In Re Curda

49 P.3d 255, 2002 WL 1358479
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 2002
DocketS-9907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 P.3d 255 (In Re Curda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska 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 Curda, 49 P.3d 255, 2002 WL 1358479 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

49 P.3d 255 (2002)

In the matter of the proceedings pursuant to AS 22.30.011(b) in relation to Dale O. CURDA, Judge of the Superior Court, Fourth Judicial District, at Bethel, Alaska, Petitioner.

No. S-9907.

Supreme Court of Alaska.

June 21, 2002.

Jonathon A. Katcher, Pope & Katcher, Anchorage, Brennan P. Cain, Middleton & Timme, Anchorage, for Petitioner.

Matthew D. Jamin, Jamin, Ebell, Schmitt & Mason, Kodiak, Special Counsel to the Alaska Judicial Conduct Commission.

Before: FABE, Chief Justice, MATTHEWS, EASTAUGH, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I.W., subpoenaed to testify in Wilfred Raphael's criminal trial in Bethel, arrived in court intoxicated on the day she was scheduled to give testimony. In an ex parte meeting, Assistant District Attorney Joe Wrona expressed concern to Superior Court Judge *256 Dale Curda that I.W. would either fail to appear a second time to testify or would not be able to stay sober. After holding a brief hearing with Wrona and I.W., Judge Curda imprisoned I.W. for contempt. The Judicial Conduct Commission has recommended to this court that Judge Curda be reprimanded for ethical misconduct based on legal errors committed in that contempt proceeding.

Judge Curda committed legal errors that violated some of I.W.'s and Raphael's rights. But because Judge Curda's legal errors were neither willful nor part of a pattern of misconduct, we conclude that they did not constitute ethical misconduct and therefore that he should not receive any sanction.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

I.W. was subpoenaed and scheduled to testify in Bethel on Tuesday, September 5, 1995, at the trial of Wilfred Raphael — her former domestic companion who had been indicted for a series of serious attacks upon her. Assistant District Attorney Joe Wrona arranged for I.W. to be flown in from Mountain Village on Monday and to stay in Pacifica House, a placement that did not allow alcohol on the premises. I.W.'s two children accompanied her to Bethel. Wrona instructed I.W. to remain sober, telling her that she would "get in trouble" if she did not.

On Tuesday morning, Raphael's lawyer, James Gould, notified the court by telephone from Anchorage that he was too sick to travel to Bethel that day. Judge Curda, who was presiding over Raphael's trial, continued the trial until the next day.

Wrona then learned that I.W. had been evicted from Pacifica House for drinking and "partying" in her room. Wrona's supervisor instructed him to tell Judge Curda about his witness problem. When Wrona arrived at the court, he encountered I.W., still intoxicated, pulling up in a taxi with her children. After talking briefly with I.W., Wrona went into the courtroom to meet with Judge Curda; I.W. remained behind in the foyer.

After Judge Curda directed that the proceedings be put on the record, Wrona explained his problem to Judge Curda, stating that he felt he could not "control" I.W. Wrona presented Judge Curda with three potential options: (1) confining I.W. for contempt; (2) sending I.W. home and bringing her back when trial resumed; or (3) keeping I.W. in Bethel if the court could shape some other sort of remedy.

As Wrona had told him that I.W. was a recalcitrant witness and that she had threatened not to testify if her testimony was not taken that day, Judge Curda decided that they could not send I.W. home. Judge Curda also found that I.W. could not safely remain in Bethel outside of custody, because her children lacked an appropriate placement there. He thus concluded that I.W. would likely have to be confined, and her children taken into custody by the Division of Family and Youth Services (DFYS). Although he stated "I've never found that . . . me talking to someone, especially when they're under the influence is going to make any difference whatsoever," Judge Curda called I.W. into the courtroom to question her.

Judge Curda asked I.W. if she had been subpoenaed to testify; if she had been evicted from Pacifica House; if she had been drinking; and if she was currently under the influence. I.W. responded that she was under subpoena; that she had left — not been evicted from — Pacifica House; that she had "perhaps" been drinking; but that she was not currently intoxicated. I.W. then admitted, however, that she had been intoxicated earlier. Meanwhile, Judge Curda concluded that I.W. was too intoxicated to drive or to testify in a criminal trial. He asked I.W. if it was too hard for her to stay sober while in Bethel and what the court could do to help her remain sober. I.W. responded that she could stay sober. Judge Curda responded: "It's not ... just about you being sober for this case, I mean, you need to be sober for your kids to keep your kids safe whatever happens with the case and also to keep yourself safe." I.W. in turn stated that she had a room at the Kusko Inn; however, Judge Curda responded that that would not work as it was "just not a good place." When I.W. then proposed staying at the Women's Shelter, Wrona reminded her that she would have to remain sober there and that "if there's one little problem, you're going to get thrown in *257 jail and your kids will get taken away from you." When Wrona continued, "We're here today trying to think of ways to not do that to you," I.W. responded that Wrona had lied to her by telling her that they would be able to get her testimony in the trial over with that day.

Following a confused series of exchanges, Judge Curda told I.W. that as she hadn't been able to remain sober in town, even with her children accompanying her, he was holding her in contempt and "remanding" her. This, he said, was the only viable solution for securing her protection, her children's protection, and her testimony. At the conclusion of these proceedings, Judge Curda stated that when I.W. gave her testimony, "then we'll revisit the case and presumably let her, she'll be able to be released." Judge Curda then arranged for a social worker from DFYS to be called to take custody of the children.

Because of Raphael's defense attorney's illness, the trial ultimately did not resume until Thursday. I.W. testified on Friday morning, but because Wrona indicated that he might need her as a rebuttal witness, she was not released until Friday afternoon.

Raphael was ultimately convicted, and his conviction was upheld by the court of appeals despite a concurrence by Judge Mannheimer that was strongly critical of Judge Curda's treatment of I.W.[1] This court, in a divided opinion, reversed the judgment of the court of appeals, concluding that Raphael's right to be present at every stage of the trial and his due process rights had been violated.[2]

The Judicial Conduct Commission subsequently investigated Judge Curda's actions and held a formal disciplinary hearing. Five members of the Commission concluded that Judge Curda had violated provisions of the Judicial Code during the I.W. contempt hearing; three members concluded that he had not. Only three of the Commissioners, however, felt that a public reprimand was appropriate. Two felt a private reprimand was appropriate, and three felt that if Judge Curda's actions were found to violate the Code, the appropriate level of discipline would be, at most, a private reprimand. The Commission filed a recommendation for a private reprimand before this court, a recommendation which Judge Curda opposes in his petition.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P.3d 255, 2002 WL 1358479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-curda-alaska-2002.