In Re Badgett

657 S.E.2d 346, 362 N.C. 202, 2008 N.C. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 7, 2008
Docket173A07
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 657 S.E.2d 346 (In Re Badgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Badgett, 657 S.E.2d 346, 362 N.C. 202, 2008 N.C. LEXIS 143 (N.C. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER OF SUSPENSION AND CENSURE

On 19 March 2007, the Judicial Standards Commission (Commission) recommended that this Court censure respondent, a Judge of the General Court of Justice, District Court Division, Judicial District Seventeen-B, for conduct inappropriate to his judicial office.

On 2 October 2006, the Commission filed a complaint alleging, inter alia, that respondent: (1) had a business relationship with attorney Ernest Clark Dummit; (2) neither disclosed this relationship to parties or counsel appearing before him nor disqualified himself from matters involving Dummit; (3) subsequently attempted to coerce District Attorney C. Ricky Bowman into signing a remittal of disqualification; (4) engaged in retaliatory conduct against the district attorney’s office after the district attorney refused to sign the remittal; (5) made comments and ruled in a manner that created the impression that attorney Dummit was in a position to influence respondent, thereby calling into question his impartiality; (6) coerced a guilty plea from criminal defendant Dale William Walker; (7) attempted to coerce a guilty plea from criminal defendant Eric Wayne Potts; and (8) was habitually rude and condescending to those who appeared before him and demonstrated an arrogant and contemptuous demeanor while presiding over court.

Respondent filed his answer on 20 October 2006. The Commission conducted hearings on the matter on 30 November 2006, 1 December 2006, 18 and 19 January 2007, and 9 February 2007. It subsequently entered findings of fact as follows:

2. Prior to respondent’s election as a district court judge, he was a practicing attorney in King, North Carolina and maintained his office in a building owned by him and located at 210 E. Dalton Street, King, North Carolina. After his election in November 2004, respondent entered into discussions with E. Clarke Dummit, an attorney with his primary office in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, concerning an arrangement by which Mr. Dummit *204 would lease respondent’s building and purchase his files. On or about 1 December 2004, respondent entered into a lease of the premises to American Law Offices, PC doing business as “The Dummit Law Firm,’ which lease was executed by respondent and Mr. Dummit as President of American Law Offices, PC. Thereafter, Mr. Dummit sent out letters soliciting respondent’s former clients, and others, and representing that his offices would be located in respondent’s former offices and that he would, as a courtesy to respondent, maintain respondent’s legal files.
3. After respondent executed the lease to Mr. Dummit’s law firm, Mr. Dummit appeared on behalf of clients on multiple occasions before respondent. At no time did respondent disclose to opposing counsel, including members of the staff of the district attorney for the 17-B Prosecutorial District, the business relationship existing between respondent and Mr. Dummit.
4. After members of the district attorney’s staff complained concerning what they perceived to be favorable treatment accorded Mr. Dummit by respondent, respondent was advised by letter dated 10 January 2006 from Paul R. Ross, Executive Secretary of the Judicial Standards Commission, that his business relationship with Mr. Dummit was potentially grounds for disqualification in matters in which Mr. Dummit was involved. Respondent, as well as members of the district attorney’s office, also received information from Mr. Ross with respect to the provisions of Canon 3D of the Code of Judicial Conduct regarding remittal of disqualification.
5. At respondent’s direction, Mr. Dummit prepared a document entitled “In re Remittal of Disqualification” disclosing the landlord-tenant relationship existing between respondent and Mr. Dummit and deeming it “insubstantial and immaterial pursuant to the opinion rendered by the Judicial Standards Commission.” No such opinion was ever rendered by the Commission or Mr. Ross. Mr. Dummit signed the document and sent it to respondent, who signed it, and to District Attorney C. Ricky Bowman, who declined to sign it. Notwithstanding the provisions of Canon 3D of the Code of Judicial Conduct requiring that a remittal of disqualification be reached independently of the judge’s participation, respondent contacted Mr. Bowman on more than one occasion in efforts to obtain his signature on the document, including one occasion in open court in which he requested Mr. Bowman to come to the bench and told him that Mr. Ross had said Mr. *205 Bowman needed to sign the document and that the Judicial Standards investigation was over. Neither of those statements was true. Upon Mr. Bowman’s refusal to sign the document, respondent became angry and threatened to “give everyone the maximum sentence” and “clog up superior court.” The Commission specifically finds that the respondent’s testimony concerning his conversation at the bench with Mr. Bowman was not credible, (emphasis added)
6. After receiving notice dated 27 December 2005 of the Commission’s preliminary investigation . . . respondent inquired of Mr. Ross as to the identity of the complainants. Citing Commission Rules 4, 7, and 9, Mr. Ross advised respondent that the “identity of the complainant is confidential until the Commission concludes whether formal proceedings should be filed.” Notwithstanding, respondent told Assistant District Attorney Angela Puckett that he knew who had complained, they were a “burr in his side” and that he was going to “unload on them.” He created a hostile work environment to members of the district attorneys [sic] staff and told one of them, Mr. Langan, “you don’t represent the State, the officer does” or words to that effect, and urged Mr. Bowman to fire Mr. Langan.
7. After respondent was served with the NOTICE OF COMPLAINT AND COMPLAINT in this matter, respondent threatened to sue Assistant District Attorney Tim Watson and “everyone in the district attorney’s office.” In response to a motion that respondent be recused from hearing matters in which the district attorney’s office was involved, respondent agreed to recuse himself from hearing criminal matters, but ordered that the motion be sealed.
8. Respondent has been habitually rude and condescending to those who appear before him in court. On 14 March 2006, while hearing evidence in the case of State v. Potts, . . . respondent expressed displeasure at having to begin a contested trial late in the day, turned his back to the witness who was testifying, engaged in conversation with a courtroom clerk during the witness’s testimony, and stated to defense counsel Karen Adams that he had “quit taking notes — I’m drawing arrows to who is related to who and what boyfriends and girlfriends go together.” On 22 March 2006, respondent belittled courtroom clerk Hope Brim in open court by speaking to her in a sarcastic manner and suggesting that she had been late coming to court when, in fact, she *206 arrived before the usual time for the opening of court. In his testimony before the Commission, respondent acknowledged that he has, on occasion, been loud and arrogant while in court and that he needs to work on his judicial temperament.
9. On 28 March 2006, Patsy Royal was present in the courtroom where respondent was presiding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
657 S.E.2d 346, 362 N.C. 202, 2008 N.C. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-badgett-nc-2008.