In Re Halloran
This text of 783 N.W.2d 709 (In Re Halloran) 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.
Opinion
In re Hon. Richard B. HALLORAN, Jr. Judge, Third Circuit Court.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Order
By order of March 11, 2010, we remanded this matter to the Judicial Tenure Commission for further explication. The Commission responded by letter of May 3, 2010. This Court has reviewed the Commission's letter.
On order of the Court, the Judicial Tenure Commission has issued a decision and recommendation for discipline, and the Honorable Richard B. Halloran, Jr. has consented to the Commission's findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendation of a sanction, which was to be no less than a public censure and no greater than a public censure and a 14-day suspension without pay.
As we conduct our de novo review of this matter, we are mindful of the standards set forth in In re Brown, 461 Mich. 1291, 1292-1293, 625 N.W.2d 744 (2000). We adopt the findings and conclusions of the Judicial Tenure Commission. Respondent was at all times a judge of the Third Circuit Court. He has admitted violating Canon 3A(5) of the Code of Judicial Conduct by failing to dispose promptly of the business of the court and by failing to exercise personal responsibility for his own behavior and for the proper conduct and administration of the court in which he presided, contrary to MCR 9.205(A). Respondent failed to timely adjudicate at least 30 family law cases within the guidelines of Michigan Supreme Court Administrative Order 2003-7. Those guidelines were implemented to ensure that judges timely process cases and require that judges submit caseflow statistics to the State Court Administrative Office. The guidelines provide that all family law cases are to be adjudicated within 364 days of filing. Respondent dismissed 30 cases as the guidelines threshold approached in order to avoid those cases being identified as being out of compliance with AO 2003-7. He would continue to work on the adjudication of those cases in a conscious design to avoid detection of those cases as being out of compliance.
As stated by the Judicial Tenure Commission:
The standards of judicial conduct make clear that an important component of justice is the prompt dispatch of judicial duties. Through his unjustified delay in resolving cases pending on his docket and his attempts to thwart detection of cases failing to meet the guidelines established by Administrative Order 2003-7, Respondent has failed in this responsibility. The facts asserted in the Formal Complaint, and established by the parties' stipulation in this matter, show by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent breached the standards of judicial conduct and is responsible for (1) failing to dispose promptly of the business of the court, contrary to MCJC, Canon 3A(5), and (2) failing to exercise personal responsibility for his own behavior and for the proper conduct and administration of the court in which he presided, contrary to MCR 9.205(A).
The Judicial Tenure Commission recommended Respondent be publicly censured. Two members dissented from that portion *710 of the recommendation, stating that a 14-day suspension was the appropriate sanction under the circumstances:
Respondent has admitted to a deliberate pattern of misconduct on the bench. Under these circumstances, we believe that consideration of the Brown factors requires a sanction more substantial than a mere public censure. ...
Apart from the Brown factors, a matter of particular concern here is the element of dishonesty inherent in Respondent's actions. We agree with the Commission's finding that Respondent acted with a specific intent to conceal from the State Court Administrator's Office the fact that many of the matters pending in his courtroom were out of compliance with Michigan Supreme Court. Administrative Order 2003-7. The dishonesty of Respondent's practice of entering unjustified no-progress dismissals is revealed by the fact that, in many of the cases, the parties simply continued to litigate as if nothing had changed. Continued litigation of dismissed cases became part of the culture of Respondent's courtroom. Thus, while the litigation continued apace, both the Third Circuit Court and the State Court Administrator's Office necessarily labored under a misapprehension regarding the state of Respondent's docket. Calculated dishonesty from a judicial officer, especially with regard to the administration of justice, merits a sanction more than a public censure. [Concurring/Dissenting Opin, 1-2.]
After reviewing the Recommendation of the Judicial Tenure Commission, the Concurring and Dissenting Opinions, the Settlement Agreement, the standards set forth in Brown, and the above findings and conclusions, we agree with the dissenting opinion and ORDER that the Honorable Richard B. Halloran, Jr., be publicly censured and suspended for 14 days without pay, effective 21 days from the date of this order. This order stands as our public censure.
MARKMAN, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
I agree that, at a minimum, the discipline imposed by this Court's order is appropriate. But I would remand to the Judicial Tenure Commission (JTC) for further explanation to determine if significantly greater discipline is appropriate.
By letter of May 3, 2010, the Chairperson of the JTC informed this Court that she could not provide the information requested in this Court's prior order because such information was outside of the scope of the stipulated facts provided to the JTC, citing Dana Corp. v. Employment Security Com'n, 371 Mich. 107, 123 N.W.2d 277 (1963). Although Dana held that stipulated facts are "sacrosanct" and cannot be "alter[ed]," it further held that a court can, of course, "reject any offered stipulation as incomplete. ..." Id. at 110-111, 123 N.W.2d 277. Here, the offered stipulation, in our judgment, is incomplete because it does not address the issues and questions raised in this statement. Therefore, I would direct the JTC to hold an evidentiary hearing, and take any other action it deems necessary, to answer sufficiently and completely the questions raised in such statement. That is, I would direct the JTC to indicate: (1) the substance of the allegations contained in the request for investigation that was dismissed as part of the settlement agreement; (2) how that matter and the cases referred to in paragraphs 14a-14dd of the settlement agreement were brought to the attention of the JTC; (3) with respect to each case referred to in the settlement agreement, whether the parties or their attorneys were contemporaneously notified of the dismissal of the case; (4) if so, whether' they complained or otherwise indicated objection; *711 and (5) whether any dismissal or action by respondent subordinated the substantive legal merits of any case to respondent's determination to mislead the State Court Administrative Office.
I am also deeply troubled by the message that is being sent by the Court in this and in other recent cases of judicial misconduct. In particular, I believe that the wrong message is being communicated as to this Court's resolve in severely sanctioning false judicial statements. In In re Servaas, 484 Mich. 634, 774 N.W.2d 46
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783 N.W.2d 709, 486 Mich. 1054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-halloran-mich-2010.