Michael Joseph Johnson v. Municipality of Anchorage

475 P.3d 1128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 2, 2020
DocketA12245
StatusPublished

This text of 475 P.3d 1128 (Michael Joseph Johnson v. Municipality of Anchorage) 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
Michael Joseph Johnson v. Municipality of Anchorage, 475 P.3d 1128 (Ala. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOTICE The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts: 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Fax: (907) 264-0878 E-mail: corrections @ akcourts.us

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

MICHAEL JOSEPH JOHNSON, Court of Appeals No. A-12245 Appellant, Trial Court Nos. 3AN-06-01018 CR, 3AN-06-01459 CR, 3AN-12-09692 CR, v. 3AN-14-09140 CR, & 3AN-14-09843 CR

MUNICIPALITY OF ANCHORAGE, OP INION

Appellee. No. 2680 — October 2, 2020

Appeal from the District Court, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Jo-Ann Chung, Judge.

Appearances: Matthew A. Michalski, Attorney at Law, Anchorage, for the Appellant. Sarah E. Stanley, Assistant Municipal Prosecutor, and William D. Falsey, Municipal Attorney, Anchorage, for the Appellee.

Before: Allard, Chief Judge, and Wollenberg and Harbison, Judges.

Judge WOLLENBERG.

The present appeal requires us to address whether a judge is disqualified from participating in a case if, before the judge’s appointment to the bench, the judge appeared as a lawyer at a hearing in an earlier stage of the same case. As we explain in this opinion, we conclude that Alaska’s judicial disqualification statute precludes a judge from participating in a case under these circumstances and that, when this issue is brought to the judge’s attention, the judge is required to recuse herself unless the parties otherwise waive the judge’s disqualification.1 For this reason, we partially reverse the judgment of the district court.

Underlying facts In 2014, Michael Joseph Johnson was charged with several offenses under the Anchorage Municipal Code: assault, family violence (arising from his assault on his girlfriend in the presence of a child), and driving while his license was suspended or revoked.2 Johnson represented himself at a jury trial on these charges. This trial was held before District Court Judge Jo-Ann Chung. The jury found Johnson guilty as charged. In a separate 2014 case, Johnson pleaded no contest to thirty-seven counts of unlawful contact with the same complaining witness. Based on Johnson’s convictions in these two 2014 cases, Johnson’s probation was revoked in three prior municipal assault cases — one case from 2012 and two cases from 2006. At a combined sentencing hearing, Judge Chung sentenced Johnson to a composite term of 4 years and 11 months’ imprisonment.

1 Because this case involves a situation in which the judge’s prior involvement as an attorney in the matter was brought to her attention, we express no opinion on the scope of a judge’s duty to ascertain their prior involvement sua sponte, particularly when the judge was not the attorney of record in the case. 2 Anchorage Municipal Code (AMC) 08.10.010(B)(1), AMC 08.10.050(B), and AMC 09.28.019(B)(1), respectively. The Municipality also charged Johnson with criminal mischief under AMC 08.20.010(A)(1), but the Municipality later dismissed that charge.

–2– 2680 Johnson’s arguments that the judge should have recused herself from his cases Prior to his jury trial, Johnson asserted that Judge Chung should recuse herself from presiding over all of his cases. Johnson argued that the judge was disqualified for two reasons: (1) prior to her appointment to the bench in 2011, and during the Municipality of Anchorage’s prosecution of Johnson’s 2006 cases, the judge was the supervising prosecutor in the Municipality’s domestic violence unit, and (2) the judge represented the Municipality at a hearing in the 2006 cases when the assigned municipal prosecutor was not present. In response to these contentions, Judge Chung acknowledged that she had been the supervisor of the Municipality’s domestic violence unit in 2006, but she declared that she harbored no bias against Johnson — that, indeed, she had no memory of Johnson or his 2006 cases. The judge further concluded that, even if she did represent the Municipality at a single hearing in 2006, this alone did not provide a basis for her disqualification. But the judge invited Johnson to file any paperwork documenting her prior involvement in his cases. If it turned out that she did “substantive” work in one of the 2006 cases, the judge said that she would reconsider her decision. Johnson eventually presented Judge Chung with documents from his 2006 cases. After reviewing the log notes, the judge discovered a hearing in 2006 in which she represented the Municipality on a motion to dismiss under Alaska Criminal Rule 45. The judge nonetheless stood by her decision not to recuse herself, finding that the “Rule 45 arguments were not substantive” and that she did not remember anything about the cases. (The judge recognized that Johnson had a right to appear before the original

–3– 2680 sentencing judges for disposition on the petitions to revoke probation, but noted that the original sentencing judges were retired and no longer available.3) On appeal, Johnson asserts that Judge Chung should have recused herself from all five of his cases (i.e., Johnson’s two current criminal cases and his three probation revocation proceedings). Johnson contends that he is entitled to a new trial in the 2014 assault and family violence case, and to resentencing in his other cases. Our analysis of these issues requires us to draw a distinction between Johnson’s three most recent cases (the two criminal cases from 2014 and the probation revocation in his 2012 assault case) and Johnson’s two oldest cases (the probation revocations in Johnson’s two assault cases from 2006). As we explain in this opinion, we conclude that, while Judge Chung was not disqualified from participating in Johnson’s three most recent cases, she was disqualified from participating in the probation revocation proceedings in Johnson’s 2006 cases.

A preliminary issue: did Johnson waive his right to appellate review of his disqualification motion by failing to request an independent review, under AS 22.20.020(c), of the denial of that motion? We must first address a preliminary issue raised by the Municipality: whether Johnson forfeited his right to appellate review of his disqualification motion by failing to pursue, under AS 22.20.020(c), an independent review of Judge Chung’s ruling by another trial court judge. Alaska Statute 22.20.020(c) provides that “[i]f a judicial officer denies disqualification[,] the question shall be heard and determined by another judge assigned

3 See Trenton v. State, 789 P.2d 178, 178-79 (Alaska App. 1990) (holding that the judge who imposed the defendant’s original sentence should ordinarily be assigned to preside over any future probation revocation proceedings, unless there is a good cause to assign a different judge).

–4– 2680 for the purpose by the presiding judge of the next higher level of courts[.]” In this case, Judge Chung denied Johnson’s motion for disqualification on the record. But no further review occurred. That is, no other judge reviewed Judge Chung’s decision. Relying on the Alaska Supreme Court’s 1978 decision in Coffey v. State,4 the Municipality argues that Johnson waived his right to appeal the denial of his disqualification motion to this Court because he failed to avail himself of the procedure set out in AS 22.20.020(c). But Coffey stands for a much more limited proposition, one narrowly tailored to the asserted deficiency — that by failing to request an independent review under AS 22.20.020(c), a defendant waives the right to challenge on appeal the failure to hold this independent review.

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Bluebook (online)
475 P.3d 1128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-joseph-johnson-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaskactapp-2020.