TESCO AMERICAN, INC. d/b/a Tesco/Williamsen, Petitioner, v. STRONG INDUSTRIES, INC. and Brooks Strong, Respondents.
No. 04-0269.
Supreme Court of Texas.
Argued Feb. 17, 2005. Decided March 17, 2006.
188 S.W.3d 546
Robert B. Dubose, Sean Reed Cox, Robert M. Roach Jr., Cook & Roach, L.L.P., Houston, S. Scott West, A. Reagan Clark, The West Law Firm, Sugar Land, Stephen G. Tipps, Baker & Botts, L.L.P., Houston, for respondents.
Carlton D. Wilde Jr., Jeffrey Donald Meyer and Sheila Murphy Wollam, Franklin Cardwell & Jones, P.C., Houston, for F.S. New Products, Inc.
Luther H. Soules, III, Langley & Banack, Inc., San Antonio, for amicus curiae.
Justice BRISTER delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice JEFFERSON, Justice O‘NEILL, Justice WAINWRIGHT, Justice MEDINA, Justice GREEN, Justice JOHNSON, and Justice WILLETT joined.
Since Texas became a state in 1845, judicial disqualification has always been a matter of constitutional dimension. Every Texas Constitution has provided that
No judge shall sit in any case wherein the judge may be interested, or where either of the parties may be connected
with the judge, either by affinity or consanguinity, within such a degree as may be prescribed by law, or when the judge shall have been counsel in the case.1
The question presented here is whether an appellate judge is disqualified because, unbeknownst to her, before she took the bench another attorney at her very large firm played a very small role in the early stages of this appeal. For the reasons discussed below, we hold that she is, and thus reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Background
Strong Industries, Inc. manufactures dump-truck trailing axles2 designed by its founder, Brooks Strong. In 1992, Tesco American, Inc. signed a dealer agreement with the company that contained covenants not to compete or disclose confidential information. Five years later, Tesco and F.S. New Products, Inc. (“FSNP“) began marketing a competing trailing axle.
Both Strongs sued Tesco and FSNP, alleging fraud, breach of contract, and misappropriation of trade secrets. Based on favorable jury findings, the trial court entered judgment against Tesco for over $2 million (for fraud and exemplary damages) and against FSNP for over $100,000 (for breach of contract).
Both appealed. A panel of the First Court of Appeals, in a lengthy and unanimous opinion authored by Justice Laura C. Higley, affirmed as to Tesco, but reversed and rendered a take-nothing judgment as to FSNP.
Shortly thereafter, Tesco filed a motion for rehearing that included a motion to disqualify Justice Higley and reassign the case to a different panel. In the motion, Tesco asserted that Justice Higley was an attorney at Baker Botts L.L.P. in 2001, during which time another attorney at the firm briefly appeared as lead counsel for the Strongs in this appeal (filing a cross-notice of appeal, participating in a status conference, and agreeing to extend deadlines), before moving to withdraw in October 2001. None of the appellate briefs mentioned Baker Botts‘s limited involvement,3 and Tesco concedes there is no evidence Justice Higley knew of any connection between her former firm and this case.
Nevertheless, Tesco asserted Justice Higley was constitutionally disqualified, and that the appeal should be assigned to a new panel “to avoid any appearance of impropriety.” The panel members disagreed, but referred both motions to the other members of the First Court. Sitting en banc, a majority of that court denied both motions,4 after which the original panel reissued substantially the same opinion, again authored by Justice Higley.5 Tesco appeals the denial of its motions, as well as the panel‘s judgment on the underlying merits.
Disqualification
For trial judges,
Rule 18b(1)(a) accordingly recognizes that a judge is vicariously disqualified under the Constitution as having “been counsel in the case” if a lawyer with whom the judge previously practiced law served as counsel to a party concerning the matter during their association. This conclusion is consistent with our holding in National Medical Enterprises, Inc. v. Godbey, that “[an] attorney‘s knowledge is imputed by law to every other attorney in the firm.”7
For appellate judges, by contrast,
For several reasons, we hold that both do.
First,
Second, as O‘Connor also noted, Texas law imputes one attorney‘s knowledge to all attorneys in a firm.12 We adopted this irrebuttable presumption for
Finally, we must construe any ambiguity in the constitutional provision here to effectuate its purpose.15 Repeatedly, the people of Texas have insisted on constitutional protection against “counsel in the case” becoming a judge in the case, a guarantee that makes no distinction between trial and appellate judges. When we adopted
We recognize the risk cited by the First Court that vicarious disqualification may allow litigants to “lie behind the log” and move to disqualify only if an appeal is unsuccessful.16 But no supine surprise was sprung on the Strongs here—none knew better than they of Baker Botts‘s early involvement in their appeal.
As it is undisputed Justice Higley was an attorney at Baker Botts at the same time another attorney with the firm served as counsel in this appeal, we hold she was disqualified under the Texas Constitution.
Disposition
We have never before addressed what happens when an appellate opinion and judgment issue before it is discovered that one of the justices is disqualified. “There is considerable diversity of opinion as to the effect on a decision of the fact that one or more of the judges participating therein is disqualified.”17
To some degree, the different results reached in other jurisdictions can be explained by the extent of the disqualified jurist‘s involvement. At one extreme, a disqualified appellate judge cannot cast the deciding vote. In Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Lavoie, the United States Supreme
At the other extreme, appellate courts universally proceed to dispose of an appeal when one or more members disqualify themselves at the outset.20 It is true that when an attorney moves between private firms, an irrebuttable presumption of shared confidences attaches to both the sending and receiving firms.21 But attorneys who take a seat at opposing-counsel table are not like those who take the bench—the former become advocates for an adversary, while judges are advocates only for the law.22 The Rules of Professional Conduct make no allowance for judges to share the confidences of former clients with their new colleagues; presuming they do so would be presuming a serious ethical breach.
In between these extremes, there is little consensus. Several courts have concluded that a decision need not be vacated if a disqualified judge‘s vote was “mere surplusage.”23 At least one would appear to apply this rule even if a disqualified judge authored the opinion,24 but others hold that a disqualified author requires that the judgment be vacated,25 and perhaps requires recusal of the entire court.26
It has always been the rule in Texas that any orders or judgments rendered by a trial judge who is constitutionally disqualified are void and without effect.27 But in the appellate courts, judgments and opinions are generally rendered by a multi-member court, not a single judge;28 un-
less every judge who participates is constitutionally disqualified, the single-judge rule does not easily fit the multi-judge situation.
In Mapco, Inc. v. Forrest,29 we rejected a general rule that appellate judgments issued in violation of the constitution are void. In that case, a court of appeals rendered judgment even though the panel of two judges disagreed, thus violating the constitutional requirement that “[t]he concurrence of a majority of the judges sitting in a section is necessary to decide a case.”30 This Court held the judgment was not void because “[a] judgment is void only when it is apparent that the court rendering the judgment had no jurisdiction of the parties, no jurisdiction of the subject matter, no jurisdiction to enter the judgment, or no capacity to act as a court.”31 But because a 1-1 decision violated the Constitution, we held it must be reversed.32
Applying the same analysis, we reach the same conclusion here. The judgment below is not void, as the First Court of Appeals certainly had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, jurisdiction to enter judgment, and capacity to act as a court. But the judgment must be reversed because the opinion on which it was based was authored by a justice who was constitutionally disqualified;33 it would be stretching the Constitution too far to simply assume she was not involved. In accordance with the appellate rules, the two remaining justices may decide this case, but they must do so without the participation of a disqualified justice.34
We see no need to answer other factual circumstances today. Post-disposition disqualification of appellate judges has been rare in the 160 years the Texas Constitution has required it.35 The variations in size of Texas appellate courts and the means they employ to dispose of motions,36 to hear and decide cases,37 and to grant discretionary review, means that the level of judicial involvement in any particular order may vary greatly from one situation to another. “Because the issue of disquali-
Tesco urges us to take two additional steps. First, it asks us to address the merits of its appeal, alleging numerous mistakes by the panel below. But as the judgment must be reversed due to the constitutional disqualification, we postpone addressing those arguments (as we did in Mapco) until after that defect has been remedied.39
The dissent would review the merits here on the ground that “remanding this case is for appearance’ sake.” We agree there would be an appearance of impropriety if opinions by disqualified justices are simply reviewed on the merits like every other. But constitutional disqualification involves more than appearances; the substantive right is to an appeal decided by qualified judges alone. It is precisely because appellate court opinions are the product of more than one justice that, if one is disqualified, the process must be conducted again. The argument that it is a “fool‘s errand” to reverse orders by disqualified judges and require reconsideration by qualified ones is an argument that the Constitution should not require disqualification of appellate justices at all.
Second, Tesco argues that this case should be assigned to an entirely different panel of the First Court of Appeals. For several reasons, we disagree. Tesco does not assert the remaining panel members are disqualified, and nothing in the Constitution suggests otherwise—the record reflects no personal interests, connection to the parties, or “counsel in the case” problem under the standards already discussed. Whether the circumstances here require recusal by the remaining panel members is a matter not before us, as Tesco insists this was not its motion below. Further, a party has no right to any particular panel of an appellate court; the assignment of cases and judges to panels is a matter within that court‘s discretion.
Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment against Tesco, and remand for further proceedings.40
Justice HECHT filed a dissenting opinion.
Justice HECHT, dissenting.
One Justice on the court of appeals panel, the author of its opinion,1 practiced in a large firm with two lawyers who, unbeknownst to her, briefly represented two parties in this case, withdrawing more than a year before she took the bench. She and her court first learned of this fact after her opinion issued, on motion for rehearing, and the court concluded en banc that she was not constitutionally disqualified.2 The other two members of the panel declined to recuse themselves3 and vot-
I agree with the Court that before she took the bench, Justice Higley was “counsel” in this case within the meaning of
Rule 18b(1)(a) incorporates [the constitutional] language, and also provides that a judge is disqualified if “a lawyer with whom [the judge] previously practiced law served during such association as a lawyer concerning the matter.”Rule 18b(1)(a) accordingly recognizes that a judge is vicariously disqualified under the Constitution as having “been counsel in the case” if a lawyer with whom the judge previously practiced law served as counsel to a party concerning the matter during their association.8
The court of appeals interpreted “under the Constitution” to mean that the rule had been adopted with constitutional authority,9 but grammatically, the phrase modifies “disqualified“, not “rule“. Moreover, if, as the court of appeals believed, the rule enlarged the constitutional grounds for judicial disqualification, it is not clear how it could have been constitutionally authorized. The Constitution cannot be amended, expanded, or contracted by court rule. What we said in O‘Connor is that
We offered no justification in O‘Connor for our construction of “counsel” in
With respect to professional relationships, the constitutional concern is that a judge may appear not to be impartial in a case in which he or an associate once participated. To be sure, no judge in Justice Higley‘s situation—that is, from a firm with 500-plus lawyers,15 two of whom, briefly and without any awareness on her part, represented clients in a case that would later be randomly assigned to her on a panel of a nine-member appellate court, more than a year after her former associates had withdrawn from representing the clients—could possibly be suspected of actual partiality due to that representation. But the appearance would be stronger, even compelling, if the firm were much smaller or the representation much longer, or if the judge knew of the representation and, say, had discussed it with his or her former partner. The constitutional rule does not permit disqualification to turn on such factors, however, for two reasons. The consequences of judicial disqualification are too severe—any action by a constitutionally disqualified judge is void and may therefore be challenged at any time16—for a rule that depends on too many circumstances. And the issue is appearance, not actuality, so the rule can apply categorically without regard to circumstances tending to show, or not show, impartiality in fact.
The court of appeals worried that this construction of article V, section 11 would “enable litigants to ‘lie behind the log’ and ‘sample’ the justices of this Court before moving to disqualify, and then to void the judgment and opinion of the Court by collateral attack on otherwise final judgments on merely procedural grounds.”17 Of course, a litigant can always use constitutional disqualification this way, but the court‘s concern appears to have been the increased risk when a judge‘s only connec-
So I agree that Justice Higley was disqualified from sitting in this case. I also agree that her disqualification provides no basis for also disqualifying the other two members of the panel or the other eight members of the court, but for reasons different from those offered by the Court. The Court‘s analysis runs thus:
- as we have held,18 for purposes of lawyer disqualification, a lawyer‘s associates must be irrebuttably presumed to have knowledge of the lawyer‘s clients’ confidences because of (i) the difficulty in proving what an associate actually knew, and (ii) the importance of protecting client relations and the legal profession from possible misconduct;
- for the same reasons, the same presumption is necessary for purposes of judicial disqualification because “lawyers who become appellate judges“—like lawyers who leave firms for other reasons—“might take confidential information with them for future use“;19
- we have also held,20 again for the same reasons, that for purposes of lawyer disqualification an associate‘s imputed knowledge is further imputed to the lawyers with whom he or she later associates;
- but we cannot likewise presume, for purposes of judicial disqualification, that a judge may share the confidences of a former associate‘s client with his or her colleagues because (i) a judge is not an advocate for an adversary, and (ii) to do so “would be presuming a serious ethical breach.”21
It is, of course, just as unethical for a lawyer to reveal client confidences as it is for a judge,22 and it is not at all clear to me why we must presume, irrebuttably, that a lawyer acts unethically, while refusing even to consider that a judge may.
As I have explained above, I do not think the analogy to lawyer disqualification works well. The reasons for the double imputation in the context of lawyer disqualification—the difficulty of proving actual knowledge, and the risk of harm to client relations and the legal profession—
I also agree with the Court that the court of appeals’ judgment was not void by reason of Justice Higley‘s disqualification because the concurrence of the other panel members was enough to decide the case.23 But I disagree that the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded for reconsideration. The Court‘s justification for this result is contained in but two sentences:
But the judgment must be reversed because the opinion on which it was based was authored by a justice who was constitutionally disqualified; it would be stretching the Constitution too far to simply assume [Justice Higley] was not involved. In accordance with the appellate rules, the two remaining justices may decide this case, but they must do so without the participation of a disqualified justice.24
Why? Certainly not because the participation of a disqualified justice affected the result when we have every indication it did not. Chief Justice Radack and Justice Alcala knew of the factual basis for Justice Higley‘s disqualification, as did every other member of the court, since the matter was considered en banc.25 And being fully aware of the facts, they declined to recuse26 and voted to deny rehearing.27 True, they were mistaken on the legal issue of disqualification as it turns out, but the Court cannot explain why they might have ruled differently on the merits had they known Justice Higley was disqualified, or why they might do so on remand, now that the mistake has been set right. No one suggests that Justice Higley was aware of any basis for disqualification before she issued her opinion, so it is impossible to think that facts revealed for the first time afterward could have influenced her.
The only possible reason for remanding this case is for appearance’ sake. The rule will be that any time a disqualified appellate judge participates in a decision, right or wrong, it must be reversed, period, even if it is to be reconsidered by the same court and two of the same judges, who
Furthermore, a remand sends the parties on what is almost certain to be a fool‘s errand, wasting their time and resources and, though to a much lesser extent, those of the court of appeals. Having presented their case for decision twice now, the parties are returned to the court of appeals to reconfirm that the same Justices who decided their case and denied rehearing have still not changed their minds. Only one thing has changed: the court of appeals was mistaken about one of the constitutional grounds for disqualification, a matter unrelated to any other issue in the case. Of course, the court is free to reassign the case to an entirely new panel, have it reargued, maybe even rebriefed, and write an entirely new opinion, but since none of these things is required or useful, none is likely to happen. Instead, the Justices who joined Justice Higley‘s opinion will almost certainly reaffirm their decision, and then the parties can refile their petition for review and response. The Court will consider them again, and if it requests briefing as it did before, the parties will file the same briefs, omitting the discussion of disqualification. The parties will get twice as many appeals on the exact same issues, but the same number of decisions. All this to preserve appearances.
Finally, regarding the procedure to be used by an appellate court to determine whether one of its members is disqualified, the court of appeals divided over whether it could itself consider issues of disqualification raised on motion, as the majority held,29 or whether those issues should properly be left to this Court on petition for mandamus, as the dissent urged.30 The Court does not address this issue but tacitly sides with the majority. I, too, agree with the majority that an appellate court should follow the same procedure in determining disqualification as in determining recusal.31
Justice Higley‘s participation in the decision of the court of appeals was error, though no fault of her own, but not error that requires reversal. We have an opinion joined by two other Justices, fully explaining the reasons for their decision, and we should proceed to determine the issues the parties have raised here. I respectfully dissent.
