State Ex Rel. Ray Wells, Inc. v. Hargreaves

PETERSON, C. J.,

dissenting.

The majority concludes that ORS 14.250 and 14.260 (1), as amended in 1987,1 do not violate the Oregon Constitution’s prohibition against one department of government unduly interfering with the functions of another department. These statutes provide for the disqualification of a judge upon the filing of a conclusory affidavit stating that the party (or the party’s attorney) believes that he or she “cannot have a fair and impartial trial or hearing” before the judge assigned to the case. The affidavit need not contain allegations of facts or circumstances supporting this belief. A judge wishing to contest disqualification may do so only by proving that the affidavit was made in “bad faith or for the purposes of delay.” *620ORS 14.260(1). Because I believe that this scheme violates the principles governing separation of powers, I respectfully dissent.

Article III, section 1, of the Oregon Constitution provides:

“The powers of the Government shall be divided into three seperate (sic) departments, the Legislative, the Executive, including the administrative, and the Judicial; and no person charged with official duties under one of these departments, shall exercise any of the functions of another, except as in this Constitution expressly provided.”

Article VII (Amended), section 1, provides:

“The judicial power of the state shall be vested in one supreme court and in such other courts as may from time to time be created by law.”

It is well settled that these constitutional provisions prohibit a coordinate branch of government from exercising power assigned by the constitution to another branch. Moreover, they preclude the legislature from unduly burdening or interfering with the judicial branch in the exercise of its functions. See Ramstead, v. Morgan, 219 Or 383, 399, 347 P2d 549 (1959). A statute creating “general institutional inconvenience” does not amount to undue interference; a statute that prevents, obstructs or outright hinders the court’s exercise of its judicial power does. Circuit Court v. AFSCME, 295 Or 542, 547, 551, 669 P2d 314 (1983).

Judge-disqualification statutes are designed to ensure that all litigants receive fair and impartial trials and to maintain public confidence in the judicial system by eliminating even the appearance of impropriety. U’Ren v. Bagley, 118 Or 77, 82-83, 245 P 1074 (1926). These are important statutory objectives.

This court has dealt with constitutional challenges to recusal statutes on a number of occasions. In U’Ren v. Bagley, supra, 118 Or at 79, we upheld a judge-disqualification statute which required that the party seeking recusal submit an affidavit declaring: that the judge was prejudiced against the party or attorney; that the party could not, or believed that he or she could not, receive a fair and impartial hearing before such judge; and that the motion to recuse was made in good *621faith and not for purposes of delay. Noting that the disqualification provisions at issue fell into the “twilight zone,” 118 Or at 81, and that the law had been “shamefully abused” by some litigants, 118 Or at 87, we nevertheless held that the statute did not violate the Oregon Constitution. 118 Or at 87-88.

However, in State ex rel Bushman v. Vandenberg, 203 Or 326, 276 P2d 432, 280 P2d 344 (1955), we held a recusal statute unconstitutional which in relevant part provided:

“Any party to or attorney appearing in any cause, matter or proceeding * * * may file an application in writing requesting [a] change of judge at any time prior to final determination of such cause, matter or proceeding * * Or Laws 1947, ch 145, § 1-502.

We distinguished U’Ren on the ground that “[t]he legislature has now invested litigants and their attorneys with the power to remove duly appointed or elected and qualified judges from the bench in particular cases at will — for good cause, bad cause, or no cause at all.” 203 Or at 337. The recusal provision at issue in Vandenberg was in the nature of a peremptory challenge. While such challenges might be appropriate to remove jurors, we declared that they were inappropriate to remove an apparently qualified judge who had taken an oath to discharge his or her judicial duties faithfully. 203 Or at 338-39. Consequently, we held that the statute unduly burdened the judiciary and therefore contravened the principle of separation of powers. 203 Or at 341. We added, however, that “the legislature may, without unduly encroaching on judicial power, provide by law for the disqualification of judges for bias or prejudice if the facts establishing such bias or prejudice are required to be stated.” 203 Or at 336.

In a series of cases following Vandenberg we fleshed out the factors required for such judge-disqualification statutes to pass muster under separation-of-powers scrutiny. Following Vandenberg, the state legislature re-enacted the recusal statute that had been upheld in URen2 This statute *622allowed disqualification of a judge for prejudice and provided that prejudice could be established

“by motion supported by affidavit that the judge before whom the cause, matter or proceeding is pending is prejudiced against such party or attorney, or the interest of such party or attorney, so that such party or attorney can not or believes that he can not have a fair and impartial trial or hearing before such judge, and that it is made in good faith and not for the purpose of delay * * Or Laws 1955, ch 408, § 1.

In State ex rel Lovell v. Weiss, 250 Or 252, 430 P2d 357 (1968), we again upheld this recusal provision. In doing so, however, we cautioned that mere conclusory recitations of good faith were insufficient in instances in which the judge contested recusal:

“If we were to hold that an affidavit could, by a pro forma recital of good faith, put beyond question the issue of good faith, it would amount to a holding that good faith in fact is not necessary. Such a holding would render [this] statute unconstitutional for the same reasons that the 1947 statute before the court in State ex rel Bushman v. Vandenberg was unconstitutional.” 250 Or at 255-56.

To guarantee that an allegation of good faith was more than simply a pro forma recital, we required that the affiant bear the burden of proof in contested cases:

“Since the party or attorney seeking to remove a duly elected judge from the bench for the trial of one or more cases may do so only if he believes in good faith that the judge is prejudiced, it is not an undue hardship to require him, when his good faith is challenged, to show that his belief is based upon a rational ground and not upon mere pique, whimsy, or imagination.
“The burden of proving good faith * * * will be satisfied if the affiant testifies that he has received information about the trial judge which, if true, reasonably could be a basis for a fear of prejudice. The affiant need not prove that the judge is prejudiced, or even prove that the evidence upon which he bases his apprehension is all true. But he must come forward with some evidence, hearsay or otherwise, from which a reasonable person could conclude that anyone possessed of such evidence might reasonably question the trial judge’s impartiality in a matter.” 250 Or at 257-58.

I read Weiss to hold that the party seeking recusal must have *623the burden of adducing evidence “from which a reasonable person could conclude that anyone possessed of such evidence might reasonably question the trial judge’s impartiality in a matter.” 250 Or at 258.

Ten years later, in Foster v. Zeiler, 283 Or 255, 584 P2d 243 (1978), this court upheld a statute requiring change of the place of trial in a justice court upon motion and supporting affidavit stating that the affiant could not expect an impartial trial because of the justice’s prejudice.3 However, to ensure that the statute satisfied Article III, section 1, we declared that the procedure laid out in Weiss for establishing good faith was required and that “factual allegations must be made from which an impartial judge could find that the challenged judge was prejudiced.” 283 Or at 259. (Emphasis added.) In instances where the judge contests the motion to disqualify, the Oregon Constitution requires that the burden is on the person seeking recusal to establish facts or circumstances from which a person could reasonably question the judge’s impartiality. Id.

Finally, in State ex rel Oliver v. Crookham, 302 Or 533, 731 P2d 1018 (1987), we upheld yet another version of Oregon’s judge-disqualification statute. The statute there at issue, identical in all material respects to that before the court in Weiss, required an affidavit stating that the judge was prejudiced and that the party (or the party’s attorney) believed that he or she could not receive a fair and impartial hearing before the challenged judge. We specifically declined the invitation to overrule State ex rel Lovell v. Weiss, supra. 302 Or at 538. We retained the good faith hearing requirement and the burden of proof requirement established in Weiss. We also declared that “we have been overly generous in our view of the *624adequacy of affidavits of prejudice. Bare allegations like the one in the present case tell the trial judge and the presiding judge nothing.” 302 Or at 541. We held that “to be sufficient in the future, an affidavit supporting a motion to recuse a judge under ORS 14.250-14.270 must allege circumstances which would permit a party or attorney reasonably to believe that the party or attorney will not receive a fair trial.” 302 Or at 542.

Evaluating the present statute in light of the case law laid out above, I submit that the majority reaches the wrong conclusion. The statute under consideration here does not require that the affiant state facts or circumstances supporting his or her belief that the challenged judge cannot be fair and impartial. Moreover, notwithstanding our clear holdings that the affiant bears the burden of producing sufficient evidence to cause a reasonable person to question the judges’ impartiality, the statute at issue here requires no presentation of evidence and requires the challenged judge to establish the affiant’s “bad faith.” I read that to mean that the judge must prove that the affiant does not believe that he or she can have “a fair and impartial trial or hearing” before that judge. Proving a negative is no mean feat, especially when the facts giving rise to the belief relate to the state of mind of a party or attorney and are known to the affiant but likely not to the judge.

Oregon evidence law supports this conclusion. In Anderson v. Palmer, 111 Or 137, 144, 224 P 629 (1924), we held that as a general rule “[t]he duty of producing evidence rests upon the party having control of it.” In Sorenson v. Kribs, 82 Or 130, 138, 161 P 405 (1916), we declared it “elementary that, when a fact is peculiarly within the knowledge of a party, he must, if necessary, furnish the evidence thereof.” Likewise, this court in Secretary of State v. Hanover Ins. Co., 242 Or 541, 549, 411 P2d 89 (1966), declared that “[t]he defendant’s theory would leave the taxpayers to search for the evidence while the accountable officers look on as spectators. The state should not be put to a search for a needle in a haystack that is controlled by the [defendants].” The procedure at issue here certainly offends these principles.

ORS 14.260(1) effectively creates a peremptory challenge by sanctioning conclusory allegations of belief that a *625judge is biased or prejudiced and then placing a difficult if not insurmountable burden of proof — or of “disproof’ — upon the challenged judge. If the statute under consideration in U’Ren fell into the “twilight zone,” then surely this statute has slipped into darkness altogether.

Lest I be misunderstood, let me reiterate that our precedents do not require allegations or proof that a judge is, in fact, biased or prejudiced. “Proof that the belief is correct is not required * * State ex rel Oliver, supra, 302 Or at 539. However, our precedents at minimum constitutionally require (1) an affidavit alleging that a party or attorney believe that he or she cannot receive a fair trial before that judge, and (2) where the judge contests recusal, the person asserting that belief must adduce evidence to raise a reasonable question as to the judge’s impartiality.

Even under the procedure required prior to the 1987 amendments to ORS 14.260(1), many judges recused themselves rather than put a person to his or her proof of a belief of prejudice. This had deleterious effects upon judicial independence, but it was not such an undue burden as to be unconstitutional. But requiring a judge to prove that a motion to recuse was made in bad faith or for the purpose of delay makes it virtually impossible forjudges to challenge disqualification. Most judges will simply yield rather than contest. This is an undue interference with judicial independence and it is no less unconstitutional here than it was in Vandenberg.

Our system of government requires that each department be independent and equal. The legislature has undercut this principle so substantially that its action must be deemed unconstitutional.

I therefore dissent.4

Campbell, J., joins in this dissent.

These code sections were amended by Oregon Laws 1987, chapter 338, sections 1-2. The former and amended code sections read as follows, with the former provisions bracketed and in italics and the amendatory provisions in bold:

“14.250. No judge of a circuit court shall sit to hear or try any suit, action, matter or proceeding when it is established as provided in ORS 14.250 to 14.270, that [such judge is prejudiced against any party or attorney, or the interest of any party or attorney appearing in such cause, matter or proceeding] any party or attorney believes that such party or attorney cannot have a fair and impartial trial or hearing before such judge. In such case the presiding judge shall forthwith transfer the cause, matter or proceeding to another judge of the court, or apply to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to send a judge to try it; or, if the convenience of witnesses or the ends of justice will not be interfered with by such course, and the action or suit is of such a character that a change of venue thereof may be ordered, the presiding judge may send the case for trial to the most convenient court; except that the issues in such cause may, upon the written stipulation of the attorneys in the cause agreeing thereto, be made up in the district of the judge to whom the cause has been assigned.
“14.260. (1) Any party to or any attorney appearing in any cause, matter or proceeding in a circuit court may establish the [prejudice] belief described in ORS 14.250 by motion supported by affidavit that [the judge before whom the cause, matter or proceeding is pending is prejudiced against such party or attorney, or the interest of such party or attorney, so that] such party or attorney [cannot or] believes that such party or attorney cannot have a fair and impartial trial or hearing before such judge and that it is made in good faith and not for the purpose of delay. No specific grounds for the belief need be alleged. Such motion shall be allowed unless the judge moved against, or the presiding judge in those counties where there is one, challenges the good faith of the affiant and sets forth the basis of such challenge. In the event of such challenge, a hearing shall be held before a disinterested judge. The burden of proof shall be on the challenging judge to establish that the motion was made in bad faith or for the purposes of delay.”

The history of these recusal statutes is discussed in detail in Oregon Law Review Staff, Disqualification of Judges For Prejudice or Bias — Common Law Evolution, Current Status, and the Oregon Experience, 48 Or L Rev 311,360-64 (1969).

Former ORS 52.530(1), the statute at issue in Foster v. Zeiler, stated in pertinent part:

“The justice shall change the place of trial, on motion of either party to the action, when it appears from a supporting affidavit of the party that
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“(b) The justice is so prejudiced against the party making the motion that he cannot expect an impartial trial before the justice.”

Though ORS 52.530 involved change of venue, while the statute under consideration here involves recusal, the same principles apply to both statutes. Foster v. Zeiler, 283 Or at 258 n 2.

Under the rule that when an amendatory section of a statute is declared unconstitutional the section thereby sought to be amended remains in full force and effect, Skinner v. Davis, 156 Or 174, 189, 67 P2d 176 (1937), I would find former ORS 14.250 and 14.160 (1) to be in effect.