(1) A judge in a water right adjudication filed under
this chapter may be partially or fully disqualified from hearing
the adjudication. Partial disqualification means
disqualification from hearing specified claims. Full
disqualification means disqualification from hearing any aspect
of the adjudication.
(a) A judge is partially disqualified when the judge's
impartiality might reasonably be questioned and the apparent or
actual partiality is limited to specified claims.
(b) A judge is fully disqualified when the judge's
impartiality might reasonably be questioned and the apparent or
actual partiality extends beyond limited claims such that the
judge should not hear any part of the adjudication.
(2) A judge may recuse himself or herself under this section
or a party may file a motion for disqualification. A motion for
disqualification must state whether the remedy being sought is
full or partial disqualification.
(3)(a) For parties who are named in the original pleadings,
a motion for disqualification is timely if it is filed before the
judge issues a discretionary order or ruling in the adjudication.
(b) For a party who is joined in the adjudication after the
original pleadings have been filed, a motion for disqualification
is timely if it is filed within the earliest of either (i) thirty
days of being joined in the adjudication; or (ii) after the
joinder of the party, before the judge issues a discretionary
order or ruling relating to the joined party.
(c) When a motion for disqualification is untimely filed
under this subsection (3), the motion will be granted only when
necessary to correct a substantial injustice.
(d) For purposes of this section, "discretionary order or
ruling" has the same meaning as "order or ruling involving
discretion" in RCW 4.12.050.
(4) A party filing a motion for disqualification under this
section has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the
evidence that the judge should be disqualified under the
standards of subsection (1) of this section.
(5) The motion for disqualification may not be heard by the
judge against whom the motion is filed. Subject to this
limitation, the court may assign the disqualification motion to
any superior court judge of the judicial district in which the
adjudication was filed or to a visiting superior court judge
under RCW 2.56.040.
(6) The standards set forth in RCW 2.28.030, which govern
the disqualification of judicial officers generally, may be
grounds for disqualification under this section.
[2009 c 332 § 3.]
NOTES:
Application -- 2009 c 332: See note following RCW 90.03.110.