Duncan v. Atlantic Coast Line R.

223 F. 446 | S.D. Ga. | 1915

LAMBDIN, District Judge.

The question here presented is whether the presiding judge is disqualified from hearing the- above-stated case on account of the fact that before his appointment as District Judge the law firm of which he was then a member was local counsel for defendant railroad company in Ware county, Ga.; the employment of said firm being restricted to the counties of Ware and Charlton. He had no connection with the case at bar, which was originally brought in the city court of Savannah and removed to this court, and knew nothing of said case until he reached it on the docket.

[ 1 ] At common law there existed no ground for the disqualification of a judge. Blackstone in his Commentaries stated that the law of England in his time was as follows:

“By the laws of England also, in tbe times of Bracton and Fleta, a judge might be refused, but now the law is otherwise, and it is held that judges and justices cannot be challenged. For the law will not suppose a possibility of bias or favor in a judge who is already sworn to administer impartial justice and whose authority greatly depends upon that presumption and idea.” 3 Bl. Com. 361; Co. Litt. 294; 23 Cyc. 575.

It is by statute that a judge is declared to be disqualified in particular instances, and, as a general rule, the statutory grounds of disqualification are exclusive. Elliott v. Hipp, 134 Ga. 844, 848, 68 S. E. 736, 137 Am. St. Rep. 272, 20 Ann. Cas. 423; Luke v. Batts, 11 Ga. App. 783 (3), 76 S. E. 165; 17 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, pp. 738, *447740. In order to decide the question under consideration, it is therefore necessary to consider the statute of the United States governing such matters. This is to be found in section 20 of the Judicial Code of the United States, which is as follows:

“Whenever It appears that the judge of any District Court is any way concerned in interest in any suit pending therein, or has been of counsel or is a material witness tor either party, or is so related to or connected with either party as to render it improper, in his opinion, for him to sit on the trial, it shall be his duty, on application by either party, to cause the fact to be entered on the records of the court; and also an order that an authenticated copy thereof shall be forthwith certified to tiie senior Circuit Judge for said circuit then present in the circuit, and thereuxion such proceedings shall bo had as are provided in section fourteen.”

The presiding judge in this case is not “concerned in interest” in the pending suit, nor is lie “a material witness” therein, nor is he “related to or connected with either party” at tiie present time, so as to render it improper for him to sit at the trial of tiie ease.

But this section also prohibits a judge from presiding wiio “has been of counsel.” Tiie question involved here, therefore, is whether the expression last quoted means that a judge is disqualified who “lias been of counsel” at any time for a party to the cause, or whether he is disqualified only when he “has been of counsel” in tiie case to be tried. The use of the expression in question in connection with the context shows conclusively that the words “has been of counsel” are restricted to tiie suit under consideration. The language of the section is that:

“Whenever it appears that the judge of any District Court is any way concerned in interest in any suit pending therein or has been of counsel, or is a material witness for either party,” etc.

It is evident that the words “in any suit pending therein” are to be understood, at the end of the above excerpt from the section. As stated by the District Judge in the case of The Richmond (C. C.) 9 Fed. 863:

“The decisions, so far as I have been able to find, are unanimous that ‘of counsel’ means ‘of counsel for a party in that cause and in that controversy,’ and if either the cause or controversy is not identical the disqualification does not exist.”

In the absence of statute, judges are not disqualified, even by reason of having been counsel in a cause. 23 Cyc. 586; Lloyd v. Smith, T. U. P. Charlt. (Ga.) 143.

The Code of Georgia of 1910, § 4642, which covers substantially the same grounds of disqualification as the federal statute, clears up tiie question, by stating specifically that the judge must have been of counsel in tiie pending ease to be disqualified; the language of the section being as follows:

“No judge or justice of any court * ~ * can sit in any cause or proceeding in which lie is pecuniarily interested, or related to either party within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, nor in which he has been of counsel, nor in which he has presided in any inferior judicature when his ruling o? decision is the subject of review, without the consent of all the parties in interest; ITwided, that in all cases in which the presiding judge of the superior court may have been employed as counsel before his appoint*448.ment as judge, lie shall preside in such cases if the opposite party or counsel agree in writing that he may preside, unless the judge declines so to do.”

The Supreme Court of Georgia has decided the question here presented squarely in the following language:

“The fact that a judge of the superior court had formerly been a director •of a railroad company, and was so at the time that an attorney rendered professional services to the company, did not disqualify him from presiding at the trial of a suit for such services, if at that time he had ceased to be a director, owned no stock, and was not otherwise interested. It is present, not past, interest ’¿Vhich disqualifies a judge.” Johnson, Executrix, v. Marietta & North Georgia Railroad, 70 Ga. 712 (1).

The Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Carr v. Fife, 156 U. S. 494, 15 Sup. Ct. 427, 39 L. Ed. 508, also held as follows:

“The fact that a Circuit Judge, prior to his appointmént, had been counsel for one of the parties in matters not connected with the case on trial, does, not disqualify him from trying the cause.”

See, also, the case of Conyers v. Ford, Receiver, 111 Ga. 754, 36 S. E. 974; In re Nevitt, 117 Fed. 448, 451, 54 C. C. A. 622; 23 Cyc. 585; The Richmond (C. C.) 9 Fed. 863; and Ex parte N. K. Fairbank (D. C.) 194 Fed. 978, 987.

[2] The presiding judge in this case does not come within the letter or the spirit of the prohibition of the statute. He is not concerned in the pending litigation; he has no interest in it, and has never been ■connected with it in any way; he never was counsel in the case for either party, and is not related to or connected with either party; he has never heard of the casejjefore, and knows nothing about the facts ■or issues involved; and he feels that his mind is absolutely impartial between the parties to the c-ause, and that it is therefore neither illegal nor improper for him to preside at the trial of the case. He holds, therefore, that he is not disqualified.

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