[Lnc-business] Two Requests for LNC Legal Action
Caryn Ann Harlos
caryn.ann.harlos at lp.org
Tue Mar 13 19:31:28 EDT 2018
Full disclosure as everyone already knows, I am on the LPCO board until
3/25 and my husband is the Chair. It has been going on a long time and I
do think this angle important to get legal help as we are not deep pockets
as a Party (not just LPCO everywhere) - and if no chance for fees, few
attorneys will do. I won my ballot selfie case that way.
Now, however, I am not disinterested and as it has been public record in
our meetings, LPCO could be on the hook at least partially for fees if this
is not successful.
In general, I think we should assist any winnable court case, and this one
where they are trying to join one thing to another to defeat fees, is a
bludgeon against third parties. And its an easy trick as anyone in law
knows.... for instance in a case where person A is suing person B but
really wants to get to person B's insurance carrier they can plead 10
things that the insurance excludes but as long as they throw in one that
the insurance does, the insurer will be providing a defense and is likely
to put money on the table. Conversely here, the state knows they just
throw in another angle and defeat the whole case for fees.
And of course I will point out, as I always do, that CO is not a ballot
access issue state and is consistently (though not at this moment) a top
ten BSM state - CO consistently supports ballot access in those other areas
that are not as lucky so this is where the LNC could assist - and CO is a
pretty good state for third parties - let's keep it that way and defeat
these loopholes.
what is the logistical issue? Getting a lawyer to write that quickly?
that's plenty of time it seems to me but putting a motion on this will take
most of it.
I ask that the EC meet on this to discuss- nothing will happen here on this
list.
Nick, please consider this Region 1's request to consider and request to
take it to the EC.
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 10:52 AM, Oliver Hall <oliverbhall at gmail.com> wrote:
> My concern regarding that case is entirely logistical. The benefit to
> the LNC is that it is on record advocating for a position that, I
> believe, advances the LNC's interests by protecting the incentive for
> attorneys to take on ballot access cases pro bono, with the expectation
> that they will be awarded fees if they win.
> Oliver B. Hall
> Special Counsel
> Libertarian National Committee
> 617-953-0161
>
> On 3/13/2018 12:43 PM, Whitney Bilyeu wrote:
>
> With regard to the amicus brief with LPCO...Oliver, is your reluctance
> in this case based solely on the cost to the Party itself? You stated
> that it has merit. So, I would like to know if there is any potential
> benefit to the LP, even if our side loses and we suffer the expense.
> Thanks for providing the information!
> Whitney Bilyeu
> Region 7 Representative
>
> On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 10:12 AM, Justin O'Donnell
> [1]<[1]justin.odonnell at lp.org> wrote:
>
> Mr Hall,
> With Regards to the Lavergne v US House case, there have already
> been previous suits regarding Connecticut's ratification of the
> amendment if I recall correctly, but regardless, the issue is a
> widely misunderstood one regardless. The actual text of the article,
> if read, does not limit the size of the congressional districts and
> increase the size of the house. The unratified article sets 4
> milestones for the growth of the house to schedule redistricting in
> line with a growing population to ensure the house would achieve at
> least 200 representative districts. However, the final clause of the
> Article states that once population had increased to the point of at
> least 200 Representatives representing Districts of at least 50,000
> citizens each, then 50,000 would become the new MINIMUM of a
> district size, not it's maximum.
> This argument has already been litigated extensively, and I would
> agree that it does not merit the cost or commitment for involvement
> from the LNC.
> Justin O'Donnell
> LNC Region 8 Representative
> ---
> Yours in Liberty,
> Justin O'Donnell
> LNC Region 8 Representative
> LPNH Alternate- LNC Platform Committee
> Chair- LPNH Platform Committee
> Candidate for US Congress, NH-2
> [2]www.odonnell2018.org
>
> On 2018-03-13 10:45, Oliver Hall wrote:
>
> Dear LNC Members,
> I have received two requests for the LNC to participate in two
> different legal matters. I think there are reasons why it will be
> difficult or unwise for the LNC to participate in either one, but
> I am
> forwarding these requests so that the LNC can make that
> determination.
> The first request is for the LNC to file an amicus brief in
> support of
> a petition for certiorari filed by the Libertarian Party of
> Colorado
> and a candidate, Ryan Frazier, in Frazier v. Williams.
> The cert petition arises from ballot access litigation that was
> filed
> in Colorado state court, asserting claims under both state law
> and the
> federal Constitution. The plaintiffs prevailed, and the candidate
> was
> placed on the ballot. But while the plaintiffs won on the merits,
> the
> state courts declined to award them attorney's fees pursuant to
> 42
> U.S.C. Sec. 1988, the federal statute authorizing such fees,
> because
> the cases were decided on state law grounds, and the courts
> didn't
> reach the federal claims. The plaintiffs argue that they were
> entitled
> to an award of attorney's fees, even though the case was decided
> on
> state law grounds. Their cert petition urges the Supreme Court to
> accept the case because otherwise, it provides states with a
> template
> for denying prevailing plaintiffs attorney's fees in these types
> of
> cases, by ruling on state law grounds and "mooting" the federal
> claims.
> That would dissuade attorneys from bringing such cases in the
> future.
> I have reviewed the cert petition (attached) and I think this
> case has
> merit. However, the LNC would need to find an attorney to author
> the
> amicus brief, and the filing deadline is March 28. The LNC would
> also
> need to pay printing costs of approximately $1,000.
> The second case is Lavergne v. U.S. House (complaint attached).
> In that
> case, the plaintiffs assert that the Bill of Rights originally
> included
> an additional two amendments, and that the original first
> amendment, or
> "Article the First", required that U.S. House members represent
> no more
> than 45,000 people. The plaintiffs contend that Article the First
> was
> ratified by the states and that it should have been made part of
> the
> Constitution. If that were the case, the U.S. House would greatly
> increase in size. For example, California would be entitled to
> 747
> members, and Florida would have 379 members. Based on this
> theory, the
> plaintiffs ask the Court to declare that Article the First is in
> fact
> part of the Constitution, and that the current Congress is void,
> for
> failure to reach a quorum.
> The plaintiffs may be right about the history behind their
> complaint.
> Assuming they are, however, I think this lawsuit has little
> chance of
> success. The plaintiffs likely have serious standing problems, as
> well
> as other justiciability problems, such as the political question
> doctrine. Notably, their claims do not focus on any alleged
> violations
> of their constitutional rights, but rather on violations of the
> "Federalism structure" and "Separation of Powers structure" of
> the
> Constitution. For those reasons, not to mention the near
> certainty that
> a Court will decline to hold that there is a new First Amendment
> to the
> Constitution, and that the current Congress is invalid and all
> its acts
> a nullity (a holding that presumably would apply to each previous
> Congress that lacked a quorum under Article the First), I don't
> think
> the LNC should get involved.
> I'll be happy to answer any questions you may have.
> Thank you,
> --
> Oliver B. Hall
> Special Counsel
> Libertarian National Committee
> [3]617-953-0161
>
> References
>
> 1. [2]mailto:justin.odonnell at lp.org
> 2. [3]http://www.odonnell2018.org/
> 3. [4]tel:617-953-0161
>
> References
>
> 1. mailto:[1]justin.odonnell at lp.org
> 2. mailto:justin.odonnell at lp.org
> 3. http://www.odonnell2018.org/
> 4. tel:617-953-0161
>
--
--
*In Liberty,*
*Caryn Ann Harlos*
Region 1 Representative, Libertarian National Committee (Alaska, Arizona,
Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Washington) - Caryn.Ann.
Harlos at LP.org <Caryn.Ann.Harlos at LP.org>
Communications Director, Libertarian Party of Colorado
<http://www.lpcolorado.org/>
Chair, LP Historical Preservation Committee
A haiku to the Statement of Principles:
*We defend your rights*
*And oppose the use of force*
*Taxation is theft*
-------------- next part --------------
Full disclosure as everyone already knows, I am on the LPCO board until
3/25 and my husband is the Chair. It has been going on a long time and
I do think this angle important to get legal help as we are not deep
pockets as a Party (not just LPCO everywhere) - and if no chance for
fees, few attorneys will do. I won my ballot selfie case that way.
Now, however, I am not disinterested and as it has been public record
in our meetings, LPCO could be on the hook at least partially for fees
if this is not successful.
In general, I think we should assist any winnable court case, and this
one where they are trying to join one thing to another to defeat fees,
is a bludgeon against third parties. And its an easy trick as anyone
in law knows.... for instance in a case where person A is suing person
B but really wants to get to person B's insurance carrier they can
plead 10 things that the insurance excludes but as long as they throw
in one that the insurance does, the insurer will be providing a defense
and is likely to put money on the table. Conversely here, the state
knows they just throw in another angle and defeat the whole case for
fees.
And of course I will point out, as I always do, that CO is not a ballot
access issue state and is consistently (though not at this moment) a
top ten BSM state - CO consistently supports ballot access in those
other areas that are not as lucky so this is where the LNC could assist
- and CO is a pretty good state for third parties - let's keep it that
way and defeat these loopholes.
what is the logistical issue? Getting a lawyer to write that quickly?
that's plenty of time it seems to me but putting a motion on this will
take most of it.
I ask that the EC meet on this to discuss- nothing will happen here on
this list.
Nick, please consider this Region 1's request to consider and request
to take it to the EC.
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 10:52 AM, Oliver Hall
<[1]oliverbhall at gmail.com> wrote:
My concern regarding that case is entirely logistical. The
benefit to
the LNC is that it is on record advocating for a position that, I
believe, advances the LNC's interests by protecting the incentive
for
attorneys to take on ballot access cases pro bono, with the
expectation
that they will be awarded fees if they win.
Oliver B. Hall
Special Counsel
Libertarian National Committee
[2]617-953-0161
On 3/13/2018 12:43 PM, Whitney Bilyeu wrote:
With regard to the amicus brief with LPCO...Oliver, is your
reluctance
in this case based solely on the cost to the Party itself? You
stated
that it has merit. So, I would like to know if there is any
potential
benefit to the LP, even if our side loses and we suffer the
expense.
Thanks for providing the information!
Whitney Bilyeu
Region 7 Representative
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 10:12 AM, Justin O'Donnell
[1]<[1][3]justin.odonnell at lp.org> wrote:
Mr Hall,
With Regards to the Lavergne v US House case, there have already
been previous suits regarding Connecticut's ratification of the
amendment if I recall correctly, but regardless, the issue is a
widely misunderstood one regardless. The actual text of the
article,
if read, does not limit the size of the congressional districts
and
increase the size of the house. The unratified article sets 4
milestones for the growth of the house to schedule redistricting
in
line with a growing population to ensure the house would achieve
at
least 200 representative districts. However, the final clause of
the
Article states that once population had increased to the point of
at
least 200 Representatives representing Districts of at least
50,000
citizens each, then 50,000 would become the new MINIMUM of a
district size, not it's maximum.
This argument has already been litigated extensively, and I would
agree that it does not merit the cost or commitment for
involvement
from the LNC.
Justin O'Donnell
LNC Region 8 Representative
---
Yours in Liberty,
Justin O'Donnell
LNC Region 8 Representative
LPNH Alternate- LNC Platform Committee
Chair- LPNH Platform Committee
Candidate for US Congress, NH-2
[2][4]www.odonnell2018.org
On 2018-03-13 10:45, Oliver Hall wrote:
Dear LNC Members,
I have received two requests for the LNC to participate in two
different legal matters. I think there are reasons why it will
be
difficult or unwise for the LNC to participate in either one,
but
I am
forwarding these requests so that the LNC can make that
determination.
The first request is for the LNC to file an amicus brief in
support of
a petition for certiorari filed by the Libertarian Party of
Colorado
and a candidate, Ryan Frazier, in Frazier v. Williams.
The cert petition arises from ballot access litigation that was
filed
in Colorado state court, asserting claims under both state law
and the
federal Constitution. The plaintiffs prevailed, and the
candidate
was
placed on the ballot. But while the plaintiffs won on the
merits,
the
state courts declined to award them attorney's fees pursuant to
42
U.S.C. Sec. 1988, the federal statute authorizing such fees,
because
the cases were decided on state law grounds, and the courts
didn't
reach the federal claims. The plaintiffs argue that they were
entitled
to an award of attorney's fees, even though the case was
decided
on
state law grounds. Their cert petition urges the Supreme Court
to
accept the case because otherwise, it provides states with a
template
for denying prevailing plaintiffs attorney's fees in these
types
of
cases, by ruling on state law grounds and "mooting" the federal
claims.
That would dissuade attorneys from bringing such cases in the
future.
I have reviewed the cert petition (attached) and I think this
case has
merit. However, the LNC would need to find an attorney to
author
the
amicus brief, and the filing deadline is March 28. The LNC
would
also
need to pay printing costs of approximately $1,000.
The second case is Lavergne v. U.S. House (complaint attached).
In that
case, the plaintiffs assert that the Bill of Rights originally
included
an additional two amendments, and that the original first
amendment, or
"Article the First", required that U.S. House members represent
no more
than 45,000 people. The plaintiffs contend that Article the
First
was
ratified by the states and that it should have been made part
of
the
Constitution. If that were the case, the U.S. House would
greatly
increase in size. For example, California would be entitled to
747
members, and Florida would have 379 members. Based on this
theory, the
plaintiffs ask the Court to declare that Article the First is
in
fact
part of the Constitution, and that the current Congress is
void,
for
failure to reach a quorum.
The plaintiffs may be right about the history behind their
complaint.
Assuming they are, however, I think this lawsuit has little
chance of
success. The plaintiffs likely have serious standing problems,
as
well
as other justiciability problems, such as the political
question
doctrine. Notably, their claims do not focus on any alleged
violations
of their constitutional rights, but rather on violations of the
"Federalism structure" and "Separation of Powers structure" of
the
Constitution. For those reasons, not to mention the near
certainty that
a Court will decline to hold that there is a new First
Amendment
to the
Constitution, and that the current Congress is invalid and all
its acts
a nullity (a holding that presumably would apply to each
previous
Congress that lacked a quorum under Article the First), I don't
think
the LNC should get involved.
I'll be happy to answer any questions you may have.
Thank you,
--
Oliver B. Hall
Special Counsel
Libertarian National Committee
[3]617-953-0161
References
1. [2]mailto:[5]justin.odonnell at lp.org
2. [3][6]http://www.odonnell2018.org/
3. [4]tel:[7]617-953-0161
References
1. mailto:[1][8]justin.odonnell at lp.org
2. mailto:[9]justin.odonnell at lp.org
3. [10]http://www.odonnell2018.org/
4. tel:[11]617-953-0161
--
--
In Liberty,
Caryn Ann Harlos
Region 1 Representative, Libertarian National Committee (Alaska,
Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Washington)
- [12]Caryn.Ann. Harlos at LP.org
Communications Director, [13]Libertarian Party of Colorado
Chair, LP Historical Preservation Committee
A haiku to the Statement of Principles:
We defend your rights
And oppose the use of force
Taxation is theft
References
1. mailto:oliverbhall at gmail.com
2. tel:617-953-0161
3. mailto:justin.odonnell at lp.org
4. http://www.odonnell2018.org/
5. mailto:justin.odonnell at lp.org
6. http://www.odonnell2018.org/
7. tel:617-953-0161
8. mailto:justin.odonnell at lp.org
9. mailto:justin.odonnell at lp.org
10. http://www.odonnell2018.org/
11. tel:617-953-0161
12. mailto:Caryn.Ann.Harlos at LP.org
13. http://www.lpcolorado.org/
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