David Chase v. Chris Stewart ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                        02/04/2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    January 7, 2020 Session
    DAVID CHASE v. CHRIS STEWART ET AL.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Williamson County
    No. 2015-200        Michael Binkley, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. M2018-01991-COA-R3-CV
    ___________________________________
    A trial court held two attorneys in contempt, assessing damages and sanctions against
    them. Shortly before another hearing in which the court was to consider a supplemental
    award of attorney’s fees, the judge of the trial court made comments in an unrelated case
    about one of the attorneys held in contempt. That attorney moved to recuse based, in
    part, on the judge’s comments. The trial court denied the motion to recuse and later
    entered a supplemental order of damages against the attorneys. Because the judge’s
    comments provide a reasonable basis for questioning his impartiality, we reverse the
    denial of the motion to recuse. And because retroactive recusal is appropriate, we also
    vacate the contempt and damages orders.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Vacated
    W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT,
    J., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., joined.
    Brian P. Manookian, Nashville, Tennessee, pro se appellant.
    Mark Andrew Hammervold, Elmhurst, Illinois, pro se appellant.
    Brian P. Manookian, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Cummings Manookian
    PLC.
    Mark Andrew Hammervold, Elmhurst, Illinois, for the appellant, Hammervold Law,
    PLC.
    Gayle I. Malone, Jr., Charles I. Malone, and Beau C. Creson, Nashville, Tennessee, for
    the appellees, Dean Chase, Sandra Chase, and D.F. Chase, Inc.
    Marcus M. Crider and Heath H. Edwards, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, CK
    Global, LLC and NV Music Row, LLC.
    OPINION
    I.
    A.
    In this consolidated appeal, we review the trial court’s denial of a motion to recuse
    and its orders holding in contempt and sanctioning two attorneys, Brian Manookian and
    Mark Hammervold, and their respective law firms, Cummings Manookian PLC1 and
    Hammervold Law, PLC. The orders on appeal arise from, but have little to do with, a
    case filed by David Chase (“Plaintiff”) against multiple defendants. Mr. Manookian and
    Mr. Hammervold represented several of the defendants. Purportedly to defeat an element
    of the malicious prosecution claim brought by Plaintiff and to prove Plaintiff had not
    suffered reputational harm, Mr. Manookian subpoenaed individuals and entities that were
    not parties to the case. The non-parties included Plaintiff’s parents, Dean Chase and
    Sandra Chase; and entities to which Plaintiff had some connection, D.F. Chase, Inc.; CK
    Global, LLC; and NV Music Row, LLC. Mr. Manookian also sought deposition
    testimony from Plaintiff’s parents.
    Wanting to protect confidential information, Dean Chase; Sandra Chase; D.F.
    Chase, Inc.; CK Global, LLC; and NV Music Row, LLC (collectively, “Petitioners”)
    proposed an agreed protective order before responding to the subpoenas or submitting to
    the depositions. And, after negotiations, counsel reached an agreement on the terms of
    the protective order. Among other things, the proposed order defined confidential
    information, provided methods for both designating information as “confidential” and
    challenging such designations, and restricted the indiscriminate or mass designation of
    information as “confidential.”
    Counsel for Petitioners then proposed that the document production could proceed
    provided that Mr. Manookian would agree that the production was subject to the
    protective order despite it not being entered by the court. Mr. Manookian responded: “I
    agree that the Order is binding on me and my clients at the time it is signed with
    permission as opposed to entered by the Court.” So counsel for Petitioners filed the
    proposed agreed protective order with the court. The same day, Petitioners produced
    1
    After briefing in this appeal, Cummings Manookian PLC filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition
    for relief under Chapter 7 of Title 11 of the United States Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for
    the Middle District of Tennessee. Late last year, the Chapter 7 Trustee reported that “it is unforeseeable
    that the bankruptcy case will be resolved before April, 2021, at the earliest.”
    2
    over 78,000 pages of documents in response to the subpoenas. Petitioners designated all
    of the documents as “confidential” under the proposed agreed protective order. In a
    cover letter, counsel for Petitioners stated that, while they “realize[d] that the Protective
    Order cautioned against mass designation of documents as ‘confidential’ . . . it would
    have been unduly burdensome upon our clients to review each of the . . .
    documents . . . .” Counsel for Petitioners offered to conduct a page-by-page review if
    Mr. Manookian’s clients would pay for it. Counsel alternatively suggested that
    Mr. Manookian’s clients could challenge any “confidential” designation to a specific
    document or documents.
    Mr. Manookian objected to the mass designation and, in a filing with the court,
    withdrew his consent to the proposed agreed protective order. But, a few days later, he
    made another filing requesting that the court enter the proposed agreed protective order.
    Petitioners then filed a motion requesting the entry of a protective order and that the court
    sustain its confidentiality designations. They set the motion for hearing on October 30,
    2015.
    Before the hearing took place, Mr. Manookian filed documents and excerpts from
    the deposition transcripts of Dean and Sandra Chase, all of which had been designated as
    “confidential,” in response to a motion filed by Plaintiff. Counsel for Petitioners
    appeared at an October 20, 2015 hearing on Plaintiff’s motion and made an oral motion.
    Counsel requested that the court treat as confidential all documents already produced by
    Petitioners, as well as the deposition testimony of Dean and Sandra Chase. Counsel also
    requested that the response filed by Mr. Manookian, including the exhibits, be kept under
    seal. The court granted the oral motion.
    At the October 30, 2015 hearing, the court again ruled in favor of Petitioners and
    ordered that “all pleadings or documents containing, attaching, or referencing documents,
    testimony, or information designated as confidential . . . were to be filed under seal.”
    And the court “adopted,”2 with modifications, the proposed agreed protective order. The
    court ordered that documents designated as “confidential” be protected consistent with
    the terms of the agreed protective order. The court’s oral rulings at the October 20 and
    October 30 hearings were reflected in written orders entered on November 7, 2015, and
    November 6, 2015, respectively.
    B.
    On February 25, 2016, Dean Chase, Sandra Chase, and D.F. Chase, Inc. moved for
    sanctions. They claimed that, on February 3, 2016, confidential materials, including
    video recordings of Dean Chase’s and Sandra Chase’s deposition testimony, were
    2
    It is unclear if the court entered the proposed agreed protective order.
    3
    featured on two television news broadcasts and were also published online. And other
    media outlets had published stories using the same materials.
    While the motion did not specifically allege that either Mr. Manookian or
    Mr. Hammervold provided the confidential materials to the media, it blamed the pair for
    use of confidential documents in separate litigation they had filed on behalf of another
    client against Dean Chase. The motion asked the court to identify who had violated its
    previous orders and to hold those parties or counsel in contempt and award costs,
    attorney’s fees, and other expenses.
    Following a hearing on the motion for sanctions, the court entered an order
    identifying four attorneys “whose actions in this matter strongly indicate violations of
    Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 37.02 and possible contempt of the orders of th[e]
    Court.” The court granted leave to those “affected by alleged violations of Tennessee
    Rule of Civil Procedure 37.02 and violations of the corresponding Court Orders [to] file
    appropriate pleadings for sanctions, listing specifically each violation alleged to have
    occurred and the specific injury inflicted upon each party.” Petitioners did so against
    three attorneys, including Mr. Manookian and Mr. Hammervold and their respective law
    firms.
    After the hearing, the trial court found Mr. Manookian and Mr. Hammervold in
    contempt. The court found Mr. Manookian in contempt for using confidential materials
    in preparing, strategizing, and negotiating the separate lawsuit and in attaching a
    confidential document to a pleading in that lawsuit. And the trial court also found that
    Mr. Manookian had disclosed confidential materials to the media after the court had
    ordered that such documents not be disclosed. The trial court found Mr. Hammervold in
    contempt for allowing the filing of the confidential document in the separate lawsuit.
    Though Mr. Manookian made the filing, Mr. Hammervold was his co-counsel. As such,
    the court held that Mr. Hammervold was responsible as well.
    The trial court also sanctioned Mr. Manookian and Mr. Hammervold under
    Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 37.02. The trial court first sanctioned both attorneys
    for the same actions for which it had found them in contempt. The court then found other
    actions of the two attorneys sanctionable. As to Mr. Manookian, the trial court
    sanctioned him for disclosing confidential materials to law enforcement and three
    attorneys not involved in the case before the court issued any ruling on the protective
    order. The court categorized those actions as an abuse of discovery. The court also
    found that he was not candid with the court and attempted to defraud the court. As to
    Mr. Hammervold, the trial court sanctioned him for Mr. Manookian’s disclosure to the
    media. The court found that Mr. Hammervold “had knowledge of and was complicit in
    concealing the improper disclosure” from the court. The court reasoned that
    Mr. Hammervold had also abused the discovery process, failed to be candid with the
    court, and attempted to defraud the court.
    4
    Based on its finding of contempt—and, alternatively, its finding of sanctionable
    conduct—the trial court awarded damages to Petitioners in the form of attorney’s fees
    and expenses against Mr. Manookian and Mr. Hammervold and their respective law
    firms. Considering affidavits filed by Petitioners’ attorneys, the court awarded
    Petitioners $622,696.12. The trial court also granted counsel for Petitioners leave to
    supplement their affidavits with fees incurred for time spent preparing for the contempt
    hearing through the date of the contempt order.
    C.
    About a month after the contempt order and before the hearing on the
    supplemental fee request, the judge of the trial court referenced Mr. Manookian while
    presiding over a hearing in the case of Elite Emergency Services, LLC v. Nesmith. In
    open court, the judge said
    There was a lawyer, Mr. Brian Manookian, who I have released a one-
    hundred-twenty-two page memorandum and order on, who, among many,
    many other things, submitted a false and fake package, along with another
    person, to the Board of Professional Responsibility and the Court of the
    Judiciary.
    Well, come to find out that it was fake. And it was wrong. Channel 4
    News picked it up and made it a headline . . . . Totally false. Totally false.
    The Board of Professional Responsibility saw what it was and said, “We’re
    not going to investigate it, Judge Binkley.” And I said, “Oh, please do. I’m
    begging you to investigate because you know how people are. They’ll read
    half the story and say, ‘Ah, that was a put-up. They’re helping Judge
    Binkley out.’”
    I don’t want that. I hired a lawyer and I said, “Let’s do it right.” Full
    investigation, dismissed, and it should’ve been. Now, Channel 4 News
    published it as if it were true. Now, what do I do when I’m sitting there
    watching that, and my family is watching it, and all of my friends are
    watching it?
    And as a judge it’s probably good that I don’t say a word. It’s very
    difficult. But my day will come. And it’s just about here . . . . I feel like
    it’s necessary for me to be crystal clear, transparent and clear. I did not like
    what Mr. Manookian did at all, and my day will come.
    5
    After the trial court made these comments, Mr. Manookian, on behalf of himself
    and his law firm, moved to recuse the judge.3 In his recusal motion, Mr. Manookian
    argued, among other things, that the above comments showed the court’s bias against
    him. The trial court denied the recusal motion, finding the statements made in open court
    “irrelevant to the issues in the present case.”
    Two days after the denial of Mr. Manookian’s recusal motion, the trial court
    awarded Petitioners $126,073.09 in supplemental attorney’s fees in a separate order. In
    total, then, the trial court held Mr. Manookian, Mr. Hammervold, and their respective law
    firms jointly and severally liable for $748,769.21. The trial court designated the original
    order of contempt and damages and the supplemental order of damages together as a final
    judgment under Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 54.02.
    II.
    Mr. Manookian petitioned for an accelerated interlocutory appeal of the denial of
    his third recusal motion. See TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10B, § 2.01. And Mr. Manookian and
    Mr. Hammervold appealed the final judgment of contempt and damages.                  We
    consolidated the interlocutory appeal with the appeal of the final judgment.
    The parties’ arguments focus both on whether the trial judge should have recused
    himself and on the merits of the contempt and damages orders. We find the recusal issue
    dispositive. As to that issue, the parties argue over various possible grounds for recusal.
    We focus on the trial court’s comments about Mr. Manookian in the unrelated
    proceeding.
    A.
    Rule 10B of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Tennessee governs the procedure
    for “determin[ing] whether a judge should preside over a case.” TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10B.
    When a trial court denies a motion to recuse, a party can either take an interlocutory
    appeal or raise the issue in an appeal after entry of final judgment. Id. § 2.01. In both
    scenarios, we review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to recuse de novo. Id.
    In Tennessee, litigants “have a fundamental right to a ‘fair trial before an impartial
    tribunal.’” Holsclaw v. Ivy Hall Nursing Home, Inc., 
    530 S.W.3d 65
    , 69 (Tenn. 2017)
    (quoting State v. Austin, 
    87 S.W.3d 447
    , 470 (Tenn. 2002)); see Kinard v. Kinard, 986
    3
    The previous year Mr. Manookian filed two recusal motions, which were denied. He sought
    accelerated interlocutory review of the denial of his first recusal motion. See TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10B,
    § 2.01. We affirmed the denial of that motion. Chase v. Stewart, No. M2017-01192-COA-T10B-CV,
    
    2017 WL 3738466
    , at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 29, 2017). Mr. Manookian did not seek interlocutory
    review of his second recusal motion.
    
    6 S.W.2d 220
    , 227 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998) (reasoning that litigants “are entitled to the ‘cold
    neutrality of an impartial court’” (quoting Leighton v. Henderson, 
    414 S.W.2d 419
    , 421
    (Tenn. 1967))); see also TENN. CONST. art. VI, § 11. It “goes without saying that a trial
    before a biased or prejudiced fact finder is a denial of due process.” Wilson v. Wilson,
    
    987 S.W.2d 555
    , 562 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).
    Tennessee has long recognized that “the appearance of bias is as injurious to the
    integrity of the judicial system as actual bias.” Davis v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    38 S.W.3d 560
    , 565 (Tenn. 2001); see In re Cameron, 
    151 S.W. 64
    , 76 (Tenn. 1912) (“[I]t is of
    immense importance, not only that justice shall be administered . . . , but that [the public]
    shall have no sound reason for supposing that it is not administered.”). Of course, a
    judge should recuse when they have “any doubt as to [their] ability to preside impartially
    in [a] case.” Davis, 
    38 S.W.3d at 564
    . But a judge must also “disqualify himself or
    herself in any proceeding in which the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be
    questioned.” TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10, Rule 2.11(A). This test is “an objective one.” State
    v. Cannon, 
    254 S.W.3d 287
    , 307 (Tenn. 2008). It requires recusal “when a person of
    ordinary prudence in the judge’s position, knowing all of the facts known to the judge,
    would find a reasonable basis for questioning the judge’s impartiality.” Davis, 
    38 S.W.3d at 564-65
     (quoting Alley v. State, 
    882 S.W.2d 810
    , 820 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1994)).
    A party seeking disqualification or recusal must support a recusal motion with an
    affidavit or declaration and “other appropriate materials.” TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10B, § 1.01.
    When a party brings forward a trial court’s comments as evidence to support a recusal
    motion, we must determine whether the comments “indicate that the judge has prejudged
    factual issues.” Alley, 
    882 S.W.2d at 822
    . “Any comments made by the trial court must
    be construed in the context of all the facts and circumstances to determine whether a
    reasonable person would construe those remarks as indicating partiality on the merits of
    the case.” 
    Id.
    Here, Mr. Manookian submitted the declaration of Samuel Clemmons. In this
    declaration, Mr. Clemmons detailed the comments that the trial judge made about
    Mr. Manookian in the Elite Emergency Services case, to which Mr. Clemmons was a
    party.4 Petitioners challenge Mr. Clemmons’s declaration as “inherently suspect, at
    best.” We disagree. Courts instead presume that testimony provided under oath and
    4
    Petitioners argue that Mr. Manookian waived the right to seek recusal of the trial judge based on
    the judge’s comments. A party waives the right “to question a judge’s impartiality” if the party does not
    assert the grounds for recusal “in a timely manner.” Kinard, 986 S.W.2d at 228 (citations omitted). A
    one-year delay in asserting grounds for recusal constitutes waiver. Chase, 
    2017 WL 3738466
    , at *3; In re
    Samuel P., No. W2016-01592-COA-T10B-CV, 
    2016 WL 4547543
    , at *6 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 31, 2016).
    Here, Mr. Manookian filed the third recusal motion twenty-two days after the judge’s comments. Under
    the circumstances, we find that Mr. Manookian acted in a timely manner.
    7
    penalty of perjury is true. See, e.g., Hogue v. Kroger Co., 
    356 S.W.2d 267
    , 271 (Tenn.
    1962) (“This court certainly will not ascribe to the oath-taker the infamy of a perjurious
    mind. We think, with every presumptive support, that people normally are honest and
    tell the truth.” (citation omitted)). In its order denying the recusal motion, the trial court
    treated the comments as if they had been made, so we do also.
    In his comments, the judge claimed that Mr. Manookian “submitted a false and
    fake package . . . to the Board of Professional Responsibility and the Court of the
    Judiciary.” The media ultimately “picked it up” and published a “[t]otally false” story
    about the judge. But, the judge continued, the media published the story “as if it were
    true.” So, the judge wondered, “what do I do when I’m sitting there watching that, and
    my family is watching it, and all of my friends are watching it?”
    The gist of the comments is that the judge blamed Mr. Manookian for the court’s
    exposure to negative publicity, possibly drawing the scrutiny of the judge’s family and
    friends. The judge was “crystal clear” and “transparent” about not liking that “at all.”
    The court also did not like “many, many other things” Mr. Manookian had done. And the
    judge envisaged that “my day will come.”
    Taken in context, “a reasonable person would construe th[e] remarks as
    indicating” that the judge may have sought retribution against Mr. Manookian for a
    perceived wrongdoing unrelated to the contempt charges.5 See Alley, 
    882 S.W.2d at 822
    .
    This possible motivation provides “a reasonable basis for questioning the judge’s
    impartiality.” See Davis, 
    38 S.W.3d at 564
    ; see also State v. Cobbins, No. E2012-02025-
    CCA-10B-DD, 
    2012 WL 5266427
    , at *22-23 (Tenn. Crim. App. Oct. 25, 2012) (recusal
    warranted based, in part, on trial court’s comments that it was “[m]y time” and “my day
    had finally come”).
    Petitioners insist that the trial court was “impartial and entirely fair” to
    Mr. Manookian and Mr. Hammervold.6 The record reflects that the judge showed
    5
    In the order denying the motion to recuse, the trial court provided more context. The judge
    explained that Mr. Manookian had been providing information about the judge to Mr. Clemmons.
    Mr. Clemmons then used this information to file a complaint with the Board of Judicial Conduct. That
    complaint was later dismissed. In the judge’s view, Mr. Manookian and Mr. Clemmons “have obviously
    worked together for the sole purpose of . . . attempt[ing] to publicly embarrass or ridicule the Court.”
    6
    Petitioners argue that Mr. Hammervold did not properly preserve the recusal issue for appeal.
    In response to our order directing the parties to respond to Mr. Manookian’s Rule 10B petition for recusal
    appeal, see TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10B, § 2.05, Mr. Hammervold, on behalf of himself and his law firm,
    joined the petition. And as a party, he was entitled to raise the denial of the recusal motion in his brief,
    which he did. See Tenn. R. App. P. 3(h) (broadly allowing any party to raise any issue “upon the filing of
    a single notice of appeal”). Although Mr. Hammervold did not join Mr. Manookian’s recusal motion in
    the trial court, the Rules of the Supreme Court of Tennessee speak of recusal as to proceedings, not as to
    parties. See TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10, Rule 2.11(A).
    8
    extraordinary patience and was thorough in his review of serious allegations against
    Mr. Manookian and Mr. Hammervold. We do not conclude that the judge was actually
    partial. But that is not the standard for recusal. See Kinard, 986 S.W.2d at 228 (“[T]he
    public’s confidence in judicial neutrality requires not only that the judge be impartial in
    fact, but also that the judge be perceived to be impartial.”). Under Tennessee’s objective
    standard, the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned. So the judge should
    have recused himself. See Cook v. State, 
    606 S.W.3d 247
    , 255 (Tenn. 2020) (reasoning
    that Tennessee’s objective standard “‘may sometimes bar trial by judges who have no
    actual bias’” (quoting In re Murchison, 
    349 U.S. 133
    , 136 (1955))).
    Petitioners also contend that, because the judge made the comments after the
    contempt order, the comments cannot be evidence of any predisposition against
    Mr. Manookian. See Alley, 
    882 S.W.2d at 821
    . We again disagree. The unfavorable
    news story for which the judge claimed Mr. Manookian was responsible ran in February
    2017. And the trial court issued the contempt order in July 2018. So the impetus for the
    judge’s thoughts about Mr. Manookian may have existed for almost a year and a half
    before the court entered the contempt order.7 That the judge did not air those thoughts
    until after entry of the contempt order misses the point.
    B.
    Having determined that recusal was appropriate, we must consider the impact on
    the final judgment of contempt and damages. Retroactive recusal generally is not the
    appropriate remedy. See Watson v. Cal-Three, LLC, 
    254 P.3d 1189
    , 1193 (Colo. App.
    2011) (“Recusal provides prospective relief; it does not necessarily invalidate orders
    previously entered.”); 46 AM. JUR. 2D Judges § 210, Westlaw (database updated Nov.
    2020). But, in Liljeberg v. Health Services Acquisition Corp., the United States Supreme
    Court set forth a test to determine whether retroactive recusal is appropriate under the
    federal recusal statute. 
    486 U.S. 847
    , 863-64 (1988). We find it appropriate to apply the
    Liljeberg test here. Tennessee courts “may look to federal interpretation of similar
    federal laws for guidance in enforcing [Tennessee] statutes.” Van Tran v. State, 
    66 S.W.3d 790
    , 821 (Tenn. 2001) (Barker, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); see
    Barnes v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 
    48 S.W.3d 698
    , 705 (Tenn. 2000) (interpreting
    Tennessee anti-discrimination laws), abrogated on other grounds by Gossett v. Tractor
    Supply Co., 
    320 S.W.3d 777
     (Tenn. 2010); Arnold v. Morgan Keegan & Co., 
    914 S.W.2d 445
    , 448 & n.2 (Tenn. 1996) (interpreting the Tennessee Uniform Arbitration Act);
    Thomas v. Oldfield, 
    279 S.W.3d 259
    , 261-62 & n.3 (Tenn. 2009) (interpreting the
    7
    Although one of the two hearing dates on the contempt petition occurred before the media story
    ran, there is still a “reasonable basis for questioning” whether partiality may have affected the trial court’s
    contempt order. See Davis, 
    38 S.W.3d at 564
    .
    9
    Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure); State v. Clayton, 
    131 S.W.3d 475
    , 478 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 2003) (interpreting the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure). Tennessee’s
    recusal standard is identical to the federal standard, save for noun and pronoun usage.
    Compare TENN. SUP. CT. R. 10, Rule 2.11(A), with 
    28 U.S.C. § 455
    (a) (2018). And
    Tennessee courts have often cited the United States Supreme Court with approval on
    recusal issues. See State v. Griffin, 
    610 S.W.3d 752
    , 760 (Tenn. 2020) (citing Williams v.
    Pennsylvania, 
    136 S. Ct. 1899
    , 1907-09 (2016)); Cook, 606 S.W.3d at 255 (citing In re
    Murchison, 
    349 U.S. at 136
    ); Bailey v. Blount Cty. Bd. of Educ., 
    303 S.W.3d 216
    , 239
    (Tenn. 2010) (citing Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 23 n.8 (1967)); Kinard, 986
    S.W.2d at 228 (citing Offutt v. United States, 
    348 U.S. 11
    , 14 (1954)); Alley, 
    882 S.W.2d at
    821 (citing United States v. Grinnell Corp., 
    384 U.S. 563
    , 583 (1966)).
    The Liljeberg test “consider[s] the risk of injustice to the parties in the particular
    case, the risk that the denial of relief will produce injustice in other cases, and the risk of
    undermining the public’s confidence in the judicial process.” Liljeberg, 
    486 U.S. at 864
    .
    As to the parties in this case, the purpose of the right to impartiality “is to guard against
    the prejudgment of the rights of litigants and to avoid situations in which the litigants
    might have cause to conclude that the court had reached a prejudged conclusion.” State
    v. Benson, 
    973 S.W.2d 202
    , 205 (Tenn. 1998) (citing Chumbley v. People’s Bank & Tr.
    Co., 
    57 S.W.2d 787
    , 788 (Tenn. 1933)).
    As noted above, the basis for the judge’s thoughts about Mr. Manookian may have
    existed for nearly a year and a half before the July 2018 contempt order. It likely existed
    at least since May 23, 2017, when the trial court entered the order denying an earlier
    recusal motion filed by Mr. Manookian. That order indicates that, by then, the judge
    suspected that Mr. Manookian was behind the news story and unfounded complaints
    about the judge made to the Board of Professional Responsibility and the Court of the
    Judiciary. The contempt order itself references the Board of Professional Responsibility
    complaint in an adverse credibility finding against Mr. Manookian. So once the court
    revealed its thoughts about Mr. Manookian in open court, one might reasonably question
    whether the court “had reached a prejudged conclusion” as to the contempt order. See
    Benson, 
    973 S.W.2d at 205
    . Although the contempt order is the product of over two
    years of litigation, under these circumstances “there is a greater risk of unfairness in
    upholding the judgment in favor of [Petitioners] than there is in allowing a new judge to
    take a fresh look at the issues.” See Liljeberg, 
    486 U.S. at 868
    ; see also Olerud v.
    Morgan, No. M2010-01248-COA-R3-CV, 
    2011 WL 607113
    , at *2-3 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    Feb. 18, 2011) (vacating orders of the trial court entered before a recusal motion was
    filed when the basis for recusal “was discovered . . . after the court entered critical rulings
    in the case”).
    Second, to deny retroactive relief could cause injustice in other cases. Our
    supreme court has cautioned judges about inappropriate remarks. See Cook, 606 S.W.3d
    at 257 (admonishing Tennessee judges “to refrain from [making] inappropriate
    10
    comments”); see also Leighton, 
    414 S.W.2d at 420
     (“[T]he judge must be careful not to
    give an expression to any thought, or to infer what his opinion would be in favor or
    against either of the parties in the trial.”). Allowing a remedy for inappropriate remarks
    even late in the proceedings would encourage judges to reflect on possible grounds for
    recusal through all phases of a case. See Liljeberg, 
    486 U.S. at 868
     (Retroactive
    enforcement “may prevent a substantive injustice in some future case by encouraging a
    judge . . . to more carefully examine possible grounds for disqualification and to
    promptly disclose them when discovered.”).
    Third, allowing the contempt order to stand risks undermining public confidence
    in the judiciary. Surely, “‘justice must satisfy the appearance of justice.’” Liljeberg, 
    486 U.S. at 864
     (quoting In re Murchison, 
    349 U.S. at 136
    ); Cook, 606 S.W.3d at 255
    (quoting same). Here, when the judge mused that “my day will come,” the judge also
    said that day is “just about here”—less than a month before awarding supplemental
    damages and finalizing the contempt order. And the judge mentioned that he had
    “released a one-hundred-twenty-two page memorandum and order on” Mr. Manookian,
    which was the order holding him in contempt. So the basis upon which it is reasonable to
    question the judge’s impartiality is directly connected to the contempt order.
    Because the trial court’s impartiality might reasonably be questioned, the court
    should have recused itself. And under the circumstances of this case, retroactive recusal
    is warranted. In finding retroactive recusal warranted, we express no opinion on the
    merits of the contempt proceeding.
    III.
    We reverse the denial of the third motion to recuse. And we vacate the contempt
    and damages order of July 20, 2018, and the order awarding supplemental attorney’s fees
    and expenses of September 27, 2018. This case is remanded for reassignment and further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    _________________________________
    W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JUDGE
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