In Re Dupont

322 So. 2d 180
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1975
Docket56572
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 322 So. 2d 180 (In Re Dupont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dupont, 322 So. 2d 180 (La. 1975).

Opinion

322 So.2d 180 (1975)

In re Judge Joseph B. DUPONT, Sr., City Court of Plaquemine, Plaquemine, Louisiana.

No. 56572.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

November 3, 1975.

*181 William R. Alford, Jr., New Orleans, Sp. Counsel for The Judiciary Commission of La.

A. J. McNamara, H. D. McNamara, Jr., Metairie, for Hon. Joseph B. Dupont, Sr.

CALOGERO, Justice.

This is a disciplinary proceeding on the recommendation of the Judiciary Commission of Louisiana pursuant to Art. 9, § 4, La.Const. of 1921, as amended by Act 661 of 1968. (See corresponding provision, Art. 14, § 16 under the La.Const. of 1974).

After a three day hearing, the commission determined that Judge Joseph B. Dupont, Sr., City Judge of the City of Plaquemine, Louisiana was guilty of willful misconduct relating to his official duty and willful and persistent failure to perform his duty.

The commission thereupon determined by a margin of 7 to 1 that Judge Dupont should be censured and that such a recommendation should be made to this Court.[1] The commission had charged the respondent judge with five specifications of willful misconduct. They found two of the charges untrue. As to the three others, however, they made the following finding of fact:

"As to Count One, we find as a fact that you, Judge Joseph Dupont, did, on February 3, 1974, at your residence in Iberville Parish, Louisiana, did receive information from Warren Ard that two guns in your possession, to-wit: One Browning automatic shotgun and one Winchester rifle, were stolen property and that when you received this information, you then and thereafter willfully and persistently failed to report that information to proper authority.
"As to Count Two, we find as a fact that on or about February 8, 1974, at your residence in Iberville Parish, Louisiana, you transferred two guns, to-wit: One Browning automatic shotgun and one Winchester rifle to Warrent Ard for a consideration, after having been advised by the said Warren Ard that the two guns were stolen property, when your official duty required you to report your possession to the proper authorities.
"We also find as a fact, in regard to Count Five, that Joseph Dupont, Sr., in receiving information from Warren Ard, on the 3rd day of February, 1974, that two weapons; namely, a Browning automatic shotgun and a Winchester rifle in his possession were stolen, did, after approximately a five-day delay, transfer these weapons to Warren Ard under circumstances designed to keep the transaction secret even to the extent of wiping the weapons for fingerprints.
"We further found as a fact that Judge Dupont did continue to willfully continue to possess and conceal said weapons for a period of about five days, knowing that such possession and concealment may have been a criminal act and that you did relinquish possession of these weapons only upon receipt of a sum of money."

The occurrence which gave rise to the charges and commission findings was as follows. Respondent, then as now a practicing *182 lawyer, was elected City judge, City Court of Plaquemine, a parttime judicial position and took office on December 8, 1973. Serious political differences existed between respondent and the Sheriff of the Parish of Iberville, which were aggravated by the Sheriff's refusal to honor release bonds set by Judge Dupont. A Contempt Rule was filed by the respondent against Sheriff Ourso in response to which the Sheriff instituted quo warranto proceedings questioning the respondent's authority to hold office.

In late January and February, 1973 while respondent was daily appearing in East Baton Rouge district court defending the quo warranto proceeding, he was approached by Warren Ard, a former client of his, who was then, unbeknown to Dupont, cooperating with the Sheriff in an undercover investigation. The respondent judge had purchased a rifle and a shotgun three or four years before February 1974, from Earl Medlock, another former client. Ard informed respondent that the guns he had purchased from Medlock were stolen, and that it was essential for him, Ard, to recover the guns and turn them over to the sheriff's department in order to avoid criminal sanctions for certain other of his activities.

The respondent denied knowing that the guns had been stolen, attempted to reassure Ard, and agreed to discuss the matter with him further. Respondent informed Ard that he did not know whether one of the guns was available.

Within the next week, after several conversations with Ard, the respondent fixed a price on the guns and agreed to sell them to Ard, who continued to urge his desperate need for possession of the weapons in order to avoid incarceration.

Ard paid the respondent $280.00; respondent then directed Ard to the guns in the back yard of his home, on a woodpile. Throughout the week the respondent had advised Ard to employ a clandestine method in turning the guns over to the authorities in order to avoid Ard's being incriminated.

Shortly following sale of the guns respondent was arrested and charged with receiving stolen goods.

Following respondent's arrest a preliminary hearing was held in the Eighteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Iberville. Upon a finding that there was not probable cause to hold him, the defendant Judge was ordered released. He was not thereafter tried. He has not been convicted of any criminal offense arising out of this incident.

Respondent's contention was that he did not know at the time he received the guns in question that they were stolen, that even after repeated advice from Ard, he was not certain that they were, that during the period 2/1/74 to 2/8/74, while he was communicating with Ard, an attorney-client relationship existed between him and Ard; that receiving an amount of money equal to the fair value of guns, would not only reimburse him his out of pocket costs (for guns which belonged to him either because not stolen, or by virtue of a three year acquisitive prescription on movables), but would also obviate the possibility of Ard's attempting to profit financially by the transfer.

The commission's findings were in part at variance with these contentions. The commission concluded that Judge Dupont received information that the guns in his possession were stolen in February 1974 and willfully and persistently failed to report that information to the proper authorities; that he transferred the guns after having been advised that they were stolen property when his official duty required him to report their possession to the proper authorities; that he transferred the weapons to Warren Ard under circumstances designed to keep the transaction secret even to the extent of wiping the weapons for fingerprints; that he did possess and *183 conceal the weapons for a period of five days knowing that such possession and concealment may have been a criminal act; and that he did relinquish possession of the weapon only upon receipt of a sum of money.

Upon a review of the transcript of the commission hearing, including tapes of the Ard-Dupont conversations, we agree with the commission's factual findings.

Accordingly, we find no merit in respondent's contention that the evidence does not "support the commission's findings or justify its recommendation," although we are, like the commission, cognizant of all the attendant and peculiar circumstances surrounding Judge Dupont's conduct during the first week of February, 1973.

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