Pursuant to C.A.R. 21, we issued a rule to show cause why the respondent district court judge should not disqualify himself from hearing a motion for post-conviction relief in a criminal case in which he is alleged to be biased. We now make thе rule absolute.
I.
The petition for a writ of mandamus and the accompanying affidavits recite the following facts pertinent to our resolution of this original proceeding: In 1975, the peti
Estep’s attorneys went to the respondent’s chambers to schedule these matters for hearing, and the judge indicated that the crowded nature of his calendar would prevent the prompt hearing of Estеp’s motions. The respondent had reviewed the petitioner’s motion for post-conviction relief and supporting exhibits, which discussed Toole’s confession and his subsequent recantation of that confession. Whеn informed that the petitioner’s need to depose Lucas during his imminent presence in Colorado required that the matter be heard promptly, the respondent allegedly said, “I hope this witness is more credible thаn your other witness.” 2 The “other witness” referred to by the judge was Toole, who had subsequently recanted his confession to the murder for which Estep had been convicted. 3
Estep had also filed a motion for the apрointment of a special prosecutor on the ground that the district attorney had improperly obtained Toole’s recantation to avoid the adverse publicity attendant to a new trial for Estep. Following the hearing on that motion, the conduct of which Estep considered to be colored by the judge’s bias in favor of the prosecution and against the defense, Estep filed a motion to disqualify the respondent. The judge denied the recu-sal motion, ruling that the motion and accompanying affidavits were untimely and were legally insufficient to require disqualification. The petitioner then filed this original proceeding and we issued а rule to show cause.
II.
Crim.P. 21(b)(1) provides in part that:
(1) Within ten days after a case has been assigned to a court, a motion, verified and supported by affidavits of at least two credible persons not related to the defendant, may be filed with the court and served on the opposing party to have a substitution of the judge. Said motion may be filed after the ten-day period only if good cause is shown to the court why it was not filed within the original ten-day period. The motion shall be based on the following grounds:
(IV) The judge is in any way interested or prejudiced with respect to the case, the parties, or counsel.
Similarly, section 16-6-201(l)(d), 8 C.R.S. (1978), provides that a judge is disqualified to hear a сase if “[h]e is in any way interested or prejudiced with respect to the case, the parties, or counsel.”
We have previously noted that “[b]asic to our system of justice is the precept that a judge must be free of all taint of bias and partiality.”
People v. District Court,
A trial judge must “conduct himself at all times in a manner that рromotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.” A.B.A. Standards, The Function of the Trial Judge 1.5. Courts must meticulously avoid any appearance of partiality, not merely to secure the confidence of the litigants immediately involved, but “to retain public respect and secure willing and ready obedience to their judgments.” Nordloh v. Packard,45 Colo. 515 , 521,101 P. 787 , 790 (1909).
People v. District Court,
In assessing a motion to disqualify, a trial court is limited to an inquiry into the legal sufficiency of the motion and aсcompanying affidavits, and their timeliness. Thus, the trial judge engaging in this inquiry “cannot pass upon the truth or falsity of statements of fact in the motion and supporting affidavits.”
People v. District Court,
We have previously formulated the test for the legal sufficiency of the motion to disqualify as follows:
To be legally sufficient, the motion and affidavits must state facts from which it may reasonably be inferred that the judge has a bias or prejudice that will prevent him from dealing fairly with the defendant. The affidavits in support of the motion do not have to contain every essential fact which establishes the judge’s prejudice. It is sufficient if the affidavits verify the facts set forth in the motion.
People v. Botham,
In the present case, the facts alleged in the motion and the accompanying affidavits support the inference that the respondent’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned. The tenor and import of thе judge’s comment regarding the credibility of Estep’s prospective witnesses were such as to constitute a premature determination that the witnesses were not truthful and suggest a predisposition on the respondеnt’s part to deny the petitioner’s motion for post-conviction relief.
4
Such a predis
The rule is made absolute.
Notes
. The pеtitioner’s convictions were affirmed by this court in
People
v.
Estep,
. The respondent does not deny making the quoted statement. He states that he has no recollection of making the statement, but that if he did, "it was not intended to be nor was it taken seriously.”
.In his order denying the motion to disqualify, the trial judge stated that he had also learned of Toole's recantation of his earlier confession through the news media. However, at the time that the judge made this сomment, neither Toole nor Lucas had testified before him.
. The credibility of Estep’s witnesses is a critical issue to be resolved by the trial court at the hearing on the petitioner’s motion for post-conviction rеlief. In his ruling denying the petitioner's motion for disqualification, the respondent stated: "The importance of Toole’s credibility on the motion for a new trial and, if granted, during a new trial, is obvious.” Because we find the judge’s statеment regarding the credibility of potential witnesses to be legally sufficient to require disqualification, we need not evaluate the petitioner’s allegations concerning the conduct of the hearing on the mоtion for the appointment of a special prosecutor which were
. We agree that "[t]he opinion of the trial judge, after hearing the testimony, that the testimony of witnesses favorable to the defendant was not worthy of belief is not evidence of prejudice.”
State v. Little,
. We view the motion to disqualify to have been filed in a timely manner. When the motion for disqualification is not filed within the ten-day period allowed by Crim.P. 21(b), the standard for its timeliness is "whether the application is made as soon as possible after the occurrence or discovery of the facts which form the basis for the motion for substitution.”
People v. Botham,
