Complaint Against Sterlinske

365 N.W.2d 876, 123 Wis. 2d 245, 1985 Wisc. LEXIS 2204
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1985
Docket84-1608—J
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 365 N.W.2d 876 (Complaint Against Sterlinske) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Complaint Against Sterlinske, 365 N.W.2d 876, 123 Wis. 2d 245, 1985 Wisc. LEXIS 2204 (Wis. 1985).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Judicial disciplinary proceeding; discipline imposed.

We review, pursuant to sec. 757.91, Stats., the findings of fact, conclusions of law and recommendation of the judicial conduct panel in this proceeding brought by the Judicial Commission against the Honorable Donald J. Sterlinske, formerly circuit judge for Rusk county, alleging his aggravated and persistent failure to comply with the standards of the Code of Judicial Ethics, SCR chapter 60, and for his wilful violation of rules of that Code. The panel concluded that the respondent engaged in misconduct and has recommended that he be removed from the position of circuit judge. The respondent did not object to the panel’s findings and conclusions, and we accept them. We agree that the respondent’s misconduct warrants his removal from the office of circuit judge for Rusk county, but we note that the respondent, by letter dated March 7, 1985, informed the director of state courts that he was submitting to the governor of Wisconsin his letter of retirement from that office, effective April 1, 1985. Consequently, our order for removal would have no practical effect concerning the judicial office previously held by the respondent. Nevertheless, because the respondent is otherwise eligible to serve temporarily as a reserve judge of the court of appeals or the circuit court for any county, sec. 753.075(2), we determine, as appropriate discipline for his misconduct, that the respondent be removed from eligibility to serve as a reserve judge.

This proceeding was commenced by the filing of the Judicial Commission’s complaint on August 15, 1984. After the judicial conduct panel filed its report with the court on March 4, 1985, the respondent submitted his *247 resignation as circuit judge for Rusk county and, on March 14, 1985, filed a motion seeking the dismissal of the complaint in this matter on the ground that, as of April 1, 1985, he would no longer be a circuit judge and this court would no longer have jurisdiction over him. We denied that motion to dismiss by order of April 1,1985.

The judicial conduct panel consisted of the Honorable Neal P. Nettesheim, presiding judge, the Honorable Burton A. Scott, and the Honorable Ted E. Wedemeyer, Jr. In its report, the panel concluded that the respondent engaged in judicial misconduct, as defined in sec. 757.81 (4), Stats., 1 in connection with seven judicial proceedings over which he presided as judge. A summary of the panel’s findings and conclusions, to which the respondent interposed no objection, follows.

State v. Marguerite Eades. In this criminal case, which was tried to a jury on October 23, 1980, the respondent prepared jury instructions and a verdict. However, no traditional or formal jury instruction and verdict conference had been held between the respondent and the attorneys after the close of evidence in which counsel would have had an opportunity to approve, comment on or object to the propriety of the proposed instructions and verdict. The defendant was convicted of two counts of felony welfare fraud and was sentenced to concurrent terms of two years and one year in the state prison.

The defendant retained other counsel to represent her to pursue appropriate postconviction proceedings. After examining the court file on January 29, 1981, that attorney filed postconviction motions on March 26, 1981, raising among other issues the question of the propriety of the jury instructions.

*248 On a date following January 29, 1981, the respondent asked his court reporter why the trial transcript did not indicate a jury instructions and verdict conference between the court and counsel. The reporter consulted his trial notes and confirmed that the original transcript showing no such conference was correct. The reporter also reviewed the court clerk’s minutes of the proceedings, which indicated that at 3:43 p.m. testimony was closed and the court conferred with counsel; at 3:45 p.m. closing arguments began. Based upon these minutes and the respondent’s inquiries, the reporter then modified the trial transcript to include a parenthetical note stating that at the close of testimony the court conferred with the attorneys, and a copy of the modified transcript page was sent to counsel.

Also after January 29, 1981, the respondent dictated and signed a “certificate” attesting to the fact that an instructions and verdict conference had been held in his chambers and, further, that counsel for the parties had agreed to the proposed instructions and verdict. The respondent directed his reporter to date that “certificate” October 23, 1980, the date of the original trial, and caused it to be stamped by the reporter with the clerk’s filing stamp, showing it had been placed in the court file on the date of the trial. The respondent also caused the docket sheet record to be altered by the reporter to indicate that the “certificate” was filed on the date of the trial.

On April 9, 1981, the respondent wrote to the defendant’s counsel concerning the postconviction motions that had been filed, stating:

“The file in the matter indicates that there was a conference held between all of the attorneys, the instructions were gone over carefully, and they were approved by both the district attorney and Mrs. Eades’ counsel at that time.
*249 “In view of these circumstances it is difficult to understand upon what basis you now claim there was an instructional error.”

On May 22, 1981, the respondent issued a decision denying those postconviction motions, stating in part:

“Prior to the submission of the verdict and the charge to the jury, the Clerk’s minutes indicate that a conference was held in chambers, and that the parties and the attorneys for the parties stipulated and agreed that the verdicts as submitted to the jury was approved by both, and likewise there was no objection to any of the instructions as proposed by the Court. This was accomplished at 3:43 P.M. after the closing of the testimony of the parties.”

The defendant’s counsel then filed a notice of appeal, and he discovered in the court file the respondent’s “certificate,” which had not been there when he examined the file on January 29, 1981. The attorney also discovered a neatly typed docket sheet different from the docket sheet in the court file when he first examined it.

The- “certificate” materially misrepresented what actually had occurred during the trial, and it was inserted in the record at the direction of the respondent with the intention of misleading others regarding those proceedings. The respondent took those actions without notice to the defendant, her counsel, or the district attorney. The defendant’s conviction was subsequently summarily reversed by the court of appeals, but the record does not reflect the specific grounds for the reversal. In any event, the defendant already had been released on parole.

State v. Roland Towers. In the fall of 1981, the respondent’s daughter was involved in an ongoing dispute with her employer, the Bruce School Board. On September 4, 1981, a grievance hearing concerning this dispute was conducted before a Wisconsin Employment Relations Commission (WERC) hearing examiner.

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365 N.W.2d 876, 123 Wis. 2d 245, 1985 Wisc. LEXIS 2204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/complaint-against-sterlinske-wis-1985.