Duckworth moved that I recuse myself from participation on the panel assigned to review the merits of his appeal. The motion is denied.
I
After receiving an аdverse judgment in the district court, and filing the notice of appeal in this case, Duckworth filed a complaint of judicial misconduct against the district judge. The misconduct complaint, filed pursuant to the administrative procedures outlined in 28 U.S.C. § 372 and the Rules of the Judicial Council of the Ninth Circuit Governing Complaints of Judicial Misconduct or Disаbility (Misconduct Rules), charged the district judge with ignoring the facts and misapplying the law in Duckworth’s case.
The misconduct complaint came before me in my administrative capacity as Chief Judge of the Circuit and, thus, as presiding officer over the Judicial Council of the Ninth Circuit. The Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of 1980 requires the chief judge of thе circuit to review complaints of judicial misconduct.
See
28 U.S.C. § 372(c)(3). A complaint of judicial misconduct must be dismissed if it is directly related to the merits of a judge’s decision or procedural ruling.
See
28 U.S.C. § 372(c)(3)(A)(ii); Misconduct Rule 4(c)(2). Under the judicial misconduct procedure, relief cannot be provided from a ruling or judgment of a court.
See
Commentary to Misсonduct Rule 1. These rules rest on sound policy grounds because “[t]o determine whether a judge’s rulings were so legally indefensible as to mandate intervention would require the same type of legal analysis as is afforded on appeal.”
In re Charge of Judicial Misconduct,
I therefore dismissed the judicial misconduct complaint because the charges rеlated directly to the merits of the district judge’s decision, which were subject to review on appeal. In that order, I did not express any opinion regarding the merits оf the district judge's determinations. Rather, I held that it would be inappropriate for me to consider rulings, or Duckworth’s assignment of error to them, in the context of an administrаtive proceeding.
Duckworth has now filed an unsigned “Motion to Compel Court to Remove Chief *1142 Judge Wallace from Judicial Panel,” contending that my . dismissal of the judicial misconduct complaint demonstrates clear bias against his claim on appeal.
II
The legal standard for recusal lies in 28 U.S.C. § 455(a), which states that “[a]ny justice, judgе or magistrate of the United States shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” 28 U.S.C. § 455(b)(1) deals with charges of “personal bias or prеjudice” or “personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts,” none of which is alleged here. Duckworth has complained only of the official actiоn taken in dismissing his complaint of judicial misconduct. 28 U.S.C. § 144, which also addresses the issue of judicial bias or prejudice, applies on its face only to district judges.
The issue рosed by this motion is whether my dismissal of his misconduct complaint raises questions of partiality sufficient to require my recusal from the appellate panel hearing his case.
A.
In reviewing Duckworth’s misconduct complaint, I did become aware of his dissatisfaction with the district judge’s handling of the cáse. The misconduct complaint desсribed some of the actions that Duckworth believed to be erroneous. However, knowledge of the facts of a case obtained in the course of earlier participation in the same case does not require recusal of the judge.
See United States v. Winston,
In
Mayes v. Leipziger,
Other circuits have characterized the issue as a quеstion of whether “the alleged bias is personal as opposed to judicial in nature.”
United States v. Meester,
Similarly in this case, Duckworth has made no allegation suggesting any personal bias. My exposure to the fаcts of his case came in my capacity as Chief Judge of the Circuit, administering the judicial misconduct complaint procedure. Under
*1143
Mayes,
a “previous adverse ruling alone is not sufficient bias,” and Duckworth charges no more than that.
Mayes,
This case is much stronger than
Mayes,
in which the judge had made an adverse ruling on some of the same issues and the same facts as hе would be asked to address in the present action. A legal malpractice action, such as that in
Mayes,
requires not only proof of the attorney’s negligencе, but also proof that the plaintiff would have prevailed on the underlying claim.
See, e.g., Sukoff v. Lemkin,
B.
Finally, the fact that I dismissed Duckworth’s misconduct complaint in an administrative rather than a judicial capacity does not change thе result. The administrative actions of a judge in his or her official capacity is judicial, rather than extrajudicial. Cf
. Mayes,
A similar conclusion was reached recently in
Cheeves v. Southern Clays, Inc.,
If a circumstance giving rise to a perceived or even a declared prejudice by a judge arises out of communications or events known to the judge only by virtue of prior judicial proceedings or actiоns taken by him or her in a judicial capacity (such as administrative oversight capacity by a chief judge, as in this case), there is no basis as a matter of law for disqualifying the judge.
Id. at 1581 (emрhasis added). Here, the chief judge’s exposure to underlying facts of the case in his administrative capacity as chief judge was not deemed sufficient grounds for recusal.
Ill
The disposition of this motion is dictated by Mayes. The administrative actions of a presiding judge in his or her official capacity are not “extrajudicial” for purposes of a recusal motion. This is particularly true in a case such as this, where the administrative action closely reflects a judicial function, and where the previous administrative action did not involve an evaluation of the merits of Duckworth’s claims.
MOTION DENIED.
