Ron D. GLICK, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Dave EDWARDS, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 13-35230
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
Submitted Feb. 6, 2015. Filed Oct. 7, 2015.
803 F.3d 505
Before: CARLOS T. BEA and MARY H. MURGUIA, Circuit Judges, and WILLIAM HORSLEY ORRICK, District Judge.
Rebekah J. French, Special Assistant Attorney General, and Thomas G. Bowe, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, MT, for Defendant-Appellee.
OPINION
BEA, Circuit Judge:
An old fable tells tale of a Pope, who, convinced of his own grave sin, called on his cardinals to judge him. “No, Your Holiness!” they replied. “We cannot sit in judgment over you. You must be your own judge.” And so, faced with the necessity his soul be judged, the Pope judged himself. He confessed his sin and abdicated the Holy See. He is now commemorated as a saint.
This ancient parable was recounted in a somewhat less ancient proceeding before the English Court of Common Pleas in 1430.1 There, the court considered whether the Chancellor of Oxford could preside over an action sounding in trespass against himself as defendant. Normally, such a conflict of interest would disqualify the chancellor. But because there was no provision for the appointment of another judge, the court held that the chancellor, like the now-sainted Pope, would have to hear his own case. Two centuries later, Rolle‘s Abridgment summarized the rule of that case as follows: “If an action is sued in the bench against all the Judges there, then by necessity they shall be their own
We note, of course, that judges are not saints. Nor do we expect them to be. The law has instead developed rules of recusal to protect the legal process from the interests and biases of less-than-saintly judges. But as in the Oxford case from Lancastrian times, we recognize there may be circumstances where recusal will not suffice. Sometimes—by necessity—a judge must judge himself.
I
In 2005, plaintiff-appellant Ron D. Glick was convicted in Montana state court for sexually assaulting the 13-year-old daughter of his girlfriend. See State v. Glick, 349 Mont. 277, 203 P.3d 796, 798 (2009). Glick attributed his prosecution and conviction to political persecution. He has since spent considerable effort and resources in attempts to vindicate himself. Following his release on probation in 2009, he initiated a number of civil suits, filed pro se and in forma pauperis in state and federal court, against various federal and state officers and institutions, and some private persons. Those suits have all alleged essentially the same facts: There exists a vast governmental conspiracy to persecute Glick and violate his constitutional rights. This case is the latest iteration in Glick‘s campaign to clear his name and recover damages from those people
Glick‘s complaint here states eight causes of action and names 19 defendants, including his probation officer, defendant-appellee Dave Edwards, as well as three federal judges, four state judges, the Montana Supreme Court, Montana‘s 11th Judicial District, and, importantly, the United States District Court for the District of Montana. Glick‘s claims can be divided into roughly two categories. First, Glick seeks damages under
Glick‘s conspiracy claims are largely duplicative of claims he made in an earlier suit, in which he named many of the same parties as defendants. The district court dismissed that case. See Glick v. Eleventh Jud. Dist. Ct. of Mont., No. CV 09-128-M–DWM-JCL, 2010 WL 4392508, at *1 (D. Mont. Oct. 26, 2010). And we dismissed Glick‘s appeals from that case for want of jurisdiction. When Glick filed the present action, the case was assigned to the same judges who had presided over his earlier case—District Judge Donald W. Molloy and Magistrate Judge Jeremiah C. Lynch—despite the fact Glick‘s new complaint named Judges Molloy and Lynch as defendants. Magistrate Judge Lynch granted Glick‘s motion to proceed in forma pauperis and conducted a preliminary screening of Glick‘s complaint as required by
Glick filed written objections to Magistrate Judge Lynch‘s findings and recommendations, in which he argued District Judge Molloy and Magistrate Judge Lynch had been disqualified because he had named them as defendants. But he did not stop there. He explained that by suing the district court itself he had intended to sue every judge in the District of Montana. By his reasoning, not only were Judges Molloy and Lynch disqualified; every judge in the district was disqualified. Glick concluded, without citation to authority, that he was thus entitled to review of his case by a panel of judges designated by the Chief Justice of the United States.
District Judge Molloy rejected Glick‘s objections and adopted Magistrate Judge Lynch‘s findings and recommendations in full. Officer Edwards filed his answer and moved for judgment on the pleadings under
The heart of Glick‘s appeal is his contention that District Judge Molloy and Magistrate Judge Lynch abused their discretion when they declined to recuse themselves from presiding over Glick‘s claims, despite being named as defendants. His other claims are either inextricable from his recusal claim or meritless, and we do not address them further.
II
Although Glick did not formally move the district court for recusal, he clearly stated the grounds for District Judge Molloy‘s and Magistrate Judge Lynch‘s disqualification in his objections to Magistrate Judge Lynch‘s findings and recommendations. We construe Glick‘s objections as a motion for recusal and thus review the district court‘s refusal to recuse itself for abuse of discretion. See United States v. McTiernan, 695 F.3d 882, 891 (9th Cir. 2012). A district court abuses its discretion when it applies the wrong legal standard or when its findings of fact or its application of law to fact are “illogical, implausible, or without support in inferences that may be drawn from the record.” United States v. Hinkson, 585 F.3d 1247, 1262 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc). We may affirm the judgment of the district court on any ground supported by the record. Lambert v. Blodgett, 393 F.3d 943, 965 (9th Cir. 2004).
III
In declining to recuse themselves, Judges Molloy and Lynch relied on our case law interpreting
This case differs from a typical motion for recusal because Glick did not sue only Judges Molloy and Lynch; he indiscriminately sued every judge in the District of Montana. Strict application of
Although Ignacio applied the rule of necessity to circuit judges, its reasoning and rationale apply with full force to district judges. The rule of necessity provides for the effective administration of justice while preventing litigants from using the rules of recusal to destroy what may be the only tribunal with power to hear a dispute. See id. at 1165 (quoting Brinkley v. Hassig, 83 F.2d 351, 357 (10th Cir. 1936)). We acknowledge that the rule of necessity should be invoked rarely in our system of justice, in which the appearance of justice is an aspect of justice itself. But our system cannot function if it cannot resolve cases. And we are confident that the checks and balances enshrined in our constitutional framework, such as the right to an appeal and the availability of concurrent state and federal tribunals, will effectively mitigate the risk that the trial of an actual conspiracy comprising an entire federal court will be improperly squelched by the judges involved.
We further note that the rule of necessity is not a rule of actual impossibility. It may well have been possible to find an unconflicted Article III judge somewhere in the country who could hear Glick‘s case, perhaps by transferring the case to a different district or assigning a judge from another district to sit by designation. But even Glick‘s requested remedy, a panel of disinterested judges designated by the Chief Justice of the United States, creates as many problems as it solves. For example, if the Chief Justice could appoint judges to act in the District of Montana, the appointment would presumably make them fall within the class of defendants he sued: judges in the District of Montana. And even Glick‘s consent to such an arrangement could not remedy the utter lack of statutory authority for such a panel. But we need not flesh out these scenarios any more than Glick has. Nor will we require courts to acquiesce to the extraordinary demands of vexatious litigants.
We therefore hold that the rule of necessity applies where every judge of a tribunal would otherwise be disqualified. More
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
