Mountain Gun Owners v. Polis , 2020 CO 66 ( 2020 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    June 29, 2020
    
    2020 CO 66
    No. 18SC817, Rocky Mountain Gun Owners v. Polis—Right to Keep and Bear
    Arms—Colo. Const. art. II, § 13—Large-Capacity Magazines.
    The supreme court reviews whether legislation prohibiting the sale,
    transfer, or possession of a “large-capacity magazine” violates the right to keep
    and bear arms protected under article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution.
    Relying on its longstanding test under Robertson v. City & County of Denver,
    
    874 P.2d 325
    (Colo. 1994), for examining challenges brought under article II,
    section 13, the court concludes that the legislation is a reasonable exercise of the
    police power that has neither the purpose nor effect of nullifying the right to bear
    arms in self-defense. Accordingly, the court affirms the judgment of the court of
    appeals.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2020 CO 66
    Supreme Court Case No. 18SC817
    Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 17CA1502
    Petitioners:
    Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, a Colorado nonprofit corporation; National
    Association for Gun Rights, Inc., a Virginia nonprofit corporation; and John A.
    Sternberg,
    v.
    Respondent:
    Jared S. Polis, in his official capacity as Governor of the State of Colorado.
    Judgment Affirmed
    en banc
    June 29, 2020
    Attorneys for Petitioners:
    Arrington Law Office
    Barry K. Arrington
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent:
    Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General
    Eric R. Olson, Solicitor General
    Stephanie Lindquist Scoville, First Assistant Attorney General
    Kathleen L. Spalding, Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Grant T. Sullivan, Assistant Solicitor General
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence:
    Hogan Lovells US LLP
    Lisa J. Fried
    Nathaniel H. Nesbitt
    Mark D. Gibson
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae City and County of Denver:
    Kristin M. Bronson, City Attorney
    Kristen J. Crawford, Assistant City Attorney
    Kristin George, Assistant City Attorney
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae City of Boulder:
    Thomas A. Carr, City Attorney
    Boulder, Colorado
    Everytown Law
    William J. Taylor, Jr.
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorney for Amici Curiae Colorado Law Enforcement Firearms Instructors
    Association; Sheriffs Shannon Byerly, Todd Combs, Allen Cooper, Garth
    Crowther, Bill Elder, Thomas Elliott, KC Hume, Matt Lewis, Dave Martin,
    Anthony Mazzola, Don McDonald, Tom McGraw, Jason Mikesell, Shawn
    Mobley, Tim Norton, Brett Powell, Steve Reams, Richard Reigenborn, Danny
    Sanchez, Brent Schroetlin, Casey Sheridan, Aaron Shiplett, Jeff Shrader, Justin
    Smith, Tony Spurlock, John Stivers, Rick Valdez, James Van Beek, Lou
    Vallario, Garrett Wiggins, Don Wilson, and Sam Zordel; and the
    Independence Institute:
    David B. Kopel
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Colorado Municipal League:
    David W. Broadwell
    Laurel Witt
    Denver, Colorado
    2
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Colorado State Shooting Association:
    Hale Westfall, LLP
    Richard A. Westfall
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorney for Amicus Curiae Firearms Policy Coalition, Firearms Policy
    Foundation, Second Amendment Foundation, and Millennial Policy Center:
    Joseph Greenlee
    Sacramento, California
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence:
    Morrison & Foerster LLP
    Nicole K. Serfoss
    Sarah E. Barr
    Denver, Colorado
    JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    3
    ¶1    In recent decades, Colorado has been the setting of two of the nation’s most
    notorious mass shootings: Columbine High School in 1999 and the Aurora movie
    theater in 2012. In both attacks, the shooters used large-capacity ammunition
    magazines. Collectively, the shooters killed over two dozen people and wounded
    scores more.
    ¶2    In response to these shootings, the Colorado General Assembly passed
    House Bill 13-1224 (“HB 1224”), which limits the capacity of magazines acquired
    after July 1, 2013. Relevant here, HB 1224 generally prohibits the sale, transfer, or
    possession of any “large-capacity magazine,” defined to include “[a] fixed or
    detachable magazine, box, drum, feed strip, or similar device capable of accepting,
    or that is designed to be readily converted to accept, more than fifteen rounds of
    ammunition.” § 18-12-301(2)(a)(I), C.R.S. (2019) (emphasis added).
    ¶3    Rocky Mountain Gun Owners (a Colorado nonprofit organization), the
    National Association for Gun Rights (a Virginia nonprofit organization), and John
    A. Sternberg (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) challenge this law as an infringement on
    the right to bear arms—not under the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
    but under article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution. Plaintiffs construe
    HB 1224’s definition of “large-capacity magazine” to encompass all magazines
    with removable base pads because such magazines can be “readily converted to
    accept[] more than fifteen rounds of ammunition.” § 18-12-301(2)(a)(I). They
    argue that HB 1224 therefore operates to ban practically all detachable magazines,
    4
    violating Coloradans’ state constitutional right to bear arms in defense of home,
    person, and property.
    ¶4       We disagree. We conclude that Plaintiffs’ interpretation of the definition of
    “large-capacity magazine” is inconsistent with the provision’s plain text because
    it ignores the narrowing language, “designed to be readily converted to accept[]
    more than fifteen rounds of ammunition.” § 18-12-301(2)(a)(I) (emphasis added).
    Relying on our longstanding test under Robertson v. City & County of Denver,
    
    874 P.2d 325
    (Colo. 1994), for examining challenges brought under article II,
    section 13 of the Colorado Constitution, we hold that Plaintiffs failed to prove
    beyond a reasonable doubt that HB 1224 violates the state constitutional right to
    bear arms. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
    ¶5       We emphasize that the Second Amendment applies with full force in
    Colorado and our legislature may not enact any law in contravention of it. But
    Plaintiffs have challenged HB 1224 only under the Colorado Constitution.
    Reviewing that claim, we conclude today that the legislation passes state
    constitutional muster. Because Plaintiffs do not challenge HB 1224 under the
    Second Amendment, we do not address whether the legislation runs afoul of the
    federal constitution. That separate question is simply not before us.1
    1   We granted certiorari to review the following issues:
    5
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    A. HB 1224
    ¶6     In 2013, the Governor signed HB 1224 into law. As relevant here, that
    legislation added two provisions to the criminal code regulating large-capacity
    magazines (“LCMs”).          Section 18-12-301(2)(a)(I) defines a “large-capacity
    magazine” to include any “fixed or detachable magazine, box, drum, feed strip, or
    similar device capable of accepting, or that is designed to be readily converted to accept,
    more than fifteen rounds of ammunition.” (Emphasis added.) Section 18-12-302,
    C.R.S. (2019), criminalizes the sale, transfer, or possession of LCMs, with certain
    exceptions.2
    1. Whether this court should address and resolve the conflict
    between Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, LLC v. Regents of
    the University of Colorado, 
    280 P.3d 18
    (Colo. App. 2010), and
    Trinen v. City & County of Denver, 
    53 P.3d 754
    (Colo. App. 2002),
    surrounding the meaning of the “reasonableness” standard of
    review established in Robertson v. City & County of Denver, 
    874 P.2d 325
    (Colo. 1994).
    2. Whether the court of appeals erred in applying the Robertson
    reasonableness standard after the United States Supreme Court’s
    decision in McDonald v. City of Chicago, 
    561 U.S. 742
    (2010).
    3. Whether the court of appeals’ interpretation of HB 1224 was
    contrary to the plain meaning and purpose of the statute.
    4. Whether HB 1224 violates the right to bear arms as set forth in
    article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution.
    2Section 18-12-302 permits possession by a person who owned an LCM on July 1,
    2013 and has maintained continuous possession of it, § 18-12-302(2)(a), and it
    6
    B. Plaintiffs’ Complaint
    ¶7    Plaintiffs challenged HB 1224 under article II, section 13 of the Colorado
    Constitution, which addresses the right to keep and bear arms:
    The right of no person to keep and bear arms in defense of his home,
    person and property, or in aid of the civil power when thereto legally
    summoned, shall be called in question; but nothing herein contained
    shall be construed to justify the practice of carrying concealed
    weapons.
    Colo. Const. art. II, § 13. In their complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that the LCM
    prohibition violates the right to keep and bear arms in defense of home, person,
    and property.3 In particular, Plaintiffs alleged that “[t]he magazines for most
    handguns, for many rifles, and for some shotguns are detachable box magazines,”
    the “very large majority” of which contain a removable floor plate, or base pad.4
    permits possession by manufacturers, employees, and sellers meeting certain
    criteria, § 18-12-302(3).
    3Amici Curiae Colorado Law Enforcement Firearms Instructors Association et al.
    argue that HB 1224 also burdens the article II, section 13 right “to keep and bear
    arms . . . in aid of the civil power when thereto legally summoned.” Because
    Plaintiffs did not address this theory in their complaint, on appeal, or in their
    briefing to this court, we do not review it.
    4 A floor plate, or base pad, is essentially the bottom end of a magazine that keeps
    its components in place. Inside the magazine, a spring-loaded follower rests
    against the base pad to hold the ammunition under pressure such that cartridges
    are fed into the gun’s chamber at the other end. Although magazines historically
    were made with fixed metal baseplates, at the time of trial, over 90% of detachable
    magazines were manufactured with removable pads.
    7
    According to Plaintiffs, a removable base pad “allows the user to clear ammunition
    jams, clean the inside of the magazine, and perform maintenance on the internal
    mechanics of the magazine.” But importantly for purposes of their constitutional
    challenge, Plaintiffs alleged that a removable base pad also “inherently creates the
    possibility” for a magazine to be extended through commercially available or
    readily fabricated parts, such that nearly every magazine can be “readily
    converted to accept[] more than fifteen rounds of ammunition” in violation of
    section 18-12-301(2)(a)(I).     In short, Plaintiffs complained that because the
    “designed to be readily converted” clause in section 18-12-301(2)(a)(I) arguably
    encompasses any magazine with a removable base pad, it effectively bans most
    functional firearms and thus violates Coloradans’ right to keep and bear arms
    under the state constitution.
    C. Initial Dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Complaint
    ¶8    The trial court granted the Governor’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ claim,
    relying on this court’s decision in Robertson v. City & County of Denver. Robertson
    addressed a challenge to a Denver ordinance that banned the manufacture, sale,
    or possession of assault 
    weapons. 874 P.2d at 326
    . The district court in that case
    concluded that the right to bear arms under article II, section 13 is a fundamental
    right.
    Id. at 327
    . 
    It therefore reviewed the ordinance under strict scrutiny, asking
    whether the ban was supported by a compelling government interest and whether
    it was narrowly tailored to meet that interest.
    Id. at 331.
    8
    ¶9    This court reversed and instead applied a “reasonable exercise” test to
    Denver’s assault weapon ban.
    Id. Specifically, we
    held that “the state may regulate
    the exercise of [the article II, section 13 right] under its inherent police power so
    long as the exercise of that power is reasonable,”
    id. at 328,
    and that an act is within
    the state’s police power “if it is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental
    interest such as the public health, safety, or welfare,”
    id. at 331.
    We concluded that
    because Denver’s ordinance served a legitimate interest of improving public safety
    and banned only a narrow class of weapons, the law was a reasonable exercise of
    the state’s police power.
    Id. at 333.
    ¶10   Here, applying the reasonable exercise test from Robertson, the trial court
    held that, even accepting the facts alleged in their complaint as true, Plaintiffs
    failed to state a claim that HB 1224 was not a reasonable exercise of the state’s
    police power. The trial court rejected Plaintiffs’ reading of the statutory definition
    of an LCM, reasoning that “a magazine that is designed to be readily converted is
    not the same as one with a design that is subject to being readily converted.” The
    court explained that “[t]he fact that extensions may be bought or built which take
    advantage of the removable floor plate to extend the magazine capacity does not
    alter [the] purpose for which the floor plate was designed.” That purpose, even
    according to the complaint, was to allow users to clear ammunition jams and
    perform maintenance and cleaning. The trial court thus concluded that Plaintiffs’
    central allegation rested on a misreading of the plain language of HB 1224.
    9
    D. RMGO I
    ¶11   The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s order dismissing the
    complaint. Rocky Mountain Gun Owners v. Hickenlooper, 
    2016 COA 45M
    , 
    371 P.3d 768
    (“RMGO I”). In a 2-1 ruling, the division rejected Plaintiffs’ chief argument on
    appeal: that the U.S. Supreme Court’s decisions in District of Columbia v. Heller,
    
    554 U.S. 570
    (2008), and McDonald v. City of Chicago, 
    561 U.S. 742
    (2010), effectively
    overruled Robertson by establishing that the right to bear arms under the Second
    Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is “fundamental” and that restrictions on the
    right are therefore subject to heightened scrutiny.5 RMGO I, ¶¶ 
    16-22, 371 P.3d at 772
    –74. The division majority reasoned that Plaintiffs did not challenge HB 1224
    under the Second Amendment, but instead under the Colorado Constitution, “the
    construction and application of which are matters peculiarly within the province
    of the Colorado Supreme Court to determine.”
    Id. at ¶
    20, 371 P.3d at 773
    –74.
    ¶12   The division also disagreed with Plaintiffs’ premise that, by adopting the
    reasonable exercise test, Robertson implicitly held the right to bear arms under
    article II, section 13 is not fundamental.
    Id. at ¶
    18, 371 P.3d at 772
    . On this point,
    it disagreed with the division in Trinen v. City & County of Denver, 
    53 P.3d 754
    5In dissent on this point, Judge Graham agreed with Plaintiffs that after Heller and
    McDonald, restrictions on the article II, section 13 right can no longer be evaluated
    under a reasonableness test. RMGO I, ¶¶ 
    49–69, 371 P.3d at 779
    –82.
    10
    (Colo. App. 2002), and explained its view that Trinen’s reading of Robertson was
    “based on the misperception that Robertson’s ‘reasonable exercise of the police
    power’ test was ‘essentially’ the same as the ‘rational basis test.’” RMGO I, ¶ 18
    
    n.3, 371 P.3d at 772
    n.3 (quoting 
    Trinen, 53 P.3d at 757
    –58). The division agreed
    instead with the analysis in Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, LLC v. Regents
    of the University of Colorado, 
    280 P.3d 18
    (Colo. App. 2010), see RMGO I, ¶ 18 
    n.3, 371 P.3d at 772
    n.3, which concluded that the reasonable exercise test is
    distinguishable from rational basis review and that Robertson expressly declined
    to address whether the article II, section 13 right is fundamental, Students for
    Concealed 
    Carry, 280 P.3d at 26
    –29.
    ¶13   Having concluded that Robertson provided the applicable framework, the
    division determined that because the reasonable exercise test presents a mixed
    question of law and fact, the trial court erred in dismissing Plaintiffs’ claim without
    a factual inquiry into the reasonableness of the limits set by HB 1224. RMGO I,
    ¶¶ 
    23–31, 371 P.3d at 774
    –75. It therefore reversed the trial court’s judgment and
    remanded the case to give Plaintiffs an opportunity to test their allegations
    “through the crucible of factfinding.”
    Id. at ¶
    ¶ 29, 
    48, 371 P.3d at 775
    , 778.
    E. Bench Trial
    ¶14   A week-long bench trial followed. The court heard testimony from both
    sides’ experts in constitutional history; Plaintiffs’ experts in statistical analysis and
    the design and operation of firearms and their components; and the Governor’s
    11
    experts in public health and violence prevention, security policy and mass
    shootings, and economics and econometric analysis. It also heard testimony from
    former law enforcement officers and witnesses to mass shootings.
    ¶15   In a detailed written order, the court concluded that Plaintiffs did not meet
    their burden to prove HB 1224 unconstitutional under Robertson. First, the court
    made findings concerning the relationship between LCMs and the prevalence and
    lethality of mass shootings. These included that the number and fatality rate of
    mass shootings in the country had surged in the preceding decade; that use of
    LCMs in mass shootings dramatically increases the number of victims shot, results
    in victims being struck by more bullets, and increases the fatality rate of struck
    victims; and that LCMs have been used in the most horrific mass shootings in
    recent history, including Columbine High School in 1999 and the Aurora movie
    theater in 2012.
    ¶16   Next, based on testimony from a security policy expert and a witness who
    tackled a gunman during a shooting in Arizona, the trial court found that one of
    the most important dynamics in ending a mass shooting and reducing casualties
    is the pause created by the shooter’s need to stop and reload or replace a magazine.
    Such pauses give victims an opportunity to take life-saving measures like hiding,
    running, or attacking the shooter. Ultimately, the court found that the greater the
    capacity of the magazines used, the greater the number of people hurt. By
    12
    contrast, the lower the capacity of the magazines used, the sooner opportunities
    are created to allow people to take potential life-saving measures.
    ¶17   On the other side of the equation, the court found that the ability to fire more
    than fifteen rounds without replacing a magazine is not required for purposes of
    legitimate self-defense. It observed that persons defending themselves, their
    homes, or their property do not seek to kill as many people as they can; instead,
    they need only to cause an intruder or assailant to flee. Indeed, the court noted
    that the testimony of law enforcement officers with decades of experience in urban
    and rural jurisdictions identified no examples of individuals firing more than two
    to three shots in self-defense.
    ¶18   Looking to the legislative history of HB 1224, the trial court concluded there
    was “no question” that its specific purpose was “to reduce the number of people
    who are killed or shot in mass shootings,” as opposed to reducing overall gun
    violence or gun deaths. It therefore rejected as irrelevant Plaintiffs’ evidence
    regarding the ineffectiveness of LCM prohibitions in reducing general murder
    rates, gun homicide rates, or gun crime rates. Ultimately, the court concluded that
    HB 1224 sought to address a “specific and valid governmental concern regarding
    the health, safety, and welfare” of Coloradans, namely, reducing “the number of
    victims in mass shootings by limiting the number of rounds that can be fired before
    a shooter has to reload.”
    13
    ¶19   The evidence presented at trial further persuaded the court that the
    fifteen-round limit was not only based on a “valid, reasonable, safety concern,”
    but is reasonable and “does not impose on the constitutionally protected right to
    keep and bear arms for self-defense or defense of home or property.” The court
    noted that in fact, during the legislative process, the General Assembly raised the
    limit from ten rounds (as initially proposed) to fifteen rounds as a compromise “to
    increase the capacity of firearms used for defensive purposes.”
    ¶20   In concluding that HB 1224 was a reasonable exercise of the state’s police
    power, the trial court again rejected Plaintiffs’ position that the statutory language,
    “designed to be readily converted,” encompasses the 90% of detachable magazines
    manufactured with a removable base pad. It acknowledged that Plaintiffs’ expert
    had demonstrated the ease with which various magazines with removable base
    pads can be converted to accept more ammunition in a matter of seconds using
    simple tools. But the court doubted the credibility of the expert’s suggestion that
    the removable base pads were designed with the intent to increase magazine
    capacity. Instead, the weight of evidence indicated that the purpose of removable
    base pads is to “facilitate cleaning, maintenance, and repair.” The court concluded
    that “while the nature of removable base pads make[s] it possible to increase the
    capacity of a magazine, they were not specifically designed to be so modified.”
    (Emphases added.)
    14
    ¶21   Finally, considering expert testimony from both sides regarding Colorado
    constitutional history, the court ruled there was no historical basis to conclude that
    the framers of article II, section 13 intended to preclude the type of regulation
    imposed by HB 1224.             The court observed that the mythology of
    nineteenth-century Colorado as a “lawless frontier” is “simply a false narrative
    created by dime novels and Hollywood westerns,” and that instead, the people
    who migrated to the West largely believed that liberty without law was anarchy.
    It found no indication in the language of the Colorado Constitution suggesting
    that the framers desired to create protections for the right to bear arms that were
    exceptional or unique for the time. Rather, Colorado’s provision, including its
    limitation with respect to the carrying of concealed weapons, drew from a similar
    provision in Missouri’s constitution. The court noted that once Colorado became
    a state, regulation of firearms at the state and local level was common. Indeed,
    some towns had firearm regulations that were among the most restrictive in the
    country at the time. The court observed that although there were no restrictions
    on magazine capacity in the late 1800s, the modern phenomenon of mass shootings
    using weaponry that can fire dozens or hundreds of rounds without reloading
    “would not even have been imagined when Colorado became a state.”
    ¶22   The court rejected Plaintiffs’ contention that restrictions on the right to bear
    arms under article II, section 13 must be subject to a more stringent test than that
    articulated in Robertson. It nevertheless proceeded to evaluate HB 1224 under
    15
    intermediate scrutiny to avoid the need for a remand in the event of a reversal on
    appeal. Even under this standard, however, the court concluded that HB 1224 is
    constitutional because “the effort to restrict LCMs is directly and substantially
    related to the fundamentally important governmental interest of protecting and
    preserving lives.” The court entered judgment for the Governor.
    F. RMGO II
    ¶23   Plaintiffs appealed again. This time, the court of appeals unanimously
    affirmed the trial court’s judgment. Rocky Mountain Gun Owners v. Hickenlooper,
    
    2018 COA 149
    , ¶ 1, __ P.3d __ (“RMGO II”). First, the division rejected Plaintiffs’
    contention that HB 1224 must be subject to a heightened standard of review.
    Id. at ¶
    ¶ 17–18 (explaining that the division was neither at liberty to depart from this
    court’s precedent in Robertson nor inclined to depart from the law of the case set
    forth in RMGO I).6
    ¶24   Reviewing Plaintiffs’ claim under Robertson, the division deferred to the trial
    court’s factual finding that the purpose of HB 1224 was to reduce the number of
    people killed or shot in mass shootings. RMGO II, ¶ 19. The division concluded
    6  The division also rejected the suggestion implicit in Plaintiffs’ proposed
    analytical framework that the constitutionality of HB 1224 should be examined in
    light of the historical context of article II, section 13. See
    id. at ¶
    42.
    16
    that this purpose furthers a legitimate governmental interest in public health and
    safety.
    Id. at ¶
    20.
    ¶25    Next, the division concluded that ample record evidence supported the trial
    court’s findings that the LCM prohibition is reasonably related to the purpose of
    the legislation:
    Because the incidence of mass shootings with LCMs is on the rise; the
    only mass shootings in Colorado over the last fifty years involved
    LCMs (and resulted in deaths of twenty-five people); and smaller
    magazines create more pauses in firing, which allow potential victims
    to take life-saving measures, we conclude that the statutes are
    reasonably related to the legitimate governmental purpose of
    reducing deaths from mass shootings.
    Id. at ¶
    25. In response to Plaintiffs’ contention that LCM restrictions have not been
    shown to reduce overall gun violence or deaths from use of guns, the court of
    appeals explained that “[l]egislation need not solve all gun problems to be
    constitutional.”
    Id. at ¶
    26 (citing Parrish v. Lamm, 
    758 P.2d 1356
    , 1371 (Colo. 1988)).
    ¶26    The division also rejected Plaintiffs’ argument that the trial court erred in
    construing the “designed to be readily converted” provision not to include all
    magazines with removable base pads.
    Id. at ¶
    ¶ 27–33. The division reasoned that
    the dictionary defines “designed” to mean “done, performed, or made with
    purpose and intent.”
    Id. at ¶
    31 (quoting Designed, Webster’s Third New
    International Dictionary 612 (2002)). And it found record support for the trial
    court’s conclusion that magazines with removable base pads were not designed
    with the intent to be converted to LCMs.
    Id. at ¶
    30. Thus, the division concluded
    17
    that under the statute’s plain language, the General Assembly did not intend to
    regulate all magazines with removable floor plates.
    Id. at ¶
    32. The division added
    that even if the statutory language were ambiguous, the legislative history of the
    bill and the doctrine of constitutional doubt would resolve any question against
    Plaintiffs’ interpretation.
    Id. at ¶
    33.
    ¶27   The division further agreed with the trial court that limiting magazines to
    fifteen rounds “burden[s] only a person’s opportunity to use an LCM, not a
    person’s right to bear arms in self-defense.”
    Id. at ¶
    35. It highlighted the parties’
    stipulation to the mass availability of magazines that hold fifteen or fewer rounds
    and of guns compatible with such magazines, id.; the trial court’s finding,
    supported by the record, that people almost never fire weapons in self-defense
    using more than two or three bullets,
    id. at ¶
    34; and Plaintiffs’ failure to present
    any evidence at trial that “any person in Colorado has ever fired even close to
    fifteen rounds in self-defense,”
    id. at ¶
    36.
    ¶28   In sum, the court of appeals concluded that HB 1224 was a reasonable
    exercise of police power and that its definition of LCMs neither forbids the use of
    magazines simply because they have detachable base pads nor unreasonably
    burdens the right to self-defense.
    Id. at ¶
    37.
    ¶29   We granted Plaintiffs’ petition for a writ of certiorari to determine whether
    HB 1224 runs afoul of article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution.
    18
    II. Standard of Review
    ¶30   In reviewing a lower court’s judgment on the constitutionality of a statute,
    we review conclusions of law de novo but defer to findings of fact unless clearly
    erroneous. See Town of Dillon v. Yacht Club Condos. Home Owners Ass’n, 
    2014 CO 37
    , ¶ 22, 
    325 P.3d 1032
    , 1038 (considering constitutionality of municipal
    ordinance). Statutes are entitled to a presumption of constitutionality, rooted in
    the doctrine of separation of powers, through which “the judiciary respects the
    roles of the legislature and the executive in the enactment of laws.” City of
    Greenwood Vill. v. Petitioners for the Proposed City of Centennial, 
    3 P.3d 427
    , 440 (Colo.
    2000). Because “declaring a statute unconstitutional is one of the gravest duties
    impressed upon the courts,” People v. Graves, 
    2016 CO 15
    , ¶ 9, 
    368 P.3d 317
    , 322
    (quoting City of Greenwood 
    Vill., 3 P.3d at 440
    ), this presumption of
    constitutionality can be overcome only if it is shown that the enactment is
    unconstitutional beyond a reasonable doubt, Colo. Union of Taxpayers Found. v. City
    of Aspen, 
    2018 CO 36
    , ¶ 13, 
    418 P.3d 506
    , 511; Mosgrove v. Town of Fed. Heights,
    
    543 P.2d 715
    , 717 (Colo. 1975).
    III. Analysis
    ¶31   To begin, because Plaintiffs challenge HB 1224 solely under article II,
    section 13 of the Colorado Constitution, we limit our consideration to that
    provision and reject the contention that U.S. Supreme Court decisions interpreting
    the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution control our analysis. Next, we
    19
    reaffirm the reasonable exercise test articulated in Robertson for reviewing
    challenges brought under article II, section 13 and clarify how that test differs from
    ordinary rational basis review. In so doing, we disapprove of the analysis of the
    court of appeals in Trinen v. City & County of Denver. We hold that article II, section
    13 stands as an independent, substantive limitation on otherwise rational
    government action. Finally, applying Robertson, we conclude that Plaintiffs failed
    to prove that HB 1224 is an unreasonable exercise of the police power or that it has
    an improper purpose or effect of nullifying the right to bear arms in defense of
    home, person, or property. Plaintiffs’ core argument is that HB 1224’s definition
    of LCMs operates unreasonably to ban the vast majority of detachable magazines.
    But because Plaintiffs’ overly broad reading of the statutory definition is contrary
    to its plain language, we reject their contention that HB 1224’s definition of LCMs
    encompasses all magazines with removable base pads.               Because Plaintiffs’
    constitutional challenge rests on this misreading of the statutory language, it fails.
    Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
    A. Heller and McDonald Do Not Bind This Court with
    Respect to the Meaning of Article II, Section 13.
    ¶32   In 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court held in District of Columbia v. Heller that the
    Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects a limited “individual right
    to keep and bear 
    arms.” 554 U.S. at 595
    . Two years later, in McDonald v. City of
    Chicago, the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment is fully applicable
    20
    against the states through the Fourteenth 
    Amendment. 561 U.S. at 791
    . In so
    holding, the McDonald Court concluded that the Second Amendment right
    identified in Heller is “among those fundamental rights necessary to our system of
    ordered liberty.” 
    McDonald, 561 U.S. at 778
    .
    ¶33   Plaintiffs argue that article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution should
    be interpreted in terms of its own text and history and that the right it guards is
    broader than the one encompassed by the Second Amendment to the U.S.
    Constitution.   Plaintiffs further contend that because McDonald deemed the
    Second Amendment right fundamental, we must abandon Robertson (and, they
    suggest, adopt a “common lawful use” test purportedly derived from Heller in its
    place).7 In other words, Plaintiffs argue that, though we are free to interpret
    Colorado’s constitution to be more protective of the right to bear arms than the
    Second Amendment, the U.S. Supreme Court’s interpretation of the federal
    provision sets the constitutional “floor” for our interpretation of article II,
    section 13.
    7
    To our knowledge, only a single federal district court has endorsed the “common
    lawful use” test. Duncan v. Becerra, 
    366 F. Supp. 3d 1131
    (S.D. Cal. 2019), appeal
    docketed, No. 19-55376 (9th Cir. Apr. 4, 2019). The court described the test as “a
    hardware test” that asks, “Is the firearm hardware commonly owned? Is the
    hardware commonly owned by law-abiding citizens? Is the hardware owned by
    those citizens for lawful purposes? If the answers are ‘yes,’ the test is over. The
    hardware is protected.”
    Id. at 1142.
    The case is pending on appeal.
    21
    ¶34   We agree with Plaintiffs’ starting premise that article II, section 13 has a text
    and constitutional tradition distinct from the Second Amendment’s. But precisely
    for this reason, we reject Plaintiffs’ contention that our state constitutional
    provision must be interpreted in lockstep with its federal counterpart. To the
    contrary, the U.S. Supreme Court has long recognized that state courts are free to
    interpret their own state constitutions as they wish. See Minnesota v. Nat’l Tea Co.,
    
    309 U.S. 551
    , 557 (1940) (“It is fundamental that state courts be left free and
    unfettered by us in interpreting their state constitutions.”); Proprietors of the Charles
    River Bridge v. Proprietors of the Warren Bridge, 
    36 U.S. 420
    , 510 (1837) (“The laws
    and constitutions of the states belong solely to the state courts to expound.”).
    Thus, “[t]his court is the final arbiter of the meaning of the Colorado Constitution.”
    Curious Theatre Co. v. Colo. Dep’t of Pub. Health & Env‘t, 
    220 P.3d 544
    , 551 (Colo.
    2009); see also People v. Dist. Court, 
    834 P.2d 181
    , 193 (Colo. 1992) (“We recognize
    our freedom to interpret our state constitutional provisions in a manner different
    than the United States Supreme Court’s interpretations of similar provisions in the
    United States Constitution.”). Indeed, we have a responsibility to engage in an
    independent analysis of our own state constitutional provision in resolving a state
    constitutional question. See People v. Young, 
    814 P.2d 834
    , 842 (Colo. 1991).
    ¶35   To be sure, the U.S. Constitution sets a federal floor of protection available to
    those who allege state infringement of their individual liberties. As such, Plaintiffs
    were entitled to invoke the protection afforded by the Second Amendment. But
    22
    they chose not to.    Instead, they proceeded under article II, section 13, the
    distinctive text of a separate sovereign, with meaning independent of the federal
    provision. See Jeffrey S. Sutton, 51 Imperfect Solutions: States and the Making of
    American Constitutional Law 174 (2018) (“There is no reason to think, as an
    interpretive matter, that constitutional guarantees of independent sovereigns,
    even guarantees with the same or similar words, must be construed in the same
    way.”). Accordingly, because Heller and McDonald construe the U.S. Constitution
    and not our differently worded state constitutional provision, they do not control
    the analysis in this case. See State v. Jorgenson, 
    312 P.3d 960
    , 964 (Wash. 2013)
    (reading the right to bear arms provision in Washington’s state constitution
    independently of Heller and McDonald); State v. Whitaker, 
    689 S.E.2d 395
    , 401 (N.C.
    Ct. App. 2009) (“[W]e are not bound by decisions of the United States Supreme
    Court as to construction of North Carolina’s constitution” with respect to the right
    to bear arms.).
    ¶36   Of course, that our test under article II, section 13 may be different does not
    mean it is less protective of the state constitutional right.     In any case, our
    independent interpretation of Colorado’s constitutional provision does not
    somehow lower the federal constitutional floor.       When interpreting our own
    constitution, we do not stand on the federal floor; we are in our own house.
    ¶37   We acknowledge that in some contexts, we have borrowed from federal
    analysis of the U.S. Constitution in construing our own constitutional text,
    23
    particularly where a party has asserted dual constitutional claims under both a
    federal provision and its Colorado counterpart.         We have leaned on federal
    analysis primarily where the text of the two provisions is identical or substantially
    similar, see, e.g., 
    Young, 814 P.2d at 845
    (“Although [U.S. Supreme Court] cases
    cannot control our decision because the issue before us is one of Colorado
    constitutional law, we are attentive to the Supreme Court’s reasoning, especially
    because the text of the cruel and unusual punishments clauses in the two
    constitutions are the same.”), and where consistency between federal and state law
    has been a goal of our own precedent, see, e.g., Nicholls v. People, 
    2017 CO 71
    , ¶ 19,
    
    396 P.3d 675
    , 679 (looking to federal Confrontation Clause analysis for guidance
    in interpreting Colorado’s Confrontation Clause where our decisions “evidence[d]
    a reasoned attempt to ‘maintain consistency between Colorado law and federal
    law’” in that area (quoting Compan v. People, 
    121 P.3d 876
    , 886 (Colo. 2005))). That
    said, even parallel text does not mandate parallel interpretation. See, e.g., People v.
    McKnight, 
    2019 CO 36
    , ¶¶ 38–43, 
    446 P.3d 397
    , 406–08 (departing from Fourth
    Amendment jurisprudence to determine a dog sniff was a search under article II,
    section 7 of the Colorado Constitution where distinctive state-specific factors
    overcame the provisions’ substantially similar wording).
    ¶38   We have also tended to follow federal jurisprudence where, based on our
    independent analysis, we find the U.S. Supreme Court’s reasoning to be sound,
    see, e.g., Nicholls, ¶ 
    32, 396 P.3d at 681
    –82 (following new development in federal
    24
    Confrontation Clause jurisprudence because “the Supreme Court’s reasoning . . .
    is sound”), and where no party has argued that the Colorado provision calls for a
    distinct analysis, see, e.g., Garner v. People, 
    2019 CO 19
    , ¶ 67 n.8, 
    436 P.3d 1107
    ,
    1120 n.8 (“We do not separately analyze our state constitutional due process
    guarantee because [defendant] has not argued that it should be interpreted any
    more broadly than its federal counterpart.”), cert. denied, 
    140 S. Ct. 448
    (2019).
    ¶39   None of these considerations is present here. First, as masters of their
    complaint, Plaintiffs did not bring dual constitutional claims but instead elected to
    challenge HB 1224 solely under the Colorado Constitution. Had Plaintiffs wished
    to have their allegations judged under Heller or McDonald, they could have raised
    a claim under the Second Amendment.8 But they chose to challenge HB 1224
    solely on state constitutional grounds. Having done so, Plaintiffs cannot now
    insist that federal constitutional law controls the analysis of their case.
    ¶40   Second, article II, section 13 does not mirror the language of the Second
    Amendment. The Second Amendment provides, “A well regulated Militia, being
    necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear
    8Had Plaintiffs brought a Second Amendment claim, we would, of course, be
    bound by the U.S. Supreme Court’s interpretation of that provision. But that is
    because we would be enforcing a right guaranteed under the federal constitution,
    not a right under our state constitution. RMGO I, ¶ 20 
    n.5, 371 P.3d at 774
    n.5.
    25
    Arms, shall not be infringed.” U.S. Const. amend. II. The text of article II,
    section 13 differs in several respects:
    The right of no person to keep and bear arms in defense of his home,
    person and property, or in aid of the civil power when thereto legally
    summoned, shall be called in question; but nothing herein contained
    shall be construed to justify the practice of carrying concealed
    weapons.
    Colo. Const. art. II, § 13.
    ¶41    Of particular relevance here, article II, section 13 confers a limited,
    individual right to bear arms “in defense of . . . home, person and property.” E.g.,
    People v. Blue, 
    544 P.2d 385
    , 391 (Colo. 1975) (“We do not read the Colorado
    Constitution as granting an absolute right to bear arms under all situations. It has
    limiting language dealing with defense of home, person, and property.”).
    ¶42    Reflecting the significant textual differences between the two provisions,
    our precedent construing article II, section 13 long ago charted a different course
    from case law interpreting the Second Amendment.
    ¶43    In People v. Nakamura, 
    62 P.2d 246
    (Colo. 1936), we construed article II,
    section 13 to provide a “personal right . . . to bear arms in defense of home, person,
    and property” rather than merely “one of collective enjoyment for common
    defense,” see
    id. at 246–47;
    see also 
    Robertson, 874 P.2d at 327
    n.6. At that time,
    26
    consensus reflected a different view regarding the scope and meaning of the
    Second Amendment.9
    ¶44   We also held in Nakamura that the right to bear arms in self-defense under
    article II, section 13 extended to “unnaturalized foreign-born 
    residents,” 62 P.2d at 247
    , a question still the subject of debate in the federal arena today, see United
    States v. Torres, 
    911 F.3d 1253
    , 1259–61 (9th Cir. 2019) (describing circuit split over
    whether the right to bear arms under the Second Amendment applies to
    undocumented immigrants). And our early decisions examining the felon-in-
    possession statute against article II, section 13 clearly proceeded from the premise
    that our constitutional provision protects persons convicted of felonies, see
    9 See, e.g., United States v. Miller, 
    307 U.S. 174
    , 178 (1939) (“In the absence of any
    evidence tending to show that possession or use of a [short-barrel shotgun] . . . has
    some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated
    militia, we cannot say that the Second Amendment guarantees the right to keep
    and bear such an instrument.”); Fife v. State, 
    31 Ark. 455
    , 458 (1876) (“It is manifest
    from the language of the [Second Amendment] . . . that the arms which it
    guarantees American citizens the right to keep and to bear, are such as are needful
    to, and ordinarily used by a well regulated militia . . . .”); City of Salina v. Blaksley,
    
    83 P. 619
    , 620 (Kan. 1905) (“That the [state constitutional] provision in question
    applies only to the right to bear arms as a member of the state militia, or some
    other military organization provided for by law, is also apparent from the second
    amendment to the federal Constitution . . . .”); State v. Workman, 
    14 S.E. 9
    , 11 (W.
    Va. 1891) (“The keeping and bearing of arms, . . . which at the date of the [Second
    Amendment] was intended to be protected as a popular right, . . . refer[s] to the
    weapons of warfare to be used by the militia . . . .”).
    27
    People v. Ford, 
    568 P.2d 26
    , 28 (Colo. 1977); Blue, 544 P.2d at 390,10 a conclusion that
    stands in contrast to some federal courts’ pronouncements regarding the Second
    Amendment, see, e.g., 
    Heller, 554 U.S. at 626
    (“[N]othing in our opinion should be
    taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by
    felons . . . .”); United States v. Small, 494 Fed. App’x 789, 791 (9th Cir. 2012) (“The
    Second Amendment . . . does not extend to ‘felons’ . . . .” (quoting 
    Heller, 554 U.S. at 626
    )).
    ¶45    The point is that we have consistently determined the scope of our provision
    based on an independent analysis of the Colorado Constitution, rather than by
    reference to the meaning of its federal counterpart. Not a single one of our
    opinions construing article II, section 13 looked to interpretations of the Second
    Amendment right. Certainly our reasoning in these cases has never suggested that
    our interpretation of article II, section 13 must lock in on the moving target of
    federal jurisprudence.
    ¶46    Third, we note that neither Heller nor McDonald mandated a particular test
    even for Second Amendment challenges under the U.S. Constitution. Heller,
    10More recently in People v. Carbajal, 
    2014 CO 60
    , 
    328 P.3d 104
    , we clarified the
    narrow scope of this protection, concluding the legislature properly
    accommodated article II, section 13 by permitting a defendant to raise a
    choice-of-evils affirmative defense to a felon-in-possession charge.
    Id. at ¶
    20–21, 328 P.3d at 109
    .
    
    28 554 U.S. at 634
    (acknowledging dissent’s criticism that the majority opinion
    “declin[ed] to establish a level of scrutiny for evaluating Second Amendment
    restrictions”); see also 
    McDonald, 561 U.S. at 790
    –91 (plurality opinion) (noting the
    Heller Court’s earlier rejection of Justice Breyer’s proposed interest-balancing test,
    but not setting forth an alternative standard). To the extent lower federal courts
    have crafted various tests for Second Amendment challenges in the absence of
    further guidance from the U.S. Supreme Court,11 we are not bound by those
    approaches when considering our own constitutional provision.
    ¶47   Finally, this is clearly not a case where the parties have agreed that the
    relevant state constitutional provision should be treated as equivalent to its federal
    counterpart. Instead, the daylight between the two constitutional guarantees has
    been a core disagreement in this litigation.
    ¶48   For all these reasons, we reject Plaintiffs’ contention that Heller and
    McDonald bind this court with respect to the meaning of the right to bear arms
    under article II, section 13.
    11 Most courts have adopted a two-pronged test that asks (1) whether the
    legislation burdens conduct that the Second Amendment protects and (2) if so,
    what level of scrutiny it warrants. See Gould v. Morgan, 
    907 F.3d 659
    , 668–69 (1st
    Cir. 2018) (collecting cases).
    29
    B. Robertson and the Reasonable Exercise Test
    1. Robertson Did Not Decide the Status of the Article II,
    Section 13 Right.
    ¶49   Like the present case, Robertson involved a constitutional challenge brought
    solely under article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution. 
    See 874 P.2d at 326
    & n.1. As previously noted, Robertson concerned a Denver ordinance banning the
    manufacture, sale, or possession of assault weapons.
    Id. We granted
    review of the
    trial court’s holding that the ordinance was unconstitutional and its conclusion
    that article II, section 13 establishes a fundamental right to bear arms in defense of
    person, home, and property.
    Id. at 327
    & n.5.
    ¶50   Reviewing our case law construing the provision, we observed that we had
    “never found it necessary to decide the status accorded [the article II, section 13
    right].”
    Id. at 328.
    Instead, we had “consistently concluded that the state may
    regulate the exercise of that right under its inherent police power so long as the
    exercise of that power is reasonable.”
    Id. We therefore
    held conclusively in
    Robertson that it was unnecessary to reach whether the right is fundamental:
    when confronted with a challenge to the validity of a statute or
    ordinance regulating the exercise of the right to bear arms guaranteed
    under article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution, a reviewing
    court need not determine the status of that right. Rather, the question
    in each case is whether the law at issue constitutes a reasonable
    exercise of the state’s police power.
    30
    Id. at 329.
    Indeed, we remarked that the trial court’s error in reaching the question
    of the status to be accorded the article II, section 13 right was “contrary to the entire
    body of precedent of this court.”
    Id. at 330–31.
    ¶51   Given these clear pronouncements, we now expressly disapprove of the
    Trinen division’s conclusion that in Robertson we “implicitly found that the right
    to bear arms is not a fundamental right.” 
    Trinen, 53 P.3d at 757
    . Rather, we
    effectively rejected the importation of federal tiers of scrutiny into our article II,
    section 13 jurisprudence. As the division in RMGO I correctly understood, we
    reasoned that whether the right under article II, section 13 is fundamental or not,
    a restriction on that right is nonetheless subject to review under a reasonable
    exercise of police power test. RMGO I, ¶ 
    18, 371 P.3d at 772
    (citing 
    Robertson, 874 P.2d at 329
    ).
    ¶52   Because we agree with the RMGO I division that the Trinen division
    misperceived our decision in Robertson as having “essentially” applied the
    “rational basis test” to the Denver ordinance, RMGO I, ¶ 18 
    n.3, 371 P.3d at 772
    n.3
    (quoting 
    Trinen, 53 P.3d at 757
    ), we take this opportunity to clarify the distinction
    between the reasonable exercise test and rational basis review.
    2. The Reasonable Exercise Test Is Distinct from
    Rational Basis Review.
    ¶53   In Town of Dillon, we explained that the police power “is an inherent
    attribute of sovereignty with which the state is endowed for the protection and
    31
    general welfare of its citizens.” ¶ 
    25, 325 P.3d at 1038
    (quoting In re Interrogatories
    of the Governor on Chapter 118, Sess. Laws 1935, 
    52 P.2d 663
    , 667 (Colo. 1935)). We
    held that the police power, though broad, is “limited by due process,”
    id. at ¶
    26,
    325 P.3d at 1039
    , such that legislation or regulation based on the exercise of the
    state’s police power must “bear a rational relationship to a legitimate government
    interest,”
    id. at ¶
    27, 325 P.3d at 1039
    . Under the approach we took there, which
    we described as essentially rational basis review, “it is entirely irrelevant for
    constitutional purposes whether the conceived reason for the challenged
    [legislation] actually motivated the legislature.” FCC v. Beach Commc’ns, Inc.,
    
    508 U.S. 307
    , 315 (1993) (outlining rational basis review in equal protection
    context).12 In other words, the rational basis test ensures rational government
    enactments.
    ¶54   But the due process limitation we discussed in Town of Dillon is independent
    from the separate and distinct constraint located in article II, section 13 of the
    Colorado Constitution and guarded by what we have referred to in shorthand as
    our “reasonable exercise” test. Cf. 
    Heller, 554 U.S. at 628
    n.27 (“If all that was
    12We note that even under rational basis review, a more searching inquiry is called
    for where a law exhibits animus, Romer v. Evans, 
    517 U.S. 620
    , 632 (1996),
    unsubstantiated fear, City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 
    473 U.S. 432
    , 448
    (1985), or a “bare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular group,” U.S. Dep’t of
    Agric. v. Moreno, 
    413 U.S. 528
    , 534 (1973).
    32
    required to overcome the right to keep and bear arms was a rational basis, the
    Second Amendment would be redundant with the separate constitutional
    prohibitions on irrational laws, and would have no effect.”).
    ¶55   True, the reasonable exercise test demands that government enactments
    implicating the article II, section 13 right have a legitimate government end within
    the police power, such as promoting the public health, safety, or welfare.
    
    Robertson, 874 P.2d at 331
    . And as its name suggests, it requires a “reasonable” fit
    between purpose and means.
    Id. at 332
    . 
    But in the article II, section 13 context, the
    ultimate function of the reasonable exercise test is to effectuate the substantive
    constraints imposed by article II, section 13 on otherwise rational government
    regulation.
    ¶56   Reflecting that function, the article II, section 13 reasonable exercise test—
    unlike ordinary rational basis review—demands not just a conceivable legitimate
    purpose but an actual one. See Students for Concealed 
    Carry, 280 P.3d at 27
    . And,
    importantly, it does not tolerate government enactments that have either a
    purpose or effect of rendering the right to bear arms in self-defense a nullity. In
    short, the reasonable exercise test permits restrictions that may burden the right to
    bear arms but that still leave open ample means to exercise the core of that right;
    on the other hand, the test forbids restrictions that are so arbitrary or onerous as
    to amount to a denial of the right.
    33
    ¶57   These features of the reasonable exercise test are apparent from our earliest
    application of article II, section 13.   In Nakamura, the challenged legislation
    prohibited unnaturalized foreign-born residents from hunting any wild bird or
    animal except “in defense of persons or property” and, “to that end,” made it
    “unlawful for any unnaturalized foreign-born resident . . . to either own or be
    possessed of a shotgun or rifle of any make, or a pistol or firearm of any 
    kind.” 62 P.2d at 246
    .     We acknowledged that the state’s identified interests were
    permissible ones: “[t]he state may preserve its wild game for its citizens” and
    “prevent the hunting and killing of same by aliens.”
    Id. at 247.
    But we struck
    down the law nonetheless, reasoning that it was apparent that it was actually
    “designed to prevent possession of firearms by aliens, as much, if not more, than
    the protection of wild game within the state.”
    Id. ¶58 Importantly,
    we found it “equally clear” that the act had the effect of “wholly
    disarm[ing] aliens for all purposes.”
    Id. We held
    that the state “cannot disarm any
    class of persons or deprive them of the right guaranteed under section 13, article 2
    of the Constitution, to bear arms in defense of home, person, and property.”
    Id. In other
    words, “[t]he police power of a state . . . cannot be exercised in such
    manner as to work a practical abrogation of its provisions.”
    Id. (quoting Smith
    v.
    Farr, 
    104 P. 401
    , 406 (Colo. 1909)).
    ¶59   Our later cases just as clearly demonstrate the independent bite of the
    reasonable exercise test. In Blue, we held that a statute prohibiting individuals
    34
    with prior felony convictions from possessing weapons was a constitutional
    exercise of the police power under article II, section 
    13. 544 P.2d at 391
    . “To be
    sure,” we explained, “the state legislature cannot, in the name of the police power,
    enact laws which render nugatory our Bill of Rights and other constitutional
    protections.”
    Id. But we
    did not read the felon-in-possession statute “as an
    attempt to subvert the intent of [article II, section 13].”
    Id. And in
    Ford, an
    as-applied challenge to the same statute, we expressly stated that “the specific
    limitations of [article II, section 13] must be superimposed on the statute’s otherwise
    valid language,” and that a state may “validly restrict or regulate the right to possess
    arms where the purpose of such possession is not a constitutionally protected one” such
    as defense of home, person, or 
    property. 568 P.2d at 28
    (emphases added); see also
    City of Lakewood v. Pillow, 
    501 P.2d 744
    , 745 (Colo. 1972) (striking down ordinance
    that made it unlawful for a person to possess a firearm in a vehicle or in a place of
    business for purpose of self-defense).13
    13We note that in Pillow we subjected the challenged statute to an overbreadth
    analysis under article II, section 13. See also People v. Garcia, 
    595 P.2d 228
    , 230 (Colo.
    1979) (holding that overbreadth applies to restrictions on the right to bear arms).
    We have since made clear in Graves that, notwithstanding any suggestion to the
    contrary in our earlier opinions, “the overbreadth doctrine is confined to facial
    challenges to statutes that burden constitutionally protected speech or expressive
    conduct.” ¶ 12 
    n.6, 368 P.3d at 323
    n.6.
    35
    ¶60   Finally, in Robertson, we again explicitly noted that the right to bear arms in
    self-defense under article II, section 13 could be regulated but not 
    prohibited. 874 P.2d at 330
    n.10. In upholding the Denver ordinance, we looked to evidence
    confirming the city council’s expressed intent to “promote the health, safety, and
    security of the citizens of Denver” by “curbing crime—particularly homicides.”
    Id. at 332
    (concluding evidence at trial supported the ordinance’s relationship to
    its statement of legislative intent). We further relied on evidence that although the
    city sought to prohibit the possession and use of approximately 40 firearms, closer
    to 2,000 remained available for purchase and use in the United States.
    Id. at 333.
    Given this evidence of the “narrow class of weapons regulated by the ordinance,”
    we had no trouble concluding that it did not “impose such an onerous restriction
    on the right to bear arms as to constitute an . . . illegitimate exercise of the state’s
    police power.”
    Id. ¶61 In
    sum, under article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution, the
    government may regulate firearms so long as the enactment is (1) a reasonable
    exercise of the police power (2) that does not work a nullity of the right to bear
    arms in defense of home, person, or property. This test differs from rational basis
    review in that it requires an actual, not just conceivable, legitimate purpose related
    to health, safety, and welfare, and it establishes that nullifying the right to bear
    arms in self-defense is neither a legitimate purpose nor tolerable result. In these
    ways, it ensures that the specifically enumerated “right to bear arms in defense of
    36
    home, person and property” in article II, section 13 stands as an independent,
    substantive limitation on otherwise rational government action.
    C. HB 1224 Does Not Run Afoul of Article II, Section 13.
    ¶62   Having clarified the appropriate standard for reviewing Plaintiffs’
    argument that HB 1224 is unconstitutional under article II, section 13, we now turn
    to the merits of their claim. We conclude that HB 1224 constitutes a reasonable
    exercise of the police power and does not work a nullity of the right to bear arms
    in defense of home, person, or property under article II, section 13.
    1. HB 1224 Constitutes a Reasonable Exercise
    of Police Power.
    ¶63   We credit the trial court’s finding that the purpose of HB 1224 was to
    “reduce the number of people who are killed or shot in mass shootings.” The
    court’s finding is amply supported by the record and we affirm both lower courts’
    conclusions that this discrete purpose of the legislation lies well within the state’s
    police power. Indeed, it can hardly be argued that seeking to reduce the lethality
    of mass shootings and to contain their rippling, traumatic effects does not relate to
    the public health, safety, or welfare. And beyond their contention about the
    definition of LCMs, which we examine and reject below, Plaintiffs make no
    argument that HB 1224 instead had an illegitimate purpose of nullifying the
    article II, section 13 right to bear arms in defense of home, person, or property.
    37
    ¶64   We further agree with the court of appeals that the prohibition on LCMs is
    reasonably related to that legitimate—and increasingly critical—state interest.
    Evidence at trial established that the use of LCMs in mass shootings increases the
    number of victims shot and the fatality rate of struck victims. It also established
    that LCMs were used in some of the most horrific shootings in recent memory.
    These statistics have been deeply felt in Colorado, where LCMs played a lethal
    role in the Columbine and Aurora massacres. Finally, the record supports the trial
    court’s finding that the pause created by the need to reload or replace a magazine
    creates an opportunity for potential victims to take life-saving measures. In short,
    the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrated the reasonableness of the General
    Assembly’s choice to set a limit on the number of rounds that can be fired before
    a shooter needs to reload.
    2. HB 1224 Does Not Work a Nullity of the Right to Bear
    Arms in Self-Defense.
    ¶65   The gravamen of Plaintiffs’ claim that HB 1224 violates the state
    constitutional right to bear arms rests on their interpretation of the phrase
    “designed to be readily converted to accept.” § 18-12-301(2)(a)(I). In their view,
    this language in the statutory definition of an LCM encompasses any magazine
    with a design that makes it capable of being “readily converted to accept” more
    than fifteen rounds. Because magazines with removable base pads can be readily
    converted to accept more than fifteen rounds, Plaintiffs argue that such magazines
    38
    fall under the statutory definition. And because 90% of detachable magazines
    contain removable base pads, Plaintiffs maintain that HB 1224 therefore bans the
    overwhelming majority of magazines, thus denying their right to bear arms under
    article II, section 13. We conclude that the statute’s plain language belies Plaintiffs’
    construction.
    ¶66   We review issues of statutory construction de novo.            People v. Opana,
    
    2017 CO 56
    , ¶ 34, 
    395 P.3d 757
    , 764. In construing a statute, our primary purpose
    is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature’s intent.
    Id. As such,
    where the
    plain meaning of a statute is clear, we need not look to other interpretive tools.
    Goodman v. Heritage Builders, Inc., 
    2017 CO 13
    , ¶ 7, 
    390 P.3d 398
    , 401. We read
    statutory language in context, giving words and phrases their plain and ordinary
    meaning and avoiding constructions that would render any word or phrase
    superfluous. People v. Iannicelli, 
    2019 CO 80
    , ¶¶ 19–20, 
    449 P.3d 387
    , 391.
    ¶67   Because our analysis must begin with the text itself, we set forth the
    disputed language of HB 1224 again in full:
    (2)(a) “Large-capacity magazine” means:
    (I) A fixed or detachable magazine, box, drum, feed strip, or similar
    device capable of accepting, or that is designed to be readily converted to
    accept, more than fifteen rounds of ammunition.
    § 18-12-301(2)(a)(I) (emphasis added).
    ¶68   First, if the legislature had intended the definition of an LCM to include any
    magazine with a design that made it “capable of being readily converted,” it could
    39
    have used that language. Indeed, reading subsection (2)(a)(I) as a whole, the
    legislature used “capable of” just words earlier. § 18-12-301(2)(a)(I) (defining
    LCMs to include devices “capable of accepting . . . more than fifteen rounds of
    ammunition”).
    ¶69   A word or phrase is presumed to bear the same meaning throughout a text,
    while a material variation in terms suggests a variation in meaning. Antonin Scalia
    & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 170 (2012). That
    the legislature used the phrase “capable of accepting,” but immediately thereafter
    chose the much narrower “designed to be readily converted to accept” evinces a
    deliberate variation in meaning. Put differently, it is clear that “designed to be”
    must mean something other than merely “capable of.”
    ¶70   This inference is buttressed by the plain and ordinary meaning of the word
    “designed.” As the division below observed, the dictionary defines “designed” to
    mean “done, performed, or made with purpose and intent.” RMGO II, ¶ 31
    (quoting Designed, Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 612 (2002)); see
    also Designed, adj., Oxford English Dictionary Online (last updated June 2020)
    (defining “designed” to mean “[p]lanned, intended”).        In short, a magazine
    “designed” to be readily converted to accept more than fifteen rounds requires an
    intent or purpose that a magazine merely “capable” of being so converted does
    not. Plaintiffs’ construction, however, effectively equates these terms, and thus
    strips the phrase “designed to be” of its common meaning.
    40
    ¶71   Notably, given the structure of the provision, the legislature would have
    achieved the meaning Plaintiffs suggest had it entirely omitted the words
    “designed to be” from the definition.           So written, subsection (2)(a)(I) would
    include any “magazine . . . capable of accepting or [being] readily converted to
    accept” more than fifteen rounds.
    ¶72   We decline to “presume that the legislature used language idly and with no
    intent that meaning should be given to its language.” Goodman, ¶ 
    7, 390 P.3d at 401
    (quoting People v. J.J.H., 
    17 P.3d 159
    , 162 (Colo. 2001)). Instead, “we must
    interpret a statute to give effect to all its parts.” Colo. Comp. Ins. Auth. v. Jorgensen,
    
    992 P.2d 1156
    , 1163 (Colo. 2000). Because Plaintiffs’ construction would render
    meaningless the limiting words “designed to be,” we reject it.
    ¶73   The legislative history of the provision buttresses our conclusion that the
    legislature deliberately included the words “designed to be.” Notably, the bill
    lacked that language as originally introduced. H.B. 1224, 69th Gen. Assemb., 1st
    Reg. Sess. § 1 (Colo. 2013) (as introduced in House). Subsection (2)(a)(I) initially
    defined an LCM to include any “magazine . . . capable of accepting, or that can be
    readily converted to accept” more than the specified number of rounds.
    Id. But the
    legislature later replaced that original language with the wording that appears
    in the statute. In short, the General Assembly specifically amended the bill to be
    narrower than the reading Plaintiffs endorse.
    41
    ¶74   Finally, “courts should construe ambiguous statutes to avoid the need even
    to address serious questions about their constitutionality.” United States v. Davis,
    
    139 S. Ct. 2319
    , 2332 n.6 (2019). Even if we were to conclude that the language
    “designed to be” were susceptible of multiple reasonable interpretations, under
    the doctrine of constitutional doubt, we would decline to read into the statute the
    constitutional problem that Plaintiffs’ construction invites. In sum, we conclude
    that HB 1224’s plain language, its legislative history, and the doctrine of
    constitutional doubt all weigh against Plaintiffs’ interpretation.
    ¶75   Plaintiffs counter that reading “designed” to connote purpose or intent
    improperly grafts an element of specific intent onto the crime of selling,
    transferring, or possessing LCMs after July 1, 2013.14 We disagree. Although we
    conclude that “designed to be readily converted to accept” means more than
    “capable of being readily converted to accept,” we do not construe the phrase to
    impose a subjective, specific intent requirement. Instead, because “designed” does
    not refer to any particular subject whose mens rea is a necessary element of the
    14Alternatively, Plaintiffs point to their trial expert’s unrebutted testimony that
    expandable capacity was in fact a design goal of magazines with removable base
    pads, and that their purpose was not just to facilitate maintenance and cleaning.
    But the trial court specifically noted that it did not find this testimony credible and
    therefore accorded it little weight. We will not second-guess that determination.
    People v. Harlan, 
    109 P.3d 616
    , 627–28 (Colo. 2005) (“[W]e cannot second-guess
    determinations of the trial court regarding witness credibility.”).
    42
    crime (e.g., a parts manufacturer, a seller, a person in possession), we read it to
    convey only an objective reference. Cf. Opana, ¶ 
    13, 395 P.3d at 760
    (“When the
    term ‘intended’ is used in the passive voice or as a unit modifier, without reference
    to a particular subject . . . , it is just as naturally understood to convey an objective
    reference, as in ‘normally intended’ or ‘reasonably intended.’”). In the context of
    subsection (2)(a)(I), we conclude that a magazine “designed to be readily
    converted to accept” more than fifteen rounds is one that would be objectively
    understood as purposely created or intended for the purpose of being converted
    to accept more than fifteen rounds. Because the evidence Plaintiffs put forth at
    trial did not prove that all magazines with removable base pads meet this
    definition under any conceivable set of facts, we conclude that Plaintiffs’
    removable base pad theory did not carry their considerable burden to prove the
    statute unconstitutional beyond a reasonable doubt.
    ¶76   Instead, the overwhelming evidence demonstrated that limiting magazine
    capacity to fifteen rounds does not significantly interfere with the core of
    Coloradans’ article II, section 13 right to bear arms in self-defense.          Indeed,
    testimony at trial established that “[i]n no case had a person fired even five shots
    in self-defense, let alone ten, fifteen, or more.”
    ¶77   Moreover, HB 1224 is similar to the ordinance we upheld in Robertson in that
    it leaves available “ample weapons” for self-defense. 
    Robertson, 874 P.2d at 333
    .
    Indeed, the parties here stipulated that “thousands of models and variants of
    43
    firearms with detachable box magazines remain available for lawful purchase and
    use for home defense in Colorado,” and that virtually “every gun that was
    available before July 1, 2013, is compatible with magazines holding 15 or fewer
    rounds.” And HB 1224 contains a “grandfather clause” that allows a person to
    maintain continuous possession of LCMs if they were owned on the law’s effective
    date. § 18-12-302(2)(a).
    ¶78   As we made clear in Robertson, the “right to bear arms is not an unlimited
    right and is subject to reasonable 
    regulation.” 874 P.2d at 329
    (quoting Arnold v.
    City of Cleveland, 
    616 N.E.2d 163
    , 172 (Ohio 1993)).          HB 1224 constitutes a
    reasonable exercise of the police power and does not nullify the article II, section
    13 right.15 We hold that Plaintiffs failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
    HB 1224 violates the state constitutional right to bear arms. We therefore affirm
    the judgment of the court of appeals.
    15Although we decide this matter under the Colorado Constitution, we observe
    that courts that have considered an LCM prohibition even more restrictive than
    the one at issue here under the Second Amendment have overwhelmingly
    concluded that such legislation survives intermediate scrutiny. See, e.g., Worman v.
    Healey, 
    922 F.3d 26
    , 41 (1st Cir. 2019) (upholding Massachusetts’ ten-round limit);
    Ass’n of N.J. Rifle & Pistol Clubs. v. Attorney Gen. N.J., 
    910 F.3d 106
    , 122–24 (3d Cir.
    2018) (upholding New Jersey’s ten-round limit); N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n. v.
    Cuomo, 
    804 F.3d 242
    , 260–64 (2d Cir. 2015) (upholding Connecticut’s and New
    York’s ten-round limits); Heller v. District of Columbia, 
    670 F.3d 1244
    , 1264 (D.C. Cir.
    2011) (upholding Washington, D.C.’s ten-round limit).
    44
    IV. Conclusion
    ¶79   We hold that HB 1224 is a reasonable exercise of the police power that has
    neither the purpose nor effect of nullifying the right to bear arms in self-defense
    encompassed by article II, section 13 of the Colorado Constitution. Accordingly,
    we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
    45