Saturday, February 27, 2010

 
The defendants' joint motion for summary judgment is here:
http://joellpalmer.blogspot.com/2007/02/this-is-defendants-motion-for-summary.html

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

 
The brief in support of summary judgment is here
http://joellpalmer.blogspot.com/2005_02_01_archive.html

 
filed the motion for summary judgment and brief today, and a motion for stay.
the state requested another extension.
i might put up a link to the brief tomorrow.
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION

ROBBIN STEWART, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. ) CASE No: 1:08-cv-586-LJM-TAB
)
MARION COUNTY, et al. )
)
Defendants. )


MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Plaintiff Robbin Stewart moves the court for partial summary judgment as motions as follows:
The parties do not agree on every fact in the case. But I think that they agree on certain core facts which are sufficient to frame the issues for decision.
These include: that in 2005 the county and state adopted a policy of requiring ID as a precondition to voting (Crawford _ U.S at ); that that policy is still continuing (Rolita letter 2009 url); that plaintiff is a person who is unwilling to show ID as a precondition of voting (affidavit p 1.); that my provisional ballots have not been counted and I have cast no counted vote since 2005 (id.), although I wish to vote and have tried to do so (id.); that the announced results in 2006 (Crawford, slip op at p._ ) and the 2008 (Michael Pitts article) primary did not include provisional ballots where no ID was shown and did not include votes of people who were not allowed to vote for reason of voter ID. I am a registered voter and have previously voted at that precinct and in Marion County. (affidavit p1 see also deposition.) There has been no contention that I am not who I say I am, or that my signature does not match the signature in the poll book.
The continued denial of my vote in 2008 and 2009 elections are not before the court at this time, because the court has not allowed the complaint to be supplemented with the new facts that have arisen as a consequence of the court's denial of preliminary injunctive relief as this case proceeds. There is a live controversy, I have standing, and the issues are ripe for decision, and can be decided as a matter of law.
The contested legal issues in the case include whether plaintiff had a right to vote without ID, and a right to free elections including counting the votes of people without ID,
A) under the free and equal elections clauses of Article II section 1,
B) under the right to vote of article II section 2,
C) under the right of free speech of Article I section 9,
D) under the right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures of Article I section 11,
E) under the right to due course of law of Article I section 12
F) under the 24th Amendment to the US constitution,
G) under the First Amendment,
H) under the 4th Amendment,
I) under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment,
G) under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment.
Claims under Article I section 31 (right to petition) are not addressed herein.
Claims under the Privileges and Immunities clause of the 14th Amendment are not addressed in this motion, as they are better deferred until the Supreme Court rules in McDonald v Chicago. Claims under the 15th Amendment are not addressed herein.
The law is with the plaintiff and against the defendants in this case.
Accordingly, the court should rule that plaintiff's rights were violated by the defendants conduct at issue, and set a jury trial as to matter of damages, and permanently enjoin defendants from again denying plaintiff the right to vote for reason of ID.
The court should order that his provisional ballots be counted.
In support of this motion plaintiff relies, as is further set out in the brief in support, on the following documents.
The verified complaint.
Affidavit of plaintiff.
County's response to interrogatories.
County's reply brief in Crawford v Marion.
Exhibits 1-5, filed separately as hardcopy.

Additionally, plaintiffs rely on the legal arguments contained in their separately submitted Memorandum of Law.
WHEREFORE, plaintiff requests that this Court grant me partial summary judgment in this cause and all other proper relief.
Respectfully submitted,
Robbin Stewart.


Friday, February 05, 2010

 
draft only do not file
caption
Motion for stay.

1. The court has set a timetable for dispositive motions. Both sides intend to file motions for summary judgment.
2. Last week the Indiana Supreme Court accepted transfer of the cross-petitions for review in League of Women Voters v Rokita. The Court of Appeals had found voter ID unconstitutional.
The Court has not set a date for oral argument, and of course we do not know how soon it will rule.
3. The Court will review two issues:
1. Whether voter ID is a qualification for voting not authorized by Article II section 2, which states that the only qualifications are citizenship, age, and residency.
2. Whether voter ID involves unequal treatment of voters under section 23 of Article I.
It is the practice of the Indiana court to accept transfer in cases whether a staute has been found unconstitutional. The court's acceptance of transfer does not foreshadow a ruling one way or the other. It may be significant that the Court accepted plaintiff-appellees cross-appeal, but the case is of such public importance, and it had already decided to hear some aspect of the case, that this does not need to be taken a sign that it will necessarily overrule the Court of Appeals on that issue. (The merits of the article II claim, rather than anything procedural, are the best indication that the Court is likely to overrule denial of the Article II claim.)

4. The Indiana courts have jurisdiction to decide issues of state law, including whether voter ID is unconstitutional under the state constitution. Under the Eire doctrine, this federal court is bound by the state courts' determinations of state law.

5. How the Indiana Supreme Court rules will have a major effect on this court's analysis of plaintiff's claims and defendants' counterarguments. A premature ruling from this court would not be genuinely dispositive, and would involve second-guessing the state court and reinventing the wheel.

6. Rule 1 promotes speedy determination of cases as well as judicial economy and justice.
A rush to judgment here is not in the interest of speedy determination, because it would simply require the case to be reopened if its decision is incompatible with how the state court rules.
Judicial economy would be served by finding out what the law of the state is, before applying it to the federal and state claims at issue herein.

7 A major part of the arguments I am making in my motion for summary judgment is that the county and state's policy is ultra vires and arbitrary, because the apparent authority, the voter ID act, has been found unconstitutional and void. How the Indiana Supreme Court rules on this issue is highly relevant.

8. A possible way out of this problem would be if the state concedes that the voter ID act is unconstitutional, but argues that there is some other defect in the lawsuit that prevents it from proceeding. So far in its filings the state has made no such concession, nor should it be expected to.
Similarly, regardless of how the Indiana Court rules, voter ID is a tax prohibited by the 24th Amendment under the binding precedent of Harman, and the Court could rule in my favor without further delay on this or other federal grounds. So far, it seems disinclined to do so. It is unlikely that such a decision would become final in time to moot the state court case, but it could be seen as inappropriate interference with the state's determination of its own law.

9. Previously, the state moved for a stay of all proceedings until LWV is decided. I opposed the motion, and the court denied it. But the reason for my opposition was that the state was seeking to stay preliminary injunctive relief, and my motion to certify the state claims in this case so that the Indiana Court would have the opportunity to consolidate the cases if it chose to do so, both of which would have become moot if stayed. The court ruled adversely to both motions, and then denied the stay. I did not object to a stay to the extent that it was not directed at preliminary motions.

10. The state declined the opportunity to join this motion.

11 . In the interests of judicial economy and interests of comity and federalism, this court should stay decisions on motions for summary judgment until the Indiana Supreme Court rules.

Respectfully submitted,
Robbin Stewart.
@certifications

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