Court Opinion

ID: 9965537
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-05-02 18:02:35.452924+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:25:10.816453
License: Public Domain

IN THE

    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
                      ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY,
                           Plaintiff/Appellant,

                                     v.

 STEPHEN RICHER, AS MARICOPA COUNTY RECORDER; AND THE MARICOPA
  COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, BY AND THROUGH, CLINT HICKMAN,
     JACK SELLERS, THOMAS GALVIN, BILL GATES, STEVE GALLARDO,
                        Defendants/Appellees,

   ADRIAN FONTES, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SECRETARY OF STATE;
                   ARIZONA DEMOCRATIC PARTY,
                        Intervenors/Appellees.

                           No. CV-23-0208-PR
                            Filed May 2, 2024

           Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
               The Honorable John R. Hannah, Jr., Judge
                          No. CV2020-014553
                         REVERSED IN PART

              Opinion of the Court of Appeals, Division One
                        255 Ariz. 363 (App. 2023)
                          VACATED IN PART

COUNSEL:

Dennis I. Wilenchik (argued), John D. Wilenchik, Garo V. Moughalian,
Wilenchik & Bartness, P.C., Phoenix, Attorneys for Arizona Republican
Party

Rachel H. Mitchell, Maricopa County Attorney, Joseph Branco, Deputy
County Attorney, Joseph Eugene La Rue, Deputy County Attorney,
Phoenix, Attorneys for Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, Stephen I.
Richer, Clint L. Hickman, Jack Sellers, Thomas Galvin, Bill Gates, and Steve
Gallardo
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

Kristin K. Mayes, Arizona Attorney General, Karen J. Hartman-Tellez
(argued), Assistant Attorney General, Kara Karlson, Assistant Attorney
General, Kyle R. Cummings, Assistant Attorney General, Phoenix,
Attorneys for Adrian P. Fontes

Kory Langhofer, Thomas Basile, Statecraft PLLC, Phoenix, Attorneys for
Amicus Curiae Statecraft PLLC

JUSTICE LOPEZ authored the Opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF
JUSTICE BRUTINEL, VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER, and JUSTICES
BOLICK, BEENE, MONTGOMERY, and KING joined.

JUSTICE LOPEZ, Opinion of the Court:

¶1            This case arises from a lawsuit challenging the manner in
which Maricopa County election officials conducted a mandatory hand
count of ballots following the 2020 general election. We consider whether
the trial court and the court of appeals erred in awarding attorney fees
against the plaintiff, Arizona Republican Party (the “ARP”), and its
attorneys, John D. Wilenchik, Lee Miller, and Wilenchik & Bartness, P.C.
(collectively “Petitioners”). 1 The court awarded fees under A.R.S.
§ 12-349(A)(1) and (F), which provides that courts “shall assess reasonable
attorney fees” if an attorney or a party “[b]rings or defends a claim” that “is
groundless and is not made in good faith.” We hold that the attorney fees
award was improper because Petitioners’ claim was not groundless, thus
obviating any need to determine whether the claim was made in the
absence of good faith.

1 Although the ARP was the plaintiff in the lawsuit and the claims belong

to it, the trial court’s fees award against both the ARP and its attorneys
arises from the same litigation conduct. For ease of reference, we refer to
both the ARP and its attorneys as “Petitioners.”
                                      2
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

                              BACKGROUND

¶2             Arizona requires county election officers to conduct a “hand
count” following each countywide primary, special, general, and
presidential preference election (“PPE”). A.R.S. § 16-602(B). The purpose
of this procedure is to ensure the accuracy of electronic voting machines
and tabulators. See id. Consistent with this purpose, the hand count
initially reviews the ballots from roughly two percent of the precincts in
each county. See § 16-602(B)(1). The precincts to be hand counted are
selected by the “county political party chairman for each political party that
is entitled to continued representation on the state ballot” or such
chairman’s designee. Id. If the hand count reveals a level of accuracy within
a “designated margin” chosen beforehand by the “vote count verification
committee,” then the hand count ends, and the electronic election results
become final. § 16-602(C), (K)(4). If the hand count reveals inaccuracies
that equal or exceed the designated margin, then the hand count expands
in stages. § 16-602(C)–(E).

¶3             Following the 2020 general election, Maricopa County
election officials conducted a hand count as prescribed by the Election
Procedures Manual (“EPM”) that the Arizona Secretary of State (the
“Secretary”) had promulgated the year prior, in December of 2019 (the
“2019 EPM”). Ariz. Sec’y of State, 2019 Election Procedures Manual (2019),
https://apps.azsos.gov/election/files/epm/2019_elections_procedures_
manual_approved.pdf. Although the actual hand count does not begin
until after the polls have closed, the procedures preceding the hand count
commence several weeks prior to the election. For example, “[a]t least 14
days prior to a countywide primary, special, general, or PPE election, the
officer in charge of elections must notify the county chairpersons of each
recognized political party of the requirement to designate Hand Count
Board members.” 2019 EPM at 213. Further, “[t]he political party county
chairpersons must designate Hand Count Board members and alternates at
least seven days before the election.” Id. And, after “all ballots voted in the
precinct polling places have been delivered to the central counting facility,”
“[t]he county political party chairpersons (or designees) shall take turns
randomly drawing the precincts, vote centers, or consolidated polling
places for the hand count.” Id. at 215.

¶4           In Arizona, each county’s board of supervisors organizes
elections by “establish[ing] a convenient number of election precincts.”

                                      3
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

A.R.S. § 16-411(A). Each precinct ordinarily contains one “polling place”
where the election is held. § 16-411(B). However, in 2011, the legislature
amended § 16-411(B) to permit county boards to utilize “voting centers in
place of or in addition to specifically designated polling places.” 2011 Ariz.
Sess. Laws ch. 331, § 3 (1st Reg. Sess.). A voting center allows any voter in
the county, regardless of the voter’s assigned precinct, to cast a ballot at the
center. See id. In the same act, the legislature also amended § 16-602(B) to
direct that “[t]he hand count shall be conducted as prescribed by this
section and in accordance with hand count procedures established by the
secretary of state in the official instructions and procedures manual
adopted pursuant to section 16-452.” Id. § 8. But, the legislature left
unchanged § 16-602(B)(1)’s requirement that the hand count sample be
selected from “[a]t least two percent of the precincts in that county, or two
precincts, whichever is greater.” See § 16-602(B)(1) (emphasis added). Thus,
despite having adopted a new practice of utilizing voting centers, § 16-602’s
hand count is arguably limited to precincts alone. Indeed, “voting centers”
are not mentioned in § 16-602. Nevertheless, the 2019 EPM provides that
voting centers are to be treated as precincts for the purpose of the hand
count. See 2019 EPM at 216.

¶5            On September 16, 2020, Maricopa County announced its
intent to use voting centers in the November 3 general election.2 After the
election, county officials conducted the hand count consistent with the 2019
EPM. Thus, shortly after the polls closed, the Republican, Democratic, and
Libertarian party county chairs selected the voting centers for the hand
count. The hand count commenced on November 7 and concluded on
November 9, apparently without objection. The process did not reveal any
material inaccuracies in the electronic vote count.

¶6           On November 12, purportedly unaware that the hand count
had already been completed days earlier, Petitioners sued the Maricopa
County Recorder and various other county officials (collectively the
“County”), seeking a declaration that the 2019 EPM violated § 16-602(B)
because it permitted a sampling of voting centers instead of precincts for
the hand count. The complaint also requested mandamus relief directing
the County to conduct the hand count based on precincts rather than voting
centers. One day later, the Secretary and the Arizona Democratic Party

2 Maricopa County had previously used voting centers in the March 2020
PPE and the August 2020 primary election.
                                       4
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

filed separate motions to intervene as defendants, which the trial court
granted. The County, the Secretary, and the Arizona Democratic Party each
filed motions to dismiss Petitioners’ complaint. In the Secretary’s motion
to dismiss, she argued that Petitioners’ requested mandamus relief was
“impossible” absent an accompanying injunction. 3 In response, Petitioners
moved for a preliminary injunction, requesting that the court enjoin the
certification of the election results pending the court’s resolution of
Petitioners’ complaint on the merits. Despite Petitioners’ assertion that a
precinct-based hand count could be conducted prior to the canvassing
deadline, see A.R.S. §§ 16-602(I), -642(A)(1)(b), Petitioners nonetheless
requested that the court delay the official canvass if a court-ordered precinct
hand count could not be completed before the canvassing deadline.

¶7             The trial court dismissed Petitioners’ complaint based upon
several perceived procedural defects. The court also emphasized that it had
not considered the merits of Petitioners’ substantive claim, writing that
“[t]he question whether the Elections Procedures Manual correctly applies
section 16-602(B) is not addressed, because the plaintiff did not make the
showing necessary to justify that inquiry.” Upon dismissal of Petitioners’
complaint, the Secretary moved for an award of attorney fees. The court,
finding that Petitioners’ complaint was both groundless and made in “bad
faith” under § 12-349(A)(1), awarded $18,237.59 in attorney fees against
Petitioners, jointly and severally.

¶8             Petitioners appealed the trial court’s dismissal of their claim
for declaratory relief—but not their mandamus relief claim—and the
attorney fees award. Ariz. Republican Party v. Richer, 255 Ariz. 363, 365 ¶ 1,
370 ¶ 31 (App. 2023). The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s rulings
in all respects, and also awarded the Secretary’s appellate attorney fees
pursuant to § 12-349. Id. at 375–76 ¶ 60. Petitioners sought review in this
Court. We accepted review of the trial court’s and the court of appeals’
attorney fees awards to clarify the interpretation and application of
§ 12-349, an issue of statewide importance. Dismissal of Petitioners’
complaint is not before us. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article 6,
section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution.

3 Current Governor Katie Hobbs served as the Secretary of State at the time

and was replaced by Adrian Fontes.
                                      5
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

                              DISCUSSION
¶9           The trial court awarded fees against Petitioners pursuant to
§ 12-349(A)(1), which provides in relevant part:

       A. [T]he court shall assess reasonable attorney fees, expenses
       and, at the court's discretion, double damages . . . against an
       attorney or party . . . if the attorney or party does any of the
       following:

              1. Brings or defends a claim without substantial
              justification.
              2. Brings or defends a claim solely or primarily for
              delay or harassment.
              3. Unreasonably expands or delays the proceeding.
              4. Engages in abuse of discovery.

       ....

       F. For the purposes of this section, “without substantial
       justification” means that the claim or defense is groundless
       and is not made in good faith.

§ 12-349(A), (F). Because the statute imposes a mandatory duty upon the
occurrence of specified events, courts must issue an award of attorney fees
whenever an attorney or party is proven, by a preponderance of the
evidence, to have engaged in the enumerated conduct. Phx. Newspapers,
Inc. v. Dep’t of Corr., 188 Ariz. 237, 243–44 (App. 1997). When issuing a fees
award under § 12-349, a court must “set forth the specific reasons for the
award.” A.R.S. § 12-350.

¶10           Review of an attorney fees award under § 12-349 presents a
mixed question of fact and law. We defer to a trial court’s findings of fact
unless clearly erroneous, but we review the court’s interpretation and
application of the fees statute de novo. Takieh v. O’Meara, 252 Ariz. 51, 61–62
¶ 39 (App. 2021).

¶11          We pause to clarify the relevance of the merits of Petitioners’
complaint to our analysis before we address the propriety of the trial court’s
attorney fees award. The trial court ostensibly dismissed Petitioners’
complaint and awarded attorney fees based on alleged procedural defects.

                                      6
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

Indeed, the court emphasized that it did not consider the merits of
Petitioners’ substantive claim and that the merits were irrelevant to the
complaint’s procedural infirmities. For example, in critiquing Petitioners’
response to the Secretary’s application for fees, the trial court chided
Petitioners for focusing on “what section 16-602 says about hand count
audit procedures” rather than addressing the “procedural defects” leading
to dismissal of the complaint and the Secretary’s attorney fees motion.
Nonetheless, the trial court dismissively described Petitioners’
interpretation of § 16-602(B) as “barely colorable” despite its avowed
disinterest in the merits and lack of substantive analysis.

¶12            The trial court’s sanction may reflect its disapproval of
Petitioners’ invocation of the hand count audit to “cross-reference or
cross-check” ballots against voter registration data or use of declaratory
relief and mandamus proceedings to challenge the “integrity” or
“legitimacy” of the election while officials were preparing for the canvass.
As the statute prescribes, the hand count audit is to ensure the accuracy of
electronic voting machines and tabulators, and there was no indication that
the use of voting centers instead of precincts in this case affected the
election. However, if the trial court’s characterization of the merits of
Petitioners’ legal theory as “barely colorable” contributed to its attorney
fees award, it erred.

¶13            Facially, Petitioners’ claim is more than “barely” colorable in
this context. Petitioners correctly point out there is a plain-language conflict
between § 16-602(B), which requires a precinct hand count, and the 2019
EPM, which permits a voting center hand count. To be sure, by noting the
facial validity of Petitioners’ claim, we do not offer an advisory opinion or
otherwise address the Secretary’s position that the 2019 EPM’s
voting-center provisions constitute a duly adopted procedure that
supplements, rather than contravenes, the relevant statutes, as expressly
contemplated by § 16-602(B)’s statement that “[t]he hand count shall be
conducted as prescribed by this section and in accordance with hand count
procedures established by the secretary of state.” See Fann v. State, 251 Ariz.
425, 432 ¶ 11 (2021) (explaining that we exercise restraint to ensure that we
do not issue advisory opinions or otherwise decide unripe issues). Because
we conclude Petitioners’ statutory construction argument is more than
“barely colorable,” and therefore could arguably form the basis of a
mandamus request, we turn to the procedural issues that the trial court
identified as the basis for the attorney fees award—naming the wrong party

                                       7
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

in the declaratory judgment action, seeking mandamus relief that was
unavailable as a matter of law, and contesting a pre-election procedure in a
post-election challenge. See § 12-350 (requiring courts to “set forth the
specific reasons for the award” pursuant to § 12-349).

                                      I.

¶14          Sections 12-349(A)(1) and (F) require a showing of both
groundlessness and the absence of good faith. We first examine the trial
court’s groundlessness determination before turning to its “bad faith”
finding.

¶15           In the context of § 12-349, the term “groundless” is
synonymous with “frivolous.” Rogone v. Correia, 236 Ariz. 43, 50 ¶ 22 (App.
2014). A claim is groundless “if the proponent can present no rational
argument based upon the evidence or law in support of that claim.” Id.
(quoting Evergreen W., Inc. v. Boyd, 167 Ariz. 614, 621 (App. 1991)).
However, a claim is not groundless if it is “fairly debatable,” Johnson v.
Mohave County, 206 Ariz. 330, 335 ¶ 19 (App. 2003), even if such claim
constitutes a “long shot,” Goldman v. Sahl, 248 Ariz. 512, 531 ¶ 68 (App.
2020). In other words, a claim may lack winning merit without being
sufficiently devoid of rational support to render it groundless. See City of
Sedona v. Devol, 196 Ariz. 178, 183 ¶ 27 (App. 1999). Whether a claim is
groundless is viewed through an objective lens, without regard to the
attorney’s or party’s subjective beliefs. See Takieh, 252 Ariz. at 61 ¶ 37.

¶16           Here, aside from opining that the claim was “barely
colorable,” the trial court ruled that Petitioners’ complaint was groundless
for two reasons: first, because Petitioners’ requested declaratory and
mandamus relief was unavailable as a matter of law; and second, because
this Court’s election law jurisprudence foreclosed Petitioners’ post-election
challenge to a pre-election procedure.

¶17            The court of appeals embraced the trial court’s reasoning
concerning the availability of remedies and the timing of election litigation,
see Ariz. Republican Party, 255 Ariz. at 371–72 ¶¶ 38–43, but it also affirmed
the trial court’s groundlessness determination for a third reason, namely
the trial court’s antecedent laches ruling, see id. at 371 ¶ 37. Although the
trial court dismissed Petitioners’ complaint based on laches, it expressly
rejected laches as a basis for its groundlessness determination.

                                      8
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

Nevertheless, because an appellate court “may affirm the superior court’s
ruling if it is correct for any reason apparent in the record,” Takieh, 252 Ariz.
at 62 ¶ 39 (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted), we will also
address whether laches supports the groundlessness finding. We address
in turn each of the lower courts’ bases for groundlessness.

                                       A.

¶18           The trial court deemed Petitioners’ complaint groundless, in
part, due to Petitioners’ procedural faux pas in purportedly naming the
incorrect defendant in their declaratory judgment action. Citing to Yes on
Prop 200 v. Napolitano, 215 Ariz. 458, 470 ¶ 36 (App. 2007), the court wrote
that “[a] declaratory judgment action must name as a defendant the entity
or official responsible for implementing the law at issue.” (Emphasis
added.) The trial court then concluded that “[t]he Arizona state official
responsible for implementing election law is the secretary of state.” Thus,
because Petitioners sued only the County—not the Secretary—the court
determined that Petitioners’ complaint was groundless.

¶19            Yes on Prop 200—the sole case on which the trial court
relied—states, “[t]o successfully bring a declaratory judgment action
challenging the State’s implementation of Proposition 200, Plaintiffs must
name as a defendant an entity or official that has the ability to control the
implementation of that proposition. In naming the Governor, the Plaintiffs
have named an appropriate official.” 215 Ariz. at 470 ¶ 36 (citation omitted)
(emphasis added). In paraphrasing Yes on Prop 200, the court changed the
indefinite articles to definite ones, thereby incorrectly implying the
existence of a single proper defendant in a procedurally valid declaratory
action. But here, Petitioners arguably did sue the governmental entity
responsible for implementing the challenged hand-count procedures. “For
each countywide primary, special, general and presidential preference
election, the county officer in charge of the election shall conduct a hand
count at one or more secure facilities.” § 16-602(B) (emphasis added). Thus,
to the extent Yes on Prop 200 is controlling here, Petitioners arguably did not
sue the wrong party by failing to also name the Secretary as a defendant.
In any event, the Secretary moved to intervene just one day after Petitioners
filed their complaint, and Petitioners agreed to the intervention. It is
untenable to invoke an alleged procedural defect like the one in this
case—readily remediable and, in fact, remedied one day after the complaint
was filed—to irrevocably mar a complaint as groundless. We hold that

                                       9
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

Petitioners’ failure to name the Secretary as a defendant, even if improper,
did not render their complaint groundless. The trial court erred in finding
otherwise.

¶20            Our holding that, in this context, Petitioners’ omission of the
Secretary as a defendant in their request for declaratory relief does not
constitute groundlessness, does not require that we decide whether the
Secretary was a necessary party. Obvious reasons abound why a party
would include the Secretary as a defendant in a suit seeking to invalidate
or enjoin an EPM provision. Indeed, Arizona’s Uniform Declaratory
Judgments Act requires a plaintiff seeking declaratory relief to name as
parties all persons “who have or claim any interest which would be affected
by the declaration.” A.R.S. § 12-1841(A). The Secretary arguably has a per
se “interest which would be affected by the declaration” in any lawsuit that
challenges the validity or applicability of an EPM provision. Whatever the
Secretary’s interest in Petitioners’ declaratory action, it was fairly debatable
whether Petitioners’ naming of the County as a defendant in their
complaint was adequate, and, regardless, the parties agreed to the
Secretary’s intervention just one day after the complaint was filed.

                                       B.

¶21            The trial court also ruled that Petitioners’ claim was
groundless because their requested mandamus relief—directing the
County to conduct a hand count based on precincts—was unavailable as a
matter of law. Citing Adams v. Bolin, 77 Ariz. 316, 322–23 (1954), the court
observed that “a writ of mandamus cannot issue to public officials who
have no legal discretion concerning the matter at issue.” But, as noted,
§ 16-602 can be interpreted as limiting the hand count audit to precincts,
thus arguably prohibiting election officials from using voting centers for the
random selection. Contrary to the court’s reasoning that mandamus is
unavailable if a public officer lacks discretion in the discharge of duties,
actually the converse is true—mandamus is only available when a public
officer lacks such discretion. See Adams, 77 Ariz. at 322–23 (“As against
public officers in particular, [the writ of mandamus] is issued only to
compel the performance of an act which the law especially enjoins as a duty
arising out of the office. If such officer is not specifically required to
perform the duty or has any discretion as to what shall be done, the writ
does not lie.” (citation omitted)); see also Sears v. Hull, 192 Ariz. 65, 68 ¶ 11

                                       10
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

(1998) (“Thus, the requested relief in a mandamus action must be the
performance of an act and such act must be non-discretionary.”).

¶22           Thus, because the Maricopa County election officials enjoyed
no discretion in the discharge of their hand-count duties—a prerequisite to
mandamus relief rather than a legal disqualifier—the trial court erred.4
Indeed, had Petitioners’ claim that the challenged 2019 EPM provisions
were void because they contravened § 16-602(B) been correct, their
requested mandamus relief could have constituted a valid attempt to
enforce a public officer’s non-discretionary duty.

¶23             Although we decline to resolve the merits of Petitioners’
claim—whether the 2019 EPM conflicted with the relevant statutes, thus
compelling Maricopa County election officials to execute the statutory hand
count procedures in violation of the 2019 EPM—we note that mandamus
relief in these circumstances is typically unavailable. The court of appeals
has held that “mandamus is not an appropriate method to use to obtain a
definition of duties that are otherwise subject to dispute,” Yes on Prop 200,
215 Ariz. at 467 ¶ 26, and this Court has “described mandamus as available
only ‘to require public officers to perform their official duties when they
refuse to act,’” Transp. Infrastructure Moving Ariz.’s Econ. v. Brewer, 219 Ariz.
207, 213 ¶ 32 (2008) (quoting Sears, 192 Ariz. at 68 ¶ 11). Thus, if a party
claims “not that the Secretary refused to perform her statutory
duties . . . but rather that she erred in performing them,” mandamus is
unavailable. Id.

¶24            Our cases, however, do not clearly delineate the standard
courts should use to discern when a legal duty is “subject to dispute” for
purposes of a mandamus action. We caution that an approach that
forecloses mandamus relief because a party simply disputes the scope of an
official’s duties risks vitiating the writ of mandamus. Here, however, we
only hold that Petitioners’ requested mandamus relief was not groundless
because it was at least fairly debatable, even if a “long shot,” whether the
County was obligated to conduct a hand count consistent with § 16-602(B)
or an arguably conflicting EPM provision. See Goldman, 248 Ariz. at 531

4  The court of appeals repeated the trial court’s error, quoting the trial
court’s incorrect legal proposition but also seemingly attributing the quote
to this Court’s holding from Adams. See Ariz. Republican Party, 255 Ariz.
at 372 ¶ 42.
                                       11
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

¶ 68. Moreover, Petitioners only sought mandamus relief conditioned on a
declaratory judgment that the 2019 EPM violated the statute requiring a
precinct hand count.

                                       C.

¶25           We next consider the trial court’s ruling that Petitioners’ claim
was groundless because their post-election challenge improperly contested
a pre-election procedure.

¶26            It is well-established that a litigant must challenge
pre-election procedures prior to the election. Kerby v. Griffin, 48 Ariz. 434,
441–44 (1936) (examining the alleged violation of certain statutes governing
the pre-election distribution of initiative publicity pamphlets); Tilson v.
Mofford, 153 Ariz. 468, 470–71 (1987) (examining whether an initiative
petition complied with certain statutes and constitutional provisions
governing “the form of the initiative”); Sherman v. City of Tempe, 202 Ariz.
339, 340 ¶ 1, 342 ¶¶ 9–11 (2002) (examining the alleged violation of certain
statutes requiring that municipalities “mail publicity pamphlets ten days
before the start of early voting”); Vangilder v. Ariz. Dep’t of Revenue, 252 Ariz.
481, 486 ¶¶ 14–15 (2022) (examining whether a county resolution calling for
a countywide special election complied with the statute governing the form
of such resolutions). It is debatable, however, whether a statutory
post-election hand count constitutes a “procedure[] leading up to an
election” governed by the bar on post-election filings. See Tilson, 153 Ariz.
at 470.

¶27           In this case, the trial court merely assumed that the challenged
hand count was a pre-election procedure, but it did not explain why the
hand count is subject to the election-law time bar. Instead, the court focused
on Petitioners’ failure to allege (1) that the hand count was fraudulent or (2)
that the failure to follow proper procedures changed the result of the
election, each of which constitutes a narrow exception to the election-law
time bar. See Findley v. Sorenson, 35 Ariz. 265, 269 (1929); Miller v. Picacho
Elementary Sch. Dist. No. 33, 179 Ariz. 178, 179–80 (1994). To be sure,
Petitioners do not allege in their complaint that the asserted hand-count
anomalies affected the outcome of the election or otherwise involved fraud.
Instead, Petitioners contend that the hand-count protocol is not a
pre-election procedure and, thus, is not subject to the election-law time bar.

                                       12
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

¶28            The court of appeals categorically rejected Petitioners’
contention that a challenge to the hand count eludes the election-law time
bar as a challenge to a post-election procedure. See Ariz. Republican Party,
255 Ariz. at 371 ¶ 39. But the court’s only justification for its conclusion is
that the “[h]and count procedures start no later than two weeks before
election day, when the county official informs the county political party
chairs how many of their respective members are needed to serve on the
‘Hand Count Boards.’” Id. (citing 2019 EPM at 213). Although the court’s
characterization of the process is correct as far as it goes, the hand-count
protocol continues past the election’s conclusion. In fact, although the
statute directs the sampling from precincts, the actual selection of polling
places does not commence until after the election. 2019 EPM at 215 (“The
selection of the precincts/polling locations shall not begin until all ballots
voted in the precinct polling places have been delivered to the central
counting facility.”). Indeed, the 2019 EPM does not include the hand count
among its pre-election procedures. Id. at 128, 213 (dedicating a chapter to
the “Hand Count Audit” despite the existence of a separate chapter
dedicated to “Pre-Election Procedures”). Thus, the hand count is not a pure
pre-election procedure; rather, it straddles the election. The opposite
conclusion would foreclose any challenge to the hand count, absent fraud,
if the basis for the claim arose from failure to comply with post-election
procedures.

¶29           The merits of Petitioners’ claim are not before us; therefore,
we need not determine whether, or to what extent, the election-law time bar
applies to a procedure, like the hand count, that straddles the election. We
merely conclude that Petitioners’ post-election claim was not groundless
because whether their claim was time-barred by our jurisprudential
election-law procedural rule is at least “fairly debatable.” See Johnson, 206
Ariz. at 335 ¶ 19.

                                      D.

¶30            Laches is an equitable defense that serves as the “counterpart
to the statute of limitations.” Sotomayor v. Burns, 199 Ariz. 81, 82–83 ¶ 6
(2000). Additionally, it is an affirmative defense, Flynn v. Rogers, 172 Ariz.
62, 66 (1992), and a trial court applies laches at its discretion, McLaughlin v.
Bennett, 225 Ariz. 351, 353 ¶ 6 (2010). Although unreasonable delay is a
criterion for laches, the “laches defense, however, cannot stand on
unreasonable conduct alone. A showing of prejudice is also required.”

                                      13
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

Sotomayor, 199 Ariz. at 83 ¶ 8 (citation omitted). In adjudicating laches
claims, courts must focus on “fundamental fairness” and “consider all
factors.” League of Ariz. Cities & Towns v. Martin, 219 Ariz. 556, 560 ¶ 13
(2009).

¶31           The outcome of a laches inquiry is difficult to predict without
considering a claim’s context because it depends upon factors independent
from groundlessness, including fundamental fairness and a weighing of
relative prejudices. See id. at 560 ¶ 13. Therefore, a successful laches
defense does not ipso facto render a claim groundless. Of course, the facts
underlying a laches dismissal could also support a finding of
groundlessness; for example, a lawsuit might be so unreasonably dilatory
and so obviously prejudicial that it is objectively groundless ab initio. If
such a case were to arise, the trial court would have to expressly “set forth
the specific reasons for the award.” § 12-350. But a court should not
conclude that a claim is groundless simply because it is barred by laches.

¶32           Here, the trial court did not base its groundlessness
determination on its antecedent laches ruling. The trial court dismissed
Petitioners’ complaint based on laches because it concluded Petitioners
could, and should, have challenged the hand-count procedure earlier in
2020, as they had acquired constructive knowledge of the contested
hand-count procedures when the Maricopa County Republican Party
participated in voting-center hand counts in the March preference and the
August primary elections leading up to the November general election.
Thus, the trial court reasoned that Petitioners were unreasonably dilatory,
and created prejudice, in sitting on their hands and waiting to challenge the
general-election hand count until after its completion.

¶33             Even if the trial court reasonably determined that Petitioners’
complaint was barred by laches, that was not the basis for imposing
sanctions. And we do not concur in the court of appeals’ conclusion that
the prejudicial delay in filing the complaint rendered Petitioners’ action
objectively groundless and, therefore, sanctionable on this record.
Although an appellate court may affirm a fees award under § 12-349 “if it
is correct for any reason apparent in the record,” Takieh, 252 Ariz. at 62 ¶ 39
(citation omitted), such a reason is absent from this record. Although
Petitioners’ challenge came months after a similar exercise of the 2019
EPM’s hand-count procedures—undermining any assertion that they were
unaware of the alleged violations—and after the hand count had been

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               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

completed, Petitioners still initiated their challenge almost two weeks
before the official canvass deadline. Consequently, although risky and a
“long shot,” see Goldman, 248 Ariz. at 531 ¶ 68, Petitioners’ contention that
another hand count could be conducted prior to the canvass deadline—the
very relief sought in the complaint—was not untenable. This case does not
present the sort of extraordinary circumstances that would render the
equitable defense of laches a source of objective legal groundlessness.

                                      E.

¶34           A fees award under § 12-349(A)(1) requires groundlessness
and the absence of good faith. Because we conclude that the trial court and
the court of appeals erred in ruling that the absence of available remedies,
the applicability of the election-law time bar on post-election challenges to
pre-election procedures, and laches rendered Petitioners’ complaint
groundless, the § 12-349(A)(1) fees award against Petitioners was improper.
We therefore have no need to consider whether Petitioners’ claim was “not
made in good faith.” Nevertheless, because our courts’ jurisprudence
interpreting § 12-349(F)’s phrase “not made in good faith” lacks clarity and
engenders confusion, we will address its meaning. See Big D Const. Corp. v.
Court of Appeals, 163 Ariz. 560, 563 (1990); In re Pima Cnty. Mental Health No.
20200860221, 255 Ariz. 519, 523–24 ¶ 9 (2023) (recognizing an exception to
our prudential mootness doctrine when an issue is “of great public
importance or one [that] is likely to recur” (alteration in original) (citation
omitted)).

                                      II.

¶35            Arizona courts have never defined the phrase “not made in
good faith” as it pertains to § 12-349(F). See Ariz. Republican Party, 255 Ariz.
at 372–73 ¶ 45. Instead, our courts typically conflate the absence of good
faith with the presence of bad faith. See, e.g., Phx. Newspapers, 188 Ariz.
at 243–45. Textually, this approach was fairly benign in the past because
§ 12-349’s prior version defined “without substantial justification”—the
basis for fees in § 12-349(A)(1)—to mean “the claim or defense constitutes
harassment, is groundless and is not made in good faith.” § 12-349(F)
(2011). In other words, by including “harassment” as a definitional
component of “without substantial justification,” the statute moored its
meaning, in part, to the presence of bad faith in the form of harassment.
However, in 2012, the legislature excised “harassment” from § 12-349(F).

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               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

See 2012 Ariz. Sess. Laws ch. 305, § 2 (2d Reg. Sess.). Nevertheless, despite
the 2012 amendment, our courts have continued to deem the absence of
good faith as synonymous with the presence of bad faith. See, e.g., White
Mountain Health Ctr., Inc. v. Maricopa County, 241 Ariz. 230, 253 ¶ 84 (App.
2016). Indeed, in this Court’s only post-2012 amendment case addressing
the faith prong of § 12-349(F), we continued to conflate the absence of good
faith with the presence of bad faith. See Shooter v. Farmer, 235 Ariz. 199, 201
¶ 6 (2014) (“Farmer requests attorney’s fees, arguing that Shooter’s petition
forgery claim was without substantial justification, meaning that it is
groundless and is not made in good faith. Because we do not conclude that
Shooter acted in bad faith, we deny Farmer’s request for fees.” (citations
omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)).

¶36           In this case, following this Court’s lead, the trial court
expressly conflated the absence of good faith under § 12-349(F) with the
presence of an “ulterior” and “improper” purpose under abuse-of-process
jurisprudence, a hallmark of bad faith. Although the court of appeals
declined to embrace the trial court’s analysis, see Ariz. Republican Party, 255
Ariz. at 373 ¶ 47, it failed to offer an alternative paradigm.

¶37            Our courts’ conflation of the absence of good faith with bad
faith under § 12-349 presents an interpretative problem because it renders
§ 12-349(A)(1) superfluous.        Sections 12-349(A)(2)–(4), respectively,
mandate a fees award if a court determines that an attorney or party
“[b]rings or defends a claim solely or primarily for delay or harassment,”
“[u]nreasonably expands or delays the proceeding,” or “[e]ngages in abuse
of discovery.” In other words, each subsection provides a separate bad faith
basis for a fees award. If we construe § 12-349(A)(1) to require
groundlessness and bad faith, (A)(1) would become superfluous because
(A)(2)–(4) merely require a type of bad faith. In practical terms, why would
a party requesting fees under § 12-349 pursue an award under
(A)(1)—requiring a showing of groundlessness and bad faith—when
merely proving harassment, delay, or abuse of discovery would suffice? If
another textually valid interpretation exists, it is preferable to the currently
prevailing one that conflates the absence of good faith with the presence of
bad faith. See Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The
Interpretation of Legal Texts 174–79 (2012) (the surplusage canon); Nicaise v.
Sundaram, 245 Ariz. 566, 568 ¶ 11 (2019) (“A cardinal principle of statutory
interpretation is to give meaning, if possible, to every word and provision
so that no word or provision is rendered superfluous.”).

                                      16
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

¶38            A truer textual construction of § 12-349(F)—one that ties the
absence of good faith to groundlessness and gives (A)(1) independent
vitality—is that a claim is “not made in good faith” if (1) it is groundless
and (2) the party or attorney knows or should know that it is groundless, or
is indifferent to its groundlessness, but pursues it anyway. This conception
of the absence of good faith captures the situation in which a party, absent
a good faith effort to change the law, pursues a claim knowing that it lacks
a legal foundation and is unlikely to succeed, even as a “long shot,” or
where a party pursues a claim devoid of factual support or legitimate
expectation that discovery will produce the requisite factual basis. In other
words, a party’s indifference to a claim’s invalidity may constitute the
absence of good faith even without an intent to harass or delay or other
evidence of affirmative bad faith. This definition also aligns with the
statutory factors a court “may include” “in its consideration” of a potential
§ 12-349 fees award, including (1) “[t]he extent of any effort made to
determine the validity of a claim before the claim was asserted,” (2) “[t]he
extent of any effort made after the commencement of an action to reduce
the number of claims or defenses being asserted or to dismiss claims or
defenses found not to be valid,” and (3) “[t]he availability of facts to assist
a party in determining the validity of a claim or defense.” See
§ 12-350(1)–(3).

¶39           Our definition of “not made in good faith” is also consistent
with several recent court of appeals decisions that effectively adopt this
approach. See Takieh, 252 Ariz. at 62 ¶¶ 40–43 (finding the absence of good
faith because the plaintiff “offered no admissible evidence that [the
defendant] made defamatory statements about him, made no effort to
determine whether [the defendant] actually made admissible defamatory
statements about him before filing his amended complaint, and failed to
withdraw his claim when confronted with his lack of evidence” (cleaned
up)); Gitman v. Simpson, No. 1 CA-CV 21-0723, 2022 WL 4241966, at *6
¶¶ 23–25 (Ariz. App. Sept. 15, 2022) (mem. decision) (finding the absence
of good faith because the plaintiff “had no evidence of a causal link,” “failed
to avail himself of facts concerning the alleged causal connection,” “lacked
a good-faith basis for his damage allegations,” “never presented any facts,”
brought a claim “rooted only in supposition and speculation,” and “failed
to conduct an adequate pre-litigation investigation” (cleaned up)).

                                      17
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

¶40           Arizona courts have viewed the absence of good faith under
§ 12-349(A)(1) through a subjective lens while, in contrast, they have
assessed groundlessness by an objective standard. See, e.g., Ariz. Republican
Party, 255 Ariz. at 372 ¶ 45 (citing Rogone, 236 Ariz. at 50 ¶ 22). We disavow
this dichotomous approach. Courts should evaluate the absence of good
faith under § 12-349(A)(1) objectively—consistent with the Arizona Rule of
Civil Procedure 11 standard—which “is not based on whether an attorney
subjectively pursues claims in good faith, but instead is judged on an
objective standard of what a professional, competent attorney would do in
similar circumstances.” See Villa De Jardines Ass’n v. Flagstar Bank, FSB, 227
Ariz. 91, 96 ¶ 14 (App. 2011) (quoting Standage v. Jaburg & Wilk, P.C., 177
Ariz. 221, 230 (App. 1993)); accord Goldman, 248 Ariz. at 531 ¶ 68 (“The basis
for a sanction according to Civil Procedure Rule 11 is the same as A.R.S.
§ 12-349(A)(1).”). The “circumstances” that the analysis incorporates are of
course fact-dependent, and they are likely to include the factors
enumerated in § 12-350, including the “availability of facts to assist a party
in determining the validity of a claim or defense” and the effort made to
inform oneself of the available facts. The virtue of this approach is that it
extricates our courts from the morass of attempting to discern the subjective
motives of attorneys and parties in bringing a case and avoids conflating
motive and the objective reasonableness of litigation conduct when
considering a fees award under § 12-349(A)(1).

¶41             To clarify the scope of § 12-349(A)’s application, we note that
the statute refers only to the bringing of a claim, thus implying that a party’s
conduct in maintaining the action is immune from sanction. However, in
context, the statute is most reasonably construed to also apply to attorneys
or parties who maintain sanctionable claims. Notably, for example,
§ 12-350(2) invites courts to consider “[t]he extent of any effort made after
the commencement of an action to reduce the number of claims or defenses
being asserted or to dismiss claims or defenses found not to be valid.”
(Emphasis added.) In addition to this textual support for applying the
statute to the bringing and maintaining of a sanctionable claim, it makes
little sense to deter and punish offending conduct at the inception of a case,
but to permit it, without sanction, during the course of the litigation.

¶42           As Petitioners’ complaint was not groundless, thus
foreclosing a fees award under § 12-349(A)(1), we decline to consider
whether Petitioners’ claim was not made in good faith. We will, however,
review the trial court’s finding that Petitioners acted in bad faith because its

                                      18
               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

bad faith determination could support a fees award under § 12-349(A)(2)
for bringing or maintaining a claim “solely or primarily for delay or
harassment.”

                                     III.

¶43           The trial court ruled that Petitioners engaged in sanctionable
bad faith by bringing a lawsuit primarily for “political reasons.” The court
rejected Petitioners’ asserted justification that they merely requested a
by-the-book hand count in order to dispel public mistrust surrounding the
2020 election, reasoning that “‘[p]ublic mistrust’ is a political issue, not a
legal or factual basis for litigation.” Id.

¶44             We cannot countenance the trial court’s rigid delineation
between the motives underlying election litigation—“political” reasons,
which invite sanction under § 12-349, and “legal or factual” justifications,
which are permissible. Invariably, political motives are inextricably
intertwined with the legal or factual considerations in pursuing election
cases. Indeed, the Secretary concedes that “[e]lection litigation inevitably
carries political considerations.” The desire to vindicate a legal right—even
if in the election context and animated exclusively by political motives—is
not relevant, much less per se sanctionable. Courts should focus on the
legal and factual merits of a claim and the party’s and attorney’s conduct in
the course of the litigation. Any suggestion that a party or attorney faces
enhanced risk of sanction merely because they couple political motives with
a long-shot effort to vindicate a legal right in the election law context
intolerably chills citizens and their attorneys precisely in an arena where
we can least afford to silence them. Our courts should be cautious that, in
their zeal to ensure that election challenges are properly grounded in fact
and law under the guise of defending an “election’s legitimacy,” they do
not inadvertently inflict real damage to our republic by slamming the
courthouse door on citizens and their counsel legitimately seeking to
vindicate rights, which is also important to maintaining public confidence
in elections.

¶45            The trial court also ruled that Petitioners acted in bad faith
because their declaratory relief served as a mere pretext to request
injunctive relief intended to undermine the results of the 2020 election. To
be sure, a party may not challenge an election based upon procedural
irregularities absent an allegation the irregularities affected the results of

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               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

the election or at least raised uncertainty. See Miller, 179 Ariz. at 180. We
are willing to assume arguendo that seeking to delay the election results
canvass is tantamount to challenging the election and, thus, is disallowed
unless there is a credible allegation that the election results are
questionable. Nevertheless, we disagree that, on this record, Petitioners’
requested injunctive relief evinces bad faith.

¶46            First, despite the trial court’s assertion, Petitioners did not
abandon their requested declaratory relief. To the contrary, after the trial
court denied such relief, Petitioners appealed the adverse ruling. Second,
even if Petitioners’ requested injunctive relief was unlikely to succeed, we
disagree that, in context, the request indicates bad faith. Critically,
Petitioners sought an injunction only after the Secretary argued that
mandamus would be “impossible” absent an injunction delaying the
official canvass. Moreover, in her application for attorney fees, the
Secretary characterized Petitioners’ injunction request as “at the [trial]
[c]ourt’s invitation.” On this record, we do not conclude that Petitioners’
request for an injunction—made midstream in the litigation upon the
prompting of the opposing party and at the court’s invitation—transmutes
the original complaint into a bad-faith pleading.

                                      IV.

¶47           The court of appeals awarded the Secretary’s attorney fees
incurred on appeal under § 12-349. Ariz. Republican Party, 255 Ariz.
at 375–76 ¶ 60. But the court did not specify the subsection of § 12-349 upon
which it awarded fees, nor did it comply with § 12-350’s requirement to “set
forth the specific reasons for the award.” Instead, the court simply based
its appellate fees award on “the same reasons outlined by the superior
court” and noted Petitioners’ failure to respond to the fees request. Id.

¶48            The court of appeals’ explanation for imposing its § 12-349
sanction—“the same reasons outlined by the superior court”—is
insufficient to sustain the fees award. First, the trial court’s reasons for its
fees award cannot support the appellate fees award because the issues
before the courts significantly diverged—on appeal, Petitioners did not
contest the trial court’s mandamus, laches, or election-law time bar rulings.
In fact, the only issues on appeal were the trial court’s attorney fees award
and Petitioners’ alleged failure to name the proper defendant in their
request for declaratory relief. Second, because the court did not set forth

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               ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                        Opinion of the Court

the specific reasons for its appellate fees award, we are left to surmise its
justification. Was it per se frivolous to appeal an award of attorney fees
and/or to dispute whether a complaint seeking declaratory relief named
the proper defendant? We doubt so. Third, we note that the court did not
issue sanctions pursuant to Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 25,
the appellate corollary of Rule 11. In any event, the court of appeals
“impose[s] sanctions under Rule 25 only with great reservation, and [it]
decline[s] to do so when the issues raised are supportable by any reasonable
legal theory, or if a colorable legal argument is presented about which
reasonable attorneys could differ.” Villa De Jardines, 227 Ariz. at 99 ¶ 26
(citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, we infer that
the court did not deem Petitioners’ appeal violative of Rule 25, and we
decline to infer such a finding on this record. Petitioners’ appeal of the trial
court’s dismissal of their requested declaratory relief and fees sanction was
not frivolous and the court erred in awarding the Secretary’s appellate fees.

                               CONCLUSION

¶49            Petitioners were sanctioned under § 12-349 for pursuing
election-related claims the trial court and court of appeals erroneously
characterized as “groundless.” Far from filing and maintaining a factually
unsupported election challenge, Petitioners sought a declaratory judgment
based on the plain language of § 16-602(B)(1) and requested mandamus
relief conditioned on a favorable resolution of their action for declaratory
relief. Under our jurisprudence, for the reasons discussed, Petitioners’
claim was not groundless and arguably was made in good faith. Of note,
the trial court emphasized in its ruling that Petitioners’ gravest
transgression and “direct evidence of bad faith” was “[u]ndercutting the
election’s legitimacy by raising ‘questions,’” which it characterized as “a
threat to the rule of law posing as an expression of concern.” But “raising
questions” by petitioning our courts to clarify the meaning and application
of our laws and noting the potential consequences of the failure to do
so—particularly in the context of our elections—is never a threat to the rule
of law, even if the claims are charitably characterized as “long shots.” Of
course, parties and attorneys in election cases are not immune from
sanction under § 12-349, see, e.g., Kentch v. Jantzen, No. CV-23-0205-SA, at 3
(Ariz. Aug. 23, 2023) (dec. order), but neither are they more susceptible to
its terms. During times of social and political contention and strife, we must
be mindful that our courts provide a means of resolving such conflicts when
issues are legitimately presented. By sanctioning parties and their lawyers

                                      21
              ARIZONA REPUBLICAN PARTY V. RICHER
                       Opinion of the Court

for bringing debatable, long-shot complaints, courts risk chilling legal
advocacy and citizens raising “questions” under the guise of defending the
rule of law. Even if done inadvertently and with the best of intentions, such
sanctions present a real and present danger to the rule of law.

¶50          For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the trial court’s and the
court of appeals’ § 12-349 attorney fees awards. We also vacate paragraphs
1 and 32–60 of the court of appeals’ opinion.

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