In the Matter of Scott A Norrick

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 2024
Docket24S-JD-00035
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of Scott A Norrick (In the Matter of Scott A Norrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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 Scott A Norrick, (Ind. 2024).

Opinion

FILED IN THE May 17 2024, 9:34 am

Indiana Supreme Court CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

Supreme Court Case No. 24S-JD-35

In the Matter of the Honorable Scott A. Norrick, Judge of the Madison Circuit Court, Respondent.

Decided: May 17, 2024

Judicial Discipline Action

Per Curiam Opinion Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa, Goff, and Molter concur. Justice Slaughter dissents. Per curiam.

"The United States legal system is based upon the principle that an independent, impartial, and competent judiciary, composed of men and women of integrity, will interpret and apply the law that governs our society.” Preamble, Ind. Code of Judicial Conduct. Inherent in the judicial conduct rules are the principles that judges “must respect and honor the judicial office as a public trust and strive to maintain and enhance confidence in the legal system.” Id.

Respondent, the Honorable Scott A. Norrick, Judge of the Madison Circuit Court, has fallen far short of these standards. Respondent engaged in judicial misconduct by: (1) failing to supervise his staff in the processing of orders, which resulted in him presiding over civil cases in which he or his son were the attorneys of record; (2) erroneously issuing an ex parte change-of-custody order without giving the opposing party notice or an opportunity to respond; and (3) failing to supervise his staff in the processing of criminal cases, which led to delays in issuing warrants, missing orders and chronological case summary (“CCS”) entries, and involuntarily dismissing sixteen criminal cases.

Respondent’s actions and inactions, which began the day he assumed office, damaged the administration of justice and public trust in the judiciary. They also caused individual harm to dozens of alleged victims, witnesses, and criminal defendants whose cases were dismissed or delayed because Respondent, through his staff, failed to update warrants, set trial dates, and reflect the outcome of hearings. Perhaps most alarming, these omissions were repeatedly brought to Respondent’s attention but he took no action until the Indiana Commission on Judicial Qualifications (“Commission”) began to investigate.

The matter is before us on the Commission’s “Notice of the Institution of Formal Proceedings and Statement of Charges” against Respondent. The parties jointly tendered a “Statement of Circumstances and Conditional Agreement for Discipline” stipulating to the following facts.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-JD-35 | May 17, 2024 Page 2 of 11 Background and Stipulated Facts Respondent was elected judge of the Madison Circuit Court 5 in November 2020 and took office on January 1, 2021. The misconduct set forth in the conditional agreement began the day Respondent took office and continued through at least March 31, 2023.

A. Conflicts of Interest—Landmark Accounts

Before Respondent’s election, he was judge of Edgewood Town Court for about fifteen years, where he supervised three staff. During this time, Respondent represented client Landmark Accounts, Inc. in small claims matters. After Respondent’s son was admitted to the bar in September 2020, he began practicing in Respondent’s firm. And when Respondent took the bench in January 2021, his son took over representing Landmark Accounts.

In April 2022, the Commission received a complaint that Respondent was presiding over cases in which his son served as counsel and in which Respondent had previously served as counsel. Two months later, Respondent tendered a self-report that acknowledged presiding over the Landmark Accounts cases and admitted the measures he had undertaken to prevent that from happening had resulted in “errors by his court staff.”

From January 20, 2021, to April 13, 2022, Respondent presided over twenty-seven cases in which his son appeared as counsel and Landmark Accounts was a party. He issued sixty-six signature-stamped orders in those cases, including orders granting the withdrawal of his own appearance as Landmark Accounts’ attorney. MyCase listed Respondent as the judicial officer in multiple Landmark Accounts cases, even though a magistrate actually heard those cases. Respondent admits he failed to adequately supervise his staff in handling the Landmark Accounts cases, which led to the public perception that he was presiding over cases in which he had previously been counsel of record or his son was counsel of record.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-JD-35 | May 17, 2024 Page 3 of 11 B. Missing Orders and CCS Entries in Criminal Cases

Prompted by the Landmark Accounts reports, the Commission issued a notice of investigation in January 2023. While this investigation was ongoing, the Commission received a report that there were criminal cases in Respondent’s court with missing case entries and orders, and so in April 2023, the Commission amended its notice of investigation.

Further investigation revealed that from January 1, 2021, to March 31, 2023, there were about forty criminal cases with missing entries and orders. These missing items included: (1) failure to update warrants accurately; (2) failure to set jury trial dates; (3) failure to reflect what took place at certain hearings; and (4) failure to state whether future hearing dates were needed. More specifically:

• When the judge ordered the bond revoked for a defendant who violated pretrial release, the CCS entry revoking bond was withdrawn and the case was never placed back on the docket; it was then dismissed on Criminal Rule 4(C) grounds. • When the judge recalled a warrant of a defendant charged with resisting law enforcement, and staff input an entry recalling the warrant, no hearing was scheduled; the case was then dismissed on Criminal Rule 4(C) grounds. • Court staff failed to update the docket regarding what took place during a bench trial that had been postponed and failed to set a future hearing date. • Court staff mistakenly updated the docket to withdraw a warrant for a defendant charged with residential entry; the mistake was not corrected (and the warrant was not reissued) for nearly five months. • No future dates were set in at least thirty-six pending cases.

Ultimately, these missing entries and orders led to the dismissal of sixteen cases because the defendants were not timely tried under Criminal Rule 4(C).

During the investigation, the Commission also discovered a pattern of delay in issuing criminal orders in Respondent’s court. Multiple people made Respondent aware of these delays, including other judges and members of the prosecutor’s office, and they told Respondent his lead

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-JD-35 | May 17, 2024 Page 4 of 11 criminal court reporter was four or five weeks behind on completing case entries. Despite being on notice of these concerns, for two years Respondent failed to undertake any efforts to review criminal cases, including whether an appropriate entry or order had been made or whether the matter had been scheduled for a future court date.

The Commission identified at least seven cases in which there was a significant delay in issuing a warrant, with delays ranging from thirty days to sixteen months. These delays all involved Level 6 felonies, including charges of battery against a public safety official, domestic battery, strangulation, auto theft, neglect of a dependent, possession of methamphetamine, and residential entry.

And in another Level 6 felony case, State v. Reynolds, Respondent did not issue an order for more than six months. In August 2022, Respondent took the State’s motion to reconsider alternative misdemeanor sentencing under advisement. Respondent provided his court reporter with a signed order in November 2022, but she failed to issue and distribute it.

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Related

In Re Hawkins
902 N.E.2d 231 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2009)
In Re Kouros
816 N.E.2d 21 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2004)

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In the Matter of Scott A Norrick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-scott-a-norrick-ind-2024.