Coeur d'Alene Tribe v. Lawerence Denney ( 2015 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 43169
    IN THE MATTER OF THE VERIFIED                                  )
    Boise, August 2015
    PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS.                                 )
    --------------------------------------------------------       )
    2015 Opinion No. 106
    COEUR D’ALENE TRIBE,                                           )
    )
    Filed: November 20, 2015
    Petitioner,                                             )
    )
    Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    v.                                                             )
    )
    SUBSTITUTE OPINION:
    LAWERENCE DENNEY, Secretary of State                           )
    THE PREVIOUS OPINION
    of the State of Idaho, in his official capacity,               )
    ISSUED SEPTEMBER 10, 2015
    )
    IS HEREBY WITHDRAWN.
    Respondent.                                             )
    Petition for Writ of Mandamus.
    The Tribe’s petition for a writ of mandamus is granted.
    Ferguson Durham, PLLC, Boise, for petitioner. Deborah A. Ferguson argued.
    Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Brian
    Kane argued.
    David H. Leroy, Boise, argued for amicus curiae Coeur d’Alene Racing, Ltd.
    Greener Burke, Shoemaker Oberrecht, P.A., Boise, for amicus curiae
    Intermountain Racing and Entertainment, LLC.
    David F. Hensley and Cally A. Younger, Boise, for amicus curiae Honorable C.L.
    “Butch” Otter, Governor of Idaho.
    Barker Rosholt & Simpson, LLP, Boise, for amicus curiae Treasure Valley
    Racing, LLC.
    _________________________________
    BURDICK, Justice
    This case comes before this Court pursuant to a Writ of Mandamus. The Coeur d’Alene
    Tribe (Tribe) petitioned the Court for a Writ of Mandamus compelling the Secretary of State to
    1
    certify Senate Bill 1011 (S.B. 1011) as law. The Tribe alleges that the Governor did not return
    his veto for S.B. 1011 within the five-day deadline under the Idaho Constitution. The Tribe
    argues that because the veto was untimely, the bill automatically became law and the Secretary
    of State had a non-discretionary duty to certify it as law. We agree.
    I.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On March 30, 2015, both the Senate and the House of Representatives passed S.B. 1011
    with supermajorities. S.B. 1011 had one purpose: to repeal Idaho Code section 54-2512A, a law
    which allowed wagering on “historical” horse races. In the afternoon of March 30, 2015, the bill
    was presented to the Governor, who then had five days to veto the bill pursuant to the Idaho
    Constitution.
    On April 2, 2015, the legislature adjourned temporarily for the Easter weekend. Around
    that time, the media reported that the Governor intended to wait until Monday, April 6, to
    announce his decision on whether to sign S.B. 1011 into law.
    The Senate reconvened Monday, April 6, 2015. That morning, the Governor returned
    S.B. 1011 and a veto message1 to the Senate President Pro Tempore’s office, along with a letter
    addressed to the President of the Senate. The President Pro Tempore and two other Senate
    officials filed official letters in the Senate Journal regarding S.B. 1011. The President Pro
    Tempore’s letter notified the Senate that the Governor returned the veto to the President Pro
    Tempore’s office at 8:52 a.m. on April 6, 2015, which was past the constitutional deadline. The
    letter further stated that “such deadline having passed, the provisions of Article IV, § 10 of the
    Idaho Constitution and 
    Idaho Code § 67-504
     and 505 appear to apply.”
    The Secretary of the Senate also filed a letter indicating that the Governor failed to return
    S.B. 1011 to the Secretary of the Senate’s Office by the April 4 deadline. That letter also
    indicated that the Governor’s office returned other communications to the Secretary of the
    Senate’s Office over the weekend, but nothing relating to S.B. 1011.
    Finally, Michelle Stennett, the Senate Minority Leader, filed a letter with the Secretary of
    the Senate, which also advised the Senate that the Governor’s veto of S.B. 1011 was untimely
    and invalid. Stennett’s letter stated that “[t]o the best of my knowledge no earlier return was
    1
    The veto message was dated April 3, 2015, but there is nothing in the record to indicate that it was returned to the
    Senate President or any other Senate official at any time before April 6, 2015.
    2
    attempted or effectuated to the Senate, nor was anyone asked to receive such a return at an earlier
    time.”
    Despite these notifications, the President of the Senate proceeded to call a vote during the
    April 6 session to override the veto. A majority, but less than two-thirds of the Senate, voted to
    override the veto. Consequently, the President of the Senate sustained the Governor’s veto and
    declared that S.B. 1011 failed to become law.
    The Tribe, believing that S.B. 1011 automatically became law when the Governor failed
    to return the veto within five days, subsequently requested the Secretary of State to certify it as
    law. The Secretary of State refused, asserting that he lacked the authority to certify the bill as a
    law because “the requisite gubernatorial authentication under 
    Idaho Code § 67-505
     [was]
    absent.” The Tribe then petitioned this Court for a Writ of Mandamus ordering the Secretary of
    State to certify S.B. 1011, deposit it with the laws of the State, and assign it a chapter number in
    the Idaho Code. The Governor, Treasure Valley Racing, LLC, Intermountain Racing and
    Entertainment, LLC, and Coeur d’Alene Racing, Ltd. all filed amicus briefs with this Court
    opposing the petition for a writ of mandamus.
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Article V, section 9 of the Idaho Constitution and Idaho Code section 1-203 confer
    original jurisdiction on this Court to issue writs of mandamus. Pursuant to Idaho Code section 7-
    302, a writ of mandamus “may be issued by the Supreme Court . . . to any . . . person, to compel
    the performance of an act which the law especially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office,
    trust or station.” This Court has repeatedly held that mandamus is not a writ of right and the
    allowance or refusal to issue a writ of mandate is discretionary. Hunke v. Foote, 
    84 Idaho 391
    ,
    398, 
    373 P.2d 322
    , 325 (1962); Kerley v. Wetherell, 
    61 Idaho 31
    , 48, 
    96 P.2d 503
    , 511 (1939);
    Reynard v. City of Caldwell, 
    53 Idaho 62
    , 81, 
    21 P.2d 527
    , 534 (1933); Logan v. Carter, 
    49 Idaho 393
    , 403, 
    288 P. 424
    , 427 (1930); State v. Malcom, 
    39 Idaho 185
    , 190, 
    226 P. 1083
    , 1085
    (1924); State v. Banks, 
    37 Idaho 27
    , 34, 
    215 P. 468
    , 470 (1923).
    In Utah Power & Light Co. v. Campbell, 
    108 Idaho 950
    , 953, 
    703 P.2d 714
    , 717 (1985),
    this Court stated that “[m]andamus will lie if the officer against whom the writ is brought has a
    ‘clear legal duty’ to perform the desired act, and if the act sought to be compelled is ministerial
    or executive in nature.” If the act sought to be compelled of the public officer is ministerial, the
    Court must find the party seeking the writ has a clear legal right to have the act performed. Kolp
    3
    v. Bd. of Tr. of Butte Cnty. Joint Sch. Dist. No. 111, 
    102 Idaho 320
    , 323, 
    629 P.2d 1153
    , 1156
    (1981). Furthermore, Idaho law requires that a writ must be issued in those cases where there is
    not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. I.C. § 7-303.
    III.   ANALYSIS
    The Tribe seeks a writ of mandamus from this Court compelling the Secretary of State to
    certify S.B. 1011 as law. There are several discrete issues involved here. First, we must address
    the amici’s arguments that the Tribe does not have standing in this matter. Second, we must
    determine whether the Governor’s veto was valid. Third, if the Governor’s veto was invalid, we
    must then determine whether the Secretary of State has a non-discretionary duty to certify S.B.
    1011 as law. Fourth, we must determine whether a writ of mandamus is an appropriate remedy in
    this case. Finally, the Tribe requests attorney fees on this writ of mandamus. We will address
    each issue in turn below.
    A. This Court will decide this matter.
    “Concepts of justiciability, including standing, identify appropriate or suitable occasions
    for adjudication by a court.” State v. Philip Morris, Inc., No. 41679, 
    2015 WL 4757859
    , at *7
    (Idaho July 23, 2015). Standing focuses directly on whether a particular interest or injury is
    adequate to invoke the protection of judicial decision. 
    Id.
     When determining whether a party has
    standing, this Court has looked to United States Supreme Court decisions for guidance. Koch v.
    Canyon Cnty., 
    145 Idaho 158
    , 161, 
    177 P.3d 372
    , 375 (2008). In fact, the origin of Idaho’s
    standing is a self-imposed constraint adopted from federal practice, as there is no “case or
    controversy” clause or an analogous provision in the Idaho Constitution as there is in the United
    States Constitution. See U.S. Const. art. III. § 2, cl. 1. Consequently, in a recent decision from
    this Court, we set forth the test for standing pursuant to United States Supreme Court
    jurisprudence:
    [T]o establish standing a plaintiff must show (1) an injury in fact, (2) a sufficient
    causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of, and (3) a
    like [lihood] that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision. An injury
    sufficient to satisfy the requirement of an injury in fact must be concrete and
    particularized and actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.
    Philip Morris, Inc., 
    2015 WL 4757859
    , at *7 (citations omitted)(internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    In that opinion, we also clarified that the “allege or demonstrate” standard so often
    repeated in our opinions is an incomplete statement of requirements for standing. 
    Id.
     We
    4
    explained that consistent with the federal standard, standing “requires a showing of a ‘distinct
    palpable injury’ and ‘fairly traceable causal connection between the claimed injury and the
    challenged conduct.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Young v. City of Ketchum, 
    137 Idaho 102
    , 104, 
    44 P.3d 1157
    ,
    1159 (2002)). This Court has defined palpable injury as “an injury that is easily perceptible,
    manifest, or readily visible.” Id. at *8. Moreover, the injury cannot be one suffered alike by all
    citizens in the jurisdiction. Troutner v. Kempthorne, 
    142 Idaho 389
    , 391, 
    128 P.3d 926
    , 928
    (2006).
    The Tribe alleges standing in this proceeding on the basis that, as a lead proponent of
    S.B. 1011, it has a concrete and discrete interest in this case and contends that it has been injured
    by the Secretary of State’s refusal to certify the bill as law. The Tribe claims that it is particularly
    harmed due to its distinct rights under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (“IGRA”). See 
    25 U.S.C. § 2701
    , et seq. Although the Tribe has established a unique and protected right towards
    gaming in the state, it fails to present sufficient facts as to how S.B. 1011 impacts the Tribe’s
    ability to benefit from gaming going forward. The Tribe correctly concedes that this Court “has
    never held that increased competition alone is sufficient to confer standing.” Martin v. Camas
    Cnty. ex rel. Bd. Comm’rs, 
    150 Idaho 508
    , 514, 
    248 P.3d 1243
    , 1249 (2011). Without providing
    facts to show actual or imminent losses of profit or rights greater than the average citizen, the
    Tribe has not demonstrated a “distinct and palpable” injury sufficient to confer standing.
    Troutner, 
    142 Idaho at 391
    , 
    128 P.3d at 928
    . However, we may nonetheless exercise jurisdiction
    over this writ.
    This Court has original jurisdiction “to issue writs of mandamus, certiorari, prohibition,
    and habeas corpus, and all writs necessary or proper to the complete exercise of its appellate
    jurisdiction.” Idaho Const. art. V, § 9. We have recognized that this Court may “exercise
    jurisdiction to review a petition for extraordinary relief where the petition alleges sufficient facts
    concerning a possible constitutional violation of an urgent nature.” Idaho Watersheds Project v.
    State Bd. of Land Comm’rs, 
    133 Idaho 55
    , 57, 
    982 P.2d 358
    , 360 (1999) (granting a writ of
    prohibition for a House Joint Resolution that proposed to amend the Idaho Constitution); Keenan
    v. Price, 
    68 Idaho 423
    , 429, 195 P.2d. 662, 664 (1948) (accepting jurisdiction because of the
    “importance of the question presented” and the “urgent necessity for immediate determination”).
    Under such circumstances, we have held that it is not necessary that a citizen show a special
    injury to himself or his property to entitle him to proceed by mandamus to compel public officers
    5
    to perform non-discretionary ministerial duties. See Beem v. Davis, 
    31 Idaho 730
    , 733, 
    175 P. 959
    , 960 (1918).
    Beem is consistent with this Court’s willingness to relax ordinary standing requirements
    in other cases where: (1) the matter concerns a significant and distinct constitutional violation,
    and (2) no party could otherwise have standing to bring a claim. See Koch, 
    145 Idaho at 162
    , 
    177 P.3d at 376
    ; see also State ex rel. Miller v. State Bd. of Educ., 
    56 Idaho 210
    , 217, 
    52 P.2d 141
    ,
    143 (1935). For instance, in Koch, this Court held that Canyon County taxpayers had standing to
    litigate whether Canyon County had incurred indebtedness or liability in violation of article VIII,
    section 3, of the Idaho Constitution. 
    145 Idaho at 162
    , 
    177 P.3d at 376
    . The Court recognized
    that if it held otherwise, it would essentially “be deleting that provision from the Constitution”
    because no party would have standing to enforce it. 
    Id.
    If the Tribe is correct in its allegations, this case concerns a significant and distinct
    constitutional violation. This Court has recognized:
    The people of this state have reserved to themselves the constitutional right to
    have all of their laws made in a certain mode, and have withheld from the
    legislature the power to make laws in any other mode. Shall the legislature and
    the judiciary connive together to overthrow this constitutional right? Do the
    obligations of the official oath rest so lightly upon judicial officers that they may
    obey those obligations or not, support the constitution or not, as they may deem
    expedient or inexpedient? May they enforce the fundamental law or refuse to do
    so at pleasure? If so, then constitutional government is in the last stages of
    dissolution, and the people have no constitutional rights which must necessarily
    be respected.
    Cohn v. Kingsley, 
    5 Idaho 416
    , 445, 
    49 P. 985
    , 995 (1897). Consequently, this Court has insisted
    upon strict adherence to the procedures outlined in our Constitution for enacting laws and in
    exercising the veto power. See Cohn, 
    5 Idaho at
    421–22, 
    49 P. at 986
    ; Cenarrusa v. Andrus, 
    99 Idaho 404
    , 406–10, 
    582 P.2d 1082
    , 1084–88 (1978). Indeed, we have stated that the provisions
    are mandatory and that it is the imperative duty of the legislature, and in this case, the executive
    as well, to obey them. Cohn, 
    5 Idaho at
    421–22, 
    49 P. at 986
    . The duty of supporting the
    Constitution of the state “is imposed upon all public officers by the solemn obligations of the
    official oath, which obligations cannot be discharged by disobeying, ignoring, and setting at
    naught the plain provisions of the constitution, but only by obedience thereto.” 
    Id.
     Where the
    mandatory provisions of the constitution require certain things to be done in exercising the veto
    6
    power and enacting laws, this Court must guard against violations of those constitutional
    provisions.
    The public has a significant interest in the integrity of Idaho’s democratic government,
    and a writ of mandamus is a remedy by which public officials may be held accountable to the
    citizens for their constitutional duties. If the Tribe does not have standing to bring this writ, the
    question would then become, who does? Neither the members of the Senate, the Governor, nor
    the Secretary of State appear ready or willing to challenge the constitutionality of the Governor’s
    purported veto or of the Senate’s actions in this case. Thus, if the Tribe could not bring this writ,
    there would be no one to enforce the important constitutional provisions involved in this case or
    to ensure that the integrity of the law-making process is upheld. The legal question before the
    court involves a fundamental constitutional provision regarding governmental structure and is a
    matter over which this Court has original jurisdiction pursuant to article V, section 9 of the Idaho
    Constitution. Such an interest is sufficient to compel an elected official to comply with a non-
    discretionary constitutional duty through a writ of mandamus, and this Court may therefore
    entertain the Tribe’s plea.
    B. The Governor’s veto was invalid and S.B. 1011 automatically became law.
    The Tribe asserts that the Governor’s attempted veto of S.B. 1011 was untimely.
    Consequently, the Tribe argues that S.B. 1011 became law the moment the deadline for the veto
    passed. Based on the plain language of the relevant constitutional and statutory provisions,
    together with the undisputed and unambiguous facts in the Senate Journal, we agree.
    1. Relevant constitutional and statutory provisions.
    Idaho Constitution, article IV, section 10 addresses the Governor’s veto power. It
    provides:
    Every bill passed by the legislature shall, before it becomes a law, be
    presented to the governor. If he approve, he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall
    become a law; but if he do not approve, he shall return it with his objections to the
    house in which it originated, which house shall enter the objections at large upon
    its journals and proceed to reconsider the bill. If then two-thirds of the members
    present agree to pass the same, it shall be sent, together with the objections, to the
    other house, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered; and if approved by two-
    thirds of the members present in that house, it shall become a law,
    notwithstanding the objections of the governor. In all such cases the vote of each
    house shall be determined by yeas and nays, to be entered on the journal. Any bill
    which shall not be returned by the governor to the legislature within five days
    (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, shall become a law
    7
    in like manner as if he had signed it, unless the legislature shall, by adjournment,
    prevent its return, in which case it shall be filed, with his objections, in the office
    of the Secretary of State within ten days after such adjournment (Sundays
    excepted) or become a law.
    Idaho Const. art. IV, § 10 (emphasis added).
    The Idaho Code provides further guidance with respect to the timeframe for returning a
    bill during an adjournment and the consequences for the Governor’s untimely return of a bill.
    Specifically, Idaho Code section 67-504 provides:
    If, on the day the governor desires to return a bill without his approval and with
    his objections thereto to the house in which it originated, that house has
    adjourned for the day (but not for the session), he may deliver the bill with his
    message to the presiding officer, clerk, or any member of such house, and such
    delivery is as effectual as though returned in open session, if the governor, on the
    first day the house is again in session, by message notifies it of such delivery, and
    of the time when, and the person to whom, such delivery was made.
    (emphasis added). Idaho Code section 67-505 then addresses the consequences should the
    Governor fail to return a bill within the deadline:
    Every bill which has passed both houses of the legislature, and has not been
    returned by the governor within five (5) days, thereby becoming a law, is
    authenticated by the governor causing the fact to be certified thereon by the
    secretary of state in the following form:
    ‘This bill having remained with the governor five (5) days (Sundays excepted),
    and the legislature being in session, it has become a law this .... day of ...., ....,’
    which certificate must be signed by the secretary of state and deposited with the
    laws in his office. Where the legislature by adjournment, prevents the return of a
    bill, the governor, if he disapproves thereof, shall file the same, with his
    objections, in the office of the secretary of state within ten (10) days after said
    adjournment (Sundays excepted) or the same shall become a law.
    (emphasis added).
    2. Facts.
    This Court has recognized that it may only look to the Senate Journal for the relevant
    facts of official government acts regarding the passage of a bill into law. Brassey v. Hanson, 
    81 Idaho 403
    , 406, 
    342 P.2d 706
    , 707 (1959). Indeed, this Court has held:
    ‘The principle of law is settled beyond controversy that a court will not go
    behind the journal of a legislature to ascertain what was done by that body. The
    journal itself is conclusive, and, if the journal is incorrect, or improperly made up,
    it is for the legislature itself to correct it, and not for the court.’
    8
    Id. at 407, 
    342 P.2d at 708
     (quoting Burkhart v. Reed, 
    2 Idaho 503
    , 511, 
    22 P. 1
    , 4 (1889) aff’d
    sub nom. Clough v. Curtis, 
    134 U.S. 361
     (1890)). Consequently, “this Court will take judicial
    notice of public and private acts of the legislature and the legislative journals to determine
    whether an act was constitutionally passed and for the purpose of ascertaining what was done by
    the legislature.” Worthen v. State, 
    96 Idaho 175
    , 176, 
    525 P.2d 957
    , 958 (1974). The recitals of
    the Senate Journal of the Idaho Senate for the First Regular Session of the Sixty-Third
    Legislature are therefore conclusive and cannot be contradicted. We will review those recitals to
    determine whether the Governor’s veto in this case was effective.
    As a preliminary matter, the amici argue that this Court’s review of the Senate Journal
    should be limited to the facts that the Constitution requires be included in the Senate Journal.
    Specifically, the amici assert that this Court should look only to the record of the proceedings
    and the yeas and nays, which is what Idaho Constitution article III, section 13 directs be included
    in the Journal. Thus, the amici argue that this Court’s review of the Journal should be limited to
    the vote the Senate took on the veto and that the result of that vote is binding on this Court. To
    support this argument, the amici rely on Whaley v. Independence Cnty., 
    205 S.W. 2d 861
     (Ark.
    1947). However, Whaley is inapposite here because that case dealt with conflicting facts in
    official records from two different branches of government. Here, however, there are no
    conflicting facts in the Senate Journal or in any other official record from the legislative or
    executive branches of our government. Rather, the facts in the Senate Journal are clear,
    unambiguous, and uncontroverted.
    Furthermore, there is no case law in Idaho to suggest that this Court’s review of facts
    from Senate Journals has been limited to the facts the Idaho Constitution requires to be included
    in them. This Court has expressly declined to limit its review of legislative journals to those facts
    required by the Constitution. Cohn, 
    5 Idaho at 446
    , 
    49 P. at 996
    . In Cohn, this Court reasoned
    that limiting the journal to the facts the Constitution expressly requires to be entered in it “would
    dispense entirely with the office of the journal” and that “[t]he idea is not in accord with the
    spirit, and is opposed to the letter, of our constitution.” 
    Id.
     Instead, this Court explained that
    under the Constitution, each house is required to keep a journal of its proceedings, which means
    that “the journal shall show all of the proceedings of the house, and all the steps taken in the
    passage of every bill.” 
    Id. at 426
    , 
    49 P. at 988
    . This Court went on to state:
    9
    By reason of this provision the journal becomes, not only the best evidence, but
    the exclusive evidence, of what was done by the house keeping such journal, and
    courts must impute to the record and statements absolute verity. The recitals in the
    journal are conclusive, and cannot be contradicted. In the passage of a bill by
    either house, the journal of such house must show affirmatively that all of the
    requirements of the constitution were complied with by such house.
    ....
    The object of the journals, principally, is to enable the people to ascertain that any
    and all laws were enacted in the manner required by the constitution, so as to
    determine whether such was constitutionally passed, and therefore valid and
    binding. If we refuse to go back of the enrolled bill,—close our eyes and ears to
    the evidence which the legislature furnishes, and is required by the constitution to
    furnish,—the object of these constitutional provisions may be wholly defeated.
    
    Id. at 430, 447
    , 
    49 P. at 988, 996
     (citations omitted).
    Consequently, our case law has indicated, without distinguishing between facts that are
    constitutionally required and those that are not, that “it is the imperative duty of the court, when
    the issue is before it, to look to the journals of the legislature, and see if, in passing the statute in
    question, [the] legislature [] proceeded in the manner provided by the Constitution.” 
    Id. at 421
    ,
    
    49 P. at 986
    . Moreover, where the facts contained in a legislative journal are clear, unambiguous,
    and uncontroverted, as they are here, we see no reason why we should be constrained to consider
    only those facts the Constitution requires, particularly where there has been a potential
    constitutional violation. Thus, this Court will focus on the entirety of the Senate Journal and
    consider all of the uncontroverted facts contained therein to ascertain what was done by the
    legislature and determine whether the Governor’s veto withstands this constitutional challenge.
    See Worthen, 
    96 Idaho at 176
    , 
    525 P.2d at 958
    . Accordingly, the relevant facts are set forth
    below.
    The Judiciary and Rules Committee reported that S.B. 1011 was delivered to the Office
    of the Governor at 4:54 p.m. on Monday, March 30, 2015. On Thursday, April 2, the legislature
    adjourned for the Easter weekend, with official business to resume Monday, April 6 at 1:30 p.m.
    The Senate Journal then reflects that the Governor returned S.B. 1011 with his veto
    message to the Senate on Monday morning, April 6. This is reflected by three letters—all of
    which were addressed to the Senate President—that were entered in the Senate Journal Monday
    10
    afternoon once the Senate had reconvened.2 The first letter was from the President Pro Tempore,
    and it stated:
    This communication reflects that Senate Bill 1011 was returned to my
    office at 8:52 am on April 6, 2015. To the best of my knowledge no earlier return
    was attempted to my office, nor was I asked to receive such a return at any earlier
    time. The return of S 1011 being due at 4:54 pm on April 4, 2015 and such
    deadline having passed, the provisions of Article IV, § 10 of the Idaho
    Constitution and 
    Idaho Code § 67-504
     and 505 appear to apply.
    The second letter, from the Secretary of the Senate, stated:
    This communication reflects that S 1011 was not returned to my office by
    4:54 p.m. on April 4, 2015 in my capacity as the Secretary of the Senate. Other
    correspondence of legislation were slipped under my door and returned in
    accordance with Article IV, § 10 and 
    Idaho Code §§ 67-504
     & 505.
    Correspondence of legislation is routinely returned to me in this fashion. To the
    best of my knowledge no earlier return was attempted to my office, nor was I
    asked to receive such a return at any earlier time.
    Finally, the Senate Minority Leader submitted a letter, which stated:
    This communication reflects that Senate Bill 1011 was returned to the
    Senate Pro Tem’s office at 8:52 am on April 6, 2015. To the best of my
    knowledge no earlier return was attempted or effectuated to the Senate, nor was
    anyone asked to receive such a return at any earlier time. The return of S1011,
    being due at 4:54 pm on April 4, 2015, and such deadline having passed, S1011 is
    law pursuant to the provisions of Article IV, Section 10 of the Idaho Constitution
    and Idaho Code Sections 67-504 and 67-505.
    There were also messages3 from the Governor read into the Senate Journal on April 6,
    2015, one of which was a letter dated April 3, 2015, and addressed to the Senate President. That
    letter stated, in relevant part: “I hereby advise you that I have returned without my approval,
    disapproved and vetoed, the following Senate Bill, to wit: S 1011 within the time limited by law,
    the same having arrived in the Office of the Governor at the hour of 4:54 p.m. on March 30,
    2
    The letters were never actually read aloud during that legislative session. The video recording of that session
    reveals that the Secretary of the Senate began to read each letter, but for each one, a member of the Senate
    interrupted the Secretary of the Senate only a few words in and asked for unanimous consent that further reading of
    the letters be “dispensed with” on the basis that the “correspondence has been provided to each of [the Senators].”
    Noting there were no objections, the President of the Senate ordered the reading of each of the letters be dispensed
    with. Notably, although the same member of the Senate asked unanimous consent to dispense with the reading of the
    Governor’s letter as well, his request was not made until the Secretary of the Senate read the most crucial part of the
    Governor’s letter. Specifically, the Secretary of the Senate read the introduction, which stated: “I hereby advise you
    that I have returned without my approval, disapproved and vetoed, the following Senate Bill, to wit: S 1011 within
    the time limited by law . . . .” Consequently, based on the video footage alone, it would appear as though there were
    no deficiencies with the Governor’s veto of S.B. 1011 and that the bill failed to become law.
    3
    All but one of these messages concerned bills not relevant to this proceeding.
    11
    2015.” Although the Governor’s letter states that he returned the veto within the time limited by
    law, there is nothing in the letter to indicate the exact date or time when the veto was returned.
    After the Governor’s letter was read into the Senate Journal, the Senate took a vote on
    whether S.B. 1011 should become law notwithstanding the Governor’s veto. A subsequent roll
    call resulted in 19 yeas and 16 nays. Because less than two-thirds of the Senate voted in the
    affirmative, the Senate President declared that the Governor’s veto was sustained and that S.B.
    1011 failed to become law. With the foregoing facts and law in mind, the next step is to
    determine whether the Governor’s veto was valid.
    3. Analysis.
    As mentioned above, the Tribe argues that the facts contained in the Senate Journal are
    uncontroverted and establish that S.B. 1011 is law. The Tribe contends that S.B. 1011
    automatically became law when the Governor failed to return his veto within the five-day
    deadline and, consequently, the Senate’s subsequent vote on the veto was a nullity and had no
    effect on the bill becoming law. Conversely, the amici argue that the Senate Journal conclusively
    establishes that S.B. 1011 did not become law because the Senate took a vote on the Governor’s
    veto and none of the Senators objected to treating the veto as timely.
    This Court has recognized that “where a statute or constitutional provision is plain, clear,
    and unambiguous, it ‘speaks for itself and must be given the interpretation the language clearly
    implies.’ ” Verska v. St. Alphonsus Reg’l. Med. Ctr., 
    151 Idaho 889
    , 895, 
    265 P.3d 502
    , 508
    (2011) (quoting Moon v. Inv. Bd., 
    97 Idaho 595
    , 596, 
    548 P.2d 861
    , 862 (1976)). This Court
    reviews the provision’s language as a whole, considering the meaning of each word, so as not to
    render any word superfluous or redundant. BHC Intermountain Hosp., Inc. v. Ada Cnty., 
    150 Idaho 93
    , 95, 
    244 P.3d 237
    , 239 (2010). Thus, the starting point in this Court’s interpretation of
    the relevant constitutional and statutory provisions is the plain language.
    The plain language of Idaho Constitution, article IV, section 10, requires the Governor to
    return his veto to the house in which the bill originated—in this case, the Senate—within five
    days of when the bill was presented to him. However, because the Senate had temporarily
    adjourned for the Easter weekend, Idaho Code section 67-504 offered an alternative method for
    the Governor to return the bill. Under Idaho Code section 67-504, the Governor may have
    alternatively delivered the vetoed bill with his message to “the presiding officer, clerk, or any
    member of such house” within the five-day period rather than returning it to the Office of the
    12
    Senate. I.C. § 67-504. However, that section also provides that such delivery is effective as
    though the bill was returned in open session, “if the governor, on the first day the house is again
    in session, by message notifies it of such delivery, and of the time when, and the person to
    whom, such delivery was made.” I.C. § 67-504 (emphasis added). Thus, in this case, the
    Governor had two options:
    1. Return the veto with his message to the Office of the Senate within five days after
    S.B. 1011 was presented to him; OR
    2. Return the veto with his message by delivering it to the presiding officer, clerk, or
    any member of the Senate within five days after S.B. 1011 was presented to him, and
    send a message to the Senate the first day it reconvened after the Easter weekend
    notifying it of the time and person he delivered the veto to.
    Under either option, the Governor was required to “return” his veto to an appropriate
    figure within the allotted five-day timeframe. The Constitution does not define the term “return,”
    but Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language defines “return” as “to bring, carry,
    or send back; as, to return a borrowed book; to return a hired horse,” and, more specifically,
    “[i]n law, the rendering back or delivery . . . to the proper officer or court . . . .” N. Webster, An
    American Dictionary of the English Language (1828). Furthermore, we have held that “the act of
    returning [the bill] with his objections is the veto of the bill.” Cenarrusa, 
    99 Idaho at 409
    , 
    582 P.2d at 1087
     (emphasis added). Therefore, we have previously indicated that returning a bill
    requires the overt act of physically delivering the bill to the appropriate official.
    This interpretation is supported by the language in Idaho Code section 67-504, which
    states that the Governor may return a bill by “delivering” it to one of several officials listed
    under that provision when the house has temporarily adjourned. Delivery suggests relinquishing
    control over the bill by physically handing it over to one of the named officials. Indeed,
    Webster’s Dictionary of the English Language defines “deliver” as “[t]o give, or transfer; to put
    into another[’]s hand or power; to commit; to pass from one to another. . . . So we say,
    to deliver goods to a carrier; to deliver a letter; to deliver possession of an estate.” N. Webster,
    An American Dictionary of the English Language (1828).
    Thus, the plain meaning of “return,” this Court’s analysis in Cenarrusa, and our statutory
    provision dealing with the return of a bill during adjournment support the conclusion that the
    word “return” means that the bill must be placed into the actual physical possession of the
    13
    appropriate office or officer to effectuate the return. Consequently, we conclude that for purposes
    of Idaho Constitution, article IV, section 10, and Idaho Code section 67-504, “return” means
    relinquishing control and physically delivering the veto to an official to whom the Governor is
    authorized under those provisions to return the veto.
    The unambiguous and uncontradicted facts in the Senate Journal indicate that the
    Governor’s veto failed under both the Idaho Constitution and Idaho Code section 67-504. First,
    despite the Governor’s veto message bearing the date of April 3, there is nothing in the Senate
    Journal to indicate that the vetoed bill was physically returned to the Office of the Senate on or
    before the April 4 deadline. Instead, the letters outlined above tell a different story. In fact, two
    of the letters specifically state that S.B. 1011 was returned to the President Pro Tempore’s office
    at 8:52    A.M.   on Monday, April 6, 2015. Further, as the Tribe noted in oral argument, the
    Governor only received one original copy of the bill, and that copy was returned to the President
    Pro Tempore’s office on Monday, April 6, 2015. The Secretary of State and the amici do not
    point to any facts in the Senate Journal—other than the Governor’s letter that was dated April 3,
    2015—evidencing an earlier return. Thus, the uncontroverted facts conclusively establish that the
    Governor did not physically return the veto to the Office of the Senate within the five-day period
    as the Constitution requires.
    The Governor’s veto also fell short of satisfying Idaho Code section 67-504’s
    requirements. Indeed, the Senate Journal does not reflect that the Governor returned the bill to
    any one of the listed officials at any time before April 6, 2015. Furthermore, the Senate Journal is
    devoid of a message notifying the Senate of the time and the person to whom the Governor
    returned the veto within the five-day deadline.4 In sum, the Senate Journal is absent any
    4
    Interestingly, a newspaper article from the Coeur d’Alene Press indicated that the President Pro Tem saw the veto
    on April 3, 2015, but never took possession of it. Specifically, the article stated:
    Idaho Senate President Pro Tem Brent Hill said he saw the controversial SB 1011 veto on April 3,
    but did not take possession of the bill. Sen. Hill, R-Rexburg, said the governor had called to
    inform him that he intended to veto the bill on April 3, but he wasn’t going to release that
    information until April 6.… Hill said after the phone call, he went to the governor’s office later
    that afternoon to make sure that the press wouldn’t have access to the veto over the Easter
    weekend. “It was about 3:30 (p.m.) on Friday, and I went down to his office to determine if the
    veto was a public record or not,” he said, adding he was assured by Gov. Butch Otter’s chief of
    staff that the Senate would not read it in the papers over the weekend. “He pulled it out of a file in
    his office and showed me that it had been vetoed.” But, Hill said, he didn’t take possession of the
    document. “Actually, I didn’t know the governor had to deliver that to the Senate at that time
    either,” Hill said. “Neither one of us did.”
    14
    indication that the bill was returned to an official listed in Idaho Code section 67-504 before the
    April 4 deadline, or of a message reflecting such timely delivery. Thus, the Governor’s veto was
    not effective under Idaho Code section 67-504.
    The Constitution is clear on the effect of a veto that is not returned within five days:
    “Any bill which shall not be returned by the governor to the legislature within five days
    (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, shall become a law in like manner
    as if he had signed it . . . .” Idaho Const. art. IV, § 10. Thus, the Constitution makes clear that the
    moment the deadline has passed for the return of a bill, the bill automatically becomes law. The
    Secretary of State, however, contends that the Governor must authenticate the bill before it
    becomes law. This argument is unavailing. Nothing in the Constitution suggests that the
    Governor must take steps to authenticate a bill that was not returned to the legislature within five
    days after presentment. Indeed, while Idaho Constitution, article IV, section 10 requires the
    Governor to sign and return a bill that he approves, there is no such requirement where the
    Governor fails to return the bill to the legislature within the five-day deadline. Instead, the
    Constitution states that bills not returned by the Governor within the deadline become law as if
    the Governor had signed it. Thus, under the Constitution, there are two ways a bill may be
    authenticated: (1) through the Governor’s signature; or (2) through a non-veto, in which case
    authentication is automatic.
    Furthermore, an analysis of Idaho Code section 67-505’s plain language also reveals that
    when the Governor fails to veto a bill within five days after presentment, no further action is
    required to authenticate the bill. Indeed, Idaho Code section 67-505 explicitly states that a bill
    that “has not been returned by the governor within five (5) days, thereby becoming a law, is
    authenticated by the governor causing the fact to be certified thereon by the secretary of
    state . . . .” (emphasis added). In contrast, Idaho Code section 67-503 provides that where the
    legislature, through reconsideration, passes a bill over the Governor’s veto, the bill “must be
    authenticated as having become a law by a certificate indorsed thereon, or attached thereto” in a
    form specified by the statute. Thus, while authentication under Idaho Code section 67-503
    requires further action by the Governor, no further action is required to authenticate a bill under
    Idaho Code section 67-505. In sum, both the Constitution and Idaho Code section 67-505 make
    Jeff Selle, Official Recalls Veto Details, CDAPress.com (May 2, 2015), available             at
    http://www.cdapress.com/news/political/article_5b891f7b-cabf-5e5e-b2b3-b1e5fe0d129c.html.
    15
    clear that the moment the deadline has passed for the return of a bill, the bill is automatically
    authenticated and becomes law with no further action required by the Governor or any other
    official.
    Here, the uncontroverted facts in the Senate Journal indicate that the Governor did not
    return S.B. 1011 until Monday, April 6, 2015. Therefore, S.B. 1011 automatically became law
    with no further action required by the Governor. There is nothing in the Constitution granting the
    Governor, the Senate, or any other official the power to disregard the untimely return of S.B.
    1011 or to change the fact that S.B. 1011 became law. Instead, this Court has recognized that
    constitutional provisions “are mandatory, and it is the imperative duty of the legislature to obey
    them,” and that the duty of supporting the constitutional provisions “is imposed upon all public
    officers by the solemn obligations of the official oath, which obligations cannot be discharged by
    disobeying, ignoring, and setting at naught the plain provisions of the constitution, but only by
    obedience thereto.” Cohn, 
    5 Idaho at 421
    , 
    49 P. at 985
    . Consequently, this Court has held that the
    requirements of the Constitution must be strictly adhered to and the Senate cannot cure defects
    through declarations, or in this case, a vote. 
    Id.
     (stating that constitutional requirements regarding
    the manner of passing bills must be strictly adhered to and that “the mere declaration by the
    senate that ‘we concur in the house amendments’ does not answer the requirements of the
    constitution.”).5 “If either house can disregard one plain provision of the constitution, then it may
    disregard all of its provisions, and the constitution, instead of being the fundamental law of the
    land, is a mere sham, an idle mockery, a nullity.” 
    Id. at 427
    , 
    49 P. at 988
    . Thus, the Senate’s
    actions did not change the fact that S.B. 1011 automatically became law when the Governor
    failed to return it within five days. Because the Governor’s veto was ineffective and S.B. 1011
    automatically became law, the next question becomes whether the Secretary of State is required
    to certify it as law.
    5
    The Court in Cohn further stated:
    The constitution requires certain things to be done in connection with the passage of any and all
    laws. It is true that the doing of these things is a matter of procedure. But by what right shall
    anyone be permitted to say that any of the things required by the constitution to be done are
    “insignificant,” and may therefore be omitted? … If the court must wink at one violation of the
    constitution, it must, wink at other violations of it. If the court must approve one violation of the
    constitution, it must, to be consistent, approve other violations of it. We must be subject to the
    constitution, or else subject to the whims of those individuals who treat the sanctity of the
    constitution as fictitious and its provisions as insignificant.
    
    Id. at 431
    , 
    49 P. at 990
    .
    16
    C. The Secretary of State has a non-discretionary duty to certify S.B. 1011 into law.
    The Secretary of State contends that he does not have the authority to certify S.B. 1011 as
    law because he is not the “timekeeper” for legislation and deadlines. Instead, the Secretary of
    State asserts that the originating house is the “timekeeper” and is therefore responsible for
    monitoring and determining whether a veto is timely and therefore effective. The Secretary of
    State, along with the amici, also argue that it would violate the separation of powers if (1) the
    Secretary of State could override the Senate and determine that a veto was not timely and
    ineffective despite the Senate treating the veto as though it was timely and effective; and (2) this
    Court orders the Secretary of State to certify S.B. 1011 into law. These arguments must fail.
    Although there is nothing in the Constitution or statutes to address whether the Secretary
    of State may override a Senate’s vote on a veto that was untimely, Idaho Code section 67-505
    resolves the issue. Indeed, under Idaho Code section 67-505’s plain language, when the
    Governor does not timely return a bill with his objections, the bill automatically becomes law
    with no further action required, and the Secretary of State has a non-discretionary duty to submit
    the bill as law. Idaho Code section 67-505 states unequivocally that when a bill is not returned to
    the Governor within five days, it becomes a law and “is authenticated by the governor causing
    the fact to be certified thereon by the secretary of state . . . .” (emphasis added). Nothing in the
    statute states that when the Governor returns a bill past the deadline the Secretary of State may
    certify the bill as law. Rather, the statute makes clear that once the deadline passes, the bill
    becomes law and is automatically authenticated by the Governor, which requires the Secretary of
    State to certify the bill as law in the specified manner. The provision goes on to state that the
    “certificate must be signed by the Secretary of State and deposited with the laws in his office.”
    I.C. § 67-505. There is nothing discretionary about the Secretary of State’s role in the matter:
    once the deadline has passed for the Governor’s return of a veto, the Secretary of State has a
    non-discretionary duty to certify the bill as law.
    In any event, the Secretary of State has acknowledged that he has a duty to certify S.B.
    1011 as law if this Court enters an order “directing the Secretary of State to issue the certification
    under 
    Idaho Code § 67-505
     that S. 1011 became law without the Governor’s signature.” Thus, it
    is irrelevant whether the Secretary of State is a “timekeeper” for legislation and deadlines.
    Instead, the relevant inquiry is simply whether this Court can order the Secretary of State to
    17
    certify S.B. 1011 as law. The Secretary of State and the amici argue that ordering the Secretary
    of State to do so would violate the separation of powers.
    The Idaho Constitution defines the roles of our three branches of government. Idaho
    Constitution, article II, section 1 provides that “[t]he powers of the government of this state are
    divided into three distinct departments, the legislative, executive and judicial; and no person or
    collection of persons charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these
    departments shall exercise any powers properly belonging to either of the others, except as in this
    constitution expressly directed or permitted.”
    Although it is true that one branch of government cannot usurp the powers of another
    branch of government, one branch of government can certainly challenge the exercise of those
    powers. It is axiomatic that each of the branches of government serves as a check against the
    powers of the others to ensure that each branch is acting within the scope of its authority and
    consistent with the Constitution. It is this Court’s responsibility to ensure that the Idaho
    Constitution’s mandate that “[a]ll political power is inherent in the people [and] Government is
    instituted for their equal protection and benefit” is zealously protected. Thus, “if a Governor
    manipulates the veto power [] [this Court] will [] intervene to forestall such conduct.”
    Washington State Legislature v. Lowry, 
    931 P.2d 885
    , 891–92 (Wash. 1997). Thus, it is this
    Court’s duty to intervene to prevent the Governor and the Senate from circumventing the
    Constitution and manipulating the veto power in this case.
    Cenarrusa supports the conclusion that this Court may intervene to prevent the Governor
    and the legislature from manipulating the veto power. In that case, the Governor was presented
    with bills three days after the Legislature had adjourned sine die. 
    Id.
     at 405–06, 
    582 P.2 at
    1083–
    84. On the eleventh day after adjournment, excluding Sundays, but on the eighth day after the
    bills had been presented to the Governor, the Governor vetoed two bills by sending his
    objections to the Secretary of State. 
    Id.
     The Secretary of State refused to honor the vetoes on the
    basis that they were untimely, proceeded to certify the bills as law, and then initiated legal action
    to resolve the controversy. 
    Id.
     This Court took the case and resolved the validity of the
    Governor’s vetoes. That case is important in two respects. First, the case demonstrates that in the
    past, the Secretary of State has acted consistently with the plain language of Idaho Code section
    67-505 and disregarded a Governor’s veto and certified the bill as law when the veto was
    untimely. Second, that case indicates that this Court can determine whether a veto was valid and
    18
    effective without violating the separation of powers. Although Cenarrusa did not specifically
    address the separation of powers, the case demonstrates this Court’s willingness to rule on
    whether an act of a co-equal branch has violated the Constitution.
    Furthermore, this Court has stated:
    There is no intention disclosed in the constitution to make the legislature
    the exclusive judges of the constitutionality of its acts. The legislature must, in the
    very nature of things, use its judgment, in the first instance, as to whether a
    proposed action by it is constitutional or not, or whether it is acting in the manner
    required by the constitution. But whether the legislature should make an honest
    mistake, or perversely violate the constitution, the remedy for such violation
    exists, nevertheless, and courts must refuse to aid and abet such violations of the
    constitution. The court does this by refusing to recognize the validity of any act
    passed in violation of the mandates of the constitution.
    Cohn, 
    5 Idaho at 436
    , 
    49 P. at 992
    . Thus, this Court has recognized that it has the power to
    review the legislature’s actions to ensure that they comply with constitutional requirements and
    that it is this Court’s duty to remedy any violations. Consequently, it cannot be said that it would
    violate the separation of powers if this Court orders the Secretary of State to certify S.B. 1011 as
    law. Because we conclude that the Secretary of State had a clear, non-discretionary duty to
    certify S.B. 1011 as law, the next issue is whether a writ of mandamus is the appropriate remedy
    to ensure that duty is carried out.
    D. A writ of mandamus is an appropriate remedy in this case.
    The amici contend that a writ of mandamus is an inappropriate remedy in this case.
    Treasure Valley Racing, LLC, argues that a writ of mandamus is inappropriate because the Tribe
    has not shown “sufficient facts concerning a possible constitutional violation of an urgent
    nature,” or an issue of “great public importance.” The Governor, Intermountain Racing and
    Entertainment, LLC, and Coeur d’Alene Racing, Ltd., argue that the Secretary of State did not
    have a clear legal duty to certify S.B. 1011 as law and that the Tribe does not have a clear legal
    right to have S.B. 1011 certified as law. They contend that because both of these things must be
    shown before the Court can issue a writ of mandamus, the Tribe’s failure to make such showings
    is detrimental to its request for a writ. The Governor also asserts that a writ of mandamus is an
    inappropriate remedy because there is an adequate remedy at the district court level and in the
    legislature.
    As stated above, this Court may issue a writ of mandamus “to compel the performance of
    an act which the law especially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office . . . .” I.C. § 7-302. This
    19
    Court has held that mandamus is the proper remedy for one seeking to require a public officer to
    carry out a clearly mandated, non-discretionary ministerial act. Cowles Publ’g Co. v. Magistrate
    Court, 
    118 Idaho 753
    , 760, 
    800 P.2d 640
    , 647 (1990). However, the existence of an adequate
    remedy in the ordinary course of law, either legal or equitable in nature, will prevent the issuance
    of a writ of mandamus. Idaho Falls Redev. Agency v. Countryman, 
    118 Idaho 43
    , 44, 
    794 P.2d 632
    , 633 (1990). The party seeking the writ of mandamus has the burden of proving the absence
    of an adequate, plain, or speedy remedy in the ordinary course of law. 
    Id.
    A writ of mandamus is an appropriate remedy in this case. The Secretary of State, a
    public officer, had a clear, non-discretionary ministerial duty to certify S.B. 1011 as law when
    the five-day deadline for the bill’s return passed. Furthermore, as discussed above, the Tribe has
    a legal right to ensure that the Secretary of State comply with his non-discretionary duty to
    certify S.B. 1011 as law. Finally, as the Tribe points out, there is no adequate, plain, or speedy
    remedy in the court of the law. Although it is true that the district court and the legislature are
    also proper forums to resolve this dispute, the facts in this case demonstrate a clear constitutional
    violation, and the resolution of the case involves an important constitutional question.
    Furthermore, the effective date of S.B. 1011 was July 1, 2015. Thus, it is unlikely that the district
    court and the legislature could offer a speedy remedy considering the time-sensitive nature of
    this case and the important constitutional question at stake. This Court has a significant interest
    in taking this case and issuing a writ of mandamus to correct the constitutional violation that has
    occurred. Thus, a writ of mandamus compelling the Secretary of State to certify S.B. 1011 as law
    is an appropriate remedy in this case.
    In sum, this Court may exercise jurisdiction over this case pursuant to article V, section 9
    of the Idaho Constitution. The Idaho Constitution clearly states that the Governor must return a
    veto within five days, which means the Governor must return the veto by physically delivering
    the bill to the originating house or an appropriate official under the code within five days. If the
    Governor fails to return the veto within five days, the Constitution and our statutory provisions
    make clear that the bill automatically becomes law as though the Governor had signed it, and
    that the Secretary of State then has a non-discretionary duty to certify the bill as law. In this case,
    the unambiguous and uncontroverted facts in the Senate Journal conclusively establish that the
    Governor’s veto was not timely returned to the originating body—the Senate—or to any other
    official listed under Idaho Code section 67-504. Therefore, under the Constitution’s plain
    20
    language, S.B. 1011 automatically became law as if the Governor had signed it. Furthermore,
    pursuant to the Constitution, because the Governor failed to return the veto within five days, the
    Secretary of State had a non-discretionary duty to certify S.B. 1011 as law. Finally, a writ of
    mandamus compelling the Secretary of State to certify S.B. 1011 as law is an appropriate remedy
    in this case and does not violate the separation of powers.
    E. The Tribe is entitled to attorney fees on this Writ of Mandamus.
    The Tribe requests attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-117 and Idaho Code
    section 12-121.
    1. Attorney fees are not available under Idaho Code section 12-117.
    Idaho Code section 12-117(1) provides:
    Unless otherwise provided by statute, in any proceeding involving as
    adverse parties a state agency or a political subdivision and a person, the state
    agency, political subdivision or the court hearing the proceeding, including on
    appeal, shall award the prevailing party reasonable attorney’s fees, witness fees
    and other reasonable expenses, if it finds that the nonprevailing party acted
    without a reasonable basis in fact or law.
    This statute authorizes attorney fees in mandamus proceedings. Musser v. Higginson, 
    125 Idaho 392
    , 397, 
    871 P.2d 809
    , 814 (1994). However, the Tribe cannot recover attorney fees
    under this statute because the Secretary of State is not a “state agency” or a “political
    subdivision.”
    Indeed, Idaho Code section 12-117 defines “state agency” as “any agency as defined in
    section 67-5201, Idaho Code.” I.C. §12-117(5)(d). In turn, Idaho Code section 67-5201(2)
    defines “state agency” as:
    [E]ach state board, commission, department or officer authorized by law to make
    rules or to determine contested cases, but does not include the legislative or
    judicial branches, executive officers listed in section 1, article IV, of the
    constitution of the state of Idaho in the exercise of powers derived directly and
    exclusively from the constitution, the state militia or the state board of correction.
    Idaho Constitution, Article IV, section 1 lists as executive officers the “governor, lieutenant
    governor, Secretary of State, state controlled, state treasurer, attorney general and superintendent
    of public instruction.” Idaho Const. art IV, § 1. Consequently, the Secretary of State is not a
    “state agency” for purposes of Idaho Code section 12-117.
    Idaho Code section 12-117(5)(d) defines “political subdivision” as “a city, a county, any
    taxing district or a health district.” Thus, the Secretary of State is not a “political subdivision”
    21
    either. Because the Secretary of State is not a state agency or a political subdivision for purposes
    of Idaho Code 12-117, the Tribe may not recover attorney fees under that statute.
    2. The Tribe is entitled to attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-121.
    Idaho Code section 12-121 provides:
    In any civil action, the judge may award reasonable attorney’s fees to the
    prevailing party or parties, provided that this section shall not alter, repeal or
    amend any statute which otherwise provides for the award of attorney’s fees. The
    term “party” or “parties” is defined to include any person, partnership,
    corporation, association, private organization, the state of Idaho or political
    subdivision thereof.
    Here, this writ against the Secretary of State is essentially an action against the State of
    Idaho. In Chastain’s, Inc. v. State Tax Comm’n, 
    72 Idaho 344
    , 350, 
    241 P.2d 167
    , 170 (1952),
    this Court stated that the proceedings against the State Tax Commission were “in effect an action
    against the State of Idaho.” In Chastain’s, this Court noted that the history of the use of writs of
    prohibition in Idaho “shows that it has been used against the contemplated actions of public
    officers, boards and commissions of the state in numerous instances.” Id. at 351, 
    241 P.2d at 170
    .
    The Court went on to conclude that because writs of prohibition are used with such frequency
    against public officers, bodies and commissions, Idaho Code section 7-312 provided for the
    taxation of costs against the state, by necessary implication. 
    Id.
    Similarly, this Court has held that an action against the Board of Barber Examiners was
    an action against the State. Rickel v. Bd. of Barber Examiners, 
    102 Idaho 260
    , 261, 
    629 P.2d 656
    ,
    657 (1981) (“As this Court found the necessary implication in [] 12-121 to award costs and
    attorney fees against a municipality in [Averitt v. City of Coeur d’Alene, 
    100 Idaho 751
    , 
    605 P.2d 515
     (1980)], and against a county in [Merris v. Ada Cnty., 
    100 Idaho 59
    , 
    593 P.2d 394
     (1979)],
    we hold that the same necessary implication exists to award costs and attorney fees against the
    state.”). Finally, in Grant Const. Co. v. Burns, 
    92 Idaho 408
    , 412, 
    443 P.2d 1005
    , 1009 (1968),
    this Court determined that when the Idaho Board of Highway Directors entered into a highway
    construction contract, it was “the state, acting through [the directors].” As the state can generally
    only act through its officers, actions against the state necessarily include by implication actions
    against public officials such as the Secretary of State. See Will v. Michigan Dep’t of State Police,
    
    491 U.S. 58
    , 71 (1989) (citation omitted) (“[A] suit against a state official in his or her official
    capacity is not a suit against the official but rather is a suit against the official’s office. As such,
    it is no different from a suit against the State itself.”). Here, when the Secretary of State refused
    22
    to certify S.B. 1011 as law, he was acting on behalf of the State. Thus, we conclude that the
    action against the Secretary of State in this case is an action against the State for purposes of
    Idaho Code section 12-121.
    This Court is also a “judge” for purposes of Idaho Code section 12-121. Indeed, this
    Court held that for purposes of Idaho Code section 12-121, “the singular ‘judge’ should also be
    construed to mean the plural ‘judges’ or ‘justices,’ and we hold that the statutory power to award
    attorneys fees applies to the members of this court as well as to the district court judges
    throughout the state.” Minich v. Gem State Developers, Inc., 
    99 Idaho 911
    , 918, 
    591 P.2d 1078
    ,
    1085 (1979). Thus, this Court is a “judge” under Idaho Code section 12-121.
    Finally, a writ of mandamus is a “civil action.” Prior to the enactment of Idaho Code
    section 12-121 in 1976, this Court held that a writ of prohibition is a civil action. Chastain’s,
    Inc., 
    72 Idaho at 350
    , 
    241 P.2d at 170
    . A writ of prohibition is the counterpart of a writ of
    mandamus. Bopp v. City of Sandpoint, 
    110 Idaho 488
    , 490, 
    716 P.2d 1260
    , 1262 (1986). Because
    proceedings for a writ of prohibition are civil actions, so too are proceedings for a writ of
    mandamus. See Rhoades v. State, 
    149 Idaho 130
    , 133, 
    233 P.3d 61
    , 64 (2010) (stating that
    “Thompson v. Hagan was a civil action in which the defendants sought a writ of mandate from
    this Court which would have compelled the district judge to apply the Idaho guest statute, now
    codified as I.C. § 49-2415.”). We presume that the legislature was fully aware of the existing
    judicial decisions when it enacted Idaho Code section 12-121. Thus, we conclude that a writ of
    mandamus is a civil action for purposes of Idaho Code section 12-121.6
    In sum, for purposes of Idaho Code section 12-121, an action against the Secretary of
    State is an action against the state of Idaho; this Court is a judge; and a writ of mandamus is a
    civil action. Thus, Idaho Code section 12-121 applies to this case and fees may be awarded to the
    Tribe if appropriate under that section.
    The standard for awarding attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-121 is essentially
    the same as that under Idaho Code section 12-117. This Court awards fees under Idaho Code
    section 12-117 “if it finds that the nonprevailing party acted without a reasonable basis in fact or
    law.” Similarly, under Idaho Code section 12-121, this Court awards fees to the prevailing party
    6
    We recognize that prior to the adoption of the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure, there were two cases in which this
    Court held that proceedings for a writ of mandamus were not “civil actions.” However, the statute that the Court
    relied on in those two cases to reach that conclusion was repealed in 1975. Therefore, those cases that determined
    writs of mandamus are not civil actions are no longer binding on that point.
    23
    “when this court is left with the abiding belief that the appeal was brought, pursued or defended
    frivolously, unreasonably or without foundation.” Minich, 99 Idaho at 918, 
    591 P.2d at 1085
    .
    This Court has stated that “[b]oth I.C. § 12-117 and § 12-121 permit the award of attorney’s fees
    to the prevailing party if the court determines the case was brought, pursued or defended
    frivolously, unreasonably or without foundation.” Nation v. State, Dep’t of Correction, 
    144 Idaho 177
    , 194, 
    158 P.3d 953
    , 970 (2007).
    Based on our analysis in the sections above, we conclude that the Secretary of State
    defended this writ unreasonably and without foundation. Indeed, the uncontroverted facts
    conclusively establish that the veto was delivered to the President Pro Tempore on April 6, 2015,
    which was well past the five-day deadline under the Constitution. Although the Secretary of
    State suggested that the bill could have been returned to “a potential of thirty-seven possible
    recipients” under Idaho Code section 67-504, that argument is without merit. There is only one
    original bill presented to the Governor, and since the Senate Journal conclusively establishes that
    S.B. 1011 was returned to the President Pro Tempore after the deadline, it is unreasonable and
    disingenuous to even suggest that the bill could have been returned to any other Senate official at
    an earlier time. Because the Governor failed to return S.B. 1011 within five days, the
    Constitution makes crystal clear that S.B. 1011 automatically became law as if the Governor had
    signed it and therefore, the Secretary of State had a non-discretionary duty to certify it as law.
    Therefore, we conclude that the Secretary of State defended this writ unreasonably and without
    foundation. Consequently, the Tribe is entitled to attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-121.
    However, the Tribe is only entitled to attorney fees against the Secretary of State on the
    substantive issues raised by the Secretary of State. The Tribe is not entitled to attorney fees
    against the amici because they are not parties to this action.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we grant the Tribe’s petition for a writ of mandamus and
    order the Secretary of State to certify S.B. 1011 as law. Attorney fees and costs to the Tribe from
    Respondent.
    Chief Justice J. JONES and J. HORTON, CONCUR.
    Justice EISMANN, specially concurring.
    I concur in the majority opinion and write to further explain that the only arguments
    made by the Deputy Attorney General on behalf of the Secretary of State were frivolous and
    24
    disingenuous, thereby requiring an award of attorney fees to the Coeur d’Alene Tribe. In the
    brief filed on behalf of the Secretary of State, the Deputy Attorney General argued only one
    issue—“whether § 67-505 imposes on him the ministerial, non-discretionary duty urged by
    Petitioner.” The Deputy Attorney General reiterated, “That substantive question, again, is the
    only issue which Respondent addresses.”
    The Deputy Attorney General’s frivolous argument regarding Idaho Code section
    67-505.
    Article IV, § 10, of the Idaho Constitution provides, insofar as is relevant, “Any bill
    which shall not be returned by the governor to the legislature within five (5) days (Sundays
    excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, shall become a law in like manner as if he
    had signed it.” It is uncontradicted that the Governor received Senate Bill No. 1011 on Monday,
    March 30, 2015, and that he did not return the bill to a senator until six days later (excluding
    Sunday) on Monday, April 6, 2015. Thus, it is absolutely clear that the bill became law pursuant
    to the Idaho Constitution because it was not returned to the legislature timely.           The only
    substantive issue is whether under those facts, the Secretary of State had a nondiscretionary duty
    under Idaho Code section 67-505 to certify the bill as law.
    That statute is unambiguous. It states, insofar as is relevant, as follows:
    Every bill which has passed both houses of the legislature, and has not
    been returned by the governor within five (5) days, thereby becoming a law, is
    authenticated by the governor causing the fact to be certified thereon by the
    secretary of state in the following form: “This bill having remained with the
    governor five (5) days (Sundays excepted), and the legislature being in session, it
    has become a law this .... day of ...., ....,” which certificate must be signed by the
    secretary of state and deposited with the laws in his office. . . . .
    I.C. § 67-505 (emphases added).
    If a bill passed by both houses is not returned by the governor within five days, the
    secretary of state is statutorily obligated by Idaho Code section 67-505 to certify that the bill has
    become law. As the statute is written, the governor’s failure to return a vetoed bill timely is the
    required authentication that causes the secretary of state to execute the required certificate. The
    statute does not require any further action by the governor. Whether section 67-505 should be
    construed as written was the only substantive issue.
    Idaho Code section 67-505 states that “[e]very bill which has passed both houses of the
    legislature, and has not been returned by the governor within five (5) days, thereby becoming a
    25
    law, is authenticated by the governor.” (emphasis added). The issue, as framed by the Deputy
    Attorney General, is what the meaning of the word “is” is.
    In the argument in his brief regarding section 67-505, the Deputy Attorney General began
    by mischaracterizing the statute and asserting that “is” authenticated by the governor means
    “shall be” authenticated by the governor. The Deputy Attorney General wrote:
    That statute, however, requires the Secretary of State to certify as law a bill
    “authenticated by the governor” as “ha[ving] not been returned by the governor
    within five (5) days”; the Governor made no such authentication here and there is
    nothing for the Secretary of State to certify pursuant to § 67-505.
    He repeated that mischaracterization at the end of his argument by writing:
    Respecting the legislative transaction between the Governor and the Legislature,
    the Constitution, implementing statutes and case law allow for three
    circumstances in which the Secretary of State can certify a bill as law:
    1. Authentication by the Governor that the bill becomes law without his
    signature under 
    Idaho Code § 67-505
    ;
    2. Authentication by the originating house that the bill has not been
    returned in accordance with Article IV, § 10 and thereby becomes law
    without the Governor’s signature; or
    3. A court order directing the Secretary of State [to] issue the certification
    under § 67-505 that S. 1011 becomes law without the Governor’s
    signature.
    (emphasis added).
    The Deputy Attorney General states that “the Constitution, implementing statutes and
    case law allow for three circumstances in which the Secretary of State can certify a bill as law.”
    He does not cite any provision in the Constitution, in a statute, or in case law that supports that
    assertion, because there is none.       Although he mischaracterizes section 67-505 regarding
    “authentication by the governor,” there is no mention in the statute of any “authentication by the
    originating house.” A writ of mandate from this Court can certainly direct the secretary of state
    to perform his nondiscretionary duty as set forth in section 67-505, but there is nothing in the
    statute indicating that a writ of mandate is a prerequisite for the secretary of state to do so.
    In his argument, the Deputy Attorney General simply misrepresented the statute by
    rearranging words to make it appear that the governor must take action to authenticate the fact
    that he had not returned the bill within the required five days. As shown above, the governor’s
    failure to return that bill within the five-day period is the required certification, which triggers
    the mandatory requirement that the secretary of state certify the bill as a law. The Deputy
    26
    Attorney General did not present any authority or cogent argument to support his assertion that
    the word “is” should be read “shall be.”
    The historical record likewise does not support the Deputy Attorney General’s
    mischaracterization of the statute. The Territory of Idaho was created in 1863. An Act to
    Provide a Temporary Government for the Territory of Idaho, § 1, 
    12 Stat. 808
    , 808-09. That
    legislation included a provision stating, “If any bill shall not be returned by the governor within
    three days (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the same shall be a law
    in like manner as if he had signed it, unless the assembly, by adjournment, prevent its return; in
    which case it shall not be a law.” 
    Id.
     § 6, 
    12 Stat. 808
    , 811. In 1887, the territorial legislation
    enacted what has now become Idaho Code section 67-505. As enacted in 1887, the statute
    stated:
    Every bill which has passed both Houses of the Legislature, and has not
    been returned by the Governor within three days, thereby becoming a law, is
    authenticated by the Governor causing the fact to be certified thereon by the
    Secretary of the Territory in the following form: “This bill having remained with
    the Governor three days (Sundays excepted), and the Legislature being in session
    it has become a law this day of A. D. _____,” which certificate must be signed by
    the Secretary of this Territory and deposited with the laws in his office.
    Rev. Stat. of Idaho Territory § 154 (1887). The territorial legislature took a great body of its
    statutory law from California. Merchants’ Protective Ass’n v. Jacobsen, 
    22 Idaho 636
    , 641, 
    127 P. 315
    , 317 (1912). In 1852, California had enacted a statute very similar to section 154 (now
    section 67-505), which stated:
    Every Bill which has passed both Houses of the Legislature, and shall not
    be returned by the Governor within ten days, having thereby become a Law, shall
    be authenticated by the Governor, causing the fact to be certified thereon by the
    Secretary of State, in the following form:
    “This Bill having remained with the Governor ten days, (Sundays
    excepted,) and the Senate and Assembly being in session, it has become a Law,
    this _____ day of _____, A. D. _____,” which certificate shall be signed by the
    Secretary of State, and deposited with the Laws in his Office.
    An Act for the Authentication of Statutes Without the Approval of the Governor, ch. 49, § 2,
    1852 Cal. Sess. Laws 112, 112-13. Because of the similarity between the two statutes and the
    fact that the Idaho territorial legislature routinely copied statutes from California, it is apparent
    that section 154 was copied from the California statute. In copying the statute, the Idaho
    territorial legislature made a significant change.
    27
    The California statute stated that the governor’s failure to return a vetoed bill within the
    prescribed time period “shall be authenticated by the Governor, causing the fact to be certified
    thereon by the Secretary of State.” In 1870, the Governor of California failed to return a vetoed
    bill timely, and he refused to execute the required authentication. As a result, a writ of mandate
    had to be obtained from the California Supreme Court to command the governor to execute the
    authentication. Harpending v. Haight, 
    39 Cal. 189
    , 
    1870 WL 857
     (Cal. 1870). The statute
    enacted by the Idaho territorial legislature did not include the wording “shall be authenticated by
    the Governor.” Instead, the wording was “is authenticated by the Governor.” The change in the
    wording was obviously made to avoid the necessity of obtaining a writ of mandate to command
    the governor to execute an authentication if he failed to return a vetoed bill timely. Section 154
    (now section 67-505) provided that the governor’s inaction—his failure to return the vetoed bill
    timely—is the authentication, which causes the fact to be certified by the secretary of the
    territory then and the secretary of state now.
    The Deputy Attorney General’s disingenuous arguments regarding the facts.
    The undisputed facts are that the Governor received the bill on March 30, 2015, and that
    the five-day period for vetoing it and returning it to the Senate expired on Saturday, April 4,
    2015. On Thursday, April 2, 2015, the Senate adjourned until 1:30 p.m. on Monday, April 6,
    2015. The Governor’s veto message is dated April 3, 2015, but the veto would be ineffective
    unless the bill was returned to the Senate on or before April 4, 2015. Idaho Const. art. IV, § 10.
    Idaho Code section 67-504 sets forth a procedure for returning a vetoed bill when the
    house in which the bill originated has adjourned for the day but not for the session. It states:
    If, on the day the governor desires to return a bill without his approval and
    with his objections thereto to the house in which it originated, that house has
    adjourned for the day (but not for the session), he may deliver the bill with his
    message to the presiding officer, clerk, or any member of such house, and such
    delivery is as effectual as though returned in open session, if the governor, on the
    first day the house is again in session, by message notifies it of such delivery, and
    of the time when, and the person to whom, such delivery was made.
    Because the Senate had adjourned on April 2, 2015, and would not be back in session
    until 1:30 p.m. on April 6, 2015, the Governor could return Senate Bill No. 1011 on or before
    Saturday April 4, 2015, by delivering it to the President of the Senate, Lieutenant Governor Brad
    Little; to the Secretary of the Senate, Jennifer L. Novak; or to any senator. However, the statute
    provides that delivery to one of those persons would only be effective “if the governor, on the
    28
    first day the house is again in session, by message notifies it of such delivery, and of the time
    when, and the person to whom, such delivery was made.” Id. There is no contention that the
    Governor did so in this case.
    On April 6, 2015, the Secretary of the Senate presented a letter to the President of the
    Senate notifying him that Senate Bill No. 1011 had not been returned to her, nor to her
    knowledge had there been any attempt to return it to her. She also stated that correspondence is
    routinely returned to her by slipping it under the door of her office, and that other
    correspondence was slipped under her door and returned “in accordance with Article IV, §10 and
    
    Idaho Code §§ 67-504
     & 505.” It is significant that not only was Senate Bill No. 1011 not
    returned to her, but neither was any correspondence in accordance with Idaho Code section 67-
    504 regarding that bill.7
    During oral argument by the Deputy Attorney General, his mischaracterization of Idaho
    Code section 67-505 was pointed out by quoting the entire relevant portion of the statute. He
    was then asked twice whether he was aware of any compliance with Idaho Code section 67-504,
    and each time he responded, “I don’t know.” Unless he was willfully ignorant of the facts, those
    responses were false. He was later asked whether anyone had contended that the Governor had
    sent a message pursuant to section 67-504, and he avoided the question. He was then asked three
    times whether he was aware of any compliance with section 67-504, and each time he would not
    answer the question. His refusal to answer the questions spoke volumes as to what the facts
    7
    The letter from the Secretary of the Senate was transcribed in the Senate Journal. It read as follows:
    April 6, 2015
    The Honorable Brad Little
    President
    Idaho State Senate
    Dear Mr. President:
    This communication reflects that S 1011 was not returned to my office by 4:54 p.m. on April 4,
    2015 in my capacity as the Secretary of the Senate. Other correspondence of legislation were [sic]
    slipped under my door and returned in accordance with Article IV, §10 and 
    Idaho Code §§67-504
    & 505. Correspondence of legislation is routinely returned to me in this fashion. To the best of
    my knowledge no earlier return was attempted to my office, nor was I asked to receive such a
    return at any earlier time.
    Sincerely,
    /s/ Jennifer L. Novak
    Secretary of the Senate
    29
    actually were and demonstrated that his strategy was to attempt to obscure the facts rather than
    confront them.
    Later in his oral argument, the Deputy Attorney General stated that “we” do not know
    whether or not the return of the bill was timely. He was asked, “Are you aware of any
    contention that it was returned within five days?” He answered: “Yes, the journal. The journal
    says that it was returned.” He was told: “The journal doesn’t say that. It doesn’t say that it was
    returned within five days.” He responded: “The journal. The journal. Under the Constitution,
    the journal is not required to reflect when the legislation was returned.” Thus, on one hand the
    Deputy Attorney General stated that the Senate Journal showed that Senate Bill No. 1011 was
    returned within five days, and on the other he stated that it is not reflected in the Senate Journal
    because the Constitution does not require the Senate Journal to reflect when legislation is
    returned. Those inconsistent answers reflect a lack of candor. Finally, near the end of his oral
    argument, the Deputy Attorney General was again asked whether anyone had contended that the
    bill was returned to him or her (other than the President Pro Tempore), and the Deputy Attorney
    General finally answered truthfully, “Not that I’m aware of.”
    It is clear that he knew there had been no compliance with section 67-504, because had
    there been, the message submitted by the Governor in compliance with that statute would be in
    the possession of the Secretary of State. Any such message would have been delivered to the
    Secretary of the Senate,8 and she would have delivered such document to the Secretary of State
    at the end of the legislative session, receiving from him a certification that he had received it.9
    8
    Senate Rule 8(A) states:
    The Secretary of the Senate shall have custody and supervise the handling of all records,
    bills, documents, and other official papers; he shall allow no bills, records, or papers to be taken
    out of his custody or out of the Senate Chamber other than in the regular routine of business; nor
    shall he at any time or place allow the same to be handled or examined by any person whatsoever
    except the President, Senators, officers, and employees of the Senate in the discharge of their
    duties. Public records requests of the Secretary of the Senate shall be handled as provided in Rule
    8(E).
    9
    Senate Rule 7(E) states:
    It shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Senate, at the close of each session of the
    legislature, to mark, label, and arrange all bills and papers belonging to the archives of the Senate,
    and to deliver the same, together with all the books of the Senate, to the Secretary of State, who
    shall certify to the reception of the same.
    30
    Thus, the Secretary of State would know whether or not the Governor had submitted to the
    Senate a message in compliance with Idaho Code section 67-504.
    The Deputy Attorney General admitted during oral argument that if Senate Bill No. 1011
    had been returned timely, it would be an absolute defense to this request for a writ of mandamus.
    He was then asked, “Would a competent attorney, representing the secretary of state, make that
    inquiry?” He answered, “No.” Apparently, his strategy was to be willfully ignorant of the facts.
    If, in truth, he was ignorant of the facts, he should not have attempted to argue them.
    The Deputy Attorney General also argued, “There is a legitimate question before this
    Court because under 67-504 there is a potential of thirty-seven possible recipients of a returned
    piece of legislation.” That assertion was patently disingenuous. The President Pro Tempore
    submitted a letter dated April 6, 2015, to the President of the Senate in which the President Pro
    Tempore stated: “This communication reflects that Senate Bill 1011 was returned to my office
    at 8:52 am on April 6, 2015. To the best of my knowledge no earlier return was attempted to my
    office, nor was I asked to receive such a return at any earlier time.” There is no doubt that the
    President Pro Tempore had possession of the original bill because until the vetoed original bill
    and the Governor’s objections to the bill were returned to the Senate, the Senate could not have
    voted to override the veto. I.C. § 67-503. See also Senate Rule 16.10 There was only one
    original of the bill submitted to the Governor, and after vetoing it he was required to return the
    vetoed original to the Senate.
    “All bills or joint resolutions passed shall be signed by the presiding officers of the
    respective houses.” Idaho Const. art. III, § 21. There is only one original of each bill that is
    signed by the presiding officer of each house and submitted to the governor. “After a bill has
    10
    Senate Rule 16 states:
    When a bill has been vetoed by the Governor and his objections entered upon the Journal,
    that bill is before the Senate for reconsideration in accordance with Article 4, Section 10, Idaho
    Constitution; the question to be put by the Chair is, “Shall Senate Bill _____ pass, the Governor’s
    veto notwithstanding?” When the question of reconsideration has been stated, it shall be in order
    to receive only the following motions in the order named:
    (1) Adjourn.
    (2) Recess.
    (3) Question of privilege (but personal privilege shall not be permitted).
    (4) Call for orders of the day.
    (5) Previous question.
    (6) Limit debate.
    (7) Postpone to a time certain.
    31
    passed both houses, it shall be enrolled not later than 48 hours after the time of passage.” Joint
    Legislative R. 4. “After being enrolled each bill . . . shall be signed first by the presiding officer
    of the house in which it originated, then by the presiding officer of the other house, and lastly be
    submitted to the governor for his consideration.” Joint Legislative R. 5.
    Thus, the Governor received the original of Senate Bill No. 1011, which was signed by
    the presiding officer of each house. It was the original of the bill upon which the Governor
    affixed his veto stamp, and it was the original of the bill that had to be returned to the Senate.
    Article IV, § 10, of the Idaho Constitution states, “Every bill passed by the legislature shall,
    before it becomes a law, be presented to the governor.” The Constitution further provides, “If he
    approve, he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become a law; but if he do not approve, he shall
    return it with his objections to the house in which it originated . . . .” Id. (emphasis added). All
    four of the words “it” refer to the original of the bill presented to the governor to which are
    affixed the signatures of the presiding officers of both houses of the legislature.
    Therefore, the Governor would have to have returned the original Senate Bill No. 1011 to
    someone on or before April 4, 2015, and then returned the same original bill to the President Pro
    Tempore on April 6, 2015. The Deputy Attorney General would apparently have us believe that
    the Governor timely returned the original of the bill to some phantom senator, who gave the bill
    back to the Governor, and then the Governor later returned the original of the bill to the Senate
    Pro Tempore. There are certainly no facts supporting that fantasy. Indeed, the Governor
    submitted a brief as amicus curiae in this case, and he did not contend that he returned Senate
    Bill No. 1011 to anyone other than the President Pro Tempore, nor did he contend that he
    returned it to the President Pro Tempore on April 4, 2015, or earlier. The Deputy Attorney
    General was obviously aware of these facts when he disingenuously argued that the Governor
    could have timely returned the bill to some other senator.
    It is undisputed that the Governor returned the vetoed bill to the President Pro Tempore.
    The President Pro Tempore stated in his letter that the return was made during the morning of
    April 6, 2015, which would be untimely. When asked about the President Pro Tempore’s
    statement as to when Senate Bill No. 1011 was given to him by the Governor, the Deputy
    Attorney General stooped to groundlessly disparaging the character of the President Pro
    Tempore.
    32
    Near the end of the Deputy Attorney General’s oral argument, the following exchange
    occurred regarding the statement by the President Pro Tempore in his letter that was transcribed
    in the Senate Journal:
    Justice Eismann:       “I’m reading from the journal. ‘Dear President Little: This
    communication reflects that Senate Bill 1011 was returned
    to my office at 8:52 a.m. on April 6, 2015.’ Should we
    accept that as true?”
    Mr. Kane:              “Mr. Justice, you can accept that as a statement of an
    individual senator.”
    Justice Eismann:       “It’s in the journal.”
    Mr. Kane:              “It is in the journal. But the senate had received that
    communication and without objection reconsidered the
    bill.”
    Justice Eismann:       “Is there any conflicting evidence in the journal?”
    Mr. Kane:              “There’s –”
    Justice Eismann:       “Is there any conflicting statement by somebody that they
    received this earlier in the journal?”
    Mr. Kane:              “Well, there’s the message of the Governor reflecting that
    he vetoed it earlier and there’s also the action of the
    senate.”
    The Governor’s message gives no indication as to when he gave the vetoed bill to the
    President Pro Tempore. Thus, the Deputy Attorney General was contending that the Senate’s
    action in seeking to override the Governor’s veto showed that the Senate did not believe the
    President Pro Tempore’s statement that the Governor had returned Senate Bill No. 1011 to him
    on the morning of April 6, 2015. That the Deputy Attorney General in an act of desperation
    would make such a groundless attack on the President Pro Tempore’s character demonstrates the
    total lack of substance in the Deputy Attorney General’s argument.
    Two people have direct knowledge of when the Governor returned Senate Bill No. 1011
    to the President Pro Tempore—the Governor and the President Pro Tempore. As stated above,
    not even the Governor has disputed the President Pro Tempore’s statement as to when the bill
    was returned to him. The record does not reflect why the Senate had a vote to override the
    33
    Governor’s veto when Senate Bill No. 1011 had already become law because the Governor had
    not returned it timely to the Senate. However, there is absolutely no reason to believe that the
    Senate did not believe the President Pro Tempore. The fact that the Deputy Attorney General
    would resort to making such a groundless attack upon the character of the President Pro Tempore
    demonstrated the total lack of merit in the Deputy Attorney General’s arguments regarding the
    facts.
    In summary, the facts are undisputed that the Governor did not return Senate Bill No.
    1011 to the Senate within the five days required by the Idaho Constitution, and so the bill
    became a law. The Secretary of State knew that the bill was not returned to the Senate timely
    because the documents showing an untimely return had been delivered to the Secretary of State
    at the end of the session by the Secretary of the Senate. In fact, at one point in his oral argument
    the Deputy Attorney General apparently inadvertently admitted that the Governor’s return was
    clearly late. He stated that if this Court wants to know “why is it that you [the Senate] took this
    into consideration when it was clearly late, those folks aren’t in front of the Court.” (emphasis
    added). Why the Senate had a vote on overriding the Governor’s veto is irrelevant. Under the
    undisputed facts, the bill had already become law. Based upon the undisputed facts known to the
    Secretary of State, his obligation was clear and unambiguous. He had the statutory duty to
    certify the fact that the bill had become law as set forth in Idaho Code section 67-505.
    The Secretary of State should have done exactly what the iconic former Secretary of State
    Pete Cenarrusa did when the Governor did not timely veto and return a bill—he refused to
    recognize the veto. Cenarrusa v. Andrus, 
    99 Idaho 404
    , 406, 
    582 P.2d 1082
    , 1084 (1978).
    Unfortunately, a majority of the Cenarrusa Court chose to disregard the plain meaning of the
    Idaho Constitution in order to uphold the veto under a hypothetical set of facts that were
    unrelated to the facts of the case.
    In this case, the arguments raised by the Deputy Attorney General in defense of the
    Secretary of State’s failure to perform his statutory duty were frivolous, unreasonable, and
    without foundation. The Deputy Attorney General mischaracterized the applicable law and
    made disingenuous and false statements regarding the facts. Therefore, the Coeur d’Alene Tribe
    is entitled to an award of reasonable attorney’s fees and other reasonable expenses pursuant to
    Idaho Code section 12-121.
    Justice W. JONES, concurs.
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