State ex rel. Lovell v. Weiss

430 P.2d 357, 250 Or. 252
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 430 P.2d 357 (State ex rel. Lovell v. Weiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Lovell v. Weiss, 430 P.2d 357, 250 Or. 252 (Or. 1968).

Opinion

GOODWIN, J.

This is a contested attempt to recuse a circuit judge. One Lovell was convicted in the District Court for Lincoln County and fined $20 foi “angling with more than one line.” He appealed to the circuit court. Counsel accompanied the documents on appeal with a motion for a change of judge, supported by counsel’s affidavit of prejudice. The circuit judge denied the motion and set the.appeal for trial. We allowed an alternative writ of mandamus ordering the judge to withdraw from the case or to show cause why he should not withdraw.

The answer to the alternative writ- tenders two issues: (1) whether the element of good faith, which an affidavit under ORS 14.260 must allege, can be controverted, and, if so, (2) how. The affiant has moved to strike the answer on the ground that good faith cannot be controverted. In order to dispose of the question, we treat the motion as a demurrer. ORS 34.180.

In 1955 this court held that the statutory method then in effect of recusing a judge, ORS 14.220 to 14.240 (a peremptory-challenge statute enacted in 1947), was unconstitutional because it clothed the litigant or his attorney with absolute discretion to disqualify judges at will “— for good cause, bad cause, or no cause at all *• * State ex rel Bushman v. Vandenberg, 203 Or 326, 337, 276 P2d 432, 280 P2d 344 (1955). Such a statutory, delegation of power to a litigant .or to his attorney was manifestly in conflict with the constitutional right of the people to elect judges. The decision in the Vandenberg case was published-while the Légis[255]*255lative ..Assembly was in session, and the .Assembly promptly enacted the present statute. ORS 14.250 to 14.270. In substance, the statute requires the motion for a change of judge to be accompanied by an affidavit asserting that the judge is prejudiced. It also requires that the motion be “made in good faith and not for the purposes of delay.” This statute substantially re-enacted the one upheld against constitutional challenge in U’Ren v. Bagley, 118 Or 77, 245 P 1074, 46 APR 1173 (1926); and see 11 Or L Rev 410 (1932).

While an affidavit of prejudice under ORS 14.260 establishes only the imputation of prejudice, the imputation, if made in good faith, is sufficient to recuse the judge. U’Ren v. Bagley, supra. Because actual prejudice is difficult either to prove or to disprove, the public policy of preserving confidence in an impartial judiciary is usually said to be served by disqualifying the judge upon an imputation of prejudice made in good faith. The alternative would create a public controversy over the truth or falsity of a specific allegation of prejudice. U’Ren v. Bagley, 118 Or at 85. See, also, Schwartz, Disqualification for Bias, 11 U Pitt P Rev 415, 426 (1950).

There is no reason to abandon the rule expressed in U’Ren v. Bagley. An allegation of the judge’s prejudice, if filed in good faith, is sufficient on its face to recuse a judge. But it does not necessarily follow that the affiant’s allegation of his own good faith is equally efficacious to establish that statutory fact beyond the power of the judge to question it. If we were to hold that an affidavit could, by a pro forma recital of good faith, put beyond question the issue of good faith, it would amount to a holding that good faith in fact is not necessary. Such a holding would render the 1955 statute unconstitutional for the same reasons that the [256]*2561947 statute before the court in State ex rel Bushman v. Vandenberg was uncohstitutional. • .

That the question of good faith may indeed be a live question is suggested by the record in these proceedings. The motion and affidavit • are prepared on printed forms with only the title'of the cause, the date, and the designation of' the moving party-affiant left blank. The affiant’s efficiency -in supplying himself with printed forms alleging the prejudice of a particular judge is not necessarily proof of a want of good faith in filing such affidavits, but the-.employment of such forms raises some questions about' either the judge or the attorney. The judge’s answer to the writ alleges that in a period of some four weeks immediately preceding the affidavit in the case at bar- seven such printed forms were used in similar affidavits filed by the same attorney. Either the judge has given the attorney a good-faith reason to believe' (rightly or wrongly)’ that the judge is prejudiced against the attorney, or the attorney has reasons other than a good-faith belief in prejudice for wanting to get rid of the judge; The taxpayers and voters of the district have an interest in learning the truth of the matter.

"While it may be true, as a matter ef fact, that a particular attorney in good faith will entertain the belief that no client of his can receive a fair trial before a particular judge, such a generality is one that an officer of the court should not lightly swear upon oath. The pleadings in the case at bar do not warrant, and we do not make, any inferences concerning the good faith of any party or attorney in this case. All we hold at this time is that the issue of good faith is a proper issue to raise in a proceeding under ORS 14.250, and the trial judge has raised it in the only manner available to him.

[257]*257Since we hold that the issue of good faith,.when good faith has been challenged by an answer to an alternative writ, is a proper subject of a fact-finding hearing prior to the mandatory removal of a judge, we .must consider next how such a fact-finding hearing is to be conducted. This court does not have conveniT ent facilities for such a hearing, and ordinarily reviews only written records made elsewhere.

The judge who challenges the good faith of the affiant is obviously not the judge who should conduct the hearing upon that issue. See U’Ren v. Bagley, 118 Or at 85. Therefore, the issue of good faith should be referred to a disinterested circuit judge for proceedings in the nature of a referee’s hearing and report. In the case at bar, the record reveals no reason for this court to assign the matter for hearing before a judge from outside the district. We therefore refer the matter to the senior circuit judge of the district. Upon the conclusion of a factual hearing, the judge should file his findings and recommendations in the nature of a referee’s report.

■ Since the party or attorney seeking to remove a duly 'elected judge from the bench for the trial of one or more cases may do so only if he believes in good faith that the judge is prejudiced, it is not an undue hardship to require him, when his good faith is challenged, to show that his belief is based upon a rational ground and not upon mere pique, whimsy, or imagination.

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Bluebook (online)
430 P.2d 357, 250 Or. 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lovell-v-weiss-or-1968.