Kristin M. PERRY; Sandra B. Stier; Paul T. Katami; Jeffrey J. Zarrillo, Plaintiffs-Appellees, City and County of San Francisco, Plaintiff-Intervenor-Appellee, v. Arnold SCHWARZENEGGER, in his official capacity as Governor of California; Edmund G. Brown, Jr., in his official capacity as Attorney General of California; Mark B. Horton, in his official capacity as Director of the California Department of Public Health & State Registrar of Vital Statistics; Linette Scott, in her official capacity as Deputy Director of Health Information & Strategic Planning for the California Department of Public Health; Patrick O‘Connell, in his official capacity as Clerk-Recorder for the County of Alameda; Dean C. Logan, in his official capacity as Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk for the County of Los Angeles, Defendants, and Dennis Hollingsworth; Gail J. Knight; Martin F. Gutierrez; Hak-Shing William Tam; Mark A. Jansson; ProtectMarriage.com-Yes on 8, A Project of California Renewal, as official proponents of Proposition 8, Defendants-Intervenors-Appellants.
No. 10-16696
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
Jan. 4, 2011
909
See also 591 F.3d 1147.
Ronald P. Flynn, Therese Stewart, Chief Deputy City, Christine Van Aken, Deputy
Tamar Pachter, Deputy Attorney General, Daniel Powell, Deputy Attorney General, California Department of Justice, San Francisco, CA, Andrew W. Stroud, Mennemeier, Glassman & Stroud LLP, Sacramento, CA, Kenneth C. Mennemeier, Jr., Mennemeier, Glassman & Stroud LLP, Sacramento, CA, Claude Franklin Kolm, Esquire, Oakland, CA, Judy W. Whitehurst, Principal Deputy County Counsel, Los Angeles, CA, for Defendants.
Jesse Panuccio, David Thompson, Charles J. Cooper, Nicole Jo Moss, Peter A. Patterson, Cooper & Kirk, PLLC, Washington, DC, James Andrew Campbell, Litigation Staff Counsel, Alliance Defense Fund, Scottsdale, AZ, Andrew P. Pugno, Law Offices of Andrew P. Pugno, Folsom, CA, Terry L. Thompson, Law Office of Terry L. Thompson, Alamo, CA, for Defendants-Intervenors-Appellants.
Before: STEPHEN REINHARDT, MICHAEL DALY HAWKINS, and N. RANDY SMITH, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge.
Shortly before the hearing of this appeal, the defendants-intervenors-appellants (“Proponents“) requested that I recuse myself under
I
The chief basis for the recusal motion appears to be my wife‘s beliefs, as expressed in her public statements and actions, both individually and in her capacity as Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California (ACLU/SC). She has held that position for 38 years, during 20 of which we have been married, although over one year ago she announced her retirement effective next month.
My wife‘s views, public or private, as to any issues that may come before this court, constitutional or otherwise, are of no consequence. She is a strong, independent woman who has long fought for the principle, among others, that women should be evaluated on their own merits and not judged in any way by the deeds or position in life of their husbands (and vice versa). I share that view and, in my opinion, it reflects the status of the law generally, as well as the law of recusal, regardless of whether the spouse or the judge is the male or the female. My position is the same in the specific case of a spouse whose views are expressed in the capacity of an
Proponents’ contention that I should recuse myself due to my wife‘s opinions is based upon an outmoded conception of the relationship between spouses. When I joined this court in 1980 (well before my wife and I were married), the ethics rules promulgated by the Judicial Conference stated that judges should ensure that their wives not participate in politics. I wrote the ethics committee and suggested that this advice did not reflect the realities of modern marriage—that even if it were desirable for judges to control their wives, I did not know many judges who could actually do so (I further suggested that the Committee would do better to say “spouses” than “wives,” as by then we had as members of our court Judge Mary Schroeder, Judge Betty Fletcher, and Judge Dorothy Nelson). The committee thanked me for my letter and sometime later changed the rule.2 That time has passed, and rightly so. In 2011, my wife and I share many fundamental interests by virtue of our marriage, but her views regarding issues of public significance are her own, and cannot be imputed to me, no matter how prominently she expresses them.3 It is her view, and I agree, that she has the right to perform her professional duties without regard to whatever my views may
Nor can I accept the argument that my wife‘s views constitute an “interest” that could warrant my recusal under
II
A
Proponents additionally suggest that I must recuse myself due to specific ACLU/SC litigation activities. I have long had a policy regarding any conceivable conflict that might result from such activities. I do not participate in any actions by this court when the organization of which my wife is the Executive Director makes any appearance or files any brief, amicus or otherwise, before this court. The clerk‘s office was notified of this policy many years ago and it has been implemented in numerous cases. In fact, it is impossible to know how many times I have actually recused myself from such cases because the Clerk‘s office automatically assigns cases covered by my policy to panels of which I am not a member rather than to a panel I am on, as a result of this directive. Later, if there is an en banc call, I advise the Clerk to record the fact that I am recused and to notify the court.
In regard to the ACLU/SC‘s past litigation activities, Proponents first argue that my recusal is required due to the ACLU/SC‘s participation in prior California state court cases pertaining to same-sex marriage. These were cases that did not involve the federal constitutional issue raised in the case before us—the only substantive issue presented here. Recusal is not required merely because a relative was or is involved in other litigation concerning the same general subject matter that is before the court. See Microsoft Corp. v. United States, 530 U.S. 1301, 121 S.Ct. 25, 147 L.Ed.2d 1048 (2000) (statement of Rehnquist, C.J.) (declining to recuse from Microsoft antitrust case under either
Proponents further argue that my recusal is required due to the ACLU/SC‘s limited activities in the court below. Proponents rely on two connections to the litigation that is now before this court. The first such action to which Proponents point is that my wife and the ACLU/SC‘s then-legal director attended a meeting with one of Plaintiffs’ lawyers and a supporter of Plaintiffs’ lawsuit prior to the filing of that action in the district court. At that meeting the ACLU/SC was asked to support the lawsuit and vigorously declined. Surely, that provides no cause for my recusal.
The second is that recusal is required because the ACLU/SC ultimately joined in two amicus briefs and an unsuccessful intervention motion—the latter on behalf of
This limited participation in the district court does not endow my wife or the ACLU-SC with any “interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding.”
B
Nor does
it is unreasonable to interpret
§ 455(a) (unless the language requires it) as implicitly eliminating a limitation explicitly set forth in§ 455(b) . It would obviously be wrong, for example, to hold that “impartiality could reasonably be questioned” simply because one of the parties is in the fourth degree of relationship to the judge. Section 455(b)(5), which addresses the matter of relationship specifically, ends the disability at the third degree of relationship, and that should obviously govern for purposes of§ 455(a) as well.
Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 553, 114 S.Ct. 1147, 127 L.Ed.2d 474 (1994). Congress gave careful consideration to the question of when a judge must recuse himself due to a relative‘s participation and, in
That is not to say that there could be no special factors or unforeseeable circumstances that might render
III
It is, indeed, important that judges be and appear to be impartial. It is also
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge
Notes
When I first became a judge, I acquainted my wife with then-applicable 1972 ABA Model Code, which provided that a judge “should encourage members of his [note the archaic “his“] family to adhere to the same standards of political conduct that apply to him.” My wife, a well-known political activist at that time, responded: “Consider me encouraged,” and went on to lead some statewide and national campaigns. The encouragement to adhere to judicial conduct rules now applies only in regard to the judge‘s own political campaign.
Roger J. Miner, Judicial Ethics in the Twenty-First Century: Tracing the Trends, 32 Hofstra L.Rev. 1107, 1130-31 (2004) (brackets in original).