Appellant pled guilty to a charge of making terroristic threats and on July 21, 1978, received a five-year sentence to be served on probation, conditioned upon payment of a fine and regular monthly reporting to his probation officer. On October 17,1979, appellant was served with a petition for revocation of probation in which his probation officer alleged that “ [appellant] has not reported since the date of his sentence, July 21,1978, and has never made a payment on his fine.” On October 23,1979, a hearing was held. On that date the trial court ordered that appellant’s original sentence of probation be modified to include as condition thereof that he “take the PSE [Psychological Stress Evaluator] test every two (2) months.” Also, the trial court ordered that appellant’s probation be revoked and that he serve one year of his five-year sentence in jail. Appellant appeals.
1. Several enumerations of error relate to appellant’s motion to disqualify the trial judge from presiding at the revocation hearing. The motion was denied. The stated ground for the motion was the trial judge’s alleged bias and prejudice against appellant’s counsel which would prevent the judge from being impartial towards his client. This is not a ground for judicial disqualification. “Under Canon 3 C. (1) (a) of [the Georgia Code of Judicial Conduct], a judge should disqualify himself in a proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned, including but not limited to instances where he has a
personal bias or prejudice concerning a party...
Consequently, where bias or prejudice of a judge has been shown concerning a party, it is error for the judge to hear and decide the case.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Savage v. Savage,
The recent Supreme Court decision in
State v. Fleming,
However, in the instant case, assuming the truth of all facts alleged by the appellant, the grounds urged as a basis for disqualification — unlike those advanced in
Fleming
— are legally insufficient. Therefore, the
Fleming
requirement that the motion be heard by another judge was not activated. The district attorney’s affidavit in
Fleming
submitted in support of the motion to disqualify contained some twenty-nine allegations of prejudicial actions taken by the trial judge against the district attorney
in the pending case.
Under such circumstances, judicial prejudice against counsel, who is acting as the legal representative of a party, could vicariously result
We do not believe Fleming stands for the proposition that allegations of judicial prejudice against counsel based upon events or circumstances occurring outside the ambit of the then pending action are sufficient grounds for disqualification of the judge. To hold that such allegations of judicial prejudice against counsel based upon circumstances of no relevance to the pending case is a sufficient ground for disqualification would mean, in effect, that an attorney, who represents numerous clients in various civil and criminal matters, can transfer this “prejudice” from client to client so as to disqualify the judge from hearing the cases of parties against whom no bias is shown but who merely happen to be represented by this counsel. This could, we fear, result in an unfortunate potential “judge shopping” situation, seriously undercutting the administration of justice in this state. We, therefore, decline to hold that such extraneous allegations of judicial prejudice against counsel is a ground for judicial disqualification and a “benefit” of the employment which counsel can offer to his clients, resulting in a possible limitation on the exercise by trial judges of their jurisdictional duties and powers. There is too much potential in such a holding for abuse in encouraging the development of prejudicial relationships between the bar and bench of this state for purposes which frustrate rather than nurture the ends of impartial judicial administration.
For the reasons stated, we find there was no error in denying the motion to disqualify or in failing to have the motion heard before another judge. Nor was it error for the trial court to deny the motion for continuance in order that witnesses be subpoenaed to testify on the motion. The testimony of these as yet unsubpoenaed witnesses
Furthermore, our careful review of the transcript of the revocation hearing demonstrates absolutely no indication that the trial judge was in any way prejudiced against counsel, or against appellant or his case.
Cochran v. State,
2. Under
Taylor v. State,
3. The evidence supports the finding that appellant was in violation of the terms and conditions of his probation in that he failed to pay the fine and failed to report to his probation officer.
4. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s modification of his probation to include as a condition thereof submission to the psychological stress evaluator test every two months. It is urged that this condition violates appellant’s Fifth Amendment privileges against compelled self-incrimination.
We note that appellant’s
original
sentence of probation contained the following special condition: “Probationer shall submit to and cooperate with a lie detector test, psychological stress evaluation, and/or psychometric tests at any timé, and from time to time, whenever so directed by the Probation Supervisor or any other law enforcement officer.” Appellant signed this stipulation, indicating that he had read the conditions of his probation, that he understood them and also understood the consequences of failure to abide by them and that he freely and voluntarily accepted the conditions and agreed to abide by them as a condition of probation. Thus the instant modification of his probation did no more than specify a certain time — every two months — and a certain test — psychological stress evaluator — with reference to a special
“The probation and suspension statutes in Georgia vest broad discretion in trial judges. In the absence of express authority to the contrary, we see no logical reason why any reasonable condition imposed for probation or suspension of a sentence by a trial court should not be approved. Probated and suspended sentences, upon reasonable conditions, have traditionally been used by trial judges in Georgia as effective tools of rehabilitation and serve a useful purpose in appropriate cases as an alternative to confinement. [Cits.]” State v. Collett, 232 Ga. 668 , 670 (208 SE2d 472 ) (1974). We find no Georgia decisions dealing with the issue here — whether submission to lie detector tests is a reasonable condition of probation. However, we are persuaded by the analysis of this question in another jurisdiction that such a condition is in fact “reasonable” as against the attacks made by appellant. In the first instance, conditioning probation upon submission to a lie detector test does not violate Fifth Amendment rights of a probationer. “The intrusion into the area of self-incrimination is no greater [than a requirement that a probationer answer all reasonable inquiries of his probation officer]; its main function appears to be the added psychological factor that if the probationer fails to tell the truth, he will be detected. Such purpose would be in furtherance of a successful probation. Accordingly, we hold that a condition requiring the probationer to submit to polygraph tests does not violate the defendants’ Fifth Amendment rights, and that the condition may be imposed, in the discretion of the trial judge, with no more than a general finding of the court that it is reasonably necessary to accomplish the purpose of probation.” State v. Age,590 P2d 759 , 763 (Or. App. 1979). Compare Inman v. State,124 Ga. App. 190 (183 SE2d 413 ) (1971). And furthermore, under the facts of the instant case, it is clear that by consenting to the original probationary conditions, appellant has waived his Fifth Amendment rights and may not now object. State v. Wilson,521 P2d 1317 (Or. App. 1974) (cert. den.420 U. S. 910 , 95 SC 829, 42 LE2d 839 (1975)). Thus, we find the requirement that appellant submit to a Psychological Stress Evaluator test every two months a valid condition of his probation.
Judgment affirmed.
