Main v. State

668 P.2d 868, 1983 Alas. App. LEXIS 345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 2, 1983
Docket7625
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 668 P.2d 868 (Main v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Main v. State, 668 P.2d 868, 1983 Alas. App. LEXIS 345 (Ala. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

Joseph A. Main filed this expedited appeal pursuant to Appellate Rule 216(a)(3), after his request to peremptorily challenge Superior Court Judge Victor D. Carlson was denied as untimely. The relevant facts may be briefly stated.

Main was charged by indictment with four counts of sexual offenses involving a niece. His ease was assigned for trial to Superior Court Judge Ralph Moody, and a *870 trial date of March 24, 1983, was established. On the day before trial, Main was informed that his case had been reassigned to Superior Court Judge Victor Carlson. 1 Main appeared before Judge Carlson the following day and immediately moved to stay the trial in order to assure that he would have a full, five-day period in which to decide whether to file a peremptory challenge as to Judge Carlson. This motion was denied by Judge Carlson.

After a series of unsuccessful efforts to obtain a stay pending appellate review of Judge Carlson’s ruling, jury selection commenced on the afternoon of March 24; a jury was impaneled on March 25. 2 Because of an intervening three-day weekend and Judge Carlson’s involvement in another case, Main’s trial was then recessed until March 30. Both Main and the state agree that March 30 constituted the fifth business day after Main received notice of reassignment of his case to Judge Carlson.

Testimony in Main’s trial was set to begin on the morning of March 30. Before the first witness was called, but after the jury had been sworn, Main attempted to exercise a peremptory challenge of Judge Carlson by filing an affidavit, personally executed by Main, indicating that, during the weekend, Main had received information leading him to believe that Judge Carlson would not conduct Main’s trial in a fair and impartial manner. Judge Carlson denied the peremptory challenge, ruling that, under Alaska Criminal Rule 25(d)(5), Main’s challenge was untimely because it was first asserted after commencement of his trial. Relevant portions of Criminal Rule 25(d) provide:

(d) Change of Judge as a Matter of Right. In all courts of the state, a judge may be peremptorily challenged as follows:
(1) Entitlement. In any criminal case in superior or district court, the prosecution and the defense shall each be entitled as a matter of right to one change of judge....
(2) Procedure. At the time required for filing the omnibus hearing form, or within five days after a judge is assigned the case for the first time, a party may exercise his right to change of judge by noting the request on the omnibus hearing form or by filing a “Notice Of Change Of Judge” signed by counsel, if any, stating the name of the judge to be changed....
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(5) Waiver. A party loses his right under this rule to change a judge when he agrees to the assignment of the case to a particular judge or participates before him in an omnibus hearing, any subsequent pretrial hearing, a hearing under Rule 11, or the commencement of trial. (Emphasis added.)

After Judge Carlson denied Main’s peremptory challenge, Superior Court Judge Mark Rowland was appointed in accordance with AS 22.20.020(c) to review Judge Carlson’s ruling. Judge Rowland upheld the denial of Main’s attempt to exercise a peremptory challenge, also relying on the waiver provisions of Criminal Rule 25(d)(5). Main then filed this appeal, challenging the propriety of the rulings entered by Judges Carlson and Rowland.

Main first asserts that AS 22.20.022, which authorizes a party to exercise a peremptory challenge of a judge within five days after the judge is appointed to a civil or criminal case, creates a peremptory challenge right that is independent of the peremptory challenge established under Criminal Rule 25(d). AS 22.20.022 provides, in relevant part:

Peremptory Disqualification of a Superior Court Judge, (a) If a party or a *871 party’s attorney in a district court action or a superior court action, civil or criminal, files an affidavit alleging under oath the belief that a fair and impartial trial cannot be obtained, the presiding district court or superior court judge, respectively, shall at once, and without requiring proof, assign the action to another judge of the appropriate court in that district .... The affidavit shall contain a statement that it is made in good faith and not for the purpose of delay.
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(c) The affidavit shall be filed within five days after the case is at issue upon a question of fact, or within five days after the issue is assigned to a judge, whichever event occurs later, unless good cause is shown for the failure to file it within that time.
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In attempting to exercise a peremptory challenge of Judge Carlson, Main purposely filed an affidavit in accordance with the requirements of AS 22.20.022(a), rather than filing the more informal Notice of Change of Judge called for under Criminal Rule 25(d). Main argues that his attempt to challenge Judge Carlson peremptorily was made pursuant to the statutory provision and that it was not based on Criminal Rule 25. He further contends that, because the statutory provision does not provide for waiver of the right to exercise a peremptory challenge upon commencement of trial, he was entitled to challenge Judge Carlson within the five-day period provided for under AS 22.20.022(c), even though his trial had already begun. 3

We conclude that Main’s theory of two independent, peremptory challenge rights— one under the statute and one under the rule — must be rejected. The Alaska Supreme Court has expressly indicated that Criminal Rule 25(d) is intended to be a procedural implementation of the substantive right to a peremptory challenge created by AS 22.20.022:

Although the legislature has the power to create the right to a fair trial before an unbiased judge, and the right to pre-empt a judge without requiring actual proof of bias or interest, it has very limited power to provide for the means by which that pre-emption right may be exercised. Until the legislature validly changes Criminal Rule 25(d), that rule is the sole provision which may be consulted in determining whether the ... right [to exercise a peremptory challenge] was properly exercised and the effect of the pre-emption on the procedural and administrative functions of the court system. Therefore, insofar as Rule 25(d) regulates only the procedural aspects of the peremptory right created by AS 22.20.022, and to the extent that the rule does not infringe upon the substantive right created by statute, the provisions of Rule 25(d) supersede the legislative enactment.

Gieffels v. State, 552 P.2d 661, 667-68 (Alaska 1976) (footnote omitted).

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Bluebook (online)
668 P.2d 868, 1983 Alas. App. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/main-v-state-alaskactapp-1983.