Hirschfeld v. SUPERIOR COURT FOR MARICOPA

908 P.2d 22, 184 Ariz. 208, 200 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 23, 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 216
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 26, 1995
Docket1 CA-SA 95-0126
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 908 P.2d 22 (Hirschfeld v. SUPERIOR COURT FOR MARICOPA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hirschfeld v. SUPERIOR COURT FOR MARICOPA, 908 P.2d 22, 184 Ariz. 208, 200 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 23, 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 216 (Ark. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinions

OPINION

KLEINSCHMIDT, Presiding Judge.

The Petitioner, Robert A. Hirschfeld, an attorney, was convicted of criminal contempt of court and sentenced to five nights in the Maricopa County Jail and ordered to pay a fine of $300. The conviction arose out of his harassment of the opposing party to a child custody action in which Hirschfeld was involved. The harassment occurred in the corridor outside the courtroom during a recess in the proceedings. Hirschfeld brought this special action seeking a reversal of the conviction and sentence. Because contempt orders are reviewable by special action, see and compare Van Baalen v. Superior Court, 19 Ariz.App. 512, 508 P.2d 771 (1973) and Ariz.R. of P. for Special Actions 1(a), we accepted jurisdiction, stayed the execution of sentence, and took this matter under advisement.

We deny the relief requested. The court has the right and the duty to protect all persons who are in attendance upon it from abuse while they are in or near the courtroom. Misbehavior towards such persons lessens the dignity and authority of the court and is punishable as a contempt of court.

THE FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

The facts, construed most strongly against Hirschfeld, are as follows. Hirschfeld was the attorney for the father in a child custody dispute between divorced parents. The parents had agreed to joint custody, and a dispute arose when the mother did not return the child to the father as required by the agreement.

The case was assigned to Judge Norman Hall of the Superior Court for Maricopa County. In the late afternoon of a day in March 1995, Hirschfeld, his client, and the child’s mother were in Judge Hall’s chambers where the mother was seeking a temporary custody order. The father was seeking an order that the child be returned to him. The mother was representing herself, but she had been accompanied to court by a friend who was waiting in the hallway. The judge decided not to resolve the issues that day, and he directed the parties to return the following day to continue the hearing. The child was to stay with the mother pending the completion of the hearing.

As Hirschfeld and the parents were leaving the judge’s chambers, Hirschfeld asked the mother where she was hiding the child. The mother asked Judge Hall whether she had to answer the question, and the judge said that she did not. He said to Hirschfeld, “Leave her alone,” and then, ‘We’ll take care of this at ten o’clock.” The judge then went back into his chambers, and the parties and Hirschfeld left the anteroom to the chambers and walked into the hall.

As the mother was walking down the hall towards the elevators, Hirschfeld called out in a loud voice demanding to know where she was hiding the child. The mother became fearful, and instead of waiting to take an elevator, she walked quickly past the elevators and turned left down a corridor. By this time she was accompanied by her friend. As the mother was hurrying down the hall, she could hear Hirschfeld’s voice in the background, and she began to panic. For a mo[210]*210ment,- the mother and her friend stood in a shallow alcove in front of an empty courtroom. Fearing that Hirschfeld would find them and continue to harass them, they went through the doors leading to the empty courtroom and into a small waiting room. In a short time Hirschfeld approached, looked in the room and said, “They’re in here.” At some point, he again demanded to know where the child was. All of this was done in an abusive and harassing manner. Hirschfeld left and walked down the hall, and the mother and her friend went into the dark courtroom, through a back door, and made their way back to Judge Hall’s anteroom.

The mother was emotionally upset, and someone from Judge Hall’s office summoned help from the sheriffs office. When two deputy sheriffs responded, Hirschfeld and his client were in the hallway. The deputy who first approached them did not know Hirschfeld, and he asked him for identification. Hirschfeld responded that he had no identification and demanded that the deputy arrest the mother for custodial interference. The second deputy, who did know Hirschfeld, arrived. Apparently Judge Hall had told the deputy to escort Hirschfeld and his client out of the courthouse and that is what they did.

The following day, Judge Hall cited Hirschfeld for contempt of court. The judge recited what he knew and had heard about Hirschfeld’s conduct and said that he was citing Hirschfeld pursuant to Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. (“A.R.S.”) section 12-864 and Rule 33.1 of the Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure. The judge singled out as the “operative language” the part of the rule referring to one who “engages in any other willfully contumacious conduct which lessens the dignity and authority of the court.” Later, when Judge Hall was interviewed by counsel for Hirschfeld, he made it clear that he had not cited Hirschfeld for disobeying the judge’s admonition to “leave her [the mother] alone.” At the contempt hearing, Judge Hall again acknowledged that he was not charging Hirschfeld with disobeying any order, and he said that he did not consider any of Hirschfeld’s contumacious conduct to have been directed at the judge or his staff. Instead, he said that all of the offensive conduct had been directed at the mother.

The evidentiary hearing on the citation for contempt was held before Judge Michael D. Ryan. Following the hearing, Judge Ryan found Hirschfeld in contempt of court. Judge Ryan orally explained his findings and ruling at length:

The particular conduct or the particular charge here is whether or not Mr. Hirschfeld engaged in willfully contumacious conduct which lessened the dignity and authority of the court.
The court’s opinion here is that every litigant should be able to exit the courthouse without being harassed by counsel for the other side. The court, I think, has inherent power to regulate the behavior of litigants, in particular, attorneys, in the immediate areas around the courthouse, particularly the hallways and anterooms and elevator areas of the courthouse.
In this situation we are not talking about downstairs in the common areas. We’re not talking about outside the courthouse. We are talking about areas that are within the hearing of the courtrooms, within immediate—or adjacent to the courtrooms, and right outside the courthouse doors, the courtroom doors. So therefore, what I had to consider was whether or not Mr. Hirschfeld willfully engaged in contumacious conduct involving [the mother] and the person she was with.
The evidence clearly shows that Judge Hall asked—told Mr. Hirschfeld to leave the woman alone, and I understand and I realize that he is not being charged with willfully disobeying the order of Judge Hall, but looking at all the activities involved here, Mr. Hirschfeld really just disregarded anything that Judge Hall said. He went outside the immediate chambers area and in the hallway outside the chambers area of Judge Hall’s court and other courts, began harassment, haranguing, and badgering [the mother].
The credible evidence shows that instead of normally leaving the courthouse on the elevator, she went around and basically had to secrete herself or hide in a courtroom or in a witness room outside Judge [211]*211Hall and Judge D’Angelo’s courtroom. The evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, shows that Mr.

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Hirschfeld v. SUPERIOR COURT FOR MARICOPA
908 P.2d 22 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
908 P.2d 22, 184 Ariz. 208, 200 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 23, 1995 Ariz. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hirschfeld-v-superior-court-for-maricopa-arizctapp-1995.