Washington Vaughn v. Board of Elections of Green County

619 F.3d 553, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 18231, 2010 WL 3419500
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 1, 2010
Docket09-5265
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 619 F.3d 553 (Washington Vaughn v. Board of Elections of Green County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington Vaughn v. Board of Elections of Green County, 619 F.3d 553, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 18231, 2010 WL 3419500 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants Geneal Warf and Glenn Gupton 1 (“the Warf appellants”), individually and on behalf of a class of 542 absentee voters, appeal the district court’s order denying their motion for a preliminary injunction and granting summary judgment to defendants-appellees the Board of Elections of Green County, the Chairperson 2 and Members of the Board of Elections, the county of Green County, Kentucky and Billy Joe Lowe, on the Warf appellants’ 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim of un *556 constitutional disenfranchisement. The Warf appellants allege that their voting rights under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated by a Kentucky state trial court judgment that declared void all 542 votes cast by absentee ballot in the 2006 General Election for the office of Green County Clerk. The district court determined that the Kentucky trial court’s decision to void every absentee ballot cast followed Kentucky precedent and therefore did not rely on non-uniform rules, standards, and procedures in violation of due process.

For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

The facts underlying the voters’ challenge arise from the 2006 election for the office of Green County Court Clerk. The November 7, 2006, general election held in Green County, Kentucky featured a race for the office of court clerk between the incumbent Democratic candidate, Carolyn Scott (“Scott”), and the Republican challenger, Billy Joe Lowe (“Lowe”). After the polls closed, the Board of Elections of Green County (“Board of Elections”) certified Scott as the winner of the election as she received the majority of the total votes cast. Although Lowe received the majority of votes cast by machine, Scott received enough absentee votes to prove victorious by a margin of 151 votes. 3

Lowe thereafter filed suit in the Green Circuit Court 4 to contest the election results, claiming that there had been irregularities in the handling of absentee voting during the election. Lowe alleged that Scott, who had served one four-year term as clerk prior to the 2006 election and had previously served for twenty-eight years as deputy clerk, engaged in multiple improprieties including affixing campaign materials to absentee voting applications that were sent to prospective absentee voters and placing the absentee voting machine in her personal office instead of elsewhere in the clerk’s office. Lowe sought to have all 542 absentee ballots cast in the election declared void and be certified the winner of the election.

On June 2, 2007, a special judge of the Green Circuit Court issued findings of fact, conclusions of law, and final judgment in the ease. The court determined that Scott had placed campaign stickers on the outside of at least thirteen envelopes containing absentee ballot applications — not the absentee ballots themselves — between September 19 and October 9, 2006. Prior to sending out the ballot applications, Scott had sought legal advice and was advised *557 by a local attorney that “inasmuch as the envelopes contained applications and not ballots there would be no problem” in placing the stickers on the envelopes. On October 9, 2006, however, Scott received a telephone call from the Kentucky Attorney General’s Office about the practice and subsequently stopped using the campaign stickers. On October 16, 2006, Scott received a letter from that same office advising her that the use of campaign stickers on official correspondence sent from her office was, at a minimum, inappropriate. The court further determined that Scott had placed the absentee voting machine in her personal office rather than elsewhere in the clerk’s office and that the door to Scott’s office was closed at times when other persons, including potential absentee voters, were in Scott’s office with her.

The court then concluded that Scott’s conduct amounted to “two distinct election irregularities.” First, Scott “used county funds to promote her own campaign by sending campaign stickers on absentee ballot applications” in violation of, “at a minimum,” Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 117.085(2), which prescribes the form for transmitting absentee ballot applications and absentee ballots. 5 Second, “Scott improperly used her office by placing the absentee voting machine within her personal office, affording her the powerful opportunity to influence potential voters as they made use of the machine.” The court then identified the case as one “falling] into a very special category of election contest cases,” in that it involved allegations that an incumbent clerk misused her own office to her electoral advantage. The court reviewed Kentucky law involving county-clerk election contests and concluded that precedent placed upon Scott, as the incumbent clerk, “the burden of showing ‘that the balloting was conducted legally, and that all requirements of the law to insure its fairness, at least, were met substantially.’ ” See Crowe v. Emmert, 305 S.W.2d 272, 274 (Ky.1957). Because Scott could not meet this burden, and in light of the court’s finding that Scott’s conduct “so tainted the entirety of the absentee ballots cas[t] via machine and paper in the election for the office of Green County Court Clerk ... [such that it] call[s] into question the integrity of all said ballots,” the court voided all 542 absentee ballots cast and declared Lowe to be the “Winner.”

Scott thereafter filed an appeal with the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, which dismissed her appeal as untimely. Scott’s subsequent petition for discretionary review was denied on December 10, 2008.

While Scott’s Petition for Discretionary Review was pending before the Kentucky Supreme Court, the Warf appellants filed the instant action in federal court. The Warf appellants moved for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the Board of Elections from enforcing the judgment of the Kentucky trial court. The appellees thereafter moved for summary judgment and dismissal. On March 3, 2009, the district *558 court granted summary judgment in favor of the appellees and denied the Warf appellants’ request for injunctive relief. Warf v. Bd. of Elections, No. l:08-cv-72-R, 2009 WL 530666 (W.D.Ky. Mar. 3, 2009). The district court determined that the Kentucky trial court “did not stray from past Kentucky precedent and that the burden of proof was properly placed on the incumbent clerk” and that there was no indication that the Kentucky court had “relied on ‘non-uniform rules, standards, and procedures’ ” in deciding to void the absentee ballots. Id. at *6. The district court therefore concluded that a constitutional violation had not been established and declined to intervene in the matter. Id.

The Warf appellants timely appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
619 F.3d 553, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 18231, 2010 WL 3419500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-vaughn-v-board-of-elections-of-green-county-ca6-2010.