Dec 01 2009
Fighting about Recusal Rules in Michigan
In the wake of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Caperton v. Massey, many states decided to review their rules governing recusal. Michigan last week formally issued a new recusal rule that includes a provision empowering the entire Supreme Court to review and overrule the refusal of one of the justices to recuse. Our friends at Gavel Grab have a detailed analysis of the continuing bitter debate between the current justices regarding this rule.
What grabs our attention is the particular focus of the dissenting justices on the “rights of elected judges” and those who voted for them. Here’s part of Justice Maura Corrigan’s commentary dissenting from the rule change:
For the first time in our state’s history, duly elected justices may be deprived by their co-equal peers of their constitutionally protected interested [sic] in hearing cases. Starting today, those contesting traffic tickets will enjoy greater constitutional protections than justices of this Court.
When it comes to the courts and fair trials, we’ve always been most concerned about the litigants having a fair trial. Certainly, a litigant’s right to have a fair and impartial judge outweighs a judge’s right to hear a particular case. And, frankly, a litigant’s rights — even in traffic court — should be of more concern to everyone who cares about justice than the judge’s right to preside over a particular case.
Chief Justice Marilyn Jean Kelly made a similar point in her response to the dissenters:
[I]t is a gross perversion of law for Justice Corrigan to allege that, ‘In one administrative order [the recusal rule], the majority takes away the right of every citizen of Michigan to have his or her vote count.’ The accurate statement is, with this rule, the Court permits a justice’s recusal where that justice is unable to render an unbiased decision and unable or unwilling to acknowledge that fact. The justice system and this Court can only be stronger for it.
Winning an election does not give a judge the right to preside over any or every case that comes before the Court. Nor does voting for a particular judge give the public the right to have that judge preside over any or every case that comes before the Court. A judge should only hear a case if it is certain he or she can be fair and impartial.
The results at the ballot box should not dictate when a judge is free from bias in a particular case. In face, as we have argued repeatedly, it is precisely because judges are elected that strong recusal rules are necessary. The fact that some — including some state Supreme Court justices in Michigan — seem to believe that election returns are more important than ensuring a fair and impartial court — should be of great concern to us all.
Tags: Caperton v. Massey, Chief Justice Marilyn Jean Kelly, Gavel Grab, judicial elections, Justice Maura Corrigan, Michigan, other states, recusal
