{"id":53737,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/the-ninth-circuit-forbids-discovery-of-proposition-8-internal-strategy-and-organization-documents.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"the-ninth-circuit-forbids-discovery-of-proposition-8-internal-strategy-and-organization-documents","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/the-ninth-circuit-forbids-discovery-of-proposition-8-internal-strategy-and-organization-documents.html","title":{"rendered":"The Ninth Circuit Forbids Discovery of Proposition 8 Internal Strategy and Organization Documents"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-8f761849  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        <div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/akhil-amar-and-vikram-amar-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/vikram.amar.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Vikram David Amar\"><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>The Ninth Circuit Forbids Discovery of Proposition 8 Internal Strategy and Organization Documents<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/akhil-amar-and-vikram-amar-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By VIKRAM DAVID AMAR<\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Friday, December 18, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n<p>In this column, I  analyze recent events in the federal constitutional litigation \u2013 currently set  for trial in federal district court early next year &#8212; challenging Proposition  8, California&#8217;s  state-law ban on same-sex marriage. (Readers who want additional background and  commentary on this litigation may be interested in <a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/should-summary-judgment-have-been-granted-in-the-federal-proposition-8-suit-part-one.html\">Part  One<\/a> and <a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/should-summary-judgment-have-been-granted-in-the-federal-proposition-8-suit-part-two.html\">Part Two<\/a> of my earlier series of  columns for this site.)<\/p>\n<p>  Last week, <a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-9th-circuit\/\" rel=\"noopener\">the United States Court of Appeals for  the Ninth Circuit disposed<\/a>, more quickly than some observers expected, of  an interesting side-question that had threatened to delay trial: Must the drafters and organizers behind  Proposition 8 make public their &#8220;internal campaign communications relating  to campaign strategy and advertising&#8221;?<\/p>\n<p>  The  plaintiffs, challengers of Proposition 8, had sought such materials during the  &#8220;discovery&#8221; phase of the lawsuit, and U.S. District Judge Vaughn  Walker had ruled that the information should be provided. In reversing the district judge and protecting  the materials from disclosure, the Ninth Circuit reached the correct result,  but, as I explain below, it arguably could and should have arrived there by a  different route.<strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The  Civil Discovery Process and Its Invocation in this Case<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>  In a civil (that is,  non-criminal) lawsuit, each side is entitled, under the procedural rules  governing federal courts, to seek and obtain \u2013 &#8220;discover,&#8221; if you will &#8212; from  the other side and third-party witnesses information that is  &#8220;relevant&#8221; to the legal and factual issues raised in the litigation,  and that is needed for that party to prove its case. In the Proposition 8 matter, the plaintiffs  used this discovery process to request access to the internal communications of  the defendants &#8212; the proponents and organizers who initiated Proposition 8.<\/p>\n<p>  Such  materials, the plaintiffs urged, were relevant to whether Proposition 8 was  motivated by a constitutionally-improper purpose &#8212; hatred or animus towards a  politically powerless group &#8212; and also relevant to the strength of any  legitimate governmental purposes supporting the same-sex marriage ban. Both of these issues \u2013 potential improper purpose behind, and lack of  adequate state interests supported by, Proposition 8 &#8212; are raised by the  plaintiffs&#8217; challenge to the initiative under the equal protection and due  process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, which form the substantive basis  for the plaintiffs&#8217; lawsuit.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The  Ninth Circuit&#8217;s First Amendment Ruling, and An Alternative Ground For Its  Result<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>  The  Ninth Circuit rejected the plaintiffs&#8217; request for the internal documents. The court did so because it agreed with the  defendants that forced disclosure of these communications would burden  political association rights protected by the First Amendment &#8220;by  discouraging individuals from participating in initiative campaigns and by  muting the exchange of ideas within those campaigns.&#8221; Drawing upon, among other sources, cases  involving forced disclosure of the identity and activity of members of groups  fighting for civil rights in the 1950s and 1960s, the Ninth Circuit quite  plausibly decided that the First Amendment trumped any right to discovery that  plaintiffs enjoyed under the federal rules of civil litigation.<\/p>\n<p>  In  so holding, though, the Ninth Circuit brushed past what in many respects is a  prior question that could have been the basis for rejecting plaintiffs&#8217; request: Were the materials sought even legally relevant  to the claims in the lawsuit in the first place?<\/p>\n<p>  As noted above, the plaintiffs  asserted that the defendants&#8217; internal communications were relevant to any  unlawful motivations behind Proposition 8, and to the strength of any public  policies served by bans on same-sex marriage like Proposition 8. And to  be sure, questions of the motivations and public policy purposes behind  Proposition 8 are fairly implicated by the lawsuit.<\/p>\n<p>  But  &#8212; and this is the key &#8212; the motivations that constitutionally count under  conventional equal protection and due process principles are not the  motivations of the drafters and organizers of a piece of legislation. Rather, they are the motivations of the measure&#8217;s  enactors &#8212; in this case, the millions of Californians who voted for the  initiative measure and thereby made it into law.<\/p>\n<p>  Similarly,  the constitutionally relevant governmental  purposes that might legitimate Proposition 8 are the purposes the voters sought  (or perhaps could have sought) to promote &#8212; not necessarily the purposes that  the drafters themselves had on their minds.<\/p>\n<p>  Now,  to the extent that the drafters and organizers of Proposition 8 communicated  their subjective motivations or sense of justifications for the initiative to  the voters &#8212; through the public advertising campaign or otherwise &#8212; the  actions of the drafters may help shed light on voter intent.<\/p>\n<p>  But these communications are themselves already (by  definition) publicly viewable. Whether  the advertising campaign appealed to hatred against gays and lesbians, or  catered to bogus public policy concerns such as fears about the teaching of  same-sex marriage in schools, can be seen by examining the advertising campaign  itself. <\/p>\n<p>  Thus, it is far from clear (to me at  least) why knowing the subjective expectations and desires of a few key  organizers would tell us much about what ended up being on the minds of the millions  of California voters who favored Proposition 8.  Again, how the organizers&#8217; goals were communicated to the public (via  flyers, television advertisements and the like that are already publicly  available to see) might matter, but how those goals were communicated among the  organizers themselves seems minimally relevant, at best.<\/p>\n<p>  It  might be possible to argue that the intent of the drafters and organizers is  important because if the drafters never drafted Proposition 8 and the  organizers never organized behind it, Proposition 8 would never have come  about. In this sense, perhaps the  drafters&#8217; motivations are a &#8220;but for&#8221; cause of the initiative&#8217;s enactment. But this argument is not mentioned in the  Ninth Circuit opinion, and it raises complexities of its own. For example, might other people who lack the  invidious motive have sponsored a measure similar to Proposition 8 if its  drafters were out of the picture? More  generally, would the subjective motives of a person who donated a lot of money  so that signatures could be gathered on behalf of an initiative doom the  initiative even though the millions who voted for it had a pure heart?<\/p>\n<p>In <em>Cuyahoga Falls v. Buckeye   Comnunity Hope Foundation<\/em> six years ago, the Supreme Court seemed to suggest that   while the action of the voters collectively in adopting an inititiative or   referendum is governed by the Fourteenth Amendment and thus must   not be based on illicit motives, the activities and attitudesof individual   organizers or sponsors who are attempting to put a direct democracy measure in   front of the voters for their decision do <u>not<\/u> constitute &#8220;state   action,&#8221; and thus fall outside the equal protection clause altogether.   The Court reasoned that sponsors and organizers, whatever their motives, are   &#8220;private&#8221; actors exercising their First Amendment right to petition government   for redress. If this is true, then even if the motivations and beliefs of the   Proposition 8 organizers constituted a &#8220;but for&#8221; cause of the initiative&#8217;s   enactment, these motivations and beliefs are not relevant to a Fourteenth   Amendment challenge except to the extent they are communicated to and influence   the voters themselves.<\/p><p><strong>The  Ninth Circuit&#8217;s Failure to Sufficiently Confront the Relevance Issue<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>  To  my mind, the Ninth Circuit did not do an adequate job of dealing with these  questions of relevance. First, it said that  it agreed with the district court that the discovery sought was relevant to the  claims in the lawsuit, but then &#8212; in a footnote \u2013 it seemed to blur that  agreement and said, instead, that it was &#8220;assum[ing] without  deciding&#8221; the correctness of the district court&#8217;s view about &#8220;the  types of evidence [that] may be relied upon to demonstrate voter intent,&#8221;  because &#8220;[t]hese issues are beyond the scope of this appeal.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>  How could the Ninth Circuit &#8220;agree&#8221; with the  district court&#8217;s determination of relevance without deciding whether it agreed  with the district court&#8217;s views about the kinds of evidence that may reveal  voter intent? Since the defendants  contested the relevance of the materials plaintiffs sought, the issue of the &#8220;types of evidence that  may be [used] to demonstrate voter intent&#8221; was not only within the scope  of the appeal, it was vital to the appeal.  A court simply cannot determine questions of relevance without first  understanding what substantive questions are raised by a lawsuit, and what  kinds of evidence might bear on those questions.<\/p>\n<p>  Labeling  certain issues &#8220;outside the scope&#8221; of an appeal can be a convenient  device an appellate court uses to not address an issue that it, in fact, should  address, but for various reasons does not want to address. The United States Courts of Appeals have a  great deal of discretion (in part because no one is looking over their  shoulders &#8212; the U.S. Supreme Court can hear only so many cases) to frame the  disputes they want to resolve in particular ways, even if that framing is not  always fair to the litigants or to the underlying issues raised by a case.<\/p>\n<p>  I  should note that the Ninth Circuit in the Proposition 8 discovery clash did also  cite to one Supreme Court case to bolster its quick conclusion that the  materials sought by the plaintiffs were relevant. But close inspection of <a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/458\/457.html\" rel=\"noopener\">that Supreme Court case<\/a> makes clear that the Court there was speaking  only about materials that had been communicated or addressed to the public, not  materials that were internal within the organizers&#8217; own communications.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Why  the Grounds of Decision Might Matter<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>  Someone might wonder, &#8220;What difference does it make  whether the Ninth Circuit reached its result in this case based on the First  Amendment, rather than on the relevance ground, if the court&#8217;s bottom line outcome  is correct?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>  There  are a few answers. First, lower federal  courts are instructed by the Supreme Court to &#8220;avoid&#8221; deciding  constitutional questions (like the meaning of the First Amendment) if a case  instead can be resolved based on the meaning of a statute (like the federal  procedure rules governing &#8220;relevance.&#8221;)<\/p>\n<p>  I  myself think this so-called avoidance doctrine is not always a good idea, and  is often misused, such that a court ends up aggressively rewriting a statute in  a way that Congress never wanted, all in  the name of &#8220;judicial restraint.&#8221;  (This is what I would argue happened, for instance, in the <a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/557\/193.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Voting Rights Act ruling<\/a> by the Supreme  Court last Term.) But in the Proposition 8 case, the appropriate  &#8220;judicially restrained&#8221; course might have been to resolve the case on  relevance, rather than First Amendment, grounds.<\/p>\n<p>  One might respond here  by arguing that the relevance question itself contains a constitutional  dimension &#8212; because it turns on whose intent, drafters&#8217; or voters&#8217;, the  Constitution cares about, and what kinds of evidence are constitutionally  relevant. But these particular  constitutional questions seem more settled &#8212; and thus narrower &#8212; than the  question of what the meaning of the First Amendment is in this context. In this respect, the Ninth Circuit did not,  to borrow a phrase from constitutional scholar Cass Sunstein in his discussion  of the virtue of judicial restraint, &#8220;leav[e] as much as possible  undecided.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>  To offer but one  example of how entering the First Amendment thicket might raise complications,  consider the non-initiative lawmaking context:  Do members of a city council who enacted an ordinance enjoy a First  Amendment privilege to keep secret their non-public deliberations (assuming  there were any) about the ordinance when the measure is challenged as being  unconstitutionally motivated?<\/p>\n<p>  In  that kind of case, the internal communications are undeniably relevant under  the Fourteenth Amendment &#8212; because drafters and enacters are one and the  same. But should First Amendment doctrine  (or similar constitutional doctrines) apply to protect government officials in  that instance?<\/p>\n<p>  To be clear, I am not saying that the  Ninth Circuit opinion holds that government officials would be so protected. My point is simply that such questions are  raised by the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s invocation of the First Amendment, but would not  be raised if instead plaintiffs&#8217; discovery requests had simply been held to be  insufficiently relevant.<\/p>\n<p>  None  of this is to say that the relevance route might not have some raised some  complex questions of its own. Perhaps it  would have; I have noted a few above. But  the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s opinion does not suggest that the court gave a great deal  of attention to whether this alternative ground might been a simpler and more  restrained, and thus preferable, one.  Perhaps the court will take the case en banc, and will have another  chance to think through some of these issues. <\/p>\n<hr size=\"1\">\n<p><a name=\"bio\" id=\"bio\"><\/a>Vikram David Amar, a FindLaw columnist, is the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor of Law at the University of California, Davis School of Law. He is a 1988 graduate of the Yale Law School, and a former clerk to Justice Harry Blackmun. He is a co-author, along with William Cohen and Jonathan Varat, of a major constitutional law casebook, and a co-author of several volumes of the Wright &amp; Miller treatise on federal practice and procedure. Before teaching, Professor Amar spent a few years at the firm of Gibson, Dunn &amp; Crutcher.\n  <\/p>\n\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\">\n                    <g id=\"thumbs-up\" clip-path=\"url(#clip0_604_3418)\">\n            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class=\"was-this-helpful__feedback-form-title\" tabindex=\"0\">Why was this not helpful?<\/legend>\n                    <div class=\"was-this-helpful__choose-option-message\" role=\"status\">\n                        <p class=\"was-this-helpful__choose-option-message-text\"><\/p>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class=\"fl-radio-button-field fl-flex was-this-helpful__feedback-form-title\">\n                        <input\n                                id=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--missing-info\"\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-input\"\n                                type=\"radio\"\n                                name=\"negative-feedback\"\n                                value=\"Missing Information\"\n                        >\n                        <label\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-label fl-text-sm was-this-helpful__radio-label\"\n                                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