Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.
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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
LANCE PRUITT, )
) Supreme Court No. S-17971
Appellant, )
) Superior Court No. 3AN-20-09661 CI
v. )
) OPINION
STATE OF ALASKA, OFFICE OF )
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, and ) No. 7565 – November 12, 2021
KEVIN MEYER, in an official )
capacity; DIVISION OF ELECTIONS, )
and GAIL FENUMIAI, in an official )
capacity. )
)
Appellees, )
)
and )
)
ELIZABETH A. HODGES SNYDER, )
)
Intervenor. )
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
Judicial District, Anchorage, Josie Garton, Judge.
Appearances: Stacey C. Stone, Holmes Weddle & Barcott,
P.C., Anchorage, for Appellant. Laura Fox, Thomas S.
Flynn, Margaret Paton Walsh, Assistant Attorneys General,
Anchorage, and Clyde “Ed” Sniffen, Jr., Acting Attorney
General, Juneau, for Appellees. Holly C. Wells and Jennifer
C. Alexander, Birch Horton Bittner & Cherot, Anchorage, for
Intervenor.
Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Carney,
and Borghesan, Justices.
BORGHESAN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
After a narrow loss in the general election for Alaska House District 27,
Lance Pruitt brought an election contest challenging the result. The superior court
dismissed Pruitt’s multi-count complaint for failure to state a valid claim. But in order
to expedite the case’s eventual review, the court heard evidence on a single count:1
Pruitt’s claim that the Division of Elections committed malconduct that influenced the
election by moving a polling place without notifying the public in all the ways required
by law. After considering the evidence, the superior court ruled that Pruitt did not show
either that the lack of notice amounted to malconduct or that it was sufficient to change
the results of the election. Pruitt appealed only the count on which the court heard
evidence. In order to resolve this election contest before the start of the legislative
session, we issued a brief order stating that Pruitt had not met his burden to sustain an
election contest. This opinion explains our reasoning. Although the count alleging
inadequate notice should not have been dismissed for failure to state a claim, it does not
succeed on the merits. We therefore affirm the superior court’s judgment.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Incumbent Lance Pruitt and challenger Elizabeth Snyder ran in the
November 3, 2020 general election to represent House District 27. On November 30 the
1
Given the expedited timeline of this case, we commend the superior court
for its foresight in taking evidence in the alternative to ensure this case could be swiftly
resolved.
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Division of Elections certified Snyder as the winning candidate by a margin of 13 votes.
A recount on December 4 narrowed Snyder’s margin of victory to 11 votes.
A. Initial Proceedings
On December 9 Pruitt and six other plaintiffs filed a complaint against the
Director of the State’s Division of Elections and Lieutenant Governor Kevin Meyer
(collectively “the Division”).2 The plaintiffs contested the election under AS 15.20.540,
alleging that the “integrity of the election [was] in question” because the Division had
failed to develop a procedure to review ballot signatures and to give required notice after
moving a polling place in House District 27. They also alleged violations of the federal
Equal Protection Clause. In the following days Snyder intervened in the lawsuit, and all
plaintiffs except Pruitt were dismissed. On December 14 Pruitt filed an amended
complaint adding a new allegation: that several voters cast ballots in House District 27
without meeting the legal requirement that they reside in that district for at least thirty
days before the election.
Both Snyder and the Division moved to dismiss Pruitt’s complaint. On
December 22 the superior court granted the motion to dismiss on all counts. It also
dismissed Pruitt’s December 14 amended complaint as untimely. But in light of the short
time frame for resolving the election contest, the court opted to take testimony on Count
2
After the December 4 recount, a group of Pruitt’s supporters also filed a
recount appeal with this court. See Nageak v. Mallott, 426 P.3d 930, 940 (Alaska 2018)
(contrasting an election contest and a recount appeal). We appointed a special master to
preside over the recount appeal and indicated that the appeal would be consolidated with
this election contest. The special master found that all ballots challenged in the recount
appeal had been properly counted or rejected. Pruitt and the recount appeal plaintiffs
then dismissed “that portion of the appeal relating to the recount appeal,” so that “the
only appeal to proceed shall be that of the election contest.”
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II, explaining that this count had been dismissed “because of what [the court] would
describe as a pleading error.”
Count II of Pruitt’s complaint3 alleged that the Division had violated
AS 15.10.090, which sets forth how the Division must notify the public when a polling
place is changed. The polling place for House District 27 Precinct 915, or “27-915,” was
changed twice in 2020, the second time shortly before the general election. Count II
asserted that the Division failed to provide the required notice of this second change.
B. Hearing On Pruitt’s Claim Related To Inadequate Notice
At a hearing on December 22 and 23, the superior court took evidence
about the two polling place changes. The polling place was first changed in August 2020
— prior to the 2020 primary election — from Wayland Baptist University to Muldoon
Town Center. It was then changed in October 2020 — prior to the 2020 general election
— from Muldoon Town Center to Begich Middle School.
A precinct chairperson for 27-9154 testified that he went to Wayland Baptist
University the day before the August 18 primary election to make sure that the booths
were properly set up. He was met at the door by a university employee and asked several
questions regarding his COVID-19 exposure. The chairperson testified that this “raised
a couple red flags for [him] on whether all of the election voters were going to have to
3
Because Count II is identical in Pruitt’s initial and amended complaints, it
is irrelevant whether the amendment was properly denied as untimely, and Pruitt does
not challenge that ruling on appeal.
4
A chairperson or co-chairperson is a poll worker who is responsible for
“oversee[ing] the Election Day Operations at an assigned polling place.” Poll workers
are nonpartisan employees of the State of Alaska. Polling Place Workers, ALASKA
DIVISION OF ELECTIONS, http://elections.alaska.gov/Core/workers_poll.php (last visited
August 19, 2021).
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undergo the same rigorous screening procedures.” He called the election field office and
voiced his concerns.
Julie Husmann, the Region 2 Elections Supervisor, received the call. She
decided to move the polling place to Muldoon Town Center because it was the “closest
polling place available . . . that would be able to handle . . . the voter turnout.” In order
to notify voters about the change in polling place, Husmann had a poster made up and
gave it to a field worker. She testified that no other notice was provided of the polling
place change, noting that “[i]t was very quick, a lot going on.”
After the primary election, the Division of Elections assumed that Muldoon
Town Center would be the 27-915 polling place for the 2020 general election. Around
October 22, Husmann contacted Muldoon Town Center to verify that it would again be
available as a polling place. The owner of the Muldoon Town Center indicated that he
did not want the center to serve as the polling place for 27-915.
Husmann testified that immediately after learning Muldoon Town Center
was no longer available, she contacted the Anchorage School District. The district had
previously offered to make its schools available as polling places. On October 22
Husmann sent the school district a formal letter asking to use Begich Middle School as
the polling place for 27-915. The district replied that the request had been tentatively
approved subject to formal approval by the school’s principal. Formal approval was
received on October 26, and Begich Middle School was confirmed as the polling place
location on October 27.
Witnesses from the Division testified about the efforts they made to provide
public notice of the change. Alaska Statute 15.10.090 requires that the Division provide
public notice of a polling place change by: (1) sending written notice to each voter in
the precinct “whenever possible”; (2) publishing notice in a local newspaper; (3) posting
the change on the Division’s website; (4) notifying relevant municipal clerks, community
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councils, and tribal entities; and (5) noting the change in the official election pamphlet.
Division Director Gail Fenumiai testified that with the late change, there was not enough
time to mail notice to voters, publish notice in the official election pamphlet (which had
already been mailed to voters), or place an ad in the newspaper. Husmann testified that
the Division updated its website and polling place locator hotline to reflect the new
polling place, and put up posters and A-frame signs at the old and new polling places to
guide voters to the correct polling place. However, the Division did not notify the
Anchorage municipal clerk of the change.
Pruitt called a witness to show that at least one voter was frustrated by the
polling place change and ultimately did not vote. Mary Jo Cunniff, a realtor from
Anchorage, testified that on the day of the general election she left her home at “about
8:20, 8:30” in the morning to go to Wayland Baptist University to vote. When she got
there, she saw a sign telling her to go to Begich Middle School to vote instead. Cunniff
testified that she was “kind of mad” because she had planned her day around voting and
because “there had been nothing in the news” about the polling place change. By the
time she got to Begich, between 8:30 and 8:45, “many, many, many people were there.”
Cunniff testified that she knew she’d “never make” her 10:00 appointment if she stayed
to vote, so she left without voting. She then had back-to-back appointments for the rest
of the day and ultimately did not vote. A 27-915 precinct co-chair testified that election
day voters at Begich Middle School were confused by the change.
Finally, Pruitt presented the testimony of an expert witness, Randolph
Ruedrich. Ruedrich opined that, based on his modeling of registration and turnout
statistics in precinct 27-915 and neighboring precincts, the Division’s actions were
sufficient to change the result of the election. The Division presented its own expert,
Ralph Townsend, who opined that Ruedrich’s analysis was flawed in several ways.
-6- 7565
C. Superior Court’s Decision
On December 29 the superior court issued findings of fact and conclusions
of law regarding Count II. It held that the Division did not fully comply with
AS 15.10.090, but that this failure did not amount to malconduct because it “did not
significantly frustrate the purpose of the statute, full compliance was impossible, [the
Division] partially complied by posting notice on its website, and it took other steps to
notify affected voters by posting signs at the old polling places, and had accurate
information available” on the hotline. It further concluded that Pruitt had failed to meet
his burden to show that any malconduct was sufficient to change the results of the
election. Pruitt’s expert’s testimony had relied on the assumption that lower turnout in
27-915 than in two neighboring districts reflected an undervote, but the court found this
assumption flawed. And the court found that Pruitt’s expert had assumed his
conclusions, namely that all three districts should have the same turnout and that any
difference in turnout between 27-915 and the other two districts was caused by the
change in polling place.
On December 30 Pruitt appealed, challenging the superior court’s rulings
on Count II only.
III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review de novo the dismissal of a complaint under Alaska Civil Rule
12(b)(6), “deeming all facts in the complaint true and provable.”5 To survive such a
motion, “it is enough that the complaint set forth allegations of fact consistent with and
appropriate to some enforceable cause of action.”6 “[A] complaint should not be
5
Guerrero v. Alaska Hous. Fin. Corp., 6 P.3d 250, 253 (Alaska 2000)
(footnote omitted).
6
Caudle v. Mendel, 994 P.2d 372, 374 (Alaska 1999) (quoting Kollodge v.
(continued...)
-7- 7565
dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can
prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”7
“Whether the conduct of election officials constitutes malconduct and
whether that malconduct was sufficient to change the result of an election are questions
of law.”8 We “review questions of law de novo, ‘adopting the rule of law most
persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy.’ ”9 Underlying findings of fact are
reviewed for clear error, which exists when our “review of the record leaves us with the
definite and firm conviction that the superior court has made a mistake.”10
IV. DISCUSSION
A. It Was Error To Dismiss Count II Of The Complaint For Failure To
State A Claim For Which Relief May Be Granted.
Alaska law allows a losing candidate to contest the outcome of an election
by proving “malconduct, fraud, or corruption on the part of an election official sufficient
to change the result of the election.”11 If the challenger makes this showing, the superior
court must “pronounce judgment on which candidate was elected or nominated” or, if
6
(...continued)
State, 757 P.2d 1024, 1025-26 (Alaska 1988)).
7
Guerrero, 6 P.3d at 254 (emphasis omitted) (quoting Martin v. Mears, 602
P.2d 421, 429 (Alaska 1979)).
8
Nageak v. Mallott, 426 P.3d 930, 940 (Alaska 2018).
9
Id. (quoting Comsult LLC v. Girdwood Mining Co., 397 P.3d 318, 320
(Alaska 2017)).
10
Id. (quoting Ranes & Shine, LLC v. MacDonald Miller Alaska, Inc., 355
P.3d 503, 508 (Alaska 2015)).
11
AS 15.20.540(1).
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it decides “that no candidate was duly elected or nominated,” order that “the contested
election be set aside.”12
The mere fact that an election law has been violated does not amount to
malconduct. Rather, proving “malconduct” requires showing “a significant deviation
from statutorily or constitutionally prescribed norms.”13 In addition, the election
contestant typically must show that this deviation from the law either introduced bias into
the vote or was committed with scienter.14 “Bias exists at the malconduct stage when
conduct of election officials influences voters to vote a certain way.”15 By contrast,
conduct that “impact[s] randomly on voter behavior” will constitute malconduct if it is
“imbued with scienter, a knowing noncompliance with the law or a reckless indifference
to norms established by law.”16 Even if no individual violation constitutes malconduct,
this court has acknowledged the possibility that “an election will be so permeated with
numerous serious violations of law, not individually amounting to malconduct, that
substantial doubt will be cast on the outcome of the vote,” in which case “cumulation of
irregularities may be proper and will support a finding of malconduct.”17
12
AS 15.20.560.
13
Hammond v. Hickel, 588 P.2d 256, 258 (Alaska 1978).
14
See Nageak, 426 P.3d at 945 n.60. Although we have “never held that a
deviation was significant enough from the norm to constitute malconduct absent scienter
or bias,” we have “not foreclosed the possibility of demonstrating malconduct by
showing good faith maladministration.” Id.
15
Id.
16
Hammond, 588 P.2d at 259.
17
Id.
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The superior court dismissed Count II of Pruitt’s complaint for failure to
state a claim upon which relief could be granted18 because Pruitt did not allege that the
Division’s failure to provide the statutorily required notice introduced bias or was
committed with scienter. The superior court stated that election contestants “must strictly
comply with the statutory requirements,” citing Dale v. Greater Anchorage Area
Borough.19 But neither Dale nor any of our other cases creates a heightened pleading
standard in election contests, and Count II of Pruitt’s complaint survives dismissal under
the ordinary standard for Rule 12(b)(6). The Division argues that we may affirm
dismissal on the alternative theory that the Division did not violate AS 15.10.090 at all
because it applies only to permanent, rather than temporary, polling place changes.
Because that interpretation is not supported by the statutory text or legislative history,
we do not affirm on that ground.
1. There is no heightened standard of pleading for election
contests.
There is no statute, court rule,20 or precedent requiring special particularity
in pleading election contest claims, and we decline to create such a rule now. Rather,
these claims are subject to the usual standard, under which motions to dismiss are
“viewed with disfavor and should only be granted on the rare occasion where ‘it appears
beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of the claims that
would entitle the plaintiff to relief.’ ”21
18
See Alaska R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
19
439 P.2d 790 (Alaska 1968).
20
Cf. Alaska R. Civ. P. 9 (requiring certain matters, such as fraud, to be pled
with particularity).
21
Jacob v. State, Dep’t of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.’s Servs., 177
(continued...)
-10- 7565
In dismissing Count II for failure to state a claim, the superior court cited
Dale, in which we stated that “the failure of a contestant to observe strict compliance
with the statutory requirements is fatal to his right to have an election contested.”22 But
Dale does not establish a higher pleading standard in election cases. In that case a
plaintiff bringing an election contest claim failed to follow a statutory requirement that
she deliver written notice of her election contest to the borough assembly.23 We held that
“[c]ompliance with this requirement of the ordinance was a condition precedent to [the
plaintiff’s] invoking the power of the court to have the election declared invalid”;
because the plaintiff had failed to meet this condition, “her complaint failed to state a
claim upon which relief could be granted.”24 Dale stands for the proposition that
plaintiffs must comply with any statutory conditions precedent before bringing an
election contest claim, but it does not require plaintiffs to plead election contest claims
with a higher degree of specificity.
The superior court reasoned that a plaintiff must plead detailed allegations
so the Division can respond within the short deadline typical of an election contest. But
the expedited nature of election contests cuts both ways.25 A plaintiff may know that a
21
(...continued)
P.3d 1181, 1184 (Alaska 2008) (quoting Lowell v. Hayes, 117 P.3d 745, 750 (Alaska
2005)).
22
439 P.2d at 792 (holding that election contestant who failed to comply with
condition precedent to bringing election contest failed to state claim upon which relief
could be granted).
23
Id. at 792-93.
24
Id. at 793.
25
See AS 15.20.550 (permitting a plaintiff to bring an election contest “in the
(continued...)
-11- 7565
law has been violated but lack time to gather evidence of bias or scienter, which will
often be under the defendants’ control when the suit is brought. Requiring plaintiffs to
plead with greater-than-normal particularity could block potentially meritorious election
contests. We therefore decline to establish a heightened pleading standard based on
election contests’ expedited nature.
2. The language of the complaint sufficiently states an election
contest claim.
Although Pruitt’s complaint does not use the term “malconduct,” Count II
clearly describes an election contest claim. The complaint invoked AS 15.20.550, the
jurisdiction statute for election contests, and explained that the plaintiffs were qualified
under AS 15.20.540, which establishes the statutory grounds for election contests. It
claimed that “there were several errors in the conduct of the election sufficient to change
the outcome of the election.” And its description of the Division’s failure to provide the
required notice alleged facts that, if true, could support a finding of malconduct sufficient
to change the result of the election.
Pruitt’s failure to use the word “malconduct” is not fatal. Whether behavior
constitutes malconduct is a question of law.26 Because “conclusions of law are not
considered admitted in resolving” Rule 12(b)(6) motions,27 it would be incongruous to
require plaintiffs to include a legal conclusion in order to avoid dismissal under
25
(...continued)
superior court within 10 days after the completion of the state review”).
26
Nageak v. Mallott, 426 P.3d 930, 940 (Alaska 2018).
27
Dworkin v. First Nat’l Bank of Fairbanks, 444 P.2d 777, 779 (Alaska
1968); accord Haines v. Comfort Keepers, Inc., 393 P.3d 422, 429 (Alaska 2017)
(“[E]ven on a motion to dismiss, a court is not obliged to accept as true ‘. . . conclusions
of law.’ ” (quoting Dworkin, 444 P.2d at 779)).
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Rule 12(b)(6). For this same reason we reject the Division’s argument that Pruitt failed
to state a claim because he did not specifically allege a “significant deviation” from
statutory norms; this too is a legal conclusion.28
Nor is it even necessary to allege malconduct in order to state an election
contest claim under AS 15.20.540. We have recognized that a plaintiff may bring a
successful election contest claim by alleging an election “so permeated with numerous
serious violations of law, not individually amounting to malconduct, that substantial
doubt will be cast on the outcome of the vote.”29 A rule requiring plaintiffs to
specifically allege malconduct to survive Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal would eliminate this
possibility.
It is true that different kinds of malconduct exist and that Pruitt’s complaint
fails to specify which kind is alleged here. But given the disfavor with which we treat
dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), we decline to require plaintiffs to allege a specific type
of malconduct in order to survive. It is difficult for a plaintiff to obtain evidence of
scienter, for example, within the compressed timeline of an election contest claim. A
plaintiff who knows that an election norm has been violated but does not yet have access
to the defendant’s mental state may need to bring an election contest claim before
knowing if the alleged malconduct was committed with or without scienter.
Snyder suggests that Miller v. Treadwell supports dismissal, but that is not
so. In Miller we remanded a defeated candidate’s lawsuit (which was not framed as a
recount appeal or an election contest) to the superior court to decide whether the
candidate should be allowed to amend his complaint to allege improper voting by
28
Nageak, 426 P.3d at 940.
29
Hammond v. Hickel, 588 P.2d 256, 259 (Alaska 1978).
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persons convicted of a felony.30 In doing so, we noted that if the candidate were to
pursue this claim, “he must do so as an election contest under AS 15.20.540. He must
allege and prove the necessary elements of an election contest claim, including the level
of misconduct necessary to support the claim and that the votes in question are sufficient
to change the result of the election.”31 This statement does not establish a standard for
the sufficiency of pleading an election contest claim. It merely restates the plaintiff’s
burden in an election contest: the plaintiff must show that the defendants’ behavior is
a serious deviation from the norm and sufficient to change the result of the election.
For these reasons Pruitt’s complaint, construed in the light most favorable
to him as the non-moving party,32 sufficiently states a claim on which relief may be
granted.
3. We cannot affirm on the alternative ground that statutory
notice requirements do not apply to temporary or last-minute
polling place changes.
The Division argues that we may affirm dismissal of Count II on the
alternative ground that AS 15.10.090 does not apply to “temporary, last-minute changes”
at all, so the Division was not obliged to provide notice when moving the polling place
in 27-915. But neither the statutory text nor legislative history reveals an intent to excuse
the Division from notifying the public of temporary or last-minute polling place changes
— an exemption that would be contrary to the overall purpose of the statute.
30
245 P.3d 867, 874, 876-77 (Alaska 2010) (observing that “the legislature
has created two specific legal proceedings for election challenges” — “an election
contest and a recount appeal” — and that the candidate could not “avoid the avenues
established by the legislature to challenge elections”).
31
Id. at 877 (emphasis added).
32
See Cornelison v. TIG Ins., 376 P.3d 1255, 1267 (Alaska 2016).
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When construing statutes “we consider three factors: ‘the language of the
statute, the legislative history, and the legislative purpose behind the statute.’ ”33 Under
our sliding scale approach to statutory interpretation, “[t]he plainer the language of the
statute, the more convincing contrary legislative history must be.”34
“Interpretation of a statute begins with its text.”35 The text of AS 15.10.090
reads as follows:
The director shall give full public notice if a precinct
is established or abolished, if the boundaries of a precinct are
designated, abolished, or modified, or if the location of a
polling place is changed. Public notice must include
(1) whenever possible, sending written notice of the change
to each affected registered voter in the precinct;
(2) providing notice of the change
(A) by publication once in a local newspaper of
general circulation in the precinct; or
(B) if there is not a local newspaper of general
circulation in the precinct, by posting written notice in three
conspicuous places as close to the precinct as possible; at
least one posting location must be in the precinct;
(3) posting notice of the change on the Internet website of the
division of elections;
(4) providing notification of the change to the appropriate
municipal clerks, community councils, tribal groups, Native
33
City of Valdez v. State, 372 P.3d 240, 248 (Alaska 2016) (quoting Oels v.
Anchorage Police Dep’t Emps. Ass’n, 279 P.3d 589, 595 (Alaska 2012)).
34
Marathon Oil Co. v. State, Dep’t of Nat. Res., 254 P.3d 1078, 1082 (Alaska
2011).
35
In re Paige M., 433 P.3d 1182, 1186 (Alaska 2018) (quoting City of Valdez,
372 P.3d at 249).
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villages, and village regional corporations established under
43 U.S.C. 1606 (Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act); and
(5) inclusion in the official election pamphlet.
The statute straightforwardly says that the Division “shall give full public notice . . . if
the location of a polling place is changed.” The text makes no distinction between
“permanent” and “temporary” or “emergency” polling place changes.
Uncertainty about whether this otherwise plain command applies to last-
minute changes stems from the fact that it may not be possible to provide each type of
notice in the event of a change shortly before the election. Subsection (1) requires the
Division to send written notice of a change to voters “whenever possible.” At first blush
it seems incongruous that the other subsections do not make similar allowance for
impossibility. But the caveat in subsection (1) may refer not to timing but to the fact that
not all registered voters may be reached by mail.36 If that is so, then none of the five
notice requirements expressly account for impossibility due to last-minute polling place
changes. The Division argues this omission reflects an intent to exclude last-minute
changes from the statutory notice requirements altogether.37 But absent an express
exemption for last-minute changes, the statutory command to give “full public notice . . .
36
To register to vote, a person must supply the person’s “Alaska residence
address.” AS 15.07.060(a)(4). But we have observed that a place of residence “need not
have mail service” and may be “a hotel, shelter for the homeless, or even a park bench.”
Fischer v. Stout, 741 P.2d 217, 221 (Alaska 1987).
37
Although the Division’s argument lumps together “temporary” and
“emergency” polling place changes, these are not the same thing. A change in response
to an emergency may be a permanent change; a temporary change may be planned long
in advance. So the fact that it might be impossible to provide much notice of an
emergency change is scant reason to think that the legislature intended to exempt all non-
permanent changes from all notice requirements.
-16- 7565
if the location of a polling place is changed”38 seems equally susceptible to the inference
that the legislature intended the Division to provide the required types of notice for all
changes when feasible to do so. Faced with the choice of which implied caveat to read
into the statute — either it exempts late changes entirely or merely exempts the Division
from doing the impossible — we find the latter more consistent with the overall statutory
purpose of notifying voters of polling place changes.39
The legislative history does suggest that the legislature was not specifically
targeting last-minute changes when it drafted the notice statute. For example, testimony
from the then-Director of the Division of Elections makes clear that the election
pamphlet was expected to include only polling place changes that occurred before its
publication.40 And it indicates that the legislature expected all polling places to be
printed in the newspaper on a single occasion, rather than continuous publication of each
individual polling place change throughout the year.41
38
AS 15.10.090.
39
See ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE
INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 63 (2012) (“A textually permissible interpretation that
furthers rather than obstructs the document’s purpose should be favored.”).
40
Testimony of Laura Glaiser, Dir., Div. of Elections at 8:30-8:33, Hearing
on H.B. 94 Before the H. State Affairs Comm., 24th Leg., 1st Sess. (Mar. 15, 2005),
http://www.akleg.gov/basis/Meeting/Detail?Meeting=HSTA%202005-03-15%2008:3
0:47 (stating that “this amendment would allow the division to include in the official
election pamphlet only those polling place changes that we know at the time”). A
Division of Elections official’s answers to legislative committee questions may be
considered a reliable indicator of the intent behind a bill introduced at the governor’s
request. See Cora G. v. State, Dep’t of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.’s Servs., 461
P.3d 1265, 1280-81 (Alaska 2020) (giving weight to statements of executive branch
representatives regarding meaning of legislation introduced at governor’s request).
41
Testimony of Laura Glaser, supra note 40 at 8:35-8:37:30 (testifying that
(continued...)
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But not specifically contemplating what notice may be required in the event
of last-minute changes is different than specifically intending to exempt last-minute
changes from any notice requirement. The Division has not proffered legislative history
that clearly shows the latter intent. The closest it comes is a statement by the then-
Division director that “the intent here is not . . . to do a notice every time we have a
polling place modification, but instead to notice people [sic] of a polling place
location.”42 This testimony indicates an intent that the Division would not publish a
notice in the newspaper each time a polling place was changed, but would inform people
of all polling place locations (changed or not) one time. But it still does not show that
if a polling place were changed after that general notice was published, the legislature
intended to excuse the Division from providing notice of that change to the public to the
extent feasible.
In sum, the text of AS 15.10.090 requires that the Division “give full public
notice . . . if the location of a polling place is changed” and makes no exception for
temporary or last-minute changes. And the obvious statutory purpose of making sure
voters know when their polling place changes is much more consistent with requiring the
Division to notify them of a late change to the extent possible rather than with excusing
the Division from notifying them even if it is entirely possible to do so. For that reason,
evidence that the legislature did not specifically contemplate the problem of last-minute
polling place changes does not convince us that the legislature actually intended to
exempt last-minute changes from the statutory notice requirements entirely. We
therefore conclude that AS 15.10.090 applies to the polling place change at issue here.
41
(...continued)
the intent was not to publish a notice in the newspaper every time a polling place was
changed, but rather to publish a single notice of all polling place locations).
42
Id.
-18- 7565
B. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Concluding That Pruitt Failed To
Meet His Burden To Prove His Election Contest Claim.
1. The superior court did not err in concluding that the Division
did not commit malconduct.
To prevail in his election contest, Pruitt had to first prove “malconduct . . .
on the part of an election official.”43 “Malconduct” means a “significant deviation” from
a legal or constitutional requirement, not just a “lack of total and exact compliance” with
that requirement.44 In addition to showing that the alleged conduct was a significant
deviation, Pruitt had to prove one of three things to establish malconduct. First, he could
show that the Division’s violations of AS 15.10.090 introduced bias into the vote.45
Second, he could show that the Division acted in knowing noncompliance with the law
or reckless indifference to norms established by law.46 Third, he could show malconduct
caused by good faith maladministration.47 Pruitt has pursued the first and second
theories of malconduct, but not the third.48
43
AS 15.20.540(1). Although there are other grounds for an election contest,
Pruitt’s allegations could support only malconduct.
44
Boucher v. Bomhoff, 495 P.2d 77, 80 (Alaska 1972).
45
See Nageak v. Mallott, 426 P.3d 930, 944 (Alaska 2018).
46
See id.
47
See id. at 945 n.60 (“[W]e . . . have not foreclosed the possibility of
demonstrating malconduct by showing good faith maladministration.”).
48
A candidate may also maintain an election contest by showing that the
election was “so permeated with numerous serious violations of law, not individually
amounting to malconduct, that substantial doubt will be cast on the outcome of the vote.”
Hammond v. Hickel, 588 P.2d 256, 269 (Alaska 1978). But because Pruitt has
abandoned on appeal his other claims of error by election officials, he cannot prevail on
that theory.
-19- 7565
The superior court concluded that Pruitt had not established malconduct.
First, it held that the Division’s violations of AS 15.10.090 were not “a significant
deviation from constitutionally or statutorily prescribed norms.”49 Second, it did not find
that any deviation from AS 15.10.090 was knowing “or done in reckless disregard of the
statute’s requirements.” Although the superior court did not address bias in its findings
of fact and conclusions of law, its order dismissing Pruitt’s complaint considered and
rejected his argument that the Division’s violations of AS 15.10.090 introduced bias into
the vote because more Republicans than Democrats vote in 27-915.
a. The Division’s failure to confirm the polling place
location earlier cannot be the basis for malconduct absent
a legal duty to confirm polling places by a certain date.
Pruitt argues that the Division’s violations of AS 15.10.090 are the result
of its negligence in timely securing a polling place for 27-915. But Pruitt cites no legal
authority requiring the Division to secure polling places by a certain date. Because he
identifies no textual basis for this argument, we assume that he interprets AS 15.10.090
to impose an implicit duty on election officials to timely confirm all polling place
locations so as to provide as many forms of required notice as possible. The Division’s
interpretation of AS 15.10.090, also reflected in the superior court’s order, requires the
Division to provide notice once a polling place is changed, but does not impose a
timeline or additional duties with respect to changing the polling place itself. We
conclude that AS 15.10.090 does not contain an implicit duty to timely confirm polling
place locations and that the timing of the polling place change therefore does not support
Pruitt’s claim of malconduct.
49
Id. at 258.
-20- 7565
The statutory text — the starting point for our analysis — does not mention
anything about when a polling place must be confirmed.50 The legislature could have
added language requiring the Division to verify the location of a polling place within a
certain number of days before the election, but it did not do so. The absence of an
express duty to confirm polling place locations by a certain date is especially significant
in light of AS 15.10.080, which requires the Division to designate precinct boundaries
at least 40 days before an election.51 “[W]here certain things are designated in a statute,
‘all omissions should be understood as exclusions.’ ”52 Thus the statutory text alone
does not impose the duty Pruitt maintains, and he does not proffer anything from the
legislative history that supports interpreting the statute contrary to the plain-text reading.
Instead Pruitt advances what is essentially a policy argument. If the
Division has no deadline for confirming polling places, then it could delay doing so until
a day or two before the election, when very little notice would be possible. Absent a
basis in text or legislative history, however, we cannot impose a duty on the Division to
confirm places by a certain date simply because it might be a good idea to do so. “We
are not vested with the authority to add missing terms [to a statute] or hypothesize
differently worded provisions in order to reach a particular result.”53 Rather than add
50
See City of Valdez v. State, 372 P.3d 240, 248 (Alaska 2016)
(“Interpretation of a statute begins with its text.”).
51
AS 15.10.080 (“The director shall designate boundaries of an election
precinct which has been established or modified, not later than 40 days before an
election.”).
52
Ranney v. Whitewater Eng’g, 122 P.3d 214, 218 (Alaska 2005) (quoting
Croft v. Pan Alaska Trucking, Inc., 820 P.2d 1064, 1066 (Alaska 1991)) (describing
maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius).
53
M.M. ex rel. Kirkland v. Dep’t of Admin., Off. of Pub. Advoc., 462 P.3d 539,
(continued...)
-21- 7565
substantive requirements to the statute, we trust in the good faith of election officials to
make sure all Alaskans are able to vote and the wisdom of the legislature in guiding these
officials’ behavior. Pruitt has identified no law that obliged the Division to confirm the
location of the 27-915 polling place by a certain date, so the Division’s failure to act
sooner is not grounds for a finding of malconduct.
b. The superior court did not err in holding that the
Division’s violations of AS 15.10.090 were not a
significant deviation from the law.
“Malconduct” “means a significant deviation from statutorily or
constitutionally prescribed norms,”54 which is something “more than a lack of total and
exact compliance with the constitutionally and statutorily prescribed” procedures.55
Pruitt argues that the Division’s failure to timely move the polling place “cannot be
considered good faith, and is a significant deviation from the norm.” But as explained
above, AS 15.10.090 does not impose a duty on the Division to confirm the polling place
location by a specific point in time. Rather, the key questions are whether the Division
complied with AS 15.10.090 by providing all forms of notice listed under that statute that
were feasible at the time of the polling place change and, if not, whether this failure was
a significant deviation from the norm.
Alaska Statute 15.10.090 requires five forms of notice: (1) “whenever
possible, sending written notice of the change to each affected registered voter in the
precinct”; (2) notice “by publication once in a local newspaper of general circulation in
the precinct”; (3) notice “on the Internet website of the division of elections”; (4) notice
53
(...continued)
547 n.37 (Alaska 2020) (alteration in original).
54
Hammond, 588 P.2d at 258.
55
Boucher v. Bomhoff, 495 P.2d 77, 80 (Alaska 1972).
-22- 7565
“to the appropriate municipal clerks, community councils, tribal groups, Native villages,
and village regional corporations”; and (5) notice in “the official election pamphlet.”
The superior court found that the only required notice that could reasonably have been
given but was not was notifying the municipal clerk.56 This finding is not clearly
erroneous, and this single failure was not a significant deviation from the statutory
norm.57
The Division did not send voters written notice of the move to Begich
Middle School. Director of the Division of Elections Gail Fenumiai testified that there
had been no time “to procure a printing company to do the mailing” and no staff
available to mail out the notices. Because unrebutted testimony indicated that sending
written notice would not have been possible, the Division did not violate
AS 15.10.090(1) when it did not send out written notice.
The Division also did not publish notice of the move in an Anchorage
newspaper as required under subpart (2). Fenumiai testified that the Division concluded
“there just wasn’t adequate time” to do so. Nor did it include notice of the change in the
official election pamphlet as required under subpart (5); testimony indicated that the
pamphlet had already been mailed out by the time of the change. The legislative history
shows that the legislature did not intend the Division to accomplish the impossible feat
of including in the election pamphlet notice of changes that had not occurred by the time
56
See AS 15.10.090(4).
57
Whether election officials’ actions amount to a significant deviation from
prescribed norms is part of the inquiry into “[w]hether the conduct of election officials
constitutes malconduct,” a question of law that we review de novo. Nageak v. Mallott,
426 P.3d 930, 940 (Alaska 2018).
-23- 7565
the pamphlet was printed.58 We conclude that it similarly did not intend the Division to
publish notice of the change in the newspaper when doing so would be infeasible.
Because unrebutted testimony established that publication in a newspaper or the election
pamphlet would not have been possible, the Division did not violate subparts (2) or (5).
The Division’s website was updated to reflect the move as required under
subpart (3). A precinct chairperson for 27-915 testified that on the day of the general
election, one page of the Division’s website listed either Wayland Baptist University or
Muldoon Town Center as the polling place for 27-915. However, when he clicked on
that location, it “took [him] to another screen that . . . did locate Begich Middle School
as being the location for 27-915.” The chairperson reported the problem with the
website to the Division. Although this may have been a minor mistake on the Division’s
part, the Division largely complied with the directive to update its website.
Finally, the Division failed to inform the Anchorage clerk of the new
polling location as required under subpart (4). As the only feasible form of required
notice that the Division failed to provide,59 this is not a significant deviation from
AS 15.10.090. Pruitt does not explain how notifying the municipal clerk would have
affected the election or turnout. In the absence of other deviation from the statute, the
Division’s violation of AS 15.10.090(4) constitutes a mere “lack of total and exact
58
Testimony of Laura Glaiser, supra note 40 at 8:30-8:33 (stating that “this
amendment would allow the division to include in the official election pamphlet only
those polling place changes that we know at the time”).
59
Pruitt argues that the Division failed to notify the election chair for the
precinct until November 1, but notifying the election chair is not a statutory requirement.
-24- 7565
compliance” with the statutory requirements, rather than a “significant deviation” from
them.60
c. The superior court did not err in rejecting Pruitt’s
argument that bias was introduced.
Even if Pruitt had shown that the Division’s violations amounted to a
significant deviation, in order to prove malconduct he would have also needed to show
that they were committed with scientier or that they introduced bias into the vote.61 Pruitt
argued to the trial court that the lack of required notice introduced bias because it did not
have “a random impact on voter behavior.” Asserting that “Republicans outnumbered
Democrats voting in [27-915] on Election Day,” Pruitt argued the lack of notice
“imped[ed] more Republican votes than Democrat votes” and therefore “bias was
absolutely introduced.” The superior court rejected this argument in its order dismissing
Pruitt’s complaint. Pruitt reprises this argument on appeal.
Nageak v. Mallott plainly forecloses this argument. In Nageak, the superior
court “found that the election officials’ actions constituted bias ‘because they occurred
in a precinct that lopsidedly favored [one candidate].’ ”62 We held the finding erroneous
because bias only “exists at the malconduct stage when conduct of election officials
influences voters to vote a certain way.”63 Because the Division’s failure to give full
public notice of a polling place change does not “influence[] voters to vote a certain
way,” Pruitt cannot show that the Division’s violation of AS 15.10.090 introduced bias
into the vote.
60
Boucher, 495 P.2d at 80.
61
See Nageak, 426 P.3d at 944.
62
Id. at 945 n.60.
63
Id. (emphasis added).
-25- 7565
d. The superior court did not clearly err in finding that
Pruitt failed to show that violations of AS 15.10.090 were
imbued with scienter.
The second way that Pruitt could show malconduct is by showing that the
Division violated AS 15.10.090 with “scienter, a knowing noncompliance with the law
or a reckless indifference to norms established by law.”64
The superior court found that “[t]he Division, the Director, the Region II
Supervisor, and other Division employees acted in good faith in attempting to notify
affected voters about the change to the polling location.” It did not find that any
deviation from AS 15.10.090 was knowing “or done in reckless disregard of the statute’s
requirements.” Because this finding is based on facts in the record, we review it for clear
error,65 and find none.
Pruitt argues that the Division “knew it had an issue with the []27-915
polling location on August 17, and . . . took no timely efforts to secure a polling place
for []27-915 voters for the General Election.” It claims that the Division “created a
situation where it was unable to notify voters timely and in a proper fashion of the
change” and that the Division’s “dilatory conduct cannot be considered good faith.” But
this argument assumes that AS 15.10.090 includes an implicit duty to timely secure
polling places. As explained above, the statute does not impose this duty on the
Division. It only requires the Division to notify voters of a polling place change.
On that score, the superior court did not clearly err in finding a lack of
scienter. The Division’s failure to notify the Anchorage clerk — the only form of notice
that it was statutorily required to give and could have given but failed to — does not
64
Hammond v. Hickel, 588 P.2d 256, 259 (Alaska 1978).
65
See Nageak, 426 P.3d at 944-45 (reviewing superior court’s decision that
election officials had acted with reckless disregard under clear error standard).
-26- 7565
itself establish “knowing noncompliance” or “reckless indifference.” Pruitt emphasized
to the superior court that the Division failed to notify the candidates of the polling place
change and failed to note the change on its Facebook page. It is true that these forms of
notice might have allowed the Division to reach many more voters. But the Division’s
failure to provide types of notice that the statute does not require is at best weak evidence
of “reckless indifference” to what the statute does require, particularly considering the
Division’s many responsibilities in the week before an election. Further, the Division
did provide additional forms of notice not required by AS 15.10.090 by posting signs and
updating the polling place locator hotline. These extra efforts suggest the Division was
not indifferent to whether voters knew the location of their polling place. The superior
court’s finding that Pruitt failed to show scienter was not clearly erroneous.
2. The superior court did not err in concluding that any
malconduct was not sufficient to change the outcome of the
election.
To prevail in an election contest, the plaintiff must prove that any
malconduct was “sufficient to change the result of the election.”66 Therefore Pruitt must
show that the Division’s failure to provide notice of the polling place change prevented
enough people from voting to change the outcome. It is not enough to show that the
polling place change itself caused voter confusion; the alleged malconduct is not the
polling place change, but the Division’s failure to provide required notice of that change.
It is also not enough to show that voters in 27-915 did not know where their polling
place was, as many voters in any given year may not know their polling place. Rather,
Pruitt had to show that a number of voters sufficient to change the result of the election
attempted to vote at the former location and were not redirected to Begich Middle School
66
AS 15.20.540.
-27- 7565
with enough time to vote before the polls closed.67 This burden is a heavy one,
consistent with our commitment to “indulging every reasonable presumption in favor of
the validity of an election.”68 In this case the superior court found that Pruitt failed to
show that “at least 11 registered voters” (Snyder’s margin of victory) “were prevented
from voting because they did not receive actual notice of the polling place change.”
Because this finding is not clearly erroneous, we agree with the court’s conclusion that
Pruitt did not show that the Division’s failure to provide the statutorily-required notice
was “sufficient to change the result of the election.”69
Pruitt’s argument rests on the testimony of his expert, Randolph Ruedrich.
Ruedrich analyzed 2020 election day turnout in precincts 27-910, 27-915, and 27-920,
noting that the turnout in 27-910 was 3.32% above 27-915, and that the turnout in 27
920 was 3.99% above 27-915. Averaging these differences, he calculated that the
“undervote” in 27-915 was 3.66% relative to precincts 910 and 920. Applying this
percentage to the total number of registered votes for the 2020 general election, Ruedrich
concluded that “at minimum, this demonstrated [House District] 27 Precinct 915
undervote is 57 votes.” If these 57 “missed” votes were allocated to the candidates in
67
Pruitt’s complaint alleged that “[t]here were several errors in the conduct
of the election sufficient to change the outcome of the election,” claiming that all the
alleged malconduct together was sufficient to change the outcome of the election. This
is a justiciable claim. See Hammond, 588 P.2d at 259 (“The total number of votes
affected by [incidents of malconduct] must . . . be considered in ascertaining whether
they are sufficient to change the result of the election.”). On appeal, however, Pruitt has
abandoned all claims of error except the notice claim under AS 15.10.090, so to prevail
he must show that the effect of this alleged malconduct alone is sufficient to change the
election outcome.
68
Nageak, 426 P.3d at 947 n.73.
69
AS 15.20.540.
-28- 7565
proportion to the existing vote totals for that precinct, Pruitt would have received 17
more “missed” votes than Snyder, winning the election by 6 votes.70
The superior court rejected Ruedrich’s analysis, pointing to flaws in his
underlying assumptions. The court found that Ruedrich relied on the flawed assumption
that turnout in 27-910, 27-915, and 27-920 should be the same, when the court found
instead that turnout “is not always the same historically in the three precincts.” And it
found that Ruedrich’s “two primary assumptions (first, that the three precincts should
have precisely equal [e]lection ]d]ay turnout and second, that any difference in turnout
was caused by the change of the polling place) are also his conclusions.” The court
credited Ruedrich’s testimony that “moving polling places generally lowers turnout.”
But it also found that it could not “determine by what increment additional feasible
notice under AS 15.10.090 . . . would have mitigated any reduction in turnout caused by
the polling place change.” It therefore concluded that the evidence did not show that “at
least 11 registered voters were prevented from voting because they did not receive actual
notice of the polling place change.” On appeal, Pruitt does not address, let alone rebut,
these findings.
70
Our decision in Hammond v. Hickel prescribed the method used to
determine whether votes affected by malconduct are sufficient to change the result of an
election: “[I]f a specified number of votes should have been counted but are no longer
available for counting, they should be added to the vote totals of each candidate in
proportion to the votes received by the candidate in the precinct or district in which the
votes would otherwise be counted.” Hammond, 588 P.2d at 260. Here, Pruitt received
204 election-day votes in 27-915, Snyder received 106 votes, and 311 votes were cast
in total. Assuming that Ruedrich is correct and the undervote in 27-915 was 57 votes,
Pruitt would receive 65.59% of those votes, or about 37.39 votes, and Snyder would
receive 34.08% of those votes, or about 19.43 votes. Pruitt would therefore receive a net
gain of 17.96 votes in 27-915; subtracting Snyder’s previous lead of 11 votes would
result in victory for Pruitt by a margin of 6 votes.
-29- 7565
The superior court’s factual findings about Ruedrich’s testimony are not
clearly erroneous. The superior court heard both Ruedrich’s testimony and Townsend’s
testimony critiquing Ruedrich’s analysis. “It is the function of the trial court, not of this
court, to judge witnesses’ credibility and to weigh conflicting evidence.”71 The court’s
rejection of Ruedrich’s conclusions rested on three gaps in Ruedrich’s analysis: he did
not consider that turnout in 27-915 has not historically been the same as in neighboring
precincts; he did not explore and rule out alternative explanations for the difference in
turnout between precincts; and he did not distinguish between the effects of the polling
place move itself and the effects of the failure to provide the forms of notice required by
AS 15.10.090. As noted above, Pruitt has not even addressed these issues on appeal, and
our review of the testimony does not convince us that the superior court was clearly
wrong in finding that these omissions fatally undermined Ruedrich’s opinion.
In addition to Ruedrich’s testimony, Pruitt presented one witness, Mary Jo
Cunniff, who claimed that she was prevented from voting by lack of notice of the polling
place change. The superior court found otherwise. It noted that by Cunniff’s own
account, she “lost 15 minutes by going to Wayland Baptist University” before learning
of the change and going to Begich, where she chose not to vote because of the line. The
court concluded that if voters received notice of the polling place change and chose not
to go to Begich, or if they went to Begich but chose not to vote, “this court cannot count
those ‘undervotes’ in determining whether any malconduct was sufficient to change the
results of the election absent evidence that voters were actually prevented from voting
as a result of the Division’s alleged malconduct.”
The superior court’s finding that Cunniff was not prevented from voting is
not clearly erroneous. Pruitt argues that “due to the lack of notice and coupled with
71
Knutson v. Knutson, 973 P.2d 596, 599-600 (Alaska 1999).
-30- 7565
[Cunniff’s] obligation for the day,” Cunniff “was not able to go back to Begich Middle
School and cast her vote.” As the superior court concluded, it is not at all clear that the
15 minutes Cunniff lost by going to Wayland first was the difference between voting and
not voting. Pruitt offered no evidence showing that if Cunniff had arrived at Begich at
8:30 a.m. rather than 8:45 a.m., the line would have been short enough to allow Cunniff
to vote and then make her 10:00 a.m. appointment. Nor did Pruitt prove the line at
8:45 a.m. was too long for Cunniff to vote and make her appointment.72 He offered only
Cunniff’s summary assessment that she’d “never make it.” And even if Cunniff were
prevented from voting, Pruitt would still need to show that at least ten other 27-915
residents were prevented from voting in order to show that the lack of notice changed the
result of the election.
Pruitt quibbles with the superior court’s findings about the timelines
Cunniff testified to, arguing that the court “failed to account for the fact” that the times
Cunniff gave “were approximate.” He seems to imply that the lack of notice could have
cost Cunniff much more than 15 minutes on election day. But the superior court’s
factual finding that Cunniff lost 15 minutes is not clearly erroneous. The court
interpreted the time ranges given by Cunniff as generously to Pruitt as possible. In the
absence of other testimony, the superior court did not clearly err by using the time ranges
Cunniff herself provided.
Instead of challenging the superior court’s findings, Pruitt argues that
because “[i]t is impossible to say with absolute certainty what the true impact of the
Division’s malconduct was . . . the only remedy here is a new election.” But neither
statute nor precedent permits us to overturn election results based on speculation.
72
There is no reason that the Division’s lack of notice should have
contributed to the line length itself; if Pruitt’s theory is correct, the lack of notice should
have shortened the line by depressing voter turnout.
-31- 7565
Rather, it is the challenger’s burden to show that any malconduct was sufficient to
change the result of the election — not the Division’s burden to show that malconduct
had no effect on the election.73 Adopting the low threshold Pruitt describes would open
the door to meritless lawsuits and undermine the integrity of our electoral process.
“Because the public has an important interest in the stability and finality of election
results . . . we have held that ‘every reasonable presumption will be indulged in favor of
the validity of an election.’ ”74 Pruitt’s speculation is not enough to support his election
challenge.75
V. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the superior court’s dismissal of Lance Pruitt’s complaint
for failure to state a claim for an election contest, but AFFIRM the superior court’s ruling
that Pruitt did not meet his burden to sustain an election contest. We therefore AFFIRM
the judgment of the superior court pronouncing Elizabeth Synder the candidate elected
in the 2020 election for House District 27.
73
See Nageak v. Mallott, 426 P.3d 930, 950 (Alaska 2018) (explaining that
“[i]t was [the plaintiff’s] burden to show that the malconduct . . . was sufficient to change
the result of the election”).
74
Dansereau v. Ulmer, 903 P.2d 555, 559 (Alaska 1995) (quoting Turkington
v. City of Kachemak, 380 P.2d 593, 595 (Alaska 1963)).
75
The Division has invited us to rule on the question of whether an election
contest may be premised on a post-election challenge to the residency qualifications of
individual voters. Although Pruitt attempted to challenge the qualifications of certain
voters as part of his election contest, he has not appealed the superior court’s dismissal
of that claim. Because this issue has not been properly presented to this court, we decline
the Division’s invitation to rule on it.
-32- 7565