Grimm v. Wagoner

77 P.3d 423, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 98, 2003 WL 22208073
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 2003
DocketS-10953
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 77 P.3d 423 (Grimm v. Wagoner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grimm v. Wagoner, 77 P.3d 423, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 98, 2003 WL 22208073 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Alaska Statute 89.50.030(a) requires candidates for elected office to file disclosure statements containing an "accurate representation" of their financial affairs. State senate candidate Thomas Wagoner filed a disclosure statement that failed to disclose several actual or potential financial interests. Two voters filed a private post-election enforeement action under AS 39.50.100, claiming that AS 39.50.060(b) required Wagoner to forfeit the election. The superior court conducted a trial and held for Wagoner. We conclude that the superior court did not err in applying a "substantial compliance" standard in deciding whether Wagoner satisfied the disclosure law. We also conclude that it did not err in alternatively ruling that if the lawsuit was a Title 15 election contest, plaintiffs had to prove that the omissions had an effect on the outcome of the election. We therefore affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Thomas H. Wagoner, a candidate for state Senate District Q, filed his Public Official Financial Disclosure Statement May 17, 2002. Wagoner was elected in the November 5, 2002 general election. He defeated the incumbent by 123 votes, and also defeated two other candidates.

On November 18 William Grimm and Merrill McGahan, two qualified voters, filed a civil action under AS 89.50.100 to enforce AS 89.50, Alaska's Public Official Financial Disclosure Law. 1 Their complaint alleged that Wagoner materially and substantially failed to disclose some of his business interests, and sought an order preventing him from taking office. They also moved for a temporary restraining order to enjoin the Division of Elections from certifying the Senate District Q election results. Their supporting memorandum explained that their civil action sought to implement AS 39.50.060(b), which prevents the Heutenant governor from certifying the election of "elected officials" who fail to comply with AS 89.50.

The complaint did not name the Division of Elections as a defendant. On November 25 the superior court ruled that the Division of Elections was an essential party and denied Grimm and McGahan's injunction motion as premature. Their amended complaint included the Division of Elections and the lieutenant governor as defendants, but on November 27 the superior court again denied their injunction motion, finding irreparable harm unlikely and the probability of success on the merits "extraordinarily low." On the same day, the Director of the Division of Elections certified Wagoner's election.

Alaska Public Offices Commission (APOC) staff reviewed Wagoner's disclosures after Grimm and McGahan filed suit. Informed by APOC that a fine would acerue for failure to file properly, Wagoner amended his disclosure statement November 21 to acknowledge additional business interests and associations. Wagoner explained to APOC that he had believed certain matters, including his position as officer of a homeowners' association in California, did not have to be disclosed under the disclosure law.

Following its audit, APOC staff issued a "Recommendation for Commission Action." The staff found that some of the new information provided by Wagoner, such as disclosures relating to inactive business interests, did not need to be disclosed under AS 89.50. But the staff also found that two omissions *426 did require disclosure-Wagoner's position in the homeowners' association, and a business interest in Wagoner Rental Properties, a real estate proprietorship Wagoner had previously listed as a source of income. Wagoner had previously disclosed the location of the rental properties, but failed to include Wagoner Rental Properties as a business interest in the business interest schedule of the disclosure form. The maximum fine for these omissions, at ten dollars per day from the time the disclosure statement was due until it was complete, was $1,740, per staff calculations. Nevertheless, the staff recommended that the fine be reduced to $150 because Wagoner was an inexperienced filer, his omission of the business interest in Wagoner Rental Properties was inadvertent, and he had cooperated fully with APOC staff by correcting his omissions as quickly as possible.

The APOC commissioners met in early December, considered the audit, and accepted the staff recommendation. APOC issued a December 18 order identifying disclosure violations, and fined Wagoner $150 for the two omissions cited in the staff recommendation. On the same day APOC issued its order, Wagoner wrote to APOC, stating that a review of his financial records with his personal accountant revealed three other omissions that were potentially disclosable: the name of an occasional tenant of Wagoner Rental Properties; a "loan" from his mother used to pay for her convalescent care; and a Small Business Administration loan that had been paid off, Wagoner filed amendments to his disclosure statement reflecting these matters. The APOC commissioners apparently had not taken action as to these amendments at the time the present appeal was commenced in our court.

On December 28 the superior court heard oral argument on the parties' motions to establish the applicable law and for summary judgment. On the day of oral argument Grimm and McGahan filed a proposed second amended complaint alleging disclosure failures not alleged in their earlier complaint.

By order of December 26, the superior court denied the parties' motions for summary judgment, and ruled that the case would be treated as an election contest. The court ruled that failure to comply with AS 39.50 may constitute a "corrupt practice" under the election contest statute, and that the disclosure requirements did not create a constitutionally impermissible qualification for office. The court also ruled that in construing AS 89.50 together with AS 15.20, the proper question before the court was whether Wagoner's alleged failures to disclose were sufficient to change the result of the election-the standard for contesting an election under AS 15.20.540. The court rejected the plaintiffs' assertion that AS 39.50 should be strict, ly construed.

Although it applied the general framework of an AS 15.20 election contest to the plaintiffs' challenge, the court ruled that one procedural requirement for a Title 15 election contest-the ten-voter requirement 2 -was "overcome" by the precedence clause in the ballot initiative that created Title 39's Public Official Financial Disclosure Law. 3

Grimm and McGahan filed a petition for review of the December 26 order. While that petition was pending in this court, the superior court conducted a bench trial on January 2, 2008. On January 6 the superior court issued a memorandum decision and judgment dismissing the plaintiffs' complaint.

The superior court dismissed on alternative theories The court ruled that if the plaintiffs' challenge were considered an election contest under Title 15, it would fail because the plaintiffs did not show that Wagoner's alleged nondisclosures had an effect on the outcome of the election.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P.3d 423, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 98, 2003 WL 22208073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimm-v-wagoner-alaska-2003.