Inquiry into the Conduct of Galler

805 N.W.2d 240, 2011 Minn. LEXIS 701, 2011 WL 5386623
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 9, 2011
DocketNo. A11-0149
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 805 N.W.2d 240 (Inquiry into the Conduct of Galler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inquiry into the Conduct of Galler, 805 N.W.2d 240, 2011 Minn. LEXIS 701, 2011 WL 5386623 (Mich. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

The Board on Judicial Standards has appealed a hearing panel’s dismissal of a formal complaint against the Honorable Gregory G. Galler, a district court judge in the Tenth Judicial District. The Board charged Judge Galler with creating an appearance of impropriety during an omnibus hearing in a DWI case. The Board asserts, among other claims, that Judge Galler ordered a criminal defense attorney to write a letter of apology for allegedly impugning the integrity of a police officer during the attorney’s oral argument at the omnibus hearing. Following an evidentia-ry hearing, the Panel dismissed the complaint against Judge Galler. The Panel found that the Board failed to prove the allegations in its complaint by clear and convincing evidence, including the primary allegation that Judge Galler had ordered the defense attorney to apologize for impugning the integrity of the police officer. The Panel also denied Judge Galler’s motion for attorney fees and costs under Minn. R. Civ. P. 11. We affirm the dismissal of the complaint and the denial of attorney fees and costs under Rule 11.

Judge Gregory G. Galler has served as a district court judge in Minnesota’s Tenth Judicial District since 2001. Judge Gal-ler’s current six-year term expires in January 2015. The primary allegations in this case relate to statements Judge Galler made during an omnibus hearing in a gross misdemeanor DWI case on June 9, 2010. The criminal defense attorney representing the defendant at the hearing challenged the stop of his client’s motor vehicle. The attorney believed that the arresting officer had not properly corroborated a tip about a drunk driver before stopping the defendant’s vehicle. Toward the end of the hearing, as the attorney was summarizing the defense position, the following exchange took place:

[ATTORNEY]: And in this case, what they had was, we got a report of a drunk driver. Watch out. I mean, the thing speaks for itself, his report. I mean why go back and find it later unless you have got it covered-you know, cover your ass.
[JUDGE GALLER]: Let’s be real careful in our language here ..., all right?

Later, at the close of the hearing, the discussion about an apology to the police officer came about. Judge Galler told the attorney:

[JUDGE GALLER]: All right, then before we go off the record, ... you need to send an apology letter to the officer. To suggest on the record that he was covering his ass is not a fair argument and it impugns instead the personal integrity of the officer. So within two days of today send him a letter saying you meant no offense by it—
[ATTORNEY]: I’m sorry.
[JUDGE GALLER]: — which I understand you didn’t. And then if you could send me a copy, I’d sure appreciate it, all right?
[ATTORNEY]: I will.

After the hearing, the criminal defense attorney retained an attorney to advise him on how to respond to Judge Galler’s directive. The criminal defense attorney did not think he should have to write a letter of apology, but he was concerned [244]*244that he might get into trouble if he did not ■write the letter because Judge Galler had “ordered” him to do so. In a letter dated June 14, 2010, the attorney representing the criminal defense attorney wrote to Judge Galler, requesting “an extension of the date by which [the criminal defense attorney] was ordered to write a letter of apology.” Judge Galler reviewed this letter on June 16, 2010, wrote “Okay” on the face of the letter, and put the letter in his out bin. Judge Galler indicated that he did not know “where it went from there.”

In addition to retaining an attorney to represent him, the criminal defense attorney told several people what had happened, stating on at least one occasion “that a judge had told [him] to apologize to a cop.” One of the people who heard about the incident was an individual who worked in the criminal defense attorney’s office. This individual went to yoga with a local newspaper reporter and told the reporter what happened at the hearing. After learning about this incident, the reporter contacted the criminal defense attorney and after talking with the attorney began to write an article about the incident.

On June 16, 2010, the newspaper reporter contacted Judge Galler by telephone and asked if he had ordered a criminal defense attorney to apologize to a police officer. Judge Galler stated that he did not think he had ordered an apology. When the reporter asked if he “might have,” Judge Galler responded that he could not recall exactly what words he had used and that it was possible he had done so.

The next day, the reporter’s newspaper published an article about the case. The article stated that Judge Galler had ordered a defense attorney to apologize to a police officer for impugning the officer’s integrity. Judge Galler first heard about the newspaper article from another judge. After reading the article, Judge Galler asked his court reporter to prepare a transcript of the omnibus hearing so he could see what he had said. That same day, after printing five or six pages of the relevant part of the transcript, Judge Gal-ler contacted the Executive Secretary of the Board on Judicial Standards and the Director of the Court Information Office for Minnesota’s judicial system. According to Judge Galler, he was concerned about the article and that he “wasn’t as clear as [he] should have been” at the hearing, and wanted to “clear this up and make it right.” Judge Galler also indicated that he contacted the Executive Secretary because he “didn’t want to get in trouble with the Board.”

Judge Galler maintains that when he spoke with the Executive Secretary on the telephone, he read aloud to the Executive Secretary the relevant parts of the transcript. According to Judge Galler, the Executive Secretary recommended sending a letter to the attorney representing the criminal defense attorney to clear up any misunderstanding about the apology. Both the Executive Secretary and the Court Information Director subsequently reviewed a draft of Judge Galler’s letter and suggested some revisions. Judge Gal-ler incorporated most of the suggested revisions into his letter before mailing it to the attorney.

Judge Galler indicated in his letter that he was “attempting] to clarify what appeared] to be a number of misunderstandings.” Essentially, the letter attempted to clarify that Judge Galler had not actually ordered the criminal defense attorney to send a letter of apology. The letter also attempted to clarify that Judge Galler’s concern was with the criminal defense attorney’s use of profanity in the courtroom. The letter indicated that Judge Galler knew that the criminal defense attorney [245]*245“did not mean to improperly impugn the officer” and that Judge Galler believed that the criminal defense attorney “was just doing his job in advocating for his client.”

After Judge Galler’s letter became part of the court file, the Court Information Director sent a copy of the letter to the newspaper reporter. The newspaper reporter then published a second article reporting that Judge Galler had sent a letter to the attorney representing the criminal defense attorney denying that he had required an apology. A third article appeared in the newspaper after the newspaper reporter had reviewed a transcript of the omnibus hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
805 N.W.2d 240, 2011 Minn. LEXIS 701, 2011 WL 5386623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inquiry-into-the-conduct-of-galler-minn-2011.