Hornaday v. Rowland

674 P.2d 1333, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 513
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1983
Docket7810
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 674 P.2d 1333 (Hornaday v. Rowland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hornaday v. Rowland, 674 P.2d 1333, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 513 (Ala. 1983).

Opinions

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

On December 3, 1982, an administrative order was issued by Mark C. Rowland, the Presiding Superior Court Judge for the Third Judicial District, directing that District Judge James C. Hornaday move his office from Homer to the District Court offices in Anchorage. The basis of Judge Rowland’s decision was his conclusion that “Judge Hornaday was being pre-empted [sic] an unusual amount of times in criminal cases set for trial.”1

Judge Rowland wrote to Judge Hornaday on December 16 and offered to meet with Hornaday and his counsel to discuss the permanent transfer decision. Judge Horna-day responded through counsel by filing a motion which requested a more formal hearing than that proposed by Rowland and asked that the proceeding be conducted by a judge other than Judge Rowland.2 Judge Rowland informed Hornaday that he had decided to proceed through an informal hearing. Judge Rowland himself conducted the hearing.

Present at the hearing were Hornaday and his counsel, Henry Camarot. The hearing consisted primarily of a discussion between Judge Rowland and Camarot concerning the transfer decision. The focus of discussion was the underlying fact pattern: how often Hornaday had been subject to peremptory challenge, the monetary cost of peremptory challenge to the court system, how often other judges were peremptorily challenged as compared to Hornaday, etc.

Following the hearing, Judge Rowland wrote to Camarot that he had considered Hornaday’s request to revoke the administrative order providing for Hornaday’s transfer to Anchorage but that he believed such a revocation would be inconsistent with his responsibilities as presiding judge. [1336]*1336Judge Rowland stated that, “It remains my belief that the unfortunate peremption rate of Judge Hornaday effectively cripples his ability to serve the [Homer] area as a judicial officer.... To continue to cover for Judge Hornaday with judges from other areas results in unwarranted expense and is unduly disruptive of the calendar in those other areas which are thereby affected.” Judge Rowland noted that his decision was not predicated upon any conclusion that Judge Hornaday had acted improperly or had failed in the responsibilities of his office. Nor was it based upon any judgment of whether the peremptory challenges of Hornaday were being executed fairly. Judge Rowland stated that: “It is the bare fact of their exercise with which I have been concerned.”

Thereafter Judge Hornaday filed a complaint against Presiding Judge Rowland in the superior court seeking a declaratory judgment that Rowland’s transfer order was invalid and an injunction against its enforcement.3 Hornaday asserted that the order lacked any basis in statute or administrative rule; that it violated the doctrine of separation of powers; that it was a violation of his right to substantive due process; and that the administrative procedures followed by Judge Rowland violated Hornaday’s right to procedural due process. Further, Hornaday challenged the facial validity of AS 22.20.022, the peremptory challenge statute, principally on the ground of a second separation of powers theory.4

After a hearing the superior court entered an oral ruling granting summary judgment to Presiding Judge Rowland and to the state. In its ruling the superior court held: (1) that Judge Rowland had the authority to transfer Third Judicial District judges anywhere within the Third Judicial District; (2) that the principle of separation of powers was not contravened by the transfer because judges are appointed by the executive to an entire district rather than to a specific locality; (3) that Judge Hornaday’s due process rights were not violated because Hornaday had no cognizable property interest in remaining in Homer and that, even if Hornaday did have such an interest, the procedures followed by Presiding Judge Rowland were constitutionally adequate; and (4) that AS 22.20.022 had previously been held constitutional by the Alaska Supreme Court. Judge Hornaday appeals all of these rulings.5

I.

Judge Rowland's Authority to Issue the Transfer Order.

Judge Hornaday argues that the statutes and court rules concerning the powers of a presiding judge and the assignment of district court judges do not authorize Presiding Judge Rowland’s permanent intra-district transfer of Judge Hornaday from Homer to Anchorage. We agree.

The powers of presiding judges are set forth in AS 22.10.130 and AS 22.15.190. Judge Hornaday argues that the presiding judge’s power to make assignments as described by these statutes is limited to temporary transfers. Judge Rowland asserts that the statutes do not impose such a limitation.

AS 22.10.130 provides:

Appointment and duties of presiding— judges. The chief justice of the supreme court shall designate a presiding judge [1337]*1337for each district. The presiding judge shall in addition to regular judicial duties (1) assign the eases pending to the judges made available within the district, (2) supervise the judges and their court personnel in the carrying out of their official duties within the district, and (3) expedite and keep current the business of the court within the district.
AS 22.15.190 provides:
Assignment of district judges and magistrates. Each district judge and each magistrate shall hold court at such times and places as are assigned by the presiding judge of the superior court of the district. The presiding judge in any judicial district may assign any district judge or magistrate within the district to serve temporarily in any other judicial districts. Rules and procedures for temporary assignment including the emergency situation where a superior court judge is not readily available to assign a district judge or magistrate shall be as prescribed by the supreme court.

Section 130 describes the general duties of a presiding judge. Subparts (1), (2), and (3) describe functions which arguably were served by Judge Rowland’s transfer order in this case. Section 130 does not, however, expressly create a permanent transfer power. Section 190 comes closer to speaking to the transfer issue. Its first sentence gives the presiding judge power to assign “times and places” where each district judge “shall hold court.” Judge Rowland claims that this is a clear grant of a permanent transfer power. Judge Hornaday responds that the presiding judge’s ability to assign “places” is limited to decisions such as which building and which courtroom will be used. He further argues that the second sentence of section 190, providing that inter-district transfers will be temporary, necessarily implies that intra-district transfers must also be temporary.

We do not agree with Judge Rowland that section 190 is a clear grant of a permanent transfer power in the presiding judge. The first sentence is certainly subject to the construction urged by Judge Hornaday that it deals with routine administrative detail. Our reading is that section 190 does not contemplate the eventuality of permanent intra-district transfers, and that it does not furnish the requisite basis for the reassignment made by Judge Rowland in this case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gates v. City of Tenakee Springs
822 P.2d 455 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1991)
Hornaday v. Rowland
674 P.2d 1333 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
674 P.2d 1333, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornaday-v-rowland-alaska-1983.