In Re King

857 So. 2d 432, 2003 WL 22399724
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 22, 2003
Docket2003-O-1412
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 857 So. 2d 432 (In Re King) 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 King, 857 So. 2d 432, 2003 WL 22399724 (La. 2003).

Opinion

857 So.2d 432 (2003)

In re Judge C. Hunter KING.

No. 2003-O-1412.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

October 21, 2003.
Order Suspending Exercise of Judicial Functions October 22, 2003.

*433 Nancy E. Rix, Commission Legal Counsel, Hugh M. Collins, PhD., Chief Executive Officer, Steven R. Scheckman, Special Counsel, Mary F. Whitney, Assistant Special Counsel, Tartiana J. Lopez, Counsel for Applicant.

Scott R. Bickford, John R. Martzell, Martzell Bickford, New Orleans; Regina O. Matthews, Louis L. Robein, Jr., Robein, Urann & Lurye, Metairie, Counsel for Respondent.

ON RECOMMENDATION FOR DISCIPLINE FROM THE JUDICIARY COMMISSION OF LOUISIANA

VICTORY, J.

This judicial disciplinary proceeding comes before the Court on the recommendation of the Judiciary Commission of Louisiana (the "Commission") that Judge C. Hunter King of the Orleans Parish Civil District Court, Division "M," State of Louisiana, be suspended from office for a period of one year without pay and ordered to reimburse the Commission the costs incurred in the investigation and prosecution of the case. The Office of Special Counsel (the "OSC") conducted an investigation, and then filed two formal charges against Judge King, Charge 0188, which accused him of campaign misconduct, and Charge 0189, which accused him of lying about his campaign misconduct to the Commission. Judge King and the OSC thereafter submitted a Statement of Stipulated Uncontested Material Facts and Stipulated Conclusions of Law (the "Stipulation") to the Judiciary Commission on December 17, 2002.[1]

The Commission adopted the Stipulation and made additional findings of fact and conclusions of law, and determined that respondent violated Canons 1, 2 A, 2 B, 3 B(2), 7 B(1)(b) and (c) and 7 D(1) of the Code of Judicial Conduct and La. Const. art. V, § 25(C).[2] The Commission then recommended to the Court that it suspend Judge King for one year without pay and order him to reimburse the Commission's costs.

*434 On June 5, 2003, the Commission and Judge King filed a "Joint Waiver of Oral Argument and Briefing and Consent to One-Year Suspension Without Salary." Judge King filed an unopposed motion to have his suspension commence on September 1, 2003. This Court denied both motions on June 19, 2003, and set the case for oral argument for the purpose of determining the appropriate discipline for Judge King's admitted misconduct.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On October 4, 2001, the OSC received a complaint against Judge King from his former court reporter, Barbara Wallace. Among other things, Ms. Wallace alleged that Judge King terminated her employment because she refused to sell tickets to a campaign fund-raising event on behalf of Judge King. She further alleged that the reasons given for her termination in her termination letter were false and that she had proof to support her allegations. On November 6, 2001, OSC notified Judge King of the complaint and asked him to respond to the following issues raised by Ms. Wallace: whether he terminated Ms. Wallace because she refused to sell a requisite number of fund raiser tickets and to deliver a personal package; and whether he abused the court's resources and his administrative authority.

Judge King responded through his attorney in a letter dated November 20, 2001, denying that he required Ms. Wallace or any of his court staff to engage in impermissible campaign activity, and stating that Ms. Wallace was not fired, but resigned. The ten-page response on behalf of Judge King contained the following statements:

a. "[T]he above-referenced complaint is unfounded and represents nothing more than an unprincipled, retaliatory attack on a respected Judge by a disgruntled former employee."
b. "Wallace's employment in Division `M' was at no time conditioned on her participation in fund raising activities. Wallace's unspecified allegation in this regard is false."
c. "Neither the Judge nor any member of the fund raising committee instructed Wallace to sell `20 tickets,' much less a single ticket."
d. "Judge King specifically recalls informing his staff in a Monday staff meeting that the fund raising had begun, that no court personnel could `push' tickets during working hours or on Court premises."
e. "[H]e took great pains to remind his staff that only the private fund raisers could perform that function."
f. "He did advise in September 2001, as he had done last year, that his staff could assist in fund raising on their own time and only through the auspices of the committee."
g. "[N]o employee `sold' tickets."
h. "Only Minute Clerk Brossett worked on committee functions, and at that, after work hours."

Attached to the letter were Judge King's letter to Ms. Wallace informing her that her "services as court reporter for Division `M'" would no longer be needed as of October 3, 2001,[3] and Ms. Wallace's letter *435 to Judge King in response, claiming that she did not resign, but was fired.[4]

After Judge King responded to the complaint, on December 6, 2001, Ms. Wallace sent the OSC copies of the transcripts of four staff meetings in which Judge King discussed his employees' obligations to engage in fund raising activities and copies of the audio tapes from which the transcripts had been made (all made without Judge King's knowledge). The tapes and transcripts revealed the following impermissible campaign activity, all of which Judge King later admitted in the Stipulation.

In these staff meetings, held in September and October of 2001, Judge King told the members of his court staff that each of them was responsible for selling twenty tickets to a fund raising event scheduled to take place on October 25, 2001. In a staff meeting of September 10, 2001, Judge King made the following statements:

Kelly [the minute clerk], you and I need to identify those that we've already, I think, for the most part identified that's going to be given lots of anything over 10 tickets—So everybody got all their people identified to sell their 20 tickets.
BARBARA: We get 20?
KELLY: Last week it was 10.
JUDGE KING: Yeah, but I thought when we sat down initially and we worked that out, me, you and Stan, we came up with the number 20. We didn't come up with the number 20, Stan?
...
I certainly hope everybody gets 20 `cause with the notion of 20, then regardless of what other people other people are going to sell, it won't even, you know—ten don't even scratch the surface from this office, that ain't nothing but 2500. That don't even scratch the surface. Twenty is 5,000 per individual. And that ain't nothing but 30. But whatever, if anybody is going to have a problem, they need to talk up before the last minute because—so they can get some help.
BARBARA: I know I'm going to have a problem.
JUDGE KING: Why?
BARBARA: I mean, I just don't know that many people to do that. I'm going to do the best that I can do, but I think I'm going to have a problem. I might need help.

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Bluebook (online)
857 So. 2d 432, 2003 WL 22399724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-king-la-2003.