A litigant (an attorney in a disciplinary proceedings) asked 5 out of 7 judges of the presiding panel to recuse.
Now, usually judges do not recuse no matter what.
The stakes and the fervor of the fight against judicial recusals (and thus against litigants' constitutional rights for impartial judicial review and access to court) has reached epic heights in the State of Wisconsin, for example, where:
- the commission that disciplines judges is sought to be subordinated to the same judges it disciplines (why not, the same setup has been in existence in federal courts for decades),
- attorneys are allowed to practice even when rejected by the State's Character and Fitness Committee, under the state's "state diploma privilege";
- a bunch of retired judge are even asking the State Supreme Court to act as a Legislature and set a rule allowing a certain sliding scale of judicial election campaign contributions (bribes) to the judge, while not mandating judges who received such bribes to recuse from cases of contributors, and where
- the state bar governors, over protest of attorney members, filed a collective statement disparaging the U.S. President for criticizing judges and attempting to instill into the public the notion that criticizing judges is wrong, and is equivalent with attacks on the U.S. Constitution and democracy in the United States, see the statement of the Wisconsin State Bar Governors here.
In New York, two attorneys that I know (John Aretakis in 2008 and myself in 2015) were suspended from practice for making motions to recuse, the same happened to attorney Christine Mire in Louisiana in 2016, the statistics of attorneys disciplined (including suspended and disbarred) for criticism of judges are ever growing across the country, the latest victim being, as far as I know, James G Miller, a 70+-year-old attorney who was suspended last week in Illinois for criticizing judges, who was considered so dangerous for the public that he was first suspended in April of 2016 while disciplinary proceedings were still pending and was then suspended again as a result of those proceedings, while the court rejected both the defense of truth and the defense of 1st Amendment protection.
But, even after a litigant has gotten himself through all the risks of sanctions for himself and his attorney, applied for recusal of judges and obtained recusal of judges, that does not mean that his right to impartial judicial review will now be maintained.
At least, not in the blessed state of Kansas where the Supreme Court of the State of Kansas has just come up with a most brilliant (read: obtuse) decision on judicial recusal I have ever seen in years, and I've seen a lot, specializing on active research of this particular topic for more than a decade.
The Kansas Supreme Court has stated to a litigant that, since he "has got what he wanted" (recusal of judges deciding his case), and "invited the error".
Just read the sleight of hands of how judges came to that conclusion:
- you have a constitutional right to access to court (1st Amendment) and due process right to impartial judicial review (14th Amendment);
- in order to obtain true access to court and that impartial judicial review, you make a motion to recuse;
- once you obtained that recusal and once another judge is assigned to the case, it is the understanding of the top court of the State of Kansas that your constitutional rights of access to court and to impartial judicial review (the rights that you were trying to secure by making the motion to recuse in the first place) suddenly disappears, and whatever the replacement-after-recusal judge does, including bias, is now your own "invited error", blamed against you.
The rule that is asserted in this case, unfortunately, is not restricted to the unique way attorney discipline is imposed in the State of Kansas (and elsewhere in the U.S.), which is in stark contrast, and in violation of equal protection of attorneys, as compared to all other regulated profession - here, based on the uniqueness of attorney regulation, Kansas Supreme Court yet forged a general rule that will be applicable to all litigants in the state and, if affirmed on appeal by the 10th Circuit, to all states that are part of the 10th Circuit - the new rule of judicial recusals announced by Kansas State Supreme Court in its Appellee's brief.
Here is where this claim is not only erroneous, but is frivolous and highlights one of the major inconsistencies of attorney regulation in all states - the use of the highest state court as the trial court in attorney disciplinary proceedings.
I have explored procedural differences between how attorneys and other professions are regulated in a lawsuit I filed on behalf of my husband in 2013 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, and am exploring more fully in my upcoming book, in Russian and in English, about conceptual inconsistencies in attorney regulation in the United States.
The use of the highest state court not only as the legislator, prosecutor and adjudicator (conflation of three branches, violation of the principle of separation of power) in one proceeding, but also the use of the highest state court as the initial license revocation administrative agency and the first and last adjudicating court at the same time created exactly the problem that attorney Kline challenged in his lawsuit, if not in those same words.
Here is the structure of judicial system in the State of Kansas:
Note that, while Kansas Supreme Court has only 7 justices, the lowest trial courts of general jurisdiction, District Courts, have 31 judicial districts, each with more than 1 judge, and often, with 6 or more judges.
Now, let's compare procedural steps in contesting suspension or revocation of a professional license in Kansas by an attorney and non-attorney.
Had attorney Kline been not a licensed attorney, but, let's say, a licensed real estate broker, the procedure would have been as follows:
Stages of license revocation and attendant issues
|
Real estate broker
|
Attorney Kline
|
Administrative agency
|
Revokes professional license
|
|
District Court - the lowest court of general jurisdiction - review by one judge
|
Judicial review of license revocation, role reversal,
license-revoking agency becomes a respondent (defendant) sued by the
professional whose license is revoked
|
|
Appellate process - Kansas Court of Appeals, review by a panel of judges
|
Intermediate appellate court
|
|
Appellate process – highest appellate court, the
Supreme Court of the State of Kansas, review by a panel of judges
|
Final appeal in the matter
|
License revocation,
Judicial review by legislator-prosecutor-adjudicator court and
licensing agency;
License revocation is combined with judicial review of the same;
No role reversal in judicial review;
No right for professional whose license is revoked to sue the agency
that revoked the license
|
Appellate process out of state
|
The U.S. Supreme Court – discretionary appeal
|
The U.S. Supreme Court – discretionary appeal
|
Alternative judicial review
|
A civil rights case, no Rooker-Feldman bar, since professional
license was not revoked by a court
(jury trial, full discovery rights)
|
Right to file a civil rights action is blocked by the Rooker-Feldman
doctrine since license was revoked by a court and revocation order is deemed
as “final court decision” – jurisdictional bar
|
Alternative appellate process
|
10th Circuit
(appeal of all issues as of right)
|
Appeal of revocation decision is doomed, the only
issues allowed to be raised outside the Rooker-Feldman bar are direct
challenges to constitutionality of rules and statutes, but not practices of
the state court in a specific proceeding
|
Alternative appellate process
|
The U.S. Supreme Court – appeal is discretionary and likely doomed because
of the court’s unwritten policy not to review appeals from cases of attorney
discipline, no matter what
|
The U.S. Supreme Court – appeal is discretionary and likely doomed because
of the court’s unwritten policy not to review appeals from cases of attorney
discipline, no matter what; plus a Rooker-Feldman-barred case, most likely, will
be considered by the U.S. Supreme Court as an additional bar for court review
|
Observe that for attorneys, THREE procedural steps of litigation in license revocation process are skipped, as compared to non-attorneys, and the first and last stage of review in the State of Kansas in attorney license revocation is:
- by a licensing agency - unlike for real estate broker;
- by a licensing agency acting as the first (and last) trial court - unlike for real estate broker;
- without the right for judicial review where the licensing agency is subject to role reversal and a lawsuit by the professional who lost his license - unlike for real estate broker;
- without the right for 2-tiered appeal - unlike the real estate broker; without the alternative for review of license revocation, together with federal constitutional issues, in federal court - because, unlike in the case of the real estate broker, revocation of attorney license is subject to the Rooker-Feldman bar, even though the nature of proceedings (revocation of a professional license) is the same, and thus procedural protections, and levels of procedural protections, should also be the same.
- 7 elected justices in the Supreme Court of the State of Kansas;
- Kansas Supreme Court is not equipped, due to jurisdictional restrictions, to act as the lowest trial court;
- Judges of Kansas Supreme Court must sit in panels with certain quorums, unlike judges in District Courts who sit just a single judge at a time;
- When a District Court judge recuses, there are over 150 other District Judges to choose from, while if Kansas Supreme Court judges recuse (especially, all of them, or 5 out of 7, as happened in this case), appointment/certification of questionable constitutionality is then triggered to provide an alternative panel.
Moreover, in the case of the former Attorney General of the State of Kansas (as Kline was), ALL state judges were attorney Kline's clients, attorney Kline was privy to ALL dirty little secrets of ALL state judges (including Kansas Supreme Court judges), including constitutional violations, and thus ALL state judges had a conflict of interest in presiding over license revocation against attorney Kline.
Additionally, in his complaint, attorney Kline mentioned bias of the new (appointed after recusal) panel because of political affiliations and campaign contributions to Kline's political opponents:
Attorney Kline mentions the following problems with the politicized disciplinary panel:
Attorney Kline's disciplinary case was tried in 2 TRIALS:
After those two trials, the panel issued a
- 185-page report finding
- 21 violations of disciplinary rules under
- 10 various factual scenarios.
It is obvious that more space on paper is needed to address 21 than 1 violation, and more space is needed to address legal issues that can be found in a 185-page report after 2 trials over 12 days, generating a considerable volume of transcripts.
Therefore, attorney Kline asked to give him adequate time to address all errors in the administrative panel's recommendations.
That right was denied, and attorney Kline was given permission only for 80 pages - so, he had to cut off MORE THAN ONE HALF of his exceptions, making further dismissal of his federal claim on Rooker-Feldman grounds, as if he already had opportunity for JUDICIAL REVIEW, a travesty of justice.
Attorney Kline also correctly points out that, while 21 rule violations were found against him, he was given only 30 pages more pages to argue legal errors as compared to attorneys charged with a single violation.
In fact, attorney Kline was given just 8% percent (over 13 times less) of space to argue per violation, as compared to an attorney charged with a single violation.
Issue
|
1
violation
|
21
violations
|
Permitted page limit
|
50 pages
|
80 pages
|
Pages permitted to argue per violation
|
50 pages
|
3.81 pages
|
My husband and I raised the same issues of unconstitutionality (denial of due process and access to court) by one-size-fits-all appellate briefs irrespective of number of claims, number of parties, number of court decisions involved and the volume of generated proceedings and transcripts (and legal errors) to be addressed in such briefs - which were all rejected by courts who deem their own convenience, and restricting their own work to short briefs, even if such short briefs cut off necessary issues, and cut off in effect the right of judicial review - as it was done in attorney Kline's case.
Attorney Kline moved to recuse several judges of the court - in fact, all of them had to recuse due to the fact that attorney Kline was their own attorney, but that did not deter Pennsylvania judges in suspending State AG Kathleen Kane in the same and worse situation (during an ongoing investigation by AG Kane of one of the judges, Michael Eakin, while Judge Eakin found it acceptable for himself to be part of the suspension panel of attorney Kane).
In Kansas, 5 judges recused, other judges were appointed, but results were nevertheless, as attorney Kline claims, not different from the biased report of the politicized disciplinary panel:
All of the above are reversible errors, and, bias of the panel can be inferred from the mass of errors and their character.
Attorney Kline claims that there exists no authority under Kansas State Law to appoint replacement judges to Kansas Supreme Court when the majority of the court recuses, as happened in his case:
It is that error that Kansas Supreme Court, implicitly acknowledging the error, claims to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit to have been "invited" by attorney Kline.
Yet, a litigant, such as attorney Kline was in the recusal situation, has a FEDERAL constitutional right to impartial judicial review, and, when making a motion to recuse, does not have to:
- consider whether the STATE court handling his proceedings, under STATE law, has an ABILITY, a LAWFUL PROCEDURE to provide replacement judges instead of the recused judges.
- stop review, and
- apply to the Legislature to create legal procedure that would provide for replacement of the majority of recused judges of the court in order to allow litigants to secure their federal constitutional right for impartial judicial review.
- Oklahoma;
- Kansas;
- New Mexico;
- Colorado;
- Wyoming;
- Utah;
- Portions of the Yellowstone National Park;
- portions of Montana;
- portions of Idaho:
- Oklahoma;
- Kansas;
- New Mexico;
- Colorado;
- Wyoming;
- Utah;
- Portions of the Yellowstone National Park;
- portions of Montana;
- portions of Idaho:
I believe, whatever the controversy in question was, a court of law may not break the law in order to discipline an attorney, and especially if such discipline (in the name of "protection of the public") puts the public in jeopardy by taking away from the public in 9 JURISDICTIONS the right of impartial judicial review.
It is very clear what Attorney Kline wanted when he made a motion to recuse - an impartial judicial review by a lawfully composed panel.
If the State of Kansas does not have in its State Constitution and the laws:
- the mechanism of replacement of recused judges of the State Supreme Court if the majority (or all judges) of the court recuse, such lack of mechanism does not deprive state court litigant from:
- seeking recusal of Kansas Supreme Court judges, and from
- seeking that the replacement be in accordance with existing law.
- The mechanism of providing an impartial judicial review to the former State Attorney General who represented, by law, ALL state judges, and thus is blocked from disclosing their dirty little secrets as his CLIENTS in motions to recuse, the attorney is not to blame for the lack of mechanism creating this mess and this conflict of interest - he is STILL entitled to assert his right to impartial judicial review, and it is for the State Legislature to change laws of the state, and for the people of the State of Kansas to change the State Constitution accordingly in order to provide to the former AG his federally required right to impartial judicial review - by creating state laws, and by amending State Constitution, by referendum if that's the required process, for importing neutral judges from out of state if necessary.
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