Ashley Ahrens v. Daniel Fendley ( 2023 )


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  •              RENDERED: APRIL 14, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2022-CA-1485-MR
    ASHLEY AHRENS                                       APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM OLDHAM CIRCUIT COURT
    v.           HONORABLE JERRY CROSBY, II, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 22-CI-00498
    DANIEL FENDLEY; HENRY
    COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS;
    MICHAEL G. ADAMS, IN HIS
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS
    KENTUCKY SECRETARY OF
    STATE; OLDHAM COUNTY BOARD
    OF ELECTIONS; KENTUCKY STATE
    BOARD OF ELECTIONS; AND
    TRIMBLE COUNTY BOARD OF
    ELECTIONS                                           APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; COMBS AND EASTON, JUDGES.
    COMBS, JUDGE: This appeal comes before the Court from an order entered on
    December 16, 2022, dismissing a petition under KRS1 118.176 filed by Appellant,
    Ashley Ahrens (Ahrens or Appellant), to disqualify Appellee Daniel Fendley
    (Fendley or Appellee) as a bona fide candidate in the general election for the office
    of district judge of the 12th Judicial District, Division 1. The order of December
    16, 2022, also denied Ahrens’s petition for a declaration of rights seeking to
    declare that KRS 118.176 is unconstitutional. After our review, we affirm.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    Appellant, Ashley Ahrens, and Appellee Daniel Fendley ran as
    opposing candidates for the office of district judge of the 12th Judicial District,
    Division 1. Fendley received the most votes in the general election held on
    November 8, 2022. He now holds that office.
    On October 21, 2022, Ahrens petitioned the Oldham Circuit Court to
    disqualify Fendley as a bona fide candidate pursuant to KRS 118.176 on the
    ground that he did not meet the two-year residency requirement set forth in Section
    122 of the Kentucky Constitution.2 Fendley moved to dismiss the petition as
    1
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.
    2
    Ahrens claims she could not challenge Fendley’s bona fide qualifications before the primary as
    required by KRS 118.176(2) because she did not discover Fendley’s qualifications -- or lack
    thereof -- until after the statute’s timeframe had elapsed.
    -2-
    untimely, asserting that KRS 118.176(2) required that Ahrens file her bona fides
    challenge prior to the May 2022 primary.
    On October 26, 2022, Ahrens moved the circuit court to allow
    amendment of her petition to include a constitutional challenge to KRS 118.176(2),
    which had been amended in 2021, as well as a petition for a declaration of rights
    that KRS 118.176 is unconstitutional. Ahrens noticed the motion for hearing on
    November 4, 2022, four days prior to the general election.
    On December 16, 2022, the circuit court denied Ahrens’s petition to
    dismiss Fendley as a candidate for district judge. The circuit court also denied
    Ahrens’s petition for a declaration of rights that KRS 118.176 was
    unconstitutional.3 Ahrens asked the circuit court to interpret KRS 118.176 to allow
    for a challenge to be brought before the general election as opposed to before the
    primary election, especially when the bona fides being challenged are required to
    be met by the Kentucky Constitution. According to Ahrens, any other
    interpretation would allow for an unqualified candidate to be seated as a judge.
    The circuit court observed, “this argument has been made as far back
    as 1985 when the Kentucky Supreme Court mandated that challenges to the bona
    3
    On December 16, 2022, Ahrens filed a notice of appeal from the order of December 16, 2022,
    and then she filed a motion to transfer the above-styled appeal to the Kentucky Supreme Court
    on December 21, 2022. The Kentucky Supreme Court denied her motion to transfer on February
    16, 2023.
    -3-
    fides of a judicial candidate needed to be brought prior to the primary election
    under its interpretation of a prior and similar version of KRS 118.176.” Record
    (R.) at 725-26 (referring to Noble v. Meagher, 
    686 S.W.2d 458
     (Ky. 1985)). The
    circuit court then extensively quoted this Court’s recent decisions regarding
    untimely bona fides challenges, Witten v. Foster, No. 2022-CA-1238-EL (Oct. 28,
    2022) (order granting motion to set aside) and Fightmaster v. Johnson, No. 2022-
    CA-1131-EL (Oct. 17, 2022) (order denying motion to set aside). R. at 726-27.
    The circuit court ultimately determined as follows:
    As noted by the higher courts, the legislature could
    have declined to place a deadline for the challenge of the
    bona fides but instead chose to insert it into the revised
    statute. Both the legislative intent and plain language of
    KRS 118.176(2) mandate that a challenge to the bona
    fides of a judicial candidate must be filed before the
    primary election. Therefore, [Ahrens’s] petition is not
    timely and her claim to disqualify Fendley as a candidate
    for the judicial position due to residency must fail.
    R. at 729.
    Ahrens then asked the circuit court to hold that KRS 118.176 is
    unconstitutional on the grounds that it violates the equal protection guarantees of
    both the state and federal constitutions because it creates unequal and irrational
    classifications of groups by fixing two different filing deadlines. The circuit court
    ruled that “the Commonwealth has made clear there exists a strong public policy
    ‘in favor of broad voter participation’ in elections, thus requiring any doubt in
    -4-
    statutory interpretation to ‘be resolved in favor of allowing the candidacy to
    continue.’” R. at 732-33 (quoting Heleringer v. Brown, 
    104 S.W.3d 397
    , 403 (Ky.
    2003)). The court reasoned:
    To allow two candidates to advance past primary only to
    have one deemed ineligible at the last moment due to a
    technical challenge subverts a voter’s freedom of choice
    and increases the risk of gamesmanship on behalf of
    candidates. This reason alone is a rational basis for the
    requirement that challenges made to the bona fides of a
    judicial candidate must be made prior to the primary.
    R. at 733.
    Ahrens also claimed that KRS 118.176 is unconstitutional because it
    could allow an unqualified candidate to be elected and serve as a judge or justice
    simply because the disqualification did not present itself until after the primary,
    thus violating Section 122 of the Kentucky Constitution. Contrary to Ahrens’s
    assertions, the circuit court ruled that KRS 118.176(2) does not abolish or subvert
    the constitutionally mandated requirements for a judicial candidate. R. at 735.
    Rather, it found that KRS 118.176(2) “is merely a procedural mechanism wherein
    a voter or another candidate may challenge the bona fides of a candidate.” R. at
    75. The court concluded that the statute “is not in conflict with § 122 because it
    does not negate the requisites for holding office in this state.” Id. It then reasoned
    that “[a]fter Judge-Elect Fendley takes the oath of office, [Ahrens], the Attorney
    [G]eneral, and the Commonwealth Attorney have the opportunity to bring an
    -5-
    action under the usurpation statutes if they have a legitimate reason to believe he is
    holding the office without the proper qualifications.” R. at 736.
    On appeal, Ahrens presents primarily three arguments. First, she
    asserts that KRS 118.176 modifies the residency requirement of Section 122 of the
    Kentucky Constitution. Second, she contends that KRS 118.176 is
    unconstitutional because it violates Section 34 of the Kentucky Constitution, the
    state equivalent of the federal Equal Protection Clause. Lastly, she argues that
    KRS 118.176 is permissive rather than mandatory, thus demonstrating that a bona
    fides challenge against a judicial nominee does not have to be filed before the
    primary. We will address each of Ahrens’s arguments below.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This appeal comes before the Court upon the circuit court’s
    conclusions of law and interpretation of KRS 118.176. Accordingly, the circuit
    court’s order is subject to de novo review. Hardin v. Montgomery, 
    495 S.W.3d 686
    , 694 (Ky. 2016) (citing McClendon v. Hodges, 
    272 S.W.3d 188
    , 190 (Ky.
    2008)).
    4
    Kentucky Constitution Section 3 provides in part, “All men, when they form a social compact,
    are equal; and no grant of exclusive, separate public emoluments or privileges shall be made to
    any man or set of men, except in consideration of public services[.]”
    -6-
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. KRS 118.176 and Section 122
    Ahrens asserts that KRS 118.176 as amended in 2021 by House Bill
    574 is unconstitutional because it “allowed the Legislature to trump the
    constitutional residency requirement mandated by KY. CONST. § 122 for judicial
    candidates by shortening the time for bona fides challenge.” Appellant’s Brief at
    8. She argues that requiring a bona fides challenge to be brought before the
    primary effectively reduces the two-year residency requirement of Section 122 to
    one and one-half years.
    Section 122 of the Kentucky Constitution requires that “[t]o be
    eligible to serve as . . . a judge of the . . . District Court a person must . . . have
    been a resident of this Commonwealth and of the district from which he is elected
    for two years next preceding his taking office.” As we have previously held in
    Dusing v. Halloran, “we hold the language ‘eligible to serve’ relates to the time a
    judicial candidate is ‘about to hold or assume the office[.]’” Dusing v. Halloran,
    No. 2022-CA-0400-EL, at p. 7 (May 10, 2022) (order granting motion to set aside)
    (quoting Kirkpatrick v. Brownfield, 
    97 Ky. 558
    , 564, 
    31 S.W. 137
    , 138, 
    17 Ky. L. Rptr. 376
     (1895)). Furthermore, a judicial candidate may only “serve” as a judge
    once he or she has been elected to office, the election results have been certified,
    and he or she has been duly sworn in. See generally KRS 118A.190; KRS 62.010.
    -7-
    According to our decision in Dusing, a judge-elect could possibly satisfy the two-
    year residency requirement after having been elected but before serving and taking
    his or her office. If eligibility were required at all stages of the candidacy, the
    framers of our modern constitution could have selected “words . . . to make the
    meaning indisputable.” Kirkpatrick, 
    97 Ky. at 563
    , 31 S.W. at 138. Therefore,
    KRS 118.176 does not effectively reduce the residency requirement of Section 122
    because a perceived disqualification could be cured after the election but before
    taking office.
    Ahrens further contends that the 2021 amendment of KRS 118.176
    “allows a candidate to conceal their lack of constitutional bona fides until the
    primary and then be statutorily immune from their constitutional defects since
    [KRS] 118.176 is the sole avenue of challenging constitutional and statutory bona
    fides for candidates.” Appellant Brief at 9 (citing Noble, 686 S.W.2d at 462). This
    argument, however, is based on the faulty premise that KRS 118.176 is the only
    mechanism to enforce Section 122.
    As the circuit court also noted, in Noble v. Meagher, the Kentucky
    Supreme Court observed as follows:
    Kentucky law provides that [the judicial candidate], as
    well as the Attorney General and the Commonwealth
    Attorney for the district all have standing to bring an
    ouster action under the usurpation statute, KRS
    -8-
    415.030,[5] 415.040,[6] 415.050,[7] if they have legitimate
    grounds to believe the [judge-elect] is holding the office
    of district judge without the proper qualifications.
    686 S.W.2d at 462. Thus, KRS 118.176 is not the only mechanism to enforce the
    constitutional qualifications of Section 122. Contrary to Ahrens’s assertions, if a
    candidate is elected but unqualified to hold public office, that individual can be
    removed from office through an ouster action. See KRS 415.030. In other words,
    if a candidate is “ineligible to hold an office, he becomes, when inducted into it, a
    usurper, and the law provides a distinct and exclusive remedy for his removal,
    which must be pursued.” Leigh v. Commonwealth, 
    203 Ky. 752
    , 755, 
    263 S.W. 14
    ,
    15 (1924).
    Moreover, “[v]otes cast for the unqualified candidate lack the import
    of those cast for a qualified candidate, as each vote could under no circumstances
    result in the placement of the candidate in the desired office.” Stephenson v.
    Woodward, 
    182 S.W.3d 162
    , 174 (Ky. 2005), as modified (Jan. 19, 2006). “When
    a candidate who is constitutionally unqualified to take office nonetheless presents
    5
    KRS 415.030 provides, “If a person usurp[s] an office or franchise, the person entitled thereto,
    or the Commonwealth, may prevent the usurpation by an ordinary action.”
    6
    KRS 415.040 provides, “It shall be the duty of the several Commonwealth attorneys to institute
    the actions mentioned in this chapter against usurpers of county offices or franchises, if no other
    person be entitled thereto, or if the person entitled fail to institute the same during three (3)
    months after the usurpation.”
    7
    KRS 415.050 provides, “For usurpation of other than county offices or franchises, the action by
    the Commonwealth shall be instituted and prosecuted by the Attorney General.”
    -9-
    him or herself as a qualified candidate eligible for election and office, that
    candidate has not only misled the electorate but also engaged it in a futile
    endeavor.” 
    Id.
     Therefore, if it should be determined through an ouster action that
    Fendley was not a resident for two years of the district to which he was elected
    before taking office, then the votes cast for him during the 2022 general election
    would have no significance. A constitutionally unqualified candidate cannot serve
    in an elected office to which he or she has no entitlement. Accordingly, we reject
    Ahrens’s argument that the General Assembly’s 2021 amendment of KRS 118.176
    somehow modifies the mandates of Section 122.
    B. KRS 118.176 Mandates that a Bona Fides Challenge Against a Judicial
    Nominee Be Filed Before a Primary
    Next, Ahrens argues that KRS 118.176 is permissive rather than
    mandatory because the Kentucky General Assembly used “may” instead of “must”
    or “shall” when drafting the statute. Appellant’s Brief at 15. KRS 118.176(2)
    provides, “An action regarding the bona fides of the nominee of a political party or
    a nonpartisan or judicial nominee may be commenced at any time prior to the
    primary.” The language “may be commenced at any time prior to the primary”
    was added by the General Assembly as part of statutory revisions effective June
    29, 2021. See Ky. Acts ch. 197 (H.B. 574) (2021). The prior version of KRS
    118.176(2), enacted in 2010, read, “An action regarding the bona fides of any
    candidate seeking nomination or election in a primary, special, or regular election
    -10-
    may be commenced at any time prior to the regular election.” See Ky. Acts ch.
    123 (H.B. 97) (2010).
    “When a statute is amended, the presumption is that the legislature
    intended to change the law.” City of Somerset v. Bell, 
    156 S.W.3d 321
    , 326 (Ky.
    App. 2005). In other words,
    [w]here a statute is amended or re-enacted in different
    language, it will not be presumed that the difference
    between the two statutes was due to oversight or
    inadvertence on the part of the Legislature. On the
    contrary, it will be presumed that the language was
    intentionally changed for the purpose of effecting
    a change in the law itself.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Eversole v. Eversole, 
    169 Ky. 793
    , 797, 
    185 S.W. 487
    , 489 (1916)).
    Furthermore, we follow the directive of KRS 446.080(4): “All words and phrases
    shall be construed according to the common and approved usage of language[.]”
    KRS 118.176, therefore, evinces an intent by the General Assembly to change the
    deadline for filing actions to challenge the qualifications of certain candidates from
    “prior to the regular election” to “prior to the primary.”
    Both the former and current versions of KRS 118.176 utilize the term
    “may,” which is unextraordinary as actions challenging a candidate’s bona fides
    are never mandated. But in the event of a challenge, we conclude that with the
    2021 amendments to the 2010 statute, the General Assembly changed the
    applicable deadline from “prior to the regular election” to “prior to the primary”
    -11-
    for challenges involving a nominee of a political party, a nonpartisan nominee, or a
    judicial nominee.8
    C. KRS 118.176 Does Not Violate Kentucky’s Equal Protection Clause
    Lastly, Ahrens argues that KRS 118.176 is unconstitutional because it
    violates Section 3, which is our state’s equivalent to the Equal Protection Clause in
    the United States Constitution. Specifically, Ahrens claims that KRS 118.176
    creates:
    two distinct classes of bona fides challenges: one class
    which pertains to primaries and includes all political
    party and non-partisan nominees (including judicial
    nominees), and a second class which pertains to all
    special and regular elections but only includes partisan
    and independent nominees.
    Appellant’s Brief at 13. These two “distinct classes of bona fides challenges” do
    not involve similarly situated individuals, however.
    8
    Ahrens also argues that KRS 118.176 creates a legal impossibility because it requires a bona
    fides challenge against a “nominee” to be made before the primary even though a candidate does
    not become a nominee until after a primary. See KRS 118A.060(9). Ahrens’s argument
    overlooks KRS 446.080(1), which mandates that “[a]ll statutes of this state shall be liberally
    construed with a view to promote their objects and carry out the intent of the legislature[.]”
    Thus, in interpreting KRS 118.176, we must construe the statute as a whole so that all its
    provisions have meaning and harmonize with related statutes. Jefferson Cnty. Bd. of Educ. v.
    Fell, 
    391 S.W.3d 713
    , 718-19 (Ky. 2012) (quoting Shawnee Telecom Resources, Inc. v. Brown,
    
    354 S.W.3d 542
    , 551 (Ky. 2011)). We also presume that the General Assembly did not intend
    for an absurd or unconstitutional result. 
    Id.
     KRS 118.176 overall refers to the bona fides of a
    candidate who seeks nomination in a primary or election. Although the provisions of KRS
    118.176 could have been more carefully worded, Ahrens’s proposed interpretation would truly
    lead to an absurd and obviously unintended result.
    -12-
    “[I]n order to determine whether a person is being denied equal
    protection of the laws it is necessary to make a comparison between two people or
    classes of people in relation to their respective enjoyment of the same privilege or
    protection.” Thomas v. Lyons, 
    586 S.W.2d 711
    , 713 (Ky. 1979); see also Vision
    Mining, Inc. v. Gardner, 
    364 S.W.3d 455
    , 474 (Ky. 2011) (“In considering an
    equal protection challenge, a court . . . must examine whether similarly situated
    individuals have been treated differently in that instance[.]”). Our Supreme Court
    previously determined:
    Persons desiring to run in a regular election as
    independent candidates against assorted party-nominated
    and other candidates are not “similarly situated” with
    persons seeking nomination in a nonpartisan primary
    election, nor are candidates for judicial office, who must,
    of course, meet certain qualifications beyond mere
    residence and supporting signatures.
    Lyons, 586 S.W.2d at 713. We agree.
    Ahrens does not complain that KRS 118.176 treats judicial nominees
    differently. Rather, she complains that KRS 118.176 treats judicial nominees
    differently from members of a political organization, political group, or
    independents running in general elections. She claims that the two classes share
    the same commonality of having to be a resident of the district in which they
    would serve.
    -13-
    However, a judicial nominee and a member of a political party do not
    enjoy the same privileges. They run for entirely different offices and require
    different support. Consequently, KRS 118.176 does not violate Section 3. And
    even if the enumerated groups within KRS 118.176 could be deemed to be
    similarly situated, the different timing requirements of KRS 118.176 do not violate
    Kentucky’s equal protection guarantee.
    “Governmental classifications that do not target suspect classes or
    groups or fundamental interests are subject only to rational basis review.”
    Commonwealth ex rel. Stumbo v. Crutchfield, 
    157 S.W.3d 621
    , 624 (Ky. 2005).
    Here, the challenged statute does not affect a suspect class such as race, national
    origin, or alienage. Additionally, it does not inflict injury to Ahrens’s right to
    candidacy because no such constitutional status exists. Mobley v. Armstrong, 
    978 S.W.2d 307
    , 309 (Ky. 1998), as modified (Oct. 22, 1998) (“The right to candidacy
    is not a fundamental right.”); Chapman v. Gorman, 
    839 S.W.2d 232
    , 237-38 (Ky.
    1992) (“The federal circuit courts of appeal, under Equal Protection Clause
    analysis, sometimes within the context of First Amendment challenges, as the trial
    court observed, have adhered to Bullock v. Carter, [
    405 U.S. 134
    , 143, 
    92 S. Ct. 849
    , 855, 
    31 L. Ed. 2d 92
     (1972)], in holding that there is no fundamental right to
    candidacy.”). Therefore, the rational basis test rather than strict scrutiny is the
    appropriate constitutional standard to analyze KRS 118.176.
    -14-
    “A person challenging a law upon equal protection grounds under the
    rational basis test has a very difficult task because a law must be upheld if there is
    any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a rational basis for the
    classification.” Crutchfield, 157 S.W.3d at 624. “Our General Assembly, under
    the Equal Protection Clause, has great latitude to enact legislation that may appear
    to affect similarly situated people differently.” Id. Moreover, Section 153 of the
    Kentucky Constitution vests the exclusive power to regulate elections to the
    Kentucky General Assembly. KY. CONST. § 153 (“[T]he General Assembly shall
    have power to provide by general law for the manner of voting, for ascertaining the
    result of elections and making due returns thereof, for issuing certificates or
    commissions to all persons entitled thereto, and for the trial of contested
    elections.”).
    As noted by the Kentucky Supreme Court in Kentucky State Board of
    Elections v. Faulkner,
    The right to hold a primary election for the nomination of
    candidates for office, the right of such nominee to have
    his name appear on the ballot under the device and as the
    candidate of his party, the right of an opposing candidate
    to the one declared to be successful by the boards of
    election commissioners empowered to compare the
    returns of the primary election and to grant certificates of
    nomination to contest such nomination, are all creatures
    of the statute enacted by the Legislature upon that
    subject.
    -15-
    
    591 S.W.3d 398
    , 407 (Ky. 2019) (quoting Brumleve v. Cronan, 
    176 Ky. 818
    , 
    197 S.W. 498
    , 501 (1917) (emphasis added)). Accordingly, KRS 118.176 comes to us
    bearing a strong presumption of validity. United Dry Forces v. Lewis, 
    619 S.W.2d 489
    , 493 (Ky. 1981) (“We are well aware of the strong presumption of the
    constitutionality of enactments of the general assembly[.]”).
    Although “[t]he laws that affect candidates always have at least some
    effect on voters[,]” Mobley, 978 S.W.2d at 309, “[n]ot all restrictions placed on a
    candidate’s eligibility impose suspect burdens on fundamental rights of voters to
    associate and to choose among candidates.” Chapman, 839 S.W.2d at 238. We
    further note that “[g]enerally, evenhanded restrictions on candidate eligibility that
    serve legitimate state goals, unrelated to First Amendment values, are upheld.” Id.
    The jurisdictional filing time requirements found within KRS
    118.176(2) further a legitimate state interest. The circuit court determined that the
    Commonwealth “has made clear there exists a strong public policy ‘in favor of
    broad voter participation’ in elections, thus requiring any doubt in statutory
    interpretation to ‘be resolved in favor of allowing the candidacy to continue.’” R.
    at 732-33. It further found that the filing time requirements of KRS 118.176
    satisfy a rational basis because they prevent the subversion of a voter’s freedom of
    choice and decrease the risk or opportunity for gamesmanship on behalf of
    candidates. R. at 733.
    -16-
    This Court’s predecessor has previously recognized this same
    principle. In Fletcher v. Teater, the Court advocated that “the voting public ought
    not to be duped or confused by the appearance on the ballot of the name of a
    person who has no right for it to be there[.]” 
    503 S.W.2d 732
    , 733-34 (Ky. 1974).
    As stated in Heleringer v. Brown, “[t]he right of the qualified voter to cast an
    effective vote is among our most precious freedoms.” 104 S.W.3d at 405 (Stumbo,
    J., concurring) (emphasis added).
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s order of
    December 16, 2022, entered by the Oldham Circuit Court, dismissing Ahrens’s
    petition to disqualify Fendley as a judicial candidate and finding that KRS 118.176
    is constitutional. Furthermore, we have considered the breadth of Ahrens’s
    remaining arguments and find them without merit or unnecessary to the resolution
    of the issues before the Court.
    ALL CONCUR.
    -17-
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT          BRIEF FOR APPELLEE
    ASHLEY AHRENS:                DANIEL FENDLEY:
    J. Gregory Troutman           Sarah D. Reddick
    Louisville, Kentucky          Chase M. Cunningham
    Louisville, Kentucky
    Jonathan Wells
    Ben Wyman
    La Grange, Kentucky
    Galen L. Clark
    Louisville, Kentucky
    Michele McKinney
    Louisville, Kentucky
    -18-