STATE OF OREGON, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. JOSHUA OVALLE, Defendant-Appellant.
Washington County Circuit Court 17CR66194; A175319
Court of Appeals of Oregon
Argued and submitted August 23, 2022, reversed and remanded April 26, 2023
325 Or App 538 (2023) | 529 P3d 278
Andrew Erwin, Judge.
Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction and sentence after remand. He assigns error to the trial judge‘s denial of his
Reversed and remanded.
Timothy A. Sylwester, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General.
Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, and Lagesen, Chief Judge, and Mooney, Judge.*
MOONEY, J.
Reversed and remanded.
* Lagesen, C. J., vice James, J. pro tempore.
MOONEY, J.
This case presents the question whether an
We begin with a general discussion about fairness and impartiality to provide
assigned to a certain case because of a potential conflict or appearance of conflict. A party might seek to disqualify a judge on the basis of conflict or bias as a matter of constitutional due process. See State v. Garza, 125 Or App 385, 388-89, 865 P2d 463 (1993), rev den, 319 Or 81 (1994) (describing a defendant‘s constitutional due process claim based on judge‘s refusal to recuse herself and stating that a “judge‘s actual or apparent bias must by necessity result in disqualification, even when the statutory requirements for recusal” have not been followed). A party may seek to disqualify a judge based upon one or more of the specific causes set forth in statute,
Oregon‘s judicial disqualification statutes,
in matters connected to the case, and (2) those that permit or require disqualification for bias or prejudice—based on affidavits of subjective belief that the judge is biased or prejudiced, making a fair trial impossible. See Disqualification of Judges for Prejudice or Bias – Common Law Evolution, Current Status, and the Oregon Experience, 48 Or L Rev 311, 360 (1969). The Supreme Court has likewise stated:
“It is important to note that there are two separate statutory schemes for disqualifying judges in Oregon.
ORS 14.210 describes disqualification for cause.ORS 14.250 describes disqualification for prejudice[.]”
Hanson v. Dept. of Rev., 294 Or 23, 27, 653 P2d 964 (1982). For-cause disqualification statutes have received less legislative and judicial attention over the years than for-prejudice statutes, no doubt at least partly because the specific for-cause grounds are “well-rooted in the American common law,” and are measurable by objective standards,
At issue here is defendant‘s motion to disqualify a particular judge for a specific cause—consanguinity within three degrees of kinship to an attorney in the district attorney‘s office—under
“A judge shall not act as judge if the judge is related to any party, or to the attorney for any party, or to the partner or office associate of any such attorney, by consanguinity or affinity within the third degree.”
We review the trial court‘s ruling on defendant‘s motion to disqualify for legal error. State v. Langley, 363 Or 482, 498, 424 P3d 688 (2018), adh‘d to as modified on recons, 365 Or 418, 446 P3d 542 (2019), cert den, 141 S Ct 138 (2020).
The pertinent facts are not in dispute. Defendant was charged with several criminal offenses against his minor stepdaughter. The Honorable Andrew Erwin presided over the jury trial and, after the jury returned its verdict acquitting defendant of one charge and convicting him of several others, Judge Erwin also sentenced defendant to time in prison. As mentioned, an appeal followed, and we
reversed in part and remanded for resentencing on the two counts that we affirmed. Ovalle, 303 Or App at 358.
Upon remand, defendant filed a motion to disqualify Judge Erwin under
It is unclear whether the motion to disqualify was scheduled to be heard at the status conference when it was discussed. No evidence was offered or received, although there was this discussion about the alleged family relationship:
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: *** The only other issue regarding the disqualification motion, Your Honor, is the basis that give rise to disqualification under 210 did not exist—to my knowledge, did not exist in this particular case at the time that—that Your Honor made substantive rulings in—in this case prior to, I guess, remand from—from the appeal.
“It has been a new circumstance that has arisen that‘s given rise to the Court having that relationship with the—with the party in this case.
“[COURT]: And I understand the position that you‘re taking. You‘re correct in your understanding, but, at this point in time, the statutory language that prevails as far as motion to disqualification does not apply to this particular case because I have made enumerable substantive rulings throughout the trial of this case.”
Judge Erwin denied the motion from the bench on the grounds that he had already made substantive rulings in the case and, because of that, the motion was not available to defendant. Judge Erwin then set a date for the next hearing, at which time he resentenced defendant on Counts 5 and 6, imposing the same sentence as he had originally imposed on those counts.
On appeal, the state argues first that defendant failed to preserve his argument but that, even if he preserved it, the court did not err, because the motion was “procedurally barred” by
“A motion to disqualify a judge may not be made after the judge has ruled upon any petition, demurrer or motion other than a motion to extend time in the cause, matter or proceeding.”
We conclude that defendant preserved his argument under the judicial disqualification statutes. He filed a written motion, he answered the court‘s questions to him about the motion, and he argued below, as he does here, that
This case concerns a for-cause motion to disqualify, but even for-cause motions vary somewhat in terms of whether disqualification or recusal is mandatory and depend on the type of cause identified in the motion. For example, there has been less certainty about whether disqualification should always be required when the cause is a family relationship between the judge and a party or a party‘s attorney as opposed to when the judge has a direct interest in the case. See Disqualification of Judges for Prejudice or Bias, 48 Or L Rev at 317-18. That tension between disqualification due to direct interest in a case and disqualification due to a family relationship with a party or attorney is reflected in
“In the circumstances specified in subsection (1)(c) [where judge is related to party or attorney by consanguinity within third degree] and (d) [where judge has been an attorney in the case] of this section, the disqualification shall be deemed waived by the parties unless a motion for disqualification of the judge is made as provided by statute or court rule.”
The fact that
Langley supports the notion that
The Supreme Court concluded that the for-prejudice motion filed under
There might be times when an actual conflict arises after a judge makes a substantive ruling in a case. In such cases, the questions of whether a cause exists and whether a cause can be or was waived should be addressed at a hearing on the merits of the motion. When an actual conflict arises under
The same cannot be said for the situation where a party forms a belief that a judge is biased after the judge rules on a substantive matter in their case and then desires to disqualify the judge on that belief alone. The lack of objective measurement in such cases renders just and efficient resolution through court proceedings exceedingly difficult and carries the risk of creating adversity and conflict where
none, in fact, exists. The question of the party‘s motivation to file the motion after a judge rules would create, by timing alone, its own practical and legal challenges, and the ill-advised practice of judge-shopping may well increase. The courts’ already full and burdened dockets would necessarily have to shift and expand to accommodate the changes that such motions would create. The Supreme Court has clearly stated that by permitting motions to be filed under
The differences in motions to disqualify judge are not unlike the differences between a motion to excuse a juror for cause and a peremptory strike used to strike a juror after counsel has passed that juror for cause. The goal of each is to remove a prospective juror from the jury in a particular case. The basis for excusing a juror is different for each—a stated cause versus an undisclosed reason. The associated quantum and burden of proof required for each method of excusing a juror is necessarily different. See, e.g.,
parallel the differences in the statutory methods for disqualification of judges. The differences in measurability and the evidentiary challenges that those differences present illustrate why it is more important to enforce strict procedural limitations on motions filed on subjective belief alone than on motions filed for cause.
The declaration submitted here by defense counsel does not address when or why he formed the belief that Judge Erwin had a family relationship that constituted cause for disqualification. That raises questions of whether such a conflict exists and whether, if it does, it is waivable and whether it has been waived. The best way to address those issues would be at a hearing on the motion. Given that Judge Erwin denied the motion solely because he had previously ruled on substantive issues in the case, the merits of the for-cause motion were not reached, despite the brief colloquy that occurred between the court and counsel where it appeared that some family relationship may have been acknowledged in passing.
Relying on Straub v. State of Oregon et al., 121 Or 451, 457, 255 P 897 (1927), defendant asks us to broadly and liberally construe the statutes concerning the disqualification of judges. It is certainly as true today as it was in 1927 that every party is entitled to a fair trial before an impartial judge and that “sound public policy” is interested in preserving the integrity and good credit of every court. Id. at 457. We agree that where, as here, the motion to disqualify is based upon a specific cause under
Having concluded that the trial court erred in summarily denying defendant‘s
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
“A judge shall not act as such in a court of which the judge is a member in any of the following circumstances:
“(a) *** if the judge is a party to or directly interested in the action, suit or proceeding[.]
“(b) *** if the judge was not present and sitting as a member of the court at the hearing of a matter submitted for its decision.
“(c) *** if the judge is related to any party, or to the attorney for any party, or to the partner or office associate of any such attorney, by consanguinity or affinity within the third degree.
“(d) *** if the judge has been attorney in the action, suit or proceeding for any party.
“(e) *** on appeal if the judge participated in making the decision that is subject to review.”
“No judge of a circuit court shall sit to hear or try any suit, action, matter or proceeding when it is established, as provided in
