Spalding County filed its complaint in Spalding Superior Court against Tim C. Cramer as judge of the State Court of Spalding County and against the clerk of the state court. The county sought a declaratory judgment to determine whether Judge Cramer had the authority to appoint an additional judge and an assistant solicitor
In 1989 a crisis arose in the State Court of Spalding County (“State Court”) due to a heavy caseload and speedy trial demands in DUI cases transferred from municipal court. Judge Cramer entered an order in March 1989 appointing an interim second judge and an assistant solicitor. The authority of the assistant solicitor to serve was immediately challenged in a quo warranto action which the superior court dismissed prior to any hearing. The county attorney researched the quo warranto action and advised the county regarding the funding of the two positions on a temporary basis. At its April meeting, the county commission approved the appointment and funding for both positions as interim positions. The second judge and assistant solicitor helped try the defendants who had demanded speedy trials and whose cases were completed in the August term of court.
In September 1989, Judge Cramer issued a second order appointing a “Judge Pro Tern of the State Court of Spalding County up and until further order of said Court”; he ordered the appointment of a new assistant solicitor in November 1989 to fill “an emergency need.” He wrote the county commission that the State Court’s increasing caseload mandated the appointments. After the county refused to fund the positions, in January 1990 Judge Cramer ordered the clerk of the state court to create the “State Court of Spalding County Contingent Expense Fund” and withhold from the county treasury monies arising from fines and forfeitures that the State Court collected.
Two weeks later, the county filed this action. Judge Cramer, the judge pro tern, and the assistant solicitor moved to disqualify the county attorney on the basis of conflict of interest. They argued that he supported the authority of the state court to make the appointments in the quo warranto action and was now taking the contrary position.
Motion To Disqualify The County Attorney
1. A lawyer is disqualified from representing “a client against a former client in an action that is of the same general subject matter, and grows out of an event that occurred
during the time
of such representation.”
Crawford W. Long Mem. Hosp. v. Yerby,
Dismissal Of County’s Declaratory Judgment Action
2. The trial court dismissed the county’s complaint on the grounds that Judge Cramer’s orders were final judgments that the county failed to appeal, citing
Darden v. Ravan,
OCGA § 9-4-2 (a) provides for declaratory judgments in “cases of actual controversy.” The words “actual controversy” mean a justiciable controversy where there are interested parties asserting adverse claims on an accrued set of facts.
Lott Investment Corp. v. City of Waycross,
Authority Of State Court Judges
3. Judge Cramer cites three possible sources for his authority to appoint and pay an assistant judge and assistant solicitor — OCGA §§ 15-7-25 (a) and 15-1-9.1 (b), Unif. Superior Ct. R. 42.1, and the inherent power of the courts. None of these sources gives him power to create judicial offices, make indefinite appointments to them, and then finance the positions with court funds.
(a) A chief judge may make a written request for assistance to another judge if the requesting court determines that the court’s business requires “the temporary assistance” of an additional judge. OCGA § 15-1-9.1 (b) (1) (1989 Supp.). 2 When Judge Cramer sought assistance in 1989, the statute required him to identify the time period for which assistance was sought and, if applicable, the specific cases. OCGA § 15-1-9.1 (c) (1989 Supp.) (deleted 1990). 3 The statute did not give him the power as chief judge to order the indefinite appointment of an additional judge.
Moreover, the uniform rules require the judge requesting the assistance of a senior judge to issue a certificate of need “which shall include an order of appointment giving the scope and tenure of such requested
(b) OCGA § 15-7-25 authorizes a retired judge or judge emeritus of a state court to serve as a state court judge upon the call of that court’s judge. This provision, however, does not obviate the need for a requesting judge to follow the procedure for seeking assistance outlined in § 15-1-9.1 and court rules.
4. A presiding judge has the authority to appoint a temporary solicitor when the solicitor is absent, indisposed, or disqualified. See OCGA § 15-18-5 (a) (1990); OCGA § 15-7-24 (g) (2) (1991 Supp.);
Horton v. State,
5. The final possible source of authority — the judiciary’s inherent power — also does not support Judge Cramer’s orders. We recently relied on this court’s inherent power to hold that state court judges affected by voting rights litigation may continue to exercise judicial power after their four-year term of office ends. See
Garcia v. Miller,
In this case, the judge usurped both legislative and executive functions of government when he made his appointments. The General Assembly has the power to establish by local law the number of judges for each state court and their status as full-time or part-time judges. OCGA § 15-7-20 (a). Local law also establishes the number, selection, and salaries of assistant solicitors. OCGA § 15-7-24 (a). The local act establishing the State Court of Spalding County provides for one part-time judge and one part-time solicitor. Act No. 304, Ga. L. 1987, p. 4527. Judge Cramer exceeded his inherent judicial power by appointing a second judge and an assistant solicitor for an
Nor does the inherent power of the courts permit the creation of an expense fund based on court fines under the facts of this case. State court judges and solicitors are compensated from county funds as provided by local law. OCGA §§ 15-7-22; 15-7-24 (d). Spalding County abolished the fee system in 1960, replacing it with the present system of compensating court officers with a salary. Act No. 746, Ga. L. 1960, p. 2756. By his order, Judge Cramer attempted to reestablish the fee system to pay the salaries of two court-appointed officials contrary to local ,law.
State court judges do not have the inherent power to order a county to pay for judicial positions. Only superior courts possess the inherent power to compel a county government to pay money for essential court functions. See OCGA § 15-6-24;
Grimsley,
We hold that a state court judge does not have the authority to order the indefinite appointment of assistant judges or solicitors whose positions are not authorized by local law or to finance those positions through a court-created fund comprised of monies withheld from the county treasury. Accordingly, we reverse the dismissal of this declaratory judgment action and remand it for the entry of an order consistent with this opinion.
Judgment affirmed in Case No. S91A0714.
Notes
Because we find this declaratory judgment action does not grow out of any event during the quo warranto action, we need not decide who the county attorney represented in the
quo warranto proceeding. The record is not clear concerning who his client was or the extent of his representation. The quo warranto petition was brought against only the first interim assistant solicitor; the assistant solicitor that Cramer appointed in November 1989 was a different person; and Judge Cramer was not a party to the quo warranto action. Furthermore, the county attorney never met with the assistant solicitor, filed a pleading, or attended a hearing before the trial court dismissed the action. Because the county attorney did not appear in court on behalf of the assistant solicitor, he cannot be disqualified under
Tilley v. King,
This subsection still applies when assistance is needed from a judge in the same county. OCGA § 15-1-9.1 (b) (2) (1990). If assistance is needed from a judge outside the county, a superior court judge or chief judge may make a request for judicial assistance to the administrative judge of the judicial administrative district where the requesting court is located. OCGA § 15-1-9.1 (b) (1) (1990).
The statute now requires the administrative judge of the district receiving the request for assistance to designate a judge to preside. The written designation, which applies only when the request is for a judge outside the county, shall identify “the time period covered, the specific case or cases for which assistance is sought if applicable, and the reason that assistance is needed.” OCGA § 15-1-9.1 (f) (1990).
