Beatrice Barton v. Robert Eugene Barton
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 3/25/97
OF THE
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 95-CA-01020 COA
BEATRICE BARTON
APPELLANT
v.
EUGENE BARTON
APPELLEE
THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND
MAY NOT BE CITED, PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-B
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DON GRIST
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:
THOMAS ROY TROUT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
GARY LEE CARNATHAN
NATURE OF THE CASE: SPECIAL JUDGE APPOINTMENT
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: CHANGE IN CUSTODY OF DAUGHTER TO FATHER
BEFORE THOMAS, P.J., COLEMAN, AND SOUTHWICK, JJ.
THOMAS, P.J., FOR THE COURT:
Beatrice Barton (Beatrice) and Gene Barton (Barton) were married and had two children. Beatrice
and Barton were divorced on April 9, 1992. Because Barton was a practicing attorney in the First
Chancery District, a special judge was appointed to hear the divorce, the Honorable Don Grist of the
Eighteenth Chancery District. Under the divorce decree Beatrice received primary physical custody
of their children.
After entry of the final judgment of divorce the parties took no legal actions in the matter until May
1995, when Beatrice filed a motion for contempt. Beatrice later dropped this motion. On June 2,
1995, Barton filed a motion to hold Beatrice in contempt for denying visitation. Barton styled the
pleading a motion for writ of assistance. Judge Grist signed an order setting a hearing on the matter
on June 14, 1995. Beatrice was given notice of this hearing on June 3, 1995.
At the hearing on June 14, 1995, Beatrice’s attorney made two motions, one objecting to the court’s
jurisdiction and one for a continuance. Beatrice’s counsel objected to the jurisdiction of the court
arguing that the special appointment of Judge Grist was no longer valid. Judge Grist denied both
motions and the case continued that day.
The only witness to testify was Barton, because Beatrice was not present to testify. The court gave
temporary physical custody of the minor child, Maria, to Barton. A hearing on the final merits was
set for August 2 and 3, 1995. At this date Beatrice did not proceed with any evidence, taking the
position that the court did not have jurisdiction. The court entered an opinion and later a decree
upholding the June 14, 1995, opinion granting Barton permanent physical custody of Maria.
Aggrieved of the lower court’s ruling Beatrice cites as error the following:
I. THE COURT ERRED IN DENYING MRS. BARTONS’ MOTION FOR
CONTINUANCE.
II. THE COURT GRANTED RELIEF NOT PRAYED FOR IN THE PLEADINGS,
DENYING MRS. BARTON AN OPPORTUNITY TO DEFEND AGAINST THAT
RELIEF.
III. THE TRIAL COURT WRONGLY APPLIED SUPREME
AUTHORITY GOVERNING CHANGE OF PARENTAL CUSTODY.
COURT
IV. MR. BARTON FAILED TO CARRY HIS BURDEN OF GOING FORWARD
WITH THE EVIDENCE AND ESTABLISHING A PRIMA FACIE CASE.
V. THE SPECIAL JUDGE WAS WITHOUT JURISDICTION TO HEAR THIS
MATTER.
VI. THE SPECIAL JUDGE WAS NOT A DE FACTO OFFICER.
As the last issue is dispositive of this case, we will discuss only this issue. For clarity’s sake, we will
separate the last issue into subparts. Finding merit in Beatrice’s assertion, we reverse and remand.
VI.
THE SPECIAL JUDGE WAS NOT A DE FACTO OFFICER.
A. Was Special Judge, the Honorable Don Grist, a De Jure or De Facto Judge?
A judge who exercises the functions of a judicial office on a particular occasion may be a judge de
jure, or a judge de facto. A judge de jure has been defined as "one who is exercising the office of a
judge as a matter of right, and a judge de facto is one acting with color of right and who is regarded
as, and has the reputation of, exercising the judicial function he assumes." 48A C.J.S. Judges § 2
(1981). A judge de jure possesses the legal qualifications for the judicial office in question, he has
been lawfully chosen to such office, and he has qualified himself to perform the duties of such office
according to the mode prescribed by law. A judge de jure has a complete title to his office and his
official acts are valid. See In re Wingler, 58 S.E.2d 372, 374 (N.C. 1950).
At the time of his initial appointment as a special judge to try the divorce case, Judge Grist was a de
jure judge. What we must decide is whether he still was a de jure judge in 1995 when ruling on the
contempt motion. Even if that status had been lost, his actions also need to be examined under the
doctrine of de facto judges. Only if neither characterization fits Judge Grist’s status in 1995 would his
actions be improper.
Barton argues that a special judge appointed to hear a divorce case has continuing jurisdiction to hear
petitions to modify that final judgment. We find no explicit language in the statutes nor in supreme
court precedents. The special judge, Judge Grist, was appointed to hear the original divorce pursuant
to Section 9-1-105, which provides for the appointment of a special judge to hear a case when the
judges of a district are unable for any reason to hear the case. Miss. Code Ann. § 9-1-105 (1991).
Sections 9-1-105(8) and (9) provide as follows:
(8) The order appointing a person as a special judge pursuant to this section shall describe
as specifically as possible the duration of the appointment.
(9) A special judge appointed pursuant to this section shall take the oath of office, if
necessary, and shall, for the duration of his appointment, enjoy the full power and
authority of the office to which he is appointed.
The appointment order of November 22, 1991, permitted Judge Grist to handle "all motions,
hearings, proceedings, and the final trial of the above styled case." That order suggests it is limited to
that progression of steps which terminate with the "final trial." The argument that Judge Grist has
authority over "all motions" should be read in the context that these are motions before the final trial.
Though less than explicit, the order itself authorized by Section 9-1-105(8), suggests Judge Grist’s
authority terminated at the divorce trial and any post-trial motions necessary to make that trial final.
Since the appointment order does not extend Judge Grist’s authority beyond the proceedings that
ended in 1992, we look to whether any general principles of the authority of special judges affects
our analysis. The Mississippi Supreme Court has not discussed this question, but other jurisdictions
have. In Hays v. Hays, 22 N.E.2d 971 (Ind. 1939), the regular trial judge disqualified himself on a
motion and a special judge was appointed. Id. at 972. The special judge entered a final judgment of
divorce and awarded the care and custody of the minor child to the wife. Id. After the divorce
became final, the ex-wife and mother brought a contempt action against the father for failure to pay
the child support ordered under the divorce judgment. Id. The father objected that the regular judge
had no jurisdiction to hear the contempt action due to his earlier disqualification. Id. In overruling the
objection the court reasoned:
[A] court trying a divorce case has a continuing jurisdiction over the children . . . . This
does not mean that the particular judge who tries the case, merely by reason of having
tried the case, has such continuing jurisdiction over the custody of the children. The
order entered by the special judge in the divorce action above mentioned was the order of
the court and the violation of that order by the appellant constituted a contempt of the
Jennings Circuit Court and not of the special judge who had made the order. Only the
regular presiding judge of that court, or some one duly authorized to act for him, could
hear the contempt proceedings.
Id. at 972 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
In Heller v. Heller, 181 N.E.2d 530, 531 (Ind. Ct. App. 1962), a custody action was venued in
another county. Subsequently, the mother filed a petition to modify the previous custody order and
the father moved for a change of judge and a special judge was selected. Id. The special judge
entered an order changing the custody. Id. Subsequent motions for changes of custody were filed by
both parties and the parties "filed written objections to the competency and jurisdiction of said special
judge on the grounds that the special judge had made a final decision in the previous custody hearing
and by reason thereof his jurisdiction had ceased upon the entry of his final decree." Id. The special
judge overruled the motions. Id. The Indiana Court of Appeals reversed stating that "upon entering a
custody order . . . that particular issue before [the special judge] was finally decided thereby
terminating his jurisdiction over subsequent petitions to modify his custody order." Id. at 533.
In Leitner v. Lonabaugh, 402 P.2d 713, 714-18 (Wyo. 1965), after the lower court granted a final
divorce and a subsequent modification, the parties argued that the judge, after having been
disqualified for the trial of the divorce case, was without authority to render a modification decree.
The court noted that the issue of a special judge’s continuing jurisdiction would not ordinarily arise in
most civil actions, since once a judge enters a final judgment the prospect of continuing litigation at
the trial level in the same case is very unusual,
[h]owever, that is not true of a divorce case involving "the care, custody and
maintenance" of children or "other allowance for the wife." In such matters, under the
statutes, jurisdiction of the court to amend or modify the provisions of the original decree
is retained and, as experience has shown, it is a jurisdiction often invoked. And that
jurisdiction is an attribute of the court not to be confused with the acts of a disqualified
judge.
....
Assuming that the decree is not disturbed by the trial judge on post-motions or on appeal,
it would seem to follow logically that when a special judge has rendered such a decree his
function and authority in the case are at an end.
....
Consequently, a modification proceeding involves new issues framed by facts differing
from those existing when the original decree was entered. A new adjudication of the rights
of the parties must be made. For all intents and purposes it is a separate and distinct case
from the original proceeding. We conclude it should be so treated even though it is
properly docketed in the divorce case.
Id. at 718-19 (citations omitted).
In State ex rel.Cannon, 237 N.E.2d 366, 366 (Ind. 1968), a special judge granted a final
divorce and made certain orders regarding the parties’ custody and support of their five
minor children. After that, the defendant filed a motion with the same special judge to
modify the final decree and the plaintiff moved to remand the cause to the regular judge,
objecting to the assumption of jurisdiction of the special judge. Id. at 366-67. The special
judge overruled the motion and the defendant presented evidence, but the plaintiff did not
participate further in the action. Id. at 367. The special judge afterwards modified the final
decree. Id. The Indiana Supreme Court stated: in a divorce action the court has continued
jurisdiction in respect to minor children of the parties and may, in a proper proceeding,
modify the decree as it pertains to custody and support, at any time during the dependency
of the children, as the circumstances of the parents may require and in order to serve the
interest and welfare of the children; but it is the court that retains jurisdiction to modify
its decree.
....
It follows, therefore, that the acting special judge in rendering after trial his decree . . .
entered an appealable order, thereby terminating his jurisdiction over subsequent petitions
to modify the custody order. . . . [T]he special judge had no jurisdiction over the
subsequent petition in this case and consequently that entire proceeding before him was
void.
Id. (emphasis added).
These cases conclude that the authority of a special judge ends when the divorce decree becomes
final. We find the reasoning sound. While the court has continuing jurisdiction in such cases, the
special judge does not.
Consequently, Judge Grist was not, as to this action, a de jure judge in 1995. In other words, at the
time of the contempt hearing, Judge Grist was not exercising the office of Chancellor of the Lee
County Chancery Court as a matter of right and thus was not a de jure judge. Where a judge is only
acting under color of authority, his exercise of power is merely de facto, rather than de jure. In order
for Grist’s rulings on the contempt matter to have legal effect, we must consider whether Judge Grist
was a de facto judge at the time of the contempt hearing. If he were a de facto judge, then his rulings
will be upheld. However, if he were not even a de facto judge, then he had no authority to hear the
matter.
The common law de facto officer doctrine is codified at Mississippi Code Annotated Section 25-137, which states in pertinent part:
The official acts of any person in possession of a public office and exercising the functions
thereof shall be valid and binding as official acts in regard to all persons interested or
affected thereby, whether such person be lawfully entitled to hold the office or not and
whether such person be lawfully qualified or not . . . .
The doctrine of de facto officers, including de facto judges, exists in order to sustain the otherwise
lawful orders of someone holding an office in the ordinary course of the government to which he or
she claims to have been elected or appointed. The law cannot simply permit the technicality of the
officer’s later determined ineligibility to vitiate official acts where there is nothing invalid about such
acts, save the subsequently determined fact that the officer who performed the act was not then a de
jure officer. Cooper v. Moore, 44 Miss. 386 (1870). The justification for the de facto officers’
doctrine rests on two primary presumptions: (1) that its non-application might render nugatory
countless official acts and (2) that the State through its proper officers will remove any pretender to
office whom in fact is asserting his authority without legal sanction. Brady v. Howe, 50 Miss. 607
(1874); Cooper v. Moore, 44 Miss. 386 (1870).
Beatrice argues that the special judge was not a de facto judge and his official acts lacked "color of
title" and "color of authority." Barton argues that Judge Grist was a de facto judge and cites several
Mississippi cases to support his proposition. See Nelson v. State, 626 So. 2d 121, 124 (Miss. 1993);
Herring v. Herring, 571 So. 2d 239, 243 (Miss. 1990).
To be considered a de facto judge, there must be a regularly constituted office, and a vacancy therein.
The office of special judge, authorized by statute, is a "regularly constituted office" for purposes of
the de facto doctrine as shown in the following cases. In Herring, all three chancellors of Perry
County recused themselves from hearing a divorce case and a special judge was appointed. 571 So.
2d at 241-43. The special chancellor under the recusal order had issued a fiat, a writ, and had entered
an order rescheduling a hearing for a later date. Id. at 243. Subsequently one of the recused
chancellors held a hearing on the matter. Id. The Mississippi Supreme Court held that absent "some
valid order setting aside the [recusal order], the only person authorized to hear th[e] case was" the
special chancellor. Id. The court held that even if some question could be raised about the validity of
the special chancellor’s appointment, an issue the court found unnecessary to resolve, the special
chancellor was acting under "color of authority." Id. at 243.
In Nelson, two regular judges recused themselves from hearing the criminal case against the
defendant because they had worked in the district attorney’s office at the time the defendant had been
indicted. 626 So. 2d at 124. The judges made an agreement with a trial judge of a different district
that he would handle the matter. Id. at 124. The judges were required to give notice to the Chief
Justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court, of such an appointment; however, no notice was given. Id.
On the day that the order appointing the special judge was filed, the special judge entered a
dispositive order. Id. After the defendant was convicted, he challenged the conviction claiming that
the special judge lacked jurisdiction because his appointment did not comply with Mississippi Code
Annotated Section 9-1-3 (Supp. 1992). Id. The Mississippi Supreme Court disagreed and stated that
the special judge was a de facto judge "who acts pursuant to the color of authority, though without
legal authority, nevertheless performs valid acts." Id. at 125.
In this case, unlike the ones cited above, Judge Grist was not acting under "color of authority," or
"color of title" in hearing the contempt matter in that the regular judges had not recused themselves
from the matter. The only colorable authority he might have had was his 1991 appointment. We have
concluded that this authority expired by its own terms and by the operation of law. Unlike Nelson and
Herring, which have dealt with potentially irregular creation of authority that could not be
collaterally attacked in a matter heard by that judge, the present case deals with the expiration of
authority. The distinction is important. The case law is clear that it is for the State in a quo warranto
proceeding, not a litigant in a private matter, to challenge the eligibility for office, the validity of an
election, or other potential defect in a judge acquiring the color of authority that the judge holds.
State ex rel. Ernest Holmes v. Griffin, 667 So. 2d 1319, 1323 (Miss. 1995).
Here, we are not asked to look behind the color of authority that an officer holds, but instead must
define the terms of that authority, including its expiration date. A judge holding a four-year term who
improperly holds over into a fifth year, not having been re-elected or appointed, is not a de facto
judge. That is because the authority is no longer colorable. Similarly, once we hold that a special
chancellor’s authority terminates at the end of the original proceedings, even admittedly, if we had
not previously made such a ruling in Mississippi, that is the end of the color of authority for that
judge. In both Herring and Nelson, the special judges were acting at worst under some faulty
appointment, where as in this case Judge Grist was not acting under any appointment.
While a vacancy in a judicial office can arise for the purposes of a single case because of recusal,
Barton made no attempt to seek an order of recusal on his contempt petition. In the absence of such
an order, there were legally serving judges holding de jure office in the First Chancery District.
B. What Needs to Be Done to Invoke Mississippi Constitution Article 6, Section 165?
Barton states that if this court finds that a special judge appointed to hear a particular case does not
have continuing jurisdiction of the matter, this does not mean that Judge Grist’s appointment ended.
He argues that Judge Grist’s appointment continued past the final divorce decree under Mississippi
Constitution Article 6, Section 165. Section 165 gives two ways to replace a regular judge with a
special judge: the parties can agree on a judge to preside over the case or the governor can appoint a
special judge. There are two problems with this argument. First, it is evident that constitutional
Section 165 was not used to appoint Judge Grist. What was used was the statutory authority of
Section 9-1-105. Secondly, the question is not original appointment anyway, but the length of the
appointment. Most of what we have already discussed is applicable here as well.
Barton argues that in this case the attorneys for both parties agreed that Judge Grist retain
jurisdiction. In his bench opinion delivering his divorce decision, Judge Grist stated, "I might add here
that I agree with the two attorneys in this case that I will retain jurisdiction of this case. I don’t
usually put this on the record but I will this time."
The Mississippi Supreme Court has never interpreted Section 165 to say what is necessary to
evidence counsel’s agreement for a special judge to retain jurisdiction and we need not establish any
hard and fast rules for future cases. We note that for Section 165 to apply, there must be a
disqualification of the chancellor. Barton’s argument basically is that the parties can agree to continue
the appointment of a special chancellor well past the reasons for the disqualification of all elected
chancellors. As to this particular case, and putting aside all other issues, we hold that Judge Grist’s
vague comment at the conclusion of the divorce action, absent some affirmative response or
statement by counsel for both parties, without their client’s agreement, is insufficient to invoke
Section 165. This is more so true in view of Beatrice’s new counsel’s objection at the contempt
hearing. Although a former counsel may bind his client in subsequent proceedings, even if new
counsel protests, we have nothing before us to affirmatively show that Beatrice was aware of, or
much less agreed to Judge Grist continuing to hear the case after the final decree of divorce. There is
nothing in the record to support such a finding nor is there anything like a written stipulation or
agreed order to confirm the matter.
For this case to proceed, a chancellor in the district or a special chancellor selected in an appropriate
manner must hear this case. Accordingly, this case is reversed and remanded to the Lee County
Chancery Court for a hearing consistent with this opinion.
THE JUDGMENT OF THE LEE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS REVERSED AND
REMANDED. ALL COSTS ARE TAXED TO THE APPELLEE.
BRIDGES, C.J., COLEMAN, DIAZ, HERRING, KING, PAYNE, AND SOUTHWICK, JJ.,
CONCUR.
McMILLIN, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
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