In Re Chrzanowski

636 N.W.2d 758, 465 Mich. 468
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 2001
DocketDocket 116721
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 636 N.W.2d 758 (In Re Chrzanowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Chrzanowski, 636 N.W.2d 758, 465 Mich. 468 (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

Markman, J.

The Judicial Tenure Commission (jtc) has recommended that we suspend respondent, 37th District Court Judge Susan R. Chrzanowski, for twelve months without pay for misconduct in the performance of her judicial duties. Respondent has filed a petition to reject this recommendation. We affirm the jtc’s findings, and conclude that the jtc’s recommendation of a one-year suspension of respondent is a reasonable one. Pursuant to MCR 9.225, we modify the recommendation of the JTC to require a six-month suspension without pay, beginning January 1, 2002, in order to accord respondent partial credit for the seventeen-month interim suspension with pay that she has already served.

I. PACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The bases for the jtc’s complaint concern two aspects of respondent’s conduct between April 1998 and August 1999. First, on a substantial number of occasions, respondent appointed then-attorney Michael Fletcher to represent indigent defendants, and presided over such cases, as well as presided over a criminal case in which Fletcher was retained counsel, without disclosing that she was engaged at the time in an intimate relationship with Fletcher. Second, respondent made false statements to police *470 officers investigating the August 16, 1999, murder of Leann Fletcher, Michael Fletcher’s wife. 1

Respondent and Fletcher met in 1996 and became friends in 1997. In February of 1998, Fletcher entered the private practice of law. Respondent began assigning him to represent indigent criminal defendants in misdemeanor cases in her court. In July of 1998, respondent and Fletcher began an intimate relationship. Throughout the course of their subsequent relationship, between July 1, 1998, and August 15, 1999, respondent assigned Fletcher to fifty-six cases. Fifty-five of these cases, without a city attorney being present, resulted in guilty pleas accepted by respondent. These appointments generated in excess of $16,000 in income for Fletcher. In addition, respondent presided over People v Donald Thomas Richards, Case No. W224162, in which Fletcher was retained counsel. Respondent entered an order dismissing the case against Fletcher’s client. Respondent failed to disclose her ongoing relationship with Fletcher in any of these cases.

On August 16, 1999, Fletcher shot and killed his wife, Leann. Sometime after committing the murder, Fletcher telephoned respondent and left her a message. In the message, Fletcher asked respondent to call him when she returned home. Respondent received this message during the pre-dawn hours of August 17. Respondent then paged Fletcher, but received no response. She then left Fletcher a message, and he returned the call approximately one-half hour later. He told respondent that he could not talk, *471 but that something “horrible” had happened. In the morning, respondent was informed by a co-worker that Leann Fletcher had committed suicide. Respondent went home early because she was too upset to complete her docket.

During the initial investigation of the murder, Hazel Park Police officers discovered evidence that respondent had been engaged in an intimate relationship with Fletcher. On August 17, the police interviewed respondent at her home. The interviewing detective asked respondent whether she had been involved with Fletcher. Judge Chrzanowski responded that she had. When questioned about the length of the relationship, respondent indicated that the relationship had begun in February of 1999 and had lasted only until March of 1999. The detective also asked respondent if she had spoken to Fletcher since the death of Leann, and respondent stated that she had not. Because respondent was emotionally distraught, the interview ceased.

On August 19, respondent went to the Hazel Park police station for a second interview. At this time, respondent indicated that her relationship with Fletcher had actually begun in August of 1998 and continued sporadically until August 15, 1999. Respondent also acknowledged, contrary to her August 17 statement, that she had spoken to Fletcher following his wife’s death.

In September of 1999, the jtc received a request from Macomb County Prosecutor Carl Marlinga for an investigation into respondent’s appointment of Fletcher during their relationship. Following respondent’s replies, the jtc filed Formal Complaint No. 65 on April 14, 2000. First, the complaint asserted that *472 respondent had engaged in misconduct by appointing Fletcher to appear in cases before her without disclosing their relationship. Second, the complaint alleged that respondent made false statements to Hazel Park police officers in the August 17 interview concerning the murder of Fletcher’s wife.

On April 26, 2000, this Court appointed former Justice Charles Levin to serve as master in this case. Meanwhile, respondent testified at the murder trial of Fletcher and indicated that she had made false statements during the initial police inquiry. The jtc then filed a petition for interim suspension pursuant to MCR 9.220. 2 On July 28, 2000, this Court entered an order suspending respondent with pay. In re Chrzanowski, 463 Mich 1201 (2000).

n. MASTER’S FINDINGS

After conducting a formal hearing, the master issued his report on December 7, 2000. He found that respondent had appointed Fletcher as counsel for indigent criminal defendants in matters over which she presided, and had approved payment of legal fees to Fletcher during the period between April 1998 and August 1999, when she and Fletcher had been engaged in an intimate relationship. The master also found that Fletcher had received “a disproportionate number” of appointments in comparison with other attorneys who practiced before respondent. He concluded that respondent violated the Code of Judicial *473 Conduct by making these appointments to Fletcher. 3 He stated that a judge is enjoined by this provision from allowing social or other relationships to influence conduct or judgment, and is further prohibited from making appointments on the basis of considerations other than merit. 4 The master also found that such appointments had “the appearance of impropriety” and “erode [d] public confidence in the judiciary.” 5 Nonetheless, the master concluded that he could not recommend discipline because the jtc “has not promulgated a policy respecting disproportionate assignments to close personal friends of the judge, and consequently the Supreme Court has not been called upon to enunciate a rule of law . . . justifying a recommendation for the imposition of discipline.” Moreover, the master determined that, because respondent had a subjective good-faith belief that she could impartially hear cases in which Fletcher appeared, she was not required by the Code of Judicial Conduct, or by MCR 2.003 6 to disclose the relationship with Fletcher, or to raise on her own the *474

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Bluebook (online)
636 N.W.2d 758, 465 Mich. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chrzanowski-mich-2001.