In re G. K.

497 P.2d 914, 1972 Alas. LEXIS 267
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1972
DocketNos. 1627, 1654 and 1674
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 497 P.2d 914 (In re G. K.) 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
In re G. K., 497 P.2d 914, 1972 Alas. LEXIS 267 (Ala. 1972).

Opinion

OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

The issue before us is whether or not an affidavit of bias and prejudice filed pursuant to AS 22.20.022 can work an automatic disqualification of a children’s court judge. In each of the cases, consolidated in this decision,1 the child seeks an overruling of In re White, 445 P.2d 813 (Alaska 1968), in which a majority of this court held AS 22.20.022 to be inapplicable to children’s proceedings.2 We have concluded that the White decision is incorrect as a matter of statutory interpretation,3 and that, therefore, it was error for the [915]*915children’s court judge below not to have disqualified himself upon timely and appropriate motions.

AS 22.20.022 provides for the peremptory disqualification of district court and superior court judges in “civil or criminal” actions.4 The White majority denied application of the peremptory disqualification procedure to juvenile proceedings, reasoning that such proceedings “are basically different from both [civil and criminal actions], and that the words ‘civil or criminal’ as used in AS 22.20.022 must be strictly construed.” 44S P.2d at 815. No authority was cited for treating juvenile proceedings as sui generis.

In other cases we have noted that AS 22.20.022 “creates and defines a right — the right to have a fair trial before an unbiased and impartial judge.”5 Thus, the provisions of AS 22.20.022 reflect the fundamental tenet of our system of justice that every litigant shall have his rights adjudicated by a judge who is disinterested, impartial, and unbiased.6 To deny the children in the cases before us the benefit of this important statutory right is to consign them to a limbo beyond the protection afforded all other litigants merely because they are children. It would require them to stand before a judge whose impartiality they question, yet who has the power to commit them to an institution where they may be lawfully detained until their twentieth birthday.7

Both the Supreme Court of the United States8 and this court9 have cautioned against denying juveniles important rights through use of simplistic distinctions made on the basis of labels. The intonation of catch phrases such as “parens patriae” allows avoidance, not resolution, of real issues.

The arbitrariness of decision-by-label is well illustrated by the White holding. Notwithstanding the almost universal characterization of juvenile proceedings as “civil”, rather than “criminal”, in nature,10 the [916]*916White majority wrote that such proceedings are “basically different from both . . . . ” 445 P.2d at 815. Neither legislative history11 nor statutory reference 12 supports that dichotomy. Nor can we agree that “[t]he geography of Alaska and the peculiar demands of an effective exercise of juvenile jurisdiction forbid the application of the peremptory challenge procedure to superior court judges when handling juvenile matters.” 445 P.2d at 815. If the child is given early notice of the superior court judge assigned to his case, the filing of an affidavit pursuant to AS 22.-20.022 should not unduly delay the children’s proceedings.13

In overruling White we are not unmindful of the doctrine of stare decisis. We fully recognize the necessity in a government of law for respect for past exercise of judicial judgment and the need for continuity and predictability of legal relations.14 Nevertheless, “stare decisis is a principle of policy and not a mechanical formula of adherence to the latest decision, however recent and questionable . . . . ” 15 Its force is not immutable, requiring us to blindly adhere to a statutory [917]*917interpretation unsound at its inception and unjust in its consequences.

The judgment of delinquency rendered against G.K. is reversed and the case remanded to the superior court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion. The matters of B.M.O. and M.L.D. are remanded to the superior court for reassignment.

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497 P.2d 914 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
497 P.2d 914, 1972 Alas. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-g-k-alaska-1972.