[Code of Federal Regulations] [Title 49, Volume 5, Parts 400 to 999] [Revised as of October 1, 1998] From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access [CITE: 49CFR821] [Page 1084-1085] TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION CHAPTER VIII--NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD PART 821--RULES OF PRACTICE IN AIR SAFETY PROCEEDINGS--Table of Contents Subpart E--Law Judges Sec. 821.35 Assignment, duties, and powers. (a) Assignment of law judge and duration of assignment. The chief law judge shall assign a law judge to preside over the proceeding. Until such assignment, motions, requests, and documents shall be addressed to the Docket Section, Office of Administrative Law Judges, for handling by the chief law judge, who may handle these matters personally or who may delegate all or any of them to other law judges for decision. After assignment, all motions, requests, and documents shall be addressed to that [[Page 1085]] law judge. The authority of the assigned law judge shall terminate upon certification of the record to the Board, or upon expiration of the period within which appeals from initial decisions may be filed, or upon the law judge's withdrawal from the proceeding. (b) Powers of law judges. Law judges shall have the following powers: (1) To give notice of and to hold prehearing conferences and hearings and to consolidate proceedings which involve a common question of law or fact; (2) To administer oaths and affirmations; (3) To examine witnesses; (4) To issue subpoenas and to take or cause depositions to be taken; (5) To receive evidence and rule upon objections and offers of proof; (6) To rule upon motions in assigned cases; (7) To regulate the conduct of the hearing; (8) To hold conferences, before or during the hearing for the settlement or simplification of issues; (9) To dispose of procedural requests or similar matters; and (10) To make initial decisions, and, if so directed by the Board, to certify records with or without recommended decisions. (c) Disqualification of a law judge. A law judge shall withdraw from the proceedings if at any time he deems himself disqualified. If, prior to the initial decision, there is filed an affidavit of personal bias or disqualifications, with substantiating facts, and the law judge does not withdraw, the Board will determine the matter as a part of the record and decision in the proceeding, if an appeal from the law judge's initial decision is filed. The Board will not otherwise consider any claim of bias or disqualification as to the law judge's assignment to conduct the hearing. The Board, in its discretion, may order a hearing on a charge of bias or disqualification. [40 FR 30243, July 17, 1975, as amended at 59 FR 59048, Nov. 15, 1994]