Amended February 26, 2015 in the Matter of Douglas A. Krull, Judicial Magistrate. on Application of the Iowa

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 20, 2015
Docket14–1596
StatusPublished

This text of Amended February 26, 2015 in the Matter of Douglas A. Krull, Judicial Magistrate. on Application of the Iowa (Amended February 26, 2015 in the Matter of Douglas A. Krull, Judicial Magistrate. on Application of the Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amended February 26, 2015 in the Matter of Douglas A. Krull, Judicial Magistrate. on Application of the Iowa, (iowa 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 14–1596

Filed February 20, 2015

Amended February 26, 2015

IN THE MATTER OF DOUGLAS A. KRULL,

Judicial Magistrate.

On application of the Iowa Commission on Judicial Qualifications.

Commission on judicial qualifications filed an application to

discipline a judicial officer. APPLICATION GRANTED; JUDICIAL

OFFICER REPRIMANDED.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kevin Cmelik and Grant K.

Dugdale, Assistant Attorneys General, for complainant.

Mark McCormick of Belin McCormick, P.C., Des Moines, for

respondent. 2

WATERMAN, Justice.

“Déjà vu all over again.” 1 We expect lawyers and judges to learn

from their mistakes. When a judicial officer repeats violations of the

same ethical rules, sanctions can escalate. In this case, the Iowa

Commission on Judicial Qualifications (the Commission) recommends we

publicly reprimand Magistrate Douglas A. Krull for signing a warrant to

search the home of his client. Krull in his private practice represented

the mother in a pending action against her ex-husband to modify the

child-custody provisions of their dissolution decree. A police officer

sought the search warrant in a burglary investigation targeting their son.

Magistrate Krull saw this matter as different from a search warrant he

signed six years earlier that led to the reversal of a criminal conviction

because he contemporaneously represented a client bringing a custody

action against the subject of the search. State v. Fremont, 749 N.W.2d

234, 235, 243–44 (Iowa 2008) (holding Magistrate Krull’s conflict of

interest invalidated warrant). The Commission issued Magistrate Krull a

private admonishment for the Fremont transgression. This time, the

district court judge in the modification action granted the opposing

party’s motion to disqualify Krull, requiring a continuance and new

counsel for Krull’s client.

On our de novo review, we agree with the Commission’s finding

that Magistrate Krull violated three disciplinary rules governing part-time

judicial magistrates by signing the search warrant. Because this is the

second time he has signed a warrant to search the home of a party in a

civil case he was handling in his private practice—conduct for which he

1David J. Dreyer, Déjà Vu All Over Again: Turner v. Rogers and the Civil Right to Counsel, 61 Drake L. Rev. 639, 640 (2013) (attributing the quote to Yogi Berra and calling him “famous for his enigmatic and oftentimes humorous remarks”). 3

was previously admonished—we impose the recommended sanction of a

public reprimand.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Magistrate Krull, age fifty-four, is a part-time judicial magistrate in

the Second Judicial District. He has practiced law in Worth County

since 1985. Krull served as Worth County Attorney from 1986 to 1998

before opening his own general private practice in Northwood, Iowa. He

was appointed magistrate in 2005. Krull has maintained his general

private practice in Northwood while serving as magistrate. Worth County

has a population of 7500. According to Magistrate Krull, only three

lawyers regularly practice in Worth County. He is the only resident

judicial officer.

Krull agreed to represent Mindy Miller in his private practice. On

March 21, 2012, Krull filed a petition against her former husband,

Thomas Arndt, to modify their dissolution decree. Under that decree,

Miller and Arndt shared physical care of their children, L.A. and T.A., but

the children actually lived exclusively with Miller. The petition for

modification asked the court to grant Miller exclusive physical care. A

trial-setting conference was held on June 1, during which the court set a

trial date of September 14.

On June 23, a Northwood police officer approached Magistrate

Krull seeking a search warrant to investigate three gas station burglaries.

The warrant identified T.A., age sixteen, as a suspect and authorized the

search of Mindy Miller’s residence for specific stolen goods and items

used in the burglaries. The officer had identified T.A. and another young

man as the burglars from a security camera video and had information

that L.A. sent out a text message offering cigarettes for sale matching the

brands of the stolen cartons of cigarettes. Magistrate Krull immediately 4

recognized the names and knew that the residence to be searched was

Miller’s home. He thought that his client may be upset with him for

signing a warrant to search her house for evidence implicating her son,

and he “recognized [she] might no longer want [him] to represent her.”

Nonetheless, Magistrate Krull signed the search warrant. He later

explained he focused on T.A.’s behavior and did not think about how the

discovery of stolen cigarettes at Miller’s home might affect the

modification proceeding.

At the time he signed the warrant, Magistrate Krull considered

whether this case was similar to Fremont. In Fremont, Magistrate Krull

was asked to sign a warrant to search the residence of Destiny Fremont,

a woman whose name Magistrate Krull recognized from his private

practice. 749 N.W.2d at 235. Krull had filed a custody action on behalf

of his client against Fremont, and that civil matter was pending at the

time the officer presented the warrant for Magistrate Krull’s signature.

Id. He was aware of his client’s pending civil action against Fremont, yet

he signed the warrant anyway, reasoning “that the evidence [supporting

the issuance of the warrant] was overwhelming, physical in nature, and

did not require him to evaluate the credibility of witnesses.” Id. at 235–

36. We held in Fremont that the warrant was constitutionally infirm and

vacated Fremont’s conviction because Magistrate Krull was not acting as

a neutral and detached magistrate. Id. at 243–44. Magistrate Krull

received a private admonition from the Commission for signing the

warrant in Fremont. When history repeated itself six years later,

Magistrate Krull again signed the search warrant presented to him after

concluding Fremont was distinguishable because the warrant this time

authorized the search of the home of his own client rather than the

adverse party. 5

Miller did not ask Krull to withdraw for signing the warrant to

search her residence, and he continued to represent her in the

modification action and prepare for trial. Seven days before the

scheduled trial date, the parties exchanged witness and exhibit lists. On

September 12, two days before trial, Thomas Arndt’s counsel sent Krull

an updated witness list naming Magistrate Krull as a witness relating to

his issuance of the search warrant. Arndt’s counsel filed a motion to

disqualify Krull from representing Miller. The next day the district court

judge conducted a telephonic hearing. The judge granted the motion to

disqualify Krull and continued the trial to allow Miller to retain new

counsel. His order stated:

A common fact issue in both the search warrant proceedings and this modification action is the behavior and conduct of [T.A.]. This modification action and the issuance of the warrant both impact the legal status of [T.A.]. Given the overlap and interconnection of the search warrant proceedings and this modification action, it is the opinion of the Court that the ethical rules . . . require Mr.

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