RENDERED: MAY 15, 2024; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2024-CA-0495-EL
DENNIS HORLANDER APPELLANT
ELECTION APPEAL v. FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT HONORABLE MITCHELL PERRY, JUDGE ACTION NO. 24-CI-001903
NIRUPAMA KULKARNI; BOBBIE HOLSCLAW, AS CHAIR OF THE JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS; KENTUCKY BOARD OF ELECTIONS; AND MICHAEL ADAMS, KENTUCKY SECRETARY OF STATE APPELLEES
OPINION AND ORDER REVERSING AND REMANDING
* * * * * *
BEFORE: COMBS, GOODWINE, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
COMBS, JUDGE: Appellant Dennis Horlander appeals the Jefferson Circuit
Court’s order denying his petition under Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 118.1761 to disqualify Appellee Nirupama “Nima” Kulkarni as a candidate for
State Representative of the 40th District. We reverse and remand.
Additionally, on May 3, 2024, Appellee Nima Kulkarni filed a motion
to dismiss the appeal as improper, arguing that Appellant failed to invoke the
Court’s jurisdiction with the correct initiating document. We deny the motion to
dismiss.
Also, on May 8, 2024, Appellant Dennis Horlander filed a motion for
intermediate relief under Kentucky Rules of Appellate Procedure (RAP) 21,
seeking to “enjoin[] the Jefferson County Clerk and Jefferson County Board of
Elections, Kentucky Board of Elections, or Kentucky Secretary of State, from
releasing any election tallies or results of the Democratic primary nominating
election for House District 40 until after the de novo review and decision of this
Court or on the bona fides of Appellee, Nirupama Kulkarni.” Mot. for
Intermediate Relief, at 1. As we are addressing the merits of Horlander’s appeal in
1 KRS 118.176(2) provides in pertinent part:
The bona fides of any candidate seeking nomination as the nominee of a political party or a nonpartisan or judicial nominee in a primary or election to an office as a member of a political organization, political group, or as an independent in a special or regular election may be questioned by any qualified voter entitled to vote for the candidate or by an opposing candidate by summary proceedings consisting of a motion before the Circuit Court of the judicial circuit in which the candidate whose bona fides is questioned resides. -2- this Opinion, we deny the motion for intermediate relief as moot.
BACKGROUND
On January 2, 2024, Representative Kulkarni filed a notification and
declaration with the Kentucky Secretary of State, seeking reelection in 2024 as the
Democratic candidate for District 40 of the Kentucky House of Representatives.
One of Kulkarni’s two required witnesses, Sharon LaRue, signed the notification
and declaration form, attesting that she was a “registered voter of the same party”
as Kulkarni, a Democrat. Notably, the oath to which LaRue swore states as
follows on the Kentucky State Board of Elections’ declaration form:
It is undisputed that at the time LaRue signed the form, she was a registered
Republican.
On January 5, 2024, the deadline to file all nomination papers closed.
KRS 118.165. Thereafter, Kulkarni learned of LaRue’s party affiliation. On
January 8, 2024, LaRue changed her voter registration from Republican to
Democratic. LaRue’s registration became effective on January 10, 2024. Because
LaRue changed her registration from one party to the other after the statutory
-3- deadline of December 31, 2023, she may not vote in the upcoming Democratic
primary election on May 21, 2024. KRS 116.055. On January 17, 2024, the
Kentucky Secretary of State certified Kulkarni as an election officer to be printed
on the Democratic primary election ballots.
On March 18, 2024, Horlander challenged Kulkarni’s status as a bona
fide candidate per KRS 118.176 with the underlying action. He argued that
Kulkarni should be disqualified as a candidate in the upcoming primary election
because Kulkarni’s nomination form was not signed by two registered voters of the
same party as Kulkarni. He asserted that because LaRue had not changed her party
registration at the time she signed the notification and declaration, her signature
invalidated Kulkarni’s notification and declaration. Horlander further argued that
LaRue could not cure this deficiency by changing her voter registration from the
Republican party to the Democratic party after the form had been filed and the
Kentucky Secretary of State’s filing deadline had passed.
On April 25, 2024, the circuit court denied Horlander’s petition to
disqualify Kulkarni. The court noted that Morris v. Jefferson County Clerk, 729
S.W.2d 444 (Ky. 1987), was factually similar to the instant dispute because it dealt
with a witness who was not a registered voter of the same party when he signed the
nomination papers.
-4- However, the Kentucky General Assembly amended KRS 118.125 in
1990. The amendment removed a proviso in the previous text requiring that both
nominating witnesses be members of the candidate’s party “at the time of filing.”
Circuit Court’s Opinion, at 3. The court found that Kulkarni had tendered an
“Affidavit from Senator Gerald Neal who co-sponsored Senate Bill 47 that made
this change, indicating that this change was made deliberately by the General
Assembly and as a result of the Supreme Court’s decision in Morris.” Id. The
circuit court remarked:
The General Assembly intentionally removed the timing component of KRS 118.125 in 1990. This removal must be presumed to effect a change in the law. Eversole v. Eversole, 185 S.W. 487, 489 (Ky. 1916). It is clear therefore that as long as the other requirements of KRS 118.125 are met, the paperwork is valid and can be properly certified by the Secretary of State. That is precisely what happened in this case.
Id. We disagree with the circuit court’s interpretation of KRS 118.125 and its
holding that Morris is no longer good law.
Before we address the merits of the appeal, we first must resolve
Kulkarni’s motion to dismiss the appeal for failing to invoke this Court’s
jurisdiction. She argues that Horlander should have filed a motion to set aside the
circuit court’s order because the case sub judice involved an action under KRS
118.176. However, “[b]ecause the expedited appeal procedure set forth in KRS
118.176(4) applies only to orders disqualifying a candidate, [Horlander] [is] not -5- entitled to move the Court of Appeals to set aside the order [of April 25, 2024].”
See Gibson v. Thompson, 336 S.W.3d 81, 83 (Ky. 2011). “[T]he order dismissing
is a final and appealable order.” Id. Accordingly, Horlander filed the appropriate
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RENDERED: MAY 15, 2024; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2024-CA-0495-EL
DENNIS HORLANDER APPELLANT
ELECTION APPEAL v. FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT HONORABLE MITCHELL PERRY, JUDGE ACTION NO. 24-CI-001903
NIRUPAMA KULKARNI; BOBBIE HOLSCLAW, AS CHAIR OF THE JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS; KENTUCKY BOARD OF ELECTIONS; AND MICHAEL ADAMS, KENTUCKY SECRETARY OF STATE APPELLEES
OPINION AND ORDER REVERSING AND REMANDING
* * * * * *
BEFORE: COMBS, GOODWINE, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
COMBS, JUDGE: Appellant Dennis Horlander appeals the Jefferson Circuit
Court’s order denying his petition under Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 118.1761 to disqualify Appellee Nirupama “Nima” Kulkarni as a candidate for
State Representative of the 40th District. We reverse and remand.
Additionally, on May 3, 2024, Appellee Nima Kulkarni filed a motion
to dismiss the appeal as improper, arguing that Appellant failed to invoke the
Court’s jurisdiction with the correct initiating document. We deny the motion to
dismiss.
Also, on May 8, 2024, Appellant Dennis Horlander filed a motion for
intermediate relief under Kentucky Rules of Appellate Procedure (RAP) 21,
seeking to “enjoin[] the Jefferson County Clerk and Jefferson County Board of
Elections, Kentucky Board of Elections, or Kentucky Secretary of State, from
releasing any election tallies or results of the Democratic primary nominating
election for House District 40 until after the de novo review and decision of this
Court or on the bona fides of Appellee, Nirupama Kulkarni.” Mot. for
Intermediate Relief, at 1. As we are addressing the merits of Horlander’s appeal in
1 KRS 118.176(2) provides in pertinent part:
The bona fides of any candidate seeking nomination as the nominee of a political party or a nonpartisan or judicial nominee in a primary or election to an office as a member of a political organization, political group, or as an independent in a special or regular election may be questioned by any qualified voter entitled to vote for the candidate or by an opposing candidate by summary proceedings consisting of a motion before the Circuit Court of the judicial circuit in which the candidate whose bona fides is questioned resides. -2- this Opinion, we deny the motion for intermediate relief as moot.
BACKGROUND
On January 2, 2024, Representative Kulkarni filed a notification and
declaration with the Kentucky Secretary of State, seeking reelection in 2024 as the
Democratic candidate for District 40 of the Kentucky House of Representatives.
One of Kulkarni’s two required witnesses, Sharon LaRue, signed the notification
and declaration form, attesting that she was a “registered voter of the same party”
as Kulkarni, a Democrat. Notably, the oath to which LaRue swore states as
follows on the Kentucky State Board of Elections’ declaration form:
It is undisputed that at the time LaRue signed the form, she was a registered
Republican.
On January 5, 2024, the deadline to file all nomination papers closed.
KRS 118.165. Thereafter, Kulkarni learned of LaRue’s party affiliation. On
January 8, 2024, LaRue changed her voter registration from Republican to
Democratic. LaRue’s registration became effective on January 10, 2024. Because
LaRue changed her registration from one party to the other after the statutory
-3- deadline of December 31, 2023, she may not vote in the upcoming Democratic
primary election on May 21, 2024. KRS 116.055. On January 17, 2024, the
Kentucky Secretary of State certified Kulkarni as an election officer to be printed
on the Democratic primary election ballots.
On March 18, 2024, Horlander challenged Kulkarni’s status as a bona
fide candidate per KRS 118.176 with the underlying action. He argued that
Kulkarni should be disqualified as a candidate in the upcoming primary election
because Kulkarni’s nomination form was not signed by two registered voters of the
same party as Kulkarni. He asserted that because LaRue had not changed her party
registration at the time she signed the notification and declaration, her signature
invalidated Kulkarni’s notification and declaration. Horlander further argued that
LaRue could not cure this deficiency by changing her voter registration from the
Republican party to the Democratic party after the form had been filed and the
Kentucky Secretary of State’s filing deadline had passed.
On April 25, 2024, the circuit court denied Horlander’s petition to
disqualify Kulkarni. The court noted that Morris v. Jefferson County Clerk, 729
S.W.2d 444 (Ky. 1987), was factually similar to the instant dispute because it dealt
with a witness who was not a registered voter of the same party when he signed the
nomination papers.
-4- However, the Kentucky General Assembly amended KRS 118.125 in
1990. The amendment removed a proviso in the previous text requiring that both
nominating witnesses be members of the candidate’s party “at the time of filing.”
Circuit Court’s Opinion, at 3. The court found that Kulkarni had tendered an
“Affidavit from Senator Gerald Neal who co-sponsored Senate Bill 47 that made
this change, indicating that this change was made deliberately by the General
Assembly and as a result of the Supreme Court’s decision in Morris.” Id. The
circuit court remarked:
The General Assembly intentionally removed the timing component of KRS 118.125 in 1990. This removal must be presumed to effect a change in the law. Eversole v. Eversole, 185 S.W. 487, 489 (Ky. 1916). It is clear therefore that as long as the other requirements of KRS 118.125 are met, the paperwork is valid and can be properly certified by the Secretary of State. That is precisely what happened in this case.
Id. We disagree with the circuit court’s interpretation of KRS 118.125 and its
holding that Morris is no longer good law.
Before we address the merits of the appeal, we first must resolve
Kulkarni’s motion to dismiss the appeal for failing to invoke this Court’s
jurisdiction. She argues that Horlander should have filed a motion to set aside the
circuit court’s order because the case sub judice involved an action under KRS
118.176. However, “[b]ecause the expedited appeal procedure set forth in KRS
118.176(4) applies only to orders disqualifying a candidate, [Horlander] [is] not -5- entitled to move the Court of Appeals to set aside the order [of April 25, 2024].”
See Gibson v. Thompson, 336 S.W.3d 81, 83 (Ky. 2011). “[T]he order dismissing
is a final and appealable order.” Id. Accordingly, Horlander filed the appropriate
initiating document from a final and appealable order and the motion to dismiss is
DENIED. We now proceed to the merits of the appeal.2
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This appeal comes before the Court upon the circuit court’s statutory
interpretation of KRS 118.125(2) and its analysis of Morris v. Jefferson County
Clerk, 729 S.W.2d 444 (Ky. 1987). We review these legal questions de novo.
Hardin v. Montgomery, 495 S.W.3d 686, 694 (Ky. 2016) (citing McClendon v.
Hodges, 272 S.W.3d 188, 190 (Ky. 2008)).
ANALYSIS
The partisan nominating process is governed by KRS 118.125(2),
which provides in pertinent part:
The notification and declaration shall be in the form prescribed by the State Board of Elections. It shall be signed by the candidate and by not less than two (2) registered voters of the same party from the district or jurisdiction from which the candidate seeks nomination.
2 Kulkarni additionally argues this Court lacks jurisdiction to review the circuit court’s order denying Horlander’s KRS 118.176 petition to disqualify Kulkarni as a bona fide candidate because the statute does not explicitly grant appellate rights to a losing petitioner. We find this argument without merit. See KY. CONST. § 115 (“In all cases, civil and criminal, there shall be allowed as a matter of right at least one appeal to another court[.]”); see also Gibson, supra. -6- Since the 1990 amendments of KRS 118.125 relied upon by the
circuit court, the Kentucky Supreme Court and this Court have cited and
referenced Morris several times as controlling precedent. See Barnard v. Stone,
933 S.W.2d 394, 395 (Ky. 1996) (rejecting the doctrine of “substantial compliance
and invalidat[ing] the candidacy”); Stoecklin v. Fennell, 526 S.W.3d 104, 107 (Ky.
App. 2017) (citing Morris for the proposition that the Kentucky Supreme Court has
“established it is mandatory that a nominating petition be signed by the requisite
number of qualified voters, or a candidate will be disqualified from being
elected”); Petition Committee by and Through a Majority of its Members v. Board
of Education of Johnson County, Kentucky, 509 S.W.3d 58, 67 (Ky. App. 2016)
(holding that Morris involved a “[rejected] claim of substantial compliance . . .
where [a] candidate failed to obtain [the] affidavit of two registered voters on his
nominating petition as required by statute”); Scott v. Board of Educ. of Green
County, No. 2008-CA-001687-MR, 2009 WL 3151097, at *4 (Ky. App. Oct. 2,
2009) (VanMeter, J., concurring) (accord).
Thus, Morris has been cited by this Court and the Kentucky Supreme
Court many times since the 1990 amendments to KRS 118.125 to demonstrate
when a candidate must strictly comply with election laws to be a bona fide
nominated candidate in a primary or general election. We find nothing from our
review of the case law or the record to support that Morris has been abrogated or
-7- overruled.
Kulkarni points to Senator Gerald Neal’s “affidavit” in support of her
position that the General Assembly amended KRS 118.125 with the intention of
abrogating Morris. Senator Gerald Neal’s written statement reflects that in 1990
he “co-sponsored Senate Bill 47, which implemented wide-ranging changes to
Kentucky’s election laws.” R. at 128, ¶ 3. He further states that “[i]n addition to
other changes, Senate Bill 47 removed the words ‘at the time of filing’ from KRS
118.125(3). The bill did not replace those words in any of the provision[s] of the
Kentucky Revised Statutes, and no other timing requirement was placed in KRS
118.125 by Senate Bill 47 or, to my knowledge, any other bill since that time.” R.
at 128, ¶¶ 4-5.
The circuit court found that Senator Gerald Neal’s statement
“indicat[es] that this change was made deliberately by the General Assembly and
as a result of the Supreme Court’s decision in Morris.” Circuit Court’s Opinion, at
7. But nothing in the statement definitively demonstrates the General Assembly
amended KRS 118.125 as a result of the Kentucky Supreme Court’s decision in
Morris. Furthermore, Senator Gerald Neal’s written statement is not notarized,
and therefore, was not sworn.3
3 Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 43.13(1) provides that “[a]ffidavits authorized or permitted . . . in any statutory proceeding[] shall be a written statement or declaration sworn to or affirmed before an officer authorized to take depositions by Rule 28.” CR 43.13(2) further -8- We conclude that we are required to apply the precedent of Morris
and do so today. “[A]s an intermediate appellate court, this Court is bound by
established precedents of the Kentucky Supreme Court. SCR [Kentucky Supreme
Court Rules] 1.030(8)(a). The Court of Appeals cannot overrule the established
precedent set by the Supreme Court or its predecessor Court.” King v. King, 638
S.W.3d 464, 471 (Ky. App. 2021) (quoting Smith v. Vilvarajah, 57 S.W.3d 839,
841 (Ky. App. 2000)).
In Morris, Geoffrey Morris filed his nomination papers for the office
of the Commonwealth’s Attorney. 729 S.W.2d at 444-45. One of his witnesses, J.
Michael Smither, “was not a registered Democrat voter at the time he signed the
affidavit or at the time the nomination papers were filed.” Id. at 445. Smither had
been purged from the list of registered voters. He was not a qualified voter or
elector when he filed his affidavit. Id. After the deadline to submit candidate
nominations had passed, but before the primary, Smither registered to vote. Id.
Morris argued that “by registering to vote after the filing deadline had
past [sic], but more than 30 days before the primary election, Smither became a
qualified elector eligible to vote in the primary election.” Id. The Kentucky
Supreme Court rejected this argument, holding that “[t]he affidavit required by
mandates that “[e]very affidavit shall be subscribed by the affiant; and the certificate of the officer or person before whom it is made shall be written separately, following the signature of the affiant, and shall be proof of the time and manner of the affidavit being made.” -9- K.R.S. 118.125(3) must be signed by two electors who are (not who may
thereafter become) members of the party to which the candidate belongs.” Id. at
445-46 (some emphasis in original).4 “We interpret this to mean that at the time
the affidavit is signed and the nomination papers filed, the affiant must be a voter
registered to vote as a member of the party to which the candidate belongs.” Id.
The Court concluded that because “Morris filed his nomination papers and
attached thereto only one valid affidavit of an elector who was a member of the
party to which he belonged,” he failed to comply with KRS 118.125(3). Id. The
Morris Court held that KRS 118.125 requires strict compliance with its provision
mandating that a witness be a member of the same party as the nominating
candidate. The deficiency of this mandatory requirement cannot be cured at any
time thereafter.5 “The reasoning behind such a mandatory provision is to ensure
that the voters who sign a petition are eligible to vote for that candidate.”
Stoecklin, 526 S.W.3d at 107.6
4 The Kentucky Supreme Court did not focus on the phrase “at the time of filing” in the pre-1990 version of KRS 118.125. Rather, the Kentucky Supreme Court emphasized the present tense of the verb “to be,” thereby stressing that the witnesses must be registered voters of the candidate’s political party at the time the affidavit is signed. The current form of the affidavit required by KRS 118.125(1) continues to use the present tense – “are.” See supra, at 3. 5 We further emphasize that the nominating candidate holds the burden to ensure that his or her witnesses are members of his or her party. Morris, 729 S.W.2d at 446 (“The law places the duty upon the candidate to support his nomination papers with the affidavits of two electors.”). 6 KRS 118.125 requires witnesses to be members of the same political party to prevent the gamesmanship of Kentucky elections. Kentucky law explicitly forbids dummy candidates. “No person shall file a notification and declaration to become a candidate in a primary election as a -10- Here, LaRue was a registered Republican when she signed Kulkarni’s
nomination papers. She did not change her registration until after she signed the
witness affidavit, after Kulkarni’s nomination papers were filed with the Kentucky
Secretary of State, and after the January 5, 2024, deadline to submit nominating
papers had expired. See KRS 118.165. LaRue, consequently, is not allowed to
vote for Kulkarni in the 2024 Democratic primary election, and, therefore, she is
not a “registered voter of the same party” as Kulkarni. See KRS 118.125(2).
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we REVERSE the circuit court’s order denying
Horlander’s petition to disqualify Kulkarni pursuant to KRS 118.176. We
REMAND this matter with directions that the Jefferson Circuit Court enter an
order granting Horlander’s petition to disqualify Kulkarni as a bona fide candidate
for District 40 of the Kentucky House of Representatives and for any other
proceedings not inconsistent with this Opinion and Order. Horlander’s remaining
arguments are moot.
IT IS ORDERED that Kulkarni’s motion to dismiss the appeal for
failing to invoke this Court’s jurisdiction is DENIED.
pretended, fictitious or ‘dummy’ candidate for the purpose of influencing or controlling the selection of challengers or inspectors or officers of election[.]” KRS 118.136. Requiring a witness to be a member of the same party as the nomination candidate ensures the voters who support that candidate have an interest in the candidate. -11- IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Horlander’s motion for
intermediate relief under RAP 21 is DENIED AS MOOT.
ALL CONCUR.
ENTERED: May 15, 2024_____ JUDGE, COURT OF APPEALS
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE NIRUPAMA KULKARNI:
Stephen Joseph Megerle James Craig Covington, Kentucky Louisville, Kentucky
BRIEF FOR APPELLEE BOBBIE HOLSCLAW:
Kathryn Meador Natalie Johnson Louisville, Kentucky
-12-