Kenneth Brown v. Wisconsin Elections Commission

2025 WI 5
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 2025
Docket2024AP000232
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 WI 5 (Kenneth Brown v. Wisconsin Elections Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Brown v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, 2025 WI 5 (Wis. 2025).

Opinion

2025 WI 5

KENNETH BROWN, Plaintiff, Respondent, Cross-Appellant, v. WISCONSIN ELECTIONS COMMISSION, et al., Defendant, Co-Appellant, Cross-Respondent.

No. 2024AP232 Decided February 18, 2025

APPEAL from a judgment and order of the Racine County Circuit Court (Eugene A. Gasiorkiewicz, J.) No. 2022CV1324

KAROFSKY, J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court, in which ANN WALSH BRADLEY, DALLET, and PROTASIEWICZ, JJ., joined. ZIEGLER, C.J., filed a dissenting opinion. REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which ZIEGLER, C.J., joined with respect to ¶¶43-44, and in which HAGEDORN, J., joined with respect to ¶¶28-43.

¶1 JILL J. KAROFSKY, J. In this case we are tasked with deciding whether Kenneth Brown has standing to seek judicial review of a Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC) decision regarding the in-person absentee voting procedures1 implemented by the Racine City Clerk during the August 2022 primary election. We determine he does not.

1An elector may vote at her or his polling place on Election Day, or may vote by absentee ballot. See WIS. STAT. §§ 6.77(1), 6.85. In-person absentee voting is one method by which an elector may vote absentee. For example, the elector BROWN v. WEC Opinion of the Court

¶2 This case stems from a complaint Brown filed with WEC under WIS. STAT. § 5.06(1) (2021-22).2 This subsection allows “any elector” served by a local election official to bring a complaint to WEC about the election official’s conduct if the elector believes the conduct violates the law. Brown contended that the in-person absentee voting he observed in Racine violated the law. WEC found that Brown failed to establish probable cause of a violation, and Brown appealed WEC’s decision to the circuit court. The circuit court determined that Brown had standing and partially ruled in Brown’s favor. In this action, which came to us via a bypass petition, WEC asserts Brown does not have standing to seek judicial review.

¶3 To answer the question of whether Brown has standing, we look to WIS. STAT. § 5.06(8), as it sets forth which § 5.06 complainants may seek judicial review of WEC’s decisions. Section 5.06(8) reads in pertinent part: “Any election official or complainant who is aggrieved by an order issued under [§ 5.06(6)] may appeal the decision of the commission to circuit court . . . .” Therefore, in order to have standing Brown must have been “aggrieved by an order” issued under § 5.06(6).

¶4 We hold that Brown was not “aggrieved by an order” issued under § 5.06(6). We have consistently held that to be “aggrieved” by a decision in the context of a statute governing appeals, an individual must suffer an injury to a legally recognized interest as a result of the decision. Brown has failed to demonstrate that WEC’s decision caused him any such injury. As a result, Brown does not have standing, and his complaint must be dismissed.

I. BACKGROUND

¶5 Only a brief overview is necessary to provide adequate context for the standing analysis. Wisconsin municipalities may designate alternate absentee voting sites where voters may request, vote, and return their absentee ballots prior to Election Day. WIS. STAT. § 6.855. In the 2022

may request, vote, and return her or his absentee ballot in person at the municipal clerk’s office, or at an alternate site designated under § 6.855.

2 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021–22 version.

2 BROWN v. WEC Opinion of the Court

election year the City of Racine designated multiple alternate sites as eligible for absentee voting. The Racine City Clerk then selected 22 of the approved sites for the August 2022 primary. The clerk posted a notice for the sites as required by § 6.855(2). One site was located in City Hall and was open during regular business hours and some Saturdays. The other 21 sites were located throughout the city. Absentee voting occurred at those 21 sites using Racine’s mobile election unit, a large vehicle containing election equipment. On each day of the absentee voting period, two of these 21 sites were open, each for a three-hour block of time. During the three hours in which one of those 21 sites was open, the mobile election unit was parked at the previously noticed site. Voters could request, vote, and return absentee ballots inside the vehicle.

¶6 On August 3, 2022, Brown observed in-person absentee voting occur at City Hall and outside a local mall where the mobile election unit was parked. Brown believed the absentee voting procedures at these two locations violated the law, so he filed a complaint with WEC under WIS. STAT. § 5.06.

¶7 Section 5.06(1) provides a means by which individuals like Brown may challenge the decisions of local election officials. Any elector may file a complaint with WEC if she or he believes that a local election official’s decision-making violates the law. § 5.06(1). Upon receiving a complaint, WEC may conduct an investigation and hold a hearing if appropriate. § 5.06(1), (4), (5). WEC may then “summarily decide the matter before it and, by order, require any election official to conform his or her conduct to the law . . . .” § 5.06(6). Any election official or complainant who is “aggrieved by an order” issued under § 5.06(6) may appeal WEC’s decision to the circuit court. § 5.06(8).

¶8 In his complaint to WEC, Brown contended that the Racine City Clerk’s administration of Racine’s alternate sites violated a number of statutory requirements set out in § 6.855. Brown maintained that: (1) the alternate sites were not “as near as practicable” to the clerk’s office; (2) the alternate sites “afford[ed] an advantage” to a political party; (3) “function[s] related to voting and return of absentee ballots” were impermissibly conducted in the same building as the clerk’s office; (4) the alternate sites were not designated for the appropriate time period; and (5) Racine’s use of the mobile election unit violated § 6.855. WEC thereafter

3 BROWN v. WEC Opinion of the Court

issued a decision finding no probable cause that the Racine City Clerk violated any statute and declined to take additional action.3

¶9 Brown appealed to the circuit court, which determined that Brown had standing to bring the action because the Racine City Clerk’s use of invalid voting procedures impacted his right to vote. The court then reversed WEC’s decision on two grounds. First, the court concluded that the clerk’s choice of alternate sites violated § 6.855’s requirement that alternate sites not “afford an advantage to any political party.” Second, the court determined that the clerk’s use of the mobile election unit violated § 6.855.4 WEC sought to appeal the circuit court’s decision and petitioned this court for bypass of the court of appeals, which we granted.

II. ANALYSIS

¶10 The threshold issue before us is whether Brown has standing to seek judicial review of WEC’s decision under WIS. STAT. § 5.06. Whether a party has standing is a question of law that this court reviews independently. Friends of Black River Forest v. Kohler Co., 2022 WI 52, ¶10, 402 Wis. 2d 587, 977 N.W.2d 342. Embedded within the question of standing here is the proper interpretation of WIS. STAT. § 5.06(8), which we also review independently. Priorities USA v. WEC, 2024 WI 32, ¶12, 412 Wis. 2d 594, 8 N.W.3d 429.

¶11 We begin this analysis by interpreting WIS. STAT. § 5.06(8), which allows for appeals from WEC’s decisions on § 5.06 complaints. Then we explain why we reject Brown’s contention that a complainant is always aggrieved under § 5.06(8) when she or he believes that a local election official engaged in unlawful activity, and WEC issues a decision declining to take corrective action.

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Kenneth Brown v. Wisconsin Elections Commission
2025 WI 5 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2025)

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2025 WI 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-brown-v-wisconsin-elections-commission-wis-2025.