In Re Kelly

238 So. 2d 565
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 17, 1970
Docket38595
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 238 So. 2d 565 (In Re Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kelly, 238 So. 2d 565 (Fla. 1970).

Opinion

238 So.2d 565 (1970)

In re Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 1, Richard A. KELLY, Circuit Judge.

No. 38595.

Supreme Court of Florida.

June 17, 1970.
Rehearing Denied September 14, 1970.

*566 Masterson, Lloyd, Sundberg & Rogers, St. Petersburg, and Fowler, White, Collins, Gillen, Humkey & Trenam, Tampa, for petitioner.

William D. Hopkins and F.E. Steinmeyer, III, Tallahassee, for respondent.

Joseph F. McDermott, St. Petersburg, as amicus curiae committee for Judge Kelly.

ADKINS, Justice.

We have for consideration a petition to reject the recommendations, findings and conclusions of the Florida Judicial Qualifications Commission in its first proceeding. Rule 24(a), Florida Judicial Qualifications Commission Rules (F.J.Q.C.R.), 32 F.S.A. The Commission found petitioner Judge Richard A. Kelly of Dade City, Florida, guilty of certain conduct unbecoming a member of the judiciary.

Conduct unbecoming a member of the judiciary may be proved by evidence of specific major incidents which indicate such conduct, or it may also be proved by evidence of an accumulation of small and ostensibly innocuous incidents which, when considered together, emerge as a pattern of hostile conduct unbecoming a member of the judiciary. The record in this case clearly reflects a pattern of petitioner's hostility toward many attorneys, court officials, and fellow judges, as well as a concerted effort to pamper the public and news media by press releases designed to bolster his personal image at the expense of the judiciary. This is conduct unbecoming a member of the judiciary.

Petitioner is a judge of the Sixth Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida and a resident of Pasco County. He was first elected a circuit judge in November 1960, and was reelected to that office in the general election of November 1966.

Petitioner was the subject of impeachment proceedings before the Florida Legislature in 1963, and was acquitted.

On February 13, 1968, petitioner was elected Presiding Judge of the Sixth Judicial Circuit. He immediately demanded that various changes in the method by which criminal prosecutions were handled in the circuit, ordered one of the newly-appointed judges to duty in Pasco County for ninety days even though this judge resided in St. Petersburg, Pinellas County (this order was rescinded), indicated that he was going to transfer all domestic relations cases to one particular judge of the circuit, proposed the elimination of special masters in uncontested divorce cases, ordered the official court reporter to report all Justice of the Peace hearings upon call of the *567 Public Defender of Pinellas County. Although some of petitioner's proposals may have been appropriate, the Commission found that they were presented in such a manner as to create turmoil, confusion and chaos within the circuit. As a result, a majority of the other judges of the circuit determined to remove or recall him as presiding judge in March of 1968. He was notified of the determination of the majority on March 19, 1968.

Judge Kelly first requested the judges to refrain from removing him or recalling him, assuring them he would return to Pasco County and not interfere with the administration of the court in Pinellas County if they would let him remain as presiding judge. When this offer was not accepted by the other judges, he requested and was granted a week's reprieve in order that he might tender his resignation as presiding judge.

After this delay, a majority of the circuit judges again met with Judge Kelly to consider his recall as presiding judge. At this meeting Judge Kelly polled all of the judges and determined that they still intended to remove him as presiding judge. He then announced his resignation; but threatened those in attendance that they would regret their actions and that he would cause them embarrassment.

Several days later he arranged an appointment with the editor and several reporters of a local newspaper in St. Petersburg to enlighten them about a petition he intended to file proposing certain alleged judicial reforms. Subsequently, on April 5, 1968, he filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court what was styled "Petition to the Judges of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in the Circuit Court of Pinellas County." His fellow judges were not given an opportunity to see or examine the contents of the petition although it contained suggested court reforms and criticism of court administration. As an example of petitioner's public criticism of his fellow judges, the petition stated:

"The tremendous reduction in the number of prisoners between September, 1965, and September, 1966, is an excellent case in point for the purpose of showing the gross lack of administration of the Circuit Court in Pinellas County and the serious consequences of a poorly administered Court. The change was accomplished with the simple expediency of appointing the Public Defender at an early date, and yet to bring this simple administrative change into effect resulted unreasonably in crisis, controversy and ill-will among the judges which varied only in degree from the same response that has met every other suggestion to improve administration.
"Soon after the undersigned took office in 1961, he started urging that the procedure for expediting criminal cases, especially cases in which the defendant was being held in jail, be reviewed. Years went by and nothing was done in Pinellas County; then in 1965, your Petitioner went to the then Criminal Administrator for Pinellas County and requested the reform and argued its urgency. The rejection was unqualified. During the same time a grand jury was convened in Clearwater, empaneled by the Criminal Administrator and although it is the duty of a judge presiding over a grand jury to instruct the grand jurors of their duties, no instruction was given regarding Section 905.16 of the Florida Statutes."
"* * *
"Virtually every phase of the criminal administration at the present time is burdened with inefficiency."
"* * *
"Vast and important and much needed judicial reforms await only the interest and action by the judges of this circuit."
"* * *
"The individual judges should impose additionally upon their secretaries in *568 handling the administration and disposition of criminal cases and thus avoid the luxury of a secretary to the Criminal Administrator or Presiding Judge."

Apparently, for the purpose of seeking favorable publicity for himself, petitioner misrepresented the facts in this petition regarding his removal as presiding judge when he said:

"This Petitioner has resigned a position he coveted to remove any possibility of personality and vanity as a consideration in the discharging of this obligation."

The office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court is not a receptacle for the ex parte grievance petition of a politician, particularly when the object is to seek revenge by embarrassing public officials. Since we have a government of law and not of men, no member of the judiciary should act officially as a "judge" save only as it is found in and defined by the law. Petitioner knew judicial reform could be attained in a variety of ways "under the law," but vengeance could best be served through publicizing his grievance. This was accomplished when petitioner, in his official capacity as a judge, filed his ex parte petition with the clerk so that it would be a public record.

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Bluebook (online)
238 So. 2d 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kelly-fla-1970.