In obtaining a divorce after ten years of marriage, defendant sought maintenance payments to meet her needs of about $10,000 a year. The trial court enforced the terms of a prenuptial agreement, which dealt only with property interests of the parties, but the court awarded no additional relief. The court found that defendant received $4176 quarterly in dividend income; however, uncontroverted evidence establishes that the $4176 was an annual — not quarterly — figure. Thus, the court ap
*287
pears to have overestimated defendant’s gross income by $12,528 a year. This material finding of fact was clearly erroneous and must be set aside.
Jacobs
v.
Jacobs,
Plaintiff contends that the erroneous finding could simply have been a clerical mistranscription from an exhibit, and thus was not a “clearly erroneous” interpretation of the evidence. Even if the court mistook these facts, plaintiff adds, they were but a part of many facts considered, and the court could in its discretion have reached the same result nonetheless.
The determinative question is not whether the court could have reached the same result even if it had not erred; rather, the question is whether correct attention to the issue could have
changed
the result. See
Kopelman
v.
Schwag,
Our function on appeal is to review the trial court’s actions in order to determine whether its exercise of discretion was proper.
Savery
v.
Savery,
Because this case will be retried, we also address defendant’s appeal of the refusal of the assistant judges to disqualify themselves from the case. The two assistant judges candidly disclosed in open court that they had known plaintiff slightly for ten years or more, Judge Rooney having played golf with plaintiff on three or four occasions during this period and Judge Nelson indicating that he had run into plaintiff from time to time and visited with him on occasion. When defendant requested that they not sit, the assistant judges both felt they could be impartial and rejected her request.
Recusal is normally a decision to be made by the particular judge. See
Daitchman
v.
Daitchman,
Absent a procedure in Vermont for referral of close questions to another judge, we reaffirm this Court’s statement in
Condosta
v.
Condosta,
Although “[s]uch a stringent rule may sometimes bar trial by judges who have no actual bias and who would do their very best to weigh the scales of justice equally between contending parties,”
In re Murchison,
In this case, the assistant judges considered their acquaintance with the plaintiff a serious enough matter to bring to the attention of the defendant. If a relationship is substantial enough to merit disclosure by the judge and invite a motion for recusal, then, when such a motion is made, the disclosing judge should, as a general rule, disqualify himself. We are unable to say, on the record before us, that all doubts of impartiality would have been erased from the mind of a reasonable, disinterested observer. Accordingly, Assistant Judges Rooney and Nelson should not sit on further proceedings herein.
Reversed and remanded for a new hearing on disposition of property and payment of maintenance.
