Campaign Integrity Watchdog, LLC v. Colorado Citizens Protecting our Constitution ( 2018 )


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  •      The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions
    constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by
    the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be
    cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division.
    Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion
    should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.
    SUMMARY
    February 8, 2018
    2018COA16
    No. 16CA1522, Campaign Integrity Watchdog, LLC v. Colorado
    Citizens Protecting our Constitution — Election Law —
    Campaign Finance — Major Purpose Test
    A division of the court of appeals considers whether an
    administrative law judge properly applied the “major purpose” test
    described in Buckley v. Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    , 79 (1976), and Colorado
    Right to Life Committee, Inc. v. Coffman, 
    498 F.3d 1137
    (10th Cir.
    2007), to determine whether an organization qualified as a political
    committee. The division concludes that (1) the major purpose test
    applied to this case; and (2) the record supported the administrative
    law judge’s determination that the organization was not a political
    committee because, based on the amount of its spending on
    political advocacy for candidates, it did not have the major purpose
    of nominating or electing candidates.
    The division also concludes that the administrative law judge
    did not err when he (1) evaluated a consecutive twelve-month
    period, instead of a calendar year period, in considering the
    organization’s spending for political advocacy for candidates; and (2)
    excluded expenditures from his analysis that the organization did
    not make within the consecutive twelve-month period.
    The division therefore affirms the administrative law judge’s
    order.
    COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                               2018COA16
    Court of Appeals No. 16CA1522
    Colorado Office of Administrative Courts No. 0S2016-0005
    Campaign Integrity Watchdog, LLC,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    Colorado Citizens Protecting our Constitution,
    Respondent-Appellee,
    and
    Colorado Secretary of State,
    Intervenor-Appellee.
    ORDER AFFIRMED
    Division VII
    Opinion by JUDGE BERNARD
    Berger and Freyre, JJ., concur
    Announced February 8, 2018
    Matthew Arnold, Authorized Representative, Denver, Colorado, of Campaign
    Integrity Watchdog, LLC
    Holland & Hart LLP, Douglas L. Abbott, Denver, Colorado, for Respondent-
    Appellee
    Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General, Matthew D. Grove, Assistant Solicitor
    General, Denver, Colorado, for Intervenor-Appellee
    ¶1    This appeal asks us to review the decision of an administrative
    law judge who employed the “major purpose test,” which the United
    States Supreme Court first set forth in Buckley v. Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    ,
    79 (1976), to determine whether an organization was a political
    committee. We conclude that the record supports the judge’s
    holding that the organization was not a political committee because
    it did not have the major purpose of nominating or electing
    candidates.
    ¶2    The organization in question was Colorado Citizens Protecting
    our Constitution, which we shall call “Colorado Citizens.”
    Campaign Integrity Watchdog, LLC, which we shall call “Campaign
    Integrity,” filed a complaint against Colorado Citizens, alleging that
    it had not registered as a political committee when it should have.
    The judge dismissed the complaint. Campaign Integrity appeals.
    We affirm.
    I.    Background
    ¶3    Between September and November 2015, Colorado Citizens
    paid for a radio advertisement that supported the candidacy of Bob
    Gardner for state senate. The advertisement stated as follows:
    1
    He’s a conservative leader who’s served our
    community and our country his entire life.
    Now he’s running to represent Colorado
    Springs in the state senate. Bob Gardner. As
    a young cadet at the Air Force Academy, he
    learned the true meaning of leadership. Then
    Bob Gardner fought for school choice as a
    founder of Cheyenne Mountain Charter
    Academy. And as a state legislator, Bob
    Gardner stood up against trial lawyers,
    teachers’ unions, and big spending politicians,
    earning him multiple legislator of the year
    awards. Now Bob Gardner is running for state
    senate. To make sure our veterans get the
    care they deserve. To fight for our rights on
    guns, school choice, and health care. And to
    take on the big spenders in both parties. A
    fiscal hawk with the unflinching guts to stand
    up for what’s right. Bob Gardner. Paid for by
    Colorado Citizens Protecting our Constitution.
    ¶4    The advertisement ran on one or more radio stations in
    Colorado Springs from September through November 2015.
    ¶5    Following the advertisement’s airing, Campaign Integrity filed
    a complaint with the Colorado Secretary of State. It alleged that
    Colorado Citizens had not registered as a political committee, as
    required by article XXVIII of the Colorado Constitution and the Fair
    Campaign Practices Act, sections 1-45-101 to -118, C.R.S. 2017.
    The Secretary’s office referred the case to the Office of
    2
    Administrative Courts, which assigned an administrative law judge
    to preside over it.
    ¶6    The Secretary moved to intervene in the proceedings. The
    judge granted the motion in part, noting that the Secretary would
    be allowed to intervene only to “submit[] an amicus-style brief
    addressing the legal issues relevant in the complaint.”
    ¶7    Both Colorado Citizens and the Secretary moved for summary
    judgment. Relying on Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc. v.
    Coffman, 
    498 F.3d 1137
    (10th Cir. 2007), and Alliance for
    Colorado’s Families v. Gilbert, 
    172 P.3d 964
    (Colo. App. 2007),
    Colorado Citizens contended that it was not a political committee
    because it did not have the “major purpose” of supporting or
    opposing candidates. The Secretary supported that contention, but
    it added that Colorado Citizens could not be a political committee
    because it did not make or receive contributions. Because of the
    Secretary’s limited party status, the judge construed the motion as
    a legal brief supporting Colorado Citizens’ position. The judge
    denied both summary judgment motions.
    ¶8    The judge then held a hearing on the merits to determine
    Colorado Citizens’ major purpose. He found that, based on the
    3
    financial information admitted into evidence, Colorado Citizens’
    spending on political candidates only accounted for little more than
    one-third of its total spending, while the majority of its spending
    involved political issues. So he concluded that Colorado Citizens
    was not a political committee because it did not have the major
    purpose of nominating or electing political candidates.
    II.   Standard of Review and General Legal Principles
    ¶9    We will uphold the decision of an administrative law judge
    unless his or her decision is arbitrary, capricious, unsupported by
    the evidence, or contrary to law. See Sherritt v. Rocky Mountain Fire
    Dist., 
    205 P.3d 544
    , 545 (Colo. App. 2009). “[W]e accept [a judge’s]
    factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous or unsupported
    by evidence in the record.” Colo. Educ. Ass’n v. Rutt, 
    184 P.3d 65
    ,
    77 (Colo. 2008). But whether the judge applied the correct legal
    standard is a question of law that we review de novo. See Cerbo v.
    Protect Colo. Jobs, Inc., 
    240 P.3d 495
    , 500-01 (Colo. App. 2010); see
    also Stamm v. City & Cty. of Denver, 
    856 P.2d 54
    , 57 (Colo. App.
    1993)(noting that “[a] reviewing court is required to set aside the
    final orders of an administrative agency if the agency applied an
    erroneous legal standard”).
    4
    ¶ 10   In an administrative hearing, evidence is admissible if it
    “possesses probative value commonly accepted by reasonable and
    prudent persons in the conduct of their affairs.” Colo. Motor Vehicle
    Dealer Licensing Bd. v. Northglenn Dodge, Inc., 
    972 P.2d 707
    , 713
    (Colo. App. 1998). But a judge “has discretion to determine the
    relevancy of evidence.” Aviado v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 
    228 P.3d 177
    , 179 (Colo. App. 2009). “Evidentiary decisions are firmly
    within a[] [judge’s] discretion . . . and will not be disturbed absent a
    showing of abuse of that discretion.” Youngs v. Indus. Claim
    Appeals Office, 
    2013 COA 54
    , ¶ 40. “An abuse of discretion occurs
    when the [judge’s] order is beyond the bounds of reason, as where it
    is unsupported by the evidence or contrary to law.” Heinicke v.
    Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 
    197 P.3d 220
    , 222 (Colo. App. 2008).
    III.   “The Major Purpose” Test
    ¶ 11   Campaign Integrity contends that the judge erred when he
    held that Colorado Citizens was not a political committee. The error
    arose, this contention continues, from the judge’s misapplication of
    the major purpose test. We disagree.
    5
    A.    Additional Background
    ¶ 12   The judge’s decision applied the major purpose test that the
    United States Supreme Court set forth in 
    Buckley, 424 U.S. at 79
    .
    He determined that, “although the major purpose test is not
    expressly included within Article XXVIII’s definition of political
    committee, [he could not] constitutionally apply that definition to
    [Colorado Citizens] unless the evidence proves that [Colorado
    Citizens’] major purpose was to support or oppose one or more
    political candidates.”
    ¶ 13   The judge analyzed the major purpose issue from two
    perspectives. First, he looked at Colorado Citizens’ “statement of
    organizational purpose.” He found that this statement did not
    mention political advocacy, but “political advocacy in one form or
    another is all [that Colorado Citizens] did over the one-year period
    under study.” So he “attache[d] little weight to [its] statement of
    organizational purpose.”
    ¶ 14   The judge then looked at Colorado Citizens’ financial records.
    He found that spending on candidates for a year beginning in 2015
    and ending in 2016 accounted for only 33.5 percent of its total
    spending. Because more than half of Colorado Citizens’ spending
    6
    went to something other than candidates, he found that it was not a
    political committee.
    B.       Law
    ¶ 15   Section 2(12)(a) of article XXVIII of the Colorado Constitution
    defines a “[p]olitical committee” as “any person, other than a
    natural person, or any group of two or more persons, including
    natural persons that have accepted or made contributions or
    expenditures in excess of $200 to support or oppose the nomination
    or election of one or more candidates.”
    ¶ 16   In interpreting similar language under federal campaign law,
    the United State Supreme Court held that, to qualify as a political
    committee, the organization must either (1) be “under the control of
    a candidate”; or (2) have “the major purpose of which is the
    nomination or election of a candidate” to qualify as a political
    committee. 
    Buckley, 424 U.S. at 79
    . Because there is no evidence
    in this case that Colorado Citizens was controlled by any candidate,
    including Mr. Gardner, we are only concerned with the second
    consideration, which is known as the “major purpose test.” See
    Alliance for Colorado’s 
    Families, 172 P.3d at 970
    . (The Supreme
    Court adopted the major purpose test to avoid “serious problems of
    7
    vagueness” that might have “deter[red] those who [sought] to
    exercise protected First Amendment rights.” 
    Buckley, 424 U.S. at 76-77
    .)
    ¶ 17   As far as political committees are concerned, the major
    purpose test does not appear in either Colorado’s Constitution or in
    any Colorado statute. But the Tenth Circuit, when analyzing the
    definition of political committee in our state constitution, held that
    it would be unconstitutional as applied if it did not incorporate the
    major purpose test. Colo. Right to Life Comm., 
    Inc., 498 F.3d at 1154
    . In incorporating the major purpose test, the Tenth Circuit
    provided further guidance on how to apply it. Relying on Federal
    Election Commission v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, 
    479 U.S. 238
    , 252 (1986), the circuit stated that there were two ways to
    determine an organization’s major purpose. Colo. Right to Life
    Comm., 
    Inc., 498 F.3d at 1152
    . First, a court could examine its
    “central organizational purpose.” 
    Id. Second, a
    court could
    compare “the organization’s independent spending with overall
    spending to determine whether the preponderance of expenditures
    are for express advocacy or contributions to candidates.” 
    Id. 8 ¶
    18   In Alliance for Colorado’s Families, a division of this court
    decided that the major purpose test from Buckley, as augmented by
    Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc., was the proper test to apply
    when analyzing whether an organization was a political committee.
    (The division did not reach a definitive conclusion about whether
    the major purpose test had been satisfied because the
    administrative law judge had not made sufficient factual 
    findings. 172 P.3d at 972
    . So the division remanded the case for “further
    proceedings . . . guided by Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc. . . .
    and other relevant authority.” 
    Id. at 973.)
    C.   Analysis
    ¶ 19   We begin by noting that Campaign Integrity agrees that the
    definition of “political committee” found in Colorado’s Constitution
    is “insufficient” because it does not incorporate Buckley’s major
    purpose test. Campaign Integrity then asks us to “clarify the
    standard for applying” that test to political committees. Based on
    Campaign Integrity’s position, we shall proceed, as did the
    administrative law judge, to decide this case employing the major
    purpose test.
    9
    ¶ 20   Campaign Integrity contends that the judge in this case
    should have applied the statutory major purpose definition from
    section 1-45-103(12)(b), C.R.S. 2017, which defines “issue
    committee,” to Colorado Citizens’ conduct. It reasons that (1)
    because the great extent of Colorado Citizens’ written and broadcast
    communications supported a candidate, it was a political
    committee, see § 1-45-103(12)(b)(II)(B); (2) the judge erred because
    he did not consider whether Colorado Citizens’ support of Mr.
    Gardner constituted a “considerable portion” of its total activities,
    see § 1-45-103(12)(b)(II)(A); see also 
    Cerbo, 240 P.3d at 501
    ; and (3)
    the judge did not consider Colorado Citizens’ “demonstrated pattern
    of conduct,” see § 1-45-103(12)(b)(II). We disagree with these
    contentions for several somewhat interconnected reasons.
    ¶ 21   First, the phrase “major purpose” does not appear in the
    definition of political committee found in section 2(12)(a) of article
    XXVIII. As we have explained above, Colorado Right to Life
    Committee, Inc., held that this definition would be unconstitutional
    without the major purpose test, and Alliance for Colorado’s Families
    followed Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc. We are persuaded by
    the reasoning in Alliance for Colorado’s Families. So we, too, will
    10
    follow Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc., and we will apply the
    major purpose test in this case as augmented by the alternative
    factors described in Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc.
    ¶ 22   Second, we reject Campaign Integrity’s contention that we
    should apply part of the definition of an “issue committee” to
    determine whether Colorado Citizens was a political committee,
    which is, as we have observed above, defined by a different
    constitutional subsection. Unlike the definition of political
    committee, the definition of “issue committee” in article 28, section
    2(10)(a)(I), includes a reference to the issue committee’s major
    purpose: “any person . . . [t]hat has a major purpose of supporting
    or opposing any ballot issue or ballot question.” The term “major
    purpose” as used in that definition is further defined in section 1-
    45-103(12)(b). That section states that an organization’s major
    purpose can be determined by
    (I) An organization’s specifically identified
    objectives in its organizational documents at the
    time it is established or as such documents
    are later amended; or
    (II) An organization’s demonstrated pattern of
    conduct based upon its:
    11
    (A) Annual expenditures in support of or
    opposition to a ballot issue or ballot question;
    or
    (B) Production or funding, or both, of written or
    broadcast communications, or both, in support
    of or opposition to a ballot issue or ballot
    question.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶ 23   But, as we have suggested above, Campaign Integrity’s
    contention contemplates apples when we must discuss oranges. A
    “major purpose,” as defined in section 1-45-103(12)(b), only applies
    to issue committees. And it ignores the importance of the
    legislature’s choice to include a definition of “major purpose” for
    issue committees but to exclude such a definition for political
    committees. See § 1-45-103(14)(defining political committee); Colo.
    Right to Life Comm., 
    Inc., 498 F.3d at 1155
    (“The inclusion of the
    ‘major purpose’ test in § 2(10)(a) indicates that the decision not to
    include this requirement in the definition of political committee was
    deliberate and consistent with the state’s citizenry’s intent.”).
    Because issue committees and political committees are mutually
    exclusive, see Colo. Const. art. XXVIII, § 2(10)(b)(stating that issue
    committees do not include political committees), this legislative
    12
    choice makes clear that the definition of “major purpose” cannot
    apply to both types of committees, see Turbyne v. People, 
    151 P.3d 563
    , 567-68 (Colo. 2007)(“We do not add words to [a] statute . . . .
    [W]e cannot supply . . . missing language . . . .”).
    ¶ 24   Campaign Integrity’s contention is further undercut by the
    language of the statutory definition of “major purpose” because
    section 1-45-103(12)(b) refers to a major purpose of an
    organization, not to the major purpose. See 
    Cerbo, 240 P.3d at 501
    (“[B]y using the indefinite article ‘a,’ the phrase ‘a major purpose’
    brings within its ambit organizations for which promoting a ballot
    issue is but one major purpose.” (citing Brooks v. Zabka, 
    168 Colo. 265
    , 269, 
    450 P.2d 653
    , 655 (1969))). Although, under this statute,
    an issue committee could have more than one major purpose, the
    United States Supreme Court made clear in Buckley that a political
    committee can have only one. See Indep. Inst. v. Coffman, 
    209 P.3d 1130
    , 1137 (Colo. App. 2008)(noting that Buckley’s major purpose
    test determines the “one, central purpose for which [a political
    committee] is created”).
    ¶ 25   Third, we think that Campaign Integrity’s reliance on Colorado
    Ethics Watch v. Gessler, 
    2013 COA 172M
    , is misplaced. In that
    13
    case, a division of this court struck down the Secretary’s rule
    codifying the major purpose test. 
    Id. at ¶
    38. But, unlike in this
    case, the division’s analysis focused on a question of administrative
    law: Has the legislature, either explicitly or implicitly, delegated the
    authority to an administrative agency to fill a gap in a statute? 
    Id. at ¶
    22. The division’s analysis therefore did not touch upon
    whether the major purpose test, as described in Colorado Right to
    Life Committee, Inc., and Alliance for Colorado’s Families, should
    apply to political committees in this case.
    ¶ 26   Fourth, Campaign Integrity asserts that Colorado Ethics Watch
    required the judge to evaluate the major purpose test in terms of
    whether Colorado Citizens “demonstrated [a] pattern of conduct
    reflected in its annual activity and production and/or funding of
    communications.” But this demonstrated pattern of conduct test
    comes directly from section 1-45-103(12)(b), the statute defining
    “major purpose” for issue committees. And, as we have already
    twice observed, this statutory test is inapplicable to this case.
    Colorado Ethics Watch did not suggest otherwise.
    14
    ¶ 27   We therefore conclude that the judge properly applied the
    major purpose test as described in Colorado Right to Life Committee,
    Inc., and Alliance for Colorado’s Families.
    ¶ 28   We further conclude that the judge’s factual findings
    supported his conclusion that Colorado Citizens was not a political
    committee. The judge considered the alternatives of the major
    purpose test. Our review of the record leads us to agree with him
    that Colorado Citizens’ statement of its organizational purpose was
    unhelpful because the statement and Colorado Citizens’ actual
    activities were inconsistent. For example, the statement of purpose
    referred to “educational outreach regarding the strengthening of
    public education,” but it did not mention political activity or
    political advocacy. But, after reviewing records from Colorado
    Citizens, the judge found that it had engaged in political advocacy
    for a year, although most of the advocacy was on behalf of issues,
    not candidates.
    ¶ 29   And we therefore agree with the judge that employing the
    second test from Colorado Right to Life Committee, Inc. — analyzing
    Colorado Citizens’ spending activity — was the appropriate method
    of inquiry. In doing so, as we will describe in more detail below, the
    15
    judge gave Campaign Integrity the benefit of the doubt when
    analyzing Colorado Citizens’ spending activity. For example, he
    treated unexplained spending in Colorado Citizens’ records as
    spending on political advocacy for candidates. Yet, even giving
    Campaign Integrity that benefit, the records merely showed that a
    little over one-third of Colorado Citizens’ spending was on political
    advocacy for candidates. We therefore conclude that the record
    established that Colorado Citizens was not a political committee
    because its major purpose — its “one, central purpose,” Indep. 
    Inst., 209 P.3d at 1137
    — was not supporting candidates.
    IV.   Calendar Year Versus Consecutive Twelve Months
    ¶ 30   When applying the major purpose test, Campaign Integrity
    contends that the judge should have considered Colorado Citizens’
    spending in a calendar year, instead of in a consecutive
    twelve-month period from June 2015 to May 2016. We disagree.
    A.    Additional Background
    ¶ 31   Campaign Integrity subpoenaed financial records from
    Colorado Citizens from July 1, 2015, through April 1, 2016. In
    response, Colorado Citizens produced bank statements from June
    2015 to April 2016. Colorado Citizens also produced a profit and
    16
    loss summary showing expenses from July 2015 to May 2016.
    Finally, Colorado Citizens produced several invoices.
    ¶ 32   The parties stipulated to admit these documents. But some of
    them did not provide the judge with information about the purpose
    of some of the expenditures. So, as we observed above, the judge
    sanctioned Colorado Citizens by deciding that it would treat all
    unexplained expenditures as spending on political advocacy for
    candidates. The judge then analyzed Colorado Citizens’
    contributions from June 2015 to May 2016, and, based on the
    submitted records, he decided that Colorado Citizens’ contributions
    to candidates constituted only slightly more than a third of its
    overall expenditures.
    ¶ 33   Although Campaign Integrity did not subpoena documents
    from the first half of 2015, it later told the judge that, for the
    purposes of the major purpose test, he had to analyze Colorado
    Citizens’ expenditures for the calendar year of 2015. It added that,
    if the judge had done so, he would have decided that Colorado
    Citizens had been a political committee in 2015.
    17
    B.   Law and Analysis
    ¶ 34   We conclude, for the following reasons, that the judge did not
    err when he decided to base the major purpose analysis on the
    records of Colorado Citizens’ expenses in the consecutive twelve-
    month period spanning 2015 and 2016.
    ¶ 35   First, Campaign Integrity undercut its contention because it
    did not provide sufficient documentary evidence for the judge to
    consider calendar years 2015 and 2016 separately. In an
    administrative hearing, the burden is on an order’s proponent to
    present sufficient evidence to support the requested order. See
    § 24-4-105(7), C.R.S. 2017; see also Velasquez v. Dep’t of Higher
    Educ., 
    93 P.3d 540
    , 542 (Colo. App. 2003). So Campaign Integrity
    had the burden to provide the judge with complete documentation
    from 2015 if it expected the judge to analyze the financial
    information on a calendar-year basis.
    ¶ 36   But Campaign Integrity only subpoenaed documents from the
    second half of 2015 and from the first three months of 2016. It did
    not subpoena any records from the first half of 2015. (As we will
    describe in more detail below, the judge had some information
    about expenditures in the first half of 2015 because Colorado
    18
    Citizens voluntarily disclosed it.) Campaign Integrity set the
    parameters for the judge’s analysis, and it cannot now argue that
    the judge should have considered evidence that it did not provide.
    Because the time period that the judge chose included the months
    in which Colorado Citizens paid for and ran the advertisement at
    issue in the complaint, we conclude that the judge did not err when
    he chose the 2015-2016 time period for analysis.
    ¶ 37   Second, even if Campaign Integrity had provided sufficient
    documentary evidence, there is no legal authority requiring the
    judge to conduct his analysis on a calendar-year basis. Although
    Campaign Integrity mentions Buckley as a basis for this contention,
    it cites nothing in that case that would lead us to the same
    conclusion, and we have not found anything in our independent
    reading of that case to support that contention. And Campaign
    Integrity’s vague reference to the Internal Revenue Code’s reporting
    requirements is similarly unconvincing. Campaign Integrity does
    not cite any other cases, statutes, or constitutional provisions that
    support its contention, and we have not found any.
    19
    V.   Exclusion of $76,000 from March and April 2015
    ¶ 38    Campaign Integrity contends that the judge improperly
    excluded evidence that Colorado Citizens had made $76,000 in
    contributions to candidates during March and April of 2015. We
    disagree.
    A.    Additional Background
    ¶ 39    Some evidence in the record showed that Colorado Citizens
    donated $76,000 in March and April of 2015 to support candidates
    in municipal elections in Colorado Springs. But the judge declined
    to consider these contributions in its analysis “because [Campaign
    Integrity] did not subpoena [Colorado Citizens’] financial records for
    those months, [so] the evidentiary record [was] incomplete as to
    [Colorado Citizens’] total spending in those months.” In other
    words, although the records that the judge had before him showed
    that Colorado Citizens had spent $76,000 in the first half of 2015
    on political advocacy for candidates, the records did not show
    whether Colorado Citizens spent additional funds on non-candidate
    activity.
    20
    B.    Law and Analysis
    ¶ 40   We conclude, for the following reasons, that the judge did not
    abuse his discretion when he excluded the $76,000 from his
    analysis because his decision was not beyond the bounds of reason
    and because it was supported by the evidence. See Youngs, ¶ 40;
    
    Aviado, 228 P.3d at 180
    ; 
    Heinicke, 197 P.3d at 222
    .
    ¶ 41   Campaign Integrity did not subpoena any records from March
    and April of 2015; Colorado Citizens gave those records to the court
    voluntarily. The judge determined that the financial records during
    that period were incomplete because they did not include “any
    evidence regarding non-candidate spending that may have occurred
    in the same period.” And the judge also had no financial records
    from May 2015, which created a gap between the March and April
    records and those from the second half of 2015.
    ¶ 42   Finally, even if the judge had included the $76,000 in his
    analysis, the total candidate spending for 2015 would still have
    constituted less than fifty percent of Colorado Citizens’ overall
    candidate-related expenditures, or less than what would constitute
    the one, central purpose for which Colorado Citizens was created.
    See Indep. 
    Inst., 209 P.3d at 1137
    .
    21
    VI.   Secretary’s Contentions
    ¶ 43   The Secretary urges us to affirm on an alternative basis —
    Colorado Citizens was not a political committee because it did not
    make or receive contributions — if we do not affirm the judge’s
    order based on the major purpose test. Because we have concluded
    that the judge properly (1) applied the major purpose test; (2) used
    the year covered by the records before him instead of calendar year
    2015; and (3) excluded $76,000 in Colorado Citizens’ expenditures
    from his analysis, we decline to address the Secretary’s alternative
    contention.
    ¶ 44   The order is affirmed.
    JUDGE BERGER and JUDGE FREYRE concur.
    22