Rith Kok v. Tacoma School District No. 10 ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                                                          FILED
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DNISICI j T1
    2013 OCT 22      M 8: 5 5
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHI. .                                                ON/
    FII\   0
    DIVISION II                                     y
    DEPU
    RITH KOK, individually and as administrator                                  No. 44517 - -II
    4
    of the Estate of SAMNANG KOK, deceased;
    MAKAI JOHNSON -KOK, individually and as
    a beneficiary of the Estate of SAMNANG
    KOK; RORTH KOK, individually and as a
    beneficiary of the Estate of SAMNANG KOK;
    RY    SOU KOK, individually        and as a
    beneficiary of the Estate of SAMNANG KOK;
    KOSAL      KOK,      individually and as a
    beneficiary of the Estate of SAMNANG KOK;
    and  LISA KOK, individually and as a
    beneficiary of the Estate of SAMNANG KOK;
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellants,
    V.
    TACOMA SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 10, A
    MUNICIPAL ENTITY UNDER THE LAWS
    OF THE State of Washington; and DOUGLAS
    SENGSABONG              CHANTHABOULY                and
    JANE            DOE"          CHANTHABOULY,
    individually      and   the    marital    community
    composed thereof;
    ondents.
    PENOYAR, J. —       The estate of Samnang Kok ( Estate) sued the Tacoma School District
    District) for negligence after Douglas Chanthabouly shot Kok in the hallway at Foss High
    School.      To prevail in its negligence action, the Estate had the burden to show that the District
    had some reason to believe Chanthabouly might be dangerous. The trial court granted summary
    judgment for the District,     finding   that   Chanthabouly' s   actions were not    foreseeable. The Estate
    appeals, arguing that foreseeability is an issue for the jury and that the trial judge, whose spouse
    had previously represented the District on unrelated issues, should have recused herself under the
    appearance of     fairness doctrine.     Because    Chanthabouly'   s   behavior   and medical records   did   not
    44517 -4 -II
    indicate that he was at risk for harming other students, we hold that the trial court did not err in
    finding that his actions were not foreseeable by the District. Additionally, the trial judge did not
    err by denying the Estate' s recusal motion because neither she nor her spouse has an interest in
    the outcome of the present case. We affirm.
    FACTS
    On January 3, 2007, Chanthabouly fatally shot Kok in the hallway at Foss High School.
    The Estate brought this claim against the District, arguing that it was negligent by failing to
    maintain a safe school environment and by enrolling a student with a severe mental illness.
    I.        MEDICAL HISTORY
    Chanthabouly was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia following a suicide attempt in
    January    2005.   At the time of his suicide attempt, doctors noted that he was hearing voices, that
    he claimed to get into fights with people he did not know, and that his thoughts were illogical
    and     his judgment bad.      After a brief hospitalization, Chanthabouly received 11 months of
    outpatient mental    health   care   from Comprehensive Mental Health.'                His psychiatrists prescribed
    him     antipsychotics,   which      he took in the morning            and   at    night,   to combat his auditory
    hallucinations.     When Chanthabouly' s care at Comprehensive Mental Health ended in January
    2006, his case manager stated that he was stable while on his medication; he occasionally heard
    voices, but they did not tell him to harm himself and he was able to separate reality from
    hallucinations.
    Chanthabouly' s medical records do not indicate that he was at risk for assaultive
    behavior.      His mental health assessment, completed while he was receiving treatment following
    his    suicide attempt,   states   that he "   has   never   been   assaultive    towards   others."   Clerk' s Papers
    Foss requested Chanthabouly' s records from the hospital and Comprehensive Mental Health.
    2
    44517 - -II
    4
    CP)    at   114.   His mental health counselor noted that while he continued to have post- treatment
    auditory hallucinations,            they    were     not   usually commanding             or   threatening.       His psychiatrist
    testified that she     did   not see     any indication that he          would     harm   others.     His medical records also
    contain assessments           from Chanthabouly            and   his     mother.    Both of them indicated that he was
    lonely and had difficulty getting along with his peers but that he did not get into fights or
    arguments.
    II.          SCHOOL HISTORY
    Chanthabouly         attended several     high   schools within        the District.      He started the 2002 -03
    school year at Stadium High School, and then transferred to Foss, where his siblings were
    enrolled.      Chanthabouly began the 2003 -04 school year at Mount Tahoma High School because
    his   family     had   moved        into Mount Tahoma'           s    attendance     area.      He transferred from Mount
    Tahoma to Oakland High School mid -
    school year, and remained at Oakland for the rest of the
    2
    year.        Chanthabouly began the 2004 -05 school year back at Mount Tahoma, but, after his
    suicide attempt, he transferred to Foss, where his younger brother was enrolled . He remained at
    3
    Foss from April 2005 until January 2007.
    Chanthabouly' s school record does not contain any incidents of prior assaultive behavior.
    His    suspension at    Stadium          was   for " defiance    of   authority"    and not     for   fighting.    CP   at   342.   He
    complained of bullying while at Mount Tahoma, but his record does not show any acts on his
    2
    Chanthabouly' s mother told his doctor that she moved him to Oakland after a gang of students
    hit him in the back of the head. His sister testified that he transferred to Oakland because he was
    having trouble with his school work.
    3
    The transfer    request       form           If any behavior or attendance problems student will return to
    states, "
    Mt Tahoma."            CP    at   353.     The Estate points to this as evidence of Chanthabouly' s behavior
    problems.        But the note does not say that Chanthabouly' s problems involved fighting or violent
    acts, and, since Chanthabouly was not transferred back to Mount Tahoma, it appears that he did
    not have any behavior problems while attending Foss.
    3
    44517 -4 -II
    part.    Additionally, none of the staff noticed any violent behavior while Chanthabouly was at
    Foss. His principal testified that Chanthabouly was never referred to him for disciplinary issues.
    Similarly, his counselor stated that teachers would approach him if they were concerned about a
    student    and   that    no    teachers     approached        him   about      Chanthabouly.             Chanthabouly' s teachers
    reported that, although he had difficulty participating in class and finishing his assignments, he
    was     cooperative      and      polite.   The school security officer testified that he did not have any
    concerns about Chanthabouly prior to January 2007 and that, while he noticed Chanthabouly
    talking and laughing to himself, he never witnessed Chanthabouly getting in fights with other
    students or being bullied.
    In 2005,       Chanthabouly' s mother requested that Foss test him for special education
    eligibility because he            was   struggling academically.               Foss determined that Chanthabouly was
    Emotionally / ehaviorally Disabled" and qualified for special education services to improve his
    B
    classroom participation and written                language      skills.      CP   at   93.   As a result, he attended a daily,
    one     hour   written   language       class   with    a special education              instructor. .   He wrote the following
    paragraph as a        writing      assignment     for that    class: "   I   nevered [ sic]      try dirt. I know a sludge face
    named Sam. He loves dirt. He eats dirt and he' s going to live in dirt. He says he' s going to live
    there    forever.       I think      sludge     faces   are   weird."         CP    at    215.     His teacher    wrote, "   Good!
    Interesting."    at   the   top   of the page.    CP    at   215.   She testified that she did not know who Sam was
    and that there was nothing about the assignment that alarmed her.
    M
    44517 -4 -II
    III.         PROCEDURE
    The Estate filed a complaint against the District, alleging that it "was negligent by failing
    to use reasonable care in maintaining a safe school environment" and by " enrolling an individual
    whom they knew or should have known had substantial mental illness and as a result, extremely
    dangerous          propensities."'     CP at 8.
    The District moved for summary judgment, arguing that Chanthabouly' s actions were not
    foreseeable.             The trial court granted the District' s summary judgment motion and dismissed the
    Estate'   s claims.          The Estate filed a motion for reconsideration, arguing that there were material
    facts   at    issue regarding        foreseeability. While that motion was pending, the Estate' s attorneys
    discovered that the trial judge' s spouse and his firm had represented the District in unrelated
    matters.          The Estate filed     a motion   for   recusal.        The trial court denied the Estate' s motions for
    recusal and reconsideration.               The Estate appealed both denials directly to the Supreme Court.
    That court denied direct review and transferred the case to this court.
    ANALYSIS
    I.            SUMMARY JUDGMENT
    We review an order granting or denying summary judgment de novo and perform the
    same inquiry as the trial court. Aba Sheikh v. Choe, 
    156 Wash. 2d 441
    , 447, 
    128 P.3d 574
     ( 2006).
    A motion for summary judgment is properly granted where ``there is no genuine issue as to any
    material          fact   and ...   the moving party     is   entitled   to   a   judgment   as a matter of   law. "' Michak v.
    Transnation Title Ins. Co., 
    148 Wash. 2d 788
    , 794 -95, 
    64 P.3d 22
     ( 2003) ( quoting CR 56( c)).                             We
    view the facts and any reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
    Michak, 148 Wn.2d at 794.
    4 The other parties and claims were dismissed during the course of the suit.
    5
    44517 -4 -II
    Il.          FORESEEABILITY
    The Estate argues that the trial court erred by granting the District' s summary judgment
    5
    motion       because    forseeability     is generally           a question       for the   jury.        Because reasonable minds
    would not differ in concluding that Chanthabouly' s acts were not foreseeable by the District, we
    affirm the trial court.
    A school district is required to exercise reasonable carethat of a reasonably prudent
    person       under    similar    circumstances —when                  supervising     students          within    its custody.   JN. v.
    Bellingham Sch. Dist. No. 501, 74 Wn.                      App.    49, 57, 
    871 P.2d 1106
     ( 1994). "[                 A] school district
    has the power to control the conduct of its students while they are in school or engaged in school
    activities, and with        that   power goes         the responsibility          of reasonable supervision."             Peck v. Siau,
    
    65 Wash. App. 285
    , 292, 
    827 P.2d 1108
     ( 1992).
    But the duty to exercise reasonable care extends only to risks of harm that are
    foreseeable.         JN., 74 Wn.        App.    at   57.   A risk of harm is foreseeable if it is within the " general
    field   of   danger    covered     by   the    specific     duty   owed
    by   the defendant."           J.N., 74 Wn. App. at 57
    quoting Maltman          v.    Sauer, 
    84 Wash. 2d 975
    , 981, 
    530 P.2d 254
     ( 1975)).                                Intentional or criminal
    conduct       may be foreseeable         unless       it is "   so highly extraordinary or improbable as to be wholly
    beyond the       range of      expectability."         Niece v. Elmview Grp. Home, 
    131 Wash. 2d 39
    , 50, 
    929 P.2d 420
     ( 1997) ( quoting Johnson                   v.    State,     77    Wn.    App.     934,    942,        
    894 P.2d 1366
     ( 1995)).
    Foreseeability is normally a jury question, but it may be decided as a matter of law where
    reasonable minds cannot differ. J.N., 74 Wn. App. at 57.
    5 The Estate also argues that the trial court misinterpreted the scope of the District' s duty. But it
    does    not    define the   scope used         by    the trial   court or argue       why the           scope was    incorrect. Rather,
    the Estate' s argument in this section appears to be that it produced evidence sufficient to show
    that the District should have known that Chanthabouly was dangerous.           That argument is
    addressed in this section.
    el
    44517 - -II
    4
    Division One of this court held that summary judgment was inappropriate where the
    plaintiff had established that the harm was within the general field of danger and the defendant
    school      district   could      reasonably have           anticipated    the offending      student' s actions.         J.
    N., 74 Wn.
    App.   at    62.     In J.N., a student was sexually assaulted by another student in the bathroom during
    recess.     74 Wn.      App.      at   51.   The    court   held that the   general   field   of   danger —harm          by one student
    to   another    in   accessible and unsupervised restrooms —                   was reasonably foreseeable by the district.
    N., 74 Wn.
    J.                     App.    at      59 -60.     Additionally, there was evidence that the district knew of the
    assaulting     student' s     dangerous            propensities.      N., 74 Wn.
    J.            App.       at   60. The district knew that the
    student had significant behavioral problems, including physically assaulting other students; had a
    possible      family history              of      sexual    abuse;   used    inappropriately        sexual    language;       and   was
    determined to be " severely behaviorally disabled" by the school psychologist. J.N., 74 Wn. App.
    at 52 -53.
    By contrast, we have held that summary judgment is appropriate where there is no reason
    to   believe that      a school         district    should      have known   of a risk   to   students.      Peck, 65 Wn. App. at
    287, 293.          In Peck,   a   librarian sexually            assaulted a student.     65 Wn.      App.    at   287.    We held that
    there was nothing in the record to indicate that the district knew the librarian was a threat to
    students.          Peck, 65 Wn.           App.      at   293.    We noted that a school district is required to protect
    students from third parties' harmful actions, but it is not liable merely because such actions
    occur.      Peck, 65 Wn.          App.       at   293.   Instead, the harmful activities must be foreseeable. Peck, 65
    Wn. App. at 293.
    7
    44517 - -II
    4
    Here,    the Estate has failed to show that the harm caused by Chanthabouly was
    foreseeable.       It appears to argue that the general field of danger was allowing a schizophrenic
    student   in the   general education population.        The Estate contends that Chanthabouly' s behavior.
    at school and his schizophrenia diagnosis presented evidence from which the District should
    have reasonably       anticipated   that   he   would engage    in   a violent act on school grounds.               Neither
    Chanthabouly' s behavior at school nor his medical records indicated any assaultive behavior or
    tendencies.       Moreover, the District did not have any information that Chanthabouly' s diagnosis
    alone was an indication that he would be a danger to others if placed in the general education
    population.
    Unlike the student in J. Chanthabouly' s behavior at school did not put the District on
    N.,
    6
    notice   that he   would   act violently    toward   another student.       The Estate lists many facts which, it
    argues,   show     Chanthabouly' s "       Violent Propensities."      Appellant'        s   Br.   at   14.   They point to
    Chanthabouly' s 2002 suspension for defiance of authority, his being attacked by a group of
    students at Mount Tahoma, his frequent school transfers, a line from the school psychologist in
    his IEP file stating that he gets into fights with people he does not know, reports of him talking
    and laughing to himself during school hours, a confrontation with a stranger at Sears, and a
    6
    The Estate repeatedly refers to the lack of school records in this case, apparently based on
    information it thinks should be in the records and a note from a Foss counselor in
    Chanthabouly' s IEP folder stating that his file contains only enrollment paperwork and a few
    other papers and      that she was unable to       find his    cumulative    file   at   his   other schools.     However,
    the record in this case contains his high school grades, enrollment information, and disciplinary
    actions. Further, there is no evidence that the District purposefully destroyed or withheld any of
    Chanthabouly' s records.
    8
    44517 -4 -II
    school     writing   assignment       referencing        a person named "      Sam."    None of these facts gave the
    District   notice    that   Chanthabouly         might act   violently   at school.    There was no indication that he
    might attempt to physically harm someone, let alone with a weapon, and many of these events
    took place before his diagnosis or while health care providers were still adjusting his treatment.
    Moreover,        Chanthabouly' s schizophrenia diagnosis was not sufficient to place the
    District   on notice        that he may     act    violently.     First, the District is not Chanthabouly' s medical
    provider.     As the Foss       psychologist       testified, "   In a school setting we deal with the behaviors, not
    necessarily the diagnosis."            CP   at    891.    Before January 2007, Chanthabouly' s behavior was not
    assaultive, and the District could not reasonably anticipate that he would act violently at school.
    Second,      even   his    medical providers       felt that he    was not at risk    for harming   others.   His medical
    records    state    that    his hallucinations      were " not      usually   command    or   threatening."   CP at 112.
    Although he had tried to harm himself, before January 2007, Chanthabouly had not tried to harm
    another person, and his psychiatrist did not believe he was a threat to others.
    Further, as the District points out, his diagnosis alone is not a reason to exclude him from
    a   public    education.        Both federal and state laws require public school districts to provide
    appropriate education          to   students with        disabilities. See Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
    ADA), 
    42 U.S. C
    . §           12132 ( " no      qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of such
    disability, be excluded from participation in or be denied the benefits of the services, programs,
    or activities of a public entity, or be subjected to discrimination by any such entity ");
    0
    44517 -4 -II
    Rehabilitation Act, 
    29 U.S. C
    . § 794( a) ( "                 No otherwise qualified individual with a disability ...
    shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from the participation in, be denied
    the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal
    financial       assistance ");     Individuals           with   Disabilities     Education    Act ( IDEA), 
    20 U.S. C
    . §
    1400( d)( 1)( A) (one of the purposes of this chapter is " to ensure that all children with disabilities
    have     available     to them       a    free   appropriate      public    education ");   RCW 28A. 155. 010 ( " It is the
    purpose of [this chapter]            to   ensure    that   all children with    disabilities ...   shall have the opportunity
    for an appropriate education at public expense as guaranteed to them by the Constitution of this
    state    and    applicable     federal laws. ").            To the maximum extent appropriate, the District shall
    educate      children       with   disabilities in the          general     education   environment.'      WAC 392 -172A-
    02050( 1);       WAC 392- 172A- 03090( 1)( d)                   and ( e);   
    20 U.S. C
    . §    1412( a)( 5)( A).   Because the
    standard of reasonable care is that of a reasonably prudent person in similar circumstances, these
    duties are relevant to whether the District exercised reasonable care.
    The Estate argues that Chanthabouly should not have been placed in the general
    education environment. This contention ignores state and federal antidiscrimination laws and the
    District'   s   duty   to   Chanthabouly.               The Estate emphasizes the deposition of Dr. Hamm, who
    opined that Chanthabouly was a " high - isk individual" who should not have been in the general
    r
    7
    Chanthabouly qualifies as an individual or student with a disability. Under the ADA and the
    Rehabilitation Act, " disability"                is defined as " a physical or mental impairment that substantially
    limits   one or more of        the   major       life   activities."   28 C. F. R. § 35. 104; 
    29 U.S. C
    . § 705( 20)( B); 
    42 U.S. C
    . § 12102( 1). Schizophrenia is a mental impairment that substantially limits brain function.
    v. Chevron Phillips Chem. Co., 
    834 F. Supp. 2d 528
    , 539
    29 C. F.R. § 1630. 20)( 3)( iii); Garner
    S. D. Tex. 2011). Under the IDEA, a " child with a disability" includes a child with a serious
    emotional disturbance who, because of the disability, requires special education and related
    services. 
    20 U.S. C
    . § 1401( 3). Under state law, a " student with a disability" means a student
    who, through an evaluation process, is determined to be eligible for special education due to a
    disability. RCW 28A. 155. 020. Foss determined that Chanthabouly was eligible for special
    education because he was emotionally and behaviorally disabled.
    10
    44517 -4 -II
    education population.           CP   at   697.   But Dr. Hamm stated that he had only general knowledge of a
    school' s legal obligations and that he had not worked within the public school system. Thus, his
    opinion does not take into account the District' s duties to Chanthabouly.
    The Estate also relies on literature describing warning signs for violent behavior and
    argues      that   Chanthabouly      exhibited     many     of   the   signs.    In doing so, it ignores the cautions in the
    literature    and relies on      warning     signs   that   are not supported         by   the   record.     The " Early Warning
    Signs"      suggested     by   the Department        of   Education        caution    that "[ s] uch signs may or may not
    indicate     a serious problem —          they do not necessarily mean that a child is prone to violence toward
    self   or    others,"    and    that "    it is important to avoid inappropriately labeling or stigmatizing
    individual         students   because they       appear   to fit   a specific profile."          CP   at   655.   Further, it warns
    that " it is inappropriate —and            potentially harmfulto use the early warning signs as a checklist
    against which         to match individual        children."      CP at 657.
    Additionally, some of the warning signs that the Estate claims are met are not supported
    by evidence in the record. The Estate argues that Chanthabouly exhibited the following warning
    signs: social withdrawal, feelings of isolation, being a victim of violence, little interest in school
    and    poor        academic    performance,        written       and    verbal    expressions      of      violence,   a history of
    discipline     problems, a      history    of violent and aggressive             behavior,   and      gang   affiliations.   There is
    evidence that Chanthabouly was withdrawn and isolated and that he may have been the victim of
    bullying, but his grades were improving, there are no written or verbal expressions of violence in
    the record, he had only one disciplinary problem back in 2002 and none of his teachers at Foss
    noted any disciplinary problems, he did not act violently toward others, and he was not in a gang.
    The District did not have evidence through either Chanthabouly' s behavior or his
    diagnosis that he would act violently. Although the Estate argues that his diagnosis alone should
    11
    44517 -4 -II
    have alerted the District to the possibility of violent acts, this argument is not persuasive where
    the District is staffed by educators, not medical professionals, and where the District owed a duty
    to   Chanthabouly        to   educate     him   with   his   peers.    We affirm the trial court.
    III.        RECUSAL
    Finally, the Estate argues that the trial court judge should have recused herself under the
    appearance of          fairness doctrine.           Because a reasonably prudent and disinterested person would
    conclude that all parties received a fair, impartial, and neutral hearing, we affirm the trial judge' s
    decision that recusal was not necessary.
    We review a trial judge' s decision whether to recuse herself to determine if the decision
    was    manifestly       unreasonable           or   based    on untenable. reasons     or   grounds.       State v. Davis, 
    175 Wash. 2d 287
    , 305, 
    290 P.3d 43
     ( 2012); State ex rel. Carroll v. Junker, 
    79 Wash. 2d 12
    , 26, 
    482 P.2d 775
     ( 1971).       A judicial proceeding satisfies the appearance of fairness doctrine if a reasonably
    prudent and disinterested person would conclude that all parties obtained a fair, impartial, and
    neutral    hearing.       Tatham     v.   Rogers, 170 Wn.             App.   76, 96, 
    283 P.3d 583
     ( 2012). "        The test for
    determining whether the judge' s impartiality might reasonably be questioned is an objective test
    that assumes that `` a          reasonable person            knows     and understands all    the   relevant   facts. "'   Tatham,
    170 Wn.       App.      at    96 ( quoting Sherman            v.   State, 
    128 Wash. 2d 164
    , 206, 
    905 P.2d 355
     ( 1995)
    quoting In       re   Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc., 
    861 F.2d 1307
    , 1313 ( 2d                      cir.   1988)).   The asserting
    party does not have to show actual bias; it is enough to present evidence of potential bias.
    Tatham, 170 Wn.              App.   at   95.    The party must produce sufficient evidence demonstrating actual
    or potential bias, such as personal or pecuniary interest on the part of the judge; mere speculation
    is   not   enough.       In re Pers. Restraint of Haynes, 
    100 Wash. App. 366
    , 377 n.23, 
    996 P.2d 637
    2000).
    12
    44517 - -II
    4
    The Estate     argues       that this   case   is   similar        to Tatham.   In Tatham, Division Three of this
    court held that the trial judge in a property distribution case should have recused himself on
    appearance of fairness grounds where the judge and one of the attorneys had prior professional
    and personal connections.                170 Wn.         App.   at    103, 107.      After the judgment, one of the parties
    discovered that the attorney for the opposing party was a partner in the judge' s former firm, may
    have represented the judge during a DUI arrest, served as the judge' s campaign manager,
    designated the judge her attorney -in -fact, and was appointed county court commissioner by the
    judge.     Tatham, 170 Wn.             App.   at   85.   Division Three noted. that most of these dealings required
    disclosure, but      not recusal,        by    the trial judge.           Tatham, 170 Wn.       App.   at   103.   But, the trial
    judge' s continuing service as the attorney' s attorney -in -
    fact was a violation of the code of
    judicial    conduct (     CJC)      and presented a reasonable concern about the judge' s impartiality.
    Tatham, 170 Wn. App. at 104. Additionally, the court noted that any prejudice was amplified by
    the   discretionary      nature of a         property distribution proceeding.               Tatham, 170 Wn.2d at 104 -05.
    The court held that the challenging party demonstrated a violation of the appearance of fairness
    doctrine    and    was   entitled   to   a new     trial before      a   different judge. Tatham, 
    170 Wash. 2d 107
    .
    Here,    a reasonably prudent person would conclude that both parties obtained a fair
    hearing. Although the trial judge ultimately dismissed the Estate' s complaint, she did enter some
    orders   in its favor         during   the    proceedings.           For example, she granted the Estate' s motions for
    continuance        and   to   compel      Chanthabouly' s            deposition.     Further, the trial judge is not directly
    connected to the District, and the Estate has not shown that her spouse or his firm has any
    interest in the outcome of the instant proceeding.
    13
    44517 - -II
    4
    Additionally,      this   case       is distinguishable from Tatham. First, the connection between the
    parties   and   the trial judge is         more     tenuous in this        case.       In Tatham, the trial judge had direct
    connections      to   an   attorney appearing before the judge.                Here, the Estate does not allege a direct
    connection between the judge and the parties or their counsel; rather, it alleges that the trial
    judge' s spouse had previously represented the District.
    Second, the trial judge in this              case   did   not violate        the   CJC.   In Tatham, the trial judge
    acted as            in fact for
    attorney - -                   one of    the attorneys        despite   a   CJC    provision   stating, " Judges shall
    not serve as executors ...            or other fiduciaries, except for the estate, trust or person of members
    of their families, and then only if such service will not interfere with the proper performance of
    their judicial    duties."     Former CJC Canon 5( D) 1995.                    Here, although the Estate argued below
    that the trial judge       violated   CJC 2. 11( A)(2)(       c) and ( 3),   which require a judge to disqualify herself
    if she knows that she or her spouse have an interest that could be substantially effected by the
    proceeding or an economic interest in the subject matter or parties to the proceeding, it did not
    show    that the judge'      s spouse' s        interest   was more      than de   minimis.     8 The trial judge' s. spouse—
    whose area of concentration               is   real estate   law —and his firm had represented the District only on
    unrelated issues. Neither the judge' s spouse nor his firm has any interest in the outcome of this
    proceedingthey are not involved in any way in litigating the present case and they will not
    receive any fees relating to the case.
    8
    Under CJC 2. 11( A)(2)(         c),   the interest must be more than de minimis, and comment 6 to CJC
    2. 11   defines "     economic        interest"    as more than a de minimis legal or equitable interest.
    According       to the CJC     terminology, " de minimis" means " an insignificant interest that could not
    raise a reasonable question regarding the judge' s impartiality."
    14
    445174II
    Finally,      the   nature of   the       proceedings was   different in   each case.   In Tatham, a property
    division case, the trial judge had greater discretion in making his decision, and, on review, the
    appellate court would          apply    a   deferential   standard of review.      By contrast, this case involved a
    summary judgment            order, which appellate courts review           de   novo.   Therefore, the increased risk
    of prejudice present in the Tatham case is not an issue here.
    Neither the trial judge nor her spouse has an interest in the outcome of the present case
    and a disinterested person would conclude that the parties received a fair and impartial hearing.
    We hold that the trial judge did not err by denying the Estate' s recusal motion.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
    YPVenoyar,
    We concur:
    Johanson, A.C. J.
    r
    p
    3   orge.,    J.
    15