Hon George W. Davis III v. Hon Thomas D. Wingate Judge, Franklin Circuit Court Div. II

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 2014
Docket2014 SC 000323
StatusUnknown

This text of Hon George W. Davis III v. Hon Thomas D. Wingate Judge, Franklin Circuit Court Div. II (Hon George W. Davis III v. Hon Thomas D. Wingate Judge, Franklin Circuit Court Div. II) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hon George W. Davis III v. Hon Thomas D. Wingate Judge, Franklin Circuit Court Div. II, (Ky. 2014).

Opinion

RENDERED: AUGUST 14, 2014 TO BE PUBLISHED

ujarrntr Court of 2014-SC-000323-MR

DATE "3 -946- ) 4 EN 4.c-05v s

HONORABLE GEORGE W. DAVIS, III APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. CASE NO. 2014-CA-000678-OA FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT CASE NO. 14-CI-00114

HONORABLE THOMAS D. WINGATE JUDGE, FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT, DIVISION II APPELLEE

AND

MARC I. ROSEN AND COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY REAL PARTIES IN INTEREST

OPINION AND ORDER

George W. Davis, III, appeals from the order of the Court of Appeals that

denied his petition for a writ commanding the Judge of the Franklin Circuit

Court to dismiss the underlying case for want of jurisdiction. The underlying

case in Franklin Circuit Court is a declaratory judgment action filed by Marc I.

Rosen in which he contests the constitutionality of House Bill (HB) 427 (2013

1 Regular Session), a statute that prohibits judges who have chosen to retire as a

Senior Status Special Judge from becoming a candidate for an elected office for

five years after retirement.

Davis argues Franklin Circuit Court lacks jurisdiction to decide Rosen's

constitutional challenge because the General Assembly, through Kentucky

Revised Statutes (KRS) 118.176, has created a statutory mechanism to

determine the bona fides of a candidate and that statute vests exclusive

jurisdiction in the candidate's county of residence. Rosen, a former Senior

Status Judge and a resident of Boyd County, Kentucky, seeks to become a

candidate for circuit judge in the 2014 election.

We affirm the order of the Court of Appeals.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND. Effective June 25, 2013, HB 427 amended various statutes governing

elections.' It sought to prohibit "a judge acting as a Senior Status Special

Judge" from "becom[ing] a candidate for any elected office during the five (5)

year term prescribed in KRS 21.580[1" 2 To this end, the following language—or

a slight variation thereof3—was inserted to amend the associated statutes:

1According to the Legislative Research Commission's (LRC) information on HB 427, the following statutes were amended: KRS 118.105, 118.115, 118.125, 118.305, 118.315, 118.325, 118.375, 118A.100, and 118A.080. However, we are unable to find any indication KRS 118.125 was amended by HB 427. 2 Available at: http:/ /www.lrc.lcy.gov/ record/ 13RS/hb427.htm. 3 Different in text, yet identical in purpose, the following language was inserted into KRS 118.105(7): "However, regardless of the number of days served by a judge acting as a Senior Status Special Judge, a judge who elected to retire as a Senior Status Special Judge in accordance with KRS 21.580 shall not become a candidate for any elected office during the five (5) year term prescribed in KRS 21.580(1)(a)1."

2 A judge who elected to retire as a Senior Status Special Judge in accordance with KRS 21.580 shall not become a candidate or a nominee for any elected office during the five (5) year term prescribed in KRS 21.580 (1)(a)1., regardless of the number of days served by the judge acting as a Senior Status Special Judge. 4 Before the filing deadline in late January of this year, Rosen submitted

nominating papers with the Kentucky Secretary of State to become a candidate

for the 32nd Judicial Circuit of Kentucky, First Division, in the 2014 election

cycle. Rosen held the same Boyd Circuit judgeship for which he now seeks to

become a candidate until January 31, 2009, when he elected to retire as a

Senior Status Special Judge.

After submitting his nominating papers, Rosen filed the underlying

declaratory judgment action in Franklin Circuit Court, seeking a determination

of the constitutionality of HB 427. 5 As the incumbent seeking re-election,

Davis sought and was granted leave to intervene in Rosen's suit. Immediately,

Davis moved to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, raising essentially the same

question he now presents in this appeal. The Franklin Circuit Court denied

Davis's motion to dismiss.

A week after Rosen filed the underlying declaratory action in Franklin

Circuit Court, a concerned voter in Boyd County filed an action challenging the

bona fides of Rosen's candidacy under KRS 118.176(2). It is unnecessary for

the resolution of this appeal to go into much detail discussing the proceedings

in Boyd Circuit. In short, the Boyd Circuit found Rosen was disqualified from

4 E.g., KRS 118.115(2). 5 As an aside, Steve D. Hurt v. State Board of Elections, et al., Case No. 14-CI- 00152, a case mirroring the facts and proceedings of the instant case, is now final. In that case, Franklin Circuit Judge Philip Shepherd found HB 427 unconstitutional.

3 being a candidate because he had been a Senior Status Special Judge and the

five-year term in KRS 21.580(1)(a)1 had not passed. The Boyd Circuit made no

explicit determination concerning the constitutionality of HB 427 but perhaps

implicitly upheld its constitutionality because it applied the terms of HB 427 to

disqualify Rosen.

Under Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 65.07, Rosen petitioned

the Court of Appeals to set aside the Boyd Circuit order. The Court of Appeals

granted Rosen's motion, specifically finding "it was incumbent upon [Boyd

Circuit] to either address the constitutional question underpinning the

controversy or to defer any ruling until the Franklin Circuit Court had resolved

the constitutional question." 6

Meanwhile, in Franklin Circuit, Davis renewed his motion to dismiss

following Boyd Circuit's judgment. Again, the Franklin Circuit denied Davis's

motion, noting that despite Rosen asserting the constitutionality of HB 427 as

a defense in Boyd Circuit, the merits of the issue had not been previously

litigated; and, accordingly, the Franklin Circuit found the constitutional

question properly before it, irrespective of the bona fides challenge in Boyd

Circuit. Davis promptly initiated the writ action in the Court of Appeals and

moved the Franklin Circuit to stay the proceedings there in the interim.

Franklin Circuit declined to grant Davis's motion for a stay but elected to

postpone reviewing arguments or ruling on the issue until the conclusion of

6 Rosen v. Hall, 2014-CA-000448-EL, p. 7-8 (Ky.App. June 4, 2014). This action is now pending before this Court on a CR 65.09 motion to vacate. Hall v. Rosen, 2014-SC-000312-MR.

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Hon George W. Davis III v. Hon Thomas D. Wingate Judge, Franklin Circuit Court Div. II, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hon-george-w-davis-iii-v-hon-thomas-d-wingate-judg-ky-2014.