Erika Lara, Katie Parrish, and Nikita Glendenning v. Gwen Faulkenberry, Special Renee Sanders, Anika Whitfield, and Kimberly Crutchfield

2025 Ark. 205
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 11, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. 205 (Erika Lara, Katie Parrish, and Nikita Glendenning v. Gwen Faulkenberry, Special Renee Sanders, Anika Whitfield, and Kimberly Crutchfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erika Lara, Katie Parrish, and Nikita Glendenning v. Gwen Faulkenberry, Special Renee Sanders, Anika Whitfield, and Kimberly Crutchfield, 2025 Ark. 205 (Ark. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. 205 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-24-754

Opinion Delivered: December 11, 2025 ERIKA LARA, KATIE PARRISH, AND NIKITA GLENDENNING APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI APPELLANTS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 60CV-24-4630] V.

GWEN FAULKENBERRY, SPECIAL RENEE SANDERS, ANIKA WHITFIELD, AND KIMBERLY HONORABLE MORGAN E. CRUTCHFIELD WELCH, JUDGE APPELLEES

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

BARBARA W. WEBB, Justice

Erika Lara, Katie Parrish, and Nikita Glendenning appeal from an order of the Pulaski

County Circuit Court denying their motion to intervene 1 in a lawsuit challenging the

constitutionality of a portion of the LEARNS Act. On appeal, they argue that they are

entitled to intervene of right because (1) as the beneficiary of a government program they

have an interest sufficient to justify their right to defend the program; (2) shutting down the

Arkansas Education Freedom Account program and clawing back past tuition payments

1 The circuit court denied Appellants both intervention by right and permissive intervention. Because we have determined that the circuit court erred in denying the Appellants intervention by right, it is unnecessary for us to address permissive intervention. would impair their interests; and (3) the government cannot adequately represent their

narrow, personal interests in the program.

I. Facts

In 2023, the Arkansas General Assembly enacted Act 237, which is known as the

“LEARNS Act.”2 Section 42 of the Act created a program referred to as the Arkansas

Children's Education Freedom Account (Education Freedom Account) program. The

Education Freedom Account program provided funds to help defray the expenses incurred

by parents that chose to home-school their child or enroll their child in a private school.

Appellees sued various state actors in their official capacities, 3 alleging that the

LEARNS Act violates article 14, sections 1 through 3, and article 16, section 11 of the

Arkansas Constitution. Accordingly, the Appellees made a claim that the Education

Freedom Account program is a public- funds illegal exaction. The Appellees sought to stop

payments for private-school tuition and those funds to be paid to vendors on behalf of home-

school parents. The Appellees also sought to claw back funds that had already been provided.

Appellants, parents of children eligible for the Education Freedom Account program,

moved to intervene. Seeking intervention of right and, alternatively, permissive

intervention, they asserted that they had a financial interest in the Education Freedom

Account program because it provides more than $6600 for private-school tuition, or

2 LEARNS is an acronym for Literacy, Empowerment, Accountability, Readiness, Networking, and School Safety. 3 Education Secretary Jacob Oliva; Chair of the State Board of Education; Dr. Sarah Moore; Vice-Chair Kathy McFetridge-Rollins; Board Members Lisa Hunter, Jeff Wood, Randy Henderson, Adrienne Woods, Ken Bragg, Leigh S. Keener; Governor Sanders; and Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration Secretary Jim Hudson.

2 approved expenditures for home-schooling, that makes the education of their children more

affordable. Appellants further contended that they would represent a perspective in the

lawsuit that the state actors could not adequately present.

The Pulaski County Circuit Court denied Appellants’ motion. It found that they

were not entitled to intervention of right because (1) they lacked a “direct, substantial, and

legally protectible interest” in the Educational Freedom Account program; (2) the

disposition of this action does not pose a threat to the parents’ ability to protect “any interest

they might have in the matter”; and (3) any interest the parents may have in the matter is

adequately represented by an existing party.” Appellants timely filed this interlocutory

appeal.

II. Standard of Review

We review de novo a circuit court’s decision denying intervention as a matter of

right. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London v. Bass, 2015 Ark. 178, 461 S.W.3d 317. Under

Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a)(2), a party is entitled to intervene when it has made

a timely application and “claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is

the subject of the action and [the party] is so situated that the disposition of the action may

as a practical matter impair or impede [the party’s] ability to protect that interest, unless the

applicant's interest is adequately represented by existing parties.”

III. Argument and Analysis

A. Timeliness

Appellants filed their motion to intervene just eleven days after Appellees filed their

complaint. There was no dispute that the motion was timely.

3 B. Recognized Interest

We next consider whether the Appellants have a recognized interest in the Education

Freedom Account program. In Cherokee Nation Businesses, LLC v. Gulfside Casino

Partnership, 2021 Ark. 17, 614 S.W.3d 811, we held that to satisfy the recognized interest in

the subject matter of the litigation, the interest must be “direct, as opposed to tangential or

collateral” and that the interest must be both “substantial” and “legally protectable.” A

“recognized interest” arises when, as a result of a ruling on a governmental regulation, the

putative intervenor would suffer “economic damage.” Id. (citing UHS of Ark., Inc. v. City

of Sherwood, 296 Ark. 97, 103, 752 S.W.2d 36, 38–39 (1988)). Further, the Cherokee court

rejected the idea that the requirement for a “recognized interest” is satisfied only by a

“present enforceable interest.”

In the case before us, Appellants would clearly suffer an economic loss if the voucher

program was held to be unconstitutional. Loss of $6600 that they could put toward private-

school tuition or home-school expenses is clearly an economic loss. Likewise, the disposition

of this action directly affects the Appellants’ interest in the Education Freedom Account

program. Finally, the claw-back provisions in the Appellees’ complaint directly threatened

the Appellants’ resources. We hold that the Appellants have established a recognized interest

in the lawsuit.

C. Adequate Representation by State Actors

The Appellants explain at length how the ability to pay for public-school alternatives

have made a crucial difference in the lives of their school-age children. In essence, they put

a human face on the learning opportunities represented by the Education Freedom Account

4 program. Conversely, the state actors’ primary focus is on the broad overhaul of public

education in Arkansas. This distinction is pivotal in this case. We have held that a litigant’s

interest is adequately represented when it is identical to, or not significantly different from,

that of the proposed intervenor. Matson, Inc. v. Lamb G Assocs. Packaging, Inc., 328 Ark. 705,

709–10, 947 S.W.2d 324, 326 (1997).” We are persuaded by the court’s reasoning in

Cherokee Businesses when it rejected the idea that Cherokee Businesses’ interests were

adequately represented by busy state actors––the Arkansas Gaming Commission and the

Department of Finance and Administration––because it was not their “sole interest.”

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