In the Matter of Judicial Discip. Proceed. Against Tesmer

580 N.W.2d 307, 219 Wis. 2d 708, 1998 Wisc. LEXIS 80
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1998
Docket97-1088-J
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 580 N.W.2d 307 (In the Matter of Judicial Discip. Proceed. Against Tesmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court 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 Judicial Discip. Proceed. Against Tesmer, 580 N.W.2d 307, 219 Wis. 2d 708, 1998 Wisc. LEXIS 80 (Wis. 1998).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. This is a review, pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 757.91,1 of the findings of fact, conclusions of law and recommendation for discipline of the judicial conduct panel concerning the conduct of the Honorable Louise M. Tesmer, circuit judge for Milwaukee county. The panel, by a divided vote, concluded that Judge Tesmer engaged in judicial misconduct by having a friend, who is a law professor, prepare for her use opinions on dispositive motions in cases over which [711]*711she presided. The panel majority concluded that the judge thereby wilfully violated two rules of the former Code of Judicial Ethics:2 one prohibiting a judge from permitting on an aggravated or persistent basis private communications designed to influence the judge's decision; the other proscribing a judge's initiating, permitting, engaging in or considering ex parte communications concerning a pending matter. As discipline for that judicial misconduct, the panel majority recommended that Judge Tesmer be reprimanded.

¶ 2. We determine that Judge Tesmer's ongoing and persistent discussions of dispositive motions in cases pending before her with a person unconnected with the judicial system, even though disinterested in the pending matters, and her use of his assistance to draft opinions in those matters violated the prohibition of private communications designed to influence a judge's decision. Those discussions and her friend's participation in the preparation of opinions continued for three years, over which time he drafted opinions in at least 32 cases. While the panel majority found that Judge Tesmer had a good faith belief that her conduct did not violate the Code, a finding we adopt, we agree with the panel majority that she should have known that it constituted a violation of the rule prohibiting private communications. Consequently, and as it did not result from duress or coercion, Judge Tesmer's conduct was "wilful," so as to constitute judicial misconduct under Wis. Stat. § 757.81(4)(a).3

[712]*712¶ 3. We do not conclude, however, as the panel majority did, that Judge Tesmer's conduct was also a wilful violation of the proscription of a judge's ex parte communications concerning pending matters. We agree that the communications Judge Tesmer had on an ongoing basis with her law professor friend were "ex parte," but we determine that her violation of the proscription was not wilful, in that she is not chargeable with having known that they violated that rule of the Code.

¶ 4. Because there was no evidence, nor had it been alleged, that Judge Tesmer's use of her friend's assistance caused actual harm to any of the parties in pending matters or that someone other than Judge Tesmer made the decisions on the substantive motions and in light of her belief that her conduct was not proscribed by the Code of Judicial Ethics, we determine that the appropriate discipline to impose for her judicial misconduct is a reprimand. That is the least severe of the four forms of discipline we are constitutionally authorized to impose.4

¶ 5. Pursuant to customary procedure, we afforded the parties the opportunity to file briefs and, at Judge Tesmer's request, held oral argument on the panel's report. Judge Tesmer contested one of the panel's factual findings and its conclusions that she violated two rules of the Code of Judicial Ethics. She also objected to the panel's recommendation of discipline. The Judicial Commission contested only the [713]*713disciplinary recommendation, taking the position that the seriousness of her judicial misconduct warrants Judge Tesmer's suspension from judicial office for six months.

¶ 6. The judicial conduct panel consisted of three judges of the Court of Appeals — the Honorables Neal Nettesheim, Gordon Myse, and Charles Dykman, who presided. Judge Tesmer and the Judicial Commission entered into a stipulation of facts, based on which and on evidence presented at a hearing the panel made findings of fact to the requisite clear, satisfactory and convincing burden of proof as follows.5

¶ 7. Judge Tesmer, first elected circuit court judge in 1989, was rotated to the large claims part of the civil division of the circuit court for Milwaukee county in 1993. At that time, it was the practice of the judges handling large claims cases to render decisions on dispositive motions in those cases each Monday. During the time relevant to this disciplinary proceeding, August, 1993 through July, 1996, Judge Tesmer was responsible for the resolution of at least 350 dis-positive motions. Her usual practice for handling dispositive motions was the following.

¶ 8. A week before the scheduled hearing date, Judge Tesmer directed her law clerk to prepare a memorandum and recommended disposition for each dispositive motion. The law clerk, a county employee, was to complete the memorandum, including a draft explanation of the disposition recommended, before noon on the Friday preceding the hearing. Judge Tes[714]*714mer began her review of the dispositive motions scheduled for a Monday during the afternoon of the preceding Friday. She took the files home with her on Friday afternoon, including the parties' briefs, the clerk's memoranda and at times relevant case law and statutes. She continued her review of the files on Saturday morning.

¶ 9. Professor John McCormack, a tenured faculty member of the University of Loyola Law School in Chicago and a longtime, close friend of Judge Tesmer, regularly visited her in the Milwaukee area. He was not a court employee or part of an accepted or approved judicial internship program. When he arrived at her home mid-morning on Saturday, Judge Tesmer gave Professor McCormack case files on certain matters that were awaiting resolution the following Monday and had him prepare drafts of opinions she could read from the bench at the hearings. At times, in the morning of the Monday set for hearing, Judge Tesmer gave her court reporter textual material to be typed as the proposed opinion in the matter.

¶ 10. At some point after 1994, Judge Tesmer became dissatisfied with the quality of her law clerk's memoranda. Although she had no independent recall of when she first used Professor McCormack's assistance, there was evidence of one instance in 1993 and one in 1994. The frequency increased significantly in 1996, during the first six months of which he assisted on 21 motions. From August, 1993 to June, 1996, he was involved in at least 32 dispositive motion matters.

¶ 11. All conversations between the judge and Professor McCormack concerning work on pending matters were confidential, and no notice was given to any of the parties in those matters of those conversations or of Professor McCormack's assistance. [715]*715Professor McCormack had no interest in any of the cases on which he provided assistance, was not acquainted with any litigant, counsel for a litigant, witness, or anyone else involved in any case on which he assisted, and had no interest in the outcome of any of those matters. He did not inject any extraneous factual matter into the draft opinions he prepared; those drafts reflected only the facts that had been presented by the parties.

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580 N.W.2d 307, 219 Wis. 2d 708, 1998 Wisc. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-judicial-discip-proceed-against-tesmer-wis-1998.