Opinion
No. 28 MM 2022
03-28-2022
ORDER
PER CURIAM
AND NOW , this 28th day of March, 2022, the Emergency Application for a Writ of Mandamus and/or Extraordinary Relief is DISMISSED AS MOOT, as the Commonwealth Court is timely holding the hearings pursuant to our prior Order.
Justice Wecht files a concurring statement in which Justices Todd, Donohue, and Dougherty join.
Justice Brobson files a concurring statement.
JUSTICE WECHT, concurring
I have searched our single-sentence per curiam Order in this case for evidence that a majority of this Court's Justices believes that the Commonwealth Court was or has been "sitting on its hands," or that we denied that court "the benefit of any doubt" or otherwise "doubt[ed] the good faith of the Commonwealth Court's reliance on" a somewhat opaque footnote in this Court's decision in Holt v. 2011 Legislative Reapportionment Commission , 614 Pa. 364, 38 A.3d 711, 735 (2012) (" Holt I "). Concurring Statement (Brobson, J.) at 955-56. And I have come up empty-handed. I cannot emphasize enough how far these characterizations diverge from my reasons for joining this Court's Order.
That Order provided: "AND NOW , this 28th day of March, 2022, the Emergency Application for a Writ of Mandamus and/or Extraordinary Relief is DISMISSED AS MOOT , as the Commonwealth Court is timely holding the hearings pursuant to our prior Order." In re Nomination Petitions of Avery & Doyle , 28 MM 2022, 275 A.3d 946 (Pa. Mar. 28, 2022) (per curiam ).
First and foremost, the Commonwealth Court's decision to relist the previously scheduled March 31 and April 4 hearings in the above-captioned matters for Tuesday, March 29, rendered the Applicants’ request for relief moot. While not technically in compliance with the plain language of our Order in Carter v. Chapman , 7 MM 2022, 273 A.3d 499 (Pa. Feb. 23, 2022) (per curiam ) (establishing March 25, 2022 as the "[l]ast day that may be fixed by the Commonwealth Court for hearing on objections that have been filed to nomination petitions")—which would have been impossible to satisfy as of the date of this Court's Order here—the Commonwealth Court's reconsideration of its initial scheduling orders nevertheless made it possible for that court to "render decisions involving objections to nomination petitions" by March 29, i.e. , within the bounds set by our Order. Id. Thus, due to the Commonwealth Court's intervening action, Applicants no longer could demonstrate that the court would fail to perform its duty within the Carter time frame so as to justify resort to any of the extraordinary bases for relief set forth in their Application.
That said, this dispute raises important questions regarding the nature of our orders in election matters and the lower courts’ compliance with them, and I respectfully disagree with Justice Brobson's analysis on that subject.
At issue here are provisions of the Election Code pertaining to judicial resolution of objections to nomination petitions, which have existed in substantially the same form since the Code's adoption in 1937. Section 977 provides:
All nomination petitions and papers received and filed within the periods limited by this act shall be deemed to be valid, unless, within seven days after the last day for filing said nomination petition or paper, a petition is presented to the court specifically setting forth the objections thereto, and praying that the said petition or paper be set aside. ... Upon the presentation of such a petition, the court shall make an order fixing a time for hearing which shall not be later than ten days after the last day for filing said nomination petition or paper, and specifying the time and manner of notice that shall be given to the candidate or candidates named in the nomination petition or paper sought to be set aside. On the day fixed for said hearing, the court shall proceed without delay to hear said objections, and shall give such hearing precedence over other business before it, and shall finally determine said matter not later than fifteen (15) days after the last day for filing said nomination paper.
Justice Brobson fairly describes the real-world concerns with treating these statutory deadlines as "mandatory, not directory," including the practicability of "hold[ing] all hearings on all objections, regardless of number and complexity, within 3 days of the filing of the objections and issu[ing] decisions within 5 days thereafter." Concurring Statement (Brobson, J.) at 952-53. As it so happens, these very concerns animated this Court's earliest decisions interpreting Section 977 soon after the Code's adoption.
This Court first confronted Section 977's constraints in In re Objections to Nomination Papers of "Socialist Labor ," 332 Pa. 78, 1 A.2d 831 (1938) (" Socialist Labor "). There, an objector timely filed a petition to set aside the nomination papers of four candidates for statewide office running under the banner of the political body "Socialist Labor." Due to "the pressure of judicial business," the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County scheduled the hearing on the objector's petition for a date just beyond the ten-day window prescribed by Section 977. Id. at 833. The candidates moved to dismiss the petition in part on the grounds that the court's scheduling order violated the Election Code. Id. at 831. The court denied the motion, heard testimony, and ultimately set aside the nomination papers, prompting the candidates’ direct appeal to this Court. Id. at 832.
At the time Socialist Labor was decided, Section 977 required objectors to file their petitions "within five days after the last day for filing the said nomination petition or paper." 1 A.2d at 832 n.1 (quoting Act of June 3, 1937, P.L. 1333, No. 320, § 2937 ). Although that filing deadline subsequently was increased to seven days, where it now stands, the statutory language concerning the ten- and fifteen-day windows for the lower courts to set hearing dates and resolve challenges, respectively, has never been altered.
The jurisdiction previously exercised by the courts of common pleas over these matters subsequently was "transferred to the Commonwealth Court by the Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of 1970," 17 P.S. § 211.14(a)(57). In re Moore , 447 Pa. 526, 291 A.2d 531, 533 n.5 (citing Act of Jan. 6, 1970, P.L. (1969) 434).
The merits of the underlying challenge are not important here. What matters is the Court's treatment of the Code's time limits. Reasoning that the General Assembly's "intent and purpose in enacting Section 977 was to secure a prompt decision of questions affecting candidates for office," the Court acknowledged the Legislature's power to "fix a time within which ministerial acts of procedure must be performed by litigants and parties so that the court may acquire jurisdiction of the subject matter," and declined to "alter this legislative mandate." Id. Regarding the judiciary's role in adjudicating these matters, however, the Court addressed the practical difficulties attendant to the Code's tight time constraints:
The time within which such questions may be resolved is frequently very short. While courts will respect and follow legislative enactments pertaining to election procedure, they will not do so where such enactments are infringements on the judicial power, or where the provision is clearly incompatible with important judicial business, or impossible of judicial performance. [Section 977] requires the court not only to set a definite day for hearing but to determine and decide, within a fixed time, the various questions presented in election matters. ...
Where the act to be performed within a fixed time involves the exercise of purely judicial functions, such as hearing and decision of matters properly before the court, or where it is impossible of judicial performance ... within the time fixed by the legislature, such provisions will be held to be directory and not mandatory.
Id. (citing In re Election Cases , 65 Pa. 20, 34 (1870) ) (cleaned up).
In prior cases involving various Election Code commands that voters, candidates, objectors, and the like "shall" do some act, I criticized what I viewed as arbitrary (and sometimes gratuitous) efforts to distinguish seemingly unambiguous statutory language sometimes as "mandatory" and other times as merely "directory." Those debates need not be rehashed here. Notwithstanding its use of that vexatious terminology, in relegating Section 977's scheduling parameters to "directory" status, the Socialist Labor Court's decision appropriately turned upon separation-of-powers principles. See id. (identifying "infringements on the judicial power" as a ground for noncompliance with legislative directives regarding the "exercise of purely judicial functions"). And this Court consistently has reaffirmed that principled distinction as applied to the Election Code's timing provisions in the ensuing decades. See, e.g. , In re Nomination Papers of Am. Labor Party , 352 Pa. 576, 44 A.2d 48, 50 (1945) ("Clearly the legislature intended all provisions of Section 977 to be mandatory. It could not, however, constitutionally impose upon the courts mandatory duties pertaining to the exercise of the judicial function."); Moore , 291 A.2d at 533 ("The scheduling of hearings is definitely a ‘purely judicial function,’ as is also the ‘specifying of the time and manner of notice’ which [Section 977] directs the court to include in its order."); Holt I , 38 A.3d at 721 n.10 ; accord In re Shapp , 476 Pa. 480, 383 A.2d 201, 204 (1978).
See, e.g. , In re Canvass of Absentee & Mail-in Ballots of Nov. 3, 2020 General Election , ––– Pa. ––––, 241 A.3d 1058, 1080-87 (2020) (Wecht, J., concurring and dissenting); Pa. Democratic Party v. Boockvar , ––– Pa. ––––, 238 A.3d 345, 390-92 (2020) (Wecht, J., concurring); accord In re Cohen for Office of Phila. City Council-at-Large , 657 Pa. 434, 225 A.3d 1083, 1092-96 (2020) (Wecht, J., dissenting).
In Section 977, the General Assembly has made clear its intent that challenges to nomination papers and petitions be heard and resolved by the Commonwealth Court within two weeks or so of the filing deadlines, in order to ensure an orderly process in the runup to a primary election. And I have no doubt that the Commonwealth Court has sought assiduously to observe those time frames, indeed, especially so under the difficult circumstances of a compressed election calendar. So, too, has this Court strived to protect the Legislature's preferred primary schedule to the extent possible by moving expeditiously to resolve impasse litigation over the Commonwealth's congressional map as well as challenges to the Legislative Reapportionment Commission's ("LRC") Final Plan for state House and Senate districts. In slightly modifying the calendar for both congressional and state legislative primary elections this year, our Orders reflected the reality that the work of our Commonwealth's principal election administrators—the Department of State and the county boards of elections—necessarily is constrained by other state and federal election deadlines, particularly April 2, the federal deadline for sending remote military-overseas absentee ballots under the federal Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act ("UOCAVA"), and May 17, the date fixed by the Election Code for Pennsylvania's unified primary.
See 52 U.S.C. § 20302(a)(8)(A) (requiring the States to "transmit a validly requested absentee ballot to an absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter ... not later than 45 days before the election"); see also 25 Pa.C.S. § 3508(a)(1) ("[N]ot later than 45 days before the election, the county election board in each jurisdiction participating in the election shall transmit a ballot and balloting materials to all covered voters who by that date submit a valid military-overseas ballot application.").
See 25 P.S. § 2753(a) ("There shall be a General primary preceding each general election which shall be held on the third Tuesday of May in all even-numbered years, except in the year of the nomination of a President of the United States, in which year the General primary shall be held on the fourth Tuesday of April.").
Fundamentally, though, this is not a case about the effect of statutory commands. In an exercise of our plenary supervisory authority over Pennsylvania's Unified Judicial System—a responsibility imposed (and a prerogative conferred) upon us by the Commonwealth's Constitution —this Court instructed the Commonwealth Court to hold hearings on challenges to the nomination petitions of congressional candidates by Friday, March 25, and to resolve all objections by Tuesday, March 29. Here, the Commonwealth Court failed to meet at least one of those deadlines. When several petitioners, Applicants here, sought reconsideration of that court's modified schedule, it declined. Our command seemingly being clear, those individuals sought relief from this Court. But for the lower court's late modification of its own orders, I would have been inclined to grant Applicants relief. However, far from intimating an expectation that the court "justify [its] scheduling decisions in [its] scheduling orders," Concurring Statement (Brobson, J.) at 956, my inclination in favor of the Applicants’ position simply reflects the well-settled principle that "[w]here the orders of the Supreme Court" and an inferior tribunal conflict, "any order of this Court obviously is ‘supreme.’ " In re Bruno , 627 Pa. 505, 101 A.3d 635, 688 (2014).
See Pa. Const. art. V, § 2 (a) ("The Supreme Court shall be the highest court of the Commonwealth and in this Court shall be reposed the supreme judicial power of the Commonwealth."); see also 42 Pa.C.S. § 502 ("The Supreme Court shall have and exercise the powers vested in it by the Constitution of Pennsylvania, including the power generally to minister justice to all persons and to exercise the powers of the court, as fully and amply, to all intents and purposes, as the justices of the Court of King's Bench, Common Pleas and Exchequer, at Westminster, or any of them, could or might do on May 22, 1722."); id. § 726 ("Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Supreme Court may, on its own motion or upon petition of any party, in any matter pending before any court or magisterial district judge of this Commonwealth involving an issue of immediate public importance, assume plenary jurisdiction of such matter at any stage thereof and enter a final order or otherwise cause right and justice to be done."); see generally Bd. of Revision of Taxes, City of Phila. v. City of Phila. , 607 Pa. 104, 4 A.3d 610, 620 (2010) ("This Court may assume, at its discretion, plenary jurisdiction over a matter of immediate public importance that is pending before another court of this Commonwealth. Although employed to similar effect, our extraordinary jurisdiction is distinct from our King's Bench jurisdiction, which allows us to exercise power of general superintendency over inferior tribunals even when no matter is pending before a lower court.") (citations omitted).
Justice Brobson's suggestion that a majority of the Justices of this Court somehow "impl[ied] through language" in Monday's per curiam Order a lack of due diligence or presumed bad faith on the Commonwealth Court's part, or that we might transgress in adopting what he calls "the extreme remedy of this Court's public interference with another court's docket," Concurring Statement (Brobson, J.) at 954-55, 956, is perplexing and off-target. Every working day, this Court dispassionately assesses the rulings of all manner of Pennsylvania tribunals for legal error, abuses of discretion, or other substantive or procedural irregularities. Not infrequently, this Court in one fashion or another "interferes" with Pennsylvania courts’ rulings—and, sometimes, their dockets. Seldom does this involve a qualitative judgment regarding the lower court's motives. It is nothing more than this Court ensuring regularity and consistency in the law.
The mere departure from our scheduling Order does not suggest bad faith. It may, in fact, reflect a good-faith misapprehension of governing law arising from an overly broad reading of a lengthy footnote from this Court's 2012 decision in Holt I . Indeed, both the Commonwealth Court and Justice Brobson cite that footnote for the proposition that our Order establishing new deadlines for nomination petition challenges may be considered "directory." Their reliance on that passage is misplaced.
While that footnote served two important functions, it provides no authority for an inferior tribunal to issue orders in conflict with our own. In the first half of the footnote, this Court explained the necessity of "adjust[ing]" the election calendar for that year's state House and Senate primary election. Pursuant to Article II, Section 17, of the Pennsylvania Constitution, the LRC's adoption of a Final Plan for state legislative districts automatically triggers a thirty-day period during which "[a]ny aggrieved person may file an appeal" in this Court challenging the plan as "contrary to law." PA. CONST. art. II, § 17 (d). Although the LRC in Holt had adopted its Final Plan by December 12, 2011, the constitutionally prescribed appeals period delayed this Court's consideration of appeals challenging the plan until January 2012. That was significant because 2012 was a presidential election year, meaning that Pennsylvania's primary election would be in April, rather than May, effectively pulling the nomination petition circulation period forward by a month for every office on the primary ballot. See 25 P.S. § 2753(a).
Consequently, the Holt Court had to reconcile the fact that, if it did not adjust the primary election calendar, its review of the LRC's Final Plan that January following the thirty-day appeals period would have directly conflicted with the window in which candidates seeking the political parties’ nomination for a seat in the General Assembly could begin to circulate nomination petitions. This Court noted that it
was cognizant that the LRC's timeline in adopting a Final Plan had ensured that the appeals [challenging the Final Plan] would carry into the period when nomination petitions could begin to be circulated, and that any mandate other than outright denial or dismissal of the appeals could cause disruption of that process. Therefore, the per curiam order also was careful to adjust the primary election schedule and, consistently with the order we entered on February 14, 1992, [in Mellow v. Mitchell , 530 Pa. 44, 607 A.2d 204 (1992),] the last time a presidential primary occurred in a reapportionment year, we directed that petition signatures collected before our mandate issued would be deemed valid as to timeliness. See Order, 1/25/12 (per curiam ).
Holt I , 38 A.3d at 721 n.10.
This Court then explained the source of its authority to alter the dates governing the judiciary's consideration of petition challenges, which should now be familiar:
Our adjustment of the primary election calendar does not alter the discretion vested in the Commonwealth Court, which will be tasked in its original jurisdiction with hearing any objections to nominating petitions. The Election Code provides a very restrictive time schedule, specifically including a ten day cut-off for hearings and a fifteen day deadline for decisions. 25 P.S. § 2937. However, this Court recognized that appeals of this nature entail the "exercise of purely judicial functions." In re Moore , , 291 A.2d 531, 534 (Pa. 1972). Thus, as it respects the judicial function, the Election Code's deadlines are understood in this context as "directory," although the deadlines and requirements of the Code will remain mandatory as to petitioners.
Id. (citing Mellow , 607 A.2d at 224 ; Shapp , 383 A.2d at 204 ). And it is here that the Commonwealth Court and Justice Brobson conflate two distinct sources of scheduling authority.
While I have no doubt that the Commonwealth Court in this case in good faith believed that this statement provided it some flexibility to further adjust the dates we established in Carter , nothing in Holt or the authorities it cited countenances such tinkering. Properly contextualized, I understood this Court's assurances that the lower court's discretion would otherwise remain unaltered as a reference to the manner in which that tribunal hears and resolves nomination challenges in its original jurisdiction—e.g. , that the court retains ample latitude to direct the form and method of submitting challenges, to take witness testimony, and to run the hearings generally—so long as it did so within the time frame set by this Court. The Commonwealth Court's discretion did not extend to deviating from our scheduling instructions at its own volition, and that court misapprehended its own power in doing so.
Citing past practices, Justice Brobson contends that this Court's silence in the face of similar deviations has implicitly sanctioned the approach taken by the Commonwealth Court here. He cites In re Nomination Petition of Gales , 618 Pa. 93, 54 A.3d 855 (2012), as an example of this Court's failure to criticize the Commonwealth Court for "not strictly adher[ing] to the hearing and decision dates set forth in the Election Code" when it held an evidentiary hearing on the objections at issue "beyond the dates set forth in the Court's Per Curiam Order" in Holt I . Concurring Statement (Brobson, J.) at 954 (noting that "the Commonwealth Court held an evidentiary hearing on the objections on March 6 and 7, 2012, and issued its order on the last day of the hearing"). While it is true that this Court did not criticize the lower court's scheduling decision in Gales , it had good reason to exercise such restraint: no one asked this Court to intervene, even though the lower court's technical noncompliance with our scheduling Order might have warranted such intervention had someone sought relief on that basis. Cf. Taylor v. King , 284 Pa. 235, 130 A. 407, 409 (1925) (explaining that a governmental body's historical course of conduct will not ipso facto "justify [ ] judicial approval" for all time notwithstanding noncompliance with the law, and that "such action will be restrained when properly attacked ") (emphasis added).
I would take no pleasure in stepping on the Commonwealth Court's best efforts to resolve the deluge of nomination challenges it faces statewide. But our order in Carter was clear, well-reasoned, and tailored to ensure that this primary cycle's timing conforms with federal law and accounts for the difficulties of preparing and distributing primary ballots to Pennsylvania voters all over the world. It is true that we have held in past cases that separation-of-powers concerns effectively rendered legislative attempts to control certain aspects of the judicial process merely advisory. But in this case, only one power was implicated—ours to direct Pennsylvania's Unified Judiciary. If we are to administer the judiciary effectively, the lower courts’ adherence to our directives cannot be optional.
Justices Todd, Donohue and Dougherty join this concurring statement.
JUSTICE BROBSON, concurring
As to the dismissal of the Emergency Application for Writ of Mandamus and/or Extraordinary Relief (Emergency Application) by way of this Court's Per Curiam Order of March 28, 2022 (PCO), I concur because the Commonwealth Court acquiesced to the request of the Applicants to expedite consideration of their objections to certain nomination petitions to March 29, 2022, thereby mooting the request for relief in the Emergency Application. As to the portion of the PCO that attributes the dismissal to the Commonwealth Court's "timely holding [of] the hearings pursuant to our prior Order," however, I strongly dissent.
The General Assembly, exercising its authority under Article I, Section 4, clause 1 of the United States Constitution (Elections Clause), enacted Section 908 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. § 2868, establishing the first day and the last day to circulate and file nomination petitions. Due to impasse litigation over new congressional and state legislative reapportionment plans occasioned by the 2020 Census, it was not possible for candidates to begin circulating their petitions on the statutory first day. Accordingly, once the impasse litigation was resolved, the Court had to establish new "first" and new "last" days, shortening the statutory period for circulation and filing in an effort to preserve the May 17, 2022 Primary Election.
"The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof ...." U.S. Const. art. I, § 4, cl. 1.
"No nomination petition shall be circulated prior to the thirteenth Tuesday before the primary, and no signature shall be counted unless it bears a date affixed not earlier than the thirteenth Tuesday nor later than the tenth Tuesday prior to the primary." 25 P.S. § 2868.
Of the two, the "last" day has greater significance under the Election Code with respect to handling objections to nomination petitions. Pertinently, with respect to objections to nomination petitions, Section 977 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. § 2937, sets a number of "deadlines," all of which flow from the last date for the filing of nomination petitions: (a) objections must be filed with the court within 7 days of the last day to file; (b) the court must schedule a hearing on any objections no later than 10 days after the last day to file; and (c) the court shall issue its decisions on any objections no later than 15 days after the last day to file. Objections are most often filed on the last possible day. Practically, then, if the statutory deadlines are mandatory, not directory, the Commonwealth Court (and courts of common pleas with respect to certain elections) must hold all hearings on all objections, regardless of number and complexity, within 3 days of the filing of the objections and issue decisions within 5 days thereafter.
This Court encountered this reality over a decade ago during the last redistricting cycle. In its Per Curiam Order in Holt v. 2011 Legislative Reapportionment Commission , 614 Pa. 364, 38 A.3d 711 (2012) ( Holt I ), this Court established new first (January 26th) and last days (February 16th) to circulate and file nomination petitions for the 2012 Primary Election, with remaining deadlines tracking the statutory periods. With respect to the last day for hearings, the Court established February 27, 2012, as the date. Although this is the 11th day, not the 10th day, following the last day to file nomination petitions, the 10th day (February 26th) would have been a Sunday. Under Section 1908 of the Statutory Construction Act of 1972, 1 Pa. C.S. § 1908, the Sunday had to be excluded, and thus the Court appropriately announced the 11th day, and not the 10th, as the last day for hearings. As for the final day by which the Commonwealth Court had to decide objections, the Court announced in its Order that the date was March 2nd, which is 15 days after the last day that the Court established for circulation and filing of nomination petitions, thereby following the statutory scheme.
Notably, in his subsequent majority opinion, Holt I , authored in support of the Per Curiam Order, then-Chief Justice Castille noted how the Court "adjusted" the primary election schedule in its earlier order. Holt I , 38 A.3d at 721 n.10. But the Court did not stop there, which would seem an appropriate cut-off if the Court intended to bind the Commonwealth Court to its Order. Instead, the Court continued:
Our adjustment of the primary election calendar does not alter the discretion vested in the Commonwealth Court,
which will be tasked in its original jurisdiction with hearing any objections to nominating petitions. The Election Code provides a very restrictive time schedule, specifically including a ten[-]day cut-off for hearings and a fifteen[-]day deadline for decisions. 25 P.S. § 2937. However, this Court recognized that appeals of this nature entail the "exercise of purely judicial functions." In re NominationPetition of Moore , 447 Pa. 526, 291 A.2d 531, 534 (Pa.1972). Thus, as it respects the judicial function, the Election Code's deadlines are understood in this context as "directory," although the deadlines and requirements of the [Election] Code will remain mandatory as to petitioners. See also Mellow v. Mitchell , 530 Pa. 44, 607 A.2d 204, 224 (Pa.1992) (same); In re Shapp , 476 Pa. 480, 383 A.2d 201, 204 (Pa.1978) (same).
Id. (emphasis added). In adding this footnote, the Court, in my view, acknowledged that beyond setting new "first" and "last" days by necessity, the remaining schedule set forth in the Per Curiam Order, particularly with regard to the resolution of objections, was dictated by the General Assembly pursuant to its authority under the Elections Clause through Section 977 of the Election Code, which the Court expressly acknowledged was "a very restrictive time schedule." Id. For that reason, this Court added that the Commonwealth Court retained the discretion to exercise its judicial function and treat the deadlines as directory, notwithstanding the Court had restated the statutory deadlines in its Per Curiam Order.
That year, the Commonwealth Court did not strictly adhere to the hearing and decision dates set forth in the Election Code, as restated in the Holt I Per Curiam Order. In In re Nomination Petition of Gales , 618 Pa. 93, 54 A.3d 855 (2012), for example, the Commonwealth Court held an evidentiary hearing on the objections on March 6 and 7, 2012, and issued its order on the last day of the hearing. Both the hearing and decision fell beyond the dates set forth in the Court's Per Curiam Order. Although this Court in In re Gales reversed the Commonwealth Court's decision, it did so without any criticism of the timeliness of the Commonwealth Court's hearing or decision. Again, this is consistent with this Court's long-held view that the statutory deadlines are directory and that the courts of this Commonwealth retain the discretion to manage their dockets as a judicial function. More importantly, it is consistent with the Court's majority opinion in Holt I .
In its February 23, 2022 Per Curiam Order in Carter v. Chapman , No. 7 MM 2022, 273 A.3d 499 ( Carter Order), this Court, inter alia , followed its precedent in Holt I , establishing new "first" and "last" days and restating the statutory time periods attendant to the objection process that flow from the new "last" day to circulate and file nomination petitions. This matter came before this Court because the Commonwealth Court originally scheduled hearings on two particular sets of objections for March 31, 2022, and April 4, 2022, beyond the statutory dates for hearing (March 25th) and disposition (March 29th) set forth in the Carter Order. The objectors in those cases, Applicants here, were unhappy with the Commonwealth Court's schedule. Rather than seek an immediate interlocutory appeal, however, they filed the Emergency Application. Applicants argued that the Commonwealth Court did not comply with the Carter Order with respect to the timing of hearings and disposition of their objections and must be forced to do so. They further contended that the failure of the Commonwealth Court to comply with the schedule set forth in the Carter Order threatened the timely distribution of military-overseas ballots. Neither asserted ground, in my view, warranted the extreme remedy of this Court's public interference with another court's docket.
The only deviation in the Carter Order from the statutory schedule to resolve objections is the last day for the Commonwealth Court to render decisions, which this Court shortened by 1 day to 14 (not 15) days. The Carter Order does not explain this 1-day deviation, but I do not believe it is material for purposes of the matter before the Court.
As for Applicants’ concerns about our servicemen and women overseas, assuming they (as opposed to the Secretary of the Commonwealth) are even the appropriate party to raise such concerns with the Court, their concerns are unfounded, at least on the basis of the allegations in their Emergency Application. Section 1305 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. § 3146.5, requires county boards of elections to mail military-overseas ballots no later than 45 days prior to the date of the primary, which deadline falls on April 2, 2022, this year. Both the Election Code and the Uniform Military and Overseas Voters Act, 25 Pa. C.S. §§ 3501 -3519, authorize county boards of elections to provide military-overseas voters with a special write-in absentee ballot when official absentee ballots are not yet available. See 25 P.S. §§ 3146.3(d), 3146.5(a) ; 25 Pa. C.S. § 3506(d). The special write-in ballot is blank, without candidates listed.
In addition to the blank write-in ballot, the counties separately provide military and overseas voters with a list of the candidates known at the time the ballots are mailed. County boards of elections routinely use special write-in ballots rather than official military-overseas ballots because the official ballots often are not yet printed by the date the military-overseas ballots are to be mailed; candidates may still be in the process of withdrawing their candidacy and challenges to nomination petitions may still be pending. Thus, the use of special write-in ballots is common even in years when the election calendar is not modified by extraordinary events as it has been this year.
Moreover, in order to facilitate the military-overseas ballot process, the county boards of elections post an Official Notice of Election for Military and Overseas Voters on their websites. The notice provides information regarding the process to obtain an official military-overseas ballot, the ability to vote using a Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot (FWAB), the offices expected to be on the ballot, and links to the unofficial candidate lists. See generally , 25 Pa. C.S. § 3514 (pertaining to election notices); see also Department of State website at https://www.vote.pa.gov/Voting-in-PA/Pages/Military-and-Overseas-Voters.aspx (providing general information to military and overseas citizens about candidate and office lists for special write-in absentee ballots and FWABs) (last visited Mar. 31, 2022). The counties keep the candidate information on their websites updated, and military and overseas voters are provided with a link to the counties’ current candidate lists. In short, these ballots will be sent out on time, as they have been in the past, notwithstanding pending objections that may have the effect of altering the candidates up for election. Our servicemen and servicewomen overseas will not be prejudiced.
This Court has opined:
[M]andamus is chiefly employed to compel the performance (when refused) of a ministerial duty, or to compel action (when refused) in matters involving judgment and discretion. It is not used to direct the exercise of judgment or discretion in a particular way, nor to direct the retraction or reversal of an action already taken. Mandamus is a device that is available in our system to compel a tribunal or administrative agency to act when that tribunal or agency has been "sitting on its hands." It must not be turned into a general writ of error or writ of review lest we further encourage interlocutory and piecemeal appellate review, or multiple appeals with their attendant burdens and delays.
Pa. Dental Ass'n v. Cmwlth. Ins. Dep't , 512 Pa. 217, 516 A.2d 647, 652 (1986) (citation omitted). Here, the Commonwealth Court was not sitting on its hands. Applicants were not being deprived of any "right" to challenge nomination petitions. To the contrary, as Applicants acknowledged in their Emergency Application, the Commonwealth Court did schedule hearings on their objections. Applicants did not identify any particularized harm that they were suffering at the hands of the Commonwealth Court. In the absence of any evidence, let alone an allegation, that the Commonwealth Court had utterly failed to act on objections or was dragging its feet, I did not, and still do not, believe it appropriate for this Court to issue a public and extraordinary writ to force the Commonwealth Court to act faster simply at the request of a litigant who is suffering no discernable harm.
Moreover, I am troubled that a majority of my colleagues, implying through language in the PCO that the Commonwealth Court was not acting timely and was somehow violating the Carter Order, were so unwilling to give the Commonwealth Court the benefit of any doubt or extend any deference to its scheduling decisions, particularly in light of our precedent in Holt I . Although the Commonwealth Court is the subject of the Emergency Application, it was not a party to this proceeding and was not in a position to defend itself. Moreover, courts are not routinely required to justify their scheduling decisions in scheduling orders. Rather than ascribe to the Commonwealth Court some sort of presumed bad faith, particularly in the absence of any such allegations in the Application, I believe this Court should have proceeded on the assumption that the Commonwealth Court, which is acting in the trenches, has been and is proceeding as swiftly as possible, understanding the General Assembly's policy decision that time is of the essence in these matters but that Holt I gives the court some leeway. As Justice Potter Stewart once said, "swift justice demands more than just swiftness." Henderson v. Bannan , 256 F.2d 363, 390 (6th Cir. 1958) (Stewart, J., dissenting). To the extent the Commonwealth Court's scheduling decisions truly disrupt or deprive any litigant of a remedy—i.e. , results in actual harm—such an issue can be addressed on expedited appeal to this Court. There were no allegations to that effect before us in the Emergency Application.
Even if a majority of this Court is of the view that the Commonwealth Court's decade of reliance on Holt I is suspect, we should not doubt the good faith of the Commonwealth Court's reliance on it. Indeed, I relied on Holt I when I signed on to the scheduling portion of the Carter Order. In my view, this matter is moot not because the Commonwealth Court righted a wrong, which seems to be the implicit message in the PCO, but because the Commonwealth Court voluntarily chose to advance the date of Applicants’ hearings to the date Applicants desired in their Emergency Application.