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  • 8/3/2019 Smith Response to Special Election Petition

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    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

    MICHAEL L. FAGAN, et al. :

    : No. 41 MM 2012

    Petitioners, :

    :v. :

    :

    SAMUEL H. SMITH, in his capacity as :Speaker of the Pennsylvania House :

    of Representatives, and :

    :CAROL AICHELE, in her capacity as :

    Secretary of the Commonwealth of :

    Pennsylvania, :

    :

    Respondents. :

    RESPONSE OF SAMUEL H. SMITH IN OPPOSITION TO

    PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS OR, ALTERNATIVELY,

    APPLICATION FOR THE EXERCISE OF ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

    UNDER KINGS BENCH POWER AND EMERGENCY RELIEF

    James J. Rohn (No. 21636)[email protected]

    Matthew H. Haverstick (No. 85072)

    [email protected]

    Robert N. Feltoon (No. 58197)[email protected]

    Francesco P. Trapani (No. 209123)

    [email protected]

    CONRAD OBRIEN PC

    1500 Market Street

    Centre SquareWest Tower, Suite 3900

    Philadelphia, PA 19102

    Tel: (215) 864-9600

    Fax: (215) 864-9620

    Attorneys for Respondent

    Samuel H. Smith

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    I. PRELIMINARY STATEMENTRespondent Samuel H. Smith, in his capacity as Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of

    Representatives, respectfully requests that the Petition in this matter be dismissed for the

    following reasons. First, the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear this matter, on the basis that the

    Court did not retain jurisdiction over this specific disputethe scheduling of special elections

    in its recent reapportionment decision,Holt v. 2011 Legislative Reapportionment Commn, -- Pa.

    --, 2012 WL 375298 (Feb. 3, 2012) (HoltOpinion), and this case does not justify invoking the

    Courts King Bench powers. Second, Petitioners substantive claim centers upon the contention

    that the Speakers authority under 25 P.S. 2778a to delay calling special elections was

    eliminated once this Court remanded the 2011 reapportionment plan by Order dated January 25,

    2012. That argument is not supported by the facts or the law, so that the Speaker remains

    entitled to exercise his authority to decide when, and under what circumstances, to call for

    special elections. Third, this Court lacks the power under its own long-standing precedent to

    review the Speakers exercise of his statutory authority on an abuse of discretion standard.

    Fourth, even if the Court may review the Speakers exercise of his statutory authority, the

    uncertainty that presently exists regarding how the election process will proceed in 2012, on

    what schedule, and under what plan of reapportionment, supports the conclusion that the Speaker

    has not abused his discretion.

    For all of these reasons, which are discussed below in more detail, the Petition should

    respectfully be dismissed.

    II. STATEMENT OF FACTSMost of the facts relevant to this matterthat is, those facts relating to the

    constitutionally-required reapportionment processare already familiar to the Court and

    therefore will be presented in summary fashion.

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    Following every federal decennial census, a Legislative Reapportionment Commission

    (LRC) is created. The LRC is tasked with creating a plan to reapportion the Pennsylvania state

    legislative districts. The LRC, created after the 2010 census, approved a preliminary

    reapportionment plan on October 31, 2011. (Smith Compl. 26, Ex. A to Petition).

    Currently there are six vacancies in the Pennsylvania House of Representativesin the

    22nd, 134th, 153rd, 169th, 186th and 197th districts, respectivelythat opened after the

    preliminary reapportionment plan was approved on October 31, 2011. (Smith Compl. 37).

    The October 31 preliminary plan (and later the final plan) called for moving the 22nd legislative

    district from Allegheny County to Lehigh County and moving the 169th legislative district from

    Philadelphia County to York County. The other four districts, while not changed as drastically

    under the preliminary and final plans, nonetheless were modified by the LRC.

    Article II, Section 2 of the Pennsylvania Constitution directs the Speaker, as presiding

    officer of the House of Representatives, to issue a writ of election to fill any vacancy that occurs

    in the House for the remainder of the legislative term. By state statute, the Speaker generally is

    required to issue a writ of election within ten days after a vacancy occurs in the House. 25 P.S.

    2778. This general rule does not apply, however, during periods associated with the legislative

    reapportionment of the Commonwealth. 25 P.S. 2778a. The time frame during which Section

    2778as statutorily-mandated alternate special election process is in effect runs from the approval

    of a preliminary reapportionment plan by the LRC (i.e., October 31, 2011) until a final

    reapportionment plan attains the force of law (either following approval of the final plan on

    appeal to this Court or when the time for appeal of the final plan has passed, if there is no

    appeal). See 25 P.S. 2778a;HoltOpinion at *18.

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    On December 12, 2011, the LRC adopted the 2011 Final Reapportionment Plan (2011

    Final Plan). (Smith Compl. 27). On January 25, 2012, this Court entered an Order declaring

    the 2011 Final Plan contrary to law and remanding the Plan to the LRC for modification

    consistent with the Courts explanatory opinion (filed on February 3, 2012). SeeHoltv. 2011

    Legislative Reapportionment Commn, -- Pa. --, 2012 WL 360584, *1 (Jan. 25, 2012) (Holt

    Order). In the Opinion, the Court took issue with the manner in which the 2011 Final Plan

    divided political subdivisions and with the compactness of some electoral districts as drawn.

    See, e.g.,HoltOpinion at *35-*38. The Court did not identify, however, any constitutional

    defect concerning the proposed reapportionment of the six districts listed above in which there

    are vacancies, nor did the Court disapprove of moving either the 22nd or 169th districts to

    geographically different parts of the Commonwealth. The Courts Opinion concluded by noting

    that [a]ny issues respecting deferring the state legislative primary, or scheduling special

    elections, etc., are, in the first instance, the concern and province of the political branches. Such

    questions have not been briefed and presented to this Court. Id. at *42.

    III. ARGUMENTA. The Court Lacks Jurisdiction To Hear This CaseBefore addressing Petitioners substantive argument, Respondent addresses whether this

    Court has jurisdiction to hear this case. Petitioners assert jurisdiction pursuant to Article II,

    Section 17(d) of the Pennsylvania Constitution and 42 Pa. C.S. 725(1)1because this matter

    1 Article II, Section 17(d) of the Pennsylvania Constitution and 42 Pa. C.S. 725(1) relate

    to this Courts authority to hear appeals regarding the constitutionality ofa final redistricting

    plan submitted by the LRC. See Article II, Section 17(d) (Any aggrieved person may file anappeal from the final plan directly to the Supreme Court within thirty days after the filing

    thereof. If the appellant establishes that the final plan is contrary to law, the Supreme Court shall

    issue an order remanding the plan to the commission and directing the commission toreapportion the Commonwealth in a manner not inconsistent with such order); 42 Pa. C.S. (footnote continued)

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    relates toHolt et. al. v. Legislative Reapportionment Commission . . . [and] [b]y order dated

    February 3, 2012, this Court retained jurisdiction in redistricting matters. Petition 6, 7. In

    the alternative, Petitioners request that the Court exercise its Kings Bench powers pursuant to

    Article II, Section 2(c) and 42 Pa. C.S. 3309.2 Petition 7. Neither basis is sufficient to grant

    the Court jurisdiction to hear this case.

    The Court inHoltdid not expressly retain jurisdiction over the matter raised by

    Petitionersthe scheduling of special elections. In fact, the Court stated that matters involving

    scheduling special elections were not before the Court at all:

    We are not in a position to predict when the LRC will complete its task ofdeveloping a new final redistricting plan that complies with law, nor when such a

    plan can become final and attain the force of law. Any issues respecting deferringthe state legislative primary, or scheduling special elections, etc., are, in the first

    instance, the concern and province of the political branches. Such questions have

    not been briefed and presented to this Court.

    HoltOpinion at *42 (emphasis added).

    Alternatively, a Kings Bench petition is an extraordinary measure which has been

    invoked only in the rarest of circumstances, which do not exist here.3

    Vacone v. Syken, 587 Pa.

    380, 387 (2006) (our extraordinary jurisdiction should be invoked sparingly, and only in cases

    725(1) (the Supreme Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of appeals from final orders of . . .constitutional and judicial agencies [including] the Legislative Reapportionment Commission).

    2 Neither Article II, Section 2(c) nor 42 Pa. C.S. 3309 actually relates to this CourtsKings Bench powers, which derive from the Pennsylvania Constitution, Article V and 42 Pa.

    C.S. 502. See In re Avellino, 547 Pa. 385, 389-91 (1997).

    3 The Kings Bench power is similar to the Courts power to exercise extraordinaryjurisdiction pursuant to 42 Pa. C.S. 726. The Court applies the same standard in determining

    whether to exercise its extraordinary jurisdictional powers under Kings Bench or 42 Pa. C.S. 726, the primary difference being that Kings Bench jurisdiction allows the Court to exercise

    jurisdiction when no matteris pending before a lower court. Board of Revision of Taxes v.City of Philadelphia, 4 A.3d 610, 620 (Pa. 2010);In re Dauphin County Fourth Investigating

    Grand Jury, 943 A.2d 929, 933 n.3 (Pa. 2007).

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    involving an issue of immediate public importance, and where the record clearly demonstrates

    the petitioners right to relief) (internal quotations and citing reference omitted); Washington

    County Commrs v. Pennsylvania Labor Relations Bd., 490 Pa. 526, 532 (1980) (we will not

    invoke extraordinary jurisdiction unless the record clearly demonstrates a petitioners rights.

    Even a clear showing that a petitioner is aggrieved does not assure that the Court will exercise its

    jurisdiction to grant the requested relief).

    Petitioners in these circumstances may seek a writ of mandamus in the Commonwealth

    Court. Commonwealth Court Internal Operating Procedures 67.45 (Commonwealth Court has

    jurisdiction over [p]roceedings under the Pennsylvania Election Code, including petitions in

    the nature of mandamus). On the same day that Petitioners filed their writ of mandamus in this

    Court, unrelated parties filed a nearly identical action in the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court

    seeking the same relief with respect to one district. Wagner v. Smith, No. 89 MD 2012 (Pa.

    Commw. Ct. Feb. 17, 2012). The Wagneraction was withdrawn after the Petition in this Court

    was filed.

    For these reasons, the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear and decide this matter.

    B. The Speakers Statutory Discretion Under Section 2778a Remains In PlaceNotwithstanding This Courts Remand To The LRC

    Petitioners claim essentially revolves around a single core contention: that this Courts

    decision to remand the 2011 Final Plan to the LRC effectively eliminated the Speakers statutory

    authority under Section 2778a to delay the issuance of a writ of election until ten days after the

    date the final plan attains the force of law. Petitioners claim that [a]s a consequence of the

    Courts January 25, 2012 order, the 2011 reapportionment plan that was approved by the LRC

    no longer exists, and [t]he LRC has not yet filed (or even developed ) a preliminary plan to

    replace the plan that this Court rejected as being unconstitutional. (Petition 45; emphasis

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    added). As a result, according to Petitioners, the events necessary to trigger application of

    Section 2778a, i.e., a vacancy during the period between filing a preliminary reapportionment

    plan by the LRC and the date a final plan attains the force of law, no longer exist. (Id. 45-46).

    Petitioners argument is not supported by the language of the Pennsylvania Constitution,

    by this Courts Order and Opinion remanding the 2011 Final Plan to the LRC, by the language of

    Section 2778a, or by plain logic and common sense:

    The LRC adopted a preliminary reapportionment plan on October 31, 2011. (Smith

    Compl. 26, Ex. A to Petition).

    The six vacancies at issue in the Petition all arose after the LRC preliminary

    reapportionment plan was adopted on October 31, 2011. (Smith Compl. 37).

    After the preliminary reapportionment plan was adopted by the LRC on October 31,

    2011, no final reapportionment plan has attained the force of law because the Final

    Plan adopted by the LRC on December 12, 2011 was found contrary to law by this

    Court and remanded to the LRC, by Order dated January 25, 2012. (Smith Compl.

    27-29; Petition 12-14).

    Article II, Section 17(d) of the Pennsylvania Constitution provides that, if this Court

    finds any final plan contrary to law, the Court shall issue an order remanding the

    plan to the commission and directing the commission to reapportion the

    Commonwealth in a manner not inconsistent with such order. The Constitution does

    not say the plan approved by the LRC no longer exists, or that the Court should

    direct the LRC to start from scratch as if there had been no final plan. Instead, the

    Court simply remands the final plan to the LRC with directions how to improve it.

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    This Courts January 25th Order is consistent with the Constitutional mandate. As

    the Court directed, the final 2011 Legislative Reapportionment Plan is REMANDED

    to the 2011 Legislative Reapportionment Commission with a directive to reapportion

    the Commonwealth in a manner consistent with this Courts Opinion, which will

    follow. See HoltOrder at *1. Again, there is no language in that Order, or in the

    Courts February 3, 2012 Opinion, stating or suggesting the 2011 Final Plan no

    longer exists or the legislative reapportionment process (which includes the LRC

    adoption of a preliminary plan in October 2011) starts over for all purposes, including

    the triggering events for application of Section 2778a. To the contrary, and as

    Petitioners take pains to point out, this Court concluded its Opinion inHoltby

    retaining jurisdiction. SeeHoltOpinion at *42. If the Court had treated the 2011

    Final Plan as if it no longer exists, there would then be no reason to retain

    jurisdiction; instead, the Court would treat any new plan as an entirely new and

    separate event, unrelated to its consideration of any previous version. By retaining

    jurisdiction, the Court plainly recognized that the apportionment process is

    continuous and ongoing, which further supports the Speakers understanding that the

    exception for the timing of special elections provided for in Section 2778a remains in

    effect.

    Section 2778a provides that the Speakers discretion to delay the issuance of a writ of

    election exists during the entireperiod between the filing of a preliminary

    reapportionment plan . . . and the date that a final plan attains the force of law.

    Section 2778a contains no language stating or suggesting that, in the event this Court

    remands a final plan to the LRC for improvement, the triggering event of the LRCs

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    adoption of a preliminary reapportionment plan in October 2011 no longer exists

    within the meaning of Section 2778a.

    The only logical reading of Section 2778a is the one evidenced by the foregoing

    points and ascribed to it by the federal court in Pileggi v. Aichele: the Speakers

    discretion to delay the issuance of a writ of election under Section 2778a remains

    effective during periods associated with the legislative reapportionment of the

    Commonwealth. Pileggi v. Aichele, 2012 WL 398784, *3 n.5 (E.D. Pa. Feb. 8,

    2012). Petitioners do not even attempt to suggest the Commonwealth is outside such

    a period. Nor do Petitioners attempt to offer any logical rationale for a contrary

    understanding.4

    C. The Speakers Discretionary Authority Under Section 2778a Is NotReviewable By This Court For Abuse of Discretion

    Petitioners next argument is that, assuming Section 2778a still applies, this Court should

    rule that the Speaker has abused his discretion by failing to issue writs of election to fill the

    vacant seats. (Petition 62-75).

    The Petition cites no authority permitting the Court to review the Speakers actions under

    Section 2778a for abuse of discretion. In fact, this Court has stated repeatedly for more than a

    century that courts of the Commonwealth, including this Court, lack that power. As the Court

    stated succinctly in 1881, [w]here a person or body is clothed with judicial, deliberative or

    discretionary powers, and he or it has exercised such powers according to his or its discretion,

    4 As Petitioners acknowledge, Section 2778a is an exception to Section 2778 (which

    otherwise requires the Speaker to issue a writ of election within ten (10) days after thehappening of the vacancy. . . .). Petition 43. If, for the reasons set forth above, Respondent is

    correct that Section 2778a applies during the current reapportionment process, then by definition

    Section 2778 is not applicable, and Petitioners request for relief in Count I under Section 2778fails.

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    mandamus will not lie to compel a revision or modification of the decision resulting from the

    exercise of such discretion, though, in fact, the decision may have been wrong. Runkle v. Com.

    ex rel. Keppelman, 97 Pa. 328, 332 (1881); accord,Martz v. Deitrick, 372 Pa. 102, 110 (1952)

    (Since it is the province of a county salary board at its annual meeting to fix the number of

    clerks to the employed in a county office, its action in such regard necessarily entails an exercise

    of official discretion which is not to be judicially dictated or modified by way of mandamus.

    The rule has been long established and calls for little citation of authority; citingRunkle and

    other cases).

    Accordingly, the Speakers actions under Section 2778a are not reviewable for abuse of

    discretion. But even assuming arguendo such review power exists, the Speaker has not abused

    his discretionary authority for the reasons discussed below.

    D. Even If The Speakers Discretionary Authority Is Subject To JudicialReview, The Speaker Has Not Abused His Discretion

    Even if the Court could review the Speakers discretionary authority under Section 2778a

    for abuse of discretion, the Court should conclude he has not abused his discretion in declining to

    date to issue writs calling for special elections. To the contrary, and given the unprecedented

    circumstances of this reapportionment cycle, the Speakers approach has been and remains

    consistent with the caution and prudence necessary to balance multiple competing state interests.

    The Court inHoltremanded the 2011 Final Plan for revision and resubmission for

    consideration of such factors as greater geographic compactness and minimizing the splitting of

    political subdivisions. But, the Court did not comment upon or otherwise criticize the planned

    movement of various House districts from one part of the state to another. Therefore, it is likely

    that a revised plan will still contain significant changes in the location of at least two of the

    districts for which special elections are demandednamely the 22nd and the 169th. As noted in

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    the Statement of Facts, the preliminary and final reapportionment plans called for moving the

    22nd legislative district from Allegheny County to Lehigh County and for moving the 169th

    legislative district from Philadelphia County to York County. Given the significant cost of

    holding any election, including a special election, it is prudent for the Speaker to determine

    whether he would be calling a special election for a district that would, only a handful of months

    later, materialize in a completely different part of the Commonwealth (and therefore serve a

    different set of voters).

    Given the timing of the adoption of a revised reapportionment plan, Petitioners demand

    that special elections occur on April 24, 2012 (the as-of-now scheduled primary date) creates an

    artificial deadline with attendant consequences that counsel in favor of delaying the issuance of

    writs calling for special elections at this point in time. It is possible that the April 24 primary

    date will be moved legislatively, meaning the Speaker should be required to hold special

    elections on April 24 (according to Petitioners) even though primary elections may take place on

    another date. Given the possibility of a legislated change in the primary date, the Speakers

    caution in scheduling a special election until true dates, and district lines, crystallize, is anything

    but abusive.

    More problematic, however, is a scenarioHoltappears to recognize at least implicitly:

    that a primary election is held under the 2001 plan, but a new final plan then attains the force of

    law after the primary election and before the general election. In that event, it would appear the

    general election (or any election after a new final plan attains the force of law) must proceed

    under the new final plan and not under the 2001 plan. As Petitioners note in paragraph 14 of

    their filing, the Court inHoltordered that the 2001 plan remain in effect until a final plan attains

    the force of law. If the primary elections occur on April 24 under the 2001 plan, and a final plan

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    then attains the force of law after April 24 but before the general election, both federal and state

    law suggest the general election must proceed under the newly-approved final plan. The

    Pennsylvania Constitution, Art. II, 17(e), requires that a final plan, once it attains the force of

    law, shall be used thereafter in elections to the General Assembly. Under the Election Code,

    25 P.S. 2602, the word election means any general, municipal, Special or primary election,

    unless otherwise specified. Applying these provisions on their face, any election taking place

    after a final plan attains the force of law must proceed under that new plan. SeeMarston v.

    Kline, 301 A.2d 393, 396-98 (Pa. Cmwlth. Ct. 1973) (concluding, based on the cited sections of

    the Pennsylvania Constitution and the Election Code, that a special election occurring after a

    new reapportionment plan attains the force of law must take place under the new plan). This

    Court recognized and applied the controlling principle inIn re 1991 Pennsylvania Legislative

    Reapportionment Commn, 530 Pa. 335, 349-350 (1992), where the Court rejected a request to

    delay the effective date of a new reapportionment plan until after the general election slated for

    that year. As the Court explained, we have no power to grant that relief as our Constitution sets

    the effective date of the plan as above. The effective date of this plan was February 14, 1992, the

    day that this Court issued an order dismissing the above appeals. Id. (citing Art. II, 17(e) of

    the Pennsylvania Constitution).

    The Courts decision inHoltdoes not expressly address this issue, but recognizes

    nonetheless that the Courts actions are likely to disrupt the primary process. SeeHoltOpinion

    at *2 (this Courts discharge of its constitutional duty to review citizen appeals has resulted in

    disruption of the election primary season); id. at*4 (the lateness of the adoption of the Final

    Plan virtually ensured that no remand could be accomplished without disrupting the primary

    process); id. at*42 (we recognize that our constitutional duty to remand a plan found contrary

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    to law has disrupted the 2012 primary election landscape, and[a]ny issues respecting deferring

    the state legislative primary, or scheduling special elections, etc., are, in the first instance, the

    concern and province of the political branches).

    Thus, there appears a realistic prospect that the Commonwealth could be required to hold

    a second primary if the April 24 primary proceeds under the 2001 plan, but a final plan attains

    the force of law between April 24 and the date of the general election. This is precisely the relief

    the United States Supreme Court sanctioned inReynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 (1964). In

    Reynolds, once the federal district court declared that both of the new reapportionment plans

    submitted for its review failed to meet Constitutional standards, that court developed its own

    plan for interim use at upcoming elections by using the best parts of the two proposed plans

    which it had found, as a whole, to be invalid. Reynolds,377 U.S. at 586-87. After the trial

    court issued its own plan, a new primary election had to be conducted, replacing the results of a

    primary election conducted a few months earlier under the outdated plan. Id. at 552-53. Under

    essentially this same scenario here, any presently-vacant district for which a special election is

    held on April 24 would have to elect a new representative, in a district potentially geographically

    distant from the one in which a special election would be held on April 24, no later than the

    general election.

    The complete lack of certainty about when this years primary elections will occur, and

    which reapportionment plan will be in effect when any election occurs this year, all support the

    Speakers prudent approach to the calling of special elections , consistent with his authority under

    Section 2778a. A special election forced to be held on April 24 may be for a district that no

    longer is in existence (at least in its present location) by the end of the year, or sooner. The date

    of the primary could move, meaning a judicially-mandated April 24 special election date would

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    be a standalone election and thereby vitiate the supposed efficiency and cost-effectiveness of

    holding special elections and primaries on the same day. It is even possible that, assuming

    judicial acceleration of the approval process, a new plan could attain the force of law before

    April 24, meaning a special election forced to occur on that date would be in a newly-drawn

    legislative district in which the candidates are not eligible to be elected. In short, there is more

    than considerable flux and uncertainty at present concerning how this years electoral process

    will proceed, and given that substantial uncertainty the Speakers exercise of discretion in the

    timing of calling special elections can fairly said to be prudent and appropriate, and certainly not

    an abuse of discretion.

    E. Petitioners Mischaracterize The Speakers Federal Court ComplaintPetitioners mischaracterize Respondent Speaker Smiths allegations in the Smith v.

    Aichele case filed in federal court and the effect of the federal court ruling. 5 Speaker Smith

    sought a ruling concerning the constitutionality of using the 2001 legislative map in the event a

    writ of mandamus was sought to force him to call a special election using that map. He did not

    acknowledge in his complaint that he was obligated to call special elections for April 24, 2012,

    or that Section 2778a would be inapplicable, if the federal court found that continued use of the

    2001 map was constitutional. Petition 19, 25, 53. Nor did he seek a ruling concerning when

    he was required to call special elections to fill the six vacant House seats, and the federal court

    made no such ruling.6

    5 While the Speaker fully supports the allegations in his federal complaint, he notes thatamong Petitioners mischaracterizations of that complaint are the repeated statements that it was

    verified.

    6Petitioners also claim that Speaker Smith never responded to Representative Frank

    Dermodys letter, dated February 15th, before the filing of their petition. See Petition 23-25.The Petition was filed two days after the date on the letter, and two of Petitioners verifications

    (footnote continued)

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    IV. CONCLUSIONFor the reasons set forth above, Respondent Samuel H. Smith respectfully requests that

    the Court dismiss the Petition for Writ of Mandamus or, Alternatively, Application For The

    Exercise Of Original Jurisdiction Under Kings Bench Power And Emergency Relief.

    Respectfully submitted,

    CONRAD OBRIEN PC

    ____________________________

    Dated: February 22, 2012 James J. Rohn (No. 21636)[email protected]

    Matthew H. Haverstick (No. 85072)

    [email protected] N. Feltoon (No. 58197)

    [email protected]

    Francesco P. Trapani (No. 209123)[email protected]

    1500 Market Street

    Centre Square

    West Tower, Suite 3900

    Philadelphia, PA 19102Tel: (215) 864-9600

    Fax: (215) 864-9620

    Attorneys for Respondent

    are dated February 16th. See Verifications of Susan R. Kerr and Robert S. Smith, attached to

    Petition. These facts suggest that the Petition was in the process of being drafted before the

    Speakers receipt of the Dermody letter, and that Petitioners did not provide Speaker Smith withreasonable time to respond before filing the Petition.

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    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

    I hereby certify that on the date set forth below, I caused a true and correct copy of the

    foregoing Response of Samuel H. Smith in Opposition to Petition of Writ of Mandamus or,

    Alternatively, Application for Exercising Original Jurisdiction Under Kings Bench Power and

    Emergency Relief via electronic mail and first mail on the parties listed below, consistent with

    Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 121(b).

    Kevin Greenberg, Esq.

    Counsel for Petitioners

    Flaster / Greenberg, P.C.1600 John F. Kennedy Boulevard, Suite 200

    Philadelphia, PA 19103Email: [email protected]

    Jarad W. Handelman, Esq.

    Deputy General Counsel

    Governor's Office of General CounselCommonwealth of Pennsylvania

    333 Market Street, 17th Floor

    Harrisburg, PA 17101Email: [email protected]

    Dated: February 22, 2012

    ____________________________

    Matthew H. Haverstick, Esq.

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]