In Re Nesbitt

313 A.2d 576, 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 407
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1973
Docket7357
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 313 A.2d 576 (In Re Nesbitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Nesbitt, 313 A.2d 576, 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 407 (D.C. 1973).

Opinion

KELLY, Associate Judge:

On a morning in March of this year Leroy Nesbitt, attorney at law, appeared before John R. Hess, Associate Judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, representing the defendant in the case of United States v. Kitt, Cr. A. No. 66860-72. When asked by the court if he was ready for trial, Mr. Nesbitt said that he was not for the reasons that (1) the defendant was not yet present; (2) a jury was deliberating in a case just completed before Judge William B. Jones of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia from which he had been excused by Judge Jones for any purpose which would not interfere with his return upon receipt of a note from the jury or a verdict (to be taken by Judge Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr.), and (3) Nicholas S. Nun-zio, a brother Associate Judge of the Superior Court, had continued a previously scheduled felony trial on a day-to-day basis pending completion of the District Court case and was ready to begin that trial. Additionally, Mr. Nesbitt informed the *577 court that he had left a notice of this possible conflict with the courtroom clerk the day before.

Judge Hess indicated that he did not consider a conflict with his brother judge a sufficient basis to grant a continuance in the case before him and because Mr. Nes-bitt had not moved for a continuance two days in advance of trial, as required by SuperCt.Cr. Rule 111(c), 1 ordered that the trial proceed as soon as Mr. Kitt arrived. 2 Mr. Nesbitt was excused momentarily to advise Judge Nunzio of this late development. Upon his return to the courtroom, following a brief colloquy as to where Mr. Kitt could possibly be, he was again excused for the purpose of trying to locate his client. Judge Hess announced before recessing that should Mr. Kitt be found either he or the Chief Judge would proceed with the trial.

When Judge Hess returned to the courtroom neither Mr. Nesbitt nor Mr. Kitt was there. The government was advised to maintain the status quo with its witnesses 3 and while realizing that in his client’s absence Mr. Nesbitt might have gone to trial before Judge Nunzio, 4 Judge Hess nevertheless observed that if Mr. Kitt showed up he expected Mr. Nesbitt to be there. The transcript reveals that after proceeding with other matters Judge Hess addressed a lady in the courtroom, Mrs. Kitt, to ask where her husband was, Mr. Kitt having been observed in the courtroom a few minutes before. He had stepped out, Mrs. Kitt said, to find Mr. Nesbitt, adding that earlier they had been sent to the wrong courtroom. 5

Judge Hess told Mrs. Kitt to have a seat, recapitulated for the record the events of the morning, including information that a bailiff had just checked and learned that contrary to his orders Mr. Nesbitt “had got himself involved” in a trial before Judge Nunzio, and in his absence held Mr. Nesbitt in contempt of court for disobeying a direct order that he be ready to begin the Kitt trial. At that moment Mr. Kitt reappeared and stated he had found Mr. Nesbitt in trial in a rape case, third floor, Room 203, and had been told the trial might last two or three days. The matter was passed until a continued date could be agreed upon.

The transcript picks up with the events of the next morning, beginning with status calls in two other cases being handled by Mr. Nesbitt who was apparently before a United States Magistrate, due back before Judge Nunzio for trial, but expected momentarily by Judge Hess. When he arrived Mr. Nesbitt asked to be relieved of his appointment as defense attorney in the first case since his normal caseload in felony court had reached a stage of unavoidable conflict by reason of the doubling and then tripling of judicial manpower to handle felony trials. The motion was eventually granted. At the suggestion of Judge *578 Hess, with which he concurred, his appointment in the second case was also vacated. Mr. Kitt’s case then resurfaced on the question of a continued date; however, when Mr. Nesbitt informed the court that his trial schedule was full for the next several months he was removed as defense attorney in that case also, again without objection.

Once on the Kitt case, Judge Hess began anew to review the events of the previous morning. Additional facts came to light when Mr. Nesbitt protested that the court’s last instruction to him, through the courtroom clerk, was that he was excused to go to Judge Nunzio. It then developed on the record that after Judge Hess had excused Mr. Nesbitt the day before to locate his client Nesbitt had reappeared in the courtroom, only to be confronted by two deputy United States marshals who had arrived to escort him to Judge Nunzio’s courtroom to begin trial. A telephone call was made to Judge Hess, still in recess, after which Mr. Nesbitt was told by the clerk that he was excused to go to Judge Nunzio. Mr. Nes-bitt took this to mean that he was excused to go to trial before Judge Nunzio while Judge Hess made it clear on the record that it was his intention to excuse Mr. Nesbitt only to make his peace with Judge Nunzio and to return. As the Assistant United States Attorney on the scene related it, Mr. Nesbitt insisted, despite his position of peril in the firm and impatient grasp of the two deputy marshals, that he would not leave the courtroom until a call had been made to Judge Hess to ask his permission. But it appeared that, when excused, Nesbitt was not specifically told to return.

After further relation of each participant’s understanding of the event, Mr. Nesbitt was again held in contempt of court. Later, in addition to the above recited facts, Judge Hess also referred in the written order of contempt to a prior order to show cause, discharged after a hearing, in which “the Court made it clear that it would not tolerate any breakdown in its calendar due to counsel’s failure to comply with Rule 111(c) . . . . ” 6

We are unable to accept appellant’s contention that the trial court erred in acting summarily under Super.Ct.Cr. Rule 42(a) to hold him in contempt for the reason that his actions, if contemptuous, were not committed in the presence of the court. The identical contention has been advanced and rejected on several occasions, In re Gates, 156 U.S.App.D.C. 88, 478 F.2d 998 (1973); In re Niblack, 155 U.S.App.D.C. 174, 476 F.2d 930 (1973), and is similarly rejected here. Nevertheless, a recent comment of the Circuit Court of Appeals deserves emphasis, namely,

[I]t [is] appropriate to note, however, that in Gates, decided after Niblack, the court itself raised, but did not answer, the issue whether the “spirit of Rule 42(a) does not call upon the judge, when he apprehends that the issue of contempt for tardiness involves, by way of excuse, matters outside the presence of the court, to proceed by reference of the matter to another judge, and invocation of Rule 42(b)”. Gates, 156 U.S.App.D.C. at -, 478 F.2d [998] at 1000. 7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
313 A.2d 576, 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nesbitt-dc-1973.