There really aren't any objective reasons to use Apache over Nginx.
In fact, there may actually be performance reasons why Nginx is superior. These sorts of reasons however are usually of no significance when putting an entire web application in perspective.
You will find many subjective reasons to prefer one web server over the other, such as bias related to familiarity. With respect to web servers, these biases might be tied to a user's age since Apache has been around much longer. For many of these users, learning a new system is not a productive use of time. For less experienced or new administrators, familiarity bias is not applicable.
Another subjective reason is the mis-belief that a larger market share will always yield recognizably greater levels of support. These reason fails to recognize the diminishing relevance of larger market share past extreme points of acceptance. For example, a recent Netcraft survey has Nginx up to 14.42% market share of all web sites while Apache is at 37.45%. While one may blindly assume Apache to have superior support given its substantially larger percent of market share, the fact is the 14.42% represents one hundred forty eight million, three hundred thirty thousand, one hundred ninety websites (148,330,190). That's an extraordinarily massive number of websites and users which and who are running on Nginx. The raw number of users of Nginx is so large that it's relatively smaller market share will have no recognizable difference in support level.