State ex rel. Welfare Division v. Eighth Judicial District Court
This text of 462 P.2d 37 (State ex rel. Welfare Division v. Eighth Judicial District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
By the Court,
This is a petition by the State of Nevada on the relation of the Welfare Division of the Nevada State Department of Health, Welfare and Rehabilitation for (1) a writ of prohibition enjoining the Honorable Thomas J. O’Donnell, Presiding Judge of Department No. 4 of the Eighth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, from hearing an adoption proceeding pending in his court, on the grounds that the judge is biased and prejudiced; and (2) a writ of mandamus commanding Judge O’Donnell to disqualify himself and assign the case to another judge.
On May 22, 1969, Duglas T. White and Marilyn J. White filed in the Eighth Judicial District Court an adoption proceeding entitled, “IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF THREE MINORS BY DUGLAS T. AND MARILYN J. WHITE, HUSBAND AND WIFE, PETITIONERS.” A copy of the petition was served on Welfare as required by law. NRS 127.120, subsection 1. Welfare served a copy of its answer on the Whites by mail on June 17, 1969, and filed the original answer in the Clark County Clerk’s office on June 19, 1969. The Whites filed a motion for a preliminary injunction on June 16, and a copy of the motion was received by Welfare on June [644]*64417. Judge O’Donnell, as Master Calendar Judge, heard the motion for the preliminary injunction on June 20. (There was no prior notice that he was to hear it. In fact, it had been assigned to several departments and eventually marked off calendar on June 11.) Judge O’Donnell entered his ruling on the motion on June 23.
On June 24, the Whites filed a motion to amend their petition for adoption. Welfare received a copy of the motion and supporting papers on June 25. The motion came on for hearing on July 1 and was granted by consent of all parties. On July 22, counsel for Welfare telephoned Judge O’Donnell and requested the judge to disqualify himself; the judge declined to do so.
The following day, Welfare by its counsel mailed affidavits of prejudice to the clerk, the judge, and the Whites, as provided in NRS 1.230, subsection 5. The judge, however, has refused to step down, on the principal ground that the affidavits were not timely filed. This is the major issue presented on this appeal.
NRS 1.2301 sets forth the various grounds for disqualification of judges other than supreme court justices. Subsection 5 provides in part:
[645]*645“A judge shall not act as such if either party to a civil action in the district court shall file an affidavit alleging that the judge before whom the action is to be tried has a bias or prejudice either against him or in favor of an opposite party to the action.”
It is on this provision that Welfare predicates its position that Judge O’Donnell is disqualified from continuing to preside in the adoption proceedings.
Subsection 5, prior to April 1, 1969, also provided in part that: “Every affidavit must be filed before the hearing on any contested matter in the action has commenced, and if no contested matter has been heard in the action prior to the day of the trial thereof, then the affidavit must be filed at least 10 days before the date set for the trial of the action.” That provision of the statute was amended by the 1969 Legislature, and the following language, which became effective April 1, 1969, was substituted: “Every affidavit must be filed at least 10 days before the hearing of a contested matter if a judge has been assigned to hear such matter or, if a judge has not been assigned at least 10 days prior to such hearing, the affidavit must be filed when the party or his attorney is notified that a judge has been assigned to hear the matter.” (Emphasis added.)
[646]*646We interpret this amendment as an attempt by the Legislature to provide litigants in those districts operating under the master calendar system (Second and Eighth) with the same opportunity to exercise a “peremptory challenge” of a judge assigned to the case as is afforded to litigants in the single-judge districts or in nonmaster calendar districts where the cases receive a department assignment when filed, designating the judge of that department to hear the case. Prior to the 1969 amendment, the challenge was for all practical purposes not available in the master calendar districts when the assignment of the hearing or trial judge was not made by the master calendar judge until the date of hearing, because subsection 5 at that time required the litigant to file his challenging affidavit 10 days prior to the hearing. Under the 1969 amendment the affidavit may be filed “when the party or his attorney is notified that a judge has been assigned to hear the matter.” We hold that, once the party or his attorney is so notified and then proceeds with the hearing of a contested matter before that judge, the challenge of that judge under subsection 5 is waived, and the party is precluded from later exercising it as to that judge. Should the case thereafter be reassigned to another judge, a party may file a subsection 5 affidavit against the new judge, subject, of course, to the limitation of NRS 1.240, which precludes more than one change of judge under the procedure provided by subsection 5 of NRS 1.230.2
Since Judge O’Donnell had heard the motion for preliminary injunction and had granted the motion to amend the petition for adoption prior to petitioner’s challenge under subsection 5 of NRS 1.230, we hold that the affidavits were not timely filed; therefore the petition is denied.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
462 P.2d 37, 85 Nev. 642, 1969 Nev. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-welfare-division-v-eighth-judicial-district-court-nev-1969.