The People appeal the district court’s order vacating defendant Sanford B. Schup-per’s judgment of conviction and sentence for theft and granting him a new trial. We reverse and remand with directions.
I. Facts
Defendant was charged with theft and fraud by cheek. The judge to whom this case was assigned had previously been a member of the local district attorney’s office. During the trial proceedings, defendant three times requested — once through counsel, and twice pro se — that the trial judge recuse himself. The trial judge denied each of these motions.
Over his objection, defendant proceeded pro se to trial. He was convicted of theft and, following sentencing, appealed his conviction to this court. While his appeal was pending, he requested and was granted a limited remand to consider the effect of a new development, namely, the trial judge’s recusal from several similar cases that were still pending trial against him in district court.
The trial judge had sua sponte recused himself from defendant’s other cases because (1) “the professional relationship between the attorneys has degenerated into something of a personal grudge match,” with grievances being filed by and against counsel for each side, with the prosecution filing a motion to hold members of the defense team in contempt, and with the defense filing motions for a special prosecutor to pursue criminal charges against members of the prosecution team; and (2) a friend and former supervisor of the judge had recently entered his appearance in those cases, on behalf of the prosecution. The judge explained:
It appears that the personal antagonism between counsel demonstrated in the past will continue. While I would not have problems dealing with these various personal issues among other counsel, I will feel uncomfortable handling them if [my friend] is involved. Likewise, the Court would have no problem dealing with one of [my friend’s] cases in which similar personal issues were not involved. However ... under these present circumstances it would create an appearance of impropriety if I retain these cases.
On limited remand in this case, a successor judge ruled that the trial judge’s recusal had to be retroactively applied because: (1) early in this case, the same friend had made an appearance at a short motions hearing, and thus “the circumstances upon which [the trial judge] relied to disqualify himself were true” even before trial; (2) the decision to recuse was made relatively close in time to trial in this ease; and (3) the trial judge had made a critical decision before trial, namely, to require defendant to proceed to trial without benefit of counsel. Thus, the successor
This court dismissed defendant’s appeal and subsequently accepted jurisdiction, under § 16-12-102(1), C.R.S.2004, of the People’s appeal challenging the successor judge’s ruling.
II. Legal Analysis
The People contend that the successor judge erred in retroactively applying the trial judge’s recusal order to vacate defendant’s judgment of conviction. We agree.
A judge must be free of all taint of bias and partiality.
People v. Dist. Court,
We review de novo the disqualification issue in this case.
See People v. Julien,
Here, we conclude that the successor judge erred in determining that the same circumstances that led the trial judge to recuse himself from defendant’s other cases also existed before the commencement of trial in this case. To be sure, the litigation in this case was highly contentious; but, as the trial judge’s order reveals, it was the transformation of defendant’s cases into “personal grudge mateh[es]” that, in combination with his friendship with one lawyer, led to his recusal. The grievances, contempt citations, and criminal charges leveled by and against the opposing advocates, which formed the basis of the trial judge’s recusal ruling, occurred after trial in this case concluded and before the friend appeared in the other cases.
The trial judge’s order indicated that he would “have no problem” presiding in other circumstances where the friend appeared of record; as we read the record, it was in such other circumstances (i.e., unencumbered by personal grudge matches between the attorneys) that the friend appeared early in the case for a short motions hearing.
Even if a judge is convinced of his or her own impartiality, disqualification is nonetheless required if circumstances compromise the appearance of fairness and impartiality, such that the parties and the public are left with substantial doubt as to the ability of the judge to fairly and impartially resolve pending litigation.
See Goebel v. Benton,
In
People v. Julien, supra,
Nor would the judge’s impartiality be reasonably called into question simply because someone the judge considers a friend appears before him or her as a lawyer in the case.
See United States v. Murphy,
Nothing in the record suggests that the trial judge had the type of close relationship with the attorney that would cause an objective, disinterested observer reasonably to question the judge’s ability to be impartial.
See United States v. Murphy, supra,
Consequently, we conclude, contrary to the successor judge’s ruling, that the circumstances were not the same and had changed between the time the friend appeared early in the case and his post-trial reentry; we further conclude that there was nothing about the friend’s involvement early in the case that would have required the trial judge to recuse himself before trial or sentencing here.
In determining whether to retroactively apply the trial judge’s recusal order, the successor judge considered the prejudice caused to defendant by two other factors: (1) the timing of the recusal ruling, vis-a-vis the completion of this case in the trial court, and (2) the nature of a critical decision made by the trial judge before trial, namely, to require defendant to proceed to trial without counsel.
See Liljeberg v. Health Servs. Acquisition Corp.,
However, if those factors come into play at all, they do so only after it has first been determined that a judge erred in failing to
earlier
recuse himself or herself.
See Lilje-berg, supra
(trial judge should have recused himself before trial);
see also United States v. O’Keefe,
Here, we have determined that no circumstances existed before the judge’s friend appeared in the other cases which would have required recusal of the trial judge for an appearance of impropriety.
Finally, we recognize that, as the appellee, defendant “may defend the judgment on any ground supported by [the] record, whether or not the trial court relied on or considered the argument.”
People v. Martinez,
For these reasons, we conclude that the successor judge erred in vacating defendant’s judgment and sentence and granting him a new trial on recusal grounds.
Accordingly, the order is reversed, and the ease is remanded to the trial court with directions to reinstate defendant’s judgment of conviction and sentence.
