In Re Inquiry Concerning Stigler

607 N.W.2d 699, 2000 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 63, 2000 WL 339904
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 22, 2000
Docket99-1449
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 607 N.W.2d 699 (In Re Inquiry Concerning Stigler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Inquiry Concerning Stigler, 607 N.W.2d 699, 2000 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 63, 2000 WL 339904 (iowa 2000).

Opinion

CARTER, Justice.

This is a consideration by this court of an application of the Commission on Judicial Qualifications (the commission) filed pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.2104(2) (1997) requesting that the court discipline Judge George L. Stigler. That application followed a hearing before the commission at which evidence was received on specific charges of misconduct and findings by the commission with respect to that evidence. Judge Stigler has responded resisting the commission’s application. We review the commission’s application as in equitable proceedings pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.2106(1).

The initial complaint to the commission concerning Judge Stigler’s conduct was by way of a letter from attorney Douglas Coonrad. The crux of his allegations pertained to Judge Stigler’s actions in scheduling a hearing to set aside a temporary injunction that another judge had issued and proceeding to hold that hearing while counsel of record for one of the parties was engaged in the trial of a previously scheduled matter in the same courthouse. The commission’s investigation of that complaint led to the filing of formal charges by the attorney general.

The facts developed by the rather extensive testimony presented at the hearing include the following. The hearing that prompted the complaint occurred on July 23, 1998. Six days earlier on July 17, attorney Coonrad had filed a petition in the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County seeking a dissolution of the marriage of his client, Brock Staley. On that same date, attorney Coonrad presented to Judge Jon Fister an application for a temporary injunction. That application alleged that Brock Staley’s wife, Angela, had left the parties’ place of residence and taken the children with her to an undisclosed location. It sought an order requiring her to return the children to the family home. Pursuant to this application, Judge Fister issued a temporary injunction without notice or hearing requiring Angela to return the children to the family home.

The sheriff was unable to locate Angela for service of the injunction papers. She was at that time concealing herself in a battered women’s shelter after an incident in which she alleges she had been forcibly dragged from the family home by Brock. After learning of the pending legal proceedings from her mother, Angela went to the sheriffs office on July 22 and accepted service of the original notice and order for injunction. That same day Angela retained attorney Jay Roberts, who immediately went to the Black Hawk County Courthouse seeking to have the injunction *702 quashed. Attorney Roberts first sought out Judge Fister but was unable to contact him. He next sought out the judge assigned to handle routine motions and orders, who was also unavailable. Upon discovering that Judge Stigler was free, he approached him concerning Judge Fister’s order and advised that he intended to challenge it. He impressed on Judge Stigler that there was some urgency in setting a hearing on Mr. Staley’s factual allegations.

Upon hearing Roberts’ plea, Judge Sti-gler immediately contacted attorney Coon-rad by telephone. He advised him that he was setting a hearing for 11 a.m. on the following morning on attorney Roberts’ pral request to set aside the temporary injunction. Coonrad responded that he had a trial set the following morning at 9 a.m. for which he had to prepare and thus could neither prepare for nor attend an 11 a.m. hearing as proposed by Judge Stigler. The judge’s response to Coonrad was that he would also be the judge presiding at Coonrad’s scheduled trial. He advised him that at 11 a.m. he would recess that proceeding in order to hear evidence in the injunction matter. That apparently satisfied attorney Coonrad, who advised his client and certain witnesses for his client to be present for an 11 a.m. hearing on July 23. After spending considerable time on July 22 preparing for his regularly scheduled trial, Coonrad met with Brock Staley and his witnesses during the late evening hours so as to prepare them for the 11 a.m. hearing the following day.

Shortly prior to attorney Coonrad’s 9 a.m. trial on July 23, Judge Stigler discovered that a relative of his was to be a witness in that case. He immediately arranged for Judge Thomas Bower to substitute for him as the judge in Coonrad’s trial and, in turn, arranged to try a marriage dissolution case assigned to Judge Bower that same morning.

Attorney Coonrad’s trial before Judge Bower commenced at 9:20 a.m. The marriage-dissolution case that Judge Stigler had acquired settled prior to the commencement of trial. Judge Bower’s trial continued until 3:40 p.m. During a very brief noon recess, attorney Coonrad spoke to Judge Stigler, who had been waiting since 11 a.m. to proceed with the hearing on the injunction matter. He told the judge that he believed his trial would wrap up shortly. When that had not occurred by 12:50 p.m., Judge Stigler convened the hearing on the injunction matter in attorney Coonrad’s absence. Attorney Roberts presented his evidence, and Brock Staley, acting as his own attorney, made a very unprofessional and ineffective cross-examination.

Attorney Roberts’ evidence included .testimony from Angela that her leaving the family home was the result of Brock physically dragging her out the door and closing it behind her. She testified that in the process she received abrasions on her body. At the conclusion of the evidence offered by attorney Roberts, Judge Stigler asked Brock Staley to take the stand and proceeded to interrogate him from the bench with leading questions concerning this physical ejection of Angela from the family home. These questions produced admissions from Brock with respect to Angela’s allegations of physical abuse.

When attorney Coonrad’s trial concluded at 3:40 p.m., he went immediately to the court room where the injunction hearing was scheduled to take place and learned that the hearing had been completed. The next day Judge Stigler vacated Judge Fis-ter’s order for a temporary injunction. In addition, he entered an order that (1) placed the temporary custody of the children jointly with the parties, (2) granted physical placement of the children to Angela, (3) set a specific schedule of times when Brock could visit the children, and (4) ordered Brock to make child support payments to the clerk of court.

Before filing his initial complaint with the commission, attorney Coonrad wrote to Judge Stigler expressing his dissatisfaction with the judge’s actions. This letter expressed the view that the judicial system (as represented by Judge Stigler) had *703 been uncaring in protecting his client’s rights and also suggested that Judge Sti-gler had “ditched” the case that had been transferred to Judge Bower and had “railroaded” Coonrad’s client into a hearing at which his lawyer was not present. Attorney Coonrad requested that Judge Stigler arrange with his court reporter to provide him with a free transcript of the hearing so that he could take- appropriate action to protect his client’s rights. Judge Stigler considered this letter to be offensive and disrespectful and advised attorney Coon-rad of that fact. Coonrad then wrote the judge another letter retracting his prior allegation concerning an uncaring judiciary. He also retracted the statements that the judge had ditched the 9 a.m. trial and had railroaded his client.

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Bluebook (online)
607 N.W.2d 699, 2000 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 63, 2000 WL 339904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-inquiry-concerning-stigler-iowa-2000.