In Re Keller

357 S.W.3d 413, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 1025, 2010 WL 4840863
CourtTexas Special Court of Review
DecidedNovember 8, 2010
Docket10-0001
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 357 S.W.3d 413 (In Re Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Special Court of Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Keller, 357 S.W.3d 413, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 1025, 2010 WL 4840863 (Tex. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

This Special Court of Review is assigned to resolve the appeal of the Order of Public Warning issued by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct (the Commission) against respondent, the Honorable Sharon Keller, Presiding Judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals for the State of Texas. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 33.034(a), (c), (e) (Vernon Supp.2010). Judge Keller has filed a motion to dismiss the charging document, asserting that the sanction issued by the Commission must be vacated as it is impermissible as a matter of law and void. The parties principally dispute whether the Texas Constitution’s list of possible outcomes following a formal proceeding is illustrative instead of exhaustive, because a sanction is not listed as a possible consequence after a formal proceeding. We conclude that, under the Texas Constitution and Government Code, it is impermissible to assess sanctions following a formal proceeding by the Commission and, therefore, the sanction is erroneous as a matter of law. Accordingly, we vacate the Commission’s Order and dismiss the charging document. Thus, our resolution of this motion is not an opinion on the underlying merits.

Factual and Procedural History

The Commission opened a case against Judge Keller. The case concerned complaints against her for her decision not to keep the clerk’s office of the Court of Criminal Appeals to remain open past business hours to allow the entity acting as defense counsel for Michael Wayne Richard to file requests concerning the impending imposition of the death penalty against him. After an informal investigation, the Commission voted in February 2009 to pursue formal proceedings against Judge Keller. It sent Judge Keller a notice advising her that “formal proceedings [had] been initiated against her” pursuant to section 33.002 of the Government Code and Rule 10 of the Procedural Rules for the Removal or Retirement of Judges. 1 In *416 June 2009, it sent her a first amended notice of formal hearing.

The Commission requested that the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court appoint a Special Master to hear evidence. The Chief Justice appointed the Honorable David Berchelmann, Jr., Judge of the 37th Judicial District Court of Bexar County, Texas as the Special Master to conduct a hearing and to make a report to the Commission. After an evidentiary hearing, the Special Master made findings of fact in January 2010.

Though critical of Judge Keller’s decision and actions concerning the complained-of conduct, the Special Master recommended that no formal action be taken against her. He found that Judge Keller’s conduct “does not warrant removal from office, or even further reprimand beyond the public humiliation she has surely suffered.”

The Special Master found that Richard’s counsel “bears the bulk of fault for what occurred on September 25, 2007.” He noted that Richard’s counsel did not spend sufficient time preparing in advance for its constitutional challenge, 2 assigned a junior attorney to draft the papers, did not have the documents it intended to file with Court of Criminal Appeals ready in a timely manner, failed to pursue all possible ways to file the claim, relied on paralegals instead of lawyers to communicate with the Court of Criminal Appeals’s staff, and gave the media false information that “embellished the computer problems it suffered and untruthfully told the media that it was ready to file at 5:20 but that Judge Keller had already closed the court house doors.” In explaining why he believed that Judge Keller should not receive any reprimand, the Special Master explained that she “did not cause [Richard’s counsel] to be late in its filing, to forget the other available avenues, or to fail to have any of its experienced lawyers contact” the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. According to the Special Master, Rule 9.2(a) of the Rules of Appellate Procedure could have been used by Richard’s counsel to file the documents after the clerk’s office closed. See Tex.R.App. P. 9.2(a) (explaining that “[a] document is filed in an appellate court by delivering it to ... a justice or judge of that court who is willing to accept delivery”). The Special Master determined that Richard’s counsel made no attempt to utilize Rule 9.2 to file any document with any judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals.

Though he found Richard’s counsel largely at fault, the Special Master made findings critical of Judge Keller’s conduct as “not exemplary of a public servant.” He determined that “she should have been more open and helpful about the way in which [Richard’s counsel] could present the lethal injection claim to the [Texas Court of Criminal Appeals].” He also criticized Judge Keller’s failure to direct the communication from Richard’s counsel to the Honorable Cheryl Johnson, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals judge assigned to Richard’s case. Additionally, he chastised as “highly questionable” Judge Keller’s judgment in not keeping the clerk’s office open past 5:00 p.m. to allow the late filing. He summarized his determination, finding that Judge Keller “did not violate any written or unwritten rules or laws.” Furthermore, the Special Master concluded that, although Judge Keller “says that if she could do it all over again she would *417 not change any of her actions, this cannot be true.” He explained that “[a]ny reasonable person, having gone through this ordeal, surely would realize that open communication, particularly during the hectic few hours before an execution, would benefit the interests of justice.” Both parties objected to the Special Master’s findings.

In June 2010, the Commission considered the record of the formal proceedings. The record included the Special Master’s findings of fact as well as the transcript of the testimony and exhibits presented at the evidentiary hearing held before the Special Master. No additional evidence was presented to the Commission at its hearing.

The Commission disregarded the conclusions of the Special Master and voted to issue Judge Keller a public warning as a sanction against her. The public warning was for violations of article 5, section 1-a(6)(A) of the Texas Constitution 3 and Canon 3(B)(8) of the Texas Code of Judicial Conduct. 4 Unlike the Special Master’s findings of fact, the Commission entered findings of fact that blamed the events solely on Judge Keller, without criticizing Richard’s counsel. Other than the findings concerning Richard’s counsel, many of the other findings by the Commission corresponded to the Special Master’s findings. In its Order, the Commission described its’ review as conducted “[pjursuant to Rule 10(m) of the Procedural Rules for the Removal or Retirement of Judges,” See Tex.R. Rem’l/Ret. Judg. 10(m).

The Commission concluded that Judge Keller violated the “binding obligations” in article 5, section l-a(6)(A) of the Texas Constitution, section 33.001(b) of the Texas Government Code, 5 and Canon 3(B)(8) of the Texas Code of Judicial Conduct.

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Bluebook (online)
357 S.W.3d 413, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 1025, 2010 WL 4840863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-keller-texreview-2010.