State ex rel. Smith v. Deason

88 So. 2d 674, 264 Ala. 596, 1956 Ala. LEXIS 399
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 12, 1956
Docket6 Div. 905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 88 So. 2d 674 (State ex rel. Smith v. Deason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Smith v. Deason, 88 So. 2d 674, 264 Ala. 596, 1956 Ala. LEXIS 399 (Ala. 1956).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The opinion of the Court heretofore announced is withdrawn and the following opinion is substituted in lieu thereof.

This is an appeal from the judgment by the Circuit Court of Walker County, Alabama, in a quo warranto proceeding brought by the appellant Smith. The proceeding involves the right of the contending parties to membership on the Board of Revenue of Walker County for District No. 1. At the time of trial, the office was held by J. H. Deason and claimed by Arthur Smith.

The office was formerly occupied by the late E. W. Swindle, who was elected at the General Election of November, 1952, for a term of four years beginning in January, 1953. Mr. Swindle died August 22, 1954. The appellee-respondent was issued a commission to this office by the Governor on September 17, 1954.

The Act creating the Board of Revenue for Walker County provides:

“Section Six. * * *; that should there be or become a vacancy in the membership of said Board of Revenue * * * the Governor shall fill such vacancy by appointment who shall serve until the first Monday after the second Tuesday in January following next general election after such appointment. * * * ” Local Acts of Alabama 1935, page 131.

The office of member of the Board of Revenue for District No. 1 did not appear on the official ballot in Walker County for the general election in November, 1954. However, seventy-six of the persons voting in such election wrote in both the title of the office and the name of Arthur Smith, the relator, at the bottom of the official ballots cast by them. It is by virtue of these seventy-six write-in votes that the relator claims the office of member of the Board of Revenue. There is no evidence that any attempt was made by any other person in that election to secure write-in votes. After certification of the returns, Smith executed the prescribed oath of office and posted the necessary bond, but was prevented from occupying the office by the refusal of the respondent Deason to vacate.

While it does not appear that any certification of vacancy was made to the Governor, a second commission was issued to the respondent Deason on January 17, 1955. The evidence as to the existence of vacancy and the circumstances surrounding the issuance of the second commission leave much to be desired.

After this quo warranto proceeding was filed, it was placed on the docket of the Hon. Arthur Fite, Jr., one of the Judges of the Circuit Court of Walker County. The relator Smith, through his attorneys, filed a motion to require Judge Fite to recuse himself from ruling on any of the pleadings and from the trial of’this cause. The basis of the motion to recuse was as follows:

First, that prior to Judge Arthur Fite, Jr.’s appointment to the office of Circuit Judge he was a member of a law firm which represented the Board of Revenue, and that Judge Fite as a member of such law firm represented the Board of Revenue during the time when appellee was a member of such board serving under his first commission.

Second, that the respondent is represented in the present trial by the Hon. Arthur Fite, Sr., the father and former partner of Judge Arthur Fite, Jr. The motion further states that Mr. Fite, Sr., is now, and has been for several years prior thereto, retained as counsel for the Board of Revenue. •

A hearing was had on the motion seeking to require Judge Fite to recuse himself, which motion was overruled. The truth of the matters alleged in the relator’s motion was established by testimony at the hearing.

Demurrers were sustained to all counts of the relator’s complaint. The complaint was amended and demurrers thereto were [600]*600again sustained to all counts except Count No. C on which ground the cause was tried. The trial was had before a jury. After the presentation of the relator’s case, the respondent rested and offered no additional evidence. We will treat later the respondent’s failure to carry forward the proof.

The court first gave the jury respondent’s requested charge No. 1, which was the general affirmative charge with hypothesis. After the jury had retired and begun their deliberations, the court recalled the jury, withdrew its prior instruction, and gave the respondent’s second requested charge, which was the general affirmative charge without hypothesis. Without retiring, the jury reached a verdict for the respondent on which judgment was rendered.

We must first consider the rulings of the cou^t on the relator’s motion for the trial judge to recuse himself. The first ground of that motion relates to Judge Fite’s connection with the firm of Fite and Fite, which firm was retained by the Board of Revenue at the time of the respondent’s original appointment to the board. It does not appear from the record nor is it contended that Judge Fite, during such time, rendered any legal service in connection with the respondent’s appointment or his subsequent occupancy of the office of member of the Board of Revenue. Nor does it appear that because of his former representation of the Board of Revenue that Judge Fite had any interest in the subject matter of this quo warranto proceeding. We, therefore, hold that the mere fact that Judge Fite did, at a prior time, represent the Board of Revenue is insufficient, in and of itself, to require him to recuse himself in the trial of this cause. State ex rel. Austin v. City of Mobile, 248 Ala. 467, 28 So.2d 177.

The second ground of the motion is directed to the fact that Circuit Judge Fite is the son of one of the counsel fof the respondent, and that the father is, and has. been for several years prior hereto, retained. by the Board of Revenue of Walker County as legal counsel. The Code of Alabama 1940, Title 13, Section 6, provides in part that “No judge of any court, * * * must sit in any cause or proceeding in which he is interested, or related to either party within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, * * The determinative question here presented is whether Mr. Arthur Fite, Sr., the father of the trial judge, is a “party” within the meaning of the above cited Code section. The relator relies on the case of Gulf States Steel Co. v. Christison, 228 Ala. 622, 154 So. 565. As we view that case, however, it furnishes artthority only for the proposition that an attorney is a “party” when he is directly interested in the subject matter of the suit, as for example, where he is employed on a contingent fee payable out of the judgment recovered. It is self-evident that all attorneys are “interested” in the outcome of their client’s case. There is, however, a most important distinction between an “interest in the outcome of the case” and interest in the subject matter of the suit which would bring an attorney within the purview of Title 13, Section 6, above. If we are to find an interest in the subject matter of the suit by Mr. Fite, Sr., it must necessarily result from his employment by the Board of Revenue; and we must further assume, and find as a fact, that the outcome of the present proceeding would have a direct bearing on his continued employment by the Board. The authorities cited by the appellant do not support the conclusion that Mr. Fite, Sr., was a “party” to the case in the present circumstances. It is our opinion that the possible effect on future employment of this attorney is too remote an interest in the outcome of the litigation to establish Mr. Fite, Sr., as a “party” within the statutory prohibition. We, therefore, conclude that the court below did not err in its ruling on appellant’s motion to require the trial judge to recuse himself.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 2d 674, 264 Ala. 596, 1956 Ala. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smith-v-deason-ala-1956.