Flannery v. Flannery

452 P.2d 846, 203 Kan. 239, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 396
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 12, 1969
Docket45,482
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 452 P.2d 846 (Flannery v. Flannery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flannery v. Flannery, 452 P.2d 846, 203 Kan. 239, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 396 (kan 1969).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fontron, J.:

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, Dorothy A. Flannery, from an order overruling her motion to modify a divorce decree in two particulars: (1) Ry requiring her former spouse, the defendant Lawrence S. Flannery, to pay for certain repairs to the ancestral home being occupied by Mrs. Flannery and a minor son, the title to which had been awarded equally to the two Flannerys and which plaintiff had been given the right to occupy until September 6, 1969; (2) by increasing the child support of $120 per month originally set by the court.

The divorce case, itself, was heard by Judge Floyd H. Coffman of Ottawa who was assigned to hear the matter after the regular district judge, Frank R. Gray, disqualified himself. Shortly after the motion for modification was filed, plaintiff’s counsel, Mr. Ross, wrote Judge Coffman asking him to set the motion for hearing. The following day, the defendant’s counsel, Mr. George Melvin, sent a letter to Judge Coffman objecting to his hearing the motion and stating that Judge Gray should hear it even though he had disqualified himself from hearing the divorce.

Three days later Judge Coffman advised both attorneys by mail that he had set the matter for hearing but would not insist on bearing it if Judge Gray should hold that he, Coffman, had no jurisdiction. A further letter was mailed to Judge Coffman by Ross advising that he assumed Judge Gray would not wish to hear the motion but that he had no preference as to which judge heard it and would leave that to the sound discretion of the courts. Thereafter Judge Gray advised by letter that the matter which had required his disqualification appeared to have been finally adjudicated and he saw no reason why he could not hear the motion.

The upshot of the extended colloquy was that Judge Gray determined he would hear plaintiff’s motion, and this he did, despite a motion filed by plaintiff for a change of venue. In ruling on this motion, Judge Gray said:

“. . . that the reason for the disqualification in the divorce hearing is, in the Court’s judgment, now resolved inasmuch as a divorce has been granted,' and the issues upon which the Court felt disqualified to hear have been resolved. . . . The only basis of your motion, if it could be construed as one, is that you feel the Court should disqualify itself, and I think the only *241 person who can determine whether he can disqualify himself is the Court himself. I don’t feel that I will be biased or prejudiced in connection with this motion, so I do not disqualify myself.”

The plaintiff contends that Judge Gray erred in malting this ruling and in proceeding to hear plaintiff’s motion to modify.

Treating plaintiff’s motion for change of venue as a motion for disqualification, as it seems to have been considered by Judge Gray, we entertain the view that no error was committed in its denial or in Judge Gray’s proceeding to act . in the matter. In so concluding, we have no intention of repudiating the principle that one who acts in a judicial capacity is disqualified to hear any matters concerning which he may be biased or prejudiced, or in which he may have an interest. That principle is far too basic to the Anglo-American concept of justice to be abrogated or debased. In Tootle v. Berkley, 60 Kan. 446, 56 Pac. 755, it was said:

“. . . It is the purpose of the law that no judge shall hear and determine a case in which he is not wholly free, disinterested, impartial, and independent. . . .” (p. 448.)

See, also, Peytons Appeal, 12 Kan. 398.

However, the fact of disqualification, that is, the existence of bias or prejudice or of conflict of interest on the part of a judicial officer is a matter which must be established. In this state a judge may not be disqualified by the simple expedient of a certificate filed by a litigant alleging bias, prejudice or conflicting interest, although such a rule exists in some jurisdictions by legislative enactment. Ordinarily it may be said, absent circumstances which of themselves would tend to cast doubt as to the fairness of whatever judgment the judge might pronounce, the question of bias or prejudice on the part of a court rests largely within the conscience of the court itself. In the early case of City of Emporia v. Volmer, 12 Kan. 622, it was held:

“In criminal cases, on an application for a change of venue on account of the prejudice of the judge, such facts and circumstances must be shown by affidavits or other evidence as clearly establish such prejudice; and unless it be by such testimony clearly established, a reviewing court will sustain an overruling of the application, on the ground that the judge must have been personally conscious of the falsity or non-existence of the grounds alleged.” (Syl. ¶1.)

This holding was cited with approval in Sheldon v. Board of Education, 134 Kan. 135, 140, 4 P. 2d 430, and applies with equal force in both civil and criminal cases.

*242 In the present case Mrs. Flannery did not allege in her motion for change of venue that Judge Gray was biased or prejudiced. She merely set out that she felt Judge Coffman was acquainted with the facts and circumstances involved in the dispute between the parties, including their financial situation, and that it had already been detrimental to her health to have the matter assigned to a different judge.

Indeed, the argument pressed most strongly by Mrs. Flannery in this appeal is that where a judge has once disqualified himself, his disqualification persists throughout all subsequent proceedings which may arise in connection with the case. Her position in this respect conflicts with the generally accepted view in this country as set out in 30A Am. Jur., Judges, § 220, pp. 115,116:

“The question whether the order or determination of a judge that he is disqualified may be revoked by himself, or by some other member of the same court, depends upon the construction of the local statutes, if any, governing the disqualification of judges, upon the effect to be given to the filing of a sufficient affidavit of prejudice, and also depends on whether another judge has been called to act in the case and has proceeded therein and still retains the case for disposition. In view of the general control of a court over its orders and decrees rendered at the same term, most of the cases are consistent with the doctrine that, absent statutory provision to the contrary, the bare fact of there having been a judicial order or determination of a judge’s disqualification does not prevent his reassuming full jurisdiction by timely order showing that in fact there was no disqualification or that the same has been removed.”

See, also, annotation in 162 A. L. R., Judge — Revocation of Disqualification, III, p. 646, et seq.

Although this court has never had occasion to pass upon the matter of disqualification under the precise circumstances now before us we believe some analogy can be found in Price v. Gibson, 165 Kan. 10, 192 P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
452 P.2d 846, 203 Kan. 239, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannery-v-flannery-kan-1969.