Appellant Sasser appealed from an entry of default judgment and an award of damages against him in a civil action alleging that he illegally altered, brokered, purchased and sold Delta Air Lines tickets and Delta Frequent Flyer Program awards constituting tortious interference with business relations. In an unpublished opinion, this panel of the court affirmed the district court’s entry of default judgment. A petition for panel rehearing is pending, and is being denied by separate order filed simultaneously herewith. Sasser has also filed a letter which we construe to be a motion to recuse one of the judges on the panel on the ground that such judge has accumulated and used credits in Delta’s Frequent Flyer Program. Because all three judges on this рanel have personal accounts in the Delta Frequent Flyer Program, we also construe Sasser’s motion as a mоtion to recuse all three judges. For the following reasons, we deny Sasser’s motion for recusal.
The frequent flyer account which is accumulated in the name of any airline passenger is part and parcel of the services which the рassenger buys when he or she buys an airline ticket. The price of the ticket pays for any addition to a frequent flyer account just as it pays for the air transportation and other services purchased. We readily conclude that such а frequent flyer account does not represent a gift.
We conclude that a frequent flyer account is not a “finanсial interest” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 455(b)(4) and (d)(4). Rather, it results from a consumer transaction in the ordinary course of doing business with a common carrier. It is analogous to a credit which would arise under the following hypothetical circumstances: a national fast food chain issues cards which can be punched whenever a hamburger is purchased; after the purchase of fifteen hamburgers, the customer is entitled to one free hamburger. Both the hamburger customer and the passenger with a frequent flyеr account have a credit which can be used at some future time. We are satisfied that neither transaction would bе grounds for recusal.
A frequent flyer account is analogous to that of a “depositor in a mutual savings association” which is expressly excluded from the scope of “financial interests” unless the value of the interest could be substantially affеcted by the outcome of the ease.
See
28 U.S.C. § 455(d)(4)(iii) (the “interest ... of a depositor in a mutual savings association ... is a ‘financial interest’ in the organization only if the outcome of the proceeding could substantially affect the value of the intеrest.”). Indeed, § 455(d)(4)(iii) excludes from the scope of “financial interests” not only deposits in mutual savings accounts, but also a policyholder’s interest in a mutual insurance company, and “similar proprietary interesas]”.
1
It is clear beyond peradventure that the interest of the judges on this panel in their personal frequent flyer accounts could not be substantially affеcted by the outcome of the instant case. The subject matter at issue in the instant case is not the viability of Delta’s Frequеnt Flyer Program, but merely a single person’s alleged improper transactions involving frequent flyer awards. There is no indication in the briefs or record in this case that Sasser’s position in this litigation, if it prevailed, would jeopardize the viability of the entirе Delta Frequent Flyer Program.
2
Thus, it is clear that the
For the same reasons, the frequent flyer accounts of the judges on this panel are not disqualifying interests pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 455(b)(4) (disqualifying interest if a judge knows thаt he or she has “any other interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding”), or рursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 455(b)(5)(iii) (disqualifying interest if a judge knows that he or she has “an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding”).
Finally, we readily conclude that the judges on this panel do not have a disqualifying interest pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 455(a) (A “judge ... shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned”). 3 It is clear to us that no reasonable рerson could question the impartiality of the panel judges under the instant circumstances. If Sasser’s position were the рrevailing one, judges would be disqualified by the multitude of day-to-day consumer transactions, conducted in the ordinary course of the business of a vendor, in which judges must and do participate, as do all other citizens. Sasser’s position is clearly not the law, and we believe reasonable persons so understand.
Accordingly, Sasser’s motion for recusal of the panel judges is DENIED.
Notes
.
See Christiansen
v.
National Sav. and Trust Co.,
. If Sasser perceived that the viability of the entire program hung in the balance of this case, then he would have been required by the govern
. The Code of Conduct for United States Judges also sets fоrth (in substantially identical language) each of the statutory recusal principles discussed in this opinion. The analysis and result is the same under the Code of Conduct.
