Kelly v. Kobach - Quo Warranto Action Dismissed
Summary
The Kansas Supreme Court dismissed Governor Laura Kelly's quo warranto petition against Attorney General Kris Kobach. The court found that while it has original discretionary jurisdiction in such matters, this specific case did not meet the criteria for exercising that jurisdiction, leading to the dismissal of the Governor's challenge to the Attorney General's authority.
What changed
The Kansas Supreme Court has dismissed Governor Laura Kelly's quo warranto action against Attorney General Kris Kobach. The Governor alleged that the Attorney General had exceeded his constitutional authority, thereby interfering with the Governor's office. The court, while acknowledging its original discretionary jurisdiction in quo warranto cases involving public officials and matters of statewide importance, determined that this particular case did not warrant the exercise of that jurisdiction.
This ruling means the Governor's challenge to the Attorney General's actions is unsuccessful. The dismissal implies that the specific legal questions raised by the Governor did not meet the court's threshold for intervention, potentially leaving the dispute over executive branch litigation control unresolved through this judicial avenue. No compliance actions are required for regulated entities as this is an intra-governmental dispute.
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March 27, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Kelly v. Kobach
Supreme Court of Kansas
- Citations: None known
Docket Number: 129788
Combined Opinion
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
No. 129,788
GOVERNOR LAURA KELLY,
in Her Official Capacity,
Petitioner,
v.
KRIS KOBACH, ATTORNEY GENERAL,
in His Official Capacity,
Respondent.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
The Kansas Supreme Court has original discretionary jurisdiction in quo warranto
actions to hear challenges to the legal authority of a public official who has engaged in a
purportedly unlawful action. The exercise of discretionary jurisdiction may be
appropriate when a case presents issues of significant public concern or matters of
statewide importance; the petition presents purely legal questions rather than requiring
extensive factfinding; or there is a need for an expeditious ruling.
Original action in quo warranto. Oral argument held January 16, 2026. Opinion filed March 27,
2026. Petition dismissed.
Stephen R. McAllister, of Dentons US LLP, of Kansas City, Missouri, argued the cause, and
Justin H. Whitten, chief counsel, Office of the Governor, Ashley Stites-Hubbard, deputy chief counsel,
and Emily Depew, associate counsel, of the same office, were with him on the brief for petitioner.
Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, argued the cause, and Anthony J. Powell, solicitor general,
Dwight R. Carswell, deputy solicitor general, and Adam T. Steinhilber, assistant solicitor general, were
with him on the brief for respondent.
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Brant M. Laue, of Topeka, Steve Karrer, general counsel, Kansas Department of Insurance,
Philip R. Michael, assistant general counsel, and Jack Clayton Johnson, assistant commissioner, of the
same department; Jeffrey A. Chanay, assistant state treasurer and general counsel, Office of the Kansas
State Treasurer; and Clayton Barker, deputy secretary of state and general counsel, Office of the Kansas
Secretary of State, were on the brief for amicus curiae Kansas Commissioner of Insurance joined by
Kansas Secretary of State and Kansas State Treasurer.
Edward D. Greim, of Graves Garrett Greim, LLC, of Kansas City, Missouri, and Matthew
Mueller, of the same firm, were on the brief for amicus curiae Legislative Coordinating Council.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
STEGALL, J.: Governor Laura Kelly brings this quo warranto action alleging that
Attorney General Kris Kobach has exceeded his constitutional authority. The Governor
claims that in so doing, the Attorney General has interfered with the constitutional
authority of her office. The Governor's allegations arise out of a disagreement between
the two executive branch officials concerning control over executive branch litigation.
But the specific legal challenges the Governor brings (and the relief she seeks) have
changed over the course of this action—morphing from important and far-reaching
constitutional claims requiring prompt resolution into claims that simply do not support
our exercise of jurisdiction in quo warranto. Because we decline to exercise our
discretionary quo warranto jurisdiction over the dispute remaining before us, we dismiss
the Governor's petition.
To explain how we reach this conclusion, we start at the beginning—with the two
related and underlying disputes between Kansas and the federal government. First, the
federal government has asked Kansas (and other states) to provide personally identifying
information of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients claiming
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such information is necessary to root out fraud—"the SNAP Data Dispute." Second, and
similarly, the federal government has attempted to delay, cut, or terminate certain federal
grant funding, including SNAP, to several state agencies—"the Funding Dispute."
Broadly speaking, the parties disagree over how to respond to the federal
government's actions in these matters. The Governor argues the federal government's
demands and reprisals are unlawful. The Attorney General believes her position lacks any
legal merit and, regardless, that she is not the real party in interest to challenge the federal
government's actions in court.
Both parties have expressed their concerns to this court regarding the potential
consequences of the other's course of action. In this opinion we expressly take no position
on this disagreement. But, the two officials' opposing postures with respect to the federal
government have now blossomed into a dispute over the scope of executive authority
between these two offices. Put succinctly, the Governor's quo warranto petition asked, at
least originally: if Kansas or its executive agencies are going to get involved in a legal
fight with the federal government, which executive officer will control the course of that
litigation?
Discretionary Jurisdiction over Quo Warranto Actions
When a petitioner seeks to challenge the legal authority of a public official to
engage in a challenged action, they may file a quo warranto petition with this court. A
quo warranto action demands that "an individual or corporation show by what authority it
has engaged in a challenged action." Kelly v. Legislative Coordinating Council, 311 Kan.
339, 344, 460 P.3d 832 (2020) (citing State ex rel. Schmidt v. City of Wichita, 303 Kan.
650, 656, 367 P.3d 282 [2016]). The right to bring a quo warranto challenge is codified in
K.S.A. 60-1202(1), which provides an action in quo warranto may be brought in the
Supreme Court "[w]hen any person shall usurp, intrude into or unlawfully hold or
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exercise any public office, or shall claim any franchise within this state, or any office in
any corporation created by authority of this state." And K.S.A. 60-1202(5) allows such an
action "[f]or any other cause for which a remedy might have been heretofore obtained by
writ of quo warranto at common law." See Kelly, 311 Kan. at 344-45.
The Kansas Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in quo warranto actions. "Our
original jurisdiction is discretionary and concurrent with that of lower courts." Schwab v.
Klapper, 315 Kan. 150, 151-52, 505 P.3d 345 (2022) (citing Ambrosier v. Brownback,
304 Kan. 907, 909, 375 P.3d 1007 [2016]). See also Kelly, 311 Kan. at 344 ("Relief in
quo warranto is discretionary."). The decision whether to exercise discretionary
jurisdiction is a separate and distinct inquiry from whether a petition states a valid claim
of relief. See Schwab, 315 Kan. at 154 ("A court may choose to exercise its discretionary
jurisdiction in an original action only to conclude—as a matter of law—that the specific
petition before it does not lie in mandamus or quo warranto.").
Determining whether to exercise this discretionary jurisdiction is our first duty
when considering a quo warranto petition. 315 Kan. at 152.
"In exercising our discretion to accept jurisdiction over such claims, we consider several
factors, including: whether the case presents issues of significant public concern or
matters of statewide importance; whether the petition presents purely legal questions or
requires extensive fact-finding; or whether there is a need for an expeditious ruling. See,
e.g., Board of Johnson County Comm'rs v. Jordan, 303 Kan. 844, 850, 370 P.3d 1170
(2016) (great public importance and concern); Stephens v. Van Arsdale, 227 Kan. 676,
682, 608 P.2d 972 (1980) (speedy adjudications of questions of law; matter of statewide
concern); Mobil Oil Corp. v. McHenry, 200 Kan. 211, 239, 436 P.2d 982 (1968) (speedy
adjudication to expedite official business)." 315 Kan. at 152.
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Thus, whether the issues raised are of significant public concern or statewide importance
is crucial to the potential success of any quo warranto petition. State ex rel. Schmidt v.
Governor Kelly, 309 Kan. 887, 890-91, 441 P.3d 67 (2019).
On the face of Governor Kelly's quo warranto petition, the issues she raised were
purely questions of law that did appear to be matters of significant public concern and
statewide importance. After all, Governor Kelly had attempted to direct the Attorney
General to participate in ongoing federal litigation on behalf of Kansas, and when he
refused, Governor Kelly filed suit in her official capacity. The Attorney General, in turn,
asserted the exclusive authority to represent Kansas and its interests in federal litigation,
and sought to have the Governor removed from certain of those lawsuits. Governor Kelly
sought relief in the form of a declaration from us that the Governor has the constitutional
authority to "sue, join, participate in, and litigate actions or proceedings on behalf of her
office and the interests of Kansas" in court.
Based on these filings, we provisionally accepted jurisdiction to allow the parties
to develop their arguments through briefing and oral argument. As we will see, that
development has significantly clarified and altered the issues that are now before us. And
as we explain below, we now determine the actual dispute remaining between these two
public officials does not present a pressing legal question of significant public importance
meriting the ongoing exercise of our discretionary jurisdiction.
There Is No Basis for Quo Warranto Jurisdiction Related to the SNAP Data Dispute
In June 2025, the Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) agency, published a notice
proposing to create a national SNAP information database for participant and transaction
data. FNS subsequently notified SNAP state agencies of the data requirements and
deadlines and warned that failure to comply could trigger punitive measures under federal
law. On July 30, the Secretary of Kansas Department for Children and Families (KDCF)
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sent official correspondence to FNS acknowledging the request for SNAP data. However,
the Secretary cited pending litigation by other states to enjoin the request in California v.
USDA, No. 25-cv-06310 (N.D. Cal.), and the roughly 30-day deadline to produce the
data, and declined to comply. After additional correspondence, FNS issued a formal
warning to the Governor threatening disallowance of federal funding to Kansas if KDCF
did not comply with the request to deliver SNAP enrollment data or submit a corrective
action proposal within 30 days.
On September 22, the Governor and the Secretary of KDCF filed an
administrative appeal, which automatically stayed the disallowance of SNAP funds to
Kansas. After filing this appeal, the Governor directed the Attorney General to file for
emergency injunctive relief. The Attorney General refused and wrote to Governor Kelly
explaining that he would seek to prevent the Governor from taking further legal action on
behalf of the State. To date, he has not done so.
Indeed, the Governor's petition failed to identify any concrete official action taken
by the Attorney General with respect to the SNAP Data Dispute that would enable us to
evaluate our jurisdiction over a scope-of-authority dispute under the two-step test set
forth in Schwab. See Schmidt, 309 Kan. at 891 ("An action in quo warranto demands that
an individual or corporation show by what authority it has engaged in a challenged
action." [Emphasis added.]).
Quo warranto does not exist in order for this court to referee abstract or rhetorical
disagreements between state officials. 309 Kan. at 890-91, 893 (explaining that quo
warranto relief is appropriate only when involving a challenged action that is of
significant public concern; noting that Kansas courts lack the constitutional power to
issue advisory opinions because they would violate the separation of powers doctrine).
Such political or policy disagreements are commonplace and do not warrant the
extraordinary remedy of quo warranto. State ex rel. Morrison v. Sebelius, 285 Kan. 875,
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880, 179 P.3d 366 (2008) ("Quo warranto is an extraordinary remedy . . . ."). Quo
warranto jurisdiction must be grounded in some concrete official action taken which is
alleged to exceed the constitutional grant of authority to that official.
No matter how vigorous a public disagreement between public officials
becomes—or how insistent the communication between them is—unless the
disagreement manifests in some concrete and particular action, it remains abstract and
theoretical. Schmidt, 309 Kan. at 891 ("An action in quo warranto demands that an
individual or corporation show by what authority it has engaged in a challenged action."
[Emphasis added.]). Such disputes do not rise to the level of significant public concern
justifying quo warranto jurisdiction in this court. A ruling on the constitutionality of what
action the Attorney General may take would effectively be the kind of advisory opinion
we cannot render.
One way to describe such hypothetical arguments not grounded in any concrete
action is to say that they have not yet ripened into the kind of limited question quo
warranto is designed to resolve. We also note that based on supplemental status reports
filed with this court, the SNAP Data Dispute may be resolved given agreements reached
between Governor Kelly and the federal government. If that proved to be true, the SNAP
Data Dispute could also be characterized as moot. And while we do not have sufficient
factual development in the record of this case to definitively declare the SNAP Data
Dispute moot, whether moot or unripe, we may still simply apply our established
principles to the ultimate question of whether to exercise our discretionary jurisdiction.
So, applying the factors for discretionary jurisdiction set forth in Schwab to the
allegations and arguments raised by the Governor relating to the SNAP Data Dispute, we
find that none are applicable. In doing so, we specifically highlight that the Governor has
failed to identify any concrete official action taken by the Attorney General with respect
to the SNAP Data Dispute. Instead, the Governor cites to the Attorney General's
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"threatened" "response" to "take all necessary actions" to prevent the Governor from
representing the State. Such arguments that are untethered to any "challenged action" are
not properly the subject of a quo warranto action. We therefore decline to exercise our
discretionary jurisdiction over Governor Kelly's quo warranto petition with respect to the
SNAP Data Dispute.
The Funding Dispute
The Funding Dispute is significantly more developed than the SNAP Data
Dispute, and the arguments of the parties about this dispute have traveled a twisting and
bumpy path over the course of this case. As such, we explain exactly where things stand
and how we got here.
Also in June 2025, Governor Kelly asked the Attorney General to join Kansas in a
lawsuit that was filed by many sister states against the federal government—New Jersey
v. U.S. Office of Management and Budget, No. 1:25-cv-11816-IT (D. Mass.) (the
Massachusetts Grants Action). The Attorney General declined, asserted the sole authority
to control the legal position of the State, and told the Governor that she lacked the
authority to direct the Attorney General to join ongoing multi-state litigation in federal
court or to initiate any litigation in federal court on behalf of the State. Governor Kelly
consequently filed suit in her official capacity, joining the plaintiff states, as the Governor
of the State of Kansas. In her filing in Massachusetts, she alleged harm to several
executive agencies she oversees.
As an aside, we note here that from the beginning of this case—through Governor
Kelly's Petition in Quo Warranto, along with her briefing—she identified the
Massachusetts Grants Action. On February 27, 2026, however, her office filed a status
report with this court alerting us to the existence of a second action in the United States
District Court for the District of Massachusetts—Massachusetts v. U.S. Department of
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Agriculture, No. 1:25-cv-13165-IT (D. Mass.)—in which she is a named party plaintiff
and in which the Attorney General has sought, via amicus brief, to have her dismissed.
Any dispute involving this second action is not properly a part of this quo warranto
petition as it was not raised in any filings or mentioned during oral argument. That said,
we note that the Attorney General's amicus brief in the second action is substantively
identical to the amicus brief he filed in the Massachusetts Grants Action.
In response to the Governor joining the Massachusetts Grants Action, the Attorney
General did take official action—he filed an amicus brief arguing that Governor Kelly
should be dismissed for lack of standing. The brief contains two arguments and they are
clearly stated in the conclusion:
"Governor Kelly cannot have her cake and eat it too. Either (1) she is suing only
in her role as a constitutional officer, in which case she has not pled sufficient injuries to
her constitutional authority, or (2) she is attempting to sue on behalf of the State, in which
case any alleged injuries are neither to her nor hers to pursue. Both roads lead to the same
conclusion: she lacks the ability to bring the State of Kansas into this litigation."
The Governor filed an original Petition in Quo Warranto in this court to challenge
the Attorney General's opposition to her pursuit of litigation. She explicitly requested a
declaration from this court that she had the authority to litigate on behalf of Kansas and
the interests of Kansas. And she asserted that the Attorney General had interfered with
her authority to "engage in legal actions or participate in legal proceedings to protect the
interests of Kansans."
The dispute over which state official in Kansas controls any specific litigated
matter, while implicating questions of constitutional or statutory authority, can also be
characterized as a disagreement about the legal doctrine of standing. Black's Law
Dictionary 1700 (12th ed. 2024) (Standing is a "party's right to make a legal claim or seek
judicial enforcement of a duty or right based on the party's having a sufficient interest in a
9
justiciable controversy."). In other words, where the constitutional authority to bring or
defend any specific litigation exists, that party will have standing grounded firmly in the
Constitution. At the most basic level, litigation is what happens when two or more parties
take a dispute before a neutral arbiter—almost always a court. The parties involved
possess legal interests they hope to vindicate through litigation. When a party has no
legal interest at stake in a case, that party is said to be without standing. See State v. Stoll,
312 Kan. 726, 734, 480 P.3d 158 (2021) (defendant lacked standing because she failed to
demonstrate injury to a personal interest).
Often, a party without standing is described as not being the "real party in
interest." "An action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest." K.S.A.
60-217(a)(1). "The real party in interest is '"the party who, by the substantive law, has the
right sought to be enforced."' . . . . [O]nly the 'real party in interest,' and not merely any
party who will benefit from an adjudication, has standing . . . ."). Bank of Kansas v.
Davison, 253 Kan. 780, 783, 861 P.2d 806 (1993); see also Torkelson v. Bank of Horton,
208 Kan. 267, 270, 491 P.2d 954 (1971) ("the real party in interest is the one entitled to
the fruits of the action"); 67A C.J.S. Parties § 20 ("A real party in interest . . . ordinarily is
one who has a real, actual, material, or substantial interest in the subject matter of the
action as distinguished from one who has only a nominal, formal, or technical interest in,
or connection with, the action.").
Governor Kelly's petition, along with her memorandum in support, various
attachments and exhibits, and all her briefing—made it clear that she believed and sought
to vindicate the idea that she had ultimate control over litigation on behalf of the State,
and that, should the Attorney General decline or refuse her directive to do so, she was
authorized to obtain counsel and engage in litigation herself. At oral argument, however,
she changed course. She conceded, for the purposes of this case, that she was not in fact
the constitutional officer with standing to speak for the State in court. She admitted that
role belongs to the Attorney General of Kansas.
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She now claims that she is only seeking to protect her right to speak on behalf of
the discrete legal interests of her constitutional office as a subdivision of the state. And
she continues to insist that Attorney General Kobach's Amicus Brief has unlawfully
interfered with that right. As her lawyer put it succinctly before us, "What the Governor
seeks is a ruling from this court that her supreme executive authority includes the power
to litigate to protect her executive interests. She's not seeking to represent the State of
Kansas. That is the Attorney General's job." She then asked this court for two things: a
declaration that she has the constitutional authority to litigate in her official capacity on
behalf of the legal interests of her office and her agencies; and a ruling that Attorney
General Kobach has stepped outside of his constitutional authority and interfered with
hers by filing an amicus brief in the federal court for the District of Massachusetts that
makes "legal arguments that the Governor has no authority or standing to participate in
[those] proceeding[s]."
For his part, the Attorney General also made crucial concessions at oral
argument that make clear he does not contest the Governor's constitutional
authority to represent the legal interests of her office or of the executive agencies
she oversees:
"[The Court]: The question is, who is the client? And if the client is only the Governor in
her own name, her own official capacity, and the executive agencies . . . which she has
authority over by law, if those are the clients that she is seeking to represent, you wouldn't
have a problem with that would you? Or maybe you would?
"[Attorney General Kobach]: Actually, no I wouldn't, your honor. . . . If they're retreating
to the position she still can sue on behalf of her office, then we are in 100% agreement.
And that's what she's doing today. She's suing on behalf of her office."
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The Attorney General followed this up by explaining that what he does
object to is a characterization of the legal interests of the Office of Governor that is
so broad it swallows the interests of Kansas as a whole—interests he believes only
he, as the Attorney General, is authorized to represent in court.
These concessions and developments prove immensely consequential to the
outcome of this case. In fact—at least for purposes of this case—they eliminate from our
consideration the most important question this case initially presented: who speaks for
the State? The Governor expressly disclaimed any effort to represent the interests of the
sovereign State of Kansas in litigation and conceded that this responsibility lies with the
Attorney General as the State's chief legal officer. While the constitutional underpinnings
of that conclusion remain cloudy at best—they are no longer part of this case and we
need not delve into them here. Likewise, Attorney General Kobach's concessions make
clear what he more obliquely admitted in his amicus brief—that he agrees with the basic
principle we outlined above that the Governor is empowered to litigate on behalf of the
legal interests of her office and those of the executive agencies she oversees—however
broad or narrow those legal interests may be.
We take pains to emphasize that today's decision neither attempts to resolve nor
draws any conclusion about which official or officials in Kansas have the constitutional
authority to speak for the State of Kansas in court. Similarly, we offer no opinion on how
broad or narrow the legal interests of the State of Kansas or of the Office of Governor
actually are. We need only accept for the limited purposes of this case the parties'
concessions and draw three conclusions about their actual disagreement:
First, the parties agree that, in Kansas, the Attorney General controls litigation
when the State of Kansas is the real party in interest. Second, the parties agree that, in
Kansas, the Governor controls litigation when the Office of Governor or the executive
agencies under the Governor's authority are the real party in interest. And finally, the
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parties disagree over how broadly or narrowly to legally define these interests—that is,
where to draw the line between the legal interests of the State of Kansas and the legal
interests of the Office of the Governor.
We Decline to Exercise Discretionary Jurisdiction over the Quo Warranto Claims Related
to the Funding Dispute
Having done the necessary work to get to the bottom of the parties' actual dispute,
we are now in a position to reevaluate our earlier provisional decision to exercise our
discretionary jurisdiction over this quo warranto petition. As we explained, one of the
factors we consider when deciding if we will exercise jurisdiction over the petition is
"whether the case presents issues of significant public concern or matters of statewide
importance." Schwab, 315 Kan. 150, Syl. ¶ 1.
In today's case, we initially determined the dispute between Governor Kelly and
Attorney General Kobach did in fact present issues of significant concern and statewide
importance. But the initial claim for quo warranto relief has been abandoned. As the
parties clarified their legal positions at oral argument, we now discern that there does not
exist a true legal dispute in this case that presents a pure question of law rising to the
level of significant importance or public concern. That is, Governor Kelly agrees that if
the real party in interest in any litigation is the State of Kansas, the Attorney General is
the constitutional officer charged with the authority and responsibility to represent the
State. And on the flip side, Attorney General Kobach agrees that if the real party in
interest in any litigation is the Office of the Governor—including all the executive branch
agencies under the authority of the Governor—then the Governor possesses the authority
and responsibility to represent those parties in court. We point out again that whether the
parties' agreement on these two points correctly reflects the actual state of constitutional
law in Kansas is not before us and we need not decide those questions.
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The point is, in the arguments made before this court, the parties do not disagree
about these two propositions. Where the parties do continue to disagree is over which of
the two—the Office of the Governor or the State of Kansas—is actually the real party in
interest in the currently pending litigation in the federal district court for Massachusetts.
Having abandoned her claim to possess constitutional standing to litigate on behalf of the
State of Kansas, the Governor is left to object only to the Attorney General's assertion
that the interests at stake in the Massachusetts Grants Action belong to the State of
Kansas rather than to the Office of the Governor. In our judgment, this portion of the
Attorney General's amicus brief is a run-of-the-mill standing or real party in interest
argument—the kind that gets made every day in hundreds of courts across the country.
But more importantly, that question is not before us—and could not be, given that it is
being litigated in another court—and almost certainly requires factual findings. As a basic
matter of comity between courts, we could not purport to issue a ruling here that would
bind another court of significantly different jurisdiction considering a matter that we
simply have not heard and are not in a position to decide.
Given all of this, there is nothing left for us to decide, and—apart from political
posturing by both parties—the issues presented no longer implicate a matter of significant
public importance and instead consist of a political, legal, or semantic dispute we will not
referee. For this reason, we decline to continue to exercise our discretionary jurisdiction
over the Funding Dispute portion of this case.
Conclusion
Today's decision is a narrow one and plows no new legal ground. In sum,
Governor Kelly's quo warranto action began by asserting a vitally important claim that
could not be easily ignored. She claimed that she—as the Governor of Kansas—had the
legal authority to speak for the State in court. But she abandoned that claim. As reframed
at argument, this court has not been asked to declare anything more than Governor
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Kelly's constitutional authority to litigate on behalf of the interests of her office and those
of the executive agencies she oversees. Likewise, the Attorney General does not object to
the Governor representing her office and agencies in court when they are the real party in
interest. We issue no holdings about the propriety of these legal positions—it is enough
for us to recognize that, given the parties' apparent agreement on the positions at issue
under the Governor's reframing, the parties do not present to us any disagreement we are
equipped to resolve through the extraordinary mechanism of a quo warranto action.
We decline to exercise our discretionary jurisdiction and dismiss this petition.
Petition dismissed.
LUCKERT, J., not participating.
WALSH, J., concurring: I join the majority opinion in full, and emphasize that we
take no position on the underlying merits of the parties' disagreement over whether the
Governor has adequately pled injury to the interests of her office in the District of
Massachusetts Grants Action. I write separately to offer an explanation—from my
perspective—for the divergent conclusions we reach and the cautionary import of that
disconnect.
Unfortunately, the disparity between the course taken by the majority and dissent
boils down to a disagreement over what the parties' arguments are. Based on my
observation of the material concessions made at oral argument, the parties appear to agree
the Governor's constitutional authority includes the authority to litigate to protect the
interests of her office and the interests of the state agencies she oversees. The dissent,
however, does not view the record as evidencing any such agreement, and would exercise
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quo warranto jurisdiction to answer questions about the scope of authority bestowed by
the Kansas Constitution on these two respective officers. Specifically, the dissent would
address the question whether the Governor possesses authority to litigate on behalf of
executive agencies and confirm that she does. And it would conclude that the Attorney
General intruded upon the Governor's constitutional authority by taking official action
asserting this power exclusively for himself in a legal proceeding.
Which view is more accurate will be evidenced by the Attorney General's conduct
in the pending federal action—as well as his conduct in other matters, some of which the
parties have previewed for us. As the dissent accurately points out, the parties vehemently
disagree on how broad the scope of the Governor's interests are, both conceptually and in
the instant Massachusetts Grants Action. But it is important to acknowledge that our role
as the final arbiter of the Kansas Constitution, while gravely important, does not on its
own bestow upon us the authority to decide either a theoretical question or one that is
before another court. And, where the parties appear to agree—rightly or wrongly—on
the constitutional authority bestowed on their respective offices, we will not use our
interpretive role as authority for deciding issues that are not properly before us.
Our decision today passes no judgment on the substantive issues but is instead an
exercise in discretion and judicial restraint based on what we believe to be the good-faith
arguments—and concessions—of both parties in the matter before us.
Should the dissent's view prove to be correct, that the Attorney General's
"concessions" at oral argument are nothing but doublespeak, then I believe it is important
we clarify the obvious: that our approach to the underlying substantive issues, if
presented in an actual dispute and through a proper procedural vehicle, may be quite
different from our approach to the reframed petition we decline to consider today.
ROSEN, C.J., joins the foregoing concurring opinion.
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STANDRIDGE, J., dissenting: Today a court majority declines to exercise original
jurisdiction in quo warranto and dismisses the Governor's petition without resolving the
constitutional dispute presented. In doing so, the majority avoids definitively answering a
pressing question of significant public importance and ignores the Attorney General's
repeated assertions that he possesses sole authority over all litigation involving state
executive agencies. The majority's rationale for this is its determination that "the Attorney
General . . . made crucial concessions at oral argument that make clear he does not
contest the Governor's constitutional authority to represent the legal interests of her
office or of the executive agencies she oversees." (Emphasis added.) Kelly v. Kobach, 322
Kan. __, __, slip op. at 11. I respectfully dissent from the majority's decision.
A more fair and complete review of the record does not support the majority's
selective parsing of the transcript and legal filings. This case presents a controversy
between two statewide elected officers in which one asserts exclusive control over a
government function that would bar the other from exercising similar authority. Although
the question before us has narrowed, the core constitutional dispute remains intact and is
just as pressing as when this case began: whether the Attorney General may claim
exclusive authority over litigation affecting executive agencies in a manner that prevents
the Governor from exercising the "supreme executive power" vested in her office under
article 1, section 3 ("The supreme executive power of this state shall be vested in a
governor, who shall be responsible for the enforcement of the laws of this state."). Our
court's precedent makes clear quo warranto is the proper mechanism for resolving such
disputes.
Underscoring this reality, the Attorney General continues to assert his theory of
exclusive authority over litigation by executive branch agencies controlled by the
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Governor in litigation pending in the United States District Court for the District of
Massachusetts. That court recently scheduled oral argument on the defendants' motion to
dismiss. Their motion specifically adopts Attorney General Kris Kobach's arguments
from the amicus curiae brief he filed in that litigation, advancing the same assertions he
makes here. Those claims should be decided in Kansas, not in Massachusetts.
The dispute between these two Kansas officials is neither abstract nor trivial. Our
court's duty is to resolve the matter by exercising our quo warranto jurisdiction and
granting Governor Kelly the relief she seeks.
RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Federal Funding Dispute
In the spring of 2025, the federal government terminated or threatened to
terminate funding under several federal grant programs administered by state executive
agencies across the country, including some within the Kansas executive branch. In
response, numerous states filed lawsuits challenging those actions as unlawful.
Against this backdrop, the Governor contacted the Attorney General in April 2025
to discuss whether Kansas should join a multistate lawsuit challenging the termination of
federal public-health funding affecting the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability
Services and the Kansas Department for Health and Environment (KDHE). According to
the Governor, the loss of this funding would eliminate approximately $20 million for
housing initiatives, social services, and public health programs administered by those
agencies.
The Attorney General declined to participate. In a written response, he asserted
that he "retain[s] sole authority to control the legal position of the State" and warned that
18
if the Governor attempted to join the litigation independently, his office would "take
whatever measures are necessary to ensure that the State's legal position and legal
interests are represented."
Two months later, in June 2025, the Governor again requested the Attorney
General join Kansas as a plaintiff in a separate multistate lawsuit filed in the United
States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, New Jersey v. U.S. Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), No. 125-cv-11816-IT (D. Mass.). That action
challenged the federal government's termination of various grant programs and sought to
enjoin additional cancellations without congressional authorization. In support of her
request, the Governor cited significant funding losses affecting several Kansas executive
agencies, including KDHE and the Kansas Department of Agriculture (KDA).
Alternatively, she directed the Attorney General to pursue comparable relief in the United
States District Court for the District of Kansas. The Attorney General again declined. He
asserted the Governor lacked authority to direct him to initiate or join federal litigation
and added that ethical obligations prevented him from doing so. He later told the
Legislative Coordinating Council he believed the proposed litigation lacked merit.
Governor's participation in federal litigation
On July 31, 2025, an amended complaint was filed in the New Jersey v. OMB
litigation identifying the Governor of Kansas, in her official capacity, as a plaintiff. In
relevant part, the complaint asserted that "[t]he Kansas Constitution vests '[t]he supreme
executive power' in the Governor" and that "[t]he Governor oversees all executive
agencies in Kansas" and may bring suit in her official capacity to fulfill her constitutional
responsibilities. The complaint further alleged the termination of federal grants would
cause substantial harm to programs administered by Kansas executive agencies, including
KDHE and KDA. Specifically, the complaint listed affected state programs involving
19
agricultural supply chains for food banks, at-risk children, public health initiatives,
military base projects, dam safety and flood prevention, abandoned mine reclamation,
safe drinking water infrastructure, and others.
Attorney General's amicus brief
On August 14, 2025, the Attorney General filed an amicus brief in the District of
Massachusetts in the New Jersey v. OMB litigation in his official capacity. In his brief, the
Attorney General asserted inter alia that the Governor's involvement in the lawsuit
violates Kansas law, that she has no authority to pursue claims on behalf of state
agencies, and that she lacks standing to sue in her official capacity as Governor. He
further claimed Kansas law "vest[s] the Attorney General with exclusive 'authority to
manage all legal affairs of the State of Kansas'" in federal court, including authority to
control litigation involving state agencies. On that basis, the Attorney General urged the
federal court to dismiss the Governor's claims.
Governor's quo warranto action
On October 31, 2025, the Governor filed a petition in quo warranto with this court
under K.S.A. 60-1201 et seq., seeking a declaration that, as the State's "supreme
executive," she possesses constitutional authority relating to litigation involving Kansas
and that the Attorney General lacks authority to prevent her from initiating or joining
litigation she determines is necessary to protect the interests of Kansas and Kansans. The
Attorney General filed a response also seeking resolution of the parties' dispute regarding
executive litigation authority. This court ordered briefing and oral argument. Notably, the
court's order said nothing about "provisionally" accepting jurisdiction as the majority
claims. 322 Kan. at ___, slip op. at 5. It simply stated: "After considering the Petition in
Quo Warranto and Response to Petition in Quo Warranto, the court schedules this case
for oral argument at 9 a.m. on January 16, 2026."
20
At oral argument, the Governor clarified the scope of her requested relief in quo
warranto, explaining that she seeks only recognition of her authority to litigate in state
and federal courts in her official capacity to protect the interests of her office and the
executive agencies she supervises. This narrowed the question presented but did not alter
its constitutional character.
Responding directly to the Governor's modified claim for relief, the Attorney
General repeatedly maintained the Governor has no authority to engage in litigation to
protect the interests of state agencies, which he argues are indistinguishable from the
interests of the State and so fall exclusively within his purview. In fact, the Attorney
General explicitly disagreed with the characterization of his argument as adopted by
today's majority.
The Attorney General asserted the Governor can only join a lawsuit in her official
capacity to protect a very narrow interest in her own claim to that office; otherwise, he
maintains the Governor is purporting to represent the State of Kansas and has no
authority to engage in said litigation. He went as far as to suggest the Governor's avenue
for seeking a broader outcome in litigation that applies to "executive interests" would be
by filing an amicus brief.
"[Attorney General]: The Governor can be certainly a party, she can be a defendant all
day long and she is a defendant quite often and usually the Attorney General steps in
because it's a collection of defendants and the Attorney General leads the defense.
"[But] [a]s a plaintiff, she has to step forward only representing her office and not the
interests that she has as the chief executive of the state but her office and we would
heartily agree.
21
"And she of course, in any case, she can, as an individual, file an amicus brief.
All of us can file amicus briefs.
"So she can do that as long as she made clear it was not on behalf of Kansas or the
interests of Kansas.
"[Court]: Why can't she file a lawsuit in her official capacity as Governor over legal
matters that are affecting programs that are statutorily set up to be operated by the
executive branch by the Governor, by the secretaries?
....
"As opposed to giving the Attorney General the ability to just decide whether that affects
the legal interests of Kansans and you alone control that.
"[Attorney General]: Well, that's why I say she could certainly file an amicus brief
saying as Governor, my office—
....
"Once she is representing, she steps in as a party or attempts to step in as a party, she is
representing Kansas.
"She's litigating on behalf of Kansas.
"She can say 'No, no, no it's not Kansas.'
"It's the interests of the executive branch of Kansas but that's a distinction without a
difference, your Honor.
....
22
"[Court]: Do you think that when a Governor represents that they are attempting to
appear in their official capacity, that that's no different than a Governor attempting to
represent the state over which they're Governor?
"[Attorney General]: I agree with that.
"When the Governor says I'm here in my official capacity as Governor, she is
representing the state. And that's exactly what she's doing.
"[Court]: And you would—would you take the same logic to a secretary, a cabinet level
secretary so when a cabinet level secretary says I'm here in court in my official capacity
as the secretary of KDHE, is that person also representing the state?
"[Attorney General]: Almost certainly.
....
"That person is also attempting to represent the state.
"[Court]: So your argument, if I'm following correctly, is that the Attorney General has
the constitutional and statutory authority to override or to take over that litigation.
"[Attorney General]: Yes." (Emphases added.)
The Attorney General's position at oral argument was therefore consistent with
his filings before this court and his amicus curiae brief submitted in the District of
Massachusetts in New Jersey v. OMB—that he has exclusive authority to represent the
interests of state executive agencies in any litigation in federal court.
Thus, despite the majority's assertions otherwise, the record shows the parties do
not agree on the scope of their respective litigation authority. Though narrowed, the core
constitutional dispute before this court—whether the Attorney General may assert
23
exclusive authority over litigation in a manner that prevents the Governor from exercising
the executive power vested in her office—remains intact.
Federal defendants' motion to dismiss
After the filing of the amended complaint and the Attorney General's amicus brief,
the federal defendants moved to dismiss the claims asserted by the plaintiffs in that
litigation. In their supporting memorandum, the defendants noted certain plaintiffs—
including the Governor of Kansas—are state officials rather than states themselves and
argued those officials may pursue the litigation only if they possess authority under their
respective state laws. Citing to the Attorney General's amicus brief as support, the
defendant's memorandum identifies the Governor as one of three state officials whose
authority to litigate on behalf of their states is disputed and argues those plaintiffs should
be dismissed if they lack authority under state law to bring the claims asserted. See
Defendants' Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion to Dismiss at 10 n.2, New Jersey
v. U.S. Office of Management and Budget, No. 25-cv-11816 (D. Mass. Sept. 11, 2025).
On March 12, 2026, the Governor filed a Notice of Update in this case informing
us that the federal court in Massachusetts has scheduled oral argument on that motion to
dismiss. The arguments supporting that motion squarely present the question whether the
Governor possesses authority under Kansas law to pursue the claims she asserts in the
federal litigation—an issue closely akin to the dispute presented here.
ANALYSIS
I. Prerequisites for quo warranto review are satisfied
Article 3, section 3 of the Kansas Constitution confers original jurisdiction on this
court over quo warranto actions, which are also grounded in common law and statute.
24
This court's quo warranto jurisdiction is discretionary and concurrent with that of the
lower courts. Schwab v. Klapper, 315 Kan. 150, 151-52, 505 P.3d 345 (2022). A common
law action in quo warranto requires the respondent to show "by what authority" it has
engaged in a challenged action. State ex rel. Schmidt v. City of Wichita, 303 Kan. 650,
656, 367 P.3d 282 (2016). K.S.A. 60-1202(1) further authorizes an action in quo
warranto "[w]hen any person shall usurp, intrude into or unlawfully hold or exercise any
public office, or shall claim any franchise within this state, or any office in any
corporation created by authority of this state."
Recently, in Schwab, this court explained quo warranto actions follow a two-step
framework requiring the court to determine (1) whether to exercise discretionary original
jurisdiction in quo warranto, and (2) whether an action "lies" in quo warranto such that
proper relief can be granted through this remedy. 315 Kan. at 152-54. Only if both
questions are answered in the affirmative should the court proceed to the merits.
A. Discretionary original jurisdiction
In deciding whether to exercise discretionary jurisdiction over a quo warranto
petition, this court considers "whether the case presents issues of significant public
concern or matters of statewide importance; whether the petition presents purely legal
questions or requires extensive fact-finding; or whether there is a need for an expeditious
ruling." Schwab, 315 Kan. at 152. For the reasons stated below, I would find each of
these factors warrants exercising discretionary jurisdiction over the Governor's petition
and her narrowed claim for relief.
Disputes involving governmental authority implicating the State's legal interests
or rights of its citizens generally qualify as matters of significant public concern and
statewide importance. See, e.g., Kelly v. Legislative Coordinating Council, 311 Kan. 339,
344-45, 460 P.3d 832 (2020) (accepting jurisdiction in quo warranto proceeding to
25
consider council's alleged intrusion into legislative scheme overseeing Governor's
emergency authority during COVID-19 pandemic); State ex rel. Stephan v. Finney, 251
Kan. 559, 568-69, 836 P.2d 1169 (1992) (exercising jurisdiction over Attorney General's
quo warranto action challenging Governor's authority to bind state in compact with native
tribe). Here, the issue of executive authority to litigate on behalf of state agencies has
implications for millions of dollars to public programs and services across Kansas. Given
the interests at stake, I would find the issue of executive authority to represent those
agencies in litigation against the federal government is a matter of significant public
concern and statewide importance.
Further, the parties agree the material facts are not in dispute and supplied this
court with supporting documents attached as exhibits, which together make up the record
here. See Kansas Supreme Court Rule 9.01(d) (2026 Kan. S. Ct. R. at 65) ("[T]he
petition, response to an order to show cause or to a petition, and accompanying
documents constitute the record" in an original action.). The issue of executive authority
to represent state agencies in litigation is primarily a legal question that does not require
this court to stray beyond the parties' filings and oral argument record to resolve this
question.
Finally, prompt resolution would provide much-needed clarity to public officials
and agencies currently engaged in disputes with the federal government that have legal
consequences for the State of Kansas and its residents, as in the New Jersey v. OMB
litigation. The immediacy and consequences of matters implicated by the merits question
here fit within this court's precedent justifying an expeditious ruling. See, e.g., Schwab,
315 Kan. at 152-53 (finding need for speedy resolution within a three-month period
before the upcoming election cycle); Stephens v. Van Arsdale, 227 Kan. 676, 682-83, 608
P.2d 972 (1980) (speedy adjudication warranted in mandamus proceeding to resolve
questions of law for guidance of state officers); Mobil Oil Corp. v. McHenry, 200 Kan.
211, 239, 436 P.2d 982 (1968) (speedy adjudication warranted to expedite official
26
business). Moreover, this issue is unlikely to be resolved without an ultimate, definitive
ruling by this court. Thus, I am convinced there is sufficient need for an expeditious
ruling.
Although the above analysis demonstrates the traditional factors warrant this
court's discretionary jurisdiction over the Governor's petition, the majority concludes this
matter is no longer of "significant public importance" but rather a mere disagreement
about the legal doctrine of standing with "political, legal, or semantic" implications that is
not for this court to "referee." 322 Kan. at ___, slip op. at 14. Frankly, if the majority was
accurately representing the parties' arguments and positions as reflected in the record, I
might agree the dispute does not warrant the exercise of discretionary jurisdiction. But
that is not the case. And since the majority ignores the inconvenient parts of the record, I
will lay them out further.
When the court proposed an alternative theory of state government in which the
subdivisions of the state can identify their own legal interests—instead of the Attorney
General possessing sole authority to determine their interests—he expressly rejected this
theory.
"[Court]: A different way to resolve that conundrum might be that the legislature
understood that the state is not the same thing as a subdivision of the state.
"Strikes me that your argument sort of views the subdivisions like a nesting doll and the
state as an entity subsumes all its subdivisions but there's a different theory of
government which is, subdivisions have their own legal standing independent of the legal
standing of the sovereign state.
"[Attorney General]: I would say, Your Honor, typically most litigation is not constructed
that way, though.
....
27
"It is like a nesting doll."
And when asked directly whether he agreed the Governor can represent the
executive agencies she has authority over, the Attorney General did not assent to that
view.
"[Court]: I thought I understood where you were and now I'm a little less certain.
"I thought at the outset you said you're fine with the Governor representing herself in her
official capacity.
"You're fine with the Governor representing the executive agencies she has authority of
but now it sounds like you're not.
"[Attorney General]: No, no—I don't think I said exactly that.
"I said I'm fine with her representing her office and the powers of her office."
Considering the entirety of the Attorney General's statements in their proper
context, it is perplexing how the majority finds a material concession that dissolves the
entire constitutional dispute before us. The most cautious reading of the record after oral
argument reveals some uncertainty remains about how the Attorney General understands
the scope of the Governor's litigation authority. But his statements reflect that, even if the
Governor may possess some theoretical authority to litigate, he believes litigation
involving state executive agencies remains under his control, leaving the Governor with
only a very limited role. Yet under this restrained interpretation, the Attorney General
most certainly does not agree the Governor may independently pursue litigation on behalf
of those agencies.
28
The Attorney General's stated position at oral argument is consistent with his
filings before this court and in federal court—that the Governor lacks authority to litigate
on behalf of state executive agencies because the interests of those agencies are
indistinguishable from the interests of the State itself and therefore fall exclusively within
his authority as the State's chief legal officer. Indeed, in his amicus brief filed in the
Massachusetts litigation, the Attorney General repeatedly asserts Kansas law vests him
with exclusive authority to control federal litigation involving state agencies and officers,
asserts that the Governor has no such authority, and urges the federal court to dismiss the
Governor's claims on that basis. The Attorney General did not disavow those assertions
during oral argument.
I predict it will come as quite a shock to both parties that a majority of this court
concludes the dispute over their respective litigation authority was resolved at oral
argument by concessions from the Attorney General. The Governor's rebuttal highlights
how far off that notion is.
"[Court]: It's your position from your briefs, anyway, is that the Attorney General is
interfering with her ability to represent the interests of her office.
"[Counsel]: Yes.
....
"[Counsel]: What kind of a remedy is it to say the Governor can file an amicus brief as a
private individual?
"That's ridiculous, frankly.
"Any of us, of course, can file an amicus brief as a private individual.
....
29
"And again, the notion that if KDHE sues or . . . the Department of Ag. sues that that is
automatically the quote State of Kansas, that makes no sense.
"It's not at all consistent with the statutes authorizing those entities to sue and be sued.
....
"[Counsel]: And our position is here state law authorizes the Governor to speak in
litigation.
"That's all she's ultimately really trying to do and I go back to Justice Biles, I think you're
right on when you characterize or at least asked is the Attorney General saying he alone
gets to decide, that's exactly the position he's ultimately taken because he's saying,
anything apparently is within the interest of Kansas.
"Therefore, it's the State of Kansas.
"Therefore, it's him.
"And him alone."
In sum, when the record is considered fairly, objectively, and in its entirety, the
core constitutional dispute between these officials remains and is just as pressing as when
the Governor filed this action. And since this constitutional dispute remains, the
majority's conclusion that the case no longer presents a matter of significant public
importance necessarily collapses.
Questions about the constitutional boundaries between two statewide elected
officials are, by their very nature, matters of significant public concern. But the majority
seeks to diminish this importance by casting it as a "run-of-the-mill standing or real party
30
in interest argument" better resolved in the federal litigation. 322 Kan. at ___, slip op. at
14. That mischaracterization distorts the nature of the issue.
The question before this court is not whether the Governor satisfies the
requirements of Article III standing in federal court or whether she is the "real party in
interest" under federal procedural rules. Rather, the question is one of Kansas
constitutional law: whether the Governor possesses authority under article 1, section 3 of
the Kansas Constitution to litigate in her official capacity to protect the interests of the
executive branch and the agencies she supervises, or whether the Attorney General may
assert exclusive control over such litigation. The answer to that question determines the
allocation of constitutional authority between two statewide elected officers under Kansas
law and is what both parties have asked this court to address. Federal courts routinely
decide standing and real-party-in-interest questions, yet they cannot definitively resolve
that question, because the meaning of the Kansas Constitution and the allocation of
authority among Kansas constitutional officers are matters of Kansas law entrusted to this
court. State ex rel. Stephan v. Finney, 254 Kan. 632, 633, 867 P.2d 1034 (1994) ("The
interpretation of the constitution of the State of Kansas and the laws of Kansas by the
Supreme Court of Kansas is controlling upon the federal and all Kansas courts.") (citing
Quality Oil Co. v. Du Pont & Co., 182 Kan. 488, 493, 322 P.2d 731 [1958]).
Nor does the existence of parallel federal litigation diminish the need for this court
to resolve the issue. To the contrary, the Attorney General's amicus filing in the federal
case expressly raises a question of Kansas law—whether the Governor possesses
authority to litigate on behalf of executive agencies—and urges the federal court to
dismiss the Governor's claims on that basis. And the federal defendants have now moved
to dismiss the Governor's claims relying directly on the Attorney General's amicus brief.
See Defendants' Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion to Dismiss at 10 n.2, New
Jersey v. U.S. Office of Management and Budget, No. 25-cv-11816 (D. Mass. Sept. 11,
31
2025) (citing Br. of the State of Kan. as Amicus Curiae, ECF No. 78). The authority of
the Governor under Kansas law to pursue the claims asserted in that litigation is therefore
presently being examined in the federal proceeding itself.
But federal courts do not possess the final authority to determine the meaning of
the Kansas Constitution or to definitively allocate powers among Kansas constitutional
officers. Those questions are matters of Kansas law entrusted to this court. Solomon v.
State, 303 Kan. 512, 525, 364 P.3d 536 (2015) ("The Kansas Supreme Court has the
authority and duty to preserve the constitutional division of powers against disruptive
intrusion by one branch of government into the sphere of a coordinate branch of
government."). When litigation pending in another forum turns on the meaning of state
constitutional or statutory authority, clarification from the state's highest court is not only
appropriate but essential. Indeed, resolving such questions is a central function of this
court. Although one way such an issue may reach this court is through a certified federal
question, when the dispute properly arrives instead by a quo warranto proceeding, we
may address it in that context. See Finney, 254 Kan. at 636 (quo warranto action
resolving dispute between statewide officers over allocation of authority under Kansas
law after federal court recognized interpretation of Kansas constitutional and statutory
authority rests with the Kansas Supreme Court). Treating the dispute as a routine
procedural matter to be resolved elsewhere ignores that the controversy arises from a
fundamental disagreement about the structure of Kansas executive power. The issue is
therefore not a subsidiary question of federal procedure but a threshold question of
Kansas constitutional authority—one that will continue to recur unless definitively
resolved by this court.
Thus, the underlying dispute here is neither hypothetical nor academic. It is
presently affecting the legal posture of multiple Kansas agencies engaged in federal
litigation. This court has repeatedly exercised its original jurisdiction in quo warranto to
resolve conflicts between branches of government or between constitutional officers
32
because such disputes implicate the structure of Kansas government itself. See, e.g.,
Legislative Coordinating Council, 311 Kan. at 344-45; State ex rel. Schmidt v. Kelly, 309
Kan. 887, 441 P.3d 67 (2019); State ex rel. Morrison v. Sebelius, 285 Kan. 875, 179 P.3d
366 (2008); Finney, 251 Kan. at 568-69; State ex rel. Stephan v. Kansas House of
Representatives, 236 Kan. 45, 687 P.2d 622 (1984).
As narrowed, this dispute presents the same type of institutional question.
Determining whether the Attorney General may prevent the Governor from litigating to
protect executive agencies under her supervision affects not only the two officials before
us, but the future operation of the executive branch. Declining to resolve that question on
the dubious basis that "the Attorney General . . . made crucial concessions at oral
argument that make clear he does not contest the Governor's constitutional authority to
represent the legal interests of her office or of the executive agencies she oversees" does
not reduce its importance; it simply leaves the constitutional boundary between these
offices unsettled. (Emphasis added.) 322 Kan. at ___, slip op. at 11.
B. Whether the action lies in quo warranto
Having concluded this court should exercise its discretionary jurisdiction, I next
consider whether the Governor's claim for relief properly "lies" in quo warranto. See
Schwab, 315 Kan. at 153-54 ("Where the relief sought is not of the kind available in an
action for quo warranto . . . , the action is said not to 'lie.'"). This is a legal question, not
subject to the court's discretion, and it turns on whether the petitioner challenges an
unlawful intrusion into or exercise of public office or authority. See K.S.A. 60-1202(1);
Schwab, 315 Kan. at 155 ("For quo warranto relief to lie, petitioners must allege that
[respondents] are exercising unlawfully asserted authority."); 65 Am. Jur. 2d Quo
Warranto §§ 14, 16 (quo warranto may be "used to determine whether a state officer or
agency has improperly exercised a power or right derived from the state, or to determine
33
whether a constitutional officer is attempting to usurp power not granted by the
constitution or laws" and to prevent "a continued exercise of authority unlawfully
asserted").
Applying that standard here, the Governor's petition presents precisely the type of
claim that lies in quo warranto. She asserts that the Attorney General is interfering with
her executive power to engage in litigation in her official capacity, on behalf of her office
and the executive agencies she supervises; and in doing so, he is exceeding his lawful
authority by claiming he exclusively can represent those state agencies in any litigation.
The Governor points to the Attorney General's amicus brief filed in the New Jersey v.
OMB litigation, which she contends is an exercise of public office capable of being tested
in quo warranto.
Because the majority takes the same myopic view of the Attorney General's
amicus brief as it does of his oral argument, I quote the relevant assertions below:
• "Governor Kelly's involvement in this suit is an unlawful end-run around the
Kansas Constitution, Kansas statutes, and Kansas Supreme Court precedent."
• "Rather than alleging any actual, particularized, and concrete injuries to her
constitutional authority, she has invoked only grievances related to certain state
agency activities."
• "Governor Kelly's executive functions do not create an implied authority to sue in
federal court. Indeed, litigation involving state officers and agencies in federal
court is expressly placed under the Attorney General's purview by Kansas law."
• "Because state agencies and officers who act in their official capacities are part of
the State, their federal litigation falls under the Attorney General's direction."
34
• "Kansas law and precedent vest the Attorney General with exclusive 'authority to
manage all legal affairs of the State of Kansas'—both in and out of federal court.
[Citation omitted.] And this includes the authority to direct the federal litigation of
state agencies and officers, like the Governor."
• "Even assuming that a constitutional injury to her office could entitle her to sue
in her official capacity as distinct from the State itself, Governor Kelly has not
alleged a sufficient injury in this suit. Rather, she has alleged general harms to
state agencies, effectively (and improperly) seeking to represent the State in this
Court."
• "Certainly, the Governor oversees state executive agencies such as the departments
of agriculture and health and environment, see Kan. Const. art. 1, § 6, and the
termination (like the expiration) of federal grants may disrupt or alter the work of
these agencies. But this disruption does not (and cannot) rise to the level of an
injury to the Governor's constitutional authority."
• "Governor Kelly's asserted injuries are really alleged harms to state agencies, not
direct, concrete, and particularized harms to her constitutional authority. She has
no constitutional or statutory power to pursue this suit on behalf of the State of
Kansas and its agencies. And the lack of any injury to her constitutional
authority—the only capacity in which she has sued and the only thing she might
possibly be able to vindicate—is fatal to her standing."
In considering these statements, it is important to clarify that quo warranto does
not police the correctness of a public official's legal arguments. Thus, the dispositive
question is not whether the Attorney General's standing analysis is colorable, but whether,
through an official act, he is interfering with the Governor's constitutional authority to
35
litigate in her official capacity to seek redress for alleged injuries to her state executive
agencies. In other words, the distinction is not between correct and incorrect legal
advocacy, but between permissible legal advocacy and asserted authority through an
official action. A public official does not exceed lawful authority merely by urging a court
to adopt a particular view, even when a favorable decision would result in the dismissal
of another official's claims. Rather, quo warranto relief is available when an official
claims exclusive authority over a government function that effectively would bar another
official from performance of that function. It is this assumption of power and exercise of
public office that places this controversy, in the context of the Federal Funding Dispute,
within the traditional scope of quo warranto.
The Attorney General's amicus brief was directed towards a concrete judicial
outcome—the Governor's wholesale exclusion from participation in federal litigation on
the ground she lacks any authority to participate. In that filing, he asserted that the
Governor's involvement violates Kansas law, she lacks authority to pursue litigation to
vindicate alleged injuries to state agencies, and he alone possesses authority to represent
the interests of state agencies in all federal litigation. By making these statements in
federal court, the Attorney General purports to exercise what he perceives as his authority
to supersede and completely foreclose the Governor's exercise of her executive functions
related to litigation on behalf of state agencies. Her claim presents the type of disputed
exercise of public authority that lies within the core purpose of quo warranto actions.
II. Merits: whether the Governor is entitled to quo warranto relief
Having determined the Governor's challenge is properly brought in quo warranto,
I turn to the merits: whether the Governor possesses executive litigation authority to
protect the agencies she supervises and, if so, whether the Attorney General exceeded his
36
lawful authority under the Kansas Constitution. I limit my analysis to the Federal
Funding Dispute. Thus, I do not consider other actions taken, which do not rise to this
level or are not documented in the record.
I begin with the constitutional framework governing the executive branch and the
respective roles of its independently elected officers. Within that framework, I examine
the scope of the Governor's constitutional authority, including her supervisory
relationship with executive agencies, as well as the constitutional limits on the Attorney
General's powers. Ultimately, I determine the Governor has inherent constitutional
authority to engage in litigation to protect the executive interests of her office and the
agencies she supervises. As such, I also conclude the Attorney General intrudes upon the
Governor's constitutional authority by an official act asserting this power exclusively for
himself in a legal proceeding.
A. Constitutional structure of the executive branch
The Governor and the Attorney General are independently elected constitutional
officers within the executive branch, each with designated powers and duties. See Kan.
Const. art. 1, § 1; Markham v. Cornell, 136 Kan. 884, 892-93, 18 P.2d 158 (1933) ("These
officers hold their offices by the will of the people. Each one has duties, responsibilities,
rights, and functions peculiar to his office. . . . Their responsibility is to the people.").
Within our government scheme, the Governor is the chief executive officer primarily
charged with execution of the law, and the Attorney General is considered the chief legal
officer. See State v. Finch, 128 Kan. 665, 667, 280 P. 910 (1929). While these two
executive officers share responsibility for the government's enforcement function, they
have varying levels and scope of authority within this scheme as determined by our
Constitution.
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1. Scope of Governor's constitutional authority
The Governor's constitutional power is notably broad. The Kansas Constitution
provides that "[t]he supreme executive power of this state shall be vested in a governor,
who shall be responsible for the enforcement of the laws of this state." Kan. Const. art. 1,
§ 3. This plain language creates a clear hierarchy within the executive branch, placing
the Governor atop the executive administrative structure created to carry out the
government's enforcement function. See State v. Dawson, 86 Kan. 180, Syl., 187, 119
P. 360 (1911) (observing Governor is the "highest in authority in the executive
department"). The term "supreme" denotes being "superior to all others" and "executive
power" encompasses the "enforcement" of law, defined as "[t]he act or process of
compelling compliance with a law." Black's Law Dictionary 1748, 713, 667 (12th ed.
2024).
The Governor's superior executive role is further demonstrated by constitutional
provisions requiring the other executive officers to report to the Governor on any subject
relating to their official duties, as required. Kan. Const. art. 1, § 4. Additionally, the
Constitution grants the Governor limited authority to appoint an acting Secretary of State
and Attorney General when those offices are vacant or in the event of temporary
disability. Kan. Const. art. 1, § 11.
As this court first held in Dawson, the phrase "supreme executive power" is "more
than a verbal adornment of the office, and implies such power as will secure an efficient
execution of the laws . . . in the manner and by the methods and within the limitations
prescribed by the Constitution and statutes, enacted in harmony with that instrument."
86 Kan. at 187-88. It is also well-established that "'[w]hen [the] Constitution gives a
general power, or enjoins a duty, it also gives, by implication, every particular power
necessary for the exercise of the one, or the performance of the other.'" 86 Kan. at 188
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(quoting Field v. The People, 3 Ill. [2 Scam.] 79, 83 [1839]). Thus, the Governor's
express constitutional powers and duties come with all the implied power necessary to
carry out the role and function of the office.
The Governor's express and implied powers are exercised primarily through the
administrative apparatus consisting of executive agencies. While the creation of a state
agency is considered a legislative function, the Constitution grants the Governor
significant authority to reorganize, modify, or eliminate executive agencies as necessary
for effective administration of the executive branch. See Kan. Const. art. 1, § 6
(excluding agencies and functions belonging to the legislative and judicial branches, as
well as constitutionally delegated functions of state officers and boards); Finney, 251
Kan. at 582 (identifying creation of state agency as legislative function). The Legislature
may override executive orders relating to reorganization of state agencies by majority
vote or legislation, but it cannot alter the basic structure of the executive branch which
places the Governor in the highest position to oversee those agencies. See Kan. Const.
art. 1, § 6 (allowing Legislature to disapprove executive reorganization orders and to later
amend or repeal by statute executive reorganization orders that take effect); Dawson, 86
Kan. at 187 ("An executive department is created, consisting of a governor and the other
officers named, and he is designated as the one having the supreme executive power; that
is, the highest in authority in that department.").
Relevant here, the affected agencies in the Federal Funding Dispute, KDA and
KDHE, are under the Governor's sole administrative authority by statute, which aligns
with the constitutional hierarchy described above. See K.S.A. 74-560(a)-(b) (establishing
the Department of Agriculture within the executive branch to be administered under
direction and supervision of a Secretary, who is appointed by and serves at the pleasure
of the Governor); K.S.A. 75-5601(a) (establishing the Department of Health and
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Environment within the executive branch to be administered under the direction and
supervision of a Secretary, who is appointed by and serves at the pleasure of the
Governor).
- Constitutional limits on Attorney General's authority
By contrast, the Kansas Constitution enumerates only two specific grants of
authority to the Attorney General: the power to seek removal of a county sheriff under
article 9, section 5, and the duty to initiate redistricting validity checks under article 10,
section 1. See also State ex rel. Stephan v. Reynolds, 234 Kan. 574, 576, 673 P.2d 1188
(1984) ("The constitution is silent as to the attorney general's powers and duties.").
Although the Kansas Constitution is largely silent on the Attorney General's
general litigation authority, the Legislature has supplied statutory dimension to the office.
See Reynolds, 234 Kan. at 576. Absent express constitutional language defining an
officer's powers and duties, the Legislature may give statutory dimension to the scope of
an office holder's authority, as it has done with the Attorney General. See Morrison, 285
Kan. at 884-85. Among other things, Kansas law directs the Attorney General to represent
the State in litigation as authorized by law—including when directed by the Governor.
See K.S.A. 75-108; K.S.A. 75-702. But these statutes do not empower the Attorney
General as the exclusive "voice of the sovereign" in all litigation or give him the power to
define the State's "interests" in all litigation, nor could they. Any statutory grant of
authority must abide by the executive-branch hierarchy established by article 1.
In addition to statutes, the Attorney General relies on common law to define the
scope of his authority. While this court has held the Attorney General may exercise broad
common law powers as the State's chief legal officer, that authority exists within the
executive structure established by the Constitution and thus remains subject to the
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direction of the Governor and the Legislature. See Finch, 128 Kan. 665, Syl. The
Attorney General is also bound by ethical obligations as an officer of the court and is
limited in his conduct before the court by those professional duties. Morrison, 285 Kan.
at 887-88.
Generally speaking, in litigation involving the State or one of its entities, the
Attorney General may be called upon to represent the interests of a government client in
litigation. Yet the client—including a government client—not the attorney, is ultimately
responsible for defining the client's legal interests. Kansas Rule of Professional Conduct
1.2(a) (2026 Kan. S. Ct. R. at 328) ("lawyer shall abide by a client's decisions concerning
the lawful objectives of representation").
B. Merits Inquiry
- Whether the Governor may litigate in her official capacity to protect executive branch interests, including those of supervised agencies
The Governor contends the power to litigate is inherent in her office's
constitutional powers and duties since "[a] fundamental and common way to command
compliance and respect for our laws is to litigate." The Governor acknowledges Kansas
law generally permits the Attorney General to represent the State's legal affairs but argues
this authority cannot infringe upon her express and implied constitutional powers—
especially in the context of executive agencies where she has a "special interest" by virtue
of her supervisory, constitutional role as head of the executive branch. At oral argument,
the Governor clarified her concern in this case, which she proposes includes the interests
of the executive agencies she supervises.
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Citing broad authority under common law and statutes, the Attorney General
claims he exclusively controls any litigation involving executive agencies because the
agencies' interests are indistinguishable from the State's interests, which he alone can
determine how, when, or even whether, to defend or vindicate.
This court's early Dawson decision provides the starting point for understanding
how executive-branch litigation authority must be analyzed under the Kansas
Constitution. In Dawson, this court emphasized the Constitution's vesting of "'supreme
executive power'" in the Governor is "more than a verbal adornment of the office" and
carries with it the authority necessary to ensure the faithful and effective execution of the
laws, exercised "within the limitations prescribed by the Constitution and statutes,
enacted in harmony with that instrument." 86 Kan. at 187-88.
The Attorney General argues Dawson has been effectively curtailed by later
precedent and does not support an implied gubernatorial litigation authority independent
of statutory authorization, particularly when the Attorney General has determined
litigation is unmeritorious or inconsistent with the public interest. He relies heavily on
Finch, which he contends establishes that the Attorney General possesses broad,
exclusive authority to determine Kansas' interests and to define those interests in any
litigation, including litigation involving executive agencies.
Properly understood, however, Finch is consistent with Dawson's constitutional
hierarchy and does not support the Attorney General's categorical theory that he may
unilaterally define the State's interests in all circumstances and thereby preclude the
Governor from participation in litigation undertaken to protect executive-branch interests.
Finch describes the Attorney General as "the chief law officer" in a controversy with a
county attorney, but simultaneously and explicitly qualifies that status as being "subject
only to direction of the Governor and the Legislature." 128 Kan. at 667. And Finch's
discussion of the Attorney General's broad common-law discretion to control the State's
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litigation is framed within that same structure, including its reliance on Dawson's
explanation that "supreme executive power" denotes the Governor is "'the highest in
authority in the executive department.'" See 128 Kan. at 667 (citing Dawson, 86 Kan.
180, Syl.).
Thus, while Finch confirms the Attorney General generally manages litigation
brought "as representative of the state," it does not resolve—much less compel—a rule
that the Attorney General may use that role to foreclose another independently elected
constitutional executive officer from litigating in his or her official capacity to vindicate
the powers and duties of his or her own office. See 128 Kan. at 668 (citing 2 Thornton on
Attorneys at Law, 1131). Finch must be read in context as resolving a dispute about the
power of the Attorney General in a disagreement with a county attorney, not with a
Governor.
The Kansas Constitution vests the Governor with the "supreme executive power"
and makes her responsible for the enforcement of the laws of this state. Kan. Const.
art. 1, § 3. This court has recognized this provision establishes the Governor as the
constitutional head of the executive branch. See Morrison, 285 Kan. at 907. The ability to
invoke the courts to protect the lawful operation of the executive branch follows naturally
from that constitutional responsibility. Litigation is a conventional means by which
executive officials ensure enforcement of the law. Thus, when litigation threatens the
functioning of executive agencies—and the Attorney General declines representation or
advances a contrary position—the Governor must be able to pursue litigation in her
official capacity to protect the interests of the executive branch she is constitutionally
charged to oversee. Without that ability, the Governor could not fully discharge her
constitutional duty to ensure the laws of this state are faithfully enforced.
Accordingly, consistent with the structure of the executive branch established by
article 1 of the Kansas Constitution and the Governor's role as the supreme executive, I
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would hold that the Governor possesses constitutional authority to engage in litigation to
protect the interests of her office and the executive agencies under her administrative
control.
As applied to the Federal Funding Dispute, the Governor exercised this
constitutional authority by filing a complaint in federal court defending the interests of
her office and executive agencies she supervises, KDHE and KDA.
- Whether the Attorney General exceeded his lawful authority
The Attorney General, acting in his official capacity, claims he possesses exclusive
authority to control all litigation involving state executive agencies and the Governor
lacks authority to participate in federal litigation to vindicate alleged injuries to those
agencies. He advanced this position in his amicus brief, which is now embraced by the
defendants in a motion to dismiss the Governor's challenge.
A careful review of the Attorney General's amicus brief confirms his assertions
cannot fairly be characterized as a routine standing argument. Although the brief invokes
Article III standing doctrine as the procedural mechanism for dismissal, its reasoning
rests on—and repeatedly returns to—a categorical theory of executive authority under
Kansas law. The brief opens by asserting that "[o]nly the Attorney General can sue on
behalf of Kansas," and proceeds to argue Kansas law vests the Attorney General with
"absolute" and "exclusive" authority to direct all federal litigation involving the State, its
agencies, and its officers acting in their official capacities. From that premise, the brief
denies the existence of any gubernatorial authority to litigate in federal court on behalf of
executive agencies, rejects the notion that the Governor may sue when the Attorney
General declines to do so, and expressly disavows any "exhaustion of remedies" or
fallback litigation power in the Governor.
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The Attorney General's standing analysis is inseparable from his asserted
allocation of power. The brief does not simply contend that the Governor failed to plead a
sufficient injury in this particular case as a matter of fact; it asserts that because state
agencies and officers acting officially are "part of the State," all federal litigation
concerning their interests necessarily falls under the Attorney General's exclusive control.
On that view, the Attorney General asserts the Governor's participation is not merely
unsupported by the pleadings but is an "unlawful end-run around the Kansas
Constitution" requiring dismissal. These arguments made in an official filing reflect an
asserted institutional prerogative to define, in the first instance, the outer limits of the
Governor's authority to litigate.
To be sure, the Attorney General occasionally acknowledges in the brief—largely
in the abstract—the possibility that the Governor might possess some narrow authority to
sue to vindicate a direct injury to her constitutional office. But he simultaneously insists
such authority is unavailable here, "[n]or could she" invoke it, because any litigation
implicating harm to executive agencies necessarily constitutes litigation on behalf of the
State, which only the Attorney General may control. The brief's culminating formulation
underscores the breadth of his position: whether the Governor is viewed as suing solely
in her official capacity or as attempting to vindicate state interests, "[b]oth roads lead to
the same conclusion: she lacks the ability to bring the State of Kansas into this litigation."
In substance and effect then, the Attorney General's amicus brief asserts more than
a debatable view of standing. It advances a theory of exclusive executive litigation
authority that categorically precludes the Governor from participating in federal litigation
whenever the claims concern the operation, funding, or legal interests of the executive
agencies she supervises. By collapsing all such interests into those he deems "the
sovereign State of Kansas" and claiming sole authority to litigate them, the Attorney
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General would supersede and foreclose the Governor's ability to employ litigation as a
tool to carry out her constitutional responsibilities to oversee and protect the functioning
of the executive branch.
I would hold this assertion of exclusive executive authority purporting to exclude
the Governor from litigating to protect executive-branch interests—rather than the mere
advocacy of a colorable standing argument—places the Attorney General's conduct
beyond the scope of his lawful authority under the Kansas Constitution.
My conclusion would not disturb this court's prior precedent on executive
litigation authority. Those cases primarily addressed statutory allocations of authority
between the Governor and the Attorney General, questions I do not resolve here because
this case turns on constitutional limits alone. See, e.g., State ex rel. Foster v. City of
Kansas City, Kansas, 186 Kan. 190, 194, 350 P.2d 37 (1980) (concluding Attorney
General was statutorily required to appear on behalf of the State in proceedings before the
Supreme Court and "the governor could have no more effect than the legislative
mandate"); Dawson, 86 Kan. at 189-91 (concluding Governor's constitutional role and
broad statutory authority to require Attorney General to assist with enforcement function
and Attorney General's specific statutory duties in the prohibition enforcement context,
allowed Governor to direct Attorney General to take legal action consistent with statutory
duty).
Nor does my approach alter the independent constitutional status of the Attorney
General. It recognizes only that the Governor may litigate to protect executive branch
interests within her constitutional sphere, and that the Attorney General may not enlarge
the scope of his authority to bar that exercise.
Finally, my position is consistent with United States Supreme Court precedent
holding the State need not speak with a single voice in federal litigation. Federal courts
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must defer to a state's internal allocation of litigation authority, even when multiple state
officials advance different legal positions. Berger v. North Carolina State Conference of
the NAACP, 597 U.S. 179, 182, 185, 192, 142 S. Ct. 2191, 213 L. Ed. 2d 517 (2022)
(recognizing "divided state governments sometimes warrant participation by multiple
state officials in federal court"; noting "[s]ometimes leaders in different branches of
government may see the State's interests at stake in litigation differently"; and surmising
it is better to "risk a hobbled litigation rather than a full and fair adversarial testing of the
State's interests and arguments"). I believe Kansas' constitutional structure permits more
than one state officer to participate in litigation affecting the State's governance,
depending on the nature of the interests at stake and the authority asserted. Yet I express
no view on the full range of circumstances in which any particular officer may litigate in
the name of the State, because that question is unnecessary to resolve the dispute
presented here.
CONCLUSION
I would exercise discretionary original jurisdiction in quo warranto, find the
original action in quo warranto properly lies, and grant the requested relief by declaring
the Governor of Kansas may, in her official capacity, litigate to protect the interests of her
office and the executive agencies she supervises.
BILES, J., joins the foregoing dissenting opinion.
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