John Kyle Day v. Laura "missy" Michelle Wardlaw; Bradley County Board of Election Commissioners; Desha County Board of Election Commissioners; Drew County Board of Election Commissioners; Cole Jester, in His Official Capacity as Arkansas Secretary of State; Republican Party of Arkansas; And Sharon Stuthard, in Her Official Capacity as Secretary of the State Committee of the Republican Party of Arkansas

2026 Ark. 21
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 11, 2026
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 Ark. 21 (John Kyle Day v. Laura "missy" Michelle Wardlaw; Bradley County Board of Election Commissioners; Desha County Board of Election Commissioners; Drew County Board of Election Commissioners; Cole Jester, in His Official Capacity as Arkansas Secretary of State; Republican Party of Arkansas; And Sharon Stuthard, in Her Official Capacity as Secretary of the State Committee of the Republican Party of Arkansas) 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
John Kyle Day v. Laura "missy" Michelle Wardlaw; Bradley County Board of Election Commissioners; Desha County Board of Election Commissioners; Drew County Board of Election Commissioners; Cole Jester, in His Official Capacity as Arkansas Secretary of State; Republican Party of Arkansas; And Sharon Stuthard, in Her Official Capacity as Secretary of the State Committee of the Republican Party of Arkansas, 2026 Ark. 21 (Ark. 2026).

Opinion

Cite as 2026 Ark. 21 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-26-60

Opinion Delivered: February 11, 2026 JOHN KYLE DAY APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, THIRD DIVISION V. [NO. 60CV-25-15659]

LAURA “MISSY” MICHELLE HONORABLE CATHLEEN V. WARDLAW; BRADLEY COUNTY COMPTON, JUDGE BOARD OF ELECTION COMMISSIONERS; DESHA COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTION COMMISSIONERS; DREW COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTION COMMISSIONERS; COLE JESTER, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS ARKANSAS SECRETARY OF STATE; REPUBLICAN PARTY OF ARKANSAS; AND SHARON STUTHARD, IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SECRETARY OF THE STATE COMMITTEE OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY OF ARKANSAS APPELLEES AFFIRMED.

COURTNEY RAE HUDSON, Associate Justice

Appellant John Kyle Day of Drew County, Arkansas, is a candidate and voter in the

March 3, 2026 Republican Preferential Primary Election for House District 94,1 Arkansas

House of Representatives. He petitioned the Pulaski County Circuit Court for a writ of

1 House District 94 includes parts of Bradley, Desha, and Drew Counties. mandamus and declaratory judgment finding that his opponent, appellee Laura “Missy”

Michelle Wardlaw is ineligible to run for public office because she had been convicted of

violating the Arkansas Hot Check Law, Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-37-302. After

the circuit court denied his petition, he appealed to this court. See Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 1-

2(a)(1) and (a)(4). For reversal, Day argues that (1) the circuit court erred when it denied

his petition and did not declare Wardlaw ineligible based on her criminal case disposition of

“Guilty – Bond Forfeiture”; and (2) the circuit court erred by permitting Wardlaw to

maintain wholly inconsistent positions and contradict her and her counsel’s concessions

related to the hot-check case. We affirm.

On December 23, 2025, Day filed his verified petition for issuance of a writ of

mandamus and declaratory judgment. In his petition, Day alleged that Wardlaw (formerly

Byrd2) had been found guilty of an infamous crime in 2018—specifically, violating the

Arkansas Hot Check Law, Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-37-302—in the Clark

County District Court. Day sought to have Wardlaw declared ineligible to run for House

District 94, removed from the ballot under article 5, section 9 of the Arkansas Constitution

and Arkansas Code Annotated section 21-8-305(a), and for the Secretary of State and the

respective county board of election commissioners to not count any ballots cast for

Wardlaw. Attached to the petition were a certified copy of the district court docket and the

arrest warrant issued in the case. In response, Wardlaw denied that Day was entitled to any

relief and specifically denied that there had been a conviction or a finding of guilt in the

2 In the district-court proceedings, Wardlaw is primarily referenced by her previous married name of Laura Byrd, but there is no dispute as to identity.

2 hot-check case. Wardlaw did not, however, contest or seek to collaterally attack the 2018

district court case.

The circuit court held a hearing on Day’s petition on January 13, 2026. The parties

stipulated to the admission of several exhibits from Wardlaw’s 2018 hot-check case, no.

ADS-18-2417: the certified docket; the warrant of arrest filed July 20, 2018; two documents

from the Contexte case-management system; and a handwritten receipt from the Clark

County Sheriff’s Office. The arrest warrant issued by the district court showed a check

amount of $73.98, along with a merchant fee of $30, and indicated that the victim was

“Brookshire #96.” The warrant also listed fees, costs, and fines for a total of $393.98 and a

bond in that same amount. The receipt from the sheriff’s office indicates that Wardlaw wrote

a check for $393.98, leaving a balance of $0. The docket sheet shows the offense of violating

Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-37-302(b)(1)(A) HOT CHECK <= $1,000 1ST

OFFENSE, an unclassified misdemeanor. It reflects a plea date of September 27, 2018, with

“NO PLEA” and a disposition date also of September 27, 2018, with the notation

“GUILTY – BOND FOR” for bond “forfeiture.” The docket sheet reflected the following

amounts: $95 for general fines; $103.98 for restitution; $25 prosecuting attorney fee; $100

criminal court costs; $50 warrant service (sheriff); and $20 county jail fine. The total amount

owed was $393.98, and the docket reflected that payments of $103.98 and $290.00 were

received on September 27, 2018. The case was closed on October 1, 2018. Over Wardlaw’s

objection, Day also introduced a certified docket sheet from a 2016 speeding-violation case

against Wardlaw; it showed a plea of “GUILTY” and a disposition of “DISMISSED –

CIVIL P” for civil penalty.

3 Among the witnesses at the hearing was Penny Ross, the chief clerk of the Clark

County District Court. Ross testified that, as chief clerk, she is present in court sessions and

dockets for trials and plea and arraignments, enters dispositions after court, and does all the

accounting for the court. When presented with the certified docket in Wardlaw’s hot-check

case, Ross explained that “Guilty – Bond Forfeiture” means that “the fine was paid before

court” and “[t]hey never came to court.” She compared the situation to paying a speeding

ticket in lieu of coming to court—“you just pay a fine, and you’re done with it.” She further

testified:

Q: Does the entry of guilty cash bond forfeiture, mean that someone forfeited their bond due to a missed court date?

A: Yes.

Q: So the entry bond forfeiture is a forfeit for a missed court date?

A: I would say they chose to pay their fine rather than come to court.

Ross further testified that the district court hears pleas and arraignments on Wednesdays.

She explained that when a defendant does not appear for plea and arraignment and the bond

has been paid, the judge announces “bond forfeiture.” Ross stated that the arrest warrant

for Wardlaw contained a plea and arraignment date of September 26, 2018, and that she

entered the disposition of the case into the computer the following day, on September 27.

She further testified that, in her experience, the district judge in Clark County sets bond

amounts in the amount of the fines and restitution due in the case. According to Ross,

appearance is not mandatory for a hot-check violation, unlike some other misdemeanor

charges.

4 Michelle Hauge, office manager for the Clark County Sheriff’s Office, testified

regarding the procedures that office followed in accepting bond payments in criminal cases,

and she identified the sheriff’s-office receipt in this case reflecting payment by check of

$393.98 before the court date. Hauge stated that funds are transmitted to the appropriate

court on “court days.” Jason Watson, the Clark County Sheriff, testified that when someone

is served with a warrant and they are not taken into custody, they are usually given a copy

of the warrant for informational purposes, including the court date. Coy Hasley, a former

Arkadelphia police officer, testified that he and Wardlaw are longtime friends because their

children grew up together. Officer Hasley testified that he saw the warrant for Wardlaw and

notified her by phone; she came by the police department, where he may have given her

paperwork; and she went that day to pay her bond.

Rhonda Harris, the senior manager of the Criminal History Division of the Arkansas

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