We must decide whether a statute of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) that earmarks civil and criminal fines imposed by the courts for a judicial building fund deprived Vincente Flores Kai-pat of due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution when he was fined by a judge of the CNMI superior court.
Kaipat was found guilty of various traffic offenses and was sentenced to a term of imprisonment, probation, and a fine. He challenged the fine on the ground that it was used as a source of funding for a new judicial complex pursuant to the Judicial Building Fund Act of 1990, 1 CMC § 3405, thereby creating an improper incentive for the court to levy fines and calling into question the impartiality of the trial judge in violation of Kaipat’s right to due process. The CNMI Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s denial of Kaipat’s motion to reconsider the fine in a published opinion. Commonwealth v. Kaipat, No. 94-041 (CNMI Sup.Ct. Aug. 3, 1995).
We have not previously considered the due process implications of a statute earmarking funds that are generated by fines imposed by courts for criminal offenses, but the United States Supreme Court has provided bookends in
Turney v. Ohio,
As we have jurisdiction over Kaipat’s timely appeal, 48 U.S.C. § 1824(a) and 1 CMC § 3103, we affirm.
I
The Judicial Building Fund Act of 1990, 1 CMC § 3405, 2 creates a special fund within the Department of Finance known as the “Judicial Building Fund.” It provides that all criminal and civil fines collected by Commonwealth courts and paid to the treasury are to be deposited and credited to the Fund. 1 CMC § 3405(a). The Fund was established “to pay the expenses to renovate and furnish existing Commonwealth judicial facilities in an aggregate amount not to exceed $250,000, and to construct and furnish a suitable building or buildings for the judicial branch of government.” 1 CMC § 3405(b). The Governor is charged with expending the Fund and “eonsult[ing] closely with the Chief Justice as to the needs and requirements of the judicial branch for the construction of the judicial facilities.” 1 CMC § 3405(e). Other funds may also be used by the Governor to build the facilities, and any funds left over after expenses and debts for the judicial complex have been paid will revert to the General Fund. 1 CMC § 3405(d), (e).
*576 Kaipat was sentenced on March 11, 1994, following his conviction by the court on two counts of driving under the influence of alcohol; two of reckless driving; two of refusal to submit to a breath test; and one count each of eluding a police officer, disobeying a traffic sign, speeding, unsafe passing, and following a vehicle too closely. 3 For these offenses a defendant may be sentenced to time in custody and may be fined up to $5,350. 9 CMC §§ 5202, 5251, 5304, 5309, 7104-7106, 7111, 7112. Kaipat was sentenced to 60 days imprisonment, with 30 days suspended for one year; he was given two years probation; he was fined in the amount of $1,000; he was required to perform 100 hours of community service; his driver’s license was suspended for one year; and he was ordered to undergo counseling at the Commonwealth Health Center.
When Kaipat moved for reconsideration of the monetary portion of his sentence, claiming that it violated his due process rights, the superior court denied the motion after considering the standards that different courts have applied in determining whether a judge’s interest in the outcome of a case implicates due process. First, it noted that some courts have held that only a “direct, personal, substantial, pecuniary interest” violates due process.
4
The court concluded that under this standard, § 3405 does not create such an interest for judges to levy fines because the Judicial Building Fund was created solely for the purpose of constructing improved judicial facilities, not for paying any funds to any judge, and no judge has any control over expenditures from the Fund. The superior court next observed that other courts have focused on Tumey’s “possible temptation to the average man as a judge” standard.
5
The court concluded that § 3405 passes muster under this standard as well because actual construction of the new judicial complex depends on other funds, not on the comparatively much smaller sums deposited in the Judicial Building Fund. Finally, the superior court considered the “appearance of justice” test employed by the Court in
In re Murchison,
The CNMI Supreme Court affirmed, on somewhat different reasoning. In its view, the
Tumey
“direct, personal, substantial, pecuniary” standard has not been extended to other bases of recusal for judges,
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Lavoie,
After Kaipat’s sentencing but before the superior court’s decision on reconsideration, the legislature authorized a $15 million loan from the CNMI Retirement Fund for construction of the Judicial Complex. 6 The Judicial Building Financing Act of 1994, N.Mar. I.Pub.L. 9-3. Ground was broken for the new Saipan Judicial Complex March 5, 1995, and construction is currently underway.
II
A
Tumey, Dugan and Ward arose out of criminal trials in mayors’ courts in Ohio where the mayor also served as judge. They offer the closest guidance for resolving the due process question in this case.
In
Tumey,
the mayor fined Tumey $100 after convicting him for unlawfully possessing liquor. By statute, the mayor was entitled to retain his costs (in addition to his regular salary) as compensation for hearing liquor cases if the defendant was convicted; there was no other way the mayor could be paid for his service as judge. Half of the fines assessed in the “liquor court” went to the village of North College Hill to be used partly to pay marshals and detectives who secured convictions and who were supervised by the mayor, and partly for improvements and repairs to the village (where the mayor owned a house). Also by statute, the mayor was the village’s chief executive officer and was charged with looking after the finances of the village as well as running the liquor court. Some $11,000 of the fines collected between May and December 1923 went to the village and $696 directly to the mayor. The Court held that Tumey was denied due process of law for two reasons. First, due process was violated because the judge had “a direct, personal, substantial, pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him in his case.”
7
Tumey,
*577 [ejvery procedure which would offer a possible temptation to the average man as a judge to forget the burden of proof required to convict the defendant, or which might lead him not to hold the balance nice, clear and true between the State and the accused, denies the latter due process of law.
*578
One year later, the Supreme Court limited
Turney’s
second ground in
Dugan v. Ohio,
[ t]he mayor of Xenia receives a salary which is not dependent on whether he convicts in any case or not. While it is true that his salary is paid out of a fund to which fines accumulated from his court under all laws contribute, it is a general fund, and he receives a salary in any event, whether he convicts or acquits. There is no reason to infer on any showing that failure to convict in any ease or cases would deprive him of or affect his fixed compensation. The mayor has himself as such no executive but only judicial duties. His relation under the Xenia charter, as one of five members of the city commission, to the fund contributed to by his fines as judge, or to the executive or financial policy of the city, is remote.
Id.
at 65,
The Court considered yet another mayor’s court in
Ward v. Village of Monroeville,
“[P]ossible temptation” may also exist when the mayor’s executive responsibilities for village finances may make him partisan to maintain the high level of contribution from the mayor’s court. This, too, is a “situation in which an official perforce occupies two practically and seriously inconsistent positions, one partisan and the other judicial, [and] necessarily involves a lack of due process of law in the trial of defendants charged with crimes before him.”
Id.
at 60,
Although not so closely on point, the Court has employed the “possible temptation” principle in other settings. For example, in
In re Murchison,
B
Kaipat argues that the situation with the Judicial Building Fund Act lies between Tu-mey and Dugan in that it does not involve the direct salary compensation benefit of Tu-mey, but does involve more than the complete lack of personal or work-related motivation in Dugan. He contends that Ward shows that due process can be violated through work-related partisan motivations even absent a direct, personal, substantial pecuniary interest. Kaipat emphasizes that he does not make a “bias and prejudice” argument, but rather maintains that the Judicial Building Fund Act impermissibly gives judges both a personal interest in the Fund, because completion of the Judicial Complex will improve their daily working conditions for the remainder of their terms, and “an official motive to convict and to graduate the fine” because the CNMI judiciary is dedicated to the development of the legal system in the CNMI and the CNMI needs the new judicial complex.
CNMI contends that this case is more like Dugan than Tumey since none of the judges has any direct, personal, substantial, pecuniary interest in the fine; no judge has any control over the Fund; the judges’ salary is fixed by statute and is paid without regard to fines; judges have no executive functions, only judicial functions; judges are not responsible for raising revenue; and the average judge would not be tempted by the possibility that the Governor will someday spend the Fund along with other monies on a judicial complex.
As the Court has recognized, when a judge’s interest in the outcome of a case is constitutionally disqualifying cannot be defined with any precision. However, the circumstances and relationships involved here indicate that the superior court judge who imposed Kaipat’s fine had no “direct, personal, substantial, pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him in his case.”
Tumey,
To be sure, judges are only human and (along with the public, litigants and attorneys) will no doubt welcome courthouse facilities that are more comfortable, efficient and secure — if and when they are built, and if the judges are still in office to serve in them. However, this kind of interest is too contingent and speculative and insubstantial to constitute the direct stake in the outcome of a case that is constitutionally infirm.
Unlike the mayor of North College Hill in Tumey and the mayor of Monroeville in Ward, CNMI judges have no responsibility for the financial condition of the Northern Mariana Islands and no official motive to improve it. The legislature, not any judge in any capacity, has the duty of raising and appropriating funds for all government operations, including the courts. Nor is the CNMI superior court a special court (like the Ohio liquor courts), set up to enforce a specific law (like the Prohibition Act); the courts will exist whether or not persons accused of traffic offenses are prosecuted, tried, convicted, sentenced, or fined. Nor do CNMI judges hold any other position that permits them to control municipal or state policy with respect to establishing courts and enforcing particular laws, or which gives to them any interest in accumulating a fund by which other obligations (like the mayor’s in Tumey of making village improvements and reducing taxes) could be met.
However, CNMI judges, as judges, undeniably do have, and perhaps inherently by virtue of their positions should have, an interest in adequate facilities for the administration of justice. The question is, does this become a constitutionally disqualifying interest if the legislature has decided to earmark funds that come into the general treasury from fees and fines imposed in all cases, civil and criminal, for judicial facilities? For a number of reasons, we cannot believe that any judge would impose an unjustified or unreasonable fine to increase the odds that enough money would be collected overall to build a courthouse.
In general, all criminal and civil fees and fines collected by Commonwealth courts go to the Commonwealth treasury. 1 CMC § 3251. In 1990 the Legislature decided to earmark these particular sources for courthouse construction. Apart from the fact that there is a certain users’ logic to this decision, the legislature could just as easily have decided, or for all that appears in the record, could decide at any time, to earmark these same fees and fines for a new state capítol, for victims of crime, for health care, for prosecuting people who run red lights, or for any other purpose that the political branches deem worthy. As
Tumey
makes clear, “it is completely within the power of the legislature to dispose of the fines collected in criminal eases as it will ...”
Tumey,
This is not the case here. While the Chief Justice of the CNMI Supreme Court, as the administrative head of the judiciary, submits budget requests and is consulted by the Governor on matters having to do with the judicial branch (including construction of the new judicial complex), 1 CMC §§ 3401, 3402, 3405(c), no judge has any responsibility for or control over monies in the Judicial Building Fund. Expenditures from that Fund, including when or whether there are any, and for what kind of improvement, are up to the Governor.
Although the fine in any individual case is certainly consequential to the person having to pay it, the fact that it and all other fines are earmarked for courthouse construction does not make them consequential to the judges in rendering their judicial decisions. It is not reasonable to assume that a CNMI judge might be tempted to impose a fine, or to impose a higher fine, to enhance the prospects of building a building or building a building sooner rather than later. Not only does the judge have no control over whether or when or how the monies in the Fund are *582 spent, but as the legislature found in 1994, the cost of a new judicial complex for which funds were earmarked in 1990 will be plus or minus $15 million. Even in 1994, fees and fines were not expected to yield more than $700,000-800,000 per year. In addition, the 1990 Act itself indicates that monies from other sources could be used for judicial building improvements; in fact, they were. 10
Therefore, by contrast with
Turney
and
Ward,
and by comparison with
Dugan,
Kai-pat has failed to show that the judge’s situation is one “which would offer a possible temptation to the average man as a judge,”
Tumey,
For these reasons we conclude that Kai-pat’s right to due process was not violated.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. To some extent, as we shall explain,
infra,
[578-80], the Court has filled in the middle in
Ward v. Village of Monroeville,
. The Act provides in full:
(a)There is hereby established a special fund within the Department of Finance which shall be known and designated as the Judicial Building Fund. Commencing on March 15, 1991, all criminal and civil fines and all revenues collected by the courts of the Commonwealth pursuant to section 3403 of this chapter [rule-making authority] or fines or fees collected pursuant to any other law and remitted or paid to the Commonwealth treasury pursuant to 7 CMC § 3206 [providing for monthly remission of fees] and 7 CMC § 3251 [providing for fines to be paid into the Commonwealth Treasury] shall be deposited and credited to the Judicial Building Fund.
(b)The purpose of the Judicial Building Fund shall be to pay the expenses to renovate and furnish existing Commonwealth judicial facilities in an aggregate amount not to exceed $250,000, and to construct and furnish a suitable building or buildings for the judicial branch of the government. The expenses, including those necessary for the renovation of existing Commonwealth judicial facilities, shall include, but not be limited to:
(1) The costs of professional assistance for planning, engineering and architectural services;
(2) Site acquisition;
(3) The cost of construction of the building or buildings; and
(4) The furnishing of the building or buildings, including any equipment, law books or other items necessary to make the facilities fully functional for the operations of the judicial branch.
(c) The Judicial Building Fund shall be expended by the Governor according to division 7 of this title [Governmental Planning, Budgeting, and Auditing]. The Governor shall consult closely with the Chief Justice as to the needs and requirements of the judicial branch for the construction of the judicial facilities.
(d) In order to expedite the construction of the judicial facility, the Governor may use the Judicial Building Fund as collateral for the advancement of architectural, design and construction services. Other funds properly allocated pursuant to local or federal law may also be used by the Governor to augment the Judicial Building Fund for the completion of the judicial facilities.
(e) Upon certification by the Director of Finance that all expenses and debts for the judicial facility have been paid in full and discharged, the Judicial Building Fund shall cease to exist and any funds remaining therein shall be deposited in the General Fund, and from the date of certification all further revenue produced by the courts of the Commonwealth shall be deposited in the General Fund.
. Because Kaipat concedes that the evidence of guilt was overwhelming, he makes no argument that the judge’s finding of guilt was also tarnished by the due process violation.
.
Tumey,
.Tumey,
. In enacting the 1994 Act, the legislature found that the projected income from revenue collected by the CNMI judiciary is between $700,000 and $800,000 per year; that debt service for a loan of $14.8 million for 15 years at 7.5% is $1,646,374 per annum, representing a shortfall of some $846,000 to $946,000 per year that the judicial branch cannot carry; and that the Legislature will have to fund this amount yearly from the General Fund. The 1994 Act accordingly directs the Director of Finance to repay the loan out of the General Fund to the extent that it is not paid out of the Judicial Building Fund. The trial court's memorandum decision denying Kaipat’s motion to reconsider the tine refers to these legislative findings in support of its view that no superior court judge would reasonably believe that marginal increases in the size of the Fund would hasten completion of the complex, affecting his judgment as to the size of a fine in a criminal case.
. As the Court explained:
All questions of judicial qualification may not involve constitutional validity. Thus matters of kinship, personal bias, state policy, remoteness of interest, would seem generally to be matters merely of legislative discretion. But it certainly violates the Fourteenth Amendment, and deprives a defendant in a criminal case of due process of law, to subject his liberty or property to the judgment of a court the judge of which has a direct, personal, substantial, pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him in his case.
Tumey,
. As Chief Justice Taft, who also delivered the opinion for the Court in Tumey, explained Tu-mey 's second basis:
[ A] defendant brought into court might with reason complain that he was not likely to get a fair trial or a fair sentence from a judge who as chief executive was responsible for the financial condition of the village, who could and did largely control the policy of setting up a liquor court in the village with attorneys, marshals and detectives under his supervision, and who by his interest as mayor might be tempted to accumulate from heavy fines a large fund by which the running expenses of a small village could be paid, improvements might be made and taxes reduced.
Dugan, 277
U.S. at 65,
. In that context the Court explained:
A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due process. Fairness of course requires an absence of actual bias in the trial of cases. But our system of law has always endeavored to prevent even the probability of unfairness. To this end no man can be a judge in his own case and no man is permitted to try cases where he has an interest in the outcome. That interest cannot be defined with precision. Circumstances and relationships must be considered. This Court has said, however, that "every procedure which would offer a possible temptation to the average man as a judge ... not to hold the balance nice, clear and true between the State and the accused, denies the latter due process of law.” Tumey v. Ohio,273 U.S. 510 , 532 [47 S.Ct. 437 , 444,71 L.Ed. 749 ]. Such a stringent rule may sometimes bar trial by judges who have no actual bias and who would do their very best to weigh the scales of justice equally between contending parties. But to perform its high function in the best way "justice must satisfy the appearance of justice.” Offutt v. United States,348 U.S. 11 , 14 [75 S.Ct. 11 , 13,99 L.Ed. 11 ] [ (clash between the presiding judge and defendant colored the course of the tried with personal overtones) ].
Murchison,
. Although the trial judge did not know that other funds would actually be used at the time of Kaipat's sentence, he did before he rendered his decision on Kaipat's motion to reconsider the fíne as the Judicial Building Financing Act of 1994 had been enacted by then.
