Welden et al v Obama - U.S. Supreme Court Petition

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    i

    QUESTIONS PRESENTED FOR REVIEW

    Question #1:

    Does the right to associate force states to

    accept any candidate from political parties for

    presentation on state primary ballots when such a

    candidate does not meet the minimum legal

    qualifications for the office sought, thereby negating

    state election laws and state control of elections?

    Question #2:

    Are all individuals born on U.S. soil Article II

    natural born citizens, regardless of the citizenship

    of their parents?

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    ii

    PARTIES TO THE PROCEEDING

    Pursuant to Rule 14.2(b), the following list

    identifies all of the parties appearing here and before

    the Georgia Supreme Court, Georgia Superior Court,

    and Georgia Office of State Administrative Hearings.

    The Georgia Office of State Administrative

    Hearings consolidated four cases filed with that

    office by eight individuals. The Georgia Superior

    Court and Georgia Supreme Court thereafter treated

    the consolidated case as one action for purposes of

    appeal.

    The petitioners here and appellants below are

    David Welden, Carl Swensson, and Kevin RichardPowell, all three of whom are individuals residing in

    Georgia. The other appellants below, David Farrar,

    Leah Lax, Cody Judy, Thomas Malaren, and Laurie

    Roth are not parties to the instant petition.

    The respondent here, and appellee below for

    all cases, is Barack Obama. Mr. Obama was and is

    named in his private capacity as a candidate for the

    Office of President of the United States of America.1

    1 Hereinafter this Petition will refer to the respondent,

    President Obama, also known as Barack Hussein Obama Jr.,

    Barack Obama II, and Barry Soetoro, as candidate Obama.

    This reference is not intended to be disrespectful to the office of

    the President or to the individual Barack Obama. It is used only

    to identify the individual, separate from the office, to note that

    candidate Obama has not yet been elected to the term of office

    at issue in the instant litigation, and to simplify communication

    for purposes of this Petition.

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    iii

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Page

    Questions Presented i

    Parties to the Proceedings ii

    Table of Contents iii

    Table of Authorities vii

    Opinions Below 1

    Jurisdiction 2

    Statutory and Constitutional Provisions 2

    Involved

    Statement of the Case 2

    Reasons for Granting the Petition 4

    I. Question I: Does the Right to Associate 6Force States to Accept Any Candidatefrom Political Parties for Presentation

    on State Primary Ballots When Such

    a Candidate Does Not Meet Minimum

    Legal Qualifications for the Office Sought,

    Thereby Negating State Election Laws and

    State Control of Elections?

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS (cont.)

    Page

    II. Question II: Are All Individuals Born on 11U.S. Soil Article II-Natural Born

    Citizens, Regardless of the Citizenship

    of Their Parents?

    A. The Minor Court Defined Natural 13Born Citizen in Order to Reach its

    Holding

    B. Precedential Status of the Minor 14Courts Definition of Natural Born

    Citizen

    C. The MinorCourts Discussion of Other 16Categories of Citizen Confirms that

    The Courts Definition of Natural Born

    Citizen is Part of its Holding

    D. Georgias Ruling Violates the Minor 17Courts Holding that the 14th

    Amendment Did Not Add to thePrivileges and Immunities of a Citizen

    E. This Courts Wong Kim Ark Holding 18Does not Conflict with Minor and Does

    Not Support the Georgia Ruling

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS (cont.)Page

    F. Rules of Construction Support 20Petitioners Harmonized Readings of

    Minor and Wong Kim Ark

    G. Indiana State Court Lacked 21Jurisdiction to Reach the Article II

    Issue

    Conclusion 25

    Appendix 1a

    Part A 1a

    Georgia Supreme Court Orders Denying

    Review, April 4, 2012

    Part B 4a

    Superior Court of Fulton County, State of

    Georgia, Order Granting Defendant Obamas

    Motion to Dismiss Appeal, March 2, 2012

    Part C 10aGeorgia Secretary of State, Final Decision

    Adopting the Decision of the Georgia Office of

    State Administrative Hearings, February 7, 2012

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS (cont.)Page

    Part D 13a

    Georgia Office of State Administrative Hearings,

    Ruling All Persons on U.S. Soil to be Article II

    Natural Born Citizens, February 3, 2012

    Part E 25a

    Constitutional Provisions Involved

    Article II 1 Clause 5; Amendments I & XIV

    Part F 26a

    Statutory Provisions Involved

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-15 and 21-2-5

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    vii

    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

    Cases Page

    Ankeny v. Governor, 22-24

    916 N.E.2d 678 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009)

    Belluso v. Poythress, 7, 8

    485 F.Supp. 904 (N.D. Ga. 1980)

    Democratic Party of the U.S. v. Wisconsin, 7, 8450 U.S. 107 (1981)

    Duke v. Cleland, 7, 8

    954 F.2d 1526 (11th Cir. 1992)

    Gen. Motors Accpt. Corp. v. United States, 21286 U.S. 49 (1932)

    Lyng v. N.W. Indian Cemetery 23

    Protective Assn.,

    485 U.S.439 (1988)

    Marbury v. Madison, 20, 22

    5 U.S. 137 (1805)

    Morton v. Mancari, 21

    417 U.S. 535 (1974)

    Minor v. Happersett, 11-16

    88 U.S. 162 (1875)

    United States v. Borden Co., 21

    308 U.S. 188 (1939)

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    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES (cont.)

    Cases Page

    United States v. Tynen, 21

    78 U.S. 88 (1870)

    United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 12, 17-22

    169 U.S. 649 (1898)

    Wood v. United States, 21

    41 U.S. 342 (1842)

    Constitution

    Article II 1 Passim

    Amendment I 10

    Amendment XIV 17, 20-22

    Statutes

    28 U.S.C. 1257 2

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-5 2, 6, 9, 10

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-15 2, 6, 9

    Dictionary

    Blacks Law Dictionary, 16, 19

    Bryan A Garner ed., 7th Ed., West 1999

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    1

    PETITION FOR A WRIT OF CERTIORARI

    The petitioners respectfully petition for a writ

    of certiorari to review the opinion and judgment of

    the Supreme Court for the State of Georgia.

    OPINIONS BELOW

    The orders of the Supreme Court for the State

    of Georgia, dated April 4, 2012, affirming the opinion

    of the Georgia Superior Court for the State of

    Georgia in the County of Fulton are reproduced at

    App. 1a.

    The order of the Superior Court for the State

    of Georgia in the County of Fulton, dated March 2,

    2012, dismissing petitioners appeal from the

    judgment of the Georgia Secretary of State, is

    reproduced at App. 2a-7a.

    The Order of the Secretary of State, dated

    February 7, 2012, adopting the Decision of the

    Georgia Office of State Administrative Hearings,

    dated February 3, 2012, granting defendant-

    respondents motion for summary judgment, is

    reproduced at App. 8a-10a.

    The Decision of the Georgia Office of State

    Administrative Hearings, dated February 3, 2012,

    granting defendant-respondents motion for

    summary judgment, is reproduced at App. 11a-22a.

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    2

    JURISDICTION

    The judgment of the Supreme Court of the

    State of Georgia was entered on April 4, 2012. This

    petition is timely filed under 28 U.S.C. 1257

    because it is being filed within 90 days of the entry ofthe judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia.

    This Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.

    1257 because the judgment of the Supreme Court of

    Georgia interpreted the United States Constitution

    to invalidate a statute of the state of Georgia, and by

    implication similar statutes in other states, and

    because the Georgia Supreme Courts judgment

    negated rights of Georgia citizens specially set up

    under the United States Constitution.

    STATUTORY AND CONSTITUTIONAL

    PROVISIONS INVOLVED

    The relevant constitutional provisions

    involved are Article II 1, and the First and

    Fourteenth Amendments, which are reproduced at

    App. 23a. The relevant statutory provisions involved

    are O.C.G.A. 21-2-15 and 21-2-5, which are

    reproduced at App. 24a-27a.

    STATEMENT OF THE CASE

    This is the first case to reach this Court that

    substantively addresses the definition of natural

    born citizen as that term is used in Article II of the

    U.S. Constitution. The Georgia Administrative Court

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    and Secretary of State properly denied all attempts

    to dismiss the instant case on procedural grounds,

    leaving a clean ruling on the legal question.

    The petitioners challenge in Georgia State

    Court was based upon an uncontested fact: that therespondents father was not a U.S. citizen; and upon

    the legal conclusion that a person must have two

    U.S. citizen parents to be a natural born citizen

    under Article II of the U.S. Constitution.

    The Georgia Office of State Administrative

    Hearings and Secretary of State ruled that any

    person born on U.S. soil is a natural born citizen as

    that term is use in Article II of the U.S. Constitution,

    regardless of the citizenship of the persons parents.

    The Georgia Superior Court dismissed an

    appeal by erroneously deciding that the Georgia

    statute under which the petitioners challenged

    candidate Obamas eligibility, violated the

    Democratic Partys right to freedom of association.

    The Superior Court ruled that the Georgia statute

    was, therefore, inapplicable to Presidential primary

    elections. This argument had been raised and

    rejected by the Georgia Office of Administrative

    Hearings and the Georgia Secretary of State.

    The Georgia statute at issue explicitly states

    that it is applicable to any general or special

    primary to nominate candidates for state, local, and

    federal office. This is why the Georgia

    Administrative Court and Secretary of State applied

    the statute to the states Presidential primary

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    election. The Superior Courts ruling, therefore,

    invalidated a significant portion of Georgias law on

    grounds that it violates the U.S. Constitution.

    The Georgia Supreme Court refused review,

    adopting the ruling of the Georgia Superior Court.

    Together these rulings leave this Court with

    an opportunity to confirm state authority over

    Presidential primary elections, and to confirm its

    definition of natural born citizen under Article II of

    the Constitution.

    REASONS FOR GRANTING THE PETITION

    Since 2007 hundreds of lawsuits have been

    litigated challenging candidate Obamas

    constitutional eligibility to hold office. As of the filing

    of this petition current Presidential candidate Mitt

    Romney may name Marco Rubio as a Vice

    Presidential running mate. Like candidate Obama,

    at least one of Mr. Rubios parents was not a U.S.

    citizen when Mr. Rubio was born. Regardless of

    whether Mr. Rubio turns out to be the next VP

    candidate, this issue is practically certain to arise

    again. When it does it will certainly result inhundreds more lawsuits, filed in courts across the

    country. Regardless of which end of the political

    spectrum the next candidate with a non-U.S. citizen

    parents may be on, his or her political opponents are

    virtually certain to raise this issue again.

    This Courts ruling in the instant case could

    decisively confirm the definition of natural born

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    citizen as that term is used in Article II. Such a

    decision would clear hundreds of cases from court

    dockets over the next few years.

    In addition, the Georgia Courts ruling turns

    freedom to associate precedent on its head,expanding a political partys legitimate right to

    exclude certain individuals into a partys absolute

    authority to dictate to states regarding who will

    appear on state election ballots. This ruling negates

    a significant portion of Georgias election code. If

    applied to other states this precedent would

    represent a revolutionary shift in power between

    states and political parties, negating state authority

    over elections as established in Article II, Section 1 of

    the U.S. Constitution.

    The Georgia rulings challenged here

    dangerously expand power for political parties, deny

    constitutional state authority over elections,

    misapply this Courts freedom to associate precedent,

    ignore this Courts precedent in favor of dicta, ignore

    venerable rules of constitutional construction, ignore

    any difference between the legally distinguishable

    terms citizen and natural born citizen, and

    erroneously established that all persons born on U.S.

    soil are natural born citizens without regard to thecitizenship of their parents. Each one of these errors

    will be compounded by courts across the country if

    they are not corrected by this Court.

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    I. Question 1: Does the Right to AssociateForce States to Accept Any Candidate

    from Political Parties for Presentation on

    State Primary Ballots When Such a

    Candidate Does not Meet Minimum Legal

    Qualifications for the Office Sought,Thereby Negating State Election Laws

    and State Control of Elections?

    Article II, section 1 of the United States

    Constitution states: Each state shall appoint, in

    such manner as the legislature thereof may direct, a

    number of electors to the electoral college for

    election of the President of the United States. U.S.

    Const. Art. II 1.

    Georgias legislature has determined that it is

    in the best interest of the citizens of Georgia to

    screen candidates for minimum legal qualifications

    prior to placement on its primary ballots:

    Every candidate for federal and

    state officeshall meet the

    constitutional and statutory

    qualifications for holding the office

    being sought. O.C.G.A. 21-2-5.

    The fact that the Georgia Legislature intended

    this section to apply to Presidential Primaries is

    made explicit by O.C.G.A. 21-2-15:

    This chapter shall apply to any

    general or special election in this state

    to fill any federal, state, county, or

    municipal office, to any general or

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    The right to associate has been interpreted to

    allow private groups to determine who will and will

    not be members of the group. Democratic Party of

    U.S. v. Wisconsin, 450 U.S. 107 (1981); Duke v.

    Cleland, 954 F.2d 1526 (11th Cir. 1992); Belluso v.Poythress, 485 F.Supp. 904 (N.D.Ga. 1980). However,

    no court has extended this right beyond the confines

    of the private organization. A party can determine

    who it will include as members. That party can also

    determine which of those members will be its

    candidates. However, nothing in the Constitution or

    precedent forces a State to accept a partys selection

    of candidates for appearance on a ballot.2

    Several right-to-associate cases did involve

    candidates exclusion from ballots. See Democratic

    Party of U.S. v. Wisconsin, 450 U.S. 107 (1981);Duke

    v. Cleland, 954 F.2d 1526 (11th Cir. 1992);Belluso v.

    Poythress, 485 F.Supp. 904 (N.D.Ga. 1980). However,

    all of these cases are exactly opposite to the situation

    presented in the Georgia litigation. All of the above

    precedent involved political parties excluding a

    candidate because the party did not want to be

    associated with the candidate. In every case cited,

    the candidate sued the party or state for inclusion on

    the ballot after being excluded. The courts upheld theparties right to exclude individuals from

    membership in their parties. This does not, however,

    create a right for the party to dictate to states.

    2 While right-to-associate precedent has negated some states

    restrictive laws for recognizing political parties, none of these

    precedent have forced states to accept all candidates for

    appearance on ballots without any screening of such candidates.

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    There are no cases prior to the instant

    litigation where a political partys decision to support

    a candidate created a Constitutional right to force a

    State to accept that decision. Such precedent would

    place the political parties authority above that of the

    state. This is why no such precedent exists.

    It is true that some states lack election codes

    authorizing a state official to screen candidate

    selections received from political parties. In these

    states political parties have essentially unfettered

    authority to determine which candidates appear on

    ballots. However, these instances represent decisions

    of the states legislatures to not screen candidates. It

    is the states right to decide how to administer its

    elections. See U.S. Const. Art. II 1. The fact that

    some states have decided to not protect their citizens

    from unqualified candidates does not mean that

    other states do not have the right to screen

    candidates. It simply means that some states have

    left the screening to the political parties.

    Right-to-associate precedent simply does not

    prevent Georgias Legislature from protecting its

    citizens in this manner because the right to associate

    easily coexists with the States right to determine the

    manner of choosing its Presidential electors. Georgiacode does not interfere with the autonomy of any

    political partys internal decision making because it

    does not prohibit the parties from submitting any

    name to the Georgia Secretary of State for inclusion

    in the Presidential primary. The political parties are

    free to submit Saddam Hussein or Mickey Mouse as

    their next Presidential candidate. However, Georgia

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    is not required to accept such submissions and waste

    taxpayer money on ballots for such candidates.

    After the Georgia Courts ruling, the political

    parties could choose to list former Presidents George

    Bush and Bill Clinton as candidates for thePresidential primary, despite the fact that both

    President Bush and President Clinton are

    disqualified to run for that office again by the 22 nd

    Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Upon such

    listing the State of Georgia would have no choice but

    to place these candidates names on its ballots. This

    result demonstrates the error of the Georgia Courts

    holding. Contrary to the Georgia Courts holding, the

    political parties simply do not have unfettered

    dictatorial authority over the state of Georgia.

    Georgia code does not prevent the political

    parties from submitting any name. Instead the code

    simply determines what the State does with a partys

    list of candidates after the party has forwarded its

    list to the State. See O.C.G.A. 21-2 et seq. This code

    does nothing to prevent any political party from

    excluding, or including, any person they choose to

    exclude or include. Nor does it prevent a party from

    choosing candidates to submit, in the partys sole

    discretion. Georgias code simply exercises theStates right to administer elections in a manner that

    best serves the citizens of the State.

    In the instant case Georgias Election code

    does nothing to infringe on the Democratic Party of

    Georgias right of association because the Party can

    and did accept the respondent into its organization.

    The Party can and did include the respondent in the

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    Partys list of candidates. The Partys rights,

    however, end there. Its rights cannot force the State

    to place the respondents name on a ballot after the

    State determines that the respondent is obviously

    not qualified to hold the office sought. 21-2-5. The

    rights of the Party and of the State simply do notconflict.

    The Georgia Courts holding logically requires

    a conclusion that no state can preclude any candidate

    from any primary ballot for any reason without

    violating a political partys right to freely associate.

    Since many candidates have been disqualified from

    primary ballots for lack of qualification to hold the

    office sought, we can safely conclude that the Georgia

    Courts holding is a gross misapplication of the right

    to associate.

    In order to protect the harmony between

    Article II and the First Amendment, and to protect

    the right of all states to control their elections, the

    petitioners respectfully request that this Court grant

    the instant petition.

    II. Question 2: Are All Individuals Born onU.S. Soil Article II natural born

    citizens, Regardless of the Citizenship oftheir Parents?

    The instant litigation challenged candidate

    Obamas Constitutional eligibility to hold the office of

    President upon grounds that his father was not a

    U.S. citizen at the time candidate Obama was born.

    App.16a-17a. Petitioners cited this Courts definition

    of natural born citizen, as that term is used in

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    Article II of the Constitution, from the holding of

    Minor v. Happersett. 88 U.S. 162, 167-8 (1875).

    In response to this challenge the Georgia

    Secretary of State and Office of State Administrative

    Hearings reached the legal conclusion that personsborn within the borders of the United States are

    natural born citizens for Article II, Section 1

    purposes, regardless of the citizenship of their

    parents. App. 21a.

    The Georgia Secretary of States legal

    conclusion runs contrary to venerable rules of

    Constitutional construction. It relies heavily upon an

    Indiana State court that had already admitted it

    lacked jurisdiction to reach the Article II issue. Most

    importantly, it rests upon dicta that would negate

    this Courts holding from Minor v. Happersett.

    The Minor Courts definition of natural-born citizen

    is binding precedent because the Courts definition

    was necessary to reach its holding. 88 U.S. 162. The

    Minor Courts definition of natural-born citizen,

    therefore, has not been abrogated by the dicta from

    Wong Kim Ark (WKA) or any other subsequent

    Supreme Court precedent. See 169 U.S. 649 (1898).

    Any rulings from other courts are simply incorrect.Unless and until this Court revisits this issue, the

    MinorCourts definition is binding.

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    A. The Minor Court Confirmed theDefinition of Article II-Natural Born

    Citizen in Order to Reach its Holding

    In Minor v. Happersett the United States

    Supreme Court was presented the question: Does the14th Amendment grant all citizens the right to vote?

    88 U.S. 162. Minor, a woman living in Missouri,

    challenged that states constitutional prohibition

    against women voting. The Court held that women

    could be citizens before ratification of the 14th

    Amendment, but that the 14th Amendment created

    no new privileges or immunities.

    To reach its holding the Minor Court defined

    the term natural born citizen. 88 U.S. at 167. It

    established that,

    it was never doubted that all

    children born in a country of parents

    who were its citizens became

    themselves, upon their birth, citizens

    also. These were natives or natural-born

    citizens, as distinguished from aliens or

    foreigners. Id.

    It is clear that the Minor Court was referringto the term natural born citizen, as it appears in

    Article II of the Constitution because, in the

    paragraph preceding the definition quoted here, that

    Court quoted the Article II requirement that the

    President must be a natural born citizen.

    The Minor Courts definition of natural born

    citizen is immediately followed by a statement that

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    there have been doubts about the broader class of

    people identified as citizens. Id. However, this

    statement is immediately followed by the

    clarification that there have never been doubts as

    to the narrower class of natural born citizens. Id.

    This understanding of the Minor Courts statementis supported by its extensive discussion of the

    broader term citizen at the beginning of the Courts

    opinion. Id. at 166. The Court concludes its

    discussion of the term citizen by stating, When

    used in this sense it is understood as conveying the

    idea of membership of a nation, and nothing more.

    Id. The Court, therefore, clearly established that the

    term citizen was to be understood to be very broad.

    With this in mind, the Minor Courts statement is

    unambiguous: it established two distinct classes of

    people, citizens and natural born citizens; citizen is

    a broad term that is inclusive of all natural born

    citizens, and others. Id. All natural born citizens are

    citizens, but not all citizens are natural born citizens;

    as to the outer limits of the term citizen there are

    doubts; and as to the definition of natural born

    citizen there have never been doubts. Id.

    B. Precedential Status of the MinorCourts Definition of Natural Born

    Citizen

    In order to reach its holding, the Minor Court

    first had to establish that Mrs. Minor was a citizen.

    It explicitly did so by determining that she was a

    natural born citizen: For the purposes of this case it

    is not necessary to solve these doubts. It is sufficient

    for everything we have now to consider that all

    children born of citizen parents within the

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    jurisdiction are themselves citizens. Id. at 167. The

    definition the Court is using here is the Courts own

    definition of natural-born citizen from earlier in the

    same paragraph. Because both of Mrs. Minors

    parents were U.S. citizens at the time she was born,

    and she was born in the U.S., she was a natural borncitizen. Because all natural born citizens are also

    within the broader category citizen, Mrs. Minor

    was a citizen. This is why the Court did not need to

    resolve doubts about the outer limits of the term

    citizen. Mrs. Minor was a citizen because she was

    clearly within the narrower category of natural-born

    citizen.

    The Minor Courts decision to establish that

    Mrs. Minor was a citizen because she was a natural

    born citizen followed the well-established doctrine of

    judicial restraint. Judicial restraint required the

    Minor Court to avoid interpreting the citizenship

    clause of the 14th Amendment if the circumstances

    presented in the case at hand did not require the

    Court to construe the 14th amendments citizenship

    clause in order to reach its holding. The facts

    presented did not require such an interpretation

    because the definition of natural born citizen was

    well-established and Mrs. Minor was a natural born

    citizen. So, the Court did not reach the 14th

    amendments citizenship clause. But this restraint

    did require the Court to conclude that Mrs. Minor

    was a citizen via its definition of natural-born citizen

    and its conclusion that all natural-born citizens are

    within the broader category of citizens. This is why

    it made the statement For the purposes of this case

    it is not necessary to solve these doubts. It is

    sufficient for everything we have now to consider

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    that all children born of citizen parents within the

    jurisdiction are themselves citizens. Id. at 168. In

    other words, the Minor Courts definition of

    natural born citizen was pivotal to reaching

    its holding.3

    Because the Minor Courts definition of

    natural born citizen was pivotal to reaching its

    holding, the Courts definition is part of its holding

    and is, therefore, also precedent. SeeBlacks Law

    Dictionary 737 (Bryan A. Garner ed., 7th ed., West

    1999) (holding, n. 1. A courts determination of a

    matter pivotal to its decision); (see alsoId. at 1195

    defining precedent and quotingJames Parker Hall,

    American Law and Procedure xlviii (1952); see also

    Blacks Law Dictionary at 465, distinguishing

    dictum gratis: A courts discussion of points or

    questions not raised by the record or its suggestion of

    rules not applicable in the case at bar.).

    C. TheMinorCourts Discussion of OtherCategories of Citizens Confirms that

    The Courts Definition of Natural Born

    Citizen is Part of its Holding

    After establishing that Mrs. Minor was a

    citizen because she was a natural born citizen, theCourt then discussed several other types of

    citizenship as general examples of its conclusion that

    3Courts using judicial restraint are deciding to rely upon well-established

    law rather than delve into new and more debatable areas of law. The fact

    that theMinorCourt deferred to the previously well-established definition

    of natural born citizen proves that this term was beyond debate at the

    time of theMinorCourts opinion. That is why the Court states that there

    have never been doubts as to the definition of Article II natural born

    citizen.

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    women could be citizens. However, it then returned

    to the specific case of Mrs. Minor, concluding: The

    fourteenth amendment did not affect the citizenship

    of women any more than it did of men. In this

    particular, therefore, the rights of Mrs. Minor do not

    depend upon the amendment. She has always been acitizen from her birth, and entitled to all the

    privileges and immunities of citizenship. Id. at 170.

    This discussion not only shows that the Minor

    Court explicitly distinguished the terms citizen and

    natural born citizen, it also shows that the Court

    determined that Minor was a citizen because she was

    a natural born citizen. Because citizen is a much

    broader term, but includes the narrower term

    natural born citizen, Minor was a citizen because she

    was a natural born citizen.

    D.Georgias Ruling Violates The MinorCourts Holding that the 14th

    Amendment Did Not Add to the

    Privileges and Immunities of a

    Citizen

    The Georgia Secretary of States decision also

    runs contrary to the MinorCourts holding that The

    amendment did not add to the privileges andimmunities of a citizen. Id. at 171. The Minor Court

    established that if an individual did not have the

    right to vote before the 14th Amendment, then that

    citizen did not have the right to vote after the

    Amendment. Id. It is clear from this holding that if a

    person was not qualified to hold the office of

    President under Article II before the 14 th

    Amendment, then he or she was not qualified to hold

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    the office of President after the Amendment. Id. In

    other words, the holding of the Minor Court explicitly

    established that the 14th Amendment did not change

    the definition of natural born citizen under Article II.

    E. This Courts Wong Kim Ark HoldingDoes not Conflict withMinorand Does

    Not Support the Georgia Ruling

    The Supreme Courts holding in Wong Kim

    Ark(WKA) did not alter or negate the definition of

    natural born citizen as established by the Minor

    Court. Compare United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169

    U.S. 649 (1898) with Minor, 88 U.S. 162. The holding

    of WKA answered the narrow question that was

    avoided by the Minor Court: namely construction of

    the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment.

    A review of the holding from WKA confirms

    this conclusion:

    [T]he single question stated at

    the beginning of this opinion, namely,

    whether a child born in the United

    States, of parents of Chinese descent,

    who at the time of his birth are subjectsof the emperor of China, but have a

    permanent domicile and residence in

    the United States, and are there

    carrying on business, and are not

    employed in any diplomatic or official

    capacity under the emperor of China,

    becomes at the time of his birth a citizen

    of the United States by virtue of the

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    first clause of the fourteenth

    amendment of the Constitution: All

    persons born or naturalized in the

    United States, and subject to the

    jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the

    United States and of the state whereinthey reside. For the reasons above

    stated, this court is of the opinion that

    the question must be answered in the

    affirmative. 169 U.S. at 705 (emphasis

    added).

    The WKA holding does not contain the term

    natural born nor does it mention Article II.

    This makes sense because the WKA Court did

    not need to define the term natural born citizen in

    order to reach its holding. Had Mr. Ark been a

    natural born citizen as defined by the Minor Court,

    then the WKA case would never have been filed

    because Mr. Arks status as a citizen would never

    have been in question. Had Mr. Ark been a natural

    born citizen the WKA Court would not have had to

    resort to the 14th Amendment in order to find that he

    was a citizen. Because Mr. Ark was not a natural

    born citizen, the WKA court had no reason to

    construe the term natural born citizen in order toanswer the question: Was Mr. Ark a citizen under

    the 14th Amendment? Therefore, any discussion

    within the WKA opinion that could possibly be

    construed to alter the Article II term natural born

    citizen, was unnecessary to reach the WKA holding

    and was, by definition, dicta. See Blacks Law

    Dictionary 465 (Bryan A. Garner e., 7th ed., West

    1999)(definingDictum Gratis).

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    Rather than construing the definition of the

    term natural born citizen under Article II, the

    WKA Court was construing the term citizen under

    the 14th Amendment. Regardless of the answer to the

    question answered by the WKA Court, it doesnothing to change the requirements for the office of

    President.

    To conclude that the WKA court altered the

    definition of natural born citizen under Article II

    would require a conclusion that dicta alters

    established precedent. This is simply not the rule.

    Dicta can be persuasive. Where the reasoning in

    dicta is logical and well supported, and where it does

    not conflict with precedent, it can be followed at the

    discretion of other courts. However, where dicta

    directly conflicts with precedent it cannot be followed

    by lower courts.

    Also, to conclude that the WKA Court altered

    the definition of natural born citizen under Article II

    would also require a conclusion that the WKA court

    intended to overturn the Minor holding that the 14th

    amendment did not create any new privileges or

    immunities. Yet the WKA Court never made any

    such assertion, nor has any decision of this Courtsince WKA.

    Nothing in the holding of Wong Kim Ark

    contradicts anything in Minor v. Happersett. Reading

    these two opinions with the distinction between

    citizen and natural born citizen in mind, and with

    the definitions of holding, precedent, and dicta

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    in mind, confirms that the Minor and Wong Kim Ark

    opinions do not conflict.

    Common sense and rules of construction tell

    us that if two laws, constitutional provisions, or court

    opinions can be read to not conflict, such aninterpretation is more likely correct than an

    interpretation that requires conflict. A proper

    reading of these two opinions reveals that they

    conform to each other and complement each other.

    This reading of Minor and WKA respects the

    foundational principals of constitutional construction

    and legal interpretation because these cases were

    answering different questions regarding different

    aspects of the Constitution. This reading of Minor

    and WKA leave these two opinions in harmony.

    F.Marbury v. Madisons Rule ofConstitutional Construction Supports

    Petitioners Harmonized Readings of

    Minorand Won Kim Ark

    The Georgia Secretary of States decision

    concludes that any person born within the United

    States, regardless of the citizenship or legal status of

    their parents, is a natural born citizen underArticle II of the United States Constitution. This

    conclusion violates venerable rules of Constitutional

    Construction established by this Court. In Marbury

    v. Madison this Court explained, It cannot be

    presumed that any clause in the Constitution is

    intended to be without effect; and therefore such a

    construction is inadmissible. 5 U.S. 137, 174 (1805).

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    This rule is still in effect and a similar rule is

    used for statutory construction: When there are two

    acts upon the same subject, the rule is to give effect

    to both if possibleThe intention of the legislature to

    repeal must be clear and manifest. United States v.

    Borden Co., 308 U.S. 188, 198 (1939). See also,Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 551 (1974); United

    States v. Tynen, 78 U.S. 88 (1870); Hendersons

    Tobacco, 78 U.S. 652 657 (1870); General Motors

    Acceptance Corp. v. United States, 286 U.S. 49, 61

    (1932); Wood v. United States, 41 U.S. 342, 362-63

    (1842).

    These rules of construction were well-

    established and well-known at the time the 14th

    Amendment was drafted. Had the drafters of the 14th

    Amendment intended that Amendment to alter the

    Article II definition of natural born citizen, they

    would have clearly stated so. Yet the term natural

    born citizen is not found anywhere within the 14 th

    Amendment. The Amendment also makes no

    reference to Article II.

    Yet the Georgia Secretary of States ruling in

    the instant case, and reading of the WKA opinion,

    leaves Article IIs natural born citizen clause with

    no independent meaning separate from the meaningof citizen under the 14th Amendment. Citizen

    simply does not have the same legal meaning as the

    term natural born citizen. Article II uses the term

    natural born citizen in order to distinguish this type

    of citizen from other citizens. Yet the Secretarys

    holding completely negates this distinction.

    Therefore, the Secretarys holding violates venerable

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    rules of Constitutional construction. Marbury, 5 U.S.

    at 174.

    The Secretary also reads the words natural

    born into the very explicit holding of the Supreme

    Courts Wong Kim Ark decision. 169 U.S. 649 (1898).Yet neither the 14th Amendment nor the holding of

    Wong Kim Ark include the term natural born. The

    Wong Kim Ark court was determining the meaning of

    the broader term citizen under the 14th

    Amendment. Id. at 705. Its holding was highly fact-

    specific. Id. Its holding neither mentioned Article II

    nor the term natural born. Id.

    The Georgia Secretary of States conclusion

    that all persons born on U.S. soil are Article II-

    natural born citizens, regardless of their parents

    citizenship, violates every rule of legal

    interpretation.

    G.Indiana State Court LackedJurisdiction to Reach the Article II

    Issue

    The Georgia Secretary of States decision relies

    heavily upon an Indiana State Appellate Court

    opinion. SeeApp.17a-22a. citingAnkeny v. Governor,916 N.E.2d 678 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). However, a

    cursory reading of the Ankeny opinion should lead

    any court to immediately recognize the limited value

    of that opinion.

    Ankeny was a challenge brought by pro-se

    litigants in Indiana against that states Governor. Id.

    at 679. While litigation by pro-se parties certainly

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    does not, by itself, negate the value of an opinion, it

    certainly should raise some concerns. Most pro-se

    litigants cannot be expected to present courts with

    fully researched and briefed arguments in support of

    their constitutional assertions. Addtionally, the

    Defendant inAnkeny was a sitting Governor with allthe resources of the state at his disposal. Id. This

    picture explains the very one-sided presentation of

    the issues and the ultimate result inAnkeny.

    Much more striking, however, is the fact that

    the Ankeny Court admitted that the plaintiff lacked

    standing. Id. at 684. Since the plaintiff lacked

    standing, the Ankeny Court lacked jurisdiction to

    reach any substantive issue presented. Yet after

    reaching this conclusive finding, the Ankeny court

    took it upon itself to construe Article II of the U.S.

    Constitution. While a court may use alternative

    means to reach a holding, it should not construe the

    U.S. Constitution to do so. Lyng v. Northwest Indian

    Cemetery Protective Association, 485 U.S. 439, 445-46

    (1988) (A fundamental and longstanding principle of

    judicial restraint requires that courts avoid reaching

    constitutional questions in advance of the necessity

    of deciding them.). Judicial restraint requires all

    courts to avoid construing any clause of the

    Constitution if avoiding such construction is at allpossible. Id. By pushing forward to give its opinion

    on the meaning of Article II, after ruling that it

    lacked jurisdiction in the case, the Ankeny Court

    ignored judicial restraint, ignored rules of

    constitutional construction, ignored direct precedent

    from this Court, and ignored the Article III

    constitutional limits on its own authority.

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    In other words, theAnkenyCourts decision to

    reach the constitutional question demonstrates that

    Courts failure to understand the most basic

    doctrines applied by this Court when construing the

    Constitution. With this fact in mind, the Ankeny

    Courts opinion regarding the meaning of Article IIand the 14th Amendment should be avoided at all

    costs by any other court.

    Yet the Georgia Administrative Court, Georgia

    Secretary of State, and other courts across the

    country are citing Ankeny as decisive on the natural

    born citizen issue.

    CONCLUSION

    For the reasons discussed above the

    petitioners respectfully request a writ of certiorari be

    granted.

    Respectfully submitted,

    Van R. Irion

    Liberty Legal Foundation

    9040 Executive Park Drive, Ste.200

    Knoxville, TN 37923

    (423) 208-9953

    J. Mark Hatfield, Esq.

    Hatfield & Hatfield, P.C.

    201 Albany Avenue

    P.O. Box 1361

    Waycross, Georgia 31502

    (912) 283-3820

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    1a

    APPENDIX

    Part A

    Supreme Court of Georgia Orders Denying

    Review, April 4, 2012

    SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA

    Case No. S12D1059

    Atlanta, April 04, 2012

    The Honorable Supreme Court met pursuant

    to adjournment.

    The following order was passed.

    DAVID P. WELDON v. BARACK OBAMA

    From the Superior Court of Fulton County.

    Upon consideration of the Application for

    Discretionary Appeal, it is ordered that it be hereby

    denied. All the Justices concur.

    Trial Court Case No. 2012CV211537

    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA

    Clerk's Office, Atlanta

    I certify that the above is a true extract from

    minutes of the Supreme Court of Georgia.

    Witness my signature and the seal of said

    court hereto affixed the day and year last above

    written.

    Lia C. Fulton, Chief Deputy Clerk

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    2a

    SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA

    Case No. S12D1077

    Atlanta, April 04, 2012

    The Honorable Supreme Court met pursuant

    to adjournment.

    The following order was passed.

    KEVIN RICHARD POWELL v. BARACK OBAMA

    From the Superior Court of Fulton County.

    Upon consideration of the Application for

    Discretionary Appeal, it is ordered that it be hereby

    denied. All the Justices concur.

    Trial Court Case No. 2012CV211528

    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA

    Clerk's Office, Atlanta

    I certify that the above is a true extract from

    minutes of the Supreme Court of Georgia.

    Witness my signature and the seal of saidcourt hereto affixed the day and year last above

    written.

    Lia C. Fulton, Chief Deputy Clerk

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    4a

    APPENDIX

    Part B

    Superior Court of Fulton County, State of

    Georgia, Order Granting Defendant Obamas

    Motion to Dismiss Appeal, March 2, 2012

    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF FULTON COUNTY

    STATE OF GEORGIA

    DAVID FARRAR, LEAH LAX,

    CODY ROBERT JUDY,

    LAURIE ROTH,

    Petitioners,

    v. CIVIL ACTION

    FILE NO.2012CV211398

    BARACK OBAMA and

    SECRETARY OF STATE

    Respondents.

    CARL SWENSSON,

    Petitioner,

    v. CIVIL ACTION

    FILE NO.2012CV211527

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

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    5a

    KEVIN RICHARD POWELL,

    Petitioner,

    v. CIVIL ACTION

    FILE NO.2012CV211528

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

    DAVID P. WELDEN,

    Petitioner,

    v. CIVIL ACTION

    FILE NO.2012CV211537

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

    ORDER GRANTING RESPONDENT BARACKOBAMAS MOTION(S) TO DISMISS

    The above-captioned actions are before the

    Court on the Petitioner(s) for Judicial Review of

    Petitioners David Farrar, et al., Carl Swensson,

    Kevin Richard Powell, and David P. Welden, which

    were filed in this Court on February 13, 2012, and

    February 15, 2012, respectively. Although initially

    assigned to four (4) different Superior Court Judges,

    the matters were transferred to the Honorable ChiefJudge Cynthia D. Wright, to whom the first-filed

    case was assigned (Farrar, et al. v. Obama, et al.,

    Civil Action File No. 2012CV11398), because each is

    an appeal of the same decision issued on February 3,

    2012 by Administrative Law Judge Michael M.

    Malihi in the Office of State Administrative Hearings

    and thereafter adopted by the Secretary of State.

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    Presently before the Court is the Motion to

    Dismiss of Respondent Barack Obama, filed in each

    of the above-referenced actions of February 27, 2012.

    The Motion(s) to Dismiss are identical in form and

    substance and will, therefore, be addressed by the

    Court in one consolidated Order to be applied in eachcase. Now, having considered the Motion(s) to

    Dismiss, the other pleadings of record, and

    applicable Georgia law, the Court finds as follows:

    Petitioners filed their Appeal/Petition for

    Judicial Review of the Secretary of States decision in

    this Court pursuant to O.C.G.A. 21-2-5(e), which

    provides as follows:

    The elector filing the challenge or thecandidate challenged shall have the

    right to appeal the decision of the

    Secretary of State by filing a petition in

    the Superior Court of Fulton County

    within ten days after the entry of the

    final decision by the Secretary of State.

    The filing of the petition shall not itself

    stay the decision of the Secretary of

    State; however, the reviewing court may

    order a stay upon appropriate terms for

    good cause shown. As soon as possibleafter service of the petition, the

    Secretary of State shall transmit the

    original or a certified copy of the entire

    record of the proceedings under review

    to the reviewing court. The review shall

    be conducted by the court without a jury

    and shall be confined to the record.

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    7a

    Petitioners allege that Respondent Barack

    Obama is not a natural born citizen4 and, thus, is

    not qualified for candidacy in Georgias 2012

    Presidential Primary. Despite its application in the

    court below, this Court does not believe that

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-5 applies in this case because thechallenge at issue involves the Presidential

    Preference Primary, which by its terms, is an

    opportunity for electors to express their preference

    for one person to be a candidate for nomination.

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-191. The Presidential Preference

    Primary apportions delegates, but neither elects nor

    nominates candidates for the Presidency. Therefore,

    because Respondent Barack Obama is not yet a

    candidate for the Presidential election in question

    and because the Presidential Preference Primary is

    not an election within the meaning of O.C.G.A. 21-

    2-1, et seq., 21-2-5 does not apply. See 21-2-2(5) and

    21-2-5.

    Moreover, it is well established in Georgia as

    elsewhere in the United States that voters vote on

    presidential electors, rather than voting directly for

    a candidate, when voting for the Office of President

    of the United States. O.C.G.A 21-2-172. The

    political parties candidates for President are

    determined by convention of the political party. SeeO.C.G.A. 21-2-191 to 21-2-200. In the case of a

    democratic candidate for President, the Democratic

    Party of Georgia has the sole discretion to determine

    the qualifications of potential candidates and the

    name(s) to be included on its Presidential Preference

    4Petitioners claim is based, in part, on a contention that at the time of his

    birth, Respondents father was not a citizen of the United States.

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    Primary ballot. O.C.G.A. 21-2-193; see Duke v.

    Cleland, 954 F.2d 1523 (11th Cir. 1992); Duke v.

    Cleland, 884 F.Supp. 511, 515-16 (N.D.Ga. 1995).

    The Secretary of State is prohibited by the

    Fourteenth Amendment of the United StatesConstitution and Georgia statutory law from

    infringing on the associational rights of the electors.

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-172 to 21-2-200; Duke v. Cleland,

    884 F.Supp. at 515-16 (N.D.Ga. 1995). Even if the

    Secretary of State believes that a challengers claims

    are valid, the Secretary of State may not interfere

    with a political partys internal decision-making. Id.

    Based upon Georgia law and governing

    precedent, the Court finds it has no authority toexercise jurisdiction over the Democratic Party of

    Georgias selection of the name(s) to be included in

    the Presidential Preference Primary or to examine

    the qualifications of those individuals. Therefore,

    these actions should be DISMISSED in accordance

    with O.C.G.A. 9-11-12(b).

    Additionally, even if the Court had determined

    that O.C.G.A. 21-2-5 applied to these matters and

    provided the Court with appellate jurisdiction oversame, the Court finds that Petitioners have failed

    entirely to perfect personal service upon

    Respondent(s) as required by O.C.G.A. 21-2-5(e) and

    O.C.G.A. 9-11-4. See Bible v. Bible, 259 Ga. 418, 418

    (1989).

    Therefore, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AND

    ADJUGED that Respondent Barack Obamas

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    9a

    Motion(s) to Dismiss in the above matters are

    GRANTED, and the above actions are hereby

    DISMISSED.

    SO ORDERED this the 2nd day of March 2012.

    CYNTHIA D. WRIGHT, Chief Judge

    Fulton County Superior Court

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    10a

    APPENDIX

    Part C

    Final Decision of the Georgia Secretary of

    State, February 7, 2012, Adopting the Decision

    of the Georgia Office of Administrative

    Hearings

    IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE

    STATE OF GEORGIA

    DAVID FARRAR, LEAH LAX,

    CODY ROBERT JUDY,

    LAURIE ROTH,

    Petitioners,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-SECSTATE-CE-1215136-

    60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA

    Respondent.

    DAVID P. WELDEN,

    Petitioner,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1215137-

    60-MALIHIBARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

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    11a

    CARL SWENSSON,

    Petitioner,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1216218-

    60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

    KEVIN RICHARD POWELL,

    Petitioner,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1216823-

    60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

    FINAL DECISION5

    Petitioners filed candidate challenges

    pursuant to O.C.G.A. 21-2-5(b) contending that

    Respondent does not meet the State of Georgias

    eligibility requirements for his name to be listed on

    the 2012 Presidential Preference Primary ballot.

    Judge Michael Malihi, Administrative Law Judge

    (ALJ) for the Office of State Administrative

    Hearings, held a hearing on each candidate challenge

    on January 26, 2012 and entered an initial decision

    for the above-captioned cases on February 3, 2012.

    5Judge Michael Malihi previously consolidated the above-captioned

    candidate challenges for the purpose of issuing his initial decision. Those

    candidate challenges remain consolidated for the purpose of issuing this

    Final Decision.

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    12a

    The Secretary of State formally adopts the initial

    decision of the ALJ into this final decision.

    Therefore, IT IS HEREBY DECIDED THAT

    the above-captioned challenges are DENIED.

    SO DECIDED this 7th day of February, 2012.

    BRIAN P. KEMP

    Georgia Secretary of State

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    13a

    APPENDIX

    Part D

    Decision of Georgia Office of State

    Administrative Hearings, February 3, 2012,

    Ruling All Persons Born on U.S. Soil to be

    Article II Natural Born Citizens

    OFFICE OF STATE ADMINISTRATIVE

    HEARINGS

    STATE OF GEORGIA

    DAVID FARRAR, LEAH LAX,

    CODY ROBERT JUDY,

    LAURIE ROTH,

    Petitioners,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1215136-

    60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA

    Respondent.

    DAVID P. WELDEN,

    Petitioner,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1215137-60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

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    CARL SWENSSON,

    Petitioner,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1216218-

    60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

    KEVIN RICHARD POWELL,

    Petitioner,

    v. Docket Number: OSAH-

    SECSTATE-CE-1216823-

    60-MALIHI

    BARACK OBAMA,

    Respondent.

    DECISION6

    Plaintiffs allege that Defendant President

    Barack Obama does not meet Georgia's eligibility

    requirements for candidacy in Georgia's 2012

    presidential primary election. Georgia law mandates

    that candidates meet constitutional and statutory

    requirements for the office that they seek. O.C.G.A.

    6 This Decision has been consolidated to include the four

    challenges to President Obama's candidacy filed by Plaintiffs

    David Farrar, et al., David P. Welden, Carl Swensson, and

    Kevin Richard Powell. Section I of this Decision applies only to

    the case presented by Ms. Taitz on behalf of Mr. Farrar and his

    co-plaintiffs, Leah Lax, Cody Judy, Thomas Malaren, and

    Laurie Roth, and does not pertain, in any way, to the cases of

    Mr. Welden, Mr. Swensson, and Mr. Powell. Section II applies

    to all Plaintiffs.

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    21-2-5(a). Mr. Obama is a candidate for federal office

    who has been certified by the state executive

    committee of a political party, and therefore must,

    under Georgia Code Section 21-2-5, meet the

    constitutional and statutory qualifications for

    holding the Office of the President of the UnitedStates. Id. The United States Constitution requires

    that a President be a "natural born [c]itizen." U.S.

    Const. art. II, 1, cl. 5.

    As required by Georgia Law, Secretary of

    State Brian Kemp referred Plaintiffs' challenges to

    this Court for a hearing. O.C.G.A. 21-2-5(b). A

    hearing was held on January 26, 2012. The record

    closed on February 1, 2012. Plaintiffs Farrar, Lax,

    Judy, Malaren, and Roth and their counsel Orly

    Taitz, Plaintiffs Carl Swensson and Kevin Richard

    Powell and their counsel J. Mark Hatfield, and

    Plaintiff David P. Welden and his counsel Van R.

    Irion, all appeared and answered the call of the case.

    However, neither Defendant nor his counsel, Michael

    Jablonski, appeared or answered. Ordinarily, the

    Court would enter a default order against a party

    that fails to participate in any stage of a proceeding.

    Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 616-1-2-.30(1) and (5).

    Nonetheless, despite the Defendant's failure to

    appear, Plaintiffs asked this Court to decide the caseon the merits of their arguments and evidence. The

    Court granted Plaintiffs' request.

    By deciding this matter on the merits, the

    Court in no way condones the conduct or legal

    scholarship of Defendant's attorney, Mr. Jablonski.

    This Decision is entirely based on the law, as well as

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    the evidence and legal arguments presented at the

    hearing.

    I. Evidentiary Arguments of Plaintiffs Farrar,

    et al.

    Plaintiffs Farrar, Lax, Judy, Malaren, and

    Roth contend that President Barack Obama is not a

    natural born citizen. To support this contention,

    Plaintiffs assert that Mr. Obama maintains a

    fraudulently obtained social security number, a

    Hawaiian birth certificate that is a computer-

    generated forgery, and that he does not otherwise

    possess valid U.S. identification papers. Further,

    Plaintiffs submit that Mr. Obama has previously

    held Indonesian citizenship, and he did not use his

    legal name on his notice of candidacy, which is either

    Barry Soetoro or Barack Obama Soebarkah. (Pl.s'

    Am. Compl. 3.)

    At the hearing, Plaintiffs presented the

    testimony of eight witnesses7 and seven exhibits in

    support of their position. (Exs. P-1 through P-7.)

    When considering the testimony and exhibits, this

    Court applies the same rules of evidence that apply

    to civil nonjury cases in superior court. Ga. Comp. R.

    & Regs. 616-1-2-.18(1)(9). The weight to be given toany evidence shall be determined by the Court based

    7 Originally, Ms. Taitz indicated to the Court that she would

    offer the testimony of seven witnesses. However, during her

    closing argument, Ms. Taitz requested to testify. Ms. Taitz was

    sworn and began her testimony, but shortly thereafter, the

    Court requested that Ms. Taitz step-down and submit any

    further testimony in writing.

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    upon its reliability and probative value. Ga. Comp. R.

    & Regs. 616-1-2.18(10).

    The Court finds the testimony of the

    witnesses, as well as the exhibits tendered, to be of

    little, if any, probative value, and thus whollyinsufficient to support Plaintiffs' allegations.8 Ms.

    Taitz attempted to solicit expert testimony from

    several of the witnesses without qualifying or

    tendering the witnesses as experts. See Stephens v.

    State, 219 Ga. App. 881 (1996) (the unqualified

    testimony of the witness was not competent

    evidence). For example, two of Plaintiffs' witnesses

    testified that Mr. Obama's birth certificate was

    forged, but neither witness was properly qualified or

    tendered as an expert in birth records, forged

    documents or document manipulation. Another

    witness testified that she has concluded that the

    social security number Mr. Obama uses is

    fraudulent; however, her investigatory methods and

    her sources of information were not properly

    presented, and she was never qualified or tendered

    as an expert in social security fraud, or fraud

    investigations in general. Accordingly, the Court

    cannot make an objective threshold determination of

    these witnesses' testimony without adequate

    knowledge of their qualifications. See Knudsen v.Duffee-Freeman, Inc., 95 Ga. App. 872 (1957) (for the

    testimony of an expert witness to be received, his or

    her qualifications as such must be first proved).

    8The credibility of witnesses is within the sole discretion of the

    trier of fact. In non-jury cases that discretion lies with the

    judge. See Mustang Transp., Inc. v. W. W. Lowe & Sons, Inc.,

    123 Ga. App. 350, 352 (1971).

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    None of the testifying witnesses provided

    persuasive testimony. Moreover, the Court finds that

    none of the written submissions tendered by

    Plaintiffs have probative value. Given the

    unsatisfactory evidence presented by the Plaintiffs,

    the Court concludes that Plaintiffs' claims are notpersuasive.

    II. Application of the "Natural Born Citizen"

    Requirement

    Plaintiffs allege that President Barack Obama

    is not a natural born citizen of the United States and,

    therefore, is not eligible to run in Georgia's

    presidential primary election. As indicated supra, the

    United States Constitution states that "[n]o person

    except a natural born Citizen . . . shall be eligible for

    the Office of the President . . .9 U.S. Const. art. I, 1,

    cl. 5.

    For the purpose of this section's analysis, the

    following facts are considered: 1) Mr. Obama was

    born in the United States; 2) Mr. Obama's mother

    was a citizen of the United States at the time of his

    birth; and 3) Mr. Obama's father was never a United

    9 The definition of this clause has been the source of muchdebate. See, e.g., Gordon, Who Can Be President of the United

    States: The Unresolved Enigma, 28 Md. L. Rev. 1 (1968); Jill A.

    Pryor, Note, The Natural-Born Citizen Clause and Presidential

    Eligibility: An Approach for Resolving Two Hundred Years of

    Uncertainty, 97 Yale L.J. 881 (1988); Christina S. Lohman,

    Presidential Eligibility: The Meaning of the Natural-Born

    Citizen Clause, 36 Gonz. L. Rev. 349 (2000); William T. Han,

    Beyond Presidential Eligibility: The Natural Born Citizen

    Clause as a Source of Birthright Citizenship, 58 Drake L. Rev.

    457 (2010).

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    States citizen. Plaintiffs contend that, because his

    father was not a U.S. citizen at the time of his birth,

    Mr. Obama is constitutionally ineligible for the Office

    of the President of the United States. The Court does

    not agree.

    In 2009, the Indiana Court of Appeals

    ("Indiana Court") addressed facts and issues similar

    to those before this Court. Ankeny v. Governor, 916

    N.E.2d 678 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). In Ankeny, the

    plaintiffs sought to prevent certification of Mr.

    Obama as an eligible candidate for president because

    he is not a natural born citizen. Id. at 681. The

    plaintiffs argued, as the Plaintiffs argue before this

    Court, that "there's a very clear distinction between

    a 'citizen of the United States' and a 'natural born

    Citizen,' and the difference involves having [two]

    parents of U.S. citizenship, owing no foreign

    allegiance." Id. at 685. The Indiana Court rejected

    the argument that Mr. Obama was ineligible, stating

    that children born within the United States are

    natural born citizens, regardless of the citizenship of

    their parents. Id. at 688. This Court finds the

    decision and analysis ofAnkeny persuasive.

    The Indiana Court began its analysis by

    attempting to ascertain the definition of "naturalborn citizen" because the Constitution does not

    define the term. Id. at 685-86; See Minor v.

    Happersett, 88 U.S. 162, 167 (1875) ("The

    Constitution does not, in words, say who shall be

    natural born citizens. Resort must be had elsewhere

    to ascertain that"); see also United States v. Wong

    Kim Ark, 169 U.S. 649 (1898) (noting that the only

    mention of the term "natural born citizen" in the

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    Constitution is in Article II, and the term is not

    defined in the Constitution).

    The Indiana Court first explained that the

    U.S. Supreme Court has read the Fourteenth

    Amendment and Article II (natural born citizenprovision) in tandem and held that "new citizens may

    be born or they may be created by naturalization."

    Id. at 685 (citing Minor, 88 U.S. at 167); See U.S.

    Const. amend. XIV, 1. ("All persons born or

    naturalized in the United States and subject to the

    jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States

    . . . ."). In Minor, the Court observed that:

    At common-law, with the

    nomenclature of which the framers of

    the Constitution were familiar, it was

    never doubted that all children born in

    a country of parents who were its

    citizens became themselves, upon their

    birth, citizens also. These were natives,

    or natural-born citizens, as

    distinguished from aliens or foreigners.

    Some authorities go further and include

    as citizens children born within the

    jurisdiction without reference to the

    citizenship of their parents. As to thisclass there have been doubts, but never

    as to the first. For the purposes of this

    case it is not necessary to solve these

    doubts. Id. at 167-68.

    Plaintiffs ask this Court to read the Supreme

    Court's decision in Minor as defining natural born

    citizens as only "children born in a country of parents

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    who were its citizens." 88 U.S. at 167. However, the

    Indiana Court explains that Minor did not define the

    term natural born citizen. In deciding whether a

    woman was eligible to vote, the Minor Court merely

    concluded that children born in a country of parents

    who were its citizens would qualify as natural born,and this Court agrees. The Minor Court left open the

    issue of whether a child born within the United

    States of alien parent(s) is a natural born citizen.

    Next, the Indiana Court looked to United

    States v. Wong Kim Ark, in which the Supreme Court

    analyzed the meaning of the words "citizen of the

    United States" in the Fourteenth Amendment and

    "natural born citizen of the United States" in Article

    II to determine whether a child born in the United

    States to parents who, at the time of the child's birth,

    were subjects of China "becomes at the time of his

    birth a citizen of the United States, by virtue of the

    first clause of the fourteenth amendment . . ." Id. at

    686 (citing Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. at 653). The

    Indiana Court determined that the two provisions

    "must be interpreted in the light of the common law,

    the principles and history of which were familiarly

    known to the framers of the constitution." Id. (citing

    Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. at 654). The Indiana Court

    agreed that "[t]he interpretation of the constitutionof the United States is necessarily influenced by the

    fact that its provisions are framed in the language of

    the English common law, and are to be read in the

    light of its history." Id. (citing Wong Kim Ark, 169

    U.S. at 655) (internal citation omitted). The Wong

    Kim Ark Court extensively examined the common

    law of England in its decision and concluded that

    Wong Kim Ark, who was born in the United States to

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    alien parents, became a citizen of the United States

    at the time of his birth. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. at

    705.10

    10The Wong Kim Ark Court explained:

    The fundamental principle of the common law with

    regard to English nationality was birth within the allegiance,

    also called "ligealty," "obedience," "faith" or "power," of the

    King. The principle embraced all persons born within the King's

    allegiance and subject to his protection. Such allegiance and

    protection were mutual . . . and were not restricted to natural-

    born subjects and naturalized subjects, or to those who had

    taken an oath of allegiance; but were predicable of aliens in

    amity, so long as they were within the kingdom. Children, born

    in England, of such aliens, were therefore natural-born

    subjects. But the children, born within the realm, of foreignambassadors, or the children of alien enemies, born during and

    within their hostile occupation of part of the King's dominions,

    were not natural-born subjects, because not born within the

    allegiance, the obedience, or the power, or, as would be said at

    this day, within the jurisdiction of the King. 169 U.S. at 655.

    It thus clearly appears that by the law of England for

    the last three centuries, beginning before the settlement of this

    country, and continuing to the present day, aliens, while

    residing in the dominions possessed by the Crown of England,

    were within the allegiance, the obedience, the faith or loyalty,

    the protection, the power, the jurisdiction, of the English

    Sovereign; and therefore every child born in England of alienparents was a natural-born subject, unless the child of an

    ambassador or other diplomatic agent of a foreign State, or of

    an alien enemy in hostile occupation of the place where the

    child was born. Id. at 658. Further:

    Nothing is better settled at the common law than the

    doctrine that the children, even of aliens, born in a country,

    while the parents are resident there under the protection of the

    government, and owing a temporary allegiance thereto, are

    subjects by birth. Id. at 660 (quoting Inglis v. Trustees of

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    Relying on the language of the Constitution

    and the historical reviews and analyses ofMinor and

    Wong Kim Ark, the Indiana Court concluded that:

    persons born within the borders

    of the United States are "natural born

    citizens" for Article II, Section 1

    purposes, regardless of the citizenship

    of their parents. Just as a person born

    within the British dominions [was] a

    natural-born British subject at the time

    of the framing of the U.S. Constitution,

    so too were those "born in the allegiance

    Sailors' Snug Harbor, 28 U.S. (3 Pet.) 99, 164 (1830) (Story, J.,

    concurring)). And:

    The first section of the second article of the constitution

    uses the language, 'a natural-born citizen.' It thus assumes that

    citizenship may be acquired by birth. Undoubtedly, this

    language of the constitution was used in reference to that

    principle of public law, well understood in this country at the

    time of the adoption of the constitution, which referred

    citizenship to the place of birth. Id. at 662 (quoting Dred Scott

    v. Sanford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393, 576 (1856) (Curtis, J.,dissenting)).

    Finally:

    All persons born in the allegiance of the king are natural-born

    subjects, and all persons born in the allegiance of the United

    States are natural-born citizens. Birth and allegiance go

    together. Such is the rule of the common law, and it is the

    common law of this country, as well as of England. Id. at 662-63

    (quoting United States v. Rhodes, (1866) (Mr. Justice Swayne)).

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    of the United States natural-born

    citizens. 916 N.E.2d at 688.

    The Indiana Court determined that a person

    qualifies as a natural born citizen if he was born in

    the United States because he became a United Statescitizen at birth.11

    For the purposes of this analysis, this Court

    considered that President Barack Obama was born

    in the United States. Therefore, as discussed in

    Ankeny, he became a citizen at birth and is a natural

    born citizen.

    Accordingly,

    CONCLUSION

    President Barack Obama is eligible as a

    candidate for the presidential primary election under

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-5(b).

    SO ORDERED, February 3, 2012.

    MICHAEL M. MALIHI, Judge

    11 This Court recognizes that the Wong Kim Ark case was not

    deciding the meaning of "natural born citizen" for the purposes

    of determining presidential qualifications; however, this Court

    finds the Indiana Court's analysis and reliance on these cases to

    be persuasive.

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    Part E

    Constitutional Provisions Involved Article II

    1 Clause 5; Amendment I; Amendment XIV

    Article II 1 Clause 5:No person except a natural born citizen, or a

    citizen at the time of the adoption of this

    Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of

    President.

    Amendment I:

    Congress shall make no law respecting an

    establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free

    exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,

    or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably toassemble; and to petition the government for a

    redress of grievances.

    Amendment XIV 1:

    All persons born or naturalized in the United

    States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are

    citizens of the United States and of the State

    wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce

    any law which shall abridge the privileges or

    immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shallany State deprive any person of life, liberty, or

    property, without due process of law; nor deny to any

    person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of

    the laws.

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    Part F

    Statutory Provisions Involved O.C.G.A. 21-2-

    15 and 21-2-5

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-15:

    This chapter shall apply to any general or

    special election in this state to fill any federal, state,

    county, or municipal office, to any general or special

    primary to nominate candidates for any such office,

    and to any federal, state, county, or municipal

    election or primary for any other purpose

    whatsoever, unless otherwise provided.

    O.C.G.A. 21-2-5:

    Qualifications of candidates for federal and

    state office; determination of qualifications

    (a) Every candidate for federal and state office who is

    certified by the state executive committee of a

    political party or who files a notice of candidacy shall

    meet the constitutional and statutory qualifications

    for holding the office being sought.

    (b) The Secretary of State upon his or her own

    motion may challenge the qualifications of any

    candidate at any time prior to the election of suchcandidate. Within two weeks after the deadline for

    qualifying, any elector who is eligible to vote for a

    candidate may challenge the qualifications of the

    candidate by filing a written complaint with the

    Secretary of State giving the reasons why the elector

    believes the candidate is not qualified to seek and

    hold the public office for which he or she is offering.

    Upon his or her own motion or upon a challenge

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    being filed, the Secretary of State shall notify the

    candidate in writing that his or her qualifications are

    being challenged and the reasons therefore and shall

    advise the candidate that he or she is requesting a

    hearing on the matter before an administrative law

    judge of the Office of State Administrative Hearingspursuant to Article 2 of Chapter 13 of Title 50 and

    shall inform the candidate of the date, time, and

    place of the hearing when such information becomes

    available. The administrative law judge shall report

    his or her findings to the Secretary of State.

    (c) The Secretary of State shall determine if the

    candidate is qualified to seek and hold the public

    office for which such candidate is offering. If the

    Secretary of State determines that the candidate is

    not qualified, the Secretary of State shall withhold

    the name of the candidate from the ballot or strike

    such candidate's name from the ballot if the ballots

    have been printed. If there is insufficient time to

    strike the candidate's name or reprint the ballots, a

    prominent notice shall be placed at each affected

    polling place advising voters of the disqualification of

    the candidate and all votes cast for such candidate

    shall be void and shall not be counted.

    (d) In the event that a candidate pays his or herqualifying fee with a check that is subsequently

    returned for insufficient funds, the Secretary of State

    shall automatically find that such candidate has not

    met the qualifications for holding the office being

    sought, unless the bank, credit union, or other

    financial institution returning the check certifies in

    writing by an officer's or director's oath that the

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    bank, credit union, or financial institution erred in

    returning the check.

    (e) The elector filing the challenge or the candidate

    challenged shall have the right to appeal the decision

    of the Secretary of State by filing a petition in theSuperior Court of Fulton County within ten days

    after the entry of the final decision by the Secretary

    of State. The filing of the petition shall not itself stay

    the decision of the Secretary of State; however, the

    reviewing court may order a stay upon appropriate

    terms for good cause shown. As soon as possible after

    service of the petition, the Secretary of State shall

    transmit the original or a certified copy of the entire

    record of the proceedings under review to the

    reviewing court. The review shall be conducted by

    the court without a jury and shall be confined to the

    record. The court shall not substitute its judgment

    for that of the Secretary of State as to the weight of

    the evidence on questions of fact. The court may

    affirm the decision or remand the case for further

    proceedings. The court may reverse or modify the

    decision if substantial rights of the appellant have

    been prejudiced because the findings, inferences,

    conclusions, or decisions of the Secretary of State

    are:

    (1) In violation of the Constitution or laws of this

    state;

    (2) In excess of the statutory authority of the

    Secretary of State;

    (3) Made upon unlawful procedures;

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    (4) Affected by other error of law;

    (5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable,

    probative, and substantial evidence on the whole

    record; or

    (6) Arbitrary or capricious or characterized by an

    abuse of discretion or a clearly unwarranted exercise

    of discretion.

    An aggrieved party may obtain a review of any

    final judgment of the superior court by the Court of

    Appeals or the Supreme Court, as provided by law.

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