Abbott, Inc. v. Samuel Guirguis ( 2021 )


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  •                                              RENDERED: FEBRUARY 18, 2021
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2018-SC-0577-DG
    ABBOTT, INC.                                                        APPELLANT
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                         NO. 2016-CA-0394
    HOPKINS CIRCUIT COURT NO. 08-CI-00177
    SAMUEL GUIRGUIS; DIANA P. HERRIN;                                   APPELLEES
    PATSY E. HOLLAND; HOMESTEAD
    AUCTION & REALTY, INC.; MICHAEL
    RUSSELL; SHARON RUSSELL; JAMES C.
    SPEAKS; DARRIN G. TABOR; THE ESTATE
    OF JOHNNY BROWN RUSSELL, BY AND
    THROUGH ITS EXECUTOR, WARREN K.
    HOPKINS AND DWIGHT E. WEST
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VANMETER
    VACATING AND REMANDING
    This case involves two primary issues, mandatory recusal of the trial
    court judge and the interpretation of deeds. While we hold that the Hopkins
    Circuit judge in this instance was required to recuse, thereby necessitating our
    setting aside the judgment, we note that interpretation of deeds and the
    devolution and ownership of a right of way following a railroad’s abandonment
    are matters of law, which an appellate court is to review de novo. Based on
    that standard of review, we give direction for that interpretation on remand.
    I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The uncontested facts in this case are that prior to 2007, members of the
    Russell family owned over 1,000 acres of land in Hopkins and Christian
    Counties. This property had been assembled over time and was comprised of
    twelve tracts. The property was bisected by a railroad which had been
    originally constructed in the 19th century. In 2007, the Russells conveyed the
    property to West and Speaks.1 Approximately six months later, West and
    Speaks conveyed the property to Samuel Guirguis. Following Guirguis’
    purchase,2 he became aware that Abbott, Inc., whose president was William
    Donan, claimed ownership of the railroad bed. Guirguis filed this action in
    early 2008 claiming fraud by West and Speaks and the real estate agents
    involved in the sale. Guirguis’ claim was that they had mispresented, and he
    had believed, the property was a contiguous tract of 1,066 acres. The action
    did not originally include Abbott as a party.
    Abbott’s claim to the railroad bed was initially based on a 2005 quitclaim
    deed from the Paducah and Louisville Railroad (“P&L”) for a four-mile strip of
    the railroad bed, sixty-six feet wide.3 P&L’s predecessors had acquired the
    1Dwight West and Brenda West, spouses, and James Speaks. Ms. West is now
    deceased and Dwight West’s participation in this action is individually and as
    Executor of her estate.
    2 A factual dispute may exist as to when Guirguis became aware of Abbott’s
    claim of ownership. Because of our analysis of uncontested facts, resolution of this
    dispute may be unnecessary.
    3 Abbott’s main property lay to the east of Guirguis’ property. Abbott’s purpose
    in acquiring the railroad bed was to gain additional access to its property from the
    west, and to attempt to limit trespassing on its property via the former railroad bed.
    2
    right-of-way for the line by multiple deeds, but as to the portion of the right-of-
    way bisecting Guirguis’ property, no deed has ever been located. P&L, the last
    railroad company to operate the line, formally abandoned the line in 2003 by
    filing a Notice of Abandonment with the Surface Transportation Board, formerly
    the Interstate Commerce Commission.
    Following the filing of Guirguis’ action, the trial court granted West and
    Speaks’ motion to amend their pleadings to add a cross-claim against Abbott.
    After filing its initial pleading, an answer to the cross-claim, Abbott filed a
    motion for the circuit judge, James Brantley, to recuse.4 The basis for recusal
    was that in November 2004, William Donan, Abbott’s President, discovered
    future judge Brantley, his son, and another man duck hunting on Abbott’s
    land.5 An exchange of letters followed between Donan, Brantley and the other
    man, in which Donan accused Brantley of trespassing and installing duck
    blinds on his land. The 2004 events were not, however, the end of the incident.
    On November 2, 2005, attorney William G. Deatherage, Jr.,6 on behalf of
    4  The fact that Abbott filed its answer and in short order thereafter filed its
    recusal motion is important since no argument exists that recusal was waived. See
    Johnson v. Commonwealth, 
    231 S.W.3d 800
    , 809 (Ky. App. 2007) (stating “[a] party
    alleging that a trial judge should recuse . . . must move for recusal immediately after
    discovering the facts upon which the disqualification rests[]”); see also Bussell v.
    Commonwealth, 
    882 S.W.2d 111
    , 113 (Ky. 1994); Bailey v. Bailey, 
    474 S.W.2d 389
    ,
    391 (Ky. 1971).
    5 At the time of the incident, James Brantley was an attorney in Dawson
    Springs. In 2006, he was elected Judge of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, a one-county
    circuit consisting of Hopkins County. Judge Brantley retired in 2019.
    6   Coincidentally, attorney Deatherage represents Guirguis in this matter.
    3
    Brantley and his son, sent Donan a letter regarding subsequent statements
    allegedly made by Donan. The letter stated:
    Re: Alleged Remarks
    Dear Bill:
    This letter is sent to you on behalf of James C. (Jim)
    Brantley and his son, William P. (Will) Brantley, who are
    represented by this law firm.                                          .
    According to Mr. Brantley, you allegedly have commented to
    a prosecutor, and possibly to judges of the Hopkins District Court
    in Madisonville, Kentucky, that Jim Brantley has encouraged
    others to trespass on your land, and that Will Brantley was with
    others when they trespassed on your land. Both Jim Brantley and
    Will Brantley insist that, if such accusations were in fact made,
    they are false and not true.
    Apparently, this issue has arisen in connection with a
    criminal case pending in the Hopkins District Court whereby
    Lester Crook and Randy Orten are accused of criminally
    trespassing on lands owned or controlled by you and/or by Ray
    Robinson. According to Jim Brantley, he received information that
    you reportedly stated that Jim either encouraged Mr. Crook and
    Mr. Orten to enter the subject lands, or that he had prior
    knowledge of their intent to do so. Jim also reports that he was
    informed that you may have accused his son, Will, of being with
    Mr. Crook and Mr. Orten when they allegedly were on the land, but
    that Will somehow avoided detection.
    Both Jim and Will Brantley are concerned about any false
    accusations that may have been made concerning them. Each is
    particularly concerned with preserving his reputation, and each
    does not want any false accusations or rumors to be circulated
    about him. Jim and Will Brantley regard all such statements to be
    defamatory and actionable.
    The purpose of this letter is to politely and respectfully
    request that, if you have made statements similar to those
    mentioned herein, you cease doing so immediately. Further, if you
    have made statements similar to those mentioned herein, it is
    requested that you go to those to whom or before whom the
    statements were made; that you withdraw the statements; and,
    that you inform those persons that you had no factual basis for
    making the statements. On the other hand, if you believe that you
    do have facts to support any such statements made by you, you
    are requested to communicate those facts to me without delay.
    4
    Neither Jim nor Will Brantley wants this matter to go any
    further. They merely want the statements to stop, and they want
    those to whom the statements were made and those who may have
    heard the statements to be informed that the statements were
    incorrect.
    Your prompt attention to this matter will be greatly
    appreciated. Should you have any questions or concerns, please
    contact me.
    Donan tersely responded that “truth was an absolute defense.”
    At a pre-trial conference in January 2009, Judge Brantley described the
    events as “a disagreement over duck-hunting territory[,]” and denied Abbott’s
    recusal motion. The denial was memorialized in an Order entered January 21,
    2009.
    While the matter was pending, Abbott obtained a quitclaim deed from the
    Russells. By this conveyance, the Russells conveyed their interest in the
    railroad bed, if any.
    Eventually, the matter proceeded to a bench trial. By Opinion and
    Judgment entered in February 2016, the trial court, relying on Illinois Cent. R.R
    Co. v. Roberts, 
    928 S.W.2d 822
     (Ky. App. 1996), adjudged Guirguis the owner
    of the property. The trial court’s basic rationale was that the railroad merely
    held an easement for the right-of-way, and upon abandonment of the
    easement, the adjoining property owners, on either side of the railroad, became
    fee simple owners to the center of the railroad. Abbott appealed, and the Court
    of Appeals affirmed. We granted Abbott’s motion for discretionary review.
    5
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    As recently as August 2020, this court reaffirmed the rule that an
    appellate court reviews a denial of a motion for recusal for an abuse of
    discretion. Thomas v. Commonwealth, 
    605 S.W.3d 545
    , 559 (Ky. 2020); Dunlap
    v. Commonwealth, 
    435 S.W.3d 537
    , 587 (Ky. 2013). The oft-quoted test for
    abuse of discretion is “whether the trial judge’s decision was arbitrary,
    unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles.”
    Commonwealth v. English, 
    993 S.W.2d 941
    , 945 (Ky. 1999). In Thomas, we
    further reaffirmed “[t]he burden of proof required for recusal of a trial judge is
    an onerous one. There must be a showing of facts ‘of a character calculated
    seriously to impair the judge’s impartiality and sway his judgment.’” 605
    S.W.3d at 559 (quoting Dunlap, 435 S.W.3d at 590). A party is required to
    show “more than ‘a . . . mere belief that the judge will not afford a fair and
    impartial trial[.]’” Minks v. Commonwealth, 
    427 S.W.3d 802
    , 808 (Ky. 2014)
    (quoting Webb v. Commonwealth, 
    904 S.W.2d 226
    , 230 (Ky. 1995) (citing
    Howerton v. Price, 
    449 S.W.2d 746
    , 748 (Ky. 1970)).
    Our analysis of the history of judicial recusal in this Commonwealth, as
    well as parties’ arguments in this case, disclose that our appellate decisions
    have inconsistently set forth the standard of review and failed to appropriately
    recognize evolving standards set forth by the legislature and this Court within
    the Code of Judicial Conduct. SCR7 4.300.
    7   Supreme Court Rules.
    6
    Prior to its 1976 repeal, KRS8 23.230 provided the only guidance for
    judicial recusal. The statute addressed the appointment of a special judge and
    included among its causes “if either party files with the clerk of the court his
    affidavit that the judge will not afford him a fair and impartial trial.” KRS
    23.230(1).9 Case law interpreting this section “require a statement of facts
    which not only show bias, prejudice or personal hostility toward the accused,
    but that such is of a character calculated seriously to impair the judge’s
    impartiality and sway his judgment.” Foster v. Commonwealth, 
    348 S.W.2d 759
    , 760 (Ky. 1961); see also Howerton, 
    449 S.W.2d at 748
     (stating “[a] party’s
    mere belief that the judge will not afford a fair and impartial trial is not
    sufficient. The asserted belief must be predicated on stated facts . . .”); German
    Ins. Co. v. Landram, 
    88 Ky. 433
    , 440, 
    11 S.W. 367
    , 369 (1889). In Johnson v.
    Ducobu, 
    258 S.W.2d 509
    , 510 (Ky. 1953), and while our predecessor court
    reaffirmed the requirement of a factually-based affidavit, it also noted that it
    had “been careful to protect litigants from every possibility of bias on the part
    of trial courts. To that end, we have held that all facts stated in an affidavit
    must be considered as true for the purpose of a motion to vacate the bench.”
    The rule that the facts contained in a litigant’s affidavit were to be considered
    8   Kentucky Revised Statutes.
    9  As with, it seems, many statutes, this provision has a long pedigree. See Gen.
    Stats. ch. 28, art. 7, § 1 (Ky. 1879) (providing for election of special judge if the circuit
    judge “cannot properly preside in an action, . . . or either party shall file . . . his
    affidavit that the judge will not afford him a fair and impartial trial[]”). Following the
    ratification of the 1891 Constitution, with the re-codification of the statutes, this
    section became Ky. Stat. § 968. In 1926, Ky. Stat. § 968 was repealed and reenacted
    as Ky. Stat. § 971-6.
    7
    as true was adhered to even if the judge considered the allegation false or filed
    a countervailing affidavit to the contrary. Conley v. Stivers, 
    445 S.W.2d 439
    ,
    440 (Ky. 1969).
    Just four years later, in Wells v. Walter, 501 S.W.259 (Ky. 1973), the
    court recognized,
    The judge is not the only one concerned in the just and correct course of
    justice. Nor, indeed, are the litigants the only ones to be consulted. The
    public generally have the right to feel that there is no favoritism in the
    courthouse; that there all men stand equal before the law, and that there
    justice will be dispensed to all with an even hand. The fact that the
    judge may be unconscious of any bias, and may be sure that interest or
    relationship could not dispose him to favor one side or the other, is not
    enough. The unsuccessful litigant has also the right to know that the
    decision was the offspring of a fair and impartial mind, and this
    satisfying assurance he cannot have if there are before his eyes facts or
    circumstances reasonably sufficient to create the belief that influences
    outside of the record operated in making the decision.
    Id. at 260 (quoting from Petrey v. Holliday, 
    178 Ky. 410
    , 423, 
    199 S.W. 67
    , 72
    (1917)).   While the court recognized a judge’s obligation to decide, it also
    noted as a higher consideration a litigant’s entitlement “‘to nothing less that
    the cold neutrality of an impartial judge . . . who is wholly free, disinterested,
    impartial and independent. Any doubt of qualification, therefore, should be
    resolved in favor of a party questioning it, bona fide, and upon grounds having
    substance and significance.’” 501 S.W.2d at 260 (quoting Dotson v. Burchett,
    
    301 Ky. 28
    , 
    190 S.W.2d 697
    , 700 (1945)). The Wells court then reiterated the
    “universally recognized tradition of the law that the appearance of impartiality
    is next in importance only to the fact itself. It cannot be sacrificed to
    convenience.” Id. at 260.
    8
    These pre-1976 cases are important because they established the
    framework for judicial recusal. 1) that recusal must be factually based; 2) a
    mere belief that a judge will not be fair and impartial is insufficient; 3) a trial
    judge’s own belief as to his or her ability to preside is immaterial; and 4) a trial
    judge’s recusal ruling is subject to appellate review.
    In 1976, the legislature repealed KRS 23.230 and replaced it with KRS
    26A.015 and 26A.020. KRS 26A.015, then and now, provides:
    (2) Any justice or judge of the Court of Justice or master
    commissioner shall disqualify himself in any proceeding:
    (a)    Where he has a personal bias or prejudice concerning
    a party, or personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts
    concerning the proceedings, or has expressed an opinion
    concerning the merits of the proceeding;
    ...
    (e)   Where he has knowledge of any other
    circumstances in which his impartiality might reasonably be
    questioned.
    (emphasis added). The affidavit requirement “that the judge will not afford him
    a fair and impartial trial” was set forth in KRS 26A.020(1).10 In that same year,
    10 In 1995, we held KRS 26A.020(1) to be an unconstitutional encroachment by
    the legislature on the judiciary’s rule-making power. However, and despite this
    infirmity, we upheld the statute on comity principles. Foster v. Overstreet, 
    905 S.W.2d 504
    , 506-07 (Ky. 1995). Previous versions of KRS 26A.020(1), supra note 9, had been
    upheld under the constitutional provisions that authorized the legislature to provide
    for the naming of special judges. German Ins. Co., 88 Ky. at 433, 11 S.W. at 368
    (interpreting Ky. Const. of 1850, art. IV, § 28 (authorizing the legislature to “provide by
    law for holding circuit courts, when, from any cause, the judge shall fail to attend, or,
    if in attendance, cannot properly preside[]”)). The present state constitution originally
    contained an identical provision as the 1850 constitution, Ky. Const. § 136, but this
    section was repealed with the adoption of the Judicial Article in 1976. See Ky. Const.
    § 110(5)(b) (directing the Chief Justice, as executive head of the Court of Justice, to
    “assign temporarily any justice or judge of the Commonwealth, active or retired, to sit
    9
    1976, the Supreme Court adopted SCR 4.000 to 4.300. SCR 4.300 contained
    the Code of Judicial Conduct.11 The 1976 version of Canon 3C, although in
    many respects similar to KRS 26A.015(2), expressed the rule of disqualification
    as “[a] judge should disqualify himself in a proceeding in which his impartiality
    might reasonably be questioned[.]” (emphasis added). Subsequent revision of
    SCR 4.300, however, resulted in its disqualification rule largely mimicking KRS
    26A.015(2)(e), in that “[a] judge shall disqualify himself or herself in a
    proceeding in which the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned,
    including but not limited to instances where: (a) the judge has a personal bias
    or prejudice concerning a party or a party’s lawyer, or personal knowledge of
    disputed evidentiary facts[.]” SCR 4.300 (1999), Canon 3E(1). The
    commentary to this section states that “[u]nder this rule, a judge is disqualified
    whenever the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned, regardless
    whether any of the specific rules in Section 3E(1) apply.” Id., Commentary.12
    in any court other than the Supreme Court when he deems such assignment
    necessary for the prompt disposition of cases[]”).
    11 SCR 4.300 (1976) was based on the 1970 American Bar Association (“ABA”)
    Model Code of Judicial Conduct. Effective January 1, 1999, we revised SCR 4.300
    based on the ABA’s 1990 American Bar Association’s Model Code of Judicial Conduct.
    In February 2017, the Kentucky Supreme Court began the process of adopting a Code
    of Judicial Conduct based on the 2007 ABA Model Code. This process was completed
    in January 2018. Ky. S. Ct. Admin. Order 2018-04.
    12 Importantly, the Preamble to Code of Judicial Conduct provides guidance as
    to interpretation of these rules and commentary:
    The Code of Judicial Conduct is intended to establish standards
    for ethical conduct of judges. It consists of broad statements called
    Canons, specific rules set forth in Sections under each Canon, a
    Terminology Section, An Application Section and Commentary. The text
    of the Canons and the Sections, including the Terminology and
    Application Sections, is authoritative. The Commentary, by explanation
    and example, provides guidance with respect to the purpose and
    10
    Both the legislature and this Court have thus expressed policy that mandates
    recusal in any proceeding in which a judge’s impartiality might reasonably be
    questioned.
    Some of our opinions have recognized that the “inquiry under Canon
    3E(1) ‘is an objective one, made from the perspective of a reasonable observer
    who is informed of all the surrounding facts and circumstances.’” Dean v.
    Bondurant, 
    193 S.W.3d 744
    , 746 (Ky. 2006) (quoting Microsoft Corp. v. United
    States, 
    530 U.S. 1301
    , 1302 (2000)); see also Liljeberg v. Health Servs.
    Acquisition Corp., 
    486 U.S. 847
    , 850 (1988) (interpreting 28 U.S.C § 455(a)
    which mandates judicial disqualification “in any proceeding in which . . .
    impartiality might reasonably be questioned” to be evaluated from the
    standpoint of “a reasonable person, knowing the relevant facts”). As
    demonstrated in both Dean and Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) v. Edwards, 
    594 S.W.3d 199
     (Ky. 2018), the analysis can be factually intensive.
    In Stopher v. Commonwealth, 
    57 S.W.3d 787
    , 794 (Ky. 2001), the
    defendant moved for recusal of the trial judge and for appointment of a non-
    Jefferson County judge, based on the close relationship between the local
    meaning of the Canons and Sections. The Commentary is not intended
    as a statement of additional rules. When the text uses “shall” or “shall
    not,” it is intended to impose binding obligations the violation of which
    can result in disciplinary action. When “should” or “should not” is used,
    the text is intended as hortatory and as a statement of what is or is not
    appropriate conduct but not as a binding rule under which a judge may
    be disciplined. When “may” is used, it denotes permissible discretion or,
    depending on the context, it refers to action that is not covered by
    specific proscriptions.
    SCR 4.300 (1999) Preamble.
    11
    sheriff’s department and judiciary. This Court, citing both KRS 26A.015(2) and
    SCR 4.300, Canon 3C(1) recusal provisions for “personal bias or prejudice” or
    “other circumstances in which . . . impartiality might reasonably be
    questioned” stated that “[t]he burden of proof required for recusal of a trial
    judge is an onerous one. There must be a showing of facts ‘of a character
    calculated seriously to impair the judge’s impartiality and sway his judgment.’”
    
    Id.
     (citing Foster and Ducobu).
    Our decision in Stopher and a slightly earlier Court of Appeals opinion,
    Brand v. Commonwealth, 
    939 S.W.2d 358
    , 359 (Ky. App. 1997), appear to be
    the first instances of describing as “onerous” the recusal burden of proof.13 In
    fact, in Brand, the court seems to have equated the onerous burden of proof
    with a showing “that the trial judge is prejudiced to a degree that she cannot be
    impartial.” 
    939 S.W.2d at 359
    . The onerous burden of proof statement
    continues to be set forth in our more recent opinions. E.g., Thomas, 605
    S.W.3d at 559; Dunlap, 435 S.W.3d at 590. The problem with this refrain is
    NOT that these cases were wrongly decided on their facts, but that they fail to
    recognize that the standard for measuring whether a judge’s impartiality might
    reasonably be questioned is an “objective one, made from the perspective of a
    reasonable observer who is informed of all the surrounding facts and
    circumstances.” Edwards, 594 S.W.3d at 201; Dean, 193 S.W.3d at 746.
    13 “Onerous” is an adjective typically referring to a task or responsibility and is
    defined as “[t]roublesome or oppressive; burdensome[.]” The American Heritage
    Dictionary of the English Language (1975).
    12
    Admittedly, both Edwards and Dean involved motions to recuse Supreme
    Court justices, but neither KRS 26A.015 nor SCR 4.300 differentiate between
    justices or judges based on level of court. See also Sommers v. Commonwealth,
    
    843 S.W.2d 879
    , 881–82 (Ky. 1992) (citing both KRS 26A.015(2)(e) and SCR
    4.300, Canon 3(C)(1) and stating that “[v]iewed in totality, the circumstances of
    the instant case persuade us that Judge Graves’ impartiality might reasonably
    be questioned, and moreover that Judge Graves had knowledge of these
    circumstances[]”).
    Against that background, our standard of review for a recusal motion
    requires revision. Admittedly as recently as four months ago, we stated that a
    court’s denial of a motion for recusal is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    Thomas, 605 S.W.3d at 559; Dunlap, 435 S.W.3d at 587; see Sommers, 843
    S.W.2d at 880 (stating as “[t]he first issue raised on appeal is whether the trial
    judge abused his discretion in denying the defendant's motion of
    recusation[]”).14 To the extent this standard implies appellate deferral to the
    trial judge and his or her reasoning in not recusing, it is inappropriate. Any
    judge who is faced with a recusal motion based on either partiality or bias, may
    naturally be loath to acknowledge same. In fact, the other side of the
    obligation to recuse when required is the judicial obligation to hear and decide
    cases when no real reason to recuse exists. See SCR 4.300 (1999), Canon
    14 The Sommers opinion appears to be the first one in which the Court
    undertook to review a judge’s order on motion to recuse under an abuse of discretion
    standard. As previously discussed, this is inconsistent with the pre-1976
    jurisprudence.
    13
    3B(1) (stating “[a] judge shall hear and decide matters assigned to the judge
    except those in which disqualification is required[]”).15 Because an objective
    standard is appropriate for measuring whether a judge’s impartiality might
    reasonably be questioned from the perspective of a reasonable observer who is
    informed of all the surrounding facts and circumstances, we hold,
    appropriately, that this determination is to be reviewed on appeal on a de novo
    basis.16
    Going forward, when a party moves for a judge’s recusal, an affidavit
    setting forth factual allegations is required. If the judge grants the motion and
    recuses, a substitute judge is appointed to the case and the matter is at an
    end. Conversely, if the motion is denied, the judge may include in the record
    15   The current rule on Responsibility to Decide is SCR 4.300, Rule 2.7.
    16  As a practical matter, this revised standard of review simply requires our
    appellate courts to review the matter with “a fresh set of eyes,” without deference to
    the trial court’s decision. As noted, supra, many of our recent decisions concerning a
    motion to recuse would have been decided similarly whether we called our standard of
    review “abuse of discretion” or de novo. For example, in Thomas, the claim of judicial
    bias arose on remand of a criminal case for resentencing and was based on certain
    statements made by the trial court in the prior proceeding. 605 S.W.3d at 559. We
    agreed with the Commonwealth that adverse rulings in prior proceedings are
    insufficient to mandate recusal. Id.; see also Minks, 427 S.W.3d at 806 (holding that a
    trial judge was not required to recuse from a suppression hearing regarding evidence
    seized because of search warrant signed by the same judge); Dunlap, 435 S.W.3d at
    590 (upholding denial of recusal motion in criminal case when trial judge had
    previously presided over custody hearing concerning the defendant’s victims).
    Certainly, in some circumstances a judge’s prior statements or rulings may cross the
    line and demonstrate that his or her impartiality might reasonably be questioned.
    E.g., Sommers, 843 S.W.2d at 881-82. In the ordinary course of judicial business,
    however, every reasonable person recognizes that cases may be remanded and return
    to the trial court, or new disputes arise, or a matter may return to the appellate courts
    for any number of reasons. Mandatory recusal of judges or justices merely because of
    prior adjudication or familiarity with the parties would create an unworkable system.
    In fact, our system of family courts, one judge, one family, explicitly contemplates that
    a judge will be familiar with a family based on previous matters.
    14
    whatever countervailing facts or considerations he or she deems pertinent to
    permit appellate review.
    III.   ANALYSIS
    A.    Recusal.
    At the time Abbott moved for Judge Brantley’s recusal, SCR 4.300,
    Canon 3E,17 governing disqualification, provided:
    (1) A judge shall disqualify himself or herself in a proceeding in
    which the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned,
    including but not limited to instances where:
    (a) the judge has a personal bias or prejudice concerning a party or
    a party’s lawyer, or personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary
    facts concerning the proceeding;
    (emphasis added). The commentary under this section stated that “[d]islike of
    a party or a party’s lawyer does not, by itself, constitute a personal bias or
    prejudice.” We also noted that the obligation to recuse may exist whether any
    of the specific circumstances delineated by Canon 3E(1)(a)-(e) are met.
    In this instance, we hold that Abbott has presented sufficient evidence of
    animosity between Judge Brantley and Donan to create a reasonable question
    of the judge’s impartiality. While Judge Brantley characterized the incident
    and subsequent discourse between Donan and himself as “a disagreement over
    duck-hunting territory,” we believe the correspondence proffered to the Judge
    by Abbott demonstrated something more heated. The 2004 correspondence
    between Donan, Brantley and the third individual demonstrated three
    17 In 2018, this Court revised SCR 4.300, based on the 2007 American Bar
    Association’s Model Code of Judicial Conduct. The disqualification rules are now
    contained in SCR 4.300, Canon 2, Rule 2.11.
    15
    individuals who took their hunting rights and territory very seriously.
    Brantley’s 2004 letter to Donan concluded with the statement, “I really do not
    wish to harbor bad feelings over a duck. But we do have permission to hunt on
    property which adjoins yours and, if we decide to do so, will be there.”
    Additionally, the exchange did not end in 2004, but continued until at least a
    year later when Judge Brantley felt sufficiently bothered by Donan’s apparent
    continuing statements within the community to engage counsel Deatherage to
    send a letter to Donan demanding certain corrective action. While counsel
    Deatherage did not explicitly threaten a lawsuit, his correspondence certainly
    implied one. Since Judge Brantley ran for election the following year, 2006,
    and would have been required to file for election by the end of January 2006, a
    reasonable assumption is that Brantley believed his election prospects might
    be adversely affected by Donan’s statements and therefore Brantley had
    Deatherage send the letter. Rumors to the effect that a judicial candidate was
    encouraging lawlessness, i.e., trespassing on land, might not go unnoticed by
    the electorate. Additionally, and while we note that the property at issue in
    this case is not the same property involved in the duck-hunting incident, it is
    in the same general area of Hopkins County. Abbott’s stated interest in the
    proceeding is limiting access to its property, much as it had sought to limit
    Judge Brantley’s access just a few years prior. We hold that Abbott sufficiently
    established that in this proceeding, Judge Brantley’s impartiality might
    16
    reasonably be questioned and his recusal was mandatory under the SCR
    4.300, Canon 3E(1).18
    By this opinion, we do not impugn Judge Brantley’s integrity. To
    paraphrase Sommers, 843 S.W.2d at 882, “the issue is not whether Judge
    [Brantley] was in fact impartial. On the true issue, i.e., whether his
    impartiality might reasonably be questioned, we hold that under the
    circumstances it was indeed reasonable for [Abbott] to question Judge
    [Brantley’s] impartiality[.]”
    Because Judge Brantley erred in not recusing, the Hopkins Circuit Court
    judgment as well as the Court of Appeals opinion affirming must be vacated.
    B. Property Ownership upon a Railroad’s Abandonment of its Right-
    of-Way.
    Judge Brantley’s failure to recuse requires us to vacate his Opinion and
    Judgment since new factual findings may be necessary on remand. That
    noted, interpretation of deeds and the devolution and ownership of a right of
    way following a railroad’s abandonment are matters of law. The parties have
    briefed and argued these issues. Thus, as a matter of judicial economy, we
    give guidance on these issues.
    As a matter of law, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, a
    presumption exists that a railroad acquired a right-of-way easement—and not
    a fee—to construct its roadbed. Roberts, 
    928 S.W.2d at 825
    . In Roberts, the
    18 While the focus of this analysis is Judge Brantley’s failure to recuse in a case
    in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned as reviewed de novo, our
    decision would be the same if we reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard.
    17
    court based that presumption on what it described as a “a settled bias in favor
    of a railroad’s acquisition of an easement rather than a fee.” Id.; see also
    Sherman v. Petroleum Expl., 
    280 Ky. 105
    , 109, 
    132 S.W.2d 768
    , 771 (1939)
    (stating “an indefinite or ambiguous conveyance of land specifically for a
    railroad right of way is . . . subject to . . . a general knowledge that much
    railroad right of way is expressly or by operation of law limited to an easement,
    which has been usually found sufficient for the purposes desired[]”). The
    surveyors in this case apparently were unable to find any deed in favor of P&L
    or its predecessors. So, to the extent no contrary evidence exists or is
    produced on remand, then P&L’s interest, as a matter of law, was an easement
    over the right of way. Roberts, 
    928 S.W.2d at 825
    .19
    Abbott argues that Winston v. Louisville & Nashville R.R. Co., 
    160 Ky. 185
    , 
    169 S.W. 597
     (1914) supports its claim that P&L or its predecessor had a
    fee simple title by adverse possession. We disagree. The dispute in Winston
    involved a side track which the railroad had possessed and used for over 40
    years for general railroad purposes, loading and unloading cars, meeting of
    trains, placing cars for shipment, and discharging freight to consignees. 
    Id.
     at
    186–87, 169 S.W. at 597. As noted by the Court of Appeals, in its opinion
    herein, this use differs from use as a right-of-way. See also Ballard v. Louisville
    & Nashville R.R. Co., 
    9 Ky. L. Rptr. 523
    , 
    5 S.W. 484
     (1887) (holding that a deed
    19 A question may exist as to whether the Commonwealth had issued a patent
    for the subservient estate. The absence of a grant from the Commonwealth would not
    necessarily indicate that P&L or a predecessor had acquired fee title to the tract in
    question by adverse possession.
    18
    to the railroad was intended to pass the fee, and not a right-of-way easement,
    based on the price paid, the irregular shape of the tract conveyed, and the uses
    for which conveyed).
    Next, and as a matter of law, upon P&L’s abandonment of the railroad,
    the easement was extinguished, and the land reverted to the grantor or any
    successor in title. Rose v. Bryant, 
    251 S.W.2d 860
    , 861 (Ky. 1952); Mammoth
    Cave Nat’l Park Ass’n v. State Highway Comm’n, 
    261 Ky. 769
    , 776, 
    88 S.W.2d 931
    , 935 (1935). This case law dictates that P&L’s conveyance or quitclaim
    deed to Abbott after its abandonment of the line was a nullity. Furthermore, in
    this case, the record appears to indicate that no grantor may exist. Assuming
    that, on remand, no grantor of the easement exists or can be determined, or if
    subsequent deeds describe the railroad as a boundary, our case law supports
    that landowners adjoining the right-of-way are presumed to accede to title to
    the land which was subject to the easement to the centerline. Matthews v.
    Hudson, 
    308 Ky. 39
    , 42, 
    213 S.W.2d 424
    , 425 (1948); Henry v. Bd. of Trs., 
    207 Ky. 846
    , 847–48, 
    270 S.W. 476
    , 477 (1925); Roberts, 
    928 S.W.2d at
    826–27.
    On remand, the trial court will be required to determine the location of
    the tracts conveyed by the Russells to West and Speaks and then to Guirguis,
    whether those tracts adjoined or were bisected by the railroad right-of-way, and
    whether the Russells retained any interest in the land formerly subject to the
    right-of-way which was subject to the quitclaim deed to Abbott. Those factual
    determinations will determine the outcome of this controversy.
    19
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth herein, the Court of Appeals’ Opinion and
    Hopkins Circuit Court’s Opinion and Judgment are vacated. This matter is
    remanded to the Hopkins Circuit Court for further proceedings consistent
    herewith.
    Minton, C.J.; Conley, Hughes, Keller, Nickell and VanMeter, JJ., sitting.
    Minton, C.J.; Hughes, Keller, Nickell and VanMeter, JJ., concur. Conley, J.,
    concurs in result only. Lambert, J., not sitting.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Sheryl Glenn Snyder
    Frost Brown Todd LLC
    Thomas E. Springer
    Springer Law Firm, PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE, SAMUEL GUIRGUIS:
    William Deatherage
    Mark Alexander Gilbert
    Deatherage Myers & Lackey, PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES, DIANA P. HERRIN;
    HOMESTEAD AUCTION & REALTY, INC. AND
    DARRIN G. TABOR:
    Todd Andrew Farmer
    Farmer & Wright, PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES,
    PATSY E. HOLLAND; MICHAEL
    RUSSELL AND SHARON RUSSELL:
    Pro se
    20
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES, JAMES C.
    SPEAKS AND DWIGHT E. WEST:
    Richard E. Peyton
    Frymire, Evans, Peyton, Teague & Cartwright
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE, THE ESTATE OF JOHNNY
    BROWN RUSSELL, BY AND THROUGH ITS
    EXECUTOR, WARREN K. HOPKINS:
    Pro se
    21