Annemarie Guare & a. v. State of New Hampshire , 167 N.H. 658 ( 2015 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Strafford
    No. 2014-558
    ANNEMARIE GUARE & a.
    v.
    STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    Argued: April 22, 2015
    Opinion Issued: May 15, 2015
    Shaheen & Gordon, P.A., of Concord (William E. Christie and Benjamin
    T. Siracusa Hillman on the brief, and Mr. Christie orally), American Civil
    Liberties Union of New Hampshire, of Concord (Gilles R. Bissonnette on the
    brief), and Sisti Law Offices, of Portsmouth (Alan J. Cronheim on the brief), for
    the petitioners.
    Joseph A. Foster, attorney general (Anne M. Edwards, associate attorney
    general, and Stephen G. LaBonte, assistant attorney general, on the brief, and
    Mr. LaBonte orally), for the State.
    PER CURIAM. The State appeals an order of the Superior Court (Tucker,
    J.) denying the State’s summary judgment motion and granting that of the
    petitioners, Annemarie E. Guare, Cody Blesedell, Garret Healey, Joan Ashwell,
    and the League of Women Voters, on their petition for declaratory and
    injunctive relief. When this case was decided by the trial court, petitioners
    Guare, Blesedell, and Healey were students enrolled at the University of New
    Hampshire, and petitioner Ashwell was a volunteer with the New Hampshire
    League of Women Voters.
    The order on appeal made permanent the preliminary injunction issued
    in 2012 by the Superior Court (Lewis, J.), pursuant to which the State was
    required to delete from the standard voter registration form the following
    language: “In declaring New Hampshire as my domicile, I am subject to the
    laws of the state of New Hampshire which apply to all residents, including laws
    requiring a driver to register a motor vehicle and apply for a New Hampshire[ ]
    driver’s license within 60 days of becoming a resident.” Laws 2012, 285:2. The
    trial court issued the permanent injunction after concluding that the
    challenged language violated Part I, Article 11 of the New Hampshire
    Constitution. On appeal, the State does not separately challenge the trial
    court’s issuance of injunctive relief. Rather, the State confines its appellate
    arguments to the trial court’s determination that the challenged language
    violates Part I, Article 11. We affirm.
    I. Background
    Language similar to the challenged language was first added to the
    standard voter registration form in 2003. See Laws 2003, 289:25. It was
    removed from the form in 2007. See Laws 2007, 10:1. The challenged
    language was added to the standard voter registration form in 2012. See Laws
    2012, 285:2. The sole issue in this appeal is whether the challenged language
    required by Laws 2012, 285:2 violates Part I, Article 11 of the New Hampshire
    Constitution.
    In September 2012, the petitioners filed the instant action, alleging that
    the challenged language is confusing because it conflates the statutory
    definitions of “domicile” and “residence,” and, therefore, violates a citizen’s
    constitutional right to vote. See RSA 654:1, I (Supp. 2014) (defining
    “domicile”); RSA 21:6 (2012) (defining “resident”); RSA 21:6-a (2012) (defining
    “residence”). Following several hearings, the superior court issued a
    preliminary injunction, which removed the language from the voter registration
    form pending final resolution of this case. In October 2012, the State filed with
    this court an emergency motion for a stay. We denied the State’s motion on
    October 9, 2012.
    The petitioners filed their summary judgment motion in the trial court in
    March 2014, and the State filed its objection and cross-motion in April 2014.
    In its summary judgment order, the trial court first determined that it had to
    apply our strict scrutiny standard of review to the challenged language. The
    2
    trial court reasoned that strict scrutiny was required because the right to vote
    is a fundamental right, see Akins v. Sec’y of State, 
    154 N.H. 67
    , 71 (2006), and
    because, in the trial court’s view, the subject language severely burdened the
    right to vote by confusing potential registrants and causing otherwise qualified
    voters to forgo registering to vote. Although the State advanced three interests
    to justify the language, the trial court found that none was sufficiently weighty
    to justify the severe burden upon a citizen’s fundamental right to vote. See 
    id. Accordingly, the
    court concluded that the subject language violates Part I,
    Article 11 of the State Constitution.
    On appeal, the State argues that the trial court erred by applying strict
    scrutiny to the subject language. The State contends that because the
    language is “consistent with New Hampshire law[ ] and is both reasonable and
    nondiscriminatory,” it imposes no burden upon a citizen’s fundamental right to
    vote. The State further contends that “[a]ny restrictions that the subject
    language places on [the] right to vote” are justified by the State’s interest in
    complying with certain provisions of the federal Help America Vote Act (HAVA),
    see 52 U.S.C.A. § 21083 (Supp. 2014). Because the State has not briefed on
    appeal the other two interests it asserted in the trial court to justify the
    challenged language, we consider its arguments about those interests waived.
    See Aubert v. Aubert, 
    129 N.H. 422
    , 428 (1987) (“Arguments not briefed are
    waived on appeal.”).
    II. Discussion
    A. Standard of Review
    In reviewing the trial court’s rulings on cross-motions for summary
    judgment, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to each party in
    its capacity as the nonmoving party and, if no genuine issue of material fact
    exists, we determine whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law. Bovaird v. N.H. Dep’t of Admin. Servs., 
    166 N.H. 755
    , 758
    (2014). If our review of that evidence discloses no genuine issue of material
    fact and if the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, then we
    will affirm the grant of summary judgment. 
    Id. We review
    the trial court’s application of the law to the facts de novo. 
    Id. We also
    review de novo the trial court’s determination that the language at
    issue violates Part I, Article 11 of the State Constitution. See Am. Fed’n of
    Teachers – N.H. v. State of N.H., 167 N.H. ___, ___, 
    111 A.3d 63
    , 68 (2015).
    Because it is part of a legislative act, we presume the language to be
    constitutional and will not declare it invalid except upon inescapable grounds.
    See 
    id. Because the
    trial court’s ruling was not based upon applying the
    challenged language to the particular facts and circumstances of this case, it
    amounts to a determination that the language is facially unconstitutional. See
    State v. Carter, 
    167 N.H. 161
    , 165 (2014). Thus, the petitioners, as challengers
    3
    of the language’s constitutionality, “must establish that no set of
    circumstances exist under which it would be valid.” 
    Id. (quotation and
    brackets omitted).
    B. Relevant Constitutional and Statutory Provisions
    Part I, Article 11 of the New Hampshire Constitution provides, in
    pertinent part:
    All elections are to be free, and every inhabitant of the state of 18
    years of age and upwards shall have an equal right to vote in any
    election. Every person shall be considered an inhabitant for the
    purposes of voting in the town, ward, or unincorporated place
    where he has his domicile.
    Although the State Constitution does not define “domicile,” the legislature has
    defined it as “that one place where a person, more than any other place, has
    established a physical presence and manifests an intent to maintain a single,
    continuous presence for domestic, social, and civil purposes relevant to
    participating in democratic self-government.” RSA 654:1, I. Under RSA 654:1,
    I, a person’s “mere intention to change domicile in the future does not, of itself,
    terminate an established domicile before the person actually moves.” RSA
    654:1, I-a (Supp. 2014) provides that a college student “may lawfully claim
    domicile for voting purposes in the New Hampshire town or city in which he or
    she lives while attending [college] . . . if such student’s claim of domicile
    otherwise meets the requirements of RSA 654:1, I.”
    The legislature has defined “residence” differently from “domicile.”
    “Residence” is “a person’s place of abode or domicile,” and the phrase “place of
    abode or domicile” is defined as “that [place] designated by a person as his
    principal place of physical presence for the indefinite future to the exclusion of
    all others.” RSA 21:6-a. Pursuant to RSA 21:6, a “resident” is “a person who is
    domiciled or has a place of abode or both in this state . . . , and who has,
    through all of his actions, demonstrated a current intent to designate that
    place of abode as his principal place of physical presence for the indefinite
    future to the exclusion of all others.” Our motor vehicle laws use this definition
    of “resident.” See RSA 259:88 (2014). Upon becoming a “resident” of New
    Hampshire, one has 60 days in which to register one’s vehicle here and to
    obtain a New Hampshire driver’s license. See RSA 261:45 (2014); RSA 263:35
    (2014). These requirements do not apply to citizens who are not “residents” of
    New Hampshire although they have their “domicile” here. The basic difference
    between a “resident” and a person who merely has a New Hampshire
    “domicile,” is that a “resident” has manifested an intent to remain in New
    Hampshire for the indefinite future, while a person who merely has a New
    Hampshire “domicile” has not manifested that same intent.
    4
    For the purposes of this appeal, the State has agreed that the 2012 law
    that added the challenged language to the voter registration form, Laws 2012,
    285:2, does not alter the statutory definitions of “domicile” and “residence.”
    The State has also acknowledged that the statutory definition of “domicile” and
    the statutory definition of “residence” differ. Further, the State has agreed
    that, to vote in New Hampshire, a citizen need only have a New Hampshire
    “domicile,” and need not be a New Hampshire “resident.”
    C. Level of Scrutiny
    Like the trial court, we begin by considering the level of scrutiny that
    applies to the challenged language. Although the right to vote is fundamental,
    we do not necessarily subject any impingement upon that right to strict
    scrutiny. See 
    Akins, 154 N.H. at 72
    . Instead, we apply a balancing test to
    determine the level of scrutiny that we must apply. See 
    id. Under that
    test, we
    “weigh the character and magnitude of the asserted injury to the [voting]
    rights” sought to be vindicated “against the precise interests put forward by the
    State as justifications for the burden imposed by its rule, taking into
    consideration the extent to which those interests make it necessary to burden
    the plaintiff's rights.” Burdick v. Takushi, 
    504 U.S. 428
    , 434 (1992)
    (quotations omitted); see 
    Akins, 154 N.H. at 72
    (adopting this analysis under
    the State Constitution). “Under this standard, the rigorousness of our inquiry
    into the propriety of a state election law depends upon the extent to which a
    challenged regulation burdens” the fundamental right to vote. 
    Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434
    ; see 
    Akins, 154 N.H. at 72
    . When those rights are subjected to
    “severe” restrictions, the regulation must be “narrowly drawn to advance a
    state interest of compelling importance.” 
    Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434
    (quotations
    omitted); see 
    Akins, 154 N.H. at 72
    . But when a state election law provision
    imposes only “reasonable, nondiscriminatory restrictions” upon the rights of
    voters, “the State’s important regulatory interests are generally sufficient to
    justify the restrictions.” 
    Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434
    (quotations omitted); see
    
    Akins, 154 N.H. at 72
    . “Most cases fall in between these two extremes.”
    Obama for America v. Husted, 
    697 F.3d 423
    , 429 (6th Cir. 2012).
    The petitioners argue that strict scrutiny is required because the
    challenged language imposes a severe burden upon the fundamental right to
    vote by conflating the statutory definitions of “domicile” and “residence” and
    potentially causing an otherwise qualified voter to be confused and to choose
    not to register to vote. The State counters that, because the challenged
    language is not misleading and does not misstate New Hampshire law, it
    imposes no burden upon the right to vote. According to the State, the language
    not only “is entirely consistent with New Hampshire law,” but also “is both
    reasonable and nondiscriminatory.” Thus, the State argues, a test similar to
    rational basis is the proper standard of review. See State v. Hollenbeck, 
    164 N.H. 154
    , 163 (2012) (describing rational basis test).
    5
    We agree with the petitioners that the challenged language inaccurately
    states New Hampshire law. The challenged language informs a potential voter
    that, upon declaring New Hampshire as her domicile, she is “subject to the
    laws of the state of New Hampshire which apply to all residents, including laws
    requiring a driver to register a motor vehicle and apply for a New Hampshire[ ]
    driver’s license within 60 days of becoming a resident.” Laws 2012, 285:2.
    This is inaccurate. A person who has only a New Hampshire domicile, but who
    does not meet the statutory definition of “resident,” is not “subject to the laws
    of the state of New Hampshire which apply to all residents.”
    The State argues that, properly interpreted, the language merely informs
    a citizen that, upon declaring New Hampshire as her domicile, she is “subject
    to the laws of the state of New Hampshire.” The State argues that this is a true
    statement – non-residents are subject to certain New Hampshire laws, such as
    traffic laws. However, this is not what the challenged language states. Rather,
    the language specifies that the laws of the State of New Hampshire to which a
    person who declares New Hampshire as her domicile is subject are those
    “which apply to all residents.”
    The State further argues that the language merely informs a citizen with
    a New Hampshire domicile that, if and when she becomes a resident in the
    future, within 60 days of doing so, she must register her motor vehicle here
    and apply for a New Hampshire driver’s license. However, the language does
    not state that either. Instead, it informs a citizen with a New Hampshire
    domicile that, upon declaring New Hampshire as her domicile, she is subject to
    our laws that “apply to all residents,” including our laws regarding obtaining a
    driver’s license and registering a motor vehicle.
    We also agree with the petitioners that the challenged language is
    confusing because it is susceptible of different interpretations. Cf. Union
    Leader Corp. v. N.H. Retirement Sys., 
    162 N.H. 673
    , 677 (2011) (concluding
    that statute is ambiguous because there is more than one reasonable
    interpretation of it). For instance, although the State has argued in this appeal
    that the challenged language left intact the statutory definitions of “domicile”
    and “residence,” the New Hampshire House of Representatives (House), in its
    emergency motion to intervene filed in the trial court, argued just the opposite.
    According to the House, the challenged language “expand[s] the [statutory]
    definition of residency” by including in that definition “persons who declare a
    domicile in New Hampshire and vote in a New Hampshire election.” Similarly,
    after this litigation was commenced, a few legislators publicly opined that the
    challenged language requires a voter with a New Hampshire domicile, who is
    not a New Hampshire “resident,” to obtain a New Hampshire driver’s license
    and to register her vehicle here, before voting here.
    Moreover, in this case, there is more than the “mere possibility of voter
    confusion.” Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party,
    6
    
    552 U.S. 442
    , 455 (2008) (concluding that court cannot invalidate statute on
    its face based upon “mere possibility of voter confusion”). Petitioners Guare,
    Blesedell, and Healey testified that they found the challenged language
    confusing because it uses the words “domicile” and “resident” interchangeably
    and is unclear as to whether a citizen with a New Hampshire “domicile,” who is
    not a New Hampshire “resident,” must obtain a New Hampshire driver’s license
    and motor vehicle registration upon registering to vote. Blesedell and Healey
    also testified that they would feel uncomfortable registering to vote in New
    Hampshire because of the challenged language. However, it is undisputed that
    even though Guare, Blesedell, and Healey are not New Hampshire “residents,”
    they are entitled to vote in New Hampshire because they are “domiciled” here.
    Because the challenged language is confusing and inaccurate, and
    because, as the trial court found, it could cause an otherwise qualified voter
    not to register to vote in New Hampshire, we hold that, as a matter of law, the
    burden it imposes upon the fundamental right to vote is unreasonable.
    Accordingly, we decline the State’s invitation to apply a test similar to our
    rational basis level of scrutiny. However, we similarly decline the petitioners’
    invitation to apply strict scrutiny because, even if we assume, without deciding,
    that the burden in this case is not severe, the challenged language fails under
    intermediate scrutiny, a test that is more deferential to the State than strict
    scrutiny.
    Our intermediate level of scrutiny requires that a challenged law be
    substantially related to an important governmental objective. Cmty. Res. for
    Justice v. City of Manchester, 
    154 N.H. 748
    , 762 (2007) (discussing
    intermediate scrutiny test in equal protection context). Under this level of
    review, the State bears the burden of proof. See 
    id. “To meet
    this burden, the
    government may not rely upon justifications that are hypothesized or invented
    post hoc in response to litigation, nor upon overbroad generalizations.” 
    Id. (quotations omitted).
    We have not previously considered what level of scrutiny applies when a
    voting restriction falls between the two extremes (“severe” on the one hand and
    “reasonable” and “nondiscriminatory” on the other). Compare 
    Akins, 154 N.H. at 72
    -73 (applying strict scrutiny because burden upon voting rights was
    severe), with Libertarian Party N.H. v. State, 
    154 N.H. 376
    , 386 (2006)
    (concluding that, because any additional burdens upon the plaintiffs were
    reasonable, the State’s important regulatory interests were sufficient to justify
    those burdens). Courts in other jurisdictions have recognized that a test
    similar to intermediate scrutiny applies to a voting restriction that falls
    between the two extremes. See Gustafson v. Illinois State Bd. of Elections, No.
    06 C 1159, 
    2007 WL 2892667
    , at *9 (N.D. Ill. 2007) (explaining that “[c]hoosing
    among the degrees of scrutiny – ranging from strict to intermediate to rational
    basis – comes down to the severity of the burden being imposed on the right to
    vote”); In re Contest of November 8, 2011, 
    40 A.3d 684
    , 698 (N.J. 2012)
    7
    (explaining that intermediate scrutiny “appears to have become the more
    commonly applied level of scrutiny” when analyzing the constitutionality of
    “requirements that candidates live in a district or municipality for a particular
    duration”).
    For instance, in Ohio State Conference of N.A.A.C.P., the Sixth Circuit
    Court of Appeals upheld the district court’s determination that the overall
    burden imposed by the challenged law was “significant, but not severe.” Ohio
    State Conference of N.A.A.C.P. v. Husted, 
    768 F.3d 524
    , 545 (6th Cir.), stay
    granted, 
    135 S. Ct. 42
    (2014). The court then weighed the burdens against the
    “precise interests put forward by the State as justifications for the burden
    imposed by its rule, taking into consideration the extent to which those
    interests make it necessary to burden the plaintiff’s rights.” 
    Id. (quotations omitted);
    see 
    Burdick, 504 U.S. at 434
    . The court explained that the State’s
    burden under this test is to “articulate specific, rather than abstract state
    interests, and explain why the particular restriction imposed is actually
    necessary, meaning it actually addresses, the interest put forth.” Ohio State
    Conference of 
    N.A.A.C.P., 768 F.3d at 545
    ; see Obama for 
    America, 697 F.3d at 433
    , 434 (holding that burden upon non-military Ohio voters from challenged
    law “is not severe, but neither is it slight,” and concluding that State’s “vague
    interest in the smooth functioning of local boards of elections” was insufficient
    to justify that burden).
    The law at issue in Ohio State Conference of N.A.A.C.P. eliminated
    “Golden Week,” a five-day period during which Ohio voters were allowed to
    register and vote on the same day. Ohio State Conference of 
    N.A.A.C.P., 768 F.3d at 531-32
    . The State asserted that its interests in preventing voter fraud,
    reducing costs, and promoting uniformity justified the law’s significant burden
    imposed upon Ohio voters. 
    Id. at 546-49.
    However, the court determined that
    the State failed to present sufficient proof that its abstract interests made
    eliminating “Golden Week” necessary. See 
    id. For instance,
    with regard to
    preventing voter fraud, the court concluded that the State had to do more than
    provide only “a handful of actual examples of voter fraud” and general evidence
    “regarding the difficulties of verifying voter registration before counting ballots.”
    
    Id. at 547.
    Rather, the State had the burden of demonstrating that
    “eliminating Golden Week serves to prevent a ‘precise’ problem of voter fraud in
    a way that is ‘necessary’ to burden . . . voters, . . . as opposed to a measure
    that might more directly target the asserted problem without burdening
    voters.” 
    Id. Similarly, with
    regard to reducing costs, the court explained that
    because “some cost-saving rationale could be identified in most voting
    restrictions[,] . . . where more than minimal burdens on voters are established,
    the State must demonstrate that such costs would actually be burdensome.”
    
    Id. at 548.
    The United States Supreme Court appears to be divided regarding the
    issue of whether intermediate scrutiny is available in voting rights cases. See
    8
    Crawford v. Marion County Election Bd., 
    553 U.S. 181
    (2008). Although the
    plurality opinion in Crawford, written by Justice Stevens and joined by Chief
    Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy, did not directly address whether
    intermediate scrutiny was available in voting rights cases, it applied a flexible
    balancing test that, arguably, could encompass a test comparable to
    intermediate scrutiny. 
    Id. at 191-203
    (plurality opinion). In their dissent in
    Crawford, Justices Souter and Ginsburg expressed support for applying a test
    similar to intermediate scrutiny to voting rights cases. See 
    id. at 209-10
    (Souter, J., dissenting). These justices opined that “a State may not burden
    the right to vote merely by invoking abstract interests, be they legitimate or
    even compelling, but must make a particular, factual showing that threats to
    its interests outweigh the particular impediments it has imposed.” 
    Id. at 209
    (citation omitted). They explained that, because voting rights cases involve two
    competing, legitimate interests (the fundamental right to vote, on the one hand,
    and the right of States to regulate elections, on the other hand), the Court has
    “avoided preset levels of scrutiny in favor of a sliding-scale balancing analysis,”
    under which “the scrutiny varies with the effect of the regulation at issue.” 
    Id. at 210.
    By contrast, in their concurrence, Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Alito
    opined that there are only two levels of scrutiny for election laws – strict
    scrutiny for severe restrictions and rational basis for “nonsevere,
    nondiscriminatory restrictions.” 
    Id. at 204-05
    (Scalia, J., concurring) (referring
    to the “two-track approach” to voting rights cases).
    We believe that the flexible standard that we adopted in Akins includes a
    test that is similar to intermediate scrutiny. Under that test, the State must
    “articulate specific, rather than abstract state interests, and explain why the
    particular restriction imposed is actually necessary, meaning it actually
    addresses, the interest set forth.” Ohio State Conference of 
    N.A.A.C.P., 768 F.3d at 545
    ; cf. Ass’n of People with Disabilities v. Herrera, 
    690 F. Supp. 2d 1183
    , 1220 (D.N.M. 2010) (to respond to a challenge under the First
    Amendment of the Federal Constitution to voter registration law, State must do
    more than assert that its regulatory interests are important), reconsideration
    granted on other grounds, 
    2010 WL 3834049
    (D.N.M. July 28, 2010); Cmty.
    Res. for 
    Justice, 154 N.H. at 762
    (to meet burden under intermediate scrutiny,
    State “may not rely upon justifications that are hypothesized or invented post
    hoc in response to litigation, nor upon overbroad generalizations” (quotations
    omitted)).
    Because we have held that the burden in the instant case is
    unreasonable and because we assume, without deciding, that it is not severe,
    we apply this intermediate scrutiny test. The only governmental interest the
    State has advanced on appeal is its interest in complying with HAVA. As the
    petitioners rightly assert, however, this interest was not the State’s actual
    interest in adopting Laws 2012, 285:2. Laws 2012, 285:2 had its genesis as
    Senate Bill (SB) 318, which the legislature ultimately enacted by overriding the
    Governor’s veto. See N.H.H.R. Jour. 1773-74 (2012). Complying with HAVA is
    9
    not among the reasons for enacting SB 318 articulated in the legislative
    history. See N.H.H.R. Jour. 1452 (2012). The State erroneously relies upon
    the legislative history of the 2003 legislation that made similar language part of
    the voter registration form. Nothing in the legislative history of the 2003 law
    establishes the legislature’s actual interest when it enacted the 2012 law nine
    years later. Thus, the State relies upon a justification that appears to have
    been “invented post hoc in response to [this] litigation.” Cmty. Res. for 
    Justice, 154 N.H. at 762
    (quotation omitted).
    Moreover, even if complying with HAVA had been the State’s actual
    interest in enacting Laws 2012, 285:2, the State has failed to establish that the
    challenged language is actually necessary or that it actually addresses that
    interest. As the State conceded at oral argument, no provision of HAVA
    requires the challenged language to be included in the voter registration form.
    Rather, HAVA, which was originally enacted in 2002, requires each State to
    implement “a single, uniform, official, centralized, interactive computerized
    statewide voter registration list . . . that contains the name and registration
    information of every legally registered voter in the State and assigns a unique
    identifier to each legally registered voter in the State.” 52 U.S.C.A.
    § 21083(a)(1)(A). In addition, HAVA requires that the statewide voter
    registration list “be coordinated with other agency databases within the State.”
    52 U.S.C.A. § 21083(a)(1)(A)(iv). HAVA provides that the State’s chief election
    official and the State official responsible for the motor vehicle authority must
    “enter into an agreement to match information” in the statewide voter
    registration system “with information in the database of the motor vehicle
    authority to the extent required to enable each such official to verify the
    accuracy of the information provided on applications for voter registration.” 52
    U.S.C.A. § 21083(a)(5)(B)(i). Under HAVA, “an application for voter registration
    for an election for Federal office may not be accepted or processed by a State
    unless the application includes” the applicant’s driver’s license number or, if
    the applicant lacks a current and valid driver’s license, the last four digits of
    the applicant’s social security number. 52 U.S.C.A. § 21083(a)(5)(A)(i).
    Thus, not only has the State failed to establish that the challenged
    language is necessary to comply with HAVA, but it also has failed to
    demonstrate that the challenged language actually addresses HAVA
    compliance. Accordingly, because the challenged language unreasonably
    burdens the fundamental right to vote, and because, even if we assume that
    the burden is not severe, the State has failed to advance a sufficiently weighty
    interest to justify the language, we affirm the trial court’s determination that
    the challenged language violates Part I, Article 11 of the State Constitution.
    Affirmed.
    DALIANIS, C.J., and HICKS, CONBOY, and BASSETT, JJ., concurred.
    10