In Re Albano

384 A.2d 144, 75 N.J. 509, 1978 N.J. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 20, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 384 A.2d 144 (In Re Albano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Albano, 384 A.2d 144, 75 N.J. 509, 1978 N.J. LEXIS 164 (N.J. 1978).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Respondent Nicholas Albano, Jr. is an Essex County District Court Judge appointed on. April 5, 1973. Presently, he is the Presiding Judge of the Essex County. District Court. The instant proceedings ágainst him had their origin in a complaint filed with the New Jersey Supreme Court Advisory 'Committee on Judicial Conduct by Essex-Newark Legal Services Corporation charging respondent with misconduct as a judge. 1 Pursuant to R'. % :15 the Committee made a preliminary investigation of the complaint, respondent’s answer thereto and numerous transcripts of Essex County District Court trials presided over by respondent.

The Committee then. conducted a hearing at which respondent appeared. The charges against him as reflected in the trial transcripts were reviewed and respondent was afforded the opportunity to respond.

Thereafter the Committee filed its Presentment and Recommendation for Institution of Formal Proceedings for removal of respondent as Judge of the Essex County District Court pursuant to N..J. S. A. 2A:1B-1 et seq. The Committee found that nothing before it. reflected in any way on respondent’s integrity, his inherent legal abilities or his hardworking attention to his duties. However, on the basis of the trial transcripts and other relevant documents placed before it, the Committee found beyond a reasonable' doubt *511 that respondent was unsuited by temperament and demeanor to continue as a Judge of the Essex County District Court and that his judicial conduct had been shown to be in violation of the Code of Judicial Conduct, Canons 1, 2, 3A(1), (2), (3) and (4).-

Respondent then filed a motion under R. 2:15-13 for an order denying or rejecting the Committee’s Recommendation for Institution of Formal Proceedings. This Court allowed respondent to present oral argument on this motion and also ordered him to show cause why he should not be censured or reprimanded in lieu of being subjected to formal proceedings for removal. The matter has now been fully argued before this Court. Our conclusion is that respondent’s conduct as a judge, hereinafter referred to, has been shown to be improper and -in violation of the Code of Judicial Conduct. Censure for his actions is required. However, the extreme penalty of reinoval, carrying with it the drastic' sanctions 2 it does, is not warranted.

The Committee’s findings of judicial misconduct fall into four general categories. They are: (a) intemperate conduct duding judicial proceedings; (b) repeated misapplication of law; (c) bias against attorneys from Essex-Newark Legal Services Corporation; (d) criticism of tenant-oriented laws. There is also one instance of an ex parte communication by respondent to the Rent Leveling Board of East Orange regarding a decision by the Board which respondent felt had attempted to overrule one of his decisions.

It is unnecessary to discuss specifically each instánce of misconduct as set forth in the Presentment. Some of them, in the light of respondent’s explanations, are debatable as to whether or not respondent exceeded the bounds of judicial propriety. Others, however, clearly manifest a lack of judicial demeanor, patience and understanding and, in some *512 instances, an attempt at sarcasm and humor that does not belong in a courtroom.

One case, referred to by the Committee in its Presentment, reflects several of the charges of alleged judicial misconduct on respondent’s part. Rabinowitz v. Bennett, heard on November 28, 1973, involved a summary proceeding to dispossess a tenant for non-payment of rent. At the hearing a Law student from the Rutgers Urban Legal Clinic appeared for the tenant pursuant to B. 1:21-3 (c). When the landlord, “as a taxpayer,” complained about the tenant being provided with a “free lawyer,” respondent said there was nothing the court could do about it but suggested that an attorney be consulted as the landlord was entitled to know the basis on which the application for representation was made and if there was a false statement, there would be a prosecution for false swearing.

The hearing then commenced with the landlord testifying to the tenancy, the tenant’s non-payment of one month’s rent amounting to $210 and the tenant still remaining in possession. The law student representing the tenant then sought permission to ask the landlord some questions about conditions in tlie apartment, stating that the tenant intended to present a Marini 3 defense.

Respondent stated that before he would hear a Marini deiense he would have to know whether the tenant was able to pay the rent and costs “right now.” Respondent was assured that the tenant had the money with her. Respondent then asked the law student to make a proffer of proof so he could determine whether or not a Marini defense existed. He also said that the tenant would have to prove a written notice to the landlord of the defects.

*513 In response .respondent was told of mice and rat infestation, a large bulge in the ceiling of the front room so that the ceiling was about to fall, water seepage in the kitchen from under the sink, a problem with hot water and garbage in and around the premises, stairways and cellar. Respondent answered that none of this went to habitability — that these were health complaints and should be directed to the Newark Board of Health. Respondent then made the following comment :

Now, why am I so irritable ancl harsh about this whole proceeding? And you’re probably correct that I’m not as kind to you as I might be, because I don’t want to listen to rats, I don’t want to listen to bulges, I don’t want to listen to seepage, I don’t want to hear about hot water, and I don’t want to hear about garbage.

When the law student persisted in her contention that the conditions complained of affected habitability, respondent told her to turn around and look at everyone else in the courtroom “and you take all the time you want.” 4

Finally, it was stated by the law student that the tenant wanted to present the defense of retaliatory eviction. Respondent brushed this aside noting that this was a non-payment of rent case and all the tenant had to do was pay the rent. Respondent then added:

You know I try to be patient, but I do wish that — Now, if there’s a holdover situation where there’s a notice to quit and surrender possession, then you have an area for reprisal ^ * * I have studied some of this stuff and I resent bitterly Rutgers and Seton Hall and the other associations coming in with the same defenses day in and day out.

Judgment for possession was entered in favor of the landlord without hearing any defense evidence. We think the *514 incident is regrettable. Unfortunately, there are others like it.

Without doubt, the Essex County District Court is one of the busiest courts in the State.

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Bluebook (online)
384 A.2d 144, 75 N.J. 509, 1978 N.J. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-albano-nj-1978.