Figueroa v. Speers

2015 CO 12, 343 P.3d 967, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 146, 2015 WL 869312
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 2, 2015
DocketSupreme Court Case 14SA235
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2015 CO 12 (Figueroa v. Speers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Figueroa v. Speers, 2015 CO 12, 343 P.3d 967, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 146, 2015 WL 869312 (Colo. 2015).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

{1 Plaintiffs-Appellants the Broomfield district court's judgment in their election contest directly to us under section appeal 1-11-214(2), CRS. (2014). The district court declared a vacancy in the Adams County School District 12 Director District 4 school board director position because Defendant-Appellee Amy Speers was elected but unqualified to serve. Plaintiffs-Appellants assert that, contrary to the district court's holding, Plaintiff-Appellant Enrico Figueroa should have been declared "legally elected" because he received the highest number of votes of any qualified candidate. We hold that, although Speers was unqualified to serve, no court declared her to be unqualified until after voting had been completed. In this situation, the legally elected party is the party who receives the most legal votes. Thus, Speers was legally elected because she received the most legal votes, meaning Figueroa was not legally elected. The district court therefore correctly voided her election and declared a vacancy under the provisions of Colorado's election code, and its judgment is affirmed.

I. Facts and Procedural History

12 This case arises from a contested two-candidate nonpartisan election for a school board director position in Adams County School District 12 ("the School District"). The School District is split into various director districts, and while eligible electors may vote for board members in all districts, only a resident of a particular district may run for that district's school board position. In 2011, both Figueroa and Speers applied to fill the then-vacant Director District 4 position on the Adams County Board of Education. At that time, both Figueroa and Speers resided within the boundaries of Director District 4 and were qualified to hold the position. The board of education appointed Figueroa to fill the vacant position until the next election in November 2018.

T8 As the November 2018 election approached, Figueroa and Speers each submitted timely petitions to be candidates for the soon-to-open Director District 4 position. *969 Although both potential candidates signed affidavits affirming that they met all the requisite qualifications to hold the office, unbeknownst to Speers, the School District had redrawn the director districts in 2012 and had placed Speers's home outside of Director District 4. The School District's designated election officer, Frances E. Mullins, was also unaware that Speers no longer met the residency requirement, and so she deemed both petitions sufficient. Neither the sufficiency of Speers's petition nor her certification to the ballot was challenged within the respective five-day windows under section 1-4-909(1), C.R.S. (2014) (allowing five days to challenge the sufficiency of a petition before certification), or section 1-4-5018), C.R.S. (2014) (allowing five additional days to challenge the certification of a candidate to the ballot), and thus Mullins's certification of both Speers and Figueroa to the ballot was valid despite Speers's unwitting failure to meet the residency requirement.

14 Ballots listing both candidates for the Director District 4 position were printed and: mailed between October 15, 2018, and October 18, 2018. Then, about a week before the election, Mullins became aware that Speers was no longer a resident of Director District 4. Mullins promptly requested that Speers withdraw from the race, which Speers refused to do. Mullins then notified the relevant county clerks to withdraw Speers's name, but the clerks similarly refused to do so. Nobody involved requested judicial intervention of any kind prior to the election, and voting proceeded with both candidates remaining on the ballot.

15 In a final attempt to effectively withdraw Speers from the election, the Secretary of State issued an emergency rule at the end of the final day of the election that instructed the clerks not to count the ballots cast for Speers. A district court invalidated this rule as incompatible with Colorado's election code, and we upheld that court's decision in Hanlen v. Gessler, 2014 CO 24, ¶ 36, 333 P.3d 41, 49, because "questions regarding a certified candidate's eligibility [must] be determined by a court, not an election official." We did not opine, however, as to whether Speers was eligible to hold office, whether she was legally elected, or whether Figueroa instead was legally elected. These issues-now squarely before us-were not relevant to the issue in Hanlen and were stayed before the Broomfield district court at that time. Hanlen, 333 P.3d at 46-47. 1 After the district court invalidated the emergency rule, the clerks counted the votes for Speers and determined that she won the election by roughly a two-to-one ratio.

T 6 The Broomfield district court resumed proceedings subsequent to our decision in Hanien. It considered Figueroa's claims that Speers was not eligible to hold office under section 1-11-201(1)(a), C.R.S. (2014), that the votes cast for her were therefore invalid, and thus that Figueroa was legally elected to the Director District 4 position under section 1-11-201(1)(e) because he "received the most votes of any qualified candidate." The court initially asserted that although no challenge was made to Speers's qualifications within the five-day windows prescribed by sections 1-4-909(1) and 1-4-501(8), "Mullins{'s] failure to confirm residen-ey prior to determining the sufficiency of the petition was a failure to discharge her statutory duty due to neglect of that duty as contemplated by § 1-1-118(1)," and so Speers's certification to the ballot could have been challenged in the court up to the end of election day under that section. See § 1-1-113(1), C.R.S. (2014). But because neither Figueroa nor any other party sought any judicial intervention whatsoever prior to the election, the court found that Figueroa had "slept on his rights" and thus that Speers had won the election. Regarding Speers, the court noted that there is no dispute that she "is ineligible to hold the office for which she was elected as contemplated by § 1-11-201(1)(a)," and because Speers had not sought to take the oath of office and had stated that she did not intend to cure her residency defect, it voided her election. The *970 court then declared a vacancy in the Director District 4 position pursuant to section 22-31-129(1), C.R.S. (2014), due to Speers's "ineligibility, failure to comply with the requirements to serve, and the [cJourt's decree voiding her election." 2

T7 Figueroa appealed the district court's decision directly to us pursuant to section 1-11-214(2). His central contention is that Speers could not have been legally elected because she was ineligible to serve, and thus that Figueroa should be deemed to have been legally elected because he received the "highest number of votes among qualified candidates." It is undisputed that Speers is not eligible to hold the Director District 4 office. Thus, the central questions on appeal are whether Speers was nonetheless legally elected and, if not, whether Figueroa was legally elected.

II. Standard of Review

¶ 8 Whether either Speers or Figueroa was "legally elected" is a question of law, and so we review the district court's decision de novo. Hanlen, 333 P.3d at 48.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carson v. Reiner
2016 CO 38 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 CO 12, 343 P.3d 967, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 146, 2015 WL 869312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/figueroa-v-speers-colo-2015.