In Re Daghir, 1 Jd 95 (pa.ct.jud.disc. 4-10-1995)

657 A.2d 1032
CourtCourt of Judicial Discipline of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1995
DocketDocket No. 1 JD 95.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 657 A.2d 1032 (In Re Daghir, 1 Jd 95 (pa.ct.jud.disc. 4-10-1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Judicial Discipline of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Daghir, 1 Jd 95 (pa.ct.jud.disc. 4-10-1995), 657 A.2d 1032 (cjdpa 1995).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In accordance with C.J.D.R.P. No. 504(B), the Court hereby issues the following decision.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The Court adopts the following stipulations of fact submitted by the parties:

1. Judge Gordon J. Daghir (hereinafter referred to as “Respondent”) is the duly elected president judge serving the Fifty-Ninth Judicial District which encompasses Elk and Cameron Counties, Pennsylvania. (Stip.Fact No. 2.)

2. Respondent has continuously served as president judge in the Fifty-Ninth Judicial District since January of 1986. Respondent is the only commissioned judge presently serving the Fifty-Ninth Judicial District. (Stip.Fact No. 3.)

3. On June 15, 1994, Respondent filed a Self Report with the [Judicial Conduct] Board (Board) advising it of the facts hereinafter included in Findings of Fact [4 through 21]. (Stip.Fact No. 4.)

4. On or about September 25, 1987, Margaret Howard filed a complaint for divorce in the Elk County Branch of the Fifty-Ninth Judicial District. This action was docketed to 87-587. The named defendant in this action was Robert V. Howard. (Stip.Fact No. 5.)

5. The above complaint in divorce raised issues of divorce, equitable distribution, custody, support, alimony pendente lite, and alimony. (Stip.Fact No. 6.)

6. During the course of the Howard v. Howard litigation, numerous Motions and Petitions were filed by the parties and ruled upon by the Respondent. (Stip.Fact No. 7.)

7. From the filing of the complaint on September 25,1987, until on or about June 7, 1994, Respondent presided over the Howard v. Howard divorce litigation. (Stip.Fact No. 8.)

8. On January 28, 1991, an Order was entered by the Respondent bifurcating proceedings in this matter and a Final Decree in Divorce was entered by the Respondent on or about January 31,1991. (Stip.Fact No. 9.)

9. Following the entry of the Divorce Decree, there was still pending before the Respondent the equitable distribution of the parties’ property. (Stip.Fact No. 10.)

10. On December 23, 1991, Respondent referred the case to Attorney Sharon L. Gregory as Master on the issue of the equitable distribution of marital property. Sharon L. Gregory was the permanent Master appointed by the Court on December 20, 1986, to hear all Elk County divorce proceedings commencing January 1,1987. (Stip.Fact No. 11.)

11. Master’s Hearings were held before Attorney Gregory on December 3,1992; December 4,1992; December 21,1992; December 22, 1992; January 7, 1993 and April 21, 1993. (Stip.Fact No. 12.)

12. In the fall of 1992, the said Robert V. Howard was the owner of at least four (4) 50 yard line season tickets to Penn State University football games and a preferred parking pass (“the tickets and parking pass”). (Stip.Fact No. 13.)

*1034 13. In early October of 1992, approximately a few days prior to the 1992 Miami v. Penn State University Football game, Robert V. Howard called the Respondent concerning matters unrelated to the Howard v. Howard litigation. (Stip.Fact No. 14.)

14. During this conversation, Respondent accepted a gift from Robert V. Howard of four (4) tickets to the 1992 Miami v. Penn State University football game. (Stip.Fact No. 15.)

15. Robert V. Howard’s intention in making the gift of the said tickets was to seek favorable treatment in the various rulings that would be made by the Respondent in that litigation. The Board cannot prove that Robert V. Howard received any such favorable treatment from the Respondent. (Stip.Fact No. 16.)

16. Respondent already had four tickets and [a] parking pass for the Miami game for his use before Robert V. Howard made the offer of his football tickets and parking pass. (Stip.Fact No. 17.)

17. Respondent took possession of and used Robert V. Howard’s tickets and attended the Miami v. Penn State University football game held on October 10, 1992, in Beaver Stadium, State College, Centre County, Pennsylvania. Respondent gave the parking pass to the daughter of a friend for her use. (Stip.Fact No. 18.)

18. In early 1994, Attorney Gregory filed the Master’s Report which addressed the questions of equitable distribution in the Howard divorce. (Stip.Fact No. 19.)

19. Exceptions were filed by both parties. (Stip.Fact No. 20.)

20. Argument was held on these exceptions before Respondent on or about March 21, 1994. (Stip.Fact No. 21.)

21. On June 7, 1994, the Respondent entered an order recusing himself from this matter. On June 15, 1994, the Respondent filed the Self-Report referred to in Finding of Fact [3]. (Stip.Fact No. 22.)

22. Before the exceptions were ruled upon by the judge appointed following the Respondent’s recusal, Robert V. Howard and Margaret A. Howard amicably resolved the equitable distribution matter, entered a stipulation for distribution, and withdrew their exceptions thereby terminating the case. (Stip.Fact No. 23.)

23. Respondent engaged in a pattern of unreasonable and unjustifiable delay in the disposition and decision of six cases pending before him in his capacity as the presiding judge in the Fifty-Ninth District and as a visiting judge. (Stip.Fact No. 25.)

24. Decisions in all of the six cases were made and entered on the record before the Respondent received notice on October 27, 1994, that the Board was conducting an investigation into unreasonable delay or the disposition of cases by the Respondent within the 59th Judicial District and a neighboring county. (Stip.Fact No. 27.)

The Court hereby further adopts Stipulated Findings of Fact Nos. 28 through 60, which are summarized below:

25. In the case of Paul Quattrone v. Erie Insurance Exchange, an action filed under the Pennsylvania No-Fault Motor Vehicle Act, the Respondent conducted a non-jury trial on December 17, 1987. (Stip.Fact No. 28.)

26. The Respondent did not enter a verdict in this matter until on or about September 19, 1994. (Stip.Fact No. 30.)

27. In the case of Bish v. Semiconductor Specialties Corporation, following a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant filed post-trial motions, argument on which was conducted on July 15, 1987. (Stip.Fact Nos. 34 and 35.)

28. In March and July of 1991, the parties respectively filed Supplemental Memo-randa regarding the Post-Trial Motions, and the defendant filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. (Stip.Fact Nos. 36 and 37.)

29. The Respondent did not enter a decision on the Post-Trial Motions until March 16, 1992. (Stip.Fact No. 39.)

30. In the case of Fritz v. Benzinger Township, the Respondent conducted a zoning hearing involving a request for a variance on March 7, 1989. (Stip.Fact No. 42.)

*1035 31. The Respondent did not enter a decision in this matter until approximately fifty-three months later, on October 12, 1993. (Stip.Fact No. 43.)

32.

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Bluebook (online)
657 A.2d 1032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-daghir-1-jd-95-pactjuddisc-4-10-1995-cjdpa-1995.