I65 Supreme Decision
I65 Supreme Decision
I65 Supreme Decision
NO. 2020-IA-01199-SCT
v.
EN BANC.
¶1. In article 15, section 273(3), of our State’s Constitution of 1890, “The people reserve
unto themselves the power to propose and enact constitutional amendments by initiative.”
So important did the drafters of section 273 consider the right of the people to amend their
constitution to be that, in section 273(13), the Legislature is forbidden from in any way
restricting or impairing “the provisions of this section or the powers herein reserved to the
people.”
¶2. The people did not, however, reserve the right unfettered by constitutional
prerequisites that must be met before proposed amendments could be included on the ballot.
An initiative sponsor must collect a number of signatures equal to twelve percent of all votes
cast for Governor in the preceding gubernatorial election. Miss. Const. art. 15, § 273(3). At
issue today is the additional requirement that the “signatures of the qualified electors from
any congressional district shall not exceed one-fifth (1/5) of the total number of signatures
required to qualify an initiative petition for placement upon the ballot.” Id. Section 273
mandates that any signatures from a given congressional district that exceed twenty percent
of the total number of required signatures “shall not be considered” when making the
determination that the proposed amendment may be placed on the ballot. Id.
In the case sub judice, the Petitioners challenge the Secretary of State’s approval of the
point out that Mississippi now has four, not five, congressional districts. They further point
out that four (the number of districts) multiplied by twenty (the maximum percentage of
signatures that may come from any one congressional district) equals only eighty. Therefore,
Petitioners assert, it would have been impossible for the petition seeking to place Initiative
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The text of the initiative and the Attorney General’s letter summarizing it are
attached as Appendixes.
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65 on the ballot to be properly certified as meeting the section 273 prerequisites by the
Secretary of State. As the petition was certified in error, the Petitioners contend that all
¶4. The Mississippi Constitution of 1890 provides two vehicles for amendment. In
addition to the ballot-initiative process at issue today, the Legislature may propose
amendments that are then voted upon by the qualified electors of the State. Miss. Const. art.
15, § 273(2). Nowhere therein does the Constitution allow amendment by the Supreme
Court. See McNeal v. State, 658 So. 2d 1345, 1350 (Miss. 1995) (“[T]he Mississippi
Constitution cannot be amended by either case law or rules of court.”) The Court has written,
State v. Hall, 187 So. 2d 861, 863 (Miss. 1966). Accordingly, today’s question is simple in
the asking, if not in the answering. We must determine whether, as argued by Petitioners,
the reduction in Mississippi’s congressional districts from five to four broke section 273 such
that it must be amended to function again, or whether, as the Secretary of State contends, it
continues to function pursuant to the five congressional districts that existed at the time of
its enactment.
¶5. Unlike the other two branches of government, the courts may not act proactively to
address problems such as the one here. The Mississippi Supreme Court only has jurisdiction,
or power, “as properly belongs to a court of appeals and shall exercise no jurisdiction on
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matters other than those specifically provided by this Constitution or by general law.” Miss.
Const. art. 6, § 146. Article 15, section 273(9), specifically vests us with “original and
exclusive jurisdiction” over all cases in which we are called upon to review the Secretary of
State’s approval of a ballot-initiative petition. Now, more than twenty years after the census
that resulted in the problematic reduction on our congressional representation, after several
ballot initiatives have been attempted both successfully and unsuccessfully, and after several
unsuccessful attempts in the Legislature to address the problem, we find ourselves presented
with the question squarely before us and nowhere to turn but to its answer. “It is our duty
to interpret our Constitution when its meaning is put at issue.” Reeves v. Gunn, 307 So. 3d
436, 437 (¶ 2) (Miss. 2020) (citing Alexander v. State ex rel. Allain, 441 So. 2d 1329, 1333
(Miss. 1983), overruled on other grounds by 5K Farms, Inc. v. Miss. Dep’t of Revenue, 94
So. 3d 221 (Miss. 2012)). “We will not shirk this duty.” Id.
¶6. Remaining mindful of both the November 3, 2020 election results and the clear
language in section 273 seeking to preserve the right of the people to enact changes to their
Constitution, we nonetheless must hold that the text of section 273 fails to account for the
possibility that has become reality in Mississippi, i.e., that our representation in the United
As more fully set forth below, the intent evidenced by the text was to tie the twenty percent
cap to Mississippi’s congressional districts, of which there are now four. In other words, the
loss of congressional representation did, indeed, break section 273 so that, absent
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¶7. Justice Chamberlin cites Myers v. City of McComb, for the proposition that, in
recognizing that section 273 can no longer function as the people designed it, we have
“destroyed th[e] presumption” that the Constitution can order human affairs despite the
occurrence of events unforeseen by its drafters. Chamberlin Diss. Op. ¶ 62 (citing Myers v.
City of McComb, 943 So. 2d 1, 7 (¶ 22) (Miss. 2006)). Justice Maxwell also writes that we
process from working. Maxwell Diss. Op. ¶ 51. We can have no idea what the drafters of
section 273 did or did not foresee. It is wholly within the realm of possibility that the drafters
foresaw or even hoped for a drop in congressional representation that would render the
ballot-initiative process unworkable. The only evidence of the intent of the drafters that
passed the amendment process is the intent found in the text of section 273 itself, and, as
more fully developed below, that text clearly evidences an intent to cap the signatures at
BACKGROUND
¶8. On July 30, 2018, Ashley Durval filed a petition for an initiative measure, enrolled as
Initiative Measure 65 by the office of the former Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann. On
August 7, 2018, the Attorney General’s Office acknowledged receipt of the petition and
certified that it had reviewed the petition. A week later, the Attorney General’s Office sent
the ballot title and a seventy-five-word ballot summary of the ten-page measure to the then-
Secretary of State. According to the Secretary of State’s brief, the initiative supporters
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completed and submitted sufficient signatures complying with the constitutional
¶9. Sometime in January of 2020, the Secretary of State’s Office delivered the initiative
measure to the Legislature. The Legislature proposed a legislative alternative to Initiative 65.
Both were placed on the ballot approved by the State Board of Election Commissioners,
composed of the Governor, the Attorney General, and the Secretary of State in September
of 2020. On October 26, 2020, the Petitioners filed an Emergency Petition before the Court
ANALYSIS
I. The Mississippi Supreme Court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over the
Petitioners’ claims.
¶10. Article 15, section 273(9), reads, “The sufficiency of petitions shall be decided in the
first instance by the Secretary of State, subject to review by the Supreme Court of the state,
which shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction over all such cases.” Pursuant to section
273(9), and section 273(9) alone, of the possible sources of jurisdiction raised by the
Petitioners, the Court has jurisdiction over the Petitioners’ challenge to the sufficiency of the
¶11. The Court does not have jurisdiction to review, affirm, or overturn the “will of the
people” as evidenced by the results on November 3, 2020. The November 2020 results are
not before us. The only matter subject to the Court’s review today is the decision of the
Secretary of State finding that the Initiative 65 petition was sufficient to be placed on the
ballot.
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II. The Petitioners have standing.
¶12. Mayor Mary Hawkins Butler of Madison, Mississippi, filed the instant petition in her
individual and her official capacities. The City of Madison joined her in filing the petition.
Standing is a jurisdictional issue, City of Madison v. Bryan, 763 So. 2d 162, 166 (Miss.
2000); Frisby v. City of Gulfport (In re City of Biloxi), 113 So. 3d 565, 570 (Miss. 2013),
and therefore addresses the fundamental question of the power of courts to act.
[O]ur view is that the issue of “standing” is a jurisdictional question which can
and should be raised by us on our own motion-this is especially true where, as
here, a constitutional interpretation is sought. To conclude otherwise would
permit the “standing” issue to be resolved with the accompanying possibility
that it might be determined adversely to the complainants, thereby leaving this
Court in the awkward posture of having interpreted the constitution for
complainants who had no legal right to invoke the jurisdiction of the Court.
Williams v. Stevens, 390 So. 2d 1012, 1014 (Miss. 1980). “[S]tanding must exist when
litigation is commenced and must continue through all subsequent stages of litigation, or the
case will become moot.” The Hotboxxx, LLC v. City of Gulport, 154 So. 3d 21, 28 (¶ 24)
(Miss. 2015) (alteration in original) (quoting In re City of Biloxi, 113 So. 3d at 572 (¶ 20)).
Before proceeding, we must determine that the petitioners have standing to ask the Court for
redress.
¶13. It is worth reiterating that the Court recently abandoned the “colorable interest”
standard for establishing standing. Reeves, 307 So. 3d at 438-439 (¶ 11) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting Harrison Cnty. v. City of Gulfport (In re City of Gulfport), 557 So.
2d 780 (Miss. 1990)). However, “the traditional articulation of ‘adverse impact’ to describe
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when a party can assert standing to bring a suit” survives. Id. (quoting In re City of
Gulfport, 557 So. 2d at 782). We have described our general law on standing as follows:
City of Picayune v. S. Reg’l Corp., 916 So. 2d 510, 526 (¶ 40) (Miss. 2005).
¶14. The Court settled the issue of Butler’s standing as in individual decades ago. Pursuant
to Power v. Robertson, 130 Miss. 188, 93 So. 769, 773 (1922), “any qualified elector has a
right to question the sufficiency and validity of the petition.” The Secretary of State accepts
¶15. The City of Madison argues that it “is likely to experience an adverse effect different
from any adverse effect suffered by the general public.” The City contends that its zoning
authority will be adversely affected by Initiative 65. We agree that the adverse impact
alleged by the City is different from that likely to be suffered by the general public, a
requirement of adverse-impact standing. Kinney v. Catholic Diocese of Biloxi, Inc., 142 So.
3d 407, 413 (¶ 14) (Miss. 2014). The Secretary of State argues that the City lacks standing
because it does not share in the same procedural injury, i.e., the allegedly improperly certified
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petition, that gives rise to voter standing. However, the Secretary of State does not address
the injury alleged by the City: the curbing of its zoning authority. Because the City alleges
a present, actionable interest, i.e., zoning authority, and an adverse effect different from that
suffered by the general public from the implementation of Initiative 65, which could be
¶16. The Secretary of State raises the doctrine of laches, claiming it bars Butler’s claims.
equitable one—in a way that prejudices the party against whom relief is sought.” Laches,
Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). As such, we have said that the doctrine applies to
bar a suit when “the plaintiff’s unreasonable delay ‘results in injustice or disadvantage to
another.’” Trigg v. Farese, 266 So. 3d 611, 626 (¶ 45) (Miss. 2018) (quoting Bolden v.
Gatewood, 250 Miss. 93, 119, 164 So. 2d 721, 732 (1964)).
¶17. “Laches, in legal significance, is not mere delay, but delay that works a disadvantage
to another.” Comans v. Tapley, 101 Miss. 203, 57 So. 567, 573 (1911) (internal quotation
mark omitted) (quoting Chase et al. v. Chase et al., 37 A. 804, 805 (R.I. 1897)). It is
enforced when a party delays asserting his rights until “the condition of the other party has,
in good faith, become so changed that he cannot be restored to his former state[.]” Id.
(quoting Chase, 37 A. at 805). The Secretary of State offers two arguments regarding
disadvantage, one related to the public and the other related to his office.
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¶18. The Secretary of State has failed to identify in the record any factual support for his
laches argument. Regardless, from the facts provided by Butler, which the Secretary of State
universally accepts, Butler acted within a reasonable time to file suit. Based on what the
Court has been provided, the ballot was only finalized at some time in September when the
State Board of Election Commissioners met. Within sixty days of that decision, Butler filed
suit.
¶19. The Secretary of State’s arguments that he and the public have been legally
after an unreasonable delay. Evanovich v. Hutto, 204 So. 2d 477, 479 (Miss. 1967) (citing
Comans, 57 So. at 567). The argument lacks grounding in republican and democratic
principles. Mississippi’s government can only validly act in ways in which it has been given
power to act by the people of Mississippi. Miss. Const. art. 3, §§ 5–6. Regardless of an
erroneous action taken by her government, the state of Mississippi persists in the organic
state in which her citizens have formed her. Id. Accordingly, it is in our State’s interest to
have erroneous and void actions declared so. See generally Power, 93 So. 769 (holding that
¶20. The Secretary of State’s argument that his office has been disadvantaged by the
Petitioners’ seeking review is likewise without merit. The litigation is brought pursuant to
a specific constitutional right to test the sufficiency of the petition. The Secretary of State
has no vested interest beyond the constitutional conduct of his office. In short, holding that
the Secretary of State properly passed on the sufficiency of the petition or improperly passed
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on the sufficiency of the petition does not change the condition of the Secretary of State’s
office whatsoever. For the foregoing reasons, we find the Secretary of State’s laches
¶21. When faced with a question regarding interpretation of our Constitution, the Court
begins by examining the plain text of our Constitution. The Court “must enforce the articles
of the Constitution as written.” Pro-Choice Miss. v. Fordice, 716 So. 2d 645, 652 (Miss.
1998). We enforce the “plain language” of the Constitution. Thompson v. Att’y Gen. of
Miss., 227 So. 3d 1037, 1041 (¶ 11) (Miss. 2017) (internal quotation mark omitted) (quoting
¶22. When a court is entreated to interpret the terms of a constitution, a court ought to
“bow with respectful submission to its provisions[,]” Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. 264, 377,
(1821), not “take liberties” with its text, National Mutual Insurance Co. v. Tidewater
Transfer Co., 337 U.S. 582, 647 (1949) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting). Our Constitution’s
plain language is to be given its “usual and popular signification and meaning[.]” Town of
Sumner v. Ill. Cent. R.R. Co., 236 Miss. 342, 111 So. 2d 230, 233 (1959) (quoting State v.
Mobile, J. & K.C.R. Co., 86 Miss. 172, 38 So. 732, 735 (1905)). If that meaning lacks
ambiguity, then there is “no reason for legislative or judicial construction.” Dunn v. Yager,
58 So. 3d 1171, 1189 (¶ 46) (Miss. 2011) (internal quotation mark omitted) (quoting Ex
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¶23. Article 15, section 273(3), of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890 provides as
follows:
The people reserve unto themselves the power to propose and enact
constitutional amendments by initiative. An initiative to amend the
Constitution may be proposed by a petition signed over a twelve-month period
by qualified electors equal in number to at least twelve percent (12%) of the
votes for all candidates for Governor in the last gubernatorial election. The
signatures of the qualified electors from any congressional district shall not
exceed one-fifth (1/5) of the total number of signatures required to qualify an
initiative petition for placement upon the ballot. If an initiative petition
contains signatures from a single congressional district which exceed one-fifth
(1/5) of the total number of required signatures, the excess number of
signatures from that congressional district shall not be considered by the
Secretary of State in determining whether the petition qualifies for placement
on the ballot.
Before Mississippi lost a congressional seat following the 2000 census, the above-quoted
provision worked well. The effect of the twenty percent cap, tied to congressional districts,
was that no more—and no less—than twenty percent of the total number of required
signatures must come from each congressional district. The system guaranteed that each
decreased to four. Mauldin v. Branch, 866 So. 2d 429, 431 (¶ 3) (Miss. 2003).
Notwithstanding several furtive fits and starts and a 2009 opinion from the Mississippi
Attorney General recognizing and suggesting a remedy for the issue before us today,
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*1 (Jan. 9, 2009), the Legislature never made any serious attempt to amend section 273 to
¶25. In the tension created by the decrease in representatives and the unchanged text of
section 273(3) lies the Petitioners’ argument. To be sure, it is not novel. In the
the geographic distribution requirement of Section 273 requires that not more
than 20% of the total required number of initiative petition signatures must
come from the last five-district congressional district plan which was is [sic]
effect prior to the adoption of the current four-district plan.[3] It would be
mathematically impossible to satisfy the requirements of Section 273 using just
four districts.
Miss. Att’y Gen. Op., No. 2009-00001, 2009 WL 367638, Hosemann, at *3 (Jan. 9, 2009)
(emphasis added). The Petitioners contend that, indeed, the Secretary of State’s approval of
the Initiative 65 ballot measure was in error because, with four congressional districts, it is
impossible that the Secretary of State followed the Constitutional directive to disregard
signatures of qualified electors in excess of twenty percent of the total from any one district.
2
From 2003 to 2015, at least six attempts were made by individual legislators to
amend section 273 to reflect the new reality of four congressional district. None made it out
of committee.
3
We note here that the state of Mississippi has not adopted a congressional districting
plan since 1991. It has failed, over the last twenty years, to account for the loss of a
congressional district and has never adopted a four district plan. The present four-district
plan was adopted by a three-judge panel of the federal United States District Court for the
Southern District of Mississippi when the Legislature failed to act.
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A. The common and constitutional meanings of “congressional
district” support the Petitioners’ position.
¶26. No party disputes the fact that, in elections for the United States House of
and vote to send four representatives to Washington, D.C., to represent them. It is important
to note that the four districts being used were not created by any state actor. Despite the clear
Senate has, to date, drawn new congressional districts. See Miss. Code Ann. §§ 5-3-121, -
123 (Rev. 2019). Mississippians elect their four representatives from districts drawn by
federal courts. See Branch v. Smith, 538 U.S. 254 (2003); Mauldin, 866 So. 2d at 431 (¶
3).
¶27. Petitioners argue, and we agree, that the plain language of section 273 ties the
Again, we enforce the “plain language” of the Constitution. Thompson, 227 So. 3d at 1041
(¶ 11) (internal quotation mark omitted) (quoting Johnson, 86 So. 3d at 244 (¶ 3)). “The
construction of a constitutional section is of course ascertained from the plain meaning of the
words and terms used within it.” Ex parte Dennis, 334 So. 2d at 373 (citing State Teachers’
¶28. When searching for a popular or usual meaning of a term, the Court often turns to
dictionaries for guidance. See Watson v. Oppenheim, 301 So. 3d 37, 42 (Miss. 2020) (citing
Lawson v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc., 75 So. 3d 1024, 1028 (Miss. 2011)). Our goal is to analyze
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and understand the text as an ordinary speaker would understand the language; in short, we
analyze the text of our Constitution as the people who ratified it and are governed by it would
understand it. Amy Coney Barrett, Congressional Insiders and Outsiders, 84 U. Chi. L. Rev.
¶29. The definition itself is simple, is unambiguous, and is not open to multiple
United States House of Representatives. The definition identifies two characteristics: (1) it
defines geography of a state, and (2) it refers to the present-tense act of electing
geographic division of a state that now elects a representative. It follows that some other
defined geographical area, such as a former congressional district, that does not elect a
¶30. There are only four areas in the state that meet the definition because Mississippi only
existed since 2002. The number of congressional districts is not directly decided by any of
the states of our nation though but rather through the application of the Permanent
Reapportionment Act of 1929. 2 U.S.C. § 2a. In 2000, the United States House of
Representatives reallocated the statutorily limited 435 seats; Mississippi’s allocation was
decreased from five seats to four seats. As more fully discussed below, the federal injunction
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decried by Justice Maxwell in his dissent came after Mississippi’s reduction in congressional
representation.
¶31. We are persuaded that, when section 273 ties the twenty percent cap to qualified
exist at the time a petition is presented for approval as opposed to the congressional districts
as they existed in 1992. The Secretary of State argues that the Petitioners are asking the
Court to insert the word “current” before the words “congressional district” in section 273(3).
Petitioners counter that the ordinary meaning of the phrase includes the understanding that
they change over time. Petitioners point to the repeated use of “any county” in the
Mississippi Constitution of 1890, see, e.g., Miss. Const. art 5, §§ 135, 139, 140; art. 6, § 171;
art. 8, § 206; art. 14, § 260. They point out that Mississippi county lines have changed, and
new counties have been created since 1890. We agree that no one interpreting the pertinent
sections would interpret them to mean the counties as they existed in 1890. It is the nature
of counties and county lines that they can change over time.
¶32. Given the nature of proportional representation that exists in the United States House
of Representatives, we find the changing nature of congressional districts is even more a part
of the meaning—in both common understanding and law—of the phrase. Article I, section
Representatives. It provides for the census, which is to be taken every ten years, and based
upon the results of which each state was to be apportioned representation in the House. U.S.
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Const. art. II, § 2. Since the beginning of our constitutional republic, the very concept of
among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number
of persons in each State . . . .” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 2. The Fourteenth Amendment
was ratified in 1868. Id. As shown by the Constitution as a whole, to contend that the
Fourteenth Amendment froze representation in place as of 1868 would strain the bounds of
credulity and defy the common and legal understandings of how proportional representation
works.
representation. Mississippi Code Section 5-3-121 (Rev. 2019) mandates the creation of a
redistrict, according to constitutional standards, the United States congressional districts for
the state of Mississippi” every ten years following census results. Miss. Code Ann. § 5-3-123
(Rev. 2019). In the event of change of representation in Congress, Mississippi Code Section
23-15-1039 (Rev. 2018) provides a stopgap procedure for electing people to Congress until
redistricting occurs. When article 8, section 213A, of the Mississippi Constitution was
adopted, the drafters acknowledged the fluid nature of districts by including the words “now
existing.” Mississippi Constitution article 8, section 213A, provided, when it was adopted,
“There shall be appointed one (1) member of such board from each congressional district of
the state as now existing . . . .” (Emphasis added.) It is telling that the drafters of the original
version of our section 213A acknowledged the fluid nature of congressional districts and the
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need to explicitly provide that, at the time, the section 213A districts would remain static
¶34. Pursuant to the foregoing reasoning, we reject the Secretary of State’s argument that
agreeing with the Petitioners requires the Court to insert the word “current” into the text of
section 273, and we reject Justice Chamberlin’s argument that section 273(3) mandates by
its own terms alone the use of the 1992 congressional districts. The changing, evolving
nature of proportional representation is simply too much a part of the common and legal
in Mississippi law that representation and districts change over time combined with the
origins of proportional representation in the United States, we would be in far more danger
of editing the text of section 273 if, as urged by Justice Chamberlin, we held that it means
¶35. Justice Chamberlin accuses us of disabling the Constitution, the very thing we all
agree we have the duty of interpreting. Chamberlin Diss. Op. ¶ 63. We do no such thing.
Drafted as it is, section 273(3) disables itself in being unworkable with fewer than five
congressional districts in Mississippi. It is the dissents, rather, that would disable part of the
constitution by amending it so that the twenty percent cap requirement is tied not to
Chamberlin Diss. Op. ¶ 74 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Myers, 943 So. 2d
process that contains prerequisites with which petitions must comply but with which
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compliance is no longer possible. The people of Mississippi, when they ratified the ballot-
initiative process, ratified all of it including the twenty percent cap. No interpretation of the
phrase “congressional district” allows it to include a geographical area that exists for reasons
cap per congressional district in a four-district Mississippi expansive enough to allow section
¶36. Pursuant to the foregoing reasoning, we do not consider the use of the phrase
quotation mark omitted) (quoting Ex parte Dennis, 334 So. 2d at 373). However, it is worth
noting that if there were ambiguity, then interpreting it as urged by the Secretary of State
would prohibit an interpretation that harmonizes the whole of section 273. “[C]onstitutional
provisions should be read so that each is given maximum effect and a meaning in harmony
with that of each other.” Dye v. State ex rel. Hale, 507 So. 2d 332, 342 (Miss. 1987) (citing
St. Louis & San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Benton Cnty., 96 So. 689 (Miss. 1923)). Pursuant to
section 273(3), “The signatures of the qualified electors from any congressional district shall
not exceed one-fifth (1/5) of the total number of signatures required to qualify an initiative
petition for placement upon the ballot.” According to the quoted language, the signatures in
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support of a ballot initiative must come from qualified electors of the district in which they
are counted.
¶37. Petitioners contend, and we agree, that electors cannot aver to be qualified electors
elector requirement, signers of a ballot-initiative petition must aver that they are qualified
electors of a congressional district. Miss. Code Ann. § 23-17-19 (Rev. 2018). Petitioners
point to signatories from Simpson County to make their point. In an exemplar petition page,
signers from Simpson County left their congressional district number blank. Petitioners also
point out that in 2000, Simpson County would have been in the Fourth Congressional District
but that it is now in the Third. Asking Simpson County signers to aver that they remain
electors in the Fourth Congressional District would be asking them to aver to, at best, an
inaccuracy. Even more damaging to the Secretary of State’s interpretation are electors who
live in areas of the state that, from 1992-2002, would have been qualified electors of the old
Fifth Congressional District. None of those qualified electors vote in the Fifth Congressional
District anymore because it does not exist. They cannot truthfully aver to be qualified
¶38. The preceding analysis illustrates the disharmony that results in interpreting the phrase
“congressional districts” used in section 273(3) to have any other meaning than the actual
the Court is to avoid interpretations that fail to harmonize and give effect to the whole
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¶39. In resorting to Mississippi Code Section 23-15-1037 (Rev. 2018) in the face of the
qualified-elector problem, Justice Chamberlin undermines his own argument that section
273(3) commands the use of the 1992 congressional districts. Justice Chamberlin takes the
position that one’s status as a qualified elector is conveyed not by what congressional district
1037—even if Section 23-15-1037 ceases to be the law. Chamberlin Diss. Op. ¶ 75.
of the 1992 congressional districts. Chamberlin Diss. Op. ¶ 75. We cannot accept his
districts when nothing in the wording of section 273(3) calls for using anything other than
¶40. To reiterate, we base our holding on the wording of section 273(3) and the undeniable
reality that Mississippi elects its congressmen from four congressional districts.
Accordingly, any foray into the effects of a statute purporting to draw five congressional
districts is unnecessary. However, the Secretary of State and Justice Maxwell contend that,
for purposes of state law including section 273(3), Mississippi still has five congressional
districts. Both cite Section 23-15-1037, wherein the old five Congressional districts are
delineated. The Secretary of State argues that, while the federal-court injunction that defines
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Mississippi’s four congressional districts for purposes of electing representatives prohibits
the state from using it to define congressional districts for that purpose, it does nothing to
prohibit the state from using it to define congressional districts for other purposes.
¶41. The Secretary of State’s and Justice Maxwell’s arguments face problems, though.
First, we reach the conclusion above, pursuant to our duty to interpret the Constitutional text
according to its plain meaning and to harmonize its parts, that the phrase “congressional
district” as used in section 273(3) means, well, congressional district. It does not mean “old
congressional districts” or “five districts that the Legislature may establish.” The statute
cannot trump the Constitution. Pickering v. Langston Law Firm, P.A., 88 So. 3d 1269,
¶42. Second, by operation of state law itself, Section 23-15-1037 no longer establishes
Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-1039 (Rev. 2018). In the above-quoted statute, the law anticipates
the possibility that Mississippi’s congressional representation can increase or decrease. The
moment Mississippi lost a representative following the 2000 census, Section 23-15-1039, in
the event of a congressional election without redistricting, would have activated to provide
an alternative, at-large method for electing the remaining four representatives. Accordingly,
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for a reason wholly separate from the federal injunction so severely decried by Justice
which the twenty percent requirement of section 273(3) is explicitly tied. Yet the demise of
Section 23-15-1037 at the hands of Section 23-15-1039 is not yet complete. Section 23-15-
1039 contains language explicitly providing that it would only be in effect “before the
districts have changed to conform to the new apportionment.” The statute does not require
that the districts be changed by the Mississippi Legislature; it requires only that they be
changed. Unarguably, as we sit in consideration of the case before us today, they have been
changed. Mauldin, 866 So. 2d at 436. Accordingly, as a matter of Mississippi law, Section
23-15-1037 is not just once removed from effect in setting Mississippi’s congressional
¶43. The unworkable nature of the Secretary of State’s argument can be illustrated with a
hypothetical. Consider the following hypothetical statute that the Legislature might have
(a) The State of Mississippi is hereby divided into four (4) congressional
districts below:
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FOURTH DISTRICT: The Fourth Congressional District shall
be composed of the following counties and portions of counties
....
....
To consider having one set of congressional districts for the purpose of electing
representatives to Congress and a different set of congressional districts for another purpose
other than electing members of Congress illustrates the semantic mountain the Secretary of
State must climb to prevail. The Legislature cannot legislate away reality, and the Court
cannot decree away reality. The text of section 273(3) ties the twenty percent signature cap
districts as otherwise set by the Legislature. The Secretary of State argues that the five
congressional districts once established by Section 23-15-1037 “may be used for anything
delineate the borders that determine where qualified electors who vote for a particular
congressional seat reside, they become, well, just districts. To hold that the old five
congressional districts remain congressional districts even though they no longer function to
define the districts from which the voters of Mississippi elect their congressional
¶44. In writing, “The reason the five congressional districts set forth in Section 23-15-1037
have not been used for twenty years to elect representatives to Congress is because
24
Mississippi has been enjoined by a panel of three federal district judges from doing so[,]”
Justice Maxwell’s dissent is simply wrong. Maxwell Diss. Op. ¶ 56 (citing Smith v. Clark,
189 F. Supp, 2d 548, 559 (S.D. Miss. 2002)). Mississippi lost a representative due to the
results of the 2000 census and the Permanent Reapportionment Act of 1929 before the
federal panel drew new districts for Mississippi in the face of Mississippi’s failure to do so.
Mauldin, 866 So. 2d at 432 (¶ 5). As set forth above, Section 23-15-1039 then activated to
replace the five Section 1037 districts with one statewide, at-large district that until such time
conclusion, Maxwell Diss. Op. ¶ 59, but it comes from the plain language of the statute
quoted above. The mystery is not in how we reach the conclusion that Section 23-15-1039
changed Mississippi’s congressional map when the state lost a representative, but it lies
instead in how it can be denied that it did so. Following the loss of our fifth representative,
under no circumstances short of regaining the fifth seat would Mississippians ever again go
to the polls to elect representatives to Congress from the five Section 23-15-1037 districts.
Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-1039 (“[I]f the number of representatives is decreased, then the
whole number shall be chosen by the electors of the state at large.”) Even if the federal court
had not issued the injunction, Mississippi by operation of state law would no longer have five
congressional districts. It would have one statewide, at-large district. In addition, and as also
noted above, Section 23-15-1039’s wording does not attempt the setting of new
25
acknowledge, in State law, redistricting by federal injunction. Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-
1039 (“and before the districts have changed to conform to the new apportionment . . . .”).
¶45. It would be interesting to know what the Secretary of State would conclude about the
continued functioning of section 273(3) had Mississippi drawn its own new four-district map.
Justice Maxwell goes as far as agreeing that section 273(3) would “no longer be in harmony”
with a new four-district map. Maxwell Diss. Op. ¶ 58 n.6. If one concludes that Section 23-
15-1037 saves section 273(3) but that a new statute that draws a new four-district map for
Mississippi would render it inoperable, then the disagreement is not with our interpretation
of section 273(3). It is instead with the proposition that Mississippi’s representation in the
United States House of Representatives can be set by federal law and that the federal
injunction in absence of state action can draw the lines. Those are bones one must pick with
Article I, Section 2, of and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the
Permanent Reapportionment Act of 1929, and a unanimous United States Supreme Court.
¶46. Although Justice Maxwell sees the issue before us as one purely of state law, Maxwell
Diss. Op. ¶ 51, federal law decides how many representatives Mississippi sends to Congress.
As long as Mississippi has fewer than five congressional districts, it can draw for itself no
map of congressional districts that complies with both the federal apportionment of
representation that requires four districts and section 273(3) that requires five for all of its
provisions to function.
CONCLUSION
26
¶47. In the end, to agree with Justice Chamberlin’s conclusion that the text of section
existed when section 273(3) was ratified in 1992 would require agreement with two ideas
that cannot be sustained. First, we would have to be able to conclude that, in an alternate
world where Mississippi retained five congressional districts but the district lines had
changed, the ballot-initiative process would continue nonetheless to proceed under the 1992
district lines. The Secretary of State does not attempt to so argue in its brief. At oral
argument, counsel for the Secretary of State declined to agree with such a conclusion.
Nothing in the text of section 273 or anywhere else supports such a conclusion. Justice
Chamberlin does not explain why the cap he reads as requiring the provision to be enforced
pursuant to the 1992 districts would not work just as well with five different districts or, for
that matter, more than five districts. Chamberlin Diss. Op. ¶ 72. Most importantly, pursuant
interpretation of section 273(3) can only give effect to the whole of section 237(3) if Section
23-15-1037 never changes. Second, as detailed in the preceding paragraph, we would have
to be able to conclude that Mississippi has two separate sets of congressional districts—one
for electing representatives to Congress and one set of congressional districts that would exist
for purposes other than electing representatives. The latter faulty conclusion would also
apply to Justice Maxwell’s position that Mississippi continues to have five congressional
districts pursuant to Section 23-15-1037. Both defy reason and reality; we can agree with
neither.
27
¶48. Pursuant to the duty imposed on us by article 15, section 273(9), of the Mississippi
Constitution, we hold that the petition submitted to the Secretary of State seeking to place
Initiative 65 on the ballot for the November 3, 2020, general election was insufficient.
Because Initiative 65 was placed on the ballot without meeting the section 273(3)
prerequisites for doing so, it was placed on the ballot in violation of the Mississippi
Constitution. Whether with intent, by oversight, or for some other reason, the drafters of
section 273(3) wrote a ballot-initiative process that cannot work in a world where Mississippi
has fewer than five representatives in Congress. To work in today’s reality, it will need
¶49. We grant the petition, reverse the Secretary of State’s certification of Initiative 65, and
¶50. GRANTED.
RANDOLPH, C.J., KING, P.J., BEAM, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ., CONCUR.
MAXWELL, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED IN
PART BY CHAMBERLIN, J. CHAMBERLIN, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY KITCHENS, P.J.; MAXWELL, J. JOINS IN
PART.
¶51. With respect to the majority, this case involves a pure question of Mississippi
pressed to see how a federal court’s almost twenty-year-old injunction, aimed solely at
28
constitutional citizen-based ballot-initiative process. But that is exactly what the majority
is saying.
¶52. The majority confidently and correctly points out that “[n]owhere therein does the
Constitution allow amendment by the Supreme Court.” Maj. Op. ¶ 4 (citing McNeal v. State,
658 So. 2d 1345, 1350 (Miss. 1995)). Yet the majority does just that—stepping completely
outside of Mississippi law—to employ an interpretation that not only amends but judicially
kills Mississippi’s citizen initiative process. While the majority admits that our Constitution
should not be “expanded or extended beyond its settled intent and meaning by any court[,]”
it actively injects a federal court’s injunction into our Constitution—an injunction that was
in no shape, form, or fashion aimed at the initiative process. Maj. Op. ¶ 4 (emphasis added)
(quoting State v. Hall, 187 So. 2d 861, 863 (Miss. 1966)). And in doing so, the majority
rejects the existing harmony between our Constitution’s plain text and current Mississippi
statutory law. I suggest the majority should have heeded its own words that constitutional
changes should not be made by courts but “by those authorized so to do by the instrument
itself—the people.” Maj. Op. ¶ 4 (quoting Hall, 187 So. 2d at 863). But it has not. And
through its actions, not only is this particular initiative dead, but so is Mississippi’s citizen-
initiative process.4
¶53. Now, based on the majority’s holding, this constitutional ballot-initiative process may
only be revived, or more accurately, be proposed by a legislative push. Because I do not join
in the majority’s stance, I dissent. Based on the Constitution’s plain text and Mississippi’s
4
This opinion does not speak to the merits of the current initiative or the wisdom or
folly of having a citizen-based initiative process.
29
unchanged statutory law, I disagree that the Secretary of State unconstitutionally placed
¶54. The question before us concerns the constitutional requirement that “[t]he signatures
of the qualified electors from any congressional district shall not exceed one-fifth (1/5) of
the total number of signatures required to qualify an initiative petition for placement upon
the ballot.” Miss. Const. art. 15, § 273(3). In answering whether then-Secretary of State
Delbert Hosemann properly certified the ballot initiative, the majority looks to two
sources—(1) the dictionary definition of “congressional district” and (2) a federal injunction
from a three-judge court. From these sources, it concludes Mississippi’s Constitution must
use the four federally drawn congressional districts for ballot-initiative purposes. Thus, in
the majority’s view, the amendment mechanism in section 273 “no longer functions.” Maj.
Op. ¶ 6.
¶55. But this case does not involve a federal election, much less a federal question. Nor
is the Supremacy Clause or federal preemption at hand. We are called solely to interpret
suggest we look to Mississippi law. With this novel approach in mind, I point out that under
¶56. Section 23-15-1037, which lays out the five districts, has not changed since section
273 was added to Mississippi’s Constitution. And there have been zero changes to the five
districts listed in Section 23-15-1037, even after the number of seats in the United States
30
House of Representatives allocated to Mississippi was reduced from five to four following
¶57. The reason the five congressional districts set forth in Section 23-15-1037 have not
been used for twenty years to elect representatives to Congress is because Mississippi has
been enjoined by a panel of three federal judges from doing so. Smith v. Clark, 189 F. Supp.
2d 548, 559 (S.D. Miss. 2002), aff’d sub nom. Branch v. Smith, 538 U.S. 254, 123 S. Ct.
1429, 155 L. Ed. 2d 407 (2003), and amended sub nom. Smith v. Hosemann, 852 F. Supp.
2d 757 (S.D. Miss. 2011).5 And while I have no reason to disagree with or decry this federal
order, I do have to point out that this federal injunction deals only with federal congressional
elections. Id. It does not consider, speak to, or in any way preclude Mississippi’s ability to
continue to use the five statutory congressional districts for other purposes—including the
Secretary of State’s use of these five districts to determine if section 273(3)’s signature
¶58. Indeed, the continued functionality of section 273 was not even remotely on the
federal judges’ radar back in 2002 when they looked at federal-election districts. And these
judges would not have touched it with a ten-foot pole even if it had been. That is because
“[a] federal court may not interpret the State Constitution.” Pro-Choice Miss. v. Fordice,
716 So. 2d 645, 665 (Miss. 1998). Instead, it is this Court that “reserve[s] the ‘sole and
absolute right’ to interpret the Mississippi Constitution.” Id. at 665-66 (quoting Penick v.
5
Under this injunction, Mississippi must “use the congressional redistricting plan
adopted by this [federal] court in its order of February 4, 2002, in all succeeding
congressional primary and general elections for the State of Mississippi thereafter, until the
State of Mississippi produces a constitutional congressional redistricting plan . . . .” Id.
31
State, 440 So. 2d 547, 551 (Miss. 1983)); see also, e.g., Learmonth v. Sears, Roebuck &
Co., 631 F.3d 724, 739 (5th Cir. 2011) (certifying a question of Mississippi constitutional law
to this Court). And after reviewing our Constitution’s text and Mississippi’s current statutory
law—Section 23-15-1037—it is obvious and beyond debate that both contemplate five
congressional districts.6
¶59. I also do not follow the majority’s logic that Mississippi Code Section 23-15-1039
(Rev. 2018) somehow erases these five geographical districts. Like the federal injunction,
this section obviously addresses what to do until the Legislature redraws Mississippi’s
congressional districts. Again, while the majority wrongly insists these statutory districts
have changed by virtue of the federal injunction, under Mississippi law, it is the Legislature
that draws Mississippi’s congressional districts. Miss. Code Ann. § 5-3-123 (Rev. 2019).
And it has been widely documented that the Legislature—which is statutorily tasked with
redrawing these districts—has failed to do so for nearly two decades. Because this case
involves absolutely no question of federal law, we need look no further than Mississippi law.
And under Mississippi law—including section 273—the Legislature has yet to change
Mississippi’s congressional districts from five to four. Just crack open the Mississippi Code.
6
The majority poses a “what if” question, expressing particular interest in my
“hypothetical” view of the continued functionality of section 273(3) had the Legislature
redrawn the districts in Section 23-15-1037 to reflect four, instead of five, districts. Maj.
Op. ¶ 43. Of course, this is not the scenario this court is facing. Let’s be clear—we are
facing five statutory districts. But if the Legislature had acted and amended Section 23-15-
1037 but not pushed a successful amendment of section 273(3), that section would no longer
be in harmony with the statutory congressional districts in Section 23-15-1037. But again,
that is not the situation we face. Instead, we are looking squarely at a Mississippi
constitutional provision and a Mississippi statutory law that both involve five districts.
32
Section 23-15-1037 is still right there on the books, and the five districts remain unchanged.
See Appendix C (containing the full and current text of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-1037).
¶60. Even so, the majority finds this view “unworkable.” Maj. Op. ¶ 43. But the Attorney
General, the Secretary of State, and the majority of voters who passed Initiative 65 and two
prior initiatives believe that it works just fine. Indeed, the five-district view is the only one
in which section 273(3) works post-2000 census. Instead of looking outside of Mississippi
law to bury section 273(3), I agree with Justice Chamberlin7 that the proper course is to
interpret “any congressional district” consistent with the one-fifth requirement of section
273(3) and Mississippi Code Section 23-15-1037. For the reasons addressed above, the
Petitioners simply cannot show the Secretary of State acted unconstitutionally by relying on
¶62. This Court has stated that “the constitution is presumed capable of ordering human
affairs decades beyond the time of ratification, under circumstances beyond the prescience
of the draftsmen.” Myers v. City of McComb, 943 So. 2d 1,7 (Miss. 2006) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting Alexander v. State ex rel. Allain, 441 So. 2d 1329, 1334 (Miss.
1983), overruled on other grounds by 5K Farms, Inc. v. Miss. Dep’t of Revenue, 94 So. 3d
7
I agree with the gist of Justice Chamberlin’s opinion that Mississippi’s ballot
initiative is not broken, particularly not by the federal judicial panel’s injunction. But I do
not join footnote 8 of his opinion.
33
221 (Miss. 2012)). The majority, holding that article 15, section 273(3), of the Mississippi
Constitution is unworkable, has destroyed this presumption and has rendered a provision of
the constitution incapable of ordering any affair, human or otherwise, beyond a time not long
after its ratification. Therefore, as to the majority’s holdings regarding article 15, section
¶63. The people of Mississippi empowered the judiciary with interpretation of the state
constitution. See Myers, 943 So. 2d at 5 (Miss. 2006) (“It is universally accepted that the
highest judicial tribunal of a state is the paramount authority for the interpretation of that
state’s constitution, subject only to the Constitution of the United States.” (quoting
Alexander, 441 So. 2d at 1333)). In attempting to exercise this responsibility, however, the
majority disables the very thing it was designed to interpret and enforce.
¶64. As indicated by the majority, in 1992, the Legislature adopted a resolution that
proposed to establish the people’s right to propose and enact initiatives to amend the
constitution. S. Con. Res. 516, 1992 Miss. Laws ch. 715. This measure was approved by the
voters in the November 1992 election and was then enshrined in article 15, section 273(3),
of the Mississippi Constitution. As enacted in 1992, section 273(3) reflects the state’s
¶65. At issue here is the third subsection within section 273. It defines the initiative
process and the signature requirements for placing initiatives on the ballot during a statewide
election:
The people reserve unto themselves the power to propose and enact
constitutional amendments by initiative. An initiative to amend the
34
Constitution may be proposed by a petition signed over a twelve-month period
by qualified electors equal in number to at least twelve percent (12%) of the
votes for all candidates for Governor in the last gubernatorial election. The
signatures of the qualified electors from any congressional district shall not
exceed one-fifth (1/5) of the total number of signatures required to qualify an
initiative petition for placement upon the ballot. If an initiative petition
contains signatures from a single congressional district which exceed one-fifth
(1/5) of the total number of required signatures, the excess number of
signatures from that congressional district shall not be considered by the
Secretary of State in determining whether the petition qualifies for placement
on the ballot.
Miss. Const. art. 15, § 273(3). The majority recognizes the sound principle that “[o]ur
Constitution’s plain language is to be given its ‘usual and popular signification and
meaning.’” Maj. Op. ¶ 22 (quoting Town of Sumner v. Ill. Cent. R. Co., 236 Miss. 342, 111
So. 2d 230, 233 (1959)). The plain language of section 273 when viewed as a whole,
(“Constitutional rights are enshrined with the scope they were understood to have when the
people adopted them whether or not future legislatures or future judges think that scope too
broad.” (citing District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 128 S. Ct. 2783, 171 L. Ed. 2d
637 (2008)).
¶66. The majority ultimately concludes that section 273 is unworkable. As support for its
holding, it announces that the term “congressional district” found within section 273(3) can
only refer to the four congressional districts that Mississippi has used since 2002 to elect
members to the United States House of Representatives. To achieve this definition, the Court
rightly looks to the dictionary meaning of “congressional district” to find that “congressional
35
district” means a place where citizens of a state elect members to serve in the United States
House of Representatives to ultimately represent the will of those citizens in Congress. See
Maj. Op. ¶ 28. Thus, as understood by the majority, section 273(3)’s use of “congressional
district” can only be the congressional districts Mississippi uses to elect, and has used to elect
since 2002 pursuant to the federal injunction issued in Smith v. Clark, 189 F. Supp. 2d 548
¶67. Further, the majority looks to a 2009 Attorney General opinion that it, presumably,
believes provides persuasive support for its theory that section 273(3) is broken. Maj. Op.
¶ 24. Indeed, the Attorney General did note that “[i]t would be mathematically impossible
to satisfy the requirements of Section 273 using just four districts.” Miss. Att’y Gen. Op.,
No. 2009-00001, 2009 WL 367638, Hosemann, at *3 (Jan. 9, 2009). While this Court is
certainly not bound by the Attorney General’s interpretation of section 273(3), it is curious
that the majority, when turning to the opinion, fails to mention the Attorney General’s other
(and ultimate) conclusion in the same opinion: “[i]t is likewise our opinion that the
geographic distribution requirement of Section 273 requires that not more than 20% of the
total required number of initiative petition signatures must come from the last five-district
congressional district plan which was in effect prior to the adoption of the current four-
district plan.” Id. Thus, while not binding, the Attorney General’s actual position supports
the reading of section 273(3) discussed in this separate opinion that utilizes the five
congressional districts as they existed in 1992 rather than a reading that unnecessarily
36
¶68. Though the majority’s method of defining “congressional district” is not unreasonable,
its reliance on the definition of “congressional district” in complete isolation and to the
exclusion of the historical and textual context surrounding the adoption of section 273(3) is
cause for concern.8 When words within the constitution are considered independently and
strictly, those words “do not of themselves immovably fetter the sense or intention” of the
constitution. Moore v. Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp., 155 Miss. 818, 125 So. 411, 413
(1930). Instead, when we interpret the Mississippi Constitution, “we seek the intent of the
draftsmen, keeping in mind, ‘the object desired to be accomplished and the evils sought to
be prevented or remedied.’” Myers, 943 So. 2d at 7 (Miss. 2006) (emphasis added) (internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting Alexander, 441 So. 2d at 1334)). The Court must also
“read and enforce the Constitution in the manner which best fits its language and best serves
our state today.” Dye v. State ex rel. Hale, 507 So. 2d 332, 342 (Miss. 1987) (citing
Alexander, 441 So. 2d at 1334, 1339). And “constitutional provisions should be read so that
each is given maximum effect and a meaning in harmony with that of each other.” Id. (citing
St. Louis & San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Benton Cnty., 132 Miss. 325, 330, 96 So. 689, 690
(1923)).
8
The majority’s interpretation is like a well-manicured lawn whose caretaker focuses
on one isolated blade of grass—here, the term “congressional district”—while ignoring the
weed that is context. Interpretation should involve a joint effort between reading the actual
words and the context in which they are found. The majority’s reading thrusts a
constitutional provision into chronic limbo, creating a transient or temporary constitutional
right. To be blunt, it effectively slams the lid on the initiative process. This surely cannot
be the intent of the Legislature and the people. As a court, we should nip this interpretation
in the bud.
37
¶69. First, section 273(3) includes a one-fifth (1/5) qualifier within the text following
“congressional district.” Miss. Const. art. 15, § 273(3). Section 273(3) prohibits the
Secretary of State from considering in the sufficiency determination the number of submitted
petition signatures received from any congressional district that exceeds one-fifth of the total
number of required signatures needed, i.e., at least twelve percent of the total votes cast in
the last gubernatorial election. Id. (“The signatures of the qualified electors from any
congressional district shall not exceed one-fifth (1/5) of the total number of signatures
required to qualify an initiative petition for placement upon the ballot.”). In 1992, when the
congressional districts. See Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-1037 (Rev. 2018). Section 273(3)
reflects this reality in the denominator of the fraction it uses to cut off consideration of
petition signatures. Therefore, one-fifth in section 273(3) qualifies section 273(3)’s other
term, “congressional district,” to reflect section 273(3)’s framework that, as was clearly
intended, utilizes five congressional districts. Thus, contrary to the majority’s conclusion
that section “273(3) ties the twenty percent signature cap to Mississippi’s congressional
Legislature[,]” the one-fifth cap ties section 273(3)’s use of the term “congressional district”
¶70. As Justice Scalia once wrote, “[i]n textual interpretation, context is everything, and
the context of the Constitution tells us not to expect nit-picking detail, and to give words and
phrases an expansive rather than narrow interpretation—though not an interpretation that the
38
language will not bear.” Antonin Scalia, Common-Law Courts in a Civil-Law System: The
Role of United States Federal Courts in Interpreting the Constitution and Laws, in A Matter
of Interpretation: Federal Courts and the Law 3, 37 (Amy Gutmann ed., 1997). Today the
district” as set out in section 273. However, the context in which section 273(3) was passed,
along with its purpose of providing the people with a means to amend the constitution by
initiative, should not be ignored and indeed supports an expansive reading of section 273(3)
that results in its continued validity rather than its demise and honors the intent of both the
Legislature and the voters of the state of Mississippi who adopted the amendment.
¶71. Second, it is undisputed that the initiative-petition process has resulted in multiple
successful amendments to our constitution since redistricting at the turn of the century.
presented it is the court’s ‘duty to adopt a construction of the statutes which purges the
Jackson, Mary Miller, Donald Campbell, et al., Mississippi Practice Series: Encyclopedia
of Mississippi Law § 68:75 (2d ed.), Westlaw (database updated Oct. 2020) (quoting Univ.
of Miss. Med. Ctr. v. Robinson, 876 So. 2d 337, 340 (Miss. 2004)). Today, the majority opts
instead for a construction that purges section 273(3) of any validity rather than choosing the
interpretation that leaves the amendment in force and allows the people to exercise the right
reserved unto them—to amend our constitution by initiative. Further, it stretches the bounds
of reason to conclude that the Legislature in 1992, when drafting section 273(3), would have
39
placed a poison pill within the language of the provision that would allow the provision and
the right of the people to amend the constitution through initiative to be eviscerated at the
¶72. The majority also discusses the perceived significance of the Legislature not placing
a “now existing” clause within section 273(3) to explicitly tie the congressional districts to
the five that Mississippi used prior to the Smith injunction. Maj. Op. ¶ 33. The plain
language of section 273(3), however, reveals that this point is a red herring since no such
clause is necessary to tie “congressional district” to the five that existed in 1992 when the
provision also clearly contemplates section 273(3)’s use of five districts in its cap on
consideration of signatures from any one district. See Cellular S., Inc. v. BellSouth
Telecomms., LLC, 214 So. 3d 208, 212 (Miss. 2017) (“It is our job to determine legislative
intent from the language of the act as a whole, and not to separate from the statutory herd one
part alone.” (citing Wilson v. State, 194 So. 3d 855, 872 (Miss. 2016)). Indeed, it is curious
that the majority recognizes via hypothetical that the term “congressional district” as used
in section 273(3) could be qualified by a “now existing” clause while, at the same time, it
ignores the one-fifth language qualifying “congressional district” that is explicitly mentioned
¶73. To be clear, I have no quarrel with how the dictionary defines terms or that the
review, however, it is apparent that this conclusion is drawn without regard to either the
40
immediate surrounding text of section 273(3) or the circumstances of the provision’s history.9
I therefore submit that section 273(3) is workable because it commands the use of the five
congressional districts as they existed in 1992. This reading is the only way to interpret
section 273(3) that gives effect to every word of section 273(3)—not just the isolated and
limited phrase “congressional district”—and gives credence to the purpose of section 273(3),
which is to reserve in the citizens of this state the ability to amend our constitution by a clear
initiative process. See Dye, 507 So. 2d at 342 (citing Alexander, 441 So. 2d at 1334, 1339).
¶74. Indeed, the “object desired,” Myers, 943 So. 2d at 7 (quoting Alexander, 441 So. 2d
at 1334), in section 273(3) is to provide the people of Mississippi an avenue to amend their
state’s constitution. See Miss. Const. art. 15, § 273(3) (“The people reserve unto themselves
the power to propose and enact constitutional amendments by initiative.”). Today, this object
only survives if section 273(3) is read to require the use of the five congressional districts as
they existed in 1992. Furthermore, utilizing the five districts as they existed in 1992 allows
to be recognized the will of both the Legislature and the people, each of which acted to have
Initiative Measures 65 and 65A placed on the ballot, as well as the citizens of Mississippi
who later voted to adopt Initiative 65 as a constitutional amendment. See Maj. Op. ¶ 3 (“On
9
The majority, while focusing almost exclusively on the term “congressional district”
in section 273(3), mentions that “the plain language of section 273 ties the congressional
districts mentioned therein to the actual, existing congressional districts.” Maj. Op. ¶ 27;
see generally Maj. Op. ¶¶ 27-35. However, while the majority may be right in giving great
weight to the text of section 273(3), the term “congressional district” when viewed in
isolation is neither the best evidence of the legislative intent behind section 273(3) nor is it
the only evidence, especially in light of other qualifying language and the facts surrounding
section 273(3)’s adoption.
41
November 3, 2020, a strong, if not overwhelming, majority of the voters of Mississippi
¶75. Additionally, the majority discusses a perceived logical inability of qualified electors
to aver that they are in fact qualified electors of a congressional district (as that district
existed at the time section 273(3) was adopted), as required by Mississippi Code Section 23-
17-19 (Rev. 2018). Maj. Op. ¶¶ 36-37. The majority misses the mark, however, because
Section 23-15-1037 explicitly defines, by county and precinct, the boundaries of each of the
five congressional districts as they existed at the time section 273(3) was adopted. Miss.
Code Ann. § 23-15-1037 (Rev. 2018). Therefore, contrary to the majority’s conclusion, a
person signing an initiative petition and the county clerk receiving the petition need only
know their county and precinct to determine the congressional district of which they are a
qualified elector. Thus, electors can indeed aver to be qualified electors of the congressional
districts for the purposes of signing an initiative petition. In responding to the mere mention
of Section 23-15-1037, the majority proceeds to both invent and then destroy an argument
that we never made nor that we now make. Our mention of Section 23-15-1037 is for one
singular purpose—to note that the definition of the congressional districts as they existed in
1992 is readily accessible in the text of the statute as it currently exists. To have knowledge
of the district in which an elector would have been qualified in 1992 simply requires that the
clerk keep a copy of the statute in his/her office. This definition could certainly come from
10
This opinion does not speak to the merits of either the initiative process as a means
to amend the constitution nor Initiative 65 itself. In both instances, the Legislature and the
people have spoken, and we would be best served to stay in our lane.
42
any number of sources including, for example, maps, journals, prior election results, etc.
However, the language as it currently exists in Section 23-15-1037 seems simplest and
provides but one of many options at the disposal of the electors of this state. Whether the
statute remains static or changes in the future does not in any way change this premise, as its
¶76. And as the Secretary of State aptly phrased it, “former-Secretary Hosemann
with existing state law instead of a federal injunction geared only at congressional elections.”
Again, the majority’s holding to the contrary implies that the drafters of section 273(3), while
able to recognize that the number of seats in the House may change for a state every ten
years, inserted a poison pill into section 273(3) that would strip the provision of its efficacy
if Mississippi ever lost a seat in Congress. This holding does not avoid absurdity; rather, it
invites it.
¶77. The constitution is presumed capable of ordering human affairs decades beyond the
time of ratification under circumstances beyond the prescience of the draftsmen. The
majority’s holding destroys such an ordering less than a decade after adoption, presumably
finding legislative incompetence or malevolence and/or a desire of the people to put a self-
destruct sequence into the initiative process they granted unto themselves. The interpretation
set forth in this separate opinion, as well as allowing the ordering of human affairs well into
the future, brings harmony to the provision, accords with the plain meaning of the section,
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and recognizes a proper legislative act followed by a knowing adoption by the electorate.
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E-Filed Document Dec 7 2020 17:59:19 2020-IA-01199-SCT Pages: 87
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APPENDIX C
(1) The State of Mississippi is hereby divided into five (5) congressional districts below:
FIRST DISTRICT. The First Congressional District shall be composed of the following
counties and portions of counties: Alcorn, Benton, Calhoun, Chickasaw, Choctaw,
DeSoto, Itawamba, Lafayette, Lee, Marshall, Monroe, Pontotoc, Prentiss, Tate, Tippah,
Tishomingo, Union, Webster, Yalobusha; in Grenada County the precincts of Providence,
Mt. Nebo, Hardy and Pea Ridge; in Montgomery County the precincts of North Winona,
Lodi, Stewart, Nations and Poplar Creek; in Oktibbeha County, the precincts of Double
Springs, Maben and Sturgis; in Panola County the precincts of East Sardis, South Curtis,
Tocowa, Pope, Courtland, Cole's Point, North Springport, South Springport, Eureka,
Williamson, East Batesville 4, West Batesville 4, Fern Hill, North Batesville A, East
Batesville 5 and West Batesville 5; and in Tallahatchie County the precincts of Teasdale,
Enid, Springhill, Charleston Beat 1, Charleston Beat 2, Charleston Beat 3, Paynes,
Leverette, Cascilla, Murphreesboro and Rosebloom.
THIRD DISTRICT. The Third Congressional District shall be composed of the following
counties and portions of counties: Clarke, Clay, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Lowndes,
Neshoba, Newton, Noxubee, Rankin, Scott, Smith, Winston; that portion of Attala County
not included in the Second Congressional District; in Jones County the precincts of
Northwest High School, Shady Grove, Sharon, Erata, Glade, Myrick School, Northeast
High School, Rustin, Sandersville Civic Center, Tuckers, Antioch and Landrum; that
portion of Leake County not included in the Second Congressional District; that portion
of Madison County not included in the Second Congressional District; that portion of
Oktibbeha County not included in the First Congressional District; and in Wayne County
the precincts of Big Rock, Yellow Creek, Hiwannee, Diamond, Chaparral, Matherville,
Coit and Eucutta.
FIFTH DISTRICT. The Fifth Congressional District shall be composed of the following
counties and portions of counties: Forrest, George, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson,
Lamar, Pearl River, Perry, Stone; and that portion of Wayne County not included in the
Third Congressional District.
(2) The boundaries of the congressional districts described in subsection (1) of this
section shall be the boundaries of the counties and precincts listed in subsection (1) as
such boundaries existed on October 1, 1990.
Credits
Laws 1986, Ch. 495, § 307; Laws 1991, 1st Ex. Sess., Ch. 2, § 1, eff. February 21, 1992.