In Re Rosner

CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Rosner (In Re Rosner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rosner, (N.M. 2023).

Opinion

The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Chief Clerk for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion.

1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 January 30, 2023

3 NO. S-1-SC-39193

4 INQUIRY CONCERNING A JUDGE 5 JSC Inquiry No. 2021-015

6 IN THE MATTER OF 7 HON. MARY W. ROSNER 8 Third Judicial District Court

9 PUBLIC CENSURE

10 {1} This matter came before this Court on the Petition to Accept the Stipulation

11 Agreement and Consent to Discipline between the Judicial Standards Commission

12 of the State of New Mexico (the Commission) and Respondent, Honorable Mary W.

13 Rosner, a district court judge in the Third Judicial District. The petition was

14 supplemented with a proposed public censure.

15 {2} Following oral argument in this matter, we granted the petition and accepted

16 the terms of the Stipulation Agreement and Consent to Discipline (Stipulation) in

17 part, adopting the Commission’s request that we issue a public censure, but

18 substituting in place of the Commission’s suggested censure, this public censure.

19 We now publish this public censure in the State Bar of New Mexico Bar Bulletin in

20 accordance with our Order, the Stipulation, and JSC Rule 36(C)(5) NMRA. 1 I. BACKGROUND

2 {3} This matter arose out of Judge Rosner’s handling of Cause No. D-307-DM-

3 2014-00786, a domestic matter involving the custody of a minor child (the Soto

4 matter). During the course of the proceedings, the parties stipulated to and Judge

5 Rosner entered an order in November 2017, which appointed Dr. Harold Smith to

6 serve as the parenting coordinator in the Soto matter to reduce conflict between the

7 parties and to assist the court in modifying an existing parenting plan and/or

8 developing a new parenting plan.

9 {4} Three years later, Father retained new counsel who quickly, upon entering her

10 appearance, filed two separate motions: a motion to recuse for cause, requesting

11 Judge Rosner’s recusal (recusal motion) and a motion to remove Dr. Harold Smith

12 as the court-appointed parenting coordinator and to revoke his quasi-judicial

13 immunity (removal motion). The recusal motion alleged that recusal was required

14 so as to compel Judge Rosner’s testimony about why Dr. Smith was appointed as

15 the parenting coordinator three years prior in 2017. The removal motion alleged that

16 Dr. Smith was not qualified to continue to serve as the parenting coordinator.

17 {5} One week after Father’s counsel filed these motions and before a hearing was

18 held, the Las Cruces Sun-News published an article reporting many of the allegations

19 contained in the two motions—that Dr. Smith was not a qualified parenting

2 1 coordinator and that Judge Rosner recommended and issued an order appointing Dr.

2 Smith despite his purported lack of qualifications. The article criticized the Third

3 Judicial District’s parenting program, along with Judge Rosner and her involvement

4 in that program and her subsequent order appointing Dr. Smith.

5 {6} Judge Rosner admits she read the Las Cruces Sun-News article and the two

6 motions filed by Father’s counsel and that she considered them to be personal

7 criticisms, factually inaccurate, and misleading. Judge Rosner admits that she felt

8 personally attacked but nevertheless continued to preside over the Soto matter,

9 including over the recusal motion and the removal motion, because she believed then

10 that she could be impartial, set aside her personal feelings, and continue with her

11 duty to sit. See Gerety v. Demers, 1978-NMSC-097, ¶ 9, 92 N.M. 396, 589 P.2d 180

12 (explaining a judge’s duty to sit is equally as compelling as a judge’s duty to recuse

13 when disqualified, “[r]ecusal should be used only for the most compelling

14 reasons[,]” and a judge “has no right to disqualify [herself] unless there is a

15 compelling constitutional, statutory or ethical cause for so doing”). Following the

16 hearing on the two motions, Judge Rosner issued an Order Denying Respondent’s

17 (Father’s) Motion to Recuse for Cause, and Order Denying Respondent’s (Father’s)

18 Motion to Remove Parenting Coordinator and Revoke Parenting Coordinator’s

19 Quasi-Judicial Immunity. In paragraph 17 of the order, Judge Rosner stated:

3 1 Rather than bring to [the c]ourt her claims of alleged misconduct by 2 Harold Smith and this [c]ourt, [Father’s counsel] took her motions to 3 the Las Cruces Sun News, without input from anyone other than herself. 4 At the hearing, on her two motions . . . her client, [Father], testified 5 under oath, that he had never had any contact nor had he made any 6 statement to any reporter of the Las Cruces Sun News. The article, 7 which appeared on the front page of the Las Cruces Sun News on July 8 21, 2020, sought to damage Harold Smith and this [c]ourt by implying 9 an inappropriate relationship between Harold Smith and the 10 undersigned judge, and bias by this [c]ourt and Harold Smith against 11 [Father]. Noteworthy, is the failure of [Father’s counsel] to attack Dr. 12 Caplan’s report which is the most damaging report against her client 13 . . . . At the request of [Father’s counsel], Dr. Caplan’s report has been 14 sealed.

15 After the order denying Father’s motions was filed, Father’s counsel renewed her

16 motion to recuse. Three days later Judge Rosner recused herself from the Soto

17 matter. Father’s counsel subsequently filed a disciplinary complaint, and this

18 disciplinary proceeding followed.

19 {7} Upon completion of its investigation, the Commission entered into a

20 stipulation with Judge Rosner to resolve the matter. As part of that stipulation, Judge

21 Rosner admitted to engaging in the following acts listed in order of significance to

22 the Commission:

23 (1) Judge Rosner failed to recuse from Cause No. D-307-DM-2014- 24 00786, when she knew or should have known that she could no 25 longer be fair and impartial following the publication of the Las 26 Cruces Sun-News article which she believed was written by 27 Father’s counsel.

4 1 (2) Judge Rosner inappropriately used paragraph 17 of the order 2 denying Father’s motions to directly respond to allegations in a 3 Las Cruces Sun-News article that she thought was written by 4 and/or because of Father’s counsel. In doing so, Judge Rosner 5 admits she cast Father’s counsel and Father’s credibility and 6 reputation in a negative light.

7 (3) Judge Rosner inappropriately referenced the conclusion of a 8 sealed doctor’s report in paragraph 17 of the order denying 9 Father’s motions, noting that the report was unfavorable to 10 Father. Judge Rosner admits that there was no substantive 11 purpose for this reference, and it was used as a retort to the Las 12 Cruces Sun-News article.

13 {8} Judge Rosner agreed and admitted that her conduct violated the following

14 Rules of the Code of Judicial Conduct:

15 • Rule 21-101 NMRA (requiring compliance with the law).

16 • Rule 21-102 NMRA (promoting confidence in the judiciary).

17 • Rule 21-202 NMRA (impartiality and fairness).

18 • Rule 21-203 NMRA (bias, prejudice, and harassment).

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Related

State v. Riordan
2009 NMSC 022 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2009)
In Re Schwartz
255 P.3d 299 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2011)
Gerety v. Demers
589 P.2d 180 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1978)
Matter of Castellano
889 P.2d 175 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1995)
In the Matter of Locatelli
2007 NMSC 029 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2007)
Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 2009-081
2011 NMSC 019 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Rosner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rosner-nm-2023.