In Re Perez

194 So. 774, 194 La. 763, 1940 La. LEXIS 1019
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 4, 1940
Docket35721.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 194 So. 774 (In Re Perez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Perez, 194 So. 774, 194 La. 763, 1940 La. LEXIS 1019 (La. 1940).

Opinion

JUGGINS, Justice.

On January 31, 1940, a petition was filed in the Twenty-fifth Judicial District Court of Plaquemines Parish for the appointment of an attorney, under Article IX, Section 6 of the Constitution of 1921, and Act 135 of 1880, to institute suit for the removal from office of Leander H. Perez, District Attorney for the Parishes of Plaquemines and St. Bernard, State of Louisiana.

It is alleged that the District Attorney is guilty of incompetency and favoritism in office, and particularly, that he failed to present to the Grand Jury, in accordance with law, the matter of the killing of the late Mrs. Angelina Treadaway in August 1939, during a strike at the Dunbar-Dukate Shrimp Packing Plant at Violet, St. Bernard Parish, La., in which Adam Melerine, Peter Guerra and Sylvero Molero are involved.

The petition, purporting to be filed by the twenty-six persons named therein, is signed by the attorney alone and he also signed the annexed affidavit stating that the allegations therein contained are true and correct, to the best of his information, knowledge and belief. Attached to the petition is a photostatic copy of a document requesting that an attorney be appointed to institute suit for the impeachment of the District Attorney on the grounds of incompetency, favoritism, and oppression in office, which document appears to have been signed by twenty-five individuals (eleven making their “X” marks), four of whom are different from the petitioners named in the formal petition signed by the attorney. There is no allegation in the petition that the petitioners are taxpayers within the Twenty-fifth Judicial District, nor is there proof annexed thereto that they are twenty-five citizens and taxpayers, although they are described as such in the preamble thereof.

On February 1, 1940, the District Attorney filed a petition for the recusation of the District Judge, J. Claude Meraux, on the ground that he had a personal interest in the matter, since he had caused to be instituted these proceedings for the purpose of protecting his brother who was being investigated by the District Attorney in connection with unlawful gambling enterprises. The District Attorney, reserving his rights under the plea of recusation, also filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione materiae, alleging that only three of the twenty-five named petitioners were taxpayers in the Twenty-fifth Judicial District, as appears from the certificate of the Tax Assessor of the *768 Parish of St. Bernard, annexed to and made a part thereof.

On February 2, 1940, Judge Meraux refused to recuse himself on the ground that the petition therefor did not disclose any right or cause of action because, under the law, to appoint an attorney to institute the impeachment suit as requested, was merely a ministerial duty on his part. The district judge then appointed Richard A. Dowling, Attorney, to file the suit. Thereupon, the District Attorney filed an application in •this Court for writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus, which were granted •and made returnable on February 16, 1940.

The district judge, the clerk of court, the attorney for the petitioners, and the attorney who was appointed to institute the impeachment proceedings were all made respondents and filed answers setting up substantially the same reasons assigned by the district judge in refusing to recuse himself, and the respondent, Midlo, annexed to his return, photostatic copies of petitions requesting the appointment of an attorney to bring impeachment proceedings against the district attorney, purporting to be signed by several hundred alleged citizens and taxpayers.

The petition of the District Attorney asking for the recusation of the district judge is not based upon the mere general allegations that the district judge was an interested party but facts are set forth tending to show the same. It is, therefore, not faulty in that respect.

In the case of State v. Nunez, 147 La. 394, 402-405, 85 So. 52, 56, we said:

“In State ex rel. Tyrrell v. Judge, 33 La. Ann. 1293, it appeared that a motion was made to recuse the judge as having a personal interest in the result of the (civil) suit, and the motion was overruled. After referring to the provisions of the Code of Practice on the subject, this court said:

“ ‘When a refusal has thus been made to the judge’s trying the cause on account of interest, that refusal must be respected by the judge. He must either admit his disqualification and enter up the order of recusation or deny it, and thereby raise an issue touching his right to try the case. If he pursues the latter course, it is plain to see that he could not legally decide that issue himself. (Our italics.) Assuming that he is interested as charged, that would prompt him to declare himself not interested, as much as it would move him to follow that interest in the judgment that he would render in the cause.

“ ‘Hence it is not enough for the judge to disavow an interest, but, where such disavowal is not satisfactory to the party making the challenge, as in the present case, and he insists upon showing such interest in the judge, it evinces an unwarranted exercise of authority in this officer to assume to determine this question, so exclusively personal to himself and affecting his own competency. He should at once recuse himself on this issue and refer it.to be tried in the manner pointed out by law. If on such trial the ground is shown to be untenable and the competency of the judge to try the case is decreed, then, and not till then, is the judge authorized to proceed in the case. To hold otherwise would be *770 to render the important right of recusation or challenge nugatory and worthless.’ ”

In State ex rel. Segura v. Judge, 37 La.Ann. 253, it was held:

“It may well be, as the respondent claims, that the relator has no just foundation to recuse him, and that the plea has no merit; but, if such indeed be the case, it is not for him to say so.

“His duty was, on the filing of the recusation, to have recused himself, to have called in another judge to try the plea and eventually the case, and to have abstained from exercising jurisdiction over the matter pertaining to the case, until the plea had been effectually overruled.

“In the case of Hunter v. Blackman, Man.Unrep.Cas. 427, our immediate predecessors said, that a recused judge is incompetent to make any order, except one of recusation. If the power exercised by the judge should be recognized, it would insure an immunity from legal pursuit. The law, they said, never contemplated that any man, however, honorable, should be a judge in his own case.

“We ourselves have already ruled clearly in this sense on this very question. State ex rel. Tyrrell v. Judge, 33 La.Ann. 1293; see also (Southern Mut. Ins. Co. v. Pike) 34 La.Ann. [825] 828; (Nugent v. Stark) 34 La.Ann. 628; (President, etc., of Roman Catholic Church of Ascension v. Perche) 36 La.Ann. 160; Const. Art. 112; Act 1880, No. 40; C.P. 338.”

In State ex rel. Martin v. Judge, 152 La. 768, 94 So. 389, we again concluded that where a charge of interest is made in a petition to recuse a judge, he should either recuse himself or refer the question to another judge, and quoted, with approval, the following language from 15 R.C.L.

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 774, 194 La. 763, 1940 La. LEXIS 1019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-perez-la-1940.