News
November 15, 2008
U.S. Supreme Court to hear case regarding W.Va. Supreme Court
Harman-Massey lawsuit appeal centers around Justice Brent Benjamin not recusing himself

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The U.S. Supreme Court decided Friday to hear an appeal of whether West Virginia Supreme Court Justice Brent Benjamin should have stepped aside in a case involving Massey Energy, after Massey's chief executive spent millions of dollars to unseat Benjamin's opponent in the 2004 election.

Benjamin twice voted in the majority in 3-2 decisions to overturn a $50 million verdict originally awarded to Harman Mining Corp. in 2002 against A.T. Massey Coal, subsequently renamed Massey Energy Co. Harman and its owner, Hugh Caperton, contended that Massey commandeered a coal supply agreement and forced the smaller company into bankruptcy.

Last year, the verdict had grown with interest to an estimated $76 million.

Massey chief executive Don Blankenship spent more than $3 million in the 2004 race that secured Benjamin's seat on West Virginia's only appeals court. Blankenship provided most of the funding for a group called And For The Sake Of The Kids, which ran ads attacking incumbent justice Warren McGraw.

After Massey appealed the original Harman verdict in 2006, Harman and Caperton repeatedly asked Benjamin to step aside from the case. Benjamin refused.

In July, Harman and Caperton petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on whether Benjamin should have stepped aside.

The court gets about 10,000 requests a year to hear cases, and accepts fewer than 100 of those.

Caperton said Friday he was extremely pleased that the high court had agreed to hear the case, saying it was a "great day."

"In this country, money has begun to pervade and permeate every election that's held, and I agree that it's the right of each citizen to support their candidate, but you can't have Supreme Court seats being propped up by millions of dollars from one individual or group," he said. "It makes the appearance of impropriety so great that normal citizens like myself lose faith in the judicial system."

In an e-mail Friday, West Virginia Supreme Court spokeswoman Jennifer Bundy wrote, "It is the policy of Justice Brent Benjamin not to comment on matters pending before the Court or the U.S. Supreme Court."

"We respect the Court's decision to review this case and look forward to the ultimate resolution of this matter. We are confident that the Harman case was properly decided by the West Virginia Supreme Court," said Shane Harvey, Massey vice president and general counsel, in a news release.

In August, five groups, including the American Bar Association, filed "friend of the court" briefs urging the U.S. Supreme Court to accept the case.

"[A]n appearance of impropriety may be created where, as in the present case, a judicial officer denies a recusal motion and continues to sit on a case where one of the parties has made significant contributions to the judge's election campaign," states the amicus brief filed by the American Bar Association.

"With the cost of judicial campaigns increasing, these issues are arising throughout the country, and there is need for guidance from the [Supreme] Court as to the boundaries imposed by the Due Process Clause [of the Fourteenth Amendment] in these circumstances."

On Thursday, an editorial in The New York Times encouraged the high court to hear the case.

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Posted By: Earned_My_Degree (6:26am 11-15-2008)
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If the U.S. Supreme Court determines that Benjamin acted improperly in this case, he should immediately resign from the State Supreme Court. The most important thing for a Judge is the assumption of impartial treatment before the Court. If the nation's highest court reaches a conclusion that Benjamin erred when the facts and circumstances were fully known to him, it becomes very difficult to understand how he reached his conclusions, other than a desire to be in a position to prove helpful to Don Blankenship.

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