ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS
William R. Groth
Geoffrey S. Lohman
A. Scott Chinn
Anthony W. Overholt
April E. Sellers
Fred R. Biesecker
Michael A. Wukmer
Indianapolis, Indiana
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
William Bock, III
Mark J. Colucci
Matthew T. Klein
Indianapolis, Indiana
ATTORNEYS FOR AMICUS CURIAE
Edward W. Harris, III
Maggie L. Smith
Thomas F. OGara
Indianapolis, Indiana
PETERSON, Bart, et al., )
)
Appellant (Defendant Below), ) Indiana Supreme Court
) Cause No. 49S02-0302-CV-71
v. )
) Indiana Court of Appeals
BORST, Philip C. ) Cause No. 49A02-0302-CV-144
)
Appellee (Petitioner Below). )
)
and )
)
BOYD, Rozelle, et al., )
)
Appellants )
(Intervening Defendants Below) )
)
v. )
)
SADLER, Doris Anne, et al., )
Appellees. )
__________________________________________________________________
BOEHM, Justice.
Appellees, Borst, et al., have filed a motion for my recusal in this
case. For the reasons given, the motion is denied.
The stated ground for the motion is that in November, 2001 I was
appointed by the Mayor of the City of Indianapolis as a member and
chair of a newly created Cultural Development Commission (CDC). At the outset,
let me state that if I agreed with the motion, I would resign
from the CDC, not recuse in this case. For the reasons stated,
I do not believe I need to take that step.
The Commission was created by resolution of the Capital Improvements Board (CIB).
It is funded by five-million-dollar grant from private sources and one million dollars
per year over five years from the CIB. Under its authorizing resolution,
the Commission is responsible for the Citys overall cultural development policy and is
accountable to both the CIB and the private funding sources. All members
of the Commission serve without compensation, and all are appointed by the Mayor,
who is a plaintiff and an appellant in this case. The Commission
is not a partisan agency. From private conversations with two of the
other eight Commissioners whom I knew before the Commission was formed, I understand
that they consider themselves generally to be disposed to the Republican Party.
I know either from public sources or newspaper reports that one other is
identified as a Republican and one as a Democrat. I have no
understanding of the political party preferences of the other four.
Once appointed to the CDC, I accepted the obligation to discharge both that
office and the office of Justice of this Court as best I can.
I believe I also undertook to subordinate my CDC role to that
of a Justice if the two conflict. A judge has a duty
to sit under Canon 3B(1) and not to recuse unless disqualification is required.
That is a particularly powerful consideration for Justices of Supreme Courts, where
there is no procedure to replace a recused Justice, and a recusal is
in practical terms a vote for the party who prevailed in the last
court. As Chief Justice Rehnquist put it:
While it can seldom be predicted with confidence at the time that a
justice addresses himself to the issue of disqualification whether or not the Court
in a particular case will be closely divided, the disqualification of one Justice
of this Court raises the possibility of an affirmance of the judgment below
by an equally divided Court. The consequence attending such a result is,
of course, that the principle of law presented by the case is left
unsettled. The undesirability of such a disposition is obviously not a reason
for refusing to disqualify oneself where in fact one deems himself disqualified, but
I believe it is a reason for not bending over backwards in order
to deem oneself disqualified.
Laird, Secretary of Defense v. Tatum, 409 U.S. 824, 837-38 (1972). I
agree, and for that reason believe resignation from the CDC is the appropriate
alternative if there is a problem in my continued service on the CDC
while sitting on this case.
The motion cites three relevant Canons of the Indiana Code of Judicial Conduct.
In my view the first two present no issue requiring extensive discussion.
Canon 4C(2) of Indianas Code specifically provides that a judge may serve
on a governmental commission concerned with improvements of the law, the legal system
or the administration of justice without permission of the Indiana Supreme Court.
A judge may serve on any other governmental commission only with that permission.
Service on the CDC requires that permission, and permission was requested and
received before I accepted the appointment. Canon 4C(3)(a)(ii) provides that a judge
is not to serve as an officer, director or non-legal advisor to an
organization if it is likely that the organization will be engaged frequently in
adversary proceedings that might get into the judges court. I agree that
service as a Commissioner of CDC is subject to the spirit if not
the letter of this provision, but I do not agree that service on
the CDC comes close to violating it. Although there is always the
possibility of litigation over some action of the CDC, I considered this issue
before taking the appointment and believed then, and believe now, that there is
no likelihood that the CDC will be engaged frequently in any court battles.
The motion also cites Canons 3E(1)(c) and (d)(iii), which embody the familiar and
often difficult to apply prohibition against a judge sitting on a case where
the judges impartiality might reasonably be questioned. The substance of this case
is the Marion County Democratic Party against the Marion County Republican Party, and
the issue is claimed to affect the parties relative strength in the City-County
Council. Litigation over this issue inevitably raises some tension with the Judicial
Code. All Justices on this Court were appointed by the Governor.
In every case the appointing Governor has selected someone with at least some
history of support for the Governors political party. The judges of the
Marion Superior Court trial court, whose divided decision Borst supports, are selected through
a process in which the party apparatus is very significant, if not usually
controlling. Unlike appellate judges, Marion Superior Court judges are subject to reelection
through the same party-dominated process every six years. This is no fault
of any judge. Someone has to resolve these disputes if the political
process produces either no result, as here, or a result in violation of
the federal or state constitution. The courts are forced to deal with
the issue if the other two branches do not. I point out
the inherent difficulty in addressing redistricting litigation because I believe any objective observer
would find these issues significantly more problematic than the ones raised by this
motion to recuse. Yet they are inherent in the process. The
best we can do is to be confident ourselves that the result we
reach is consistent with both the fact of fairness and impartiality and the
appearance of both.
I do not believe a reasonable objective person would conclude that service on
the Cultural Development Commission generates an economic interest in the outcome of this
lawsuit. As the motion notes, [o]rdinarily, community involvement and political participation are
not sufficient to require a Judge or Justices recusal.
See, e.g., In
re Mason, 916 F.2d 384, 387-88 (7th Cir. 1990); Sexson v. SerVaas, 830
F.Supp 475, 478 (S.D. Ind. 1993). Specifically, a judges recusal is not
required because the appointing authority is a litigant. Hamlin v. Govt of
Canal Zone, 26 F.2d 161 (5th Cir. 1928) (judge not disqualified to pass
on the removal power of the governor who appointed him). I take
it as obvious that I have no personal economic stake in the Commissions
activities. I serve without compensation. The motion suggests the City-County Councils
review of the budgets of the CIB gives me, as a CDC commissioner,
an interest in the outcome of this case because one party may be
more inclined to approve funding for the CDC than another. It is
by no means clear to me that the political makeup of the City-County
Council would have any effect on the Commissions funding, half of which comes
from private sources. The motion presents no facts to support the claim
that council members elected by one party or the other will be more
supportive of CIB funding for programs designed to further the cultural resources, tourism,
and quality of life in Indianapolis. In my own experience, views on
this subject vary widely with individuals. In any event, I consider this
claimed conflict of interest to be far too remote to overcome the presumption
that a judge will act without regard to it.
The motion also notes that the Mayor, who is a party to this
litigation, appointed me to the CDC. To the extent this is a
separate or additional factor beyond any claim that the composition of the City-County
Council might affect the CDC, I believe it is in the same category
as appointment by the Governor and does not require recusal. See generally
10 A.L.R. 2d 1307. Similarly, in those states where judges are elected,
having accepted political contributions from a party to a lawsuit is not disqualifying.
City of Las Vegas Downtown Redev. Agency v. the Eight Judicial Dist.
Court of the State of Nev., 5 P.3d 1059 (Nev. 2000).
Finally, the motion was filed after oral argument in this case. The
movants represent that they were unaware of my appointment to the CDC until
that time, and I accept that. But the timing of the motion
is not significant here. The timing of the motion in
In re
Wilkins, 780 N.E.2d 842 (Ind. 2003), was important because the motion brought to
the attention of the affected Justice facts that were not known to him,
and was filed only after the Justice had ruled on the case.
It is highly desirable that recusal issues be raised promptly, but the motion
here presented me with no facts I had not considered before I determined
that I should sit on the case. I reached that conclusion before
seeing the motion, and nothing in it causes me to reach a different
result today.