to be enforced against them. Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 573 U.S. 149, 157 n.5 (2014) (stating that the issues of injury in fact and ripeness āboil[ed] down to the same questionā in the preenforcement challenge before the Court (citation omitted)); Dermer v, Miami-Dade Cty., 599 āF.3d 1217, 1220 (11th Cir. 2010); see also Johnson v. Missouri, 142 F.3d 1087, 1090 n.4 (8th Cir. _ 1998) (explaining that the doctrines of ripeness and standing āare closely related in that each focuses on whether the harm asserted has matured sufficiently to warrant judicial intervention,ā (cleaned up and citation omitted)). The issue here is whether IFS has āan injury in factā or instead a claim resting on ācontingent future events that may or may not occur as anticipated, or indeed may not occur at all.ā See Steel Co., 523 U.S. at 102-03; Texas, 523 U.S. at 300. To satisfy Article ITI standing, the injury āmust be concrete and particularized and actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.ā Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 158 (cleaned up and citation omitted). ā”ā”ā” allegation of future injury may suffice if the threatened injury is certainly impending, or there is a substantial risk that the harm will occur.ā Id. (cleaned up and citation omitted). The Supreme Court has explained that a plaintiff bringing a First Amendment challenge can meet the injury-in- ā” fact requirement by showing āan intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with - constitutional interest, but proscribed by astatute, and there exists a credible threat of prosecution thereunder.ā?! Id. at 159 (citation omitted). Wa plaintiff in a First Amendment challenge can also establish an injury in fact by alleging that ā”ā” censored itself because of a statute. Missourians for Fiscal Accountability v. Klahr, 830 F.3d 789, 794 (8th Cir. 2016). IFS in its amended complaint has neither alleged that it has engaged in self- ā” censure nor claimed that there are currently-pending campaign finance measures about which it wishes to comment. , ' 10 . B. Standing Based on IFS Publication After Entry of Preliminary Injunction Though IFS discussed standing only cursorily in its briefing, it argued during the hearing that it has standing in two different ways. First, IFS pointed to standing based on the nebulous stance of Defendants during the hearing and in pleadings about whether IFSās past publication on the two ballot measures contravened SDCL § 12-27-16. As a general rule, however, courts determine standing based on the facts that existed when the plaintiff commenced the suit. Park v. Forest Serv. of U.S., 205 F.3d 1034, 1037-38 (8th Cir. 2000) (holding that the defendantās use ā”ā” illegal checkpoints after the complaint was filed was irrelevant to whether the plaintiff could show _ that she faced a real and immediate threat of an illegal checkpoint at the time of filing); 13A | Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 3531 (3d ed. Updated August 2019) (āPost-filing events that supply standing that did not exist on filing may be disregarded, denying ā” _ standing despite a showing of sufficient present injury caused by the challenged acts and capable of judicial redress.ā), Here, Defendantsā statements on whether § 12-27-16 applied to IFSās analysis did not occur until after IFS commenced this suit and filed its amended complaint. Even though this asserted ground for standing could be disregarded as developing after the case was filed, this Court chooses to address this standing argument further. To be clear, as this Court previously reasoned, Defendantsā choice not at this time to enforce SDCL § 12-27-16 against IFS does not necessarily dispose of IFSās challenge. State defendants may change their ā” about enforcing a statute or may be replaced by the electorate, and the state Defendants are not bound, by estoppel or otherwise, to their present decision to forego prosecuting IFS. See Vt, Rig ht to Life Comm, Inc. v. Sorrell, 221 F.3d 376, 383~84 (2d Cir. 2000); Kucharek v. Hanaway, 902 F.2d 313, 519 (7th Cir. 1990). To hold otherwise potentially risks putting asserted First Amendment rights āāat the sufferance ofā state officials. N.C. Right to Life, Inc. v. Bartlett, 168 F.3d 705, 711 (4th Cir. 1999): see also Sorrell, 221 F.3d at 383. Yet there can be instances where the risk of prosecution is so remote that no standing and no ripe claim exists. See Harmon v. City of Kan. City, 197 F.3d 321, 327 (8th Cir. 1999) (holding that plaintiffs bringing a First Amendment challenge lost standing to seek injunctive relief when the city admitted that the plaintiffsā conduct was constitutionally protected and was not prohibited by the challenged statute); Wis. Right to Life, Ine. y. Paradise, 138 F.3d 1183, 1185 (7th Cir, 1998) (finding no well-founded fear to justify standing when every attorney general since 1976 had adhered to same interpretation of challenged . statute); Graham v. Butterworth, 5 F.3d 496, 499 (11th Cir. 1993) (dismissing First Amendment challenge to State statute as moot when defendants withdrew determination that plaintiff's conduct violated statute and advised plaintiff that his conduct would not be prosecuted). IFSās argument for standing based on possible prosecution under § 12-27-16 for its ā” published analysis, however, does not account for the fact that this Court has entered a preliminary injunction enjoining Defendants āfrom using SDCL. § 12-27-16 to prosecute IFS for posting its analysis [of the two ballot measures] to its own website and issuing a press release of the analysis to South Dakota media outlets.ā Doc. 21 at 13. Thus, IFS is not at āthe sufferance ofā state officials in their decision to prosecute or not prosecute IFS. This Court has preliminarily enjoined state officials from any such prosecution. Even if IFS were to argue that it may have exposed itself, whether deliberately or not, to prosecution by overstepping what it represented it would āpublish and thus be outside of the protection of this Courtās injunction, the Defendants have not sought any relief from the injunction in the 11 months: since IFS published its analysis, and ā” Defendants ultimately represented during the hearing that they do not intend to prosecute IFS for . publishing the analysis.!? And, as the parties heard from this Court during the hearing, this Court .believes there to be a factual question about what IFS is and what it is doing that determines āwhether IFS is even covered by § 12-27-16(1)(c), the portion of the statute IFS challenges as unconstitutional. os oe To explain the issue of whether IFS is even covered by § 12-27-16(1)(6) and what the fact questions about IFSās operations are, this Court needs to discuss the statutory language that IFS challenges, The portion of § 12-27-16(1)(c) challenged by IFS states: _ * |f°an independent expenditure is undertaken by an entity not including a candidate, public office holder, political party, or political committee, the following notation must be included: āTop Five Contributors,ā including a listing of the names of the five ā persons making the largest contributions in aggregate to the entity during the twelve months preceding that communication. § 12-27-16(1)(c) (emphasis added). Although IFS complied with § 12-27-16(1)(a) and ā”ā”ā”ā”ā”ā” in its analysis, it did not list its top five ācontributors,ā The word ācontributionsā in § 12-27- 16(1)(c) is a defined term in the statutory scheme and may not even extend to those who contribute: to IFS. The word ācontribution,ā with the most pertinent language to this case emphasized, is defined in § 12-27-1 as: (6) āContribution,ā any gift, advance, distribution, deposit, or. . payment of money or any other valuable consideration, or any contract, promise or agreement,to do so; any discount or rebate not available to the general public; any forgiveness of indebtedness or payment of indebtedness by another person; or any use of services - . or property without full payment or that is provided by any person . or political committee whose primary business is to provide services or property, made for the purpose of influencing: ā (b) The placement of a ballot question on the ballot or the adoption or defeat of any ballot question submitted. Towards the end of the hearing, Defendants said that they have no desire to go back and prosecute IFS for its published analysis. 13 oe ā” SDCL § 12-27-1(6) (emphasis added). Under South Dakota law, courts are.ānot free to disregard legislative definitions of words.ā N. Border Pipeline Co. v. 8.D. Depāt of Revenue, 868 N.W.2d : ā” ā” ' ā” 380, 584 n.9 (S.D. 2015); see also Behlmann v. Century Sur. Co.; 794 F.3d 960, 963 (8th Cir. 2015) (explaining that federal courts apply state rules of statutory construction when interpreting state'statutes). Indeed, āāwhenever the meaning of a word or phrase is defined in any statute such definition is applicable to the same word or phrase wherever it occurs, except where a contrary ā” intention plainly appears.ā N. Border Pipeline Co., 868 N.W.2d at 584 n.9 (citation omitted); see also SDCL § 2-14-6 (āWords used in the singular. number include the plural, and the plural, the singular, except where a contrary intention plainly appearsā). The South Dakota Legislature has not plainly indicated that the definition of ācontributionā in § 12-27-1 isāinapplicable to § 12-27- 16(1)(c). In fact, the introductory clause of § 12-27-1 suggests that the definition of ācontributionā applies throughout Chapter 12-27. SDCL § 12-27-1 (stating that ā[t]erms used in this chapter _ meanā); N. Border Pipeline Co., 868 N.W.2d at 584 n9 (concluding that a very similar introductory clause ādirect[ed]ā that the terms defined in that section applied throughout chapter). By its text, then, § 12-27-1(6)(b) applies to IFS only if IFS receives aāācontribution... made for the purpose of influencing . . . the adoption'or defeat of any ballot question submitted.ā . IFS has represented itself to this Court as follows: Plaintiff IFS is a § 501(c)(3) nonpartisan, educational charity dedicated to the defense of the political speech and press rights ' ā” protected by the First Amendment. As part of that mission, IFS researches āconstitutional and practical implications of federal and state compelled disclosure laws, especially in the area of campaign ā” finance regulation. Additionally, IFS represents individuals and ā”ā”ā” ācivil society organizations, pro bono, in cases raising First Amendment objections to burdensome regulation of core political Ā© speech. 1 at 4] 12; Doc. 27 at | 12; Doc. 33 at 3; Doc. 34 at 71. If that is how IFS has represented itself to its contributors, then any contribution to IFS is likely not āmade for the purpose of influencing . . . the adoption or defeat of any ballot question submitted.ā See SDCL § 12-27-1(6). | Strangely, IFS did not like this reading of the statute, even though it would appear to take IES (if it indeed is what it purports to be) outside of the statute and any ability of Defendants to ā” āprosecute it under § 12-27-16(1)(c) for not disclosing information about its contributors, Equally strangely, despite having repeatedly cited to its website throughout its court filings, Doc. 1 at 18; āDoe. 27 at] 18: Doc. 33 at 4-5; Doc. 34 at 45, IFS at oral argument balked at the Court taking judicial notice of (or even viewing) its website in determining whether contributors to IFS are even arguably within the statutory definition of SDCL § 12-27-1(6). IFS expressed at oral argument that it solicits contributions through separate mailings and communications and through certain solicitations and activities of its board of directors, but then bristled at the suggestion of possible discovery of such communications as to whether the statute would apply to IFS. IFS evidently wants the statute to apply to it, regardless of the statutory language or IFSās business or activities, ā but that desire alone is insufficient to justify standing. In short, any concern about Defendants enforcing SDCL § 12-27-16 against IFS for what ā” IFS published does not involve a credible threat of prosecution or subject IFSās First Amendment rights to the sufferance of the Defendants, Defendants are enjoined from any enforcement action against IFS by this Courtās order, have not sought to have this Court alter this order, have not attempted any enforcement action, and know from this Opinion and Order that this Court remains - skeptical and would have to be convinced, perhaps after discovery is allowed, that IFS has ācontributorsā within the compass of § 12-27-1(6) to even render § 12-27-16(1)(c) applicable to IFS. 15 C. Standing Based on Possible Future IFS Publications IFSās second argument for standing, consistent with its amended complaint, is that campaign finance proposals are likely to be on the ballot in South Dakota for āyears to come,ā that it will run analyses of āfuture South Dakota campaign finance ballot measures,ā and that it'wonāt be able to publish these analyses without āimminent fear of prosecutionā under 8 12-27-16. Doc. 34 at Ff] 10, 12, 14. The best evidence that a campaign finance measure will be on the ballot in the future is that such proposals were before the South Dakota electorate in 2008, 2016, and 2018. Doc. 43 at] 10. The State disagrees with IFSās allegations, asserting that it is speculative whether South Dakota will have another campaign finance measure to which IFS will provide commentary. Doce. 43 at Jf 10, 12, 14. The South Dakota Secretary of Stateās website shows that there are no campaign finance proposals currently slated to be on the South Dakota ballot in 2020, and, as mentioned above, South Dakota has made statutory changes to make such initiatives more difficult to get onthe ballot. ā”ā” This Court must determine whether IFSās alleged injury is ācertainly impendingā or there is a āsubstantial riskā that the injury will occur. Depāt of Commerce v. New York, 139S.Ct. 2551, 2565 (2019) (quoting Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 158). After all, IFS will not publish any analysis unless a campaign finance proposal appears on the South Dakota ballot. The Supreme Court has decided several cases concerning when the threatened enforcement of a statute establishes an Article III injury. None of these cases are exactly on point, but they provide some guideposts for determining whether the injury IFS alleges is sufficiently imminent. In Steffel y. Thompson, 415 U.S. 452 (1974), for instance, the Supreme Court found an āactual controversyā when the plaintiff was twice warned to stop handbilling and was threatened with prosecution if he refused, he planned to continue his activity, and his handbilling companion was 16 prosecuted. Id, at 459, The plaintiff in Steffel had been handbilling against the Vietnam War. Although finding an āactual controversy,ā the Supreme Court remanded the case to the district ā”ā” court to determine whether the controversy remained live after the United States reduced its | involvement in the war. Id, at 459-60. . - Similarly, the Supreme Court in Babbitt vy. United Farm Workers National Union, 442 U.S. 289 (1979), held that the plaintiffs had standing to challenge a statute that prohibited the use of . ādishonest, untruthful, and deceptive publicity.ā Id. at 301. Although the plaintiffs didnāt plan ā”ā” publish anything deceptive, they claimed that āerroneous statement. is inevitable in free debate.ā Id. (citation omitted), The plaintiffs also showed that they had participated in past consumer publicity campaigns and claimed that they intended to continue those campaigns in the future. Id. _ That recordāalong with the stateās failure to disavow an intention to invoke the statuteās criminal penalties against the plaintiffsāconvinced the Supreme Court that the threat of prosecution was not āimaginary or wholly speculative.ā Id. at 302. Relying on Babbitt, the Supreme Court in Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, 561 U.S. 12010), held that the plaintiffs could bring a preenforcement challenge to a statute that outlawed knowing support of a foreign terrorist organization. Id. at 15-16. The plaintiffs had provided support to groups classified as terrorist organizations before the statute was enacted and claimed they would provide similar support if the statute were struck down. Id. The government had charged 150 persons with violating the statute and did not claim that the plaintiffs would be safe from prosecution if they resumed their support of the organizations. Id. at 16. These considerations, the Court explained, established a ācredible threat of prosecution.ā Id. at 15-16, Most recently, the Supreme Court in Susan B. Anthony List considered preenforcement challenges to an Ohio statute that criminalized false statements concerning a political candidate. 17 §73U.8. at 161. The statute allowed anyone to complain tothe Ohio Election Commission, which āwould then refer the complaint to a prosecutor if it found a violation. āTd, at 152-53. One of the . plaintiffs, Susan B. Anthony List, had issued a press release saying that a candidate supported tax- payer funded abortion by voting for the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Id. at 153-54. The candidate ā” āfiled a complaint over the statement being false, after which the Ohio Election Commission fotind _, probable cause and scheduled a hearing before the whole Commission. Id. at 154. The candidate āwithdrew his complaint because he lost the election. Id. at 155. The other plaintiff in Susan B. | Anthony List alleged that it wanted to make similar statements about the candidateās vote for the ACA but refrained from doing so because of what happened to Susan B. Anthony List. Id. at 15 6. The Supreme Court held that the plaintiffs faced a credible threat of enforcement: both plaintiffs pleaded āgpecificā future statements they intended to make about candidates who voted for the . ACA; the Ohio Statute āarguablyā covered the plaintiffsā intended activity; there was a history of past enforcement; and Ohio had not ādisavowedā enforcement if the plaintiffs made similar - statements in the future. Id. at 161-65, And while the candidate the plaintiffs wanted to attack had lost the election, the Court found that āthe case remained justiciable because the plaintiffs _ wanted to issue statements about the broader issue of support for the ACA. Id. at 163. The Supreme Court has found jurisdiction lacking in at least one preenforcement challenge, however. Golden v, Zwickler, 394°U.S. 103 (1969). The plaintiff in Golden challenged a New ā” York law that outlawed the distribution of anonymous leaflets pertaining to election campaigns. Id. at 104-05. The plaintiff had been convicted under the law for distributing anonymous leaflets - focusing on a particular candidate running for election in 1964, Id. at 105-06. The plaintiff challenged the law after the 1964 election, claiming that the candidate would run again in 1966 ā” and that the plaintiff intended to continue distributing anonymous literature about the candidate. Id. at 106. After the plaintiff filed his complaint, the canididate left Congress for a position: with ā” āthe New York judiciary. Id. The Supreme Court found that the controversy was not justiciable ā”ā” because it was āmost unlikelyā that the candidate would be running again. Id; at 109. The prospect of a campaign involving the candidate was neither āreal nor immediate,ā the Court explained, so it was āwholly conjectural that another occasion might ariseā where the plaintiff would be prosecuted for distributing leaflets about the candidate. Id. . This Case does not involve a threat of prosecution as clear as in Steffel; Babbitt, or Holder and falls in between the facts of Susan B. Anthony List and Golden, Unlike in Susan B. Anthony List, South Dakota has no history to date of enforcing SDCL § 12-27-16(1)(c) and future South Dakotaā ballot initiatives on campaign finance measures are far less certain to occur than Ohio - candidates who, support the ACA. Unlike in Golden, future South Dakota ballot measures on campaign finance restrictions are more possible than it was for the candidate in Golden who became a judge to run for elected office again. ā”ā” . There is an additional factor in this case that separates IFSās situation: from that of ā” plaintifts in Steffel, Babbitt, Holder, and Susan B. Anthony List: IFS may well not be required to make the disclosure under § 12-27-16(1)(c) for the reasons explained above. That is, IFS may be attempting to challenge as unconstitutional a statutory provision that -does not apply to IFS, depending on tine true riature of IFSās business and what it communicated to solicit contributors and contributions, . This Court concludes that IFS has not at this point sustairied āan injury in fact.ā Whether there is a future Soutli Dakota ballot measure implicating IFSās concerns about campaign finance restrictions is uncertain and subject to conjecture. Whether § 12-27-16(1}(c) even applies to IFS prevents this Court from concluding that the South Dakota ballot measure analysis posted to IFSās website and shared with South Dakota media outlets is āproscribed by the statuteā or, given this Courtās reading of § 12-27-16(1)(c), exposes IFS to a ācredible threat of prosecution thereunder.ā Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 159. Because of IFSās lack of standing and because of related ripeness concerns, this Court denies IFSās motion for judgment on the pleadings or summary judgment. This Court withholds granting Defendantsā motion for summary judgment until and unless Defendants file a definitive statement with this Court that they agree the preliminary injunction can be made permanent with regard to IFSās prior published analysis on IM 24 and Amendment W. If Defendants instead wish to contest whether IFSās analysis is covered by §§ 12-27-1(6) and 12-27-16 and conduct discovery on the subject of whether IFS collects ācontributionsā under § 12-27-1(6), Defendants shall so notify this Court within 21 days hereof. IV. Order Therefore, it is ORDERED that IFSās motion for judgment on the pleadings or alternatively for summary judgment, Doc. 32, is denied. It is further ORDERED that ruling on Defendantsā motion for summary judgment, Doc. 48, is deferred at this time pending notification of whether Defendants resist entry of a permanent injunction against enforcing § 12-27-16 as to IFSās published analysis on IM 24 and Amendment W. DATED this ae day of September, 2019. BY THE COURT: UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE 20 Case Information
- Court
- D.S.D.
- Decision Date
- September 26, 2019
- Status
- Precedential