In the Matter of Hon. Pamela J. White

181 A.3d 750, 458 Md. 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 27, 2018
Docket5m/16
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 A.3d 750 (In the Matter of Hon. Pamela J. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Hon. Pamela J. White, 181 A.3d 750, 458 Md. 60 (Md. 2018).

Opinion

Adkins, J.

We must decide whether proceedings before the Maryland Commission on Judicial Disabilities ("Commission") violated a judge's due process rights. As we explained last year, although we have no appellate jurisdiction to review a judge's exceptions to the Commission's determination to issue a public reprimand after public charges and a contested hearing, the common law writ of mandamus provides an avenue for a judge to challenge the fundamental fairness of the proceedings before the Commission. Matter of White , 451 Md. 630 , 649-50, 155 A.3d 463 (2017) (per curiam) [hereinafter White I ]. We previously refrained from deciding the due process claims made by Petitioner, Judge Pamela J. White, because we did not have the full record of the Commission proceedings before us. Id. at 652-53 , 155 A.3d 463 . After review of the complete record, we hold that, although the Commission violated applicable Maryland Rules, these violations did not ultimately deprive Judge White of a fundamentally fair proceeding.

BACKGROUND

Discipline Or Removal Of Judges

Article IV, §§ 4A - 4B of the Maryland Constitution provides a special process for the discipline or removal of a judge who has committed misconduct, or who is found to suffer from a disability. Article IV, § 4A(a) creates the Commission, and Article IV, § 4B(a)(1) authorizes it to conduct investigations of complaints about judges. At the conclusion of the investigation, the Commission may "issue a reprimand and [has] the power to recommend to the Court of Appeals the removal, censure, or other appropriate disciplining of a judge or, in an appropriate case, retirement." Id. , § 4B (a)(2). Commission proceedings are confidential and privileged, except as provided by rule of this Court. Id. , § 4B (a)(3). The General Assembly granted the Commission additional powers relating to investigations and hearings. See Md. Code (1973, 2013 Repl. Vol.), §§ 13-401 - 13-403 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (power to issue and enforce subpoenas, administer oaths or affirmations, and grant immunity to witnesses).

The Constitution also delegates to this Court the task of prescribing "the means to implement and enforce the powers of the Commission and the practice and procedure before the Commission." Md. Const. art. IV, § 4B (a)(5). We have done so in the Maryland Rules at 18-401 et seq. 1

Maryland Rule 18-402(d) empowers the Commission to appoint an Investigative Counsel. Upon submission of a complaint to the Commission, Investigative Counsel may dismiss the complaint if "the complaint does not allege facts that, if true, would constitute a disability or sanctionable conduct and that there are no reasonable grounds for a preliminary investigation ...." Md. Rule 18-404(c). If Investigative Counsel does not dismiss the complaint, she then conducts a preliminary investigation of the alleged misconduct. Id. (d). Unless the Commission or the Judicial Inquiry Board ("Inquiry Board") (discussed infra ) directs otherwise, Investigative Counsel shall notify the judge of the pendency of the investigation before its conclusion. 2 Id. (e)(4). Investigative Counsel must "afford the judge a reasonable opportunity to present, in person or in writing, such information as the judge chooses." Id. (e)(5). Investigative Counsel has 90 days to complete her preliminary investigation. Id. (e)(6). Upon application by Investigative Counsel, and for good cause, the Inquiry Board shall extend the time for completing the preliminary investigation for an additional 30-day period. Id. The Commission may dismiss the complaint and terminate an investigation if Investigative Counsel fails to comply with these time requirements. Id.

Maryland Rule 18-403(a) requires the Commission to "appoint an [Inquiry] Board consisting of two judges, two attorneys, and three public members who are not attorneys or judges." After completing a preliminary investigation, Investigative Counsel shall report the results of her investigation to the Inquiry Board with a recommendation of either: (1) dismissal; (2) authorization of further investigation; (3) entering into a private reprimand or deferred discipline agreement; or (4) filing public charges. Md. Rule 18-404(f). The Inquiry Board must continually monitor the investigation and review the reports and recommendations of Investigative Counsel. Id. (g).

Upon reviewing the results of the preliminary investigation, the Inquiry Board prepares a report for submission to the Commission. Id. (j)(1). The report must include a recommendation for further action by the Commission. The Inquiry Board may not recommend a dismissal with warning, a private reprimand, or a deferred discipline agreement unless the respondent judge consents to the remedy. Id. After the Commission receives the Inquiry Board's report, it must promptly transmit a copy to the judge and Investigative Counsel. Id. (j)(4). Both Investigative Counsel and the judge have an opportunity to file objections to the Inquiry Board's report.

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Bluebook (online)
181 A.3d 750, 458 Md. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-hon-pamela-j-white-md-2018.