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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Jeffrey Hout v. State of Alaska, Office of the Governor, and Governor Mike Dunleavy, in an Official Capacity (11/17/2023) sp-7673

Jeffrey Hout v. State of Alaska, Office of the Governor, and Governor Mike Dunleavy, in an Official Capacity (11/17/2023) sp-7673

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  



  



  JEFFREY HOUT,                                            )     

                                                           )    Supreme Court No. S-18511  

                             Appellant,                    )     

                                                           )    Superior Court No. 3AN-21-08659 CI  

           v.                                               )    

                                                           )   O P I N I O N  

  STATE OF ALASKA, OFFICE OF                               )     

  THE GOVERNOR, AND MICHAEL                                )     

  DUNLEAVY, IN AN OFFICIAL                                 )   No. 7673 - November 17, 2023  

  CAPACITY,                                                )  

                                                           )  

                             Appellees.                    )  

                                                           )  

                    

                  Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                   Judicial District, Anchorage, Thomas A. Matthews, Judge.  

  

                  Appearances:    Jeffrey  Hout,  pro  se,  Wasilla,  Appellant.   

                   Thomas  C.  Mooney-Myers,  Assistant  Attorney  General,  

                  Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau,  

                   for Appellees.  

  

                   Before:         Borghesan,        Henderson,         and     Pate,     Justices.   

                   [Maassen,        Chief      Justice,      and      Carney,       Justice,     not  

                  participating.]  

                    

                   PATE, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                  An inmate sued Governor Michael Dunleavy for failing to provide him  



with proof of various bonds, oaths, and licenses.  The inmate also alleged that certain  


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people  involved  in  his  criminal  trial  had  practiced  law  without  valid  licenses.    The  



superior court dismissed the lawsuit because it failed to state a claim upon which relief  



may be granted.  The inmate appealed.  We affirm the superior court's judgment .  



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



                 After Jeffrey Hout was convicted in 2010 of kidnapping and murder, he  



                                                     1 

was sentenced to 104 years imprisonment.   Hout sent a letter to Governor Dunleavy in  



August 2021 demanding proof that the Governor was licensed to practice law in Alaska,  



had  obtained  various official  surety  bonds,  and had  taken  his  oath  of office.    After  



Governor Dunleavy did not respond, Hout filed a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)  



                                                                                             2 

Financing  Statement  with  the  Alaska  UCC  Central  File  System  Office,   seeking  to  



secure  a  purported  debt  of  $250  million  in  gold  dollars  owed  to  him  by  Governor  



Dunleavy and the State of Alaska.  



                 Hout then filed a complaint in the superior court, alleging that the State of  



Alaska  and  Governor Dunleavy had committed fraud  against him.  Hout  also alleged  



that  his criminal conviction  was invalid  and that he should be released from  prison  



because  government officials involved in his criminal case, including the judge,  had  



engaged in the practice of law without valid licenses.  



                 The State moved to dismiss Hout's complaint with prejudice under Alaska  



Civil Rule 12(b)(6).   Hout failed to  respond.   The superior court granted the State's  



motion to dismiss.  Hout now  appeals the court's order dismissing his complaint  and  



asks us to "release [him] from prison due to [f]raud and [o]bstruction of [j]ustice by the  



State of Alaska."  



                                                                                                               

         1       See Hout v. State, No. A-11212, 2015 WL 5000552, at  *1 (Alaska App.  

Aug. 19, 2015) (affirming sentencing decision).  

        2        See generally Ranes & Shine, LLC v. MacDonald Miller Alaska, Inc. , 355  

P.3d 503, 511 (Alaska 2015) (explaining that "[a] UCC financing statement is intended  

to provide notice to the world of a secured party's interest in specific collateral").  



                                                     -2-                                                 7673  



  


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         STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 "We review de novo the dismissal of a complaint under Alaska Civil Rule  



                                                                                  3 

12(b)(6), 'deeming all facts in the complaint true and provable.' "   



        DISCUSSION  



                 The  content  and  style  of  Hout's  claims  and  arguments  in  this  case  are  



consistent with the  expressed belief system of a group that has  come to be known as  



                          4 

"sovereign citizens."  For example, Hout  signed his complaint as  "Hout:  Jeffery TM  



©" and he asserts that he is "a sui juris and  Sovereign."  "Courts across the country  



have universally rejected these types of 'sovereign citizen' claims, dismissing them as  



'misguided,'  'completely  without  merit,'  and  having  'no  conceivable  validity  in  



                      5 

American law.' "   Hout's claims and arguments in this case are similarly flawed.  



                 We have jurisdiction to decide this case .  Hout asserts that he "does NOT  



consent  to  Superior/Supreme  Courts  [sic]  decisions  in  opposition  of ANY ,  and ALL  



                                                                                                              

        3        Pruitt v. Off. of Lieutenant Governor , 498 P.3d 591, 597 (Alaska 2021)  

(quoting Guerrero v. Alaska Hous. Fin. Corp., 6 P.3d 250, 253 (Alaska 2000)).  

        4        See  Caesar Kalinowski  IV, A Legal  Response  to  th e Sovereign Citizen  

Movement , 80 MONT.  L.  REV.  153, 154-55 (2019) ("Most often, Sovereign Citizens  

contest the United States' jurisdiction over them as federal defendants because they  

have not consented to that jurisdiction.  In pursuing their 'rights,' Sovereign Citizens  

engage in 'paper terrorism,' which includes the filing of false liens against government  

officials  and  a  multitude  of  other  civil  claims  based  on  abstract  violations  of  the  

Uniform Commercial Code ('UCC')."  (footnotes omitted)); Charles E . Loeser, From  

Paper Terrorists to Cop Killers:  The Sovereign Citizen Threat , 93 N.C. L. REV.  1106,  

1126 (2015) ("Anyone can file a lien under the [UCC], and sovereign citizens tend to  

file liens against the homes and land of public officials who participated in or were  

complicit in their legal proceedings.  The monetary amount of these liens tends to have  

no basis in reality and instead is usually in preposterous amounts like $5.1 million or  

$100 billion." (footnotes omitted)).  

        5        Bourdon  v.  State ,  370  P.3d  1116,  1117  (Alaska  App.  2016)  (footnotes  

omitted).  



                                                    -3-                                                 7673  



  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

                        6 

claims presented."   He asserts that we lack the authority to deny his claims, including  



his fraud claim and his purported $250 million lien against Governor Dunleavy.  Hout's  



argument is premised on the misguided notion that Alaska's laws do not apply to him  



unless  and  until  he  provides  personal  consent  to  be  governed  by  our  laws.    This  



                            7                                                                         8 

argument is nonsense  and antithetical to our form of constitutional democracy.   



                 Our  government  derives  its  powers  from  Alaska  citizens  who,  as  a  



collective  whole,  have  provided  "consent  of  the  governed"  by  ratifying  the  Alaska  



                  9 

Constitution.    "Article IV, Section 1 of the Alaska Constitution grants the legislature  

authority to prescribe the jurisdiction of courts within the state."10  The legislature has  



                                                                                                                 

         6       Emphasis in original.  



         7        Cf. United States v. Mitchell, 405 F. Supp. 2d 602, 604 (D. Md. 2005)  

(explaining  that  defendants  "are  mistaken  if  they  think  they  cannot  be  prosecuted  

without their consent or signatures.  If this were the case, it is hard to imagine that any  

indicted  defendant  would  'consent'  to  any  proceedings  against  him,  and  the  entire  

federal criminal code would be pointless" (footnotes omitted)).  

         8       See, e.g., Trump v. Vance, 140 S. Ct. 2412, 2432 (2020) (Kavanaugh, J.,  

concurring) ("In our system of government, as this Court has often stated, no one is  

above  the  law.");  Ex  parte  Milligan ,  71  U.S.  2,  30  (1866)  ("Our  system  knows  no  

authority beyond or above the law."); cf. Aspen Expl. Corp. v. Sheffield , 739 P.2d 150,  

 157  n.14  (Alaska  1987)  (explaining  that  the  common  law  historically  held  public  

officials and private individuals to same standard for purposes of tort liability, rooted  

in "common law principle that 'no man is above the law' " (quoting A.V. DICEY, THE  

LAW OF THE CONSTITUTION  193 (10th ed. 1959))).  

         9       Ernest  Gruening,  Governor  of  the  Territory  of  Alaska,  delivered  the  

keynote  address  to  the  Alaska  Constitutional  Convention,  explaining  the  delegates '  

authority  was  derived  from  the  people  of  Alaska.    6  Proceedings  of  the  Alaska  

Constitutional Convention App. III at 1 (November 9, 1955) ("We meet to validate the  

most  basic  of  American  principles,  the  principle  of  'government  by  consent  of  the  

governed.' ");  see  also  THE  DECLARATION  OF  INDEPENDENCE  para.  2  (U.S.  1776)  

("That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their  

just powers from the consent of the governed  . . . .").  

         10      Bourdon, 370 P.3d at  1118 (footnotes omitted).  



                                                      -4-                                                  7673  



  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

authorized the superior court to exercise original jurisdiction over all civil matters, and  

the superior court's jurisdiction extends over the whole of Alaska.11  The legislature has  



likewise  authorized  us  to  exercise  "final  appellate  jurisdiction  in  all  actions  and  

proceedings" that begin in the district or superior courts.12  We exercise that jurisdiction  



today to affirm the court's dismissal of Hout's claims.  



                 On the merits, Hout  alleges that Governor Dunleavy and the State have  



failed  to  comply  with   statutes   and  constitutional  provisions   dealing  with  three  

categories of government activities.  First, he cites official bonding statutes.13  Second,  



he  cites  the  oath  of  office  statutes  and  a  corresponding  provision  of  the  Alaska  

Constitution.14    Third,  he  cites  Alaska's  law-licensing  statute.15    Hout  alleges  that  



Governor Dunleavy committed fraud by not providing proof of compliance with these  



three categories of statutes within three days of Hout's written demand for such proof .   



Hout also alleges that "every member and party" who participated in his criminal case  



                                                                                                                 

         11      AS 22.10.020(a)-(b)  (noting some actions within original jurisdiction of  

superior court must be filed in district court, rather than superior court); see also Alaska  

Const. art. IV, § 3.  

         12      AS 22.05.010(a); see also Alaska Const. art. IV, § 2.  



         13      AS 39.15.010-.100 (providing for form, amount, and conditions of official  

surety  bonds);  see  also  AS 39.05.050  ("The  principal  executive  officer  of  each  

department and subordinate officials shall furnish corporate surety bonds in the instance  

and amount required by law or determined by the governor upon recommendation of  

the  commissioner  of  administration.  The  state  shall  pay  the  cost  of  the  bond.  The  

attorney general shall approve the form of the bond.").  

         14      AS 39.05.040 (providing principal executive officers must take, sign, and  

file oath of office as required by Alaska Constitution); AS 39.05.045 (providing public  

employees must take and sign oath of office as required by statute); Alaska Const. art.  

XII,  § 5  (providing  public  officers  must  swear  to  support  and  defend  United  States  

Constitution and Alaska Constitution).  

         15      AS 08.08.210  (providing  person  engaging  in  practice  of  law  in Alaska  

must be licensed and active member of Alaska Bar and Alaska Bar Rules shall define  

"practice of law").  



                                                      -5-                                                  7673  



  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

did  "NOT  hold  or  possess  a  valid  'License'  issued  by  the  'only'  state  government  



agency  that  issue's  [sic]  or,  should  issue  said  prerequisited  [sic]  AS 08.08.210(d)  

license."16    The  superior  court  interpreted  this  argument  as  a  claim  "that  [Hout's]  



conviction was an improper violation of his civil rights."  



                 Hout's fraud claim is without merit.  In a complaint alleging fraud, "the  

circumstances constituting fraud . . . shall be stated with particularity."17  However, the  



primary allegation underpinning Hout's  fraud claim -  that Governor Dunleavy was  



legally  obligated  to  provide  him  with  proof  of  oaths,  licenses,  and  bonds  -  is  

essentially a "legal conclusion . . . 'style[d] [as an] assertion[] of fact.' "18  The superior  



court acknowledged it was undisputed  that  no government official or employee had  



provided Hout with proof of  a license, oath, or bond.  Accepting this fact as true, the  



court correctly held that Hout was not entitled to such proof because "there is no legal  



basis upon which a criminal defendant is entitled to such bonds and oaths."  We affirm  



the court's summary dismissal of Hout's fraud claim.  



                 The superior court was also correct to dismiss Hout's civil rights claim  



seeking release from prison on the ground that certain officials who participated in his  



criminal  trial  were  practicing  law  without  valid  licenses.    The  court  explained  that  



Hout's civil rights claim is "underpinned by the assertion that the State of Alaska does  



not  have  authority  to  license  attorneys."    Although  we  "liberally  construe[]"  the  



allegations  in  a  complaint  and  "treat  all  factual  allegations  as  true"  when  deciding  



                                                                                                                 

         16      Emphasis in original.  Hout included this allegation in a petition for leave  

to amend his complaint.  The State and the superior court treated Hout's petition  to  

amend as part of his complaint, and we do the same.  

         17      Alaska R. Civ. P. 9(b).  



         18      Forrer  v.  State ,  471  P.3d  569,  585  (Alaska  2020)  (first  and  fourth  

alteration  added);  id.  at  585  n.160  (rejecting  legal  conclusions  styled  as  factual  

assertions  when  considering  motion  to  dismiss,  including  allegation  that  statutory  

bonding requirements created obligation to pay for oil and tax credits).  



                                                      -6-                                                  7673  



  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

whether a complaint states a  cognizable claim  for relief,19 bare legal conclusions  like  



Hout's assertion that the State of Alaska lacks the authority to license attorneys are not  

entitled to the benefit of the presumption of truth.20  Even assuming, without deciding,  



that Hout's complaint states a claim that  at least one official  involved in his criminal  



trial was practicing law without a license and that his conviction therefore violated his  



civil rights, the superior court was correct to dismiss Hout's complaint asserting those  



claims.  



                 The proper vehicle for Hout's claim seeking release from prison would be  

an  application  for  post-conviction  relief.21    Subject  to  the  limited  exception  we  



recognized in Grinols v. State for ineffective assistance of counsel claims raised for the  

first time in a second application for post-conviction relief,22  a person convicted of a  



criminal  offense  is  entitled  to  make  only  one  such  application,  and  any  subsequent  

application must be dismissed.23   Hout had already applied once for post-conviction  



relief from his 2010 conviction before filing this complaint, meaning it would have been  



futile  for  the  superior  court  to  convert  his  civil  claim  into  an  application  for  post- 



                                                                                                                

         19      Larson v. State, Dept. of  Corr., 284 P.3d 1, 6 (Alaska 2012).  



        20       See Dworkin v. First Nat'l Bank of Fairbanks, 444 P.2d 777, 779 (Alaska  

1968)  (stating although well pleaded allegations in a complaint are deemed admitted  

for the purpose of deciding a motion to dismiss, "unwarranted factual inferences and  

conclusions  of  law  are  not  considered  admitted  in  resolving  the  merits  of  such  

motions").  Hout's assertion about the State of Alaska's authority to license attorneys  

is, of course, mistaken.  The legislature has provided by statute that the Alaska Bar  

Rules shall define the "practice of law" and specified the requirements for practicing  

law in the state, including active membership in the Alaska Bar.  AS 08.08.210; see  

also Alaska Bar. R. 15(b) (defining the practice of law).  

        21       See AS  12.72.010; Alaska R. Crim. P. 35.1(a); McDonald v. State, Dep't  

of Corr., Alaska Parole Bd., 519 P.3d 345, 351 (Alaska 2022).  

        22       74 P.3d 889, 895 (Alaska 2003).  



        23       AS  12.72.020(6).  



                                                     -7-                                                  7673  



  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

conviction relief.24   The court would  thus  have been correct to dismiss Hout's civil  



rights claim even if his complaint had alleged defects in his trial that would otherwise  



entitle him to post-conviction relief.    



         CONCLUSION  



                  We AFFIRM the superior court's judgment.  



                                                                                                                    

         24       Cf.  McDonald,  519 P.3d  at  351 (affirming  dismissal  where  conversion  

into an application for post-conviction relief would have been futile because the time to  

file such an application had expired).  



                                                       -8-                                                    7673  



  

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