Studley v. Alaska Public Offices Commission ( 2017 )


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    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@akcourts.us.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    JAMES M. STUDLEY,                                  )
    )    Supreme Court No. S-15757
    Appellant,                   )
    )    Superior Court No. 1JU-13-00669 CI
    v.                                           )
    )    OPINION
    ALASKA PUBLIC OFFICES                              )
    COMMISSION,                                        )
    )    No. 7148 – January 27, 2017
    Appellee.                    )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First
    Judicial District, Juneau, Philip M. Pallenberg, Judge.
    Appearances: Fred W. Triem, Petersburg, for Appellant.
    Joanne M. Grace, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage,
    Janell M. Hafner, Assistant Attorney General, and Craig W.
    Richards, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee.
    Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Fabe, Winfree, Maassen, and
    Bolger, Justices.
    WINFREE, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    A self-employed real estate broker ran as a candidate for local elective
    office. The broker sought a blanket exemption from Alaska’s financial disclosure
    requirements to avoid reporting his clients’ identities and the income earned from them.
    The Alaska Public Offices Commission denied the broker’s request and assessed a $175
    civil penalty for his failure to comply with the candidate reporting requirements. On
    appeal the superior court upheld the Commission’s ruling. The broker now appeals the
    superior court’s decision, contending the disclosure requirements violate his duty to
    maintain client confidentiality, infringe his clients’ privacy rights under the Alaska
    Constitution, and impair several personal constitutional rights. We affirm the superior
    court’s decision upholding the Commission’s ruling.
    II.   FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    In 2012 James Studley, a real estate broker operating through a self-owned
    corporation, ran for a borough assembly seat. As a candidate for public office Studley
    was subject to Alaska’s financial disclosure laws, administered and enforced by the
    Alaska Public Offices Commission. He was required to file a Public Official Financial
    Disclosure Statement reporting the source of any income exceeding $1,000 earned
    during the prior calendar year and the nature of the services rendered.1 Because Studley
    owned the corporation through which he operated, he was self-employed for purposes
    of the disclosure laws and so was required to report his actual client names as the income
    “source.”2
    Studley submitted his calendar year 2011 disclosure statement in July 2012
    and amended it three times. On the line for identifying clients Studley provided no
    details, but he made notes essentially stating that he was prohibited by law from
    disclosing the information. Under a general entry he titled “Real Estate Sales” Studley
    reported “$20,000 - $50,000” in income. During this process Studley contacted the
    Commission and directed it to four real estate statutes that he said should provide “an
    1
    See AS 39.50.030(b)(1)(A)-(F).
    2
    See AS 39.50.200(a)(10).
    -2­                                      7148
    exemption from disclosing confidential financial information.”3 Studley stated: “These
    statutes specifically prohibit release of any financial information regarding my clients or
    customers without prior written approval or at the direction of the judicial system by
    court order.”
    Campaign disclosure regulations permit a candidate to request a reporting
    exemption or a waiver.4 The Commission asked Studley to provide the required
    information for making an exemption request, including the name, mailing address, and
    email address of the person making the request; the provision under which the exemption
    was sought; the reasons for requesting the exemption; and a certification that all facts
    given were true.5 Studley responded by providing some of the requested information,
    including his name, mailing address, email address, and a certification that the
    information was true and accurate. Citing “AS 08-4145,” he gave as the reason for his
    request that the statute does “not allow any financial disclosure or information that would
    be considered financially harmful to a client.”6
    3
    The four statutes he cited were: AS 08.88.071, outlining the Alaska Real
    Estate Commission’s duties and powers and grounds for disciplinary sanctions;
    AS 08.88.081, providing, in its entirety, that “[t]he commission shall adopt regulations
    necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter”; AS 08.88.171, listing real estate
    licensee eligibility standards; and AS 08.88.685, requiring real estate brokers to adopt
    various written policies and procedures.
    4
    2 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 50.821 (2012).
    5
    See 2 AAC 50.821(a)(1)-(9).
    6
    It was subsequently clarified that “08-4145” is not a statute number, but
    rather the designation on an Alaska Real Estate Commission pamphlet that real estate
    licensees are required to present to customers and clients outlining a licensee’s duties to
    those consumers. The pamphlet explains that a licensee will “[n]ot disclose confidential
    information, even after the relationship ends, from or about you without written
    (continued...)
    -3-                                      7148
    In a subsequent exchange Studley provided the Commission a copy of the
    Alaska Real Estate Commission pamphlet he had referred to as “AS 08-4145” and stated
    that no information about a client may be disclosed without court order. Studley
    provided two hypothetical examples to illustrate how disclosing the existence or details
    of a broker-client relationship might harm a client. Studley’s first example discussed
    how a buyer might be able to infer that a couple is divorcing from client disclosures and
    use that as negotiating leverage in a purchase; his second outlined privacy concerns for
    a person selling real property while filing for bankruptcy. He did not assert that these
    were actual client situations he faced.
    Later that day Studley sent the Commission another response asserting that
    he was “not required” to file the disclosures because “I receive my money from my
    various owned companies and I have listed both of my companies that pay me my
    income.” He explained that: “all of my clients are with contracts to my companies and
    not to me personally”; “Alaska real estate law requires a court order or subpoena before
    I (a Broker) can release confidential information”; and “the legal system seems to weigh
    towards protecting the personal rights of all Alaskans[’] financial data.”
    The following week Commission staff denied Studley’s exemption request.
    The Commission explained that the four statutes Studley cited “do not provide any
    statutory reason that would exempt you as a candidate[] from disclosing real estate
    transactions that provided you income.” Noting that “the value of real estate transactions
    is a public process and your involvement and [c]ommissions from this public process
    6
    (...continued)
    permission, except under a subpoena or court order.” The language from this pamphlet
    mirrors that of AS 08.88.620(4), stating that real estate licensees may “not disclos[e]
    confidential information from or about the represented person without written consent,
    except under a subpoena or another court order, even after termination of the licensee’s
    relationship with the represented person.”
    -4-                                      7148
    [are] ascertainable already from other sources,” the Commission concluded that the
    transactions did not “fall under a constitutionally protected zone of privacy.” The
    Commission observed that “the public’s right to know the sources of your income
    outweigh[s] any reason you may have to keep these matters private.” The denial also
    informed Studley that he could appeal the staff’s decision directly to the Commission’s
    appointed members within 30 days.
    Studley took no action to appeal. The Commission then sent him a “Notice
    of Penalty” informing him that civil penalties are assessed for filing incomplete
    disclosure statements, and that he was subject to fines accrued daily from the decision
    date until the election date. The penalty was $10 per day, for a total of $350. Studley
    was given 30 days to pay the penalty or appeal to the Commission.
    Studley appealed the penalty, requesting a hearing and stating that he was
    “not allowed” to comply with the disclosure laws “on reporting contractual agreements.”
    At the hearing the commissioners located a real estate statute defining “confidential
    information”7 and took note of Studley’s arguments that the required disclosures violated
    his clients’ constitutional privacy rights.
    The Commission later issued a “Final Order” ruling that none of the real
    estate statutes Studley cited prohibited the required disclosures. The Commission found
    that Studley “violated the reporting statute by not filing a complete [disclosure] report,”
    but reduced his civil penalty to $175 because he was an “inexperienced filer.” The order
    informed Studley that he could request reconsideration within 15 days and that he could
    appeal to the superior court within 30 days.
    7
    AS 08.88.695(2); see infra Section IV.B.3 (discussing applicability of
    AS 08.88.695(2)).
    -5-                                    7148
    Studley requested reconsideration.8 The Commission addressed Studley’s
    request at a subsequent meeting, ultimately denying it for failure to provide a basis for
    reconsideration.
    Studley had not been represented by an attorney during his Commission
    interactions; he retained counsel and filed an appeal with the superior court after the
    Commission denied his request for reconsideration. Studley cited the real estate statute
    establishing a licensee’s duty to maintain a client’s confidential information learned
    during representation,9 and the statutory “confidential information” definition examined
    at his Commission hearing.10 Studley also asserted that the required disclosures would
    violate his clients’ constitutional privacy rights and would infringe on several of his own
    constitutional rights.
    The superior court concluded that Studley “has not shown that he was
    called upon to disclose any confidential information” and that he “never made any
    specific assertion that any particular client’s information should be kept confidential.”
    The court rejected Studley’s constitutional claims, explaining that “Studley did not
    demonstrate . . . that release of information about his clients would violate any of his
    clients’ privacy rights [or that] his rights under any of the[ ] [asserted] constitutional
    provisions were violated.” Observing that Studley “provided no basis upon which [the
    Commission] could have granted him an exemption,” the court affirmed the
    Commission’s decision.
    8
    See 2 AAC 50.891(g) (“The commission may reconsider an order as
    provided in AS 44.62.540. . . . A request for reconsideration must state specific grounds
    for reconsideration.”).
    9
    AS 08.88.620(4).
    10
    AS 08.88.695(2).
    -6-                                      7148
    Studley now appeals the superior court’s decision with two “principal
    questions” for our review. First, do “real estate regulations that require a broker not to
    release confidential client information conflict with the [Commission’s] regulations that
    demand this disclosure by a broker who runs for public office?” (Emphasis in original.)
    Second, was Studley’s “constitutional right of candidacy improperly conditioned upon
    relinquishment of his constitutional right of privacy and the rights of privacy of his
    clients[, or u]pon possible loss of his license and of his profession?”
    III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “When the superior court has acted as an intermediate court of appeal, we
    review the merits of the administrative agency’s decision without deference to the
    superior court’s decision.”11 “[W]e give deference to [an] agency’s interpretation of a
    statute] so long as it is reasonable, when the interpretation at issue implicates agency
    expertise or the determination of fundamental policies within the scope of the agency’s
    statutory functions.”12 But we will substitute our own judgment for questions of law
    “when the statutory interpretation does not involve agency expertise, or the agency’s
    specialized knowledge and experience would not be particularly probative.”13 “In such
    cases we ‘adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and
    11
    Tolbert v. Alascom, Inc., 
    973 P.2d 603
    , 606-07 (Alaska 1999) (citing
    Tesoro Alaska Petroleum Co. v. Kenai Pipe Line Co., 
    746 P.2d 896
    , 903 (Alaska 1987)).
    12
    Marathon Oil co. v. State, Dep’t of Nat. Res., 
    254 P.3d 1078
    , 1082 (Alaska
    2011) (citing Matanuska-Susitna Borough v. Hammond, 
    726 P.2d 166
    , 175 (Alaska
    1986)).
    13
    Lakloey, Inc. v. Univ. of Alaska, 
    141 P.3d 317
    , 320 (Alaska 2006) (quoting
    Gunderson v. Univ. of Alaska, Fairbanks, 
    922 P.2d 229
    , 233 (Alaska 1996)).
    -7-                                      7148
    policy.’ ”14 Questions of constitutional interpretation are also reviewed de novo under
    the substitution of judgment standard.15
    IV.	   DISCUSSION
    A.	   Candidates Must Report Sources And Amounts Of Income But May
    Seek An Exemption When Privacy Concerns Arise.
    1.	    Disclosure requirements
    Under Alaska law a candidate for elective office, including municipal
    office, must file a statement disclosing “income sources and business interests.”16 A
    municipal candidate must disclose this information when declaring candidacy or
    submitting other required filings.17 The statement must provide “sources of income over
    $1,000” for the preceding calendar year, including “each source of the income” and the
    corresponding “amount of income” earned from the source, which “may be stated in a
    range rather than as an exact amount.”18 A candidate is considered self-employed when
    the candidate owns a controlling interest in an income-deriving entity, such as a
    partnership or a corporation.19 A self-employed candidate’s source of income is the
    14
    Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. DeShong, 
    77 P.3d 1227
    , 1231 (Alaska 2003)
    (quoting Guin v. Ha, 
    591 P.2d 1281
    , 1284 n.6 (Alaska 1979)).
    15
    Brandal v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n, 
    128 P.3d 732
    , 735
    (Alaska 2006); see also Beeson v. City of Palmer, 
    370 P.3d 1084
    , 1088 (Alaska 2016)
    (“We review questions of constitutional law de novo.” (citing Anchorage v. Sandberg,
    
    861 P.2d 554
    , 557 (Alaska 1993))).
    16
    AS 39.50.020(a).
    17
    
    Id.
    18
    AS 39.50.030(b)(1); 2 AAC 50.685(c).
    19
    AS 39.50.200(10).
    -8-	                                   7148
    entity’s individual “client or customer.”20 Disclosure statements are available to the
    public.21
    2.     Disclosure exemptions
    A candidate required to file a disclosure statement may request exemptions
    from reporting.22 Among other items, a candidate may request to keep “the name of an
    individual who was a source of income” or “the amount of income” earned confidential.23
    “The person requesting any exemption has the burden of proving each fact necessary to
    show that an exemption . . . is applicable.”24 A candidate may seek an exemption under
    2 AAC 50.775(c)(1) when “prohibited by law . . . from reporting” the information, or
    under 2 AAC 50.775(c)(2) when disclosure “would violate rights of the source under
    state or federal statutes or constitutions.”25 Although the superior court based its decision
    on a different provision,26 both parties relied on these two provisions and we accept them
    as the relevant authorities for this appeal.
    20
    
    Id.
    21
    AS 39.50.050(c); see also 2 AAC 50.801(a) (providing for inspection and
    copies of reports, records, and other information in Commission’s possession).
    22
    2 AAC 50.775(a).
    23
    
    Id.
    24
    
    Id.
    25
    2 AAC 50.775(c)(1), (2).
    26
    See 2 AAC 50.775(e) (providing for exemption requests when “state or
    federal law or court order requires the . . . information to be kept confidential”).
    -9-                                     7148
    B.     Studley Did Not Demonstrate He Was Entitled To An Exemption.
    1.	    We regard Studley’s assertions as arguments for an exemption.
    Studley argues that candidate disclosure requirements “compete” with his
    statutory duty as a real estate agent to keep client information confidential, and that
    reporting the information would violate his clients’ privacy rights under the Alaska
    Constitution. Studley claims that his right to stand for elective office was conditioned
    upon the surrender of his right to practice as a real estate broker and that his equal
    protection rights were violated. He also contends he does not need to show that his
    clients’ information is confidential on a “case-by-case” basis. We consider these
    contentions together as an argument that Studley was entitled to a financial disclosure
    reporting exemption.
    2.	    Exemption requests must be supported by facts; hypothetical
    scenarios are insufficient.
    As a candidate requesting an exemption it was Studley’s burden to “prov[e]
    each fact necessary” to show that a reporting exemption applied.27 Contending that he
    “cannot know the circumstances of each client, [but] can envision or anticipate
    circumstances in which disclosure would be detrimental,” Studley offers four “possible
    examples” where disclosure could be detrimental to a client.28 Studley argues that such
    hypothetical examples should suffice for an exemption, quoting Falcon v. Alaska Public
    27
    2 AAC 50.775(a).
    28
    The four hypothetical clients Studley offers as examples are: (1) “a seller
    who anticipates a divorce or dissolution”; (2) “a buyer [with] a creditor who is looking
    for property on which to place a lien”; (3) “[t]he victim of a crime”; and (4) a buyer with
    an “interest in keeping the selling price . . . confidential.”
    -10-	                                     7148
    Offices Commission29 for the proposition that “a case-by-case determination would be
    excessively burdensome.” Studley offered the Commission no facts pertaining to his
    own situation supporting a reporting exemption.
    We conclude that Studley’s hypothetical scenarios are an insufficient basis
    for an exemption from the financial disclosure requirement.30 Under 2 AAC 50.775(a)
    “the burden of proving each fact necessary to show that an exemption . . . is applicable”
    is on the candidate seeking elective office. Hypothetical scenarios do not qualify as
    “fact[s] necessary to show that an exemption . . . is applicable.”31
    Studley was in the best position to investigate his clients’ circumstances and
    present facts showing an applicable exemption. But there is no evidence that Studley
    tried to determine whether any client’s name or commission amount could be legally
    protected from disclosure. Studley’s case is distinguishable from Falcon; that case was
    decided before an exemption process existed, and real estate transactions have fewer
    privacy considerations than healthcare.32 Because Studley offered no facts showing an
    applicable exemption with respect to any of his claims, he failed to meet his burden.
    29
    
    570 P.2d 469
    , 480 (Alaska 1977) (holding that absent regulations providing
    an exemption scheme, physicians are categorically exempt from “reporting the names of
    individual patients” in financial disclosure reports).
    30
    Because the Commission has no agency expertise, specialized knowledge,
    or experience interpreting real estate confidentiality rules, we apply the substitution of
    judgment standard in making this determination. See Lakloey, Inc. v. Univ. of Alaska,
    
    141 P.3d 317
    , 320 (Alaska 2006).
    31
    See 2 AAC 50.775(a).
    32
    See Falcon, 570 P.2d at 479-80.
    -11-                                      7148
    3.	    Studley did not demonstrate that the required information was
    uniformly confidential and that disclosure was uniformly
    prohibited by law.
    Studley contends that he is under a statutory duty not to disclose
    confidential information, including client names and derived earnings. We consider this
    to be an argument that disclosure of a self-employed real estate agent’s clients’
    information is always prohibited by law for purposes of Alaska’s election disclosure
    regime.33
    Alaska Statute 08.88.620(4) prohibits a broker from “disclosing
    confidential information from or about [a] represented person without written consent,
    except under a subpoena or another court order, even after termination of the . . .
    relationship.”34   “[C]onfidential information” is defined in AS 08.88.695(2) as
    “information from or concerning a person” that:
    (A) the licensee acquired during the course of the
    licensee’s relationship as a licensee with the person;
    (B) the person reasonably expects to be kept
    confidential;
    (C) the person has not disclosed or authorized to be
    disclosed to a third party;
    (D) would, if disclosed, operate to the detriment of the
    person; and
    (E) the person is not obligated to disclose to the other
    party in a real estate transaction . . . .[35]
    33
    See 2 AAC 50.775(a), (c)(1).
    34
    AS 0.88.620(4).
    35
    AS 08.88.695(2) (emphasis added). A real estate broker is considered a
    licensee in this context. See AS 08.88.695(7).
    -12-	                                   7148
    The legislature’s conjunctive use of the word “and” indicates that all five conditions must
    be satisfied to meet the “confidential information” definition.36 Here Studley failed to
    make the required showing.37
    Studley argues that a real estate broker’s clients reasonably expect their
    names and the broker-client relationship to be kept confidential because Alaska is a
    “non-disclosure state” and the information “is not part of the public record.” He further
    contends that a candidate for elected office cannot be expected to determine whether
    clients disclosed his representation to third parties, which would render the information
    non-confidential under AS 08.88.695(2)(C).
    But client names and real estate broker commissions are frequently
    disclosed to third parties. The Commission observes that disclosure of a client’s identity
    “is generally necessary to enter into a purchase contract of sale, execute a deed, and close
    the transaction.” And during the January 2013 Commission meeting Studley admitted
    that he reveals his commission amount directly to counter parties in real estate
    transactions. Such disclosures are commonplace in land sale contracts, which generally
    include “the identity of the buyer and seller, the price to be paid, the time and manner of
    36
    See Emp’t Sec. Comm’n v. Wilson, 
    461 P.2d 425
    , 428 (Alaska 1969) (“[W]e
    may assume that the legislature knew and understood the rules of grammar,” and are
    “justified in relying on such rules in the interpretation of [Alaska] laws.” (citing
    AS 01.10.040)).
    37
    We do not address all five elements of the definition because once we
    determine that one element is lacking, Studley’s claim fails. See AS 08.88.695(2).
    -13-                                       7148
    payment, and the property to be transferred.”38 Much of this information is also
    disclosed to third parties when real estate transactions are recorded.39
    We do not suggest there can never be a transaction where a client’s identity
    or the amount of the broker’s commission is intended to be confidential. But we will not
    assume that all real estate broker’s commissions and clients’ identities must be and are
    always confidential. And because Studley has not shown that any of his clients’ names
    or his derived income were previously undisclosed to third parties, we affirm the superior
    court’s decision that he was not “prohibited by law . . . from reporting” this information
    to the Commission.40
    Studley also argues that the “crux of the problem is that a broker cannot
    know for certain what information is detrimental to a client, or whether the release of
    information will not work a detriment to a client in the future.” He lists four
    “circumstances” in which he “can envision or anticipate” disclosures could be
    detrimental.41 But as noted earlier hypothetical scenarios do not show that disclosure
    would be detrimental to a real estate broker’s actual clients. Alaska Statute 08.88.695(2)
    38
    Hall v. Add-Ventures, Ltd., 
    695 P.2d 1081
    , 1086 n.6 (Alaska 1985) (quoting
    Custis v. Valley Nat’l Bank of Phx., 
    375 P.2d 558
    , 561 (Ariz. 1962)).
    39
    See AS 40.17.040 (establishing that a district recorder shall maintain an
    index system for instruments “so the public may find documents by location and by
    names of grantors and grantees”). Studley contends that “no Alaska statute or regulation
    requires a property owner to record a transaction.” But he does not suggest that his
    clients do not in fact do so.
    40
    2 AAC 50.775(c)(1); see AS 08.88.695(2)(C).
    41
    See supra note 27 (outlining Studley’s four hypothetical scenarios).
    -14-                                      7148
    plainly requires that a disclosure actually be detrimental for the information to be
    confidential.42 The mere possibility of theoretical harm does not mean a harm exists.
    Studley relies on Falcon to argue that his clients’ “sensitive personal
    information” should be protected “from public disclosure.”43 In Falcon we held that
    physicians did not need to “report[] the names of individual patients” because of the
    “significant privacy interest” at stake in many physician-client relationships.44 But unlike
    Falcon where “[e]ven visits to a general practitioner may cause particular embarrassment
    or opprobrium,” we do not conclude that the disclosure of buyers and sellers of real
    estate will be similarly detrimental.45 In this case there is no indication of broad classes
    of clients who must uniformly be protected from election disclosure laws, and
    AS 08.88.695(2) already provides a mechanism for protecting confidential information
    in individual circumstances. Because Studley has failed to show that disclosure would
    actually be detrimental to any of his clients, we affirm the superior court’s decision that
    Studley was not asked “to disclose any confidential information.”46
    42
    See AS 08.88.695(2)(D) (requiring that the confidential information
    “would, if disclosed, operate to the detriment of the person” (emphasis added)); see also
    Heller v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, 
    314 P.3d 69
    , 74 (Alaska 2013) (“The plainer the
    meaning of the statute, the more persuasive any legislative history to the contrary must
    be.” (quoting City of Dillingham v. CH2M Hill Nw., Inc., 
    873 P.2d 1271
    , 1276 (Alaska
    1994))); cf. 
    id.
     (“We give unambiguous statutory language its ordinary and common
    meaning . . . .” (citing City of Dillingham, 873 P.2d at 1276)).
    43
    Falcon v. Alaska Pub. Offices Comm’n, 
    570 P.2d 469
    , 480 (Alaska 1977).
    44
    
    Id.
    45
    Id. at 479-80.
    46
    See AS 08.88.695(2)(D).
    -15-                                       7148
    4.	    Studley has not demonstrated that the disclosures would violate
    his clients’ constitutional privacy rights.
    In addition to his statutory argument Studley contends that disclosing his
    clients’ names and derived income would violate his clients’ constitutional privacy
    rights.47 Studley again relies on Falcon to argue that his clients’ personal information
    should be kept confidential.48
    But just as with Studley’s statutory argument, his constitutional privacy
    argument fails because he relies solely on generalized hypotheticals. If Studley had any
    specific client relationships where a constitutional right of privacy was a concern, it was
    his obligation to bring the facts of those relationships to the Commission’s attention and
    request an exemption. But Studley brought no specific requests.
    We held in Falcon that disclosing the identities of physicians’ patients
    could not be required until the Commission promulgated regulations “provid[ing] a
    method for exempting certain classes of patients . . . or for determining whether certain
    patients fall within special or sensitive classes.”49 But the broker-client relationship is
    not like the physician-client relationship we addressed in Falcon, where because of
    “specialized practice[s], the disclosure of the patient’s identity also reveals the nature of
    the treatment, and the particular type of treatment is one which patients would normally
    47
    See Alaska Const. art. I, § 22 (“The right of the people to privacy is
    recognized and shall not be infringed.”); 2 AAC 50.775(c)(2) (permitting candidates to
    seek an exemption when a disclosure “would violate rights of the source under [the] state
    . . . constitution[]”).
    48
    See Falcon, 570 P.2d at 479-80.
    49
    Id. at 480.
    -16-	                                      7148
    seek to keep private.”50 Studley does not present “classes of clients” who might have a
    common interest in privacy; he instead presents four unique circumstances that do not
    lend themselves to ready classification and are best dealt with on a case-by-case basis.
    And the Commission’s regulations provide Studley with a method of preserving his
    clients’ confidentiality.51 Because no blanket exemption exists, we affirm the superior
    court’s rejection of Studley’s clients’ constitutional claims.
    C.     Studley’s Remaining Personal Constitutional Claims Fail.
    Studley also argues that his own constitutional right to privacy would be
    infringed by the required candidacy financial disclosures. But the required disclosures
    are neither “personal” nor “intimate,” and Studley, at least with respect to potential
    conflicts of interest, has “waived his right to privacy by ‘voluntarily entering the public
    arena.’ ”52
    Studley also asserts that he has been “whipsawed” by “dueling”
    requirements, arguing that his statutory duty of confidentiality irreconcilably competes
    with the candidate disclosure laws, setting an “unconstitutional condition” that impairs
    his constitutional right of candidacy. He contends that his right to stand for election is
    infringed because abiding by the disclosure requirements could subject him to discipline,
    suspension, or loss of his broker’s license. Studley argues that this violates his equal
    protection and substantive due process rights and acts as a barrier to his candidacy.
    But the constitutional rights of self-employed real estate brokers like
    Studley who run for public office are protected. A broker may stand for elective office
    50
    Id.
    51
    See 2 AAC 50.775.
    52
    Falcon, 570 P.2d at 474 (citing N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan, 
    376 U.S. 254
    (1964)).
    -17-                                      7148
    by either making the required disclosures or proving an exemption applies.53 And
    Studley’s right of candidacy was not impaired; he stood for election to the borough
    assembly and could have avoided any penalty by following the Commission’s
    procedures. Studley’s remaining personal constitutional arguments are all without merit.
    We affirm the superior court’s decision on those issues.
    V.     CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the superior court’s decision affirming the Commission’s
    final order and civil penalty.
    53
    2 AAC 50.775(a).
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Document Info

Docket Number: 7148 S-15757

Filed Date: 1/27/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/10/2017