Wonda Doe v. Gaines L. Stegall ( 2001 )


Menu:
  •                         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2001-CA-01674-SCT
    CONSOLIDATED WITH
    NO. 1998-CA-01058-SCT
    WONDA DOE
    v.
    GAINES L. STEGALL, INDIVIDUALLY AND d/b/a
    NOTTINGHAM PLACE APARTMENTS AND BETTY
    STEGALL
    ON MOTION FOR FURTHER REVIEW
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                              09/25/2001
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                   HON. W. SWAN YERGER
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                     HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                       RICK D. PATT
    SHANE F. LANGSTON
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                       JASON HOOD STRONG
    ROBERT S. ADDISON
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                            CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
    DISPOSITION OF MOTION:                         DENIED - 04/15/2004
    EN BANC.
    CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.     This matter is before this Court, pursuant to M.R.A.P. 48C(b), on a motion filed by Wonda Doe
    to review the refusal of Court of Appeals Judge T. Kenneth Griffis to recuse himself from this case and the
    order of the Court of Appeals denying reconsideration of that refusal. Finding that a reasonable person
    knowing all the circumstances would not question the impartiality of Judge Griffis, we deny the motion.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.       The facts of this personal injury case (involving an apartment tenant who was twice raped at
    knifepoint by a burglar over the course of a two-hour period) are adequately discussed in this Court’s
    decision in Doe v. Stegall, 
    757 So. 2d 201
    , 202-04 (Miss. 2000) (Doe I). In Doe I, we reversed the
    trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants (the Stegalls) and remanded the case
    back for trial. After the trial court again granted the Stegalls’ motion for summary judgment, the case came
    to us a second time on appeal (Doe II). Upon the second appeal, this case was initially retained by us for
    decision; however, on May 19, 2003, we deflected this case to the Court of Appeals for a decision on the
    merits.
    ¶3.       On June 13, 2003, Doe’s counsel filed a motion for recusal in the Court of Appeals requesting the
    recusal of Presiding Judge Leslie H. Southwick and Judge T. Kenneth Griffis.1 Doe’s basis for the
    requested recusal of Judge Southwick was that Judge Southwick was an officer in the Mississippi National
    Guard and that, as of the date of the filing of the motion, Doe and her counsel had a declaratory judgment
    action pending in state court against Mississippi Supreme Court Justice William L. Waller, Jr., challenging
    the constitutionality of Justice Waller’s service as an officer in the Mississippi National Guard simultaneously
    with his service on this Court.2 Presiding Judge Southwick entered an order on June 17, 2003, dismissing
    the recusal motion against him as moot inasmuch as he had already by that time voluntarily recused himself
    fromthe case prior to the filing of Doe’s motion. Doe’s basis for the requested recusal of Judge Griffis was
    that during the 2002 judicial campaign for the Court of Appeals, Judge Griffis, as a candidate, had
    1
    Even though they were not the subject of a recusal motion, Chief Judge Roger H. McMillin, Jr.,
    Judge L. Joseph Lee, and Judge David A. Chandler, voluntarily chose to recuse themselves from participation
    in this case.
    2
    The state court action against Justice Waller has since been voluntarily dismissed by Doe.
    2
    distributed fliers critical of “personal injury lawyers.”3 On June 27, 2003, Judge Griffis entered an order
    denying Doe’s request for his recusal. In this order, Judge Griffis stated inter alia that he was not required
    to recuse himself in this case, in considering “Article 6, Section 165 of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890,
    and consistent with the Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 3E, and the recusal policy of [the Court of
    Appeals].”4
    ¶4.     On July 10, 2003, Doe filed a motion requesting the Court of Appeals to take en banc action by
    reconsidering the recusal issue, vacating Judge Griffis’s order denying recusal, and requiring Judge Griffis
    to recuse himself from further participation on the merits of this case. On August 22, 2003, the Court of
    Appeals, by a 4-1-5 vote, denied Doe’s Motion for the Court of Appeals to Reconsider the Order
    Denying [Doe’s] Motion to Recuse.5
    ¶5.     On September 5, 2003, Doe’s counsel filed a motion requesting this Court to review the Court of
    Appeals’ order denying reconsideration of Judge Griffis’s refusal to recuse himself in this case. However,
    while this Court had Doe’s motion under consideration, Doe, on October 10, 2003, filed a motion with this
    Court requesting that then-Presiding Justice James W. Smith, Jr.,6 then-Justice Kay B. Cobb,7 and Justice
    George C. Carlson recuse themselves from participation in this case because they were among the justices
    3
    Doe’s attorney is a past president of the Mississippi Trial Lawyers Association.
    4
    On August 12, 2003, with the permission of the en banc Court of Appeals, Judge Griffis filed in this
    cause a separate statement fully explaining his reasons for previously denying Doe’s motion for recusal.
    5
    The order denying the motion for reconsideration was signed by Judge Billy G. Bridges, and joined
    by Judge James E. Thomas, Judge L. Joseph Lee, and Judge William H. Myers. Presiding Judge Leslie D.
    King dissented with separate written statement, finding that Judge Griffis should recuse himself, and Judge
    Tyree Irving recused himself, with separate written statement, for the purpose of the motion only.
    6
    Justice Smith became Chief Justice on April 1, 2004.
    7
    Justice Cobb became a Presiding Justice on April 1, 2004.
    3
    who filed a complaint with the Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance against then-Presiding
    Justice Charles R. (Chuck) McRae, the father-in-law of Doe’s attorney.8 Based on the filing of Doe’s
    motion requesting three justices of this Court to recuse themselves from this case, it was necessary to delay
    consideration of the recusal issue pertaining to Judge Griffis until such time as the recusal motion against the
    justices of this Court had been resolved.
    ¶6.     While the recusal issues pertaining to a Court of Appeals judge and three Supreme Court justices
    were under consideration by this Court, the Court of Appeals, on November 18, 2003, handed down a
    decision on the merits in Doe II.9 In an opinion authored by Judge Bridges and joined by Presiding Judge
    King and Judges Thomas, Irving, Myers and Griffis (Chief Judge McMillin, Presiding Judge Southwick,
    and Judges Lee and Chandler not participating), the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the
    Stegalls and against Doe was again reversed and remanded to the trial court. Judge Griffis wrote a
    separate concurring opinion offering additional considerations for the trial judge upon remand.
    Notwithstanding this favorable ruling from the Court of Appeals (again, one which was joined by Judge
    Griffis), and notwithstanding the pendency of Doe’s previously filed motion for recusal of certain Supreme
    Court justices, Doe filed with the Court of Appeals a motion to strike Judge Griffis’s special concurring
    opinion since the M.R.A.P. 48C(b) recusal issue on Judge Griffis was still pending before this Court. Of
    course, that issue was still pending before us because we could take no further action on it until we had
    resolved the recusal issue on three Supreme Court justices as raised by Doe. In any event, by en banc
    order signed by Presiding Judge King and entered on December 5, 2003, the Court of Appeals denied
    8
    Then-Chief Justice Edwin Lloyd Pittman and then-Justice William L. Waller, Jr., had already recused
    themselves from the case on the merits. Chief Justice Pittman retired on March 31, 2004. Presiding Justice
    McRae's term ended on January 5, 2004 on which date Justice Waller became Presiding Justice.
    9
    Doe v. Stegall, 
    2003 WL 22707337
    (Miss. Ct. App. Nov. 18, 2003) (motion for rehearing pending).
    4
    Doe’s “Motion to Strike Concurring Opinion of Judge Griffis and Supplement to Motion to Strike
    Concurring Opinion of Judge Griffis.”
    ¶7.     Finally, by separate orders entered on February 5, 2004, by then-Presiding Justice Smith and then-
    Justice Cobb and Justice Carlson, Doe’s motions for recusal as to each of these Justices were denied.
    Doe's motion for rehearing was also denied.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8.     With this procedural backdrop, we now focus on the recusal issue relating to Judge Griffis. Again
    Doe’s Motion for Recusal asking that Judge Griffis be recused from participating in this case focused on
    two incidents occurring during Judge Griffis’s successful 2002 judicial campaign for the position he now
    occupies on the Court of Appeals. First, according to allegations in the recusal motion and attached media
    documentation, Judge Griffis, during the weekend immediately prior to his election, distributed campaign
    fliers which stated, inter alia, that Judge Griffis “would ‘fight the special interest groups – like the personal
    injury lawyers who have created the ‘lawsuit industry.’” Indeed, the Special Committee on Judicial Election
    Campaign Intervention (Special Committee)10 did in fact issue a press release finding that Judge Griffis’s
    distribution of these fliers with this language violated the applicable provisions of the Mississippi Code of
    Judicial Conduct. The other campaign issue referenced by Doe, pertained to Judge Griffis having referred
    to his judicial campaign opponent as a former President of the Mississippi Trial Lawyers Association
    (MTLA), a position likewise previously held by Doe’s attorney.
    ¶9.     The Stegalls responded to Doe’s motion contending that a reasonable person would not question
    Judge Griffis's impartiality as he had previously ruled in favor of parties represented by personal injury
    10
    See Canon 5F of the Mississippi Code of Judicial Conduct, as amended, April 4, 2002.
    5
    attorneys. The Stegalls also argued that this recusal would set a precedent causing Judge Griffis to recuse
    himself from all future cases where personal injury lawyers were involved.
    ¶10.    This Court applies the manifest error standard when reviewing a judge's refusal to recuse himself.
    Bredemeier v. Jackson, 
    689 So. 2d 770
    , 774 (Miss. 1997) (citing Davis v. Neshoba County Gen.
    Hosp., 
    611 So. 2d 904
    , 905 (Miss. 1992)). Pursuant to the Code of Judicial Conduct, a judge must
    disqualify when that judge’s "impartiality might be questioned by a reasonable person knowing all the
    circumstances . . . including but not limited to instances where: (a) the judge has a personal bias or
    prejudice concerning a party, or personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts concerning the
    proceeding." Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 3(E)(1). The test for recusal has been stated as follows:
    "[W]ould a reasonable person, knowing all the circumstances, harbor doubts about the judge's
    impartiality?" In re Conservatorship of Bardwell, 
    849 So. 2d 1240
    , 1247 (Miss. 2003);
    
    Bredemeier, 689 So. 2d at 774
    (citing Frierson v. State, 
    606 So. 2d 604
    , 606 (Miss. 1992); Rutland
    v. Pridgen, 
    493 So. 2d 952
    , 954 (Miss. 1986)). This Court presumes a judge to be qualified and
    unbiased, and that presumption must be overcome by evidence producing a "reasonable doubt" about the
    validity of the presumption. Turner v. State, 
    573 So. 2d 657
    , 678 (Miss. 1990).
    ¶11.    In Rogers v. Morin, 
    791 So. 2d 815
    (Miss. 2001), Morin accused the chancellor of expressing
    his opinions about her and concluding that she lacked credibility. This Court held that there was no
    evidence in the record which would cause a reasonable person to have doubts about the chancellor's
    impartiality. 
    Id. at 821. Therefore,
    this Court found that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in failing
    to recuse himself from the case. 
    Id. 6 ¶12. In
    Murphree v. Cook, 
    822 So. 2d 1092
    (Miss. Ct. App. 2002), the Court of Appeals held that
    the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in failing to recuse himself after the chancery clerk of the county
    testified as a witness. The court found that because the chancellor "specifically indicated that he could hear
    the testimony and give it no greater weight than he would any other evidence", there was no evidence that
    the chancellor, who resided in another county, was manifestly wrong in his decision not to recuse himself
    from the case. 
    Id. at 1100. ¶13.
       In Burnham v. Stevens, 
    734 So. 2d 256
    (Miss. Ct. App. 1999), the Burnhams filed a motion
    to recuse the trial judge from their suit alleging, inter alia, that Mr. Burnhamand the judge had engaged in
    "verbal combat" during the judge's election campaign, that the judge had previously ruled on this matter
    when he was a municipal judge, and that Mr. Burnham and the judge had previously spoken before the
    matter had been dismissed wherein the judge told Mr. Burnham that he did nothing wrong. 
    Id. at 262. Because
    the Burnhams called no witnesses to testify at the recusal hearing, their counsel's statements were
    dismissed as hearsay. 
    Id. The trial judge
    addressed all issues presented and denied the conversations and
    confrontations alleged by the Burnhams. 
    Id. at 263. "Given
    the presumption of the judge's impartiality and
    the apparent hearsay nature of the evidence regarding the alleged reasons for recusal," the Court of
    Appeals found "no manifest abuse of discretion by the trial judge when he denied the Burnhams' motion
    that he recuse himself." 
    Id. ¶14. M.R.A.P. 48C,
    which became effective October 17, 2002, states in part:
    (a) Disqualification of Justices and Judges of the Supreme Court or Court
    of Appeals.
    (i) Any party may move for the recusal of a justice of the Supreme Court or a judge of the
    Court of Appeals if it appears that the justice or judge's impartiality might be
    questioned by a reasonable person knowing all the circumstances, or for other
    grounds provided in the Code of Judicial Conduct or otherwise as provided by law. A
    motion seeking recusal shall be filed with an affidavit of the party or, if the party is
    7
    represented, by the party's attorney setting forth the factual basis underlying the asserted
    grounds for recusal and declaring that the motion is filed in good faith and that the affiant
    truly believes the facts underlying the grounds stated to be true.
    (iii) Motions for recusal shall be decided in the first instance by the justice or judge who is
    the subject of the motion. The remainder of the court on which such justice or judge serves
    shall, prior to the order being entered, be informed of a decision of a justice to deny
    recusal, and such decision shall be subject to review by the entire court upon motion for
    reconsideration filed within 14 days following the issuance of an order denying recusal.
    (b) Supreme Court Review of Orders of the Court of Appeals Addressing
    recusal of Judges. No decision concerning the recusal of a judge of the Court of
    Appeals shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court unless, upon timely motion, the
    Court of Appeals has denied reconsideration of the motion. A party may, within 14 days
    following the denial of reconsideration by the Court of Appeals, file a motion with the
    Supreme Court seeking further review, and the Supreme Court, en banc, shall promptly
    consider such recusal. Such motion for further review by the Supreme Court shall be
    accompanied by a copy of the order entered by the judge who is the subject of the motion
    for recusal, the order denying reconsideration, and the motions for recusal and
    reconsideration by the Court of Appeals.
    (emphasis added). Therefore, the question which must be decided by this Court is whether Judge Griffis's
    impartiality might be questioned by a reasonable person knowing all of the circumstances involved.
    ¶15.    Judge Griffis's voting record during his tenure on the Court of Appeals does not indicate that he
    lacks impartiality towards a personal injury plaintiff represented by a personal injury lawyer. In Rogers
    v. Rausa, No. 2001-CA-01760-COA, 
    2003 WL 21790237
    (Miss. Ct. App. Aug. 5, 2003), pet. for
    cert. filed, (Miss. Nov. 19, 2003), Judge Griffis concurred with the majority of the court in affirming a
    jury verdict of $100,000 in favor of the plaintiff for personal injuries received in an automobile accident.
    Again, the plaintiff was represented by two personal injury lawyers. In Wilkins v. Bloodsaw, 
    850 So. 2d
    185 (Miss. Ct. App. 2003), Judge Griffis concurred with the majority of the court in reversing the trial
    court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants in a premises liability case where the plaintiff
    received personal injuries. Two of the plaintiff’s lawyers were members of the MTLA and practiced
    8
    personal injury law, like Doe's attorney. In Moore v. K & J Enterprises, 
    856 So. 2d 621
    (Miss. Ct.
    App. 2003), cert. granted, 
    860 So. 2d 1223
    (Miss. 2003), Judge Griffis concurred with the majority
    of the court in reversing the trial court's grant of a directed verdict in favor of the defendant in a personal
    injury lawsuit.11 Indeed, we must also remember that in today’s case, Judge Griffis not only voted in Doe’s
    favor on the merits by concurring with the majority opinion which reversed and remanded this case to the
    trial court, thus keeping Doe’s case viable, but Judge Griffis also wrote a separate concurring opinion to
    offer guidance to the trial court upon remand.
    ¶16.    Therefore, based on the limited record before us on this issue, the reasons stated, and the Code
    of Judicial Conduct, the rules and the applicable case law, we conclude that a reasonable person, knowing
    all the circumstances, could not question Judge Griffis’s impartiality. Therefore, the Court of Appeals did
    not err in denying the motion to reconsider Judge Griffis’s denial of the recusal motion.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶17.    For these reasons, we deny Doe’s motion for further review.
    ¶18. MOTION FOR FURTHER REVIEW BY THE MISSISSIPPI SUPREME COURT
    OF THE COURT OF APPEALS’ ORDER TO DENY RECONSIDERATION OF THE
    ORDER DENYING APPELLANT’S MOTION TO RECUSE, DENIED.
    SMITH, C.J., COBB, P.J., EASLEY AND DICKINSON, JJ., CONCUR. WALLER,
    P.J., DIAZ AND GRAVES, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    11
    Judge Griffis stated in his August 12, 2003, separate statement permitted by the en banc Court of
    Appeals that the reference to campaign fliers was taken out of context and that he did not single out personal
    injury lawyers. Additionally, while Doe’s motion before us focuses on Judge Griffis’s campaign fliers
    referring to personal injury lawyers, we mention here that as to the other issue, Judge Griffis responded in his
    August 12, 2003, separate statement that he was not attacking his judicial campaign opponent because of his
    being a former MTLA president, but instead, he was attacking his opponent for his lack of candor in failing
    to reveal his membership in various associations. Judge Griffis stated that he had revealed to the voters
    during the judicial campaign inter alia that he (Judge Griffis) was a former member of both the MTLA and
    the Mississippi Defense Lawyers Association.
    9