Court Opinion

ID: 2795506
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-04-21 21:05:17.068772+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:09:30.987780
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                              AT JACKSON
                                   Assigned March 6, 2015

                                     IN RE: ADISON P.

                   Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Henderson County
                             No. 6203   Steve Beal, Judge

                No. W2015-00393-COA-T10B-CV – Filed April 21, 2015

BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., dissenting.

       I must respectfully dissent from the majority opinion for two reasons.

        First, I maintain that Father‟s failure to include, in his petition for recusal appeal, his
affidavit in support of his motion to recuse is fatal. While Father‟s Second Motion for Recusal
of Trial Judge, filed in the trial court on December 4, 2014, indicated that Father‟s affidavit in
support of the motion is attached, it was not provided to this Court on appeal. Tennessee
Supreme Court Rule 10B Section 2.03 specifically provides that a petition for recusal appeal
“shall be accompanied by copies of any order or opinion and any other parts of the record
necessary for determination of the appeal.” Section 1.01 of Rule 10B provides that a motion to
recuse “shall be supported by an affidavit under oath or a declaration under penalty of perjury on
personal knowledge….” Section 1.01 also provides that the motion to recuse “shall affirmatively
state that it is not being presented for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause
unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.” Father‟s motion to recuse does
not “affirmatively state that it is not being presented for any improper purpose,” and his petition
before this Court does not contain the affidavit required by Section 1.01.

        The majority opinion relies on Watson v. City of Jackson, 448 S.W.3d 919 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2014), in excusing these defects. However, Watson involved a pro se litigant who filed a
post-trial recusal motion seeking to have the trial judge recused “from presiding over the
preparation of the record for her appeal of the substantive issues in the case.” Id. at 921. The
trial judge denied the motion and entered a written order with specific findings of fact. Id.
Watson then filed a petition for accelerated interlocutory appeal with this Court, but she was also
pursuing an appeal of substantive issues as well. See Watson v. City of Jackson, No. W2013-
01364-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 4202466 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 26, 2014). When this Court
considered the Rule 10B accelerated interlocutory appeal, we noted that Watson failed to
affirmatively state that her motion to recuse was not being presented for any improper purpose
and that she further failed to provide this Court with copies of the dispositive orders in the trial
court, namely the trial court‟s order denying her motion to recuse. This Court proceeded with a
substantive review of the Rule 10B appeal despite these deficiencies. The case presently before
the Court does not involve a pro se petitioner and does not involve a motion for recusal filed
after the conclusion of all substantive issues in the case. Watson is factually and procedurally
distinguishable from this case, and I do not believe this Court can effectively review the trial
court‟s actions without Father‟s sworn affidavit testimony, as required by Section 1.01.

        The Eastern Section of the Court of Appeals recently encountered a similar situation in
Johnston v. Johnston, No. E2015-00213-COA-T10B-CV, 2015 WL 739606 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb.
20, 2015). In Johnston, the record submitted by the recusal appeal petitioner did not include an
affidavit filed in support of the motion to recuse. The Eastern Section held that “[w]ithout this
necessary part of the record, we cannot conclude that the Trial Court erred in denying the Motion
to Recuse.” Id. at *2. The Eastern Section went on to say:

       We emphasize to Defendant that the accelerated nature of these interlocutory
       appeals as of right requires meticulous compliance with the provisions of Rule
       10B regarding the content of the record provided to this Court so as to allow this
       Court to meet its obligations under section 2.06 of the rule, which requires this
       Court to decide these appeals “on an expedited basis.” As such, it is imperative
       that litigants file their petitions for recusal appeal in compliance with the
       mandatory requirements of Rule 10B in the first instance.

Id.; see also Tipton v. Constance, No. E2014-00143-COA-T10B-CV, 2014 WL 605434 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Feb. 14, 2014), perm. app. denied (Tenn. May 9, 2014). I agree with the conclusion
reached by the Eastern Section and therefore would affirm the decision of the trial court based on
the procedural deficiencies in Father‟s Rule 10B accelerated interlocutory appeal.

        Second, I disagree that Father has established facts sufficient to warrant the recusal of the
trial judge. My disagreement with the majority result on this point is interwoven with my
position on the procedural deficiencies discussed above. To be sure, the trial court has not
assisted this Court in its analysis. Section 1.03 of Rule 10B specifically states that if a motion to
recuse is denied, “the judge shall state in writing the grounds upon which he or she denies the
motion.” Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 10B § 1.03. The trial court‟s order on Father‟s first motion to recuse
merely said “[u]pon careful consideration of [Father‟s] Motion to Recuse … and a hearing on
same, said Motion to Recuse is denied.” The trial court did not comply with Section 1.03. In its
order denying Father‟s second motion to recuse, the trial court simply stated:

       [Father] presented at [the] hearing no new proof or evidence indicating any bias
       or prejudice on the part of the Trial Court. [Father] then filed an Appeal to the
       Court of Appeals. This appeal was summarily dismissed by the Court of Appeals
       and that dismissal is now final.

       The claimant now appears before the Court complaining of matters which were
       heard and disposed of in the prior Order. The Order dated September 22, 2014 is
       now final. There is no merit in claimants 2nd Motion. Res Judicata is applicable to
       the 2nd Motion and said Motion is denied.
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I agree with the majority that Father‟s second motion for recusal asserted new grounds for the
recusal, although it also incorporated Father‟s first motion for recusal and relied on the grounds
asserted in that first motion to recuse. Given the new grounds asserted in the second motion to
recuse, the trial court should have made a fresh effort to comply with Section 1.03. Again, the
requirements of Rule 10B are mandatory for the litigants, and they are also mandatory for the
trial court.

        Nonetheless, the majority concludes that the trial court‟s entry of a written order that
differed from the trial judge‟s oral colloquy, with no explanation from the trial judge, necessarily
demonstrates the appearance of bias and requires recusal. Father provided this Court with the
transcript of the September 3, 2014 hearing, during which the trial judge “instructed” the parties
to have a weekend visitation, as described in the majority opinion, “within the next 30 days.”
After Father‟s counsel asked about recurring visitation between September 3 and a hearing date
on Father‟s “petition for entry of the show cause order,” the trial court stated:

          I [the court] would set that up once a month. I know he wouldn‟t want to go
          anymore than that, but I would be inclined – and then what I would do is just have
          you to pick a date and advise – and I would just let – put in an order, put in a little
          separate order and new order of the date that he could go down there and do that.
          We could just do it one order at a time until it‟s heard, if that‟s necessary. And I
          think that would give Mr. Fain the visitation that‟s reasonable under those
          circumstances because y‟all know Texas is a long way and it‟s a hardship on
          everybody involved when they travel back and forth like that, and particular with
          him, with [Father]. I suspect he wouldn‟t want to go more than that.

The majority correctly notes that Father‟s counsel prepared a draft order responsive to the trial
court‟s oral instructions, that the draft order memorialized the trial judge‟s rulings concerning
temporary visitation with the minor child (providing for telephone calls with the child on Friday
evenings and visitation with the minor child only on September 20 through September 21, 2014),
and that the trial judge did not sign the draft order. However, the copy of Father‟s counsel‟s draft
order contained in his petition for recusal appeal does not include a certificate of service
indicating the date Father‟s counsel submitted the proposed order to the trial court. The trial
court entered an order on September 22, 2014, denying Father‟s motion to recuse, noting that
Mother had been properly served, relieving Mother‟s counsel of further representation, and
addressing a child support issue. While Father takes issue with the trial court‟s failure to include
temporary visitation in the September 22 order, Father was admittedly able to exercise some
visitation with the child after the September 3 hearing, which is apparently consistent with the
trial court‟s oral instructions.

       The crux of the majority‟s holding is that the trial judge is required to recuse himself
because (1) a writ of mandamus required the trial judge to set Father‟s petition for contempt for
hearing; (2) Father filed a complaint with the Tennessee Board of Judicial Conduct,1 and; (3) the
1
    Attached as an exhibit to Father‟s petition for accelerated interlocutory appeal to this Court is a
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trial judge entered an order that was not as expansive as his oral instructions to the party at the
September 3, 2014 hearing. However, Father simply has not submitted “any evidence that the
trial judge‟s actions in this case were the result of bias, prejudice, impropriety, or harassment.”
Watson, 448 S.W.3d at 933.

        The party seeking recusal bears the burden of proof, and “any alleged bias must
        arise from extrajudicial sources and not from events or observations during
        litigation of a case.” … “If the bias is alleged to stem from events occur[r]ing in
        the course of the litigation of the case, the party seeking recusal has a greater
        burden to show bias that would require recusal, i.e., that the bias is so pervasive
        that it is sufficient to deny the litigant a fair trial.”

Runyon v. Runyon, No. W2013-02651-COA-T10B-CV, 2014 WL 1285729, at *6 (Tenn. Ct.
App. Mar. 31, 2014) (no perm. app. filed) (quoting McKenzie v. McKenzie, No. M2014-00010-
COA-T10B-CV, 2014 WL 575908, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 11, 2014) (no perm. app. filed)).
“Adverse rulings by a trial judge … are not usually sufficient to establish bias.” Ingram v. Sohr,
M2012-00782-COA-R3-CV, 2013 WL 3968155 at *31 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 31, 2013) (citing
State v. Cannon, 254 S.W.3d 287, 308 (Tenn. 2008)). As the Eastern Section noted in Johnston,
“[r]ulings of a trial judge, even if erroneous, numerous and continuous, do not, without more,
justify disqualification.” Johnston at *2 (citing Alley at 821); see also State v. Reid, 313 S.W.3d
792, 816 (Tenn. 2006).

        The record before us reveals that the trial judge entered an order that did not address
every matter he addressed in his oral instructions to the parties at the September 3 hearing. I
recognize that the item the trial judge did not address in his written order is the issue most
important to Father – visitation with his daughter. However, trial courts speak through written
orders, not through oral statements contained in transcripts. Alexander v. JB Partners, 380
S.W.3d 772, 777 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

        The three things on which the majority rely – the existence of a mandamus action, a
judicial complaint setting forth the same arguments as the mandamus action, and the entry of an
order with which Father disagreed – do not provide us with enough evidence to find bias,

“Complaint Against Judge Under Code of Judicial Conduct,” dated June 13, 2014. The complaint does
not indicate when or whether it was received by the Board of Judicial Conduct. Father‟s judicial
complaint essentially relies on and incorporates his complaint for mandamus relief.
        Father filed his first Motion for Recusal on September 2, 2014, and did not assert that the judicial
complaint was a basis for recusal. Father also did not assert that the judicial complaint was a basis for
recusal in his second Motion for Recusal (although it was briefly discussed at the hearing on the second
motion). Notably, Father did not assert that the judicial complaint was a basis for recusal in his petition to
this Court.
        A disciplinary complaint filed against a judge does not necessarily require recusal of the judge.
See Moncier v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 406 S.W.3d 139, 162 (Tenn. 2013) (noting that judicial
disqualification standards do not require recusal merely because a litigant files a separate lawsuit against
the judge); see also State v. Blankenship, 115 Ohio App. 3d 512, 685 N.E.2d 831, 833 (1996) (holding a
judge need not recuse himself simply because a party filed a disciplinary complaint against him).
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prejudice, impropriety, or harassment. All arise from events during litigation of the case and
therefore require additional evidence to establish a basis for recusal. The transcripts provided in
Father‟s petition for accelerated appeal demonstrate that Father disagrees with the trial court on
at least three things: (1) whether Mother had to be served with service of process before Father
could present a motion for contempt; (2) whether mandamus was necessary; and (3) whether the
court was required to include oral instructions in a written order. All of these are disagreements
over legal issues. Even if the trial judge is wrong on each point (and I express no opinion
whatsoever in that regard), recusal is not required.

        Based on the evidence and information before us, I do not believe that “„a person of
ordinary prudence in the judge‟s position, knowing all of the facts known to the judge, would
find a reasonable basis for questioning the judge‟s impartiality.‟” City of Memphis, No. W2014-
02197-COA-T10B-CV, 2015 WL 127895, at *7 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 8, 2015) (no perm. app.
filed) (citation omitted). Rather, I believe that a person of ordinary prudence in the judge‟s
position would find that Father disagrees with a number of the trial judge‟s legal positions. For
those, he has a remedy through direct appeal, but they do not require recusal.

         For the foregoing reasons, and either of them separately, I would affirm the decision of
the trial court.

                                                     _________________________________
                                                     BRANDON O. GIBSON, JUDGE

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