Justices have until April 1 to decide whether the proposal โ bankrolled by the stateโs largest medical-marijuana operator, Trulieve โ should go before voters in November 2024.
The case also could have broader implications for attempts to change the Florida Constitution, Wednesdayโs arguments indicated.
Lawyers for Attorney General Ashley Moodyโs office and the Florida Chamber of Commerce argued that the proposed marijuana amendment would be misleading to voters and fails to address a single subject as required under state law.
But an attorney representing Smart & Safe Florida, a political committee backing the proposal, said the courtโs own โroadmapโ was used to draft the measure.
Jeffrey DeSousa, chief deputy solicitor general in Moodyโs office, said Florida law requires proposed amendments to be โclear and unambiguous.โ
โThe attorney general opposes ballot placement because we think, in several ways, this ballot summary is misleading,โ DeSousa told the justices.
DeSousa pointed to a part of the proposal that says the stateโs currently licensed operators, known as medical marijuana treatment centers, โand other state licensed entitiesโ would be allowed to participate in the industry.
The summary doesnโt explain that the Legislature would have to create a process for more โentitiesโ to join the market, he argued.
โWhatโs really going on here is that the ballot summary is playing on a desire of voters to see greater competition in the marketplace. There have been public complaints that the market is monopolized and thereby raising prices,โ DeSousa said.
But Chief Justice Carlos Muniz pressed him on the issue.
โIf you read it literally, what itโs telling people is that there might be two entities licensed in the state other than these medical marijuana treatment centers. โฆ Is that really relative to the competitive landscape?โ Muniz asked.
He asked DeSousa to โwalk through the thought processโ of a voter.
โIโm in there and I think the idea of allowing recreational use is good, but I would vote no because the Legislature might not authorize entities other than MMTCs (medical marijuana treatment centers) to sell? I mean, who are you trying to protect?โ Muniz asked.
DeSousa said โsome subset of votersโ who are โapathetic about recreational marijuana useโ would โlike to see more competition in the marketplace โฆ and so theyโll support it under the idea that this will lower prices there.โ
The state lawyer also focused on part of the ballot summary that says the proposal โapplies to Florida law; does not change, or immunize violations of, federal law.โ DeSousa argued that is misleading because it doesnโt specify that marijuana remains illegal under federal law.
โI think that it is a very easy circumstance for voters to be confused about this,โ DeSousa said.
But Justice John Couriel pushed back.
โHelp me understand what this does to inject confusion,โ he said.
โBecause it uses the word โallowsโโฆโโ DeSousa began..
โCome on. It says it applies to Florida law,โ the justice interrupted. โWe canโt not read the context of the whole statement. โฆ I mean, come on. Whereโs the hidden ball? It says on the face of this that it applies to Florida law.โ
DeSousa said โthere is at least ambiguityโ in the ballot summary.
Justice Charles Canady also weighed in.
โI donโt know how a voter, when it says, โdoes not immunize violations of federal law,โ how a voter could be confused by that. Iโm baffled by the argument,โ Canady said.
Samuel Salario, an attorney for the Florida Chamber, also faced questions. The business group has a long history of opposing proposed ballot initiatives and has backed efforts making it more difficult to amend the Constitution.
โThe Constitution is not the place for impulsive policy change. Legislation on tough questions is the constitutional province of the Legislature,โ Salario said.
He said the proposal violates a requirement that amendments address only a single subject because it would both โimmunize sanctionsโ for marijuana use and give the stateโs current medical-marijuana operators โeffective regulatory captureโ over the cannabis market. But the argument drew pushback.
โIf a measure is to have a oneness of purpose under our case law, does that mean that it can never, with one change to the organic law of the state, both permit something or remove penalties for something without speaking to the market implications of that?โ Couriel asked.
โIโm not suggesting that,โ Salario conceded.
Canady probed further.
โYour fundamental position here is that this is just not a proper subject for the initiative process โฆ Thereโs really no way that the citizens could act in this arena through the initiative process, effectively,โ Canady said. โSay their primary purpose is to have the commercial sale of marijuana for personal use โฆ Is there any way they could accomplish that effectively in your view?โ
โI think that if you are talking about an amendment that would combine the decriminalization or legalization โฆ,โ Salario began.
โSo they couldnโt,โ Canady interrupted.
โThey are distinct ideas that are not connected,โ Salario said.
โIt seems like this is turning the single-subject requirement into not anything other than a straightjacket,โ Canady responded.
John Bash, an attorney who represents the Smart & Safe political committee, told the justices that โcommercial sales go hand-in-hand with possession.โ
The amendmentโs sponsors โdid a conscientious jobโ of relying on the courtโs own โroadmapโ in recent marijuana-related rulings, Bash argued, noting that the court has been reluctant to strike ballot initiatives over the years.
โIf there was ever a case not to do it, itโs the one where the ballot sponsor looked at the courtโs precedents, tried to follow them scrupulously and even adopted the language that this court said is the roadmap,โ Bash said.
He also said voters will have an understanding of what the proposed amendment would do and know that the โfederal proscription on marijuana is not at issue here.โ
The questions from the conservative court โ which includes five justices appointed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, who opposes the proposal โ appeared to buoy proponents of the measure.
โIt appears that at least some members of the court believe the analysis advanced by the Attorney Generalโs Office and the Florida Chamber of Commerce constrain the citizensโ amendment process to the point that no proposal could ever reach the ballot,โ attorney John Lockwood, who represents cannabis companies but is not involved in the Supreme Court case, told The News Service of Florida in an email.
This article appears in 11-02-2023.

