                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                                 NO. 2016-M-01072-SCT

RICKY W. WARD

v.

DOROTHY WINSTON COLOM


DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           11/18/2011
TRIAL JUDGES:                               HON. DOROTHY WINSTON COLOM
                                            HON. KENNETH M. BURNS
                                            HON. H. J. DAVIDSON, JR.
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  LOWNDES COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER:                    THOMAS E. PAYNE
FOR RESPONDENTS:                            DOROTHY WINSTON COLOM
                                            KENNETH M. BURNS
                                            H. J. DAVIDSON, JR.
NATURE OF THE CASE:                         MISCELLANEOUS
DISPOSITION:                                VACATED - 06/07/2018
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

       EN BANC.

       RANDOLPH, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    In 2011, the Mississippi Legislature amended Mississippi Code Section 97-37-7,

granting enhanced concealed-carry licensees the privilege of carrying a concealed firearm

in the courthouses of this state, save for courtrooms, which the Legislature left within the

province of judges.1 Litigants, witnesses, and family members who do not have enhanced


       1
         The statute explicitly prohibits firearm possession in a courtroom “during a judicial
proceeding,” but also states that “[t]his section shall in no way interfere with the right of a
trial judge to restrict the carrying of firearms in the courtroom.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-37-
7(2) (Rev. 2014) (emphasis added).
concealed-carry licenses are subject to the general ban found in Mississippi Code Section 97-

37-1 (Rev. 2014), which makes carrying a concealed weapon illegal for persons without

enhanced concealed-carry licenses. Nonetheless, the three chancellors of the Fourteenth

Chancery District, on their own motion, issued a court order prohibiting enhanced concealed-

carry licensees from possessing a firearm in and around courthouse buildings of the

Fourteenth District.

¶2.       Thereafter, Ricky Ward, an enhanced concealed-carry licensee, filed a petition to

modify or dismiss the order. The chancellors issued another order denying Ward’s petition

and reiterated that enhanced concealed-carry licensees would be prohibited from possessing

a firearm in all Fourteenth District courthouses. Ward then filed an Extraordinary Writ of

Prohibition in this Court, seeking to have the orders vacated as unconstitutional and in direct

conflict with state law.

¶3.       This Court ordered additional briefing, requesting the parties to address the following

issues:

          (1) What is the authority of judges to exercise control over security issues
          beyond the four walls of the courtroom itself?

          (2) Whether the judiciary has the inherent authority to exercise control of
          security extending beyond the four walls of a courtroom.

          (3) Whether Mississippi Code Section 97-37-7(2) prohibits judges from
          controlling courthouse security. Specifically, what is the definition of
          “courtrooms during a judicial proceeding,” and does that definition either
          allow or prohibit judges from exercising control of security beyond the four
          walls of a specific courtroom while court is in session?




                                                 2
       (4) If Mississippi Code Section 97-37-7(2) does prohibit judges from
       exercising control over courthouse security, whether it violates the separation
       of powers doctrine.

¶4.    The Attorney General, National Rifle Association, Attorney Virgil Gillespie, and

Chancellor James Persons2 also filed briefs.

¶5.    Having considered the law and arguments offered by the aforementioned, the Court

finds that the orders are facially unconstitutional. Furthermore, the orders defy existing

Mississippi statutory and caselaw. Accordingly, the orders are vacated. They are nullius

juris–of no legal force.3

       I.       The orders defy the Mississippi Constitution.

¶6.    Article 1, Sections 1 and 2 of the Mississippi Constitution establish clear lines of

demarcation among the three branches of government.          Section 1 establishes that the

executive, legislative, and judicial branches of our state government are separate and co-

equal: “The powers of the government of the State of Mississippi shall be divided into three

distinct departments, and each of them confided to a separate magistracy, to-wit: those which

are legislative to one, those which are judicial to another, and those which are executive to

another.” Section 2 provides that no person belonging to one of those departments “shall

exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others.” In other words, when the

executive branch or legislative branch has been properly delegated a power, the judiciary is

without authority to assume that power.


       2
        Nine other chancellors and the Conference of Circuit Judges joined Chancellor
Persons’s brief.
       3
           Nullius juris, Black’s Law Dictionary 1217 (Rev. 4th ed. 1968).

                                               3
¶7.    One of the clearest delegations of legislative power in our Constitution is found in

Article 3, Section 12. It provides: “The right of every citizen to keep and bear arms in

defense of his home, person, or property, or in aid of the civil power when thereto legally

summoned, shall not be called in question, but the Legislature may regulate or forbid

carrying concealed weapons.” (Emphasis added.) Without equivocation, the Legislature is

the branch of government that the citizens of Mississippi chose to regulate or forbid

concealed weapons.

¶8.    A plain reading of these provisions in our Constitution renders the orders

unconstitutional on their face, for “no set of circumstances exists under which the [orders]

would be valid.” U.S. v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745, 107 S. Ct. 2095, 2100, 95 L. Ed. 2d

697 (1987). “[T]he key to a successful facial challenge . . . is whether [the orders], as [they

are] currently written, could never be constitutionally applied and valid.” Crook v. City of

Madison, 168 So. 3d 930, 942 (Miss. 2015) (Coleman, J., dissenting) (emphasis in original).

Applying this standard to the present case, the chancellors’ orders, as they currently are

written, could never be constitutional.      The Mississippi Constitution vests only the

Legislature with the authority to regulate or forbid carrying concealed weapons. The orders

at issue usurp that power.

¶9.    Notwithstanding the clarity of our Constitution and the statute, the chancellors urge

this Court to approve their actions as an “inherent power,” despite the orders reaching beyond

the Constitution. The chancellors cite Newell v. State, 308 So. 2d 71, 72 (Miss. 1975), and

Hosford v. State, 525 So. 2d 789 (Miss. 1988).



                                              4
¶10.   While Newell establishes Mississippi courts’ “inherent power,” it clearly holds such

power is limited by the Constitution and separation-of-powers doctrine. See Newell, 308 So.

2d at 76-77 (holding the Court’s inherent powers emanate from the separation-of-powers

doctrine in the Constitution, but also holding that “[t]he phrase ‘judicial power’ in [S]ection

144 of the Constitution includes the power to make rules of practice and procedure, not

inconsistent with the Constitution . . . .”) (emphasis added). A review of the Mississippi

Constitution, the Code, and caselaw reveals that judges do not have “inherent power” to

control security beyond their courtrooms or to regulate concealed weapons outside their

courtrooms.    These powers are nonexistent, for there simply is no language in our

Constitution that grants courts such power, and “this Court must declare the Mississippi

Constitution as it is written . . . .” In Re Hooker, 87 So. 3d 401, 423 (Miss. 2012)

(Randolph, P.J., dissenting). Turning to the separation-of-powers doctrine, the Constitution

specifically vests the Legislature with authority to regulate concealed weapons. The judicial

branch therefore is without constitutional authority to exercise that power, for it properly

belongs to the Legislature, as mandated by our Constitution. Miss. Const. art. 1, § 2.

¶11.   The chancellors next argue that Hosford provides validity to the orders. Hosford, 525

So. 2d at 789. In Hosford, a trial judge petitioned this Court for direction regarding how to

handle external noise affecting trial court proceedings.          Id. at 797.    Examining the

Constitution and state law, this Court held that it is the statutory duty of boards of supervisors

and the sheriff to provide adequate court facilities and security for each county. Id. The

Hosford Court held that if, and only if, either the board of supervisors, sheriff, or the



                                                5
Legislature fail in their constitutional and statutory obligations to enable the judicial branch

to operate, then, and only then, can “the Judicial branch [have] the authority as well as the

duty to see that courts do not atrophy.” Hosford, 525 So. 2d at 798. The record reveals that

no such claim has been advanced in this case.

¶12.   In a unanimous4 opinion penned just three years ago by this Court, we expressly

rejected a similar attempt by a circuit judge. Lewis v. Hinds Cty. Circuit Court, 158 So. 3d

1117, 1119 (Miss. 2015). In Lewis, this Court was presented with a dispute between the

Hinds County Sheriff and the Hinds County Circuit Court that arose from another local court

order, which attempted to prescribe several requirements on the sheriff, sheriff’s deputies,

and bailiffs by which to abide in carrying out their statutory duties. Id. at 1125-26. The

Hinds County order contained sections which addressed the hours, uniform, discipline, and

duties of bailiffs, inter alia. Id. One section of the order stated that “the sheriff must

establish a discipline for the security and maintenance of the court that must be approved by

the court . . . .” Id. at 1125 (emphasis added). Applying the aforementioned constitutional

separation-of-powers principles, this Court held that, under Article 5, Section 135 of the

Mississippi Constitution, “[t]he sheriff is a member of the executive branch of government,”

and is ‘“the executive officer of the circuit and chancery court of his county.”’ Id. at 1124

(citing multiple authorities). We further held that, under Mississippi Code Section 19-25-69

(Rev. 2012), “the Legislature has given the sheriff the duties of protecting the courthouse.”

Id. at 1123. Because the order required judges to approve security measures—a statutory

       4
        Justice Coleman wrote for the unanimous Court, joined by Chief Justice Waller,
Presiding Justices Randolph and Kitchens, and Justice King.

                                               6
duty of the executive branch—this Court found that section “to be void in full” because it

completely contradicted statutory law. Id. at 1126.

¶13.   Lewis established that the judiciary is without “inherent power” to exercise control

of security extending beyond the courtroom, as ‘“[n]o . . . governmental official[] can

exercise power beyond their constitutional authority.”’ Id. at 1124-25 (quoting Barbour v.

State ex rel. Hood, 974 So. 2d 232, 239 (Miss. 2008)) (citations omitted). By striking the

aforementioned section of the Hinds County order, this Court held that the judiciary’s

authority to control security begins and ends at the courtroom door. Any attempt by the

judiciary to assume or exercise control over the statutory responsibilities of the executive

branch is void.

       II.    The orders defy statutory law.

¶14.   Pursuant to its constitutional authority, the Legislature amended Mississippi Code

Section 97-37-7(2) authorizing certain categories of people,5 including enhanced concealed-

carry licensees, to carry a concealed pistol in courthouses6 except in courtrooms7 during a

judicial proceeding, so long as they also (1) meet specific requirements under Mississippi




       5
        The statute encompasses law enforcement officers, investigators for the Attorney
General, judges, and Department of Corrections officers, inter alia.
       6
       Courthouse: “1. A building housing judicial courts. 2. A building housing county
government offices.” Webster’s II New College Dictionary 260 (2001).
       7
         Courtroom: “A room in which the proceedings of a court of law are held.”
Webster’s II New College Dictionary at 260. Justice Chamberlin’s special concurrence
opines that proceedings of a court of law may require more than one room.

                                             7
Code Section 45-9-101 (Rev. 2015)8 and (2) have voluntarily completed an instructional

course in the safe handling and use of firearms. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-37-7(2) (Rev. 2014).9

The statute specifically exempts “courtrooms during a judicial proceeding,” and further states

that “[t]his section shall in no way interfere with the right of a trial judge to restrict the

carrying of firearms in the courtroom.” Id. (emphasis added).

¶15.   “In considering a statute passed by the Legislature, . . . the first question a court

should decide is whether the statute is ambiguous. If it is not ambiguous, the court should

simply apply the statute according to its plain meaning and should not use principles of

statutory construction.” Barbour, 974 So. 2d at 240 (internal citations omitted) (quoting

Miss. Dep’t of Transp. v. Allred, 928 So. 2d 152, 154 (Miss. 2006)) (citation omitted). In

deciding the first question, as we must, there is simply no ambiguity in Section 97-37-7:


       8
          The statute provides that the Department of Public Safety shall issue a license if the
applicant meets the training requirement set forth in Section 97-37-7, certain age and
residency requirements, and: (1) does not suffer from a physical infirmity which prevents
the safe handling of a firearm; (2) is not ineligible to possess a firearm by virtue of a felony
conviction; (3) does not chronically and habitually abuse controlled substances; (4) does not
chronically and habitually use alcoholic beverages; (5) has not been adjudicated as mentally
incompetent, or has waited five years since a court’s restoration of his capacity; (6) has not
been voluntarily or involuntarily committed to a mental institution or mental health treatment
facility, unless a psychiatrist issues a certificate that the applicant has not suffered from the
disability for five years; (7) has not had adjudication of guilt withheld or sentence suspended
on any felony unless three years have elapsed since probation or conditions set by the court
have been fulfilled; (8) is not a fugitive from justice; and (9) is not disqualified to possess
a weapon based on federal law.
       9
         The privilege to carry a concealed weapon into a courthouse is not conferred on
every gun-permit holder, much less every citizen of our state. The authority to carry in
courthouses impacts only the individuals who have demonstrated that they are trained in the
handling of weapons, are physically and mentally fit to possess and operate a firearm, and
have proven that they have not committed a felony. The rights of enhanced-carry holders are
at the center of the controversy before the Court.

                                               8
enhanced concealed-carry licensees may possess a concealed weapon in a courthouse, except

in courtrooms, which the Legislature left within the province of judges.

¶16.   Courts must enforce the law “unless it appears beyond all reasonable doubt to violate

the Constitution.” Tunica Cty. v. Town of Tunica, 227 So. 3d 1007, 1015 (Miss. 2017)

(quoting Pathfinder Coach Div. of Superior Coach Corp. v. Cottrell, 216 Miss. 358, 62 So.

2d 383, 385 (Miss. 1953)) (emphasis in original). The parties have failed to prove beyond

a reasonable doubt that Mississippi Code Section 97-37-7 is unconstitutional. Id. The

“inherent power” of Mississippi courts, which is limited by our Constitution, lends no

support to the dissenting justices’ opinions that the statute is unconstitutional. See Newell,

308 So. 2d at 76-77; see also Spec. Conc. ¶ 22 (Maxwell, J.). Thus, we are duty-bound to

enforce the law as written. Applying a plain reading of Section 97-37-7 to the orders at issue,

the chancellors effectively repealed a statute as applied to the seven courthouses of the

Fourteenth Judicial District, which is, ipso facto, a violation of Mississippi law. See Lewis,

158 So. 3d at 1125 (“[C]ourt[s] may not issue orders that contradict statutory law. . . .”)

       III.   Conclusion

¶17.   The chancellors may have good and noble intentions, and their concerns are well-

founded. However, their personal fears and opinions do not trump, and cannot negate,

constitutional guarantees. The ultimate outcome of today’s issue is reserved for the

Legislature, not to be commandeered by unilateral local judicial proclamations. Courts must

give more than lip service to the rule of law; they must insist upon its lawful application.

Judges cannot allow their sense of superior knowledge, perceptions, or understandings to



                                              9
justify open defiance of the very laws that they are called upon to uphold. Indeed, we have

held repeatedly that courts are guardians of the Constitution,10 not guardians of the

courthouse. Without question, the orders defy existing law and seek to exercise a power that

plainly is reserved for the other branches of government. The orders contain no authority

to suggest otherwise. The law of Mississippi is clear: enhanced-carry licensees are permitted

to possess a firearm in courthouses. No matter how well-intentioned, judges are without the

power to limit enhanced concealed-carry licensees’ right to carry a firearm beyond

courtrooms in the State of Mississippi. The orders are vacated.

¶18.   VACATED.

       COLEMAN, MAXWELL, CHAMBERLIN AND ISHEE, JJ., CONCUR.
MAXWELL, J., SPECIALLY CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION
JOINED BY RANDOLPH, P.J., COLEMAN, CHAMBERLIN AND ISHEE, JJ.
CHAMBERLIN, J., SPECIALLY CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN
OPINION JOINED BY RANDOLPH, P.J., MAXWELL AND ISHEE, JJ.; WALLER,
C.J., AND BEAM, J., JOIN IN PART. WALLER, C.J., CONCURS IN PART AND
DISSENTS IN PART WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY BEAM,
J. BEAM, J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART WITH SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY WALLER, C.J. KING, J., DISSENTS WITH
SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY KITCHENS, P.J.; WALLER, C.J.,
AND BEAM, J., JOIN IN PART.

       MAXWELL, JUSTICE, SPECIALLY CONCURRING:

¶19.   I agree with the majority that, while certainly well-meaning, the chancellors’ orders

prohibiting enhanced concealed-carry licensees from possessing firearms in courthouses of




       10
          Legislature of State v. Shipman, 170 So. 3d 1211, 1226 (Miss. 2015) (Randolph,
P.J., concurring in part and in result); In re Hooker, 87 So. 3d 401, 411 (Miss. 2012); Hall
v. State, 539 So. 2d 1338, 1349 (Miss. 1989) (Hawkins, J., dissenting); Ex parte Wren, 63
Miss. 512, 535 (Miss. 1886).

                                             10
the Fourteenth District are overly broad and facially unconstitutional as applied. Thus, we

have no option but to vacate them.

¶20.   Article 3, Section 12 of Mississippi’s Constitution is crystal clear. Its text expressly

delegates to the Legislature the authority to regulate concealed weapons:

       The right of every citizen to keep and bear arms in defense of his home,
       person, or property, or in aid of the civil power when thereto legally
       summoned, shall not be called in question, but the Legislature may regulate
       or forbid carrying concealed weapons.

Miss. Const. art. 3, § 12 (emphasis added).

¶21.   Whether by wisdom or folly, Mississippi’s Legislature has exercised its express

constitutional power to authorize a small class of concealed-carry licensees to possess

firearms in non-courtroom areas of courthouses. While I understand and share some of the

chancellors’ concerns, neither my own personal observations or experiences, nor those of

others, trump express constitutional authority.

¶22.   I do, however, emphasize that our judiciary has inherent constitutional authority to

secure its courtrooms. But the orders here broadly apply to non-judicial hallways, rooms, and

offices located within the District’s courthouses—areas that by no definition qualify as

courtrooms. Further, to the extent the dissenting justices rely on inherent-authority cases

from other jurisdictions, they fail to acknowledge a glaring difference between the

constitutions of those states and Mississippi’s. That prominent distinction is that not one of

the cited states has a constitutional provision like Mississippi’s—a constitutional provision

that expressly authorizes the Legislature to regulate the concealed carry of firearms.




                                              11
     RANDOLPH, P.J., COLEMAN, CHAMBERLIN AND ISHEE, JJ., JOIN THIS
OPINION.

       CHAMBERLIN, JUSTICE, SPECIALLY CONCURRING:

¶23.   I agree with the analysis of the majority and its ultimate holding that the Mississippi

Constitution and the doctrine of separation of powers require nullification of the orders in

question. However, as the Legislature clearly recognized, judges are in control of their

courtrooms. Courtrooms (while in session) are specifically excluded from the legislation.

¶24.   A courtroom is not always an easily defined structure. Judges must have discretion

in defining the courtroom (i.e., judges’ chambers, witness rooms, jury rooms, etc.). Further,

the design of some courthouses may still require jurors to exit the main courtroom and travel

through a public hallway to the jury room. The same applies to witness rooms. A judge

certainly has the right to deem these areas to be part of the courtroom while court is in

session.

¶25.   Though not specifically before us, as set forth in Hosford, judges may have the

authority to step outside of the courtroom limitation where the facts of a specific case so

warrant. Hosford v. State, 525 So. 2d 789, 797–98 (Miss. 1988). This might include issues

such as gang-related trials or highly emotional circumstances such as those involving crimes

against children. This is allowed only upon specific findings of such exigent circumstances.

¶26.   However, the orders at issue today are merely blanket orders that overstep the

authority of the judges and attempt to negate the constitutionally backed legislation. Remote

hallways and nonjudicial offices certainly are not courtrooms under any definition of the

word. I, therefore, specially concur.


                                             12
    RANDOLPH, P.J., MAXWELL AND ISHEE, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
WALLER, C.J., AND BEAM, J., JOIN THIS OPINION IN PART.

     WALLER, CHIEF JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING
IN PART:

¶27.   The trial judges in this State possess the inherent, constitutional authority to secure

their courtrooms for the fair, efficient, and independent administration of justice. However,

because the subject order is facially overly broad, I would vacate the trial-court order without

prejudice for the trial judges to enter specific detailed analysis in a modified order supporting

gun-carrying restrictions beyond the courtroom for the security of the courtroom.

¶28.   “The judicial power of the State shall be vested in a Supreme Court and such other

courts as are provided for in this Constitution.” Miss. Const. art. 6, § 144. The “judicial

power” has roots in the common law. Yazoo & M.V.R. Co. v. Scott, 108 Miss. 871, 67 So.

491, 494 (1915) (“[A] court possesses certain inherent powers being derived from the

common law.”). One such common-law power is the authority of trial judges over their

courtrooms. Lewis v. Hinds Cty. Circuit Court, 158 So. 3d 1117, 1125 (Miss. 2015) (“We

hold that courts have inherent power over their courtrooms . . . .”); see also United States v.

Spellissy, 374 F. App’x 898, 900 (11th Cir. 2010) (“Courts have inherent powers derived

from common law that assist in exercising their enumerated judicial powers, such as

managing their cases and courtrooms.”). As a corollary, a trial court’s authority over its

courtroom may necessarily extend to areas adjacent to the courtroom, required to secure the

courtroom itself.




                                               13
¶29.   This Court has not been called upon to answer the exact question of a trial court’s

inherent authority to regulate firearms within the courtroom, but other states have. In New

Hampshire, the legislature enacted a statute that provided, “[n]otwithstanding any other rule,

regulation or order to the contrary, law enforcement officers shall be permitted to wear

firearms in any courtroom in the state.” State v. LaFrance, 124 N.H. 171, 175, 471 A.2d 340,

341 (1983) (emphasis omitted). Pursuant to a local policy, the trial court prohibited an officer

from wearing his firearm into the courtroom. Id. The New Hampshire Supreme Court upheld

the trial court’s action, holding that “it is clear that trial judges, subject to our review, have

authority under the judicial power of the constitution to control the wearing of firearms in

the courtroom.” Id. at 182. Similarly, the Supreme Court of Alaska has observed that courts

have the “inherent authority to control, prohibit or direct the possession of firearms on court

premises.” State v. Alaska Pub. Emp. Ass’n, 644 P.2d 236, 238 n.1 (Alaska 1982).

¶30.   I do not view a trial court’s inherent authority to secure the courtroom expansively.

This is a factually intensive analysis that depends, in part, on the physical characteristics of

the spaces surrounding the courtroom. Factors to be reviewed may include, for example, the

number of doors in the courthouse and courtroom, how the public enters the courtroom and

courthouse, how the judge’s chambers are accessed, how prisoners with court appearances

are admitted into the courtroom and where they are held prior to and after court appearances,

where witness rooms and jury-deliberation rooms are located in relation to the courtroom,

and, finally, whether security resources exist to provide the required physical and electronic

security in view of the number of doors and physical layout of the courthouse. Stated



                                               14
differently, a trial court may impose only those measures that are necessary to secure the

courtroom and the efficient disposition of judicial business conducted therein. Hosford v.

State, 525 So. 2d 789, 797 (Miss. 1988).

¶31.   This application of inherent authority comports with the understanding of judicial

power throughout the states. See Ex parte City of Birmingham, 134 Ala. 609, 616, 33 So.

13, 15 (1902) (“[E]very court of record [h]as inherent power, irrespective of statute, to make

rules for the regulation and transaction of its business . . . .”); State ex rel. Finley v. Pfeiffer,

163 Ohio St. 149, 154, 126 N.E.2d 57, 61 (1955) (“Assuredly, a court of general jurisdiction

has great inherent power to acquire and control the ordinary facilities [that] are essential to

secure and safeguard the free and untrammeled exercise of its functions.”); State v.

Wadsworth, 139 Wash. 2d 724, 741, 991 P.2d 80, 90 (2000) (“Under the inherent powers of

the courts, the judiciary has authority to administer justice and to ensure the safety of court

personnel, litigants and the public.”). As the United States Supreme Court has observed:

       It has long been understood that “[c]ertain implied powers must necessarily
       result to our Courts of justice from the nature of their institution,” powers
       “which cannot be dispensed with in a Court, because they are necessary to the
       exercise of all others.” United States v. Hudson, 7 Cranch 32, 34, 3 L. Ed. 259
       (1812); see also Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 764, 100 S.
       Ct. 2455, 2463, 65 L. Ed. 2d 488 (1980) (citing Hudson). For this reason,
       “Courts of justice are universally acknowledged to be vested, by their very
       creation, with power to impose silence, respect, and decorum, in their
       presence, and submission to their lawful mandates.” Anderson v. Dunn, 6
       Wheat. 204, 227, 5 L. Ed. 242 (1821); see also Ex parte Robinson, 19 Wall.
       505, 510, 22 L. Ed. 205 (1874). These powers are “governed not by rule or
       statute but by the control necessarily vested in courts to manage their own
       affairs so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.” Link
       v. Wabash R.R. Co., 370 U.S. 626, 630–631, 82 S. Ct. 1386, 1388–1389, 8 L.
       Ed. 2d 734 (1962).



                                                 15
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 43, 111 S. Ct. 2123, 2132, 115 L. Ed. 2d 27 (1991).

¶32.   In accordance with these well-established principles, the trial courts of this State have

the inherent authority to prohibit firearms as necessary to secure their courtrooms. In the

statute at issue, the Legislature impliedly recognizes this power of the trial courts: “This

section shall in no way interfere with the right of a trial judge to restrict the carrying of

firearms in the courtroom.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-37-7(2) (Rev. 2014) (emphasis added).

This power, of necessity, cannot be a bright line at the courtroom door. There are more than

ninety-two courthouses scattered throughout our eighty-two counties.11 Our Supreme Court

courtroom has a modern design with secure access for judges and court personnel, electronic

monitors, and one, easily controlled public entrance into the courtroom. A bright-line rule

without regard to the physical design of the courtroom as it is situated in the courthouse

limits the judicial power of the courts over their courtrooms, and therefore, Section 97-37-

7(2), as applied by the majority, violates the separation of powers under our Constitution.

Miss. Const. art. 1, § 1; see also Newell v. State, 308 So. 2d 71, 76 (Miss. 1975).12




       11
          The number ninety-two is based on the presence of at least one courthouse in every
county and two for the ten counties with two judicial districts. Many counties have separate
courthouses for circuit and chancery courts. The Amite County Courthouse appears to be the
oldest courthouse still in use, having been built between 1839 and 1841. National Park
Services, https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/42cc1802-b7b2-4e6d-96c2-71d7a112cd62
(last visited June 6, 2018).
       12
         This bright-line rule set out in the majority opinion would restrict a trial judge from
directing additional secured spaces outside the courtroom for high-profile cases such as De
La Beckwith v. State, 707 So. 2d 547 (Miss. 1997), and Killen v. State, 958 So. 2d 172
(Miss. 2007).

                                              16
¶33.   As the order under review is facially overbroad, particularly as to the courthouse

premises, I would vacate the subject order without prejudice, giving the trial judges an

opportunity to enter a specific detailed analysis in a modified order to show why gun-carrying

restrictions past the courtroom are necessary to provide minimally adequate security for the

courtroom.

       BEAM, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.

       BEAM, JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART:

¶34.   The majority’s holding today that judges are without authority to control the security

outside their courtrooms renders a sad day for justice in Mississippi. I have witnessed first-

hand the volatility that embodies the courthouse in situations where emotions are running

high in even the most reasonable and steadfast citizens among us. Knowing that litigants,

witnesses, and court participants are secure in the sacred halls of the courthouse is imperative

to assure “justice for all.”

¶35.   I agree with Justice King that the chancery court’s order is an appropriate exercise of

inherent judicial authority, and that Section 97-37-7(2) as applied to the courts violates the

separation of powers. However, I agree with Chief Justice Waller that extending a

prohibition on firearms out into the parking lot (within 200 feet of any entrance door to the

courthouses) may be overly broad. Thus, I would vacate the subject order without prejudice,

and allow the trial judges to enter a specific, detailed analysis in a modified order for security

restrictions beyond the courtroom walls.

       WALLER, C.J., JOINS THIS OPINION.



                                               17
       KING, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:

¶36.   Because the chancellors’ orders are a valid exercise of their inherent power and do not

violate the Mississippi Constitution, I dissent.

                       FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶37.   On July 1, 2011, it became the law that enhanced concealed carry permit holders

“shall also be authorized to carry weapons in courthouses except in courtrooms during a

judicial proceeding[.]” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-37-7(2) (Rev. 2014). On November 28, 2011,

the chancellors of the Fourteenth District issued an order prohibiting those permit holders

from carrying weapons

       within 200 feet of any door to any courtroom which said courtrooms shall be
       extended coextensive with any entrance door to any of the following
       Courthouses served and part of the 14th Judicial District, the same to include,
       Lowndes County, Oktibbeha County, Clay County, Noxubee County,
       Chickasaw County (1st and 2nd District), and Webster County.13

The order explicitly found that

               . . . [T]he carrying of a concealed weapon in any Courthouse by any
       party other than a law enforcement officer in carrying out his/her official
       business is an unreasonable danger to the public, courthouse and court
       personnel, and Judges. Courthouses are often places where the business of the
       public is conducted on a day to day basis and those activities are not inherently
       more dangerous than other locations. However, courthouses are frequently
       places where, during court sessions, emotions of family members and litigants
       are extremely high, whether they are families of victims and/or the accused, in
       Circuit court or those facing divorce, financial pressures or loss of a child or
       children in Chancery Court. The possibility of violence or harm at that time
       is therefore much more likely.




       13
         A July 1, 2013, order, entered in response to additional statutory law, essentially
reiterated the November 2011 order.

                                              18
The order acknowledged that the law allows a trial judge to restrict the carrying of firearms

in a courtroom, but it went on to make specific findings regarding the security of the

courthouses of the Fourteenth District:

               . . . [A]ll of the six courthouses served by the 14th Chancery District
       were built and designed many years ago, when one of the main purposes was
       to make them accessible by many doors and corridors for the convenience of
       the general public and safety was not the foremost concern. All of those
       Courthouses have two or more doors and numerous accesses to courtrooms
       and Judge’s chambers within the buildings. It is not cost effective or would
       it be to secure to the extent necessary for the respective counties to provide
       security that would be adequate to deter any person intent on doing harm to
       any other person including Court and Courthouse personnel within the
       buildings themselves. Many of the doors leading to the courtrooms are mere
       feet from the Bench, the clerk’s table and the witness stand. To allow a person
       legally to carry a concealed weapon to the courtroom door poses a threat that
       can not [sic] be deterred before great bodily harm or death could be inflicted
       inside the courtroom.

¶38.   Ricky Ward filed a Petition to Modify or Dismiss Order of the Court in the Fourteenth

District, alleging that a court has no jurisdiction to establish security protocols for the

courthouses, that as an enhanced license holder he is “directly impacted” by the court’s order,

and that a substantial change in circumstance occurred, and requesting that the court amend

or dismiss its November 2011 order in order to conform with the laws of Mississippi. The

court dismissed the petition, finding that it simply defined “courtroom” and that judges “have

the authority to enter such administrative orders as may be necessary in their estimation for

the proper administration of justice, to further the efficiency of the Courts, and to make sure

that the legal system is fair and just.” It noted that:

       The seven courthouses of this District were all built many years ago and not
       designed to properly secure Courtrooms. The litigants, witnesses and families,
       more often than not, are in the hallways outside of the Courtrooms during most

                                               19
       of a trial. These trials include divorces, child custodies, domestic violence and
       other very emotional and inflammatory issues.

The court also opined that Ward lacked standing to challenge the order.

¶39.   Ward then filed a Petition for Writ of Prohibition14 with this Court, asking this Court

to find the order unconstitutional and in direct conflict with statutory law. This Court

ordered the chancellors of the Fourteenth District to file an answer to the petition. In their

response, the chancellors argue that the courtroom and the courthouse corridors “must be

considered as one common unit, both necessary to meet the ends of justice. One must be

used to reach the other.” They maintain that:

       [i]t is ludicrous to assume that people in heightened states of emotional
       upheaval would pause to decide where in the building they can be mad and
       where they cannot! Most of the confrontations that have occurred in this
       district, thus far, do so outside the hearing room. For whatever reason, persons
       entering the hearing room and seeing the Chancellor on the bench usually are
       much more restrained than in the halls.

The order, they assert, therefore defined the courtroom, because the Courts must “define the

parameters of what is necessary to the safe and orderly administration of justice.” For

example, “the intimidation by a divorce litigant with a firearm toward his antagonist is,

without question, a deterrent to the free development of the facts necessary and the

administration of justice.” They note that the decision was also based on the structure and

cost to secure the specific courthouses served. They argue that it is the courts’ responsibility




       14
        In the case at hand, the court entered an order regarding its own functioning and the
administration of justice. This Court has acknowledged that courts have such authority. See
Lewis v. Hinds Cty. Circuit Court, 158 So. 3d 117 (Miss. 2015).

                                              20
to provide justice. In doing so, they argue that the courts “have inherent authority to make

local rules to foster the goal of the complete administration of justice.”

¶40.     As the majority notes, this Court then ordered additional briefing. Ward, the

Fourteenth District, the Attorney General, and three amici filed briefs. Ward, the Attorney

General, and the National Rifle Association as amicus argue that the order is invalid. The

Fourteenth District, Virgil Gillespie, an attorney with chancery court experience, and

Chancellor James Persons argue that the order is a valid exercise of judicial authority. Nine

chancellors15 and the Conference of Circuit Judges joined in Chancellor Persons’s amicus

brief.

                                          ANALYSIS

¶41.     The crux of the analysis is whether the Fourteenth District chancellors had the

authority to exercise control of security beyond the four walls of their courtrooms via the

challenged order.16

         A. The Mississippi Constitutional Right to Bear Arms

¶42.     The Mississippi Constitution of 1890 provides that “[t]he right to every citizen to keep

and bear arms in defense of his home, person, or property, or in aid of the civil power when

thereto legally summoned, shall not be called in question, but the Legislature may regulate


         15
        Chancellors Carter O. Bise, Jaye A. Bradley, E. Vincent Davis, John A. Hatcher,
Gerald Martin, Lawrence Primeaux, Jennifer T. Schloegel, David Shoemake, and Sandy
Steckler all joined Chancellor Persons’s brief.
         16
         The majority asserts that the chancellors have repealed the concealed carry law as
applied to their courthouses. Maj. Op. ¶16. The chancellors have done no such thing. The
chancellors have simply found that they cannot attend to their constitutional duty to fairly
administer justice if weapons are brought into the courthouses of the Fourteenth District.

                                               21
or forbid carrying concealed weapons.” Miss. Const. art. 3, § 12. The majority suggests that

the phrase “the Legislature may regulate or forbid carrying concealed weapons” is a

separation of powers provision vesting the Legislature with the sole power to allow

concealed weapons in courthouses. Such an interpretation ignores the original intent of this

provision, which was to allow the Legislature to restrict and prohibit concealed carry, not to

expand it. Moreover, the right to bear arms in the Mississippi Constitution is a right only

“to keep and bear arms in defense of his home, person, or property, or in aid of the civil

power when thereto legally summoned.” Miss. Const. art. 3, § 12 (emphasis added). By the

plain language of the Constitution, the right to keep and bear arms is narrowly drawn to

provide that right only for defense.

¶43.   In interpreting constitutional text, a court may use as a guide the idiomatic

understanding of the text at the time it was drafted to inform its analysis. District of

Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 128 S. Ct. 2783, 171 L. Ed. 2d 637 (2008) (Scalia, J., for

the Court). The Mississippi Constitution, like that of the federal government, was “written

to be understood by the voters; its words and phrases were used in their normal and ordinary

as distinguished from technical meaning.” Id. at 576 (internal quotations omitted). “Normal

meaning . . . excludes secret or technical meanings that would not have been known to

ordinary citizens in the founding generation.” Id. at 576-77. While we may not be

completely constrained by the original meaning of a text, it is certainly helpful to ascertain

the meaning behind text – to understand the text, we often must embrace the predicate. The




                                             22
majority completely abandons any examination or consideration of the original meaning of

the text simply to fit a modern political narrative.

¶44.   While a review of Mississippi law does not reveal any general restrictions or

prohibitions on concealed carry of weapons prior to the late 1800s, African Americans, both

slave and free, were restricted from carrying or owning weapons. Slaves were generally

banned from carrying weapons, absent permission from a justice of the peace on application

of his master, and then the slave was only allowed to carry and use a weapon within the limits

of his master’s land. See, e.g., Miss. Rev. Code ch. 73, § 10 (1823). The law further

provided that “[n]o free negro or mulatto, shall be suffered to keep or carry any firelock of

any kind, any military weapon, or any powder or lead, without first obtaining a license from

the court . . . .” Id. at ch. 73, § 12. After the Civil War ended, Mississippi passed “Black

Codes” in 1865, which continued the prohibition against black people owning a gun without

a special license. Miss. Laws ch. 23, § 1 (1865); Jason Phillips, Reconstruction in

Mississippi, 1865-1876,       Mississippi History Now         (May 2006),      available   at

http://www.mshistorynow.mdah.ms.gov/articles/204/reconstruction-in-mississippi-1865-1

876 (last visited June 6, 2018); Michael H. Hoffheimer, Kris Gilliland, & Lynn Murray, Pre-

1900 Mississippi Legal Authority, 73 Miss. L.J. 195, 226 (2003).             Retaining these

prohibitions after the Civil War was so important to white Mississippians that Chief Justice

Handy, in an unpublished opinion, declared the Civil Rights Bill unconstitutional in a

freedman’s challenge to his conviction for carrying firearms. See Decision of Chief Justice

Handy, Declaring the Civil Rights Bill Unconstitutional., published in The New York Times,



                                              23
Oct. 26, 1866, p.2, col. 3. Because of resistance to black rights in Mississippi, Congressional

Reconstruction began in 1867. Phillips, supra.

¶45.   The first Mississippi Constitution provided that “[e]very citizen has a right to bear

arms in defence of himself and the state.” Miss. Const. art. 1, § 23 (1817). The

corresponding provision in the Mississippi Constitution of 1832 is nearly identical, providing

that “[e]very citizen has a right to bear arms in defence of himself and of the state.” Miss.

Const. art. 1, § 23 (1832). The Mississippi Constitution of 1869, drafted in 1868 during

Congressional Reconstruction,17 altered the right to bear arms, providing that “All persons

shall have a right to keep and bear arms for their defense.” Miss. Const. art. 1, § 15 (1869)

(emphasis added). During the early years of Reconstruction, Freedmen communities were

often well-armed, and able to defend their rights. David H. Schenk, Freedmen with

Firearms: White Terrorism and Black Disarmament During Reconstruction, The Gettysburg

College Journal of the Civil War Era: Vol. 4, Article 4 (2014). White Southern entities

consequently began to systematically disarm African Americans. Id.; McDonald v. City of

Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 771-72, 130 S. Ct. 3020, 177 L. Ed. 2d 894 (2010).

¶46.   Democrats regained political power in Mississippi in 1876, and “African Americans

were effectively excluded from political life by extralegal means.” Hoffheimer, et al., 73

Miss. L.J. 195, 227. Reconstruction ended, and by 1880, the Legislature had generally




       17
         The convention’s ninety-seven delegates included seventeen African Americans.
David Sansing, Mississippi’s Four Constitutions, 56 Miss. L.J. 3, 8 (1986); Hoffheimer, et
al., supra, at 227.

                                              24
prohibited the concealed carry of weapons, absent some narrow exceptions. Miss. Rev. Code

Ch. 77, § 2985 (1880).18

¶47.   One of the “main goals” of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890 “was to provide

formal, legal means for excluding African Americans from voting and running for office.”

Hoffheimer, et al., supra, at 229. The purpose of the 1890 Constitution to disadvantage

African Americans is well-documented. David Sansing, Mississippi’s Four Constitutions,

56 Miss. L.J. 3, 10 (1986); Neil R. McMillen, Dark Journey: Black Mississippians in the

Age of Jim Crow 40-44 (1989); Miss. Const. art. 8, § 207 (segregating schools); Miss.

Const. art. 12, § 243 (poll tax); Miss. Const. art. 12, § 244 (voter must be able to read and/or

understand the Constitution); Miss. Const. art. 14, § 263 (forbidding interracial marriage);

Miss. Const. art. 14, § 264 (must be a qualified elector and able to read and write to qualify

as a juror). Section 12 of the 1890 Constitution changed the right to bear arms back from “all

persons” to “citizens,” and allowed the Legislature to regulate or forbid carrying concealed

weapons. This alteration was one of several “craftily designed to obstruct or deny certain

rights to African Americans . . . .” Westley F. Busbee, Jr., Mississippi: A History 178 (2d

ed. 2015). Such measures regulating or prohibiting concealed carry could be selectively

enforced. Id.; Clayton E. Cramer, The Racist Roots of Gun Control, 4-WTR Kan. J.L. &

Pub. Pol’y 17, 20 (1995) (the Fourteenth Amendment “led to the adoption of restrictive

       18
          The primary exception tied directly to the constitutional right was one related
explicitly to defense. It was not a crime to carry a concealed weapon if one was “threatened
with, or having good and sufficient reason to apprehend an attack.” Miss. Rev. Code ch. 77,
§ 2985 (1880). Notably, Ward does not appear to be threatened or to apprehend attack at the
courthouses at issue. The 1890 Constitution then solidified the Legislature’s ability to
restrict or prohibit the concealed carry of weapons.

                                              25
firearms laws in the South that were equal in the letter of the law, but unequally enforced”).

The original intent of Section 12, therefore, was for the Legislature to be able to restrict or

prohibit the concealed carry of weapons. That the original intent of adding the provision

regarding the Legislature to the right to bear arms was restriction of that right was noted in

contemporaneous documents and has been recognized by Judge Coleman in a Fifth Circuit

case. Governor Robert Lowry called attention to the problems surrounding the concealed

carry of weapons and called for radical means to end the practice. Journal of the House of

Representatives of the State of Mississippi, Governor’s Message, pp. 15-41 (1890). He noted

that “[l]aw abiding citizens, who make up and constitute well-regulated communities, don’t

carry concealed weapons.” Id. at 36. He observed that a person concealing weapons “invites

antagonisms and then avails himself of its unlawful use.” Id. He urged that any carried

deadly weapon should be “done openly and the carrier advertise his bravery, instead of

concealing on his person, and in easy reach, the means of taking human life.” Id. In more

recent times, the Fifth Circuit noted that “[b]y 1890 the carrying of concealed deadly

weapons had attained such gravity that statutes prohibiting such conduct received special

constitutional sanction[.]” McLain v. Lafayette Cty. Bd. of Educ., 673 F.2d 106, 107 (5th

Cir. 1982).

¶48.   Consequently, the Legislature criminalized concealed carry of weapons, with only

narrow exceptions, for approximately one hundred years. Miss. Code Ann. § 1026 (1892);

Miss. Code ch. 28, § 1103 (1906); Hemmingway’s Miss. Code § 829 (1917); 1962 Miss.

Laws ch. 310, § 1 (amending Section 2079 of the Code); John W. Winkle III, The



                                              26
Mississippi State Constitution 36 (2d ed. 2014) (in 1990, the Legislature passed the so-called

“gunslinger” laws allowing citizens to carry handguns in many locations). This Court found

that criminal penalties for concealed carry were appropriate even when a person lacked

criminal intent, and even when he carried the concealed weapon in his own home. Strahan

v. State, 8 So. 844 (Miss. 1891); Wilson v. State, 33 So. 171 (Miss. 1903).

¶49.   “[I]t is necessary to construe all the provisions of the Constitution together, and to

deduce from them as a whole the policy and purpose of the constitutional convention.” St.

Louis & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Benton Cty., 96 So. 689, 690 (Miss. 1923) (emphasis added). It is

clear that the constitutional convention contemplated stringent restrictions and/or prohibitions

on the concealed carry of weapons, and was constitutionally sanctioning those prohibitions

already present in the statutes. Yet, according to the majority, this provision of the

Constitution sanctions the Legislature’s supreme authority over concealed weapons, even if

said authority were to contravene other constitutional provisions. Our Constitution protects

property rights. Miss. Const. art. 3, §§ 14, 17. A private citizen may prohibit weapons from

his private property. According to the majority, Section 12 allows the Legislature to override

property rights as it relates to concealed weapons, as it finds the Legislature supreme over

concealed weapons and the concealed weapons provision of the Constitution supreme over

the remainder of the Constitution. Yet, as discussed, the original intent of the provision

allowing the Legislature to regulate or forbid concealed carry was to restrict and/or prohibit

concealed carry of weapons. The majority inexplicably determines that this provisions

delegated to the Legislative branch of our government the power to control security of the



                                              27
entire courthouse. Such an interpretation finds no basis in either the plain language of the

Constitution or the original meaning of the provision. This interpretation appears to fall in

the way of a “secret” or “technical” meaning that the ordinary citizen in 1890 would not have

understood. We turn to analyze the separation of powers against this backdrop.

       B. Separation of Powers

¶50.   Our Constitution provides that the powers of the state government “shall be divided

into three distinct departments, and each of them confided to a separate magistracy, to-wit:

those which are legislative to one, those which are judicial to another, and those which are

executive to another.” Miss. Const. art. 1, § 1. It further provides that “[n]o person or

collection of persons, being one or belonging to one of these departments, shall exercise any

power properly belonging to either of the others.” Miss. Const. art. 1, § 2. This language

remains, in substantive part, essentially unchanged from the language in the Mississippi

Constitution of 1817. Judge Leslie Southwick, Separation of Powers at the State Level:

Interpretations and Challenges in Mississippi, 72 Miss. L.J. 927, 938-39 (2003). The

separation of powers language in the Mississippi Constitution is more stringent than any

found in the federal Constitution. See generally id. The stringency came from a concern that

the concentration of power in one branch would lead to despotism. Id. Indeed, Thomas

Jefferson had concerns that legislative control over other branches’ budgets gave the

legislative branch too much power. Id. Consequently, one important issue at the 1817

constitutional convention was “to ensure the independence of the judiciary.” Winbourne




                                             28
Magruder Drake, The Framing of Mississippi’s First Constitution, 29 J. of Miss. Hist. 301,

318 (1967).

¶51.   Under the Mississippi Constitution, the administration of justice is solely a judicial

function and obligation. That function and that obligation both extend beyond the four walls

of the courtroom. The Legislature’s passage of Section 97-37-7(2), which allows for the

carrying of concealed weapons in courthouses except in courtrooms while court is in session,

seeks to limit the judicial branch in the performance of its judicial function; thus, it is a clear

violation of Article 1, Sections 1 and 2, which mandate the separation of powers between the

executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government.

¶52.   Article 6, Section 155 of the Mississippi Constitution requires judges of this State to

take the following oath:

       I . . . solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will administer justice without respect
       to persons, and do equal right to the poor and to the rich, and that I will
       faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon
       me . . . according to the best of my ability and understanding, agreeably to the
       Constitution of the United States and the Constitution and laws of the State of
       Mississippi. So help me God.

Miss. Const. art. 6, § 155. The Legislature’s passage of Section 97-37-7(2) seeks to limit the

constitutional obligation imposed upon judges by this oath, and is thus a violation of Article

1, Sections 1 and 2, which mandate the separation of powers between the executive,

legislative, and judicial branches of government. As applied to the judiciary, this statute is

unconstitutional.

Inherent Powers




                                                29
¶53.   Additionally, the orders are within the inherent power of the court to propound. “The

judicial power of the State shall be vested in a Supreme Court and such other courts as are

provided for in this Constitution.” Miss. Const. art. 6, § 144. “This same Constitutional

requirement for our courts to exist obviously carries with it the duty on the part of the

Legislative branch to provide sufficient funds and facilities for them to operate independently

and effectively.” Hosford v. State, 525 So. 2d 789, 797 (Miss. 1988). Otherwise, the

constitutional mandate for three separate and co-equal branches would be emasculated “by

reducing courts to supplicants only of the Legislature.” Id. The judicial power provided for

in the Mississippi Constitution “includes the power to make rules of practice and procedure,

not inconsistent with the Constitution, for the efficient disposition of judicial business.” Id.

(internal quotations omitted). Moreover, the judiciary has the constitutional obligation to

fairly “administer justice.” Miss. Const. art. 6, § 155; Newell v. State, 308 So. 2d 71, 77-78

(Miss. 1975).

¶54.   The judicial power provided for in the Constitution clearly reaches issues necessary

for the efficient disposition of judicial business, so long as judicial control of those issues is

not inconsistent with the Constitution. Moreover, inherent in the constitutional duty to

“administer justice” is the ability, when necessary, to control the location at which justice is

administered.19 Real or perceived danger or the potential for violence clearly impedes the

       19
         “[B]eyond mere access [to courthouses], people require a safe and secure
environment free from fear or intimidation. Judges, employees, and members of the general
public need to feel safe if they are to conduct themselves impartially and decorously.” Don
Hardenbergh, Protecting America’s Courthouses, 44 No. 3 Judges’ J. 14 (Summer 2005).
       “The courthouse is a place where moods, personalities, and lives come together at a
time of disagreement. It is possible for a person to lose control of his behavior at any type

                                               30
administration of justice. This Court has implicitly recognized that the judiciary may control

security for an entire courthouse, and thus recognized that the judicial authority over security

may extend beyond the four walls of the courtroom. See McCune v. State, 989 So. 2d 310,

317 n.16 (Miss. 2008) (noting that, for a specific trial, the court allegedly used extra security

precautions, such as “law enforcement in and around the courthouse, metal detectors, and

limited entryways” and also noting that “untoward conduct in courthouses caused by

unwelcome societal changes has prompted increased security in many courthouses.”); see

also Hosford, 525 So. 2d 789 (noisy conditions prevented court from operating

independently and effectively, and legislative branch may be subject to appropriate court

orders when the court’s integrity is at issue). Indeed,

       [n]o court created by the Constitution is required to accept conditions which
       prevent it operating independently and effectively. Such court also has the
       duty under our governmental system to protect its own integrity. It likewise
       has the inherent authority as part of a separate and co-equal branch to make
       such orders to insure that independence and integrity.

Hosford, 525 So. 2d at 798; Miss. Const. art. 1, §1.20


of court proceeding. . . . Criminal and domestic relations cases are the source of a great
number of acts of violence. But other types of litigation – including but not limited to will
contests, landlord-tenant disputes, and even cases involving animals and pets – also can
bring out the worst behavior in people.” Richard W. Carter, Keeping a Secure Courthouse,
76 Judicature 314 (April-May 1993).
       “Presiding judges are responsible to see that trials are conducted in an orderly
manner. Certainly, order is nonexistent if violence is present or threatened in the courthouse
and courtroom. Courts have used their inherent powers to secure needed facilities,
personnel, equipment, and services.” Id.
       20
        The Legislature failed to provide the funds to the judiciary that would be necessary
to adequately secure courtrooms without securing the courthouse. In his amicus brief,
Chancellor Persons lays out the cost to taxpayers to adequately secure the courtrooms of
Harrison County, when the ability to control courthouse security is removed:

                                               31
¶55.   “[T]he courtroom and courthouse premises are subject to the control of the court.”

Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333, 358, 86 S. Ct. 1507, 16 L. Ed. 2d 600 (1966). Federal

law criminalizes the possession of weapons in federal facilities, including federal court

facilities. 18 U.S.C. § 930(a), (e)(1). Federal court facilities are specifically defined as

meaning certain rooms and offices used by courts and court officers. 18 U.S.C. § 930(g)(3).

Yet, federal courts have the ability to control the entire building in which they are situated.

When it passed the law, Congress recognized the pre-existing power21 of the courts to control

court security, stating that “[n]othing in this section limits the power of a court of the United

States to punish for contempt or to promulgate rules or orders regulating, restricting, or

prohibiting the possession of weapons within any building housing such court or any of its

proceedings, or upon any grounds appurtenant to such building.” 18 U.S.C. § 930(f)


       Of vital importance to each county of this state is the additional cost of
       providing security at each door of each courtroom in each courthouse in each
       county in the event the Writ of Prohibition is granted. In these tight budget
       times, a real question is presented as to the ability of the counties of this state
       to provide adequate security at the courtroom door for each of their
       courtrooms. Sheriff Peterson addresses the anticipated cost to Harrison County
       of providing security to each of the twelve (12) courtrooms in his jurisdiction
       in paragraph 7 of his Declaration. The annual cost of providing the required
       security at each of Harrison County’s twelve courtroom doors in terms of the
       additional staffing requirements is $528,000 (12 x $44,000), in addition to a
       one time cost to provide metal detection devices for the twelve courtrooms of
       $90,000 (12 x $7,500). To the extent the sheriff is required to employ
       additional deputies to provide security at each courtroom door, these
       individuals must complete the certification requirements mandated for law
       enforcement officers. Lewis, 158 So. 3d at 1123-24. Sheriff Peterson states
       that the cost of training each deputy is approximately $6,500, which is
       reimbursed to the sheriff’s department by the State of Mississippi.
       21
        Tellingly, the statute does not purport to grant the courts this power; it rather
recognizes that courts already have this power.

                                               32
(emphases added). Congress clearly enacted this law in furtherance of the inherent powers

of the courts, not in restraint of it.

¶56.   The Attorney General argues that “trial judges do not have general authority to

unilaterally control courthouse security outside of the courtroom itself in the ordinary course

of business” because the Legislature has delegated control of courthouse security to the

executive branch. It is clear that the sheriff has the general duty to secure his county’s

courthouses. Miss. Code Ann. § 19-25-69 (Rev. 2012); Lewis v. Hinds Cty. Circuit Court,

158 So. 3d 1117 (Miss. 2015). Indeed, the sheriff is the “executive officer of the circuit and

chancery court of his county.” Miss. Code Ann. § 19-25-35 (Rev. 2012). However, this duty

and authority must be harmonized with and be subject to the inherent power of the court to

control the administration of justice.

¶57.   In Lewis, the Hinds County Circuit Court had issued court orders that “addressed the

hours, uniform, discipline, and duties of bailiffs.” Lewis, 158 So. 3d at 1119-20. The

justification for the orders was that, because the court can statutorily have a bailiff removed,

“judicial involvement with the sheriff does not violate the constitution.” Id. at 1125. At no

point did the circuit court maintain that its orders were necessary for the administration of

justice or that any of the sheriff’s actions regarding bailiffs impaired the ability of the court

to operate independently and effectively. And indeed, this Court acknowledged that “courts

have inherent power over their courtrooms, including the authority to define the attire of

bailiffs and others in attendance.” Id. Rather, the court, without any allegations that the

sheriff was disrupting the administration of justice, encroached on the sheriff’s duty to



                                               33
maintain “the general safety of the courthouse and specifically protect[] it from violence,

attacks, and injuries.” Id. at 1123-24. The sheriff certainly has a statutory duty to protect the

court, a duty upon which a court generally should not encroach.22 However, the courts have

a constitutional, i.e., higher than statutory, duty to administer justice and operate

independently and efficiently. To the extent a security issue impacts a court’s constitutional

duty to administer justice, it is within its inherent power to address.23


       22
        The majority alleges that courthouse security beyond the courtroom falls solely
within the province of the executive branch without addressing how Mississippi Code
Section 97-37-7(2) directly conflicts with such a duty. Maj. Op. ¶¶ 12-13. If a sheriff
determines that all concealed weapons should be banned from a courthouse, has the
Legislature encroached on the sheriff’s duty? It would appear so.
       23
          Other jurisdictions have also acknowledged a court’s inherent authority over
courthouse security in various circumstances. Epps v. Commonwealth, 626 S.E.2d 912, 916
(Va. App. 2006)(“[I]t would be folly to claim the circuit court judge has the power to ensure
courtroom, but not courthouse, security. If the judge is impotent to supervise who enters the
courthouse, the ability to ensure the security of the courtroom is diminished.”); State v.
Wadsworth, 991 P.2d 80, 82 (Wash. 2000)(“This Court has recognized the inherent power
and obligation of the judiciary to control all its necessary functions to promote the effective
administration of justice. We have stated that the inherent powers of the courts are neither
derived from nor dependent upon express constitutional authority, but the courts are
empowered to do all that is reasonably necessary for the efficient administration of justice.
. . . Supreme Courts in other jurisdictions have also relied upon the inherent powers doctrine
as the basis for resolving issues concerning courthouse security and the general
administration of court facilities. Under the inherent powers of the courts, the judiciary has
authority to administer justice and to ensure the safety of court personnel, litigants and the
public.”); Petition of Mone, 719 A.2d 626, 628-29 (N.H. 1998) (“An integral part of any
court’s duty to administer justice and fairly adjudicate disputes is to ensure that all parties
have the opportunity to advance their cause in an atmosphere of safety, decorum, and
fairness. . . . Thus, because the providers of court security play an integral role in the most
fundamental function of any court, the adjudicatory function, it is an improper encroachment
on the judiciary’s power for the legislature to mandate the provider of court
security.”(internal citations omitted)); Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Weld Cty. v. Nineteenth
Judicial Dist., 895 P.2d 545, 546-47 (Colo. 1995) (“Without security the public’s
confidence in the integrity of the judicial system is threatened. The proper administration
of justice requires that courts operate in a safe and secure environment. When society views

                                               34
¶58.   The Second Circuit has likewise held that control of courthouse security by the courts

is “essential.”24 United States v. Smith, 426 F.3d 567, 576 (2d Cir. 2005), cert. denied 546

U.S. 1204 (2006). The court acknowledged the Marshals Service and Secretary of the

Department of Homeland Security are statutorily charged with protecting federal courts, but




the security of the court system with skepticism, the authority of the judicial branch is
diminished. A weak judicial branch prevents a proper functioning of the tripartite scheme
of government. The Chief Judge properly ordered security so the courts may continue to
fulfill their constitutional mandate and administer justice in an orderly and dignified
atmosphere.”); see also Halverson v. Hardcastle, 163 P.3d 428 (Nev. 2007) (“[C]ourts have
the inherent authority to make certain that their courtrooms are secure. By necessity, this
latter exercise of inherent power extends to securing courthouse security in general.”); State
v. Spaulding, 507 S.E.2d 376 (W. Va. 1998) (court had “inherent power to provide adequate
security, which is essential to the safe and orderly administration of justice”); State v.
Shelton, 243 S.E.2d 455 (S.C. 1978) (trial judge has inherent authority to take measures
reasonably necessary to secure orderly proceedings and preserve the security of those
present; “[t]he exercise of this authority by the trial judge is not inhibited by the guarantees
of the Fourth Amendment. Therefore, the Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures is inapplicable to a courtroom in the exercise of the trial
judge’s authority and duty to preserve security and order.”); In the Matter of Spike, 415
N.Y.S.2d 762 (Cty. Ct., Yates County, N.Y. 1979) (inherent powers of the court to perform
efficiently its judicial functions includes the court’s responsibility to assure that security
services are provided); In re the Matter of the Judicial Space in the Bradford Cty.
Courthouse, 378 So. 2d 1247 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1979) (regarding allocation of space, “a
court of general jurisdiction has inherent power to acquire and control facilities which are
essential to secure and safeguard free and untrammeled exercise of its functions”); see also
Smith v. Washington Cty., 43 P.3d 1171 (Ct. App. Or. 2002) (courthouse security is within
a court’s statutory administrative authority, noting that “the effective functioning of courts
of the state is served by preventing people from entering courthouse facilities with hazardous
substances and weapons.”).
       24
         This issue is one of first impression in Mississippi, and that it is appropriate to look
to our sister states for guidance. See, e.g., Enterprise Leasing Co. South Cent. Inc. v.
Bardin, 8 So. 3d 866 (Miss. 2009) (Randolph, J., for the Court); Lemon Drop Props., LLC
v. Pass Marianne, LLC, 73 So. 3d 1073 (Miss. 2011) (Randolph, J., for the Court); Moffett
v. State, 49 So. 3d 1073 (Miss. 2010) (Randolph, J., for the Court).

                                               35
noted the Supreme Court’s statement that the courtroom and courthouse premises are subject

to the court’s control. Id. It found that

       Control by the courts is essential, because the judiciary is uniquely attuned to
       the delicate balance between defendants’ Sixth Amendment rights to public
       trial, the public and press’s First Amendment rights to courtroom access, and
       the overarching security considerations that are unique to the federal facilities
       containing courtrooms. . . . The judiciary is uniquely competent to strike the
       proper balance.

Id. The Eleventh Circuit has likewise held that “[a] judge’s authority to maintain control of

his courtroom extends to the court building.” Stevens v. Osuna, 877 F.3d 1293, 1307 (11th

Cir. 2017). It noted that “[j]udges have an obligation to maintain control over the courthouse

and over the conduct of persons in the courthouse[.]” Id. at 1305 (emphasis added). One

district court also noted the constitutional implications that would be caused by weapons in

courthouses, in upholding Section 930 against a Second Amendment challenge. United

States v. Giraitis, 127 F. Supp. 3d 1, 2-3 (D.R.I. 2015). It stated that “[a] federal court

facility is a governmental building where the public has a right to attend and observe

courtroom proceedings and into which individuals may be compelled to appear as litigants,

witnesses, jurors, etc.” Id. at 3 (emphasis added). It acknowledged that “[s]uch courthouse

activity has constitutional underpinnings. For instance, the Sixth Amendment guarantees the

right to a ‘public trial’ . . . and the Seventh Amendment preserves the ‘right of trial by jury.’”

Id. at 3, n.3. The court found it “undisputable that the members of the public coming to the

courthouse and those who work in the courthouse are entitled to a safe and secure

environment . . . .” Id. at 3 (emphases added). Indeed, in criminal cases, the accused has the

right to be confronted by the witnesses against him, to have compulsory process to obtaining

                                               36
favorable witnesses, and to a public trial by jury. Miss. Const. art. 3, § 26; U.S. Const.

amend. VI. The courts are required to be open, and the public has access to the courts. Miss.

Const. art. 3, §§ 24, 25. Crime victims “have the right to be treated with fairness, dignity and

respect throughout the criminal justice process[.]” Miss. Const. art. 3, § 26A. In civil or

criminal trials, “[t]he right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate[.]” Miss. Const. art. 3, § 31;

see also U.S. Const. amend. VII. The judiciary, and access thereto, implicates numerous

constitutional rights. The safety of those compelled to be at the courthouse is necessary for

the fair administration of justice; keeping safe and free from threat those people necessary

to the judicial process, such as parties, criminal defendants, witnesses, and jurors, is crucial

for the administration of justice, the integrity of the judicial system, and the preservation of

the constitutional rights implicated at the courthouse. The majority subjugates all of these

constitutional rights and provisions to the phrase “the Legislature may regulate or forbid

carrying concealed weapons,” instead of harmonizing them.

¶59.   One Utah order, in finding that the legislative and executive powers to protect the

judicial process may not go so far as to define the essential nature of the judicial

environment, eloquently wrote that

       No single characteristic of the judiciary is more defining of its nature nor of
       greater consequence to its purpose than its reliance on the power of reason and
       law rather than the power of the sword. The very essence of the judiciary is
       the antithesis of “might makes right.” It represents one of man’s most noble
       and complete aspirations at civilization. The gladiators in the legal arena are
       armed only with books and the power of reason and logic . . . . The right of the
       judiciary to maintain an arms-free environment not only relates to the
       protection of judge, jury, court personnel, counsel, litigants, and witnesses, but
       to the maintenance of an environment where even the silent influence of
       physical weaponry is eliminated.

                                                37
Sixth District of Utah Order, quoted in Judge K.L. McIff, Weapon-Free Courthouses and the

Gun Locker Dilemma, 16-JUL Utah B.J. 10 (June/July 2003). While a court may not

criminalize bringing a weapon into a courthouse, as making the law is certainly within the

province of the Legislature, the lower court in this case did not attempt to criminalize

carrying a weapon into the courthouse. A determination that a court cannot fairly administer

justice and protect constitutional rights when members of the public25 may carry weapons

into the courthouse is a determination within the judiciary’s inherent power to make.

¶60.   In this case, the chancellors of the Fourteenth District noted that many of the

proceedings in their courtrooms are of a highly inflammatory nature and that the majority of

confrontations in their district have occurred outside the four walls of the courtroom itself.26


       25
          The majority appears to cite the wisdom of the Legislature to allow only certain
enhanced concealed carry permit holders to carry weapons into courthouses. Maj. Op. ¶14.
First, the constitutionality of a provision is not dependent on whether this Court deems it
“wise.” Under the majority’s view of legislative power, the Legislature has the absolute
power to authorize felons, members of organized gangs, or members of terrorist
organizations to carry concealed weapons into courthouses. Second, if membership in an
organized gang or terrorist organization is unknown, such persons may be able to obtain an
enhanced concealed carry permit. Interestingly enough, the Mississippi Legislature in its
wisdom bans all weapons from the Capitol unless permission is granted by a majority of one
of the chambers. See Mississippi Legislature Joint Rules of the Senate and the House Joint
Convention, Rule 37.
       26
         Rule 3.08 of the Uniform Chancery Court Rules acknowledges the chilling effect
weapons have on the fair administration of justice, requiring even law enforcement
personnel remove firearms when they take the witness stand. UCCR 3.08. In a study done
in Wisconsin, a commission noted that, where domestic violence is involved, “[e]ven only
visual contact can have a chilling effect on the victim.” Dianne Molvig, Violence and the
Judicial System: Stemming the Tide of Violence in our Courthouses, 70-JUL Wis. Law. 10
(1997). Imagine the effect on the administration of justice in heated custody cases if one
party or witness knew that the relatives of the opposing party could be sitting in the hallway
outside the courtroom with a weapon. It does not stretch the imagination to determine that
such knowledge could severely impact the fair administration of justice.

                                              38
They made findings regarding the structure and layout of the courthouses in their district, and

the impossibility of adequately securing the courtrooms and judicial chambers27 without

securing the courthouse due to multiple entrances, the proximity of the bench and witness

boxes to multiple courtroom doors, and other such issues.28 They determined that, because


       27
         Where would the majority have legislative power end? Is there any line the
Legislature could cross regarding concealed carry that the majority believes would impede
the court’s inherent power and obligation to fairly administer justice? What if the
Legislature authorized criminal defendants to carry concealed weapons into the courthouse
or the courtroom during their trials? Or abusive spouses during restraining order
proceedings? Indeed, it may well have, as abusive spouses without convictions may be
enhanced concealed carry permitees. According to the majority, the only reason that courts
may prohibit weapons in a courtroom is because the Legislature magnanimously grants
courts the permission to do so. Indeed, some members of the Legislature have expressed a
desire to eliminate all gun-free zones. See Jeff Amy, No Guns in Stadiums? No Guns for
Mississippi’s Teachers, U.S. News and World Report (March 22, 2018), available at
https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/mississippi/articles/2018-03-22/house-kills-bil
l-that-would-have-let-schools-arm-teachers (last visited June 6, 2018). The majority would
also appear to force individual judges, including the Justices of the Supreme Court, to allow
enhanced concealed carry permit holders to carry weapons into their private chambers,
notwithstanding the fact that gun violence against the judiciary is such a concern that our
windows consist of bullet-proof glass. The majority allows the Legislature to authorize the
concealed carry of weapons into any location whatsoever that the Legislature so determined
appropriate, without regard to any other constitutional provision, duty, or right, since the
majority argues that the regulation of concealed weapons is an absolute and supreme
legislative prerogative. The majority leaves even courtroom security up to the whims of the
Legislature.
       28
         The order only applies to the courthouse facility; it does not apply to the courthouse
grounds. My opinion on this issue is therefore limited to the chancellors’ authority to issue
this order regarding courthouse security within the courthouse building. In the 2011 Order,
the chancellors prohibited concealed carry “within 200 feet of any door to any courtroom
which said courtrooms shall be extended cotextensive with any entrance door to any of the
following Courthouses . . . .” Ward argued that the “200 feet” language extended the
concealed carry ban to the grounds, and even to private property. The 2013 Order, which
appears to have replaced the 2011 Order, eliminates the “200 feet” language and provides
that concealed carry is prohibited “in any courtroom . . . and which said Courtroom doors
shall be extended coextensively with any exterior door of any of the seven Courthouses . .
. .” Further, in their original Response to the Writ of Prohibition, the chancellors clarified

                                              39
of these factors, allowing people to carry firearms into the courthouse imposed a safety

hazard that impairs the court’s duty and ability to administer justice and operate

independently and efficiently.29 Based on the findings by the chancellors in this case that


that

               . . . The figure of a radius of 200 feet was also included in the order and
       could be classified as surplusage. It was unclear as to how far from the
       courtroom door was every exterior door in the seven (7) courthouses, so out
       of an abundance of caution and for clarity, the reference to any exterior door
       was included to make the area to be restricted clear and beyond question.
               Mr. Ward is in error by stating that the order extends the courtrooms
       past the exterior doors by 200 feet into businesses. A simple reading of the
       order clearly reveals no such extension past any exterior door. This was never
       the intention . . . .

While the language of the 2011 Order is somewhat confusing, I take the chancellors at their
word; moreover, the 2013 Order by its plain language clarifies that the Order only applies
to the courthouse building, not to courthouse grounds or private property.

       29
          The right to keep and bear arms is not unfettered, nor does the Mississippi
Constitution grant a right to keep and bear arms for any reason whatsoever. Ward argues
simply that he was “unable to carry his firearm concealed or otherwise in the” courthouse.
It is clear that Ward did not need to carry a weapon into the courthouse in aid of the civil
power when legally summoned, as no civil power summoned him. It is also clear that Ward
did not need to carry a weapon into the courthouse to defend his home. Ward does not even
attempt to articulate why he needed to carry a weapon into the courthouse to defend his
person or property. Thus, Ward does not even provide facts for this Court to determine
whether any alleged right has been infringed. Moreover, he does not articulate any prejudice
or injustice he suffered by not being allowed to carry a weapon in the courthouse.
Constitutional rights are often restricted. For example, when it comes to interpreting the
Fourth Amendment’s explicit statement that the right to be free against unreasonable
searches and seizures “shall not be violated,” the majority’s interpretation is puzzlingly
divergent. This Court has held that constitutional rights, including Fourth Amendment
rights, need not be strictly enforced where the person whose rights are violated does not
articulate sufficient prejudice or injustice suffered, nor must they be strictly enforced when
compelling social interests indicate that they should not be. See Delker v. State, 50 So. 3d
300 (Miss. 2010) (Randolph, J., for the Court) (regarding enforcing the exclusionary rule
against a Fourth Amendment violation due to a violation of jurisdictional boundaries,
finding that any deterrent effect “is significantly outweighed by the ‘substantial social costs’

                                               40
allowing weapons in the courthouses of their district presents a security problem that

jeopardizes the independent and effective administration of justice, I would find that the

order at issue is permissible as an exercise of the judiciary’s inherent power to administer

justice.30

¶61.   I would find that the order is an appropriate exercise of inherent judicial authority and

that Section 97-37-7(2), as applied to the courts, violates the separation of powers. I disagree

with the majority’s holding that the phrase “the Legislature may regulate or forbid carrying

concealed weapons” reigns supreme over every other provision in our Constitution. I would

deny Ward’s petition for writ of prohibition, and accordingly dissent.

     KITCHENS, P.J., JOINS THIS OPINION. WALLER, C.J., AND BEAM, J.,
JOIN THIS OPINION IN PART.




and ‘harm to the justice system’ exacted by exclusion . . . . It takes neither a judge nor a
lawyer to recognize the compelling social interest in protecting innocent citizens from drunk
drivers and the offense to ‘basic concepts of the criminal justice system’ by ‘letting guilty
and possibly dangerous defendants go free.’”); Hall v. State, 201 So. 3d 424 (Miss. 2016)
(Randolph, P.J., for the Court).
       30
          This Court has held that where the proclamations of the Legislature that touch on
the judiciary “coincide with fair and efficient administration of justice,” the Court will
cooperate with them. Newell, 308 So. 2d at 78. But when those proclamations impair
justice, thus impinging on the Court’s constitutional mandate to fairly administer justice, “it
remains our duty to correct it.” Id. It may be that certain courts find, based on the layout
of the courthouse and nature of cases, that carrying of concealed weapons by enhanced
concealed carry permit holders does not impinge on the administration of justice, and that
is within their province to determine. But where a court determines that it cannot carry out
its constitutional duty to fairly administer justice in the presence of concealed weapons in
its courthouse, it likewise is within its province to determine.

                                              41
