Tim Griffin, in His Official Capacity as Attorney General of Arkansas v. Arkansas Board of Corrections; And Benny Magness, in His Official Capacity as Chairman of the Arkansas Board of Corrections

2025 Ark. 81
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 22, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. 81 (Tim Griffin, in His Official Capacity as Attorney General of Arkansas v. Arkansas Board of Corrections; And Benny Magness, in His Official Capacity as Chairman of the Arkansas Board of Corrections) 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
Tim Griffin, in His Official Capacity as Attorney General of Arkansas v. Arkansas Board of Corrections; And Benny Magness, in His Official Capacity as Chairman of the Arkansas Board of Corrections, 2025 Ark. 81 (Ark. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. 81 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-24-147

Opinion Delivered: May 22, 2025

TIM GRIFFIN, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS ATTORNEY GENERAL APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI OF ARKANSAS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, APPELLANT SIXTH DIVISION [NO. 60CV-23-9637] V. HONORABLE TIMOTHY DAVIS ARKANSAS BOARD OF FOX, JUDGE CORRECTIONS; AND BENNY MAGNESS, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY MOTION TO DISMISS DENIED; AS CHAIRMAN OF THE ARKANSAS MOTION TO DISQUALIFY BOARD OF CORRECTIONS DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE; APPELLEES REVERSED AND REMANDED.

RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice

The Attorney General sued the Arkansas Board of Corrections 1 (Board) for violating

the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Several days after the complaint was

filed, the circuit court ordered the Attorney General to invoke statutory procedures or

“reach an accommodation” for the Board’s hiring of special counsel for the current

litigation; if not done, the court threatened to dismiss the complaint without prejudice. The

circuit court expressed concern because the Attorney General had sued “his own client.”

The Attorney General responded that he could not legally comply with the court’s order.

When thirty days passed, the circuit court dismissed the complaint without prejudice. On

1 He also sued members of the Board in their official capacities. appeal, we hold that the Attorney General could not legally comply with the order. We

accordingly reverse the order of dismissal and remand for further proceedings.

I. Factual Background

On December 15, 2023, the Attorney General sued the Arkansas Board of

Corrections. The allegations, later amended, included claims that the Board violated the

open-meetings provision of the FOIA and failed to adequately respond to the Attorney

General’s open-records request. The complaint sought declaratory relief that the Board had

violated the FOIA as well as injunctive relief from any decisions that flowed from the

relevant meetings and executive sessions. Specifically, the Attorney General asked the

circuit court to enjoin the Board’s employment of a special counsel.

Four days after the complaint was filed, the circuit court sua sponte entered an order

finding that it could not go forward with the action unless the Attorney General certified

special counsel for the Board. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and

noted that “from a procedural standpoint . . . the Attorney General has sued his own clients.”

The court found that the Attorney General had violated Arkansas Code Annotated section

25-16-702 (Repl. 2024), which establishes statutory duties surrounding appointment of

special counsel, and ordered that the Attorney General “reach an accommodation” about

representation within thirty days or it would dismiss the complaint without prejudice. The

following are the relevant paragraphs from the order:

7. The court is unable to proceed with the merits of this action at this time because the Attorney General is in clear violation of his mandated constitutional and statutory duty to either represent the state defendants or to initiate the special counsel procedure set forth in § 25-16-702. Clearly the state defendants are entitled to legal counsel.

2 8. The Attorney General is given thirty (30) days from entry of this Order in which to comply with his constitutional and statutory duty to either reach an accommodation with the state defendants concerning authorization and payment of the state defendants’ current special counsel or invoke the above recited statutory process to assist the state defendants in obtaining special counsel to represent them in this matter.

9. In the event the Attorney General has not accomplished, within thirty (30) days, one of the two enumerated methodologies for securing special counsel for the state defendants, this case will be dismissed without prejudice for the Attorney General’s clear violation of his statutorily prescribed duties mandated by the Arkansas General Assembly.

In short, the case derailed and never proceeded to a hearing on the merits of the

FOIA complaint.

The Attorney General moved to vacate the circuit court’s order, arguing that it could

not certify special counsel until the Board asked for legal representation. The Attorney

General argued further that, in any event, it alone could not accommodate payment because

additional authorization must come from either the Governor or the Legislative Council.

In sum, the Attorney General argued he could not comply with the court’s order.

Various other motions and pleadings were filed in the interim period. For example,

the Board filed a motion to disqualify the Attorney General, and the Attorney General filed

a motion to disqualify special counsel for the Board. The Board also filed a motion for Rule

11 sanctions, a motion for summary judgment, and a motion for a show-cause order. The

Board’s counsel throughout this case has been the special counsel it had retained under the

disputed FOIA meetings.

The circuit court held a brief hearing in January 2024. The court spent most of that

time explaining the status of the case. Only a short portion involved arguments from

counsel. The main inquiry was whether the Attorney General had done more than email

3 the Board asking if it was planning to certify its need for counsel and whether the Board

responded to the email. The answer from both was negative. The court ended the hearing

after that short exchange and entered an order finding the Attorney General “failed to make

material and good faith efforts” to help the Board obtain special counsel. The order cited

email correspondence in the pleadings to show that the Attorney General’s office “refused

to communicate with the [Board’s] current special counsel.” The court accordingly

dismissed the Attorney General’s complaint without prejudice.

The Attorney General filed an appeal. Once the record was lodged, the parties filed

motions with this court. First, the Attorney General filed a motion to disqualify the Board’s

special counsel. The arguments in this motion largely mirrored the arguments the Attorney

General made in a similar motion to disqualify filed in circuit court; as a reminder, the

circuit court never ruled on this motion to disqualify. Next, the Board moved to dismiss

the Attorney General’s appeal; in short, the Board argued that the circuit court’s order was

not a final, appealable order because the complaint could still be refiled as it was dismissed

without prejudice. We took both motions with submission of the appeal.

II. Motion to Dismiss

We address first the jurisdictional issue raised by the Board’s motion to dismiss the

appeal. The Board argues that because the court dismissed the case without prejudice, the

Attorney General may refile the lawsuit, thus rendering the order not final for purposes of

appeal. We deny the motion.

Generally, when a complaint has been dismissed without prejudice, a party may

either appeal the dismissal or elect to plead further. Orr v. Hudson, 2010 Ark. 484, at 6, 374

4 S.W.3d 686, 691; Robinson v. Felts, 2025 Ark. 67, at 2. If the party chooses the first course,

and the appeal is affirmed, then the dismissal converts to a dismissal with prejudice. Id. This

is the general rule.

But a different rule applies when a party voluntarily dismisses one of multiple claims

in order to appeal an adverse judgment on the remaining claims. In that situation, the appeal

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