JUD. INQUIRY & REVIEW COM'N OF VA v. Taylor

685 S.E.2d 51, 278 Va. 699
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 5, 2009
Docket090845
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 685 S.E.2d 51 (JUD. INQUIRY & REVIEW COM'N OF VA v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JUD. INQUIRY & REVIEW COM'N OF VA v. Taylor, 685 S.E.2d 51, 278 Va. 699 (Va. 2009).

Opinion

685 S.E.2d 51 (2009)

JUDICIAL INQUIRY AND REVIEW COMMISSION OF VIRGINIA
v.
Ramona D. TAYLOR, Judge of the Second Judicial District.

Record No. 090845.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

November 5, 2009.

*53 Donald R. Curry, Commission Counsel, for petitioner.

*54 Kevin E. Martingayle (Stallings & Bischoff, on brief), Virginia Beach, for respondent.

Present: KOONTZ, KINSER, LEMONS, GOODWYN and MILLETTE, JJ., and CARRICO and RUSSELL, S.JJ.

OPINION BY Justice LEROY F. MILLETTE, JR.

The Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission ("the Commission") filed the present complaint against Ramona D. Taylor, Judge of the Second Judicial District, pursuant to the original jurisdiction of this Court set forth in Article VI, § 10 of the Constitution of Virginia and Code § 17.1-902. The Commission asserted that its charges against Judge Taylor for allegedly violating the Canons of Judicial Conduct ("the Canons") are well founded in fact and are of sufficient gravity to constitute the basis for censure by this Court.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On January 13, 2009, the Commission issued a Notice establishing formal charges against Judge Taylor that she had engaged in misconduct or engaged in conduct prejudicial to the proper administration of justice while serving as a judge in the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court for the City of Virginia Beach ("the juvenile and domestic relations court"). Judge Taylor was charged with alleged violations of Canons 1, 2, 2A, and 3B(2).

The Commission alleged that on May 2, 2007, at the conclusion of an adjudicatory hearing on a misdemeanor assault charge against a 15 year old defendant ("K.M."), who was not then in custody, Judge Taylor found K.M. guilty following his plea of "not innocent." During the adjudicatory hearing, the Commission alleged, "someone in the courtroom audience blurted out that [K.M.] had used a racial epithet toward the victim of the assault," and Judge Taylor called witnesses to the stand to testify about the use of the racial epithet. According to the Commission, Judge Taylor found that K.M. represented a risk of harm to the community, and remanded him to custody pending a sentencing hearing scheduled for May 24, 2007.

The Commission further alleged that Judge Taylor denied K.M.'s request for immediate sentencing so that an appeal could be noted, and ordered that a social history be compiled for the sentencing hearing. In addition, the Commission alleged that Judge Taylor denied K.M.'s May 2, 2007 written motion for bond and release pending the sentencing hearing by order entered on May 3, 2007 that expressly stated it was "an interlocutory, non-appealable order" ("May 3rd order").

The Commission further contended that, by letter from his counsel dated May 4, 2007, K.M. sought reconsideration of the May 3rd order. The Commission alleged that K.M.'s four-page letter outlined K.M.'s factual and legal argument in support of bond, his appeal of the denial of bond to the next higher court, and his request for an immediate sentencing so that he could immediately appeal, because otherwise denying bail and imposing incarceration would make K.M.'s right to a de novo appeal meaningless. However, according to the Commission, Judge Taylor denied reconsideration by an order in which she maintained her position that the denial of K.M.'s motion for bond and release was interlocutory and non-appealable ("May 8th order").[1] The Commission alleged that when K.M. attempted to appeal his case, the clerk of the juvenile and domestic relations court ("the clerk of court" or "clerk") refused to process the appeal, and K.M. filed a petition for writ of mandamus against the clerk in the Circuit Court for the City of Virginia Beach ("the circuit court"). The writ of mandamus, which was granted by order dated May 11, 2007, directed the clerk of court to process an appeal of Judge Taylor's order. After a bond hearing also conducted on May 11th, the circuit court released K.M. to the custody of his parents.

In Judge Taylor's answer to the Notice of formal charges, she maintained that she did not recall whether K.M.'s counsel requested *55 an immediate sentencing. Judge Taylor admitted that she entered the May 3rd order denying K.M.'s motion for bond and release pending the sentencing hearing, and that K.M. requested reconsideration of that order. However, Judge Taylor denied that K.M.'s counsel cited to authority that clearly gave K.M. the right to appeal the decision denying bail and asserted that the authority cited by K.M.'s counsel is "subject to contrary legal interpretations with regard to its applicability to juvenile defendants detained post-adjudication and pre-disposition."

Judge Taylor admitted that at the mandamus hearing, the attorney for the clerk of court asserted that the clerk was "under a direct order by [Judge Taylor] as the Chief Judge not to process the defendant's appeal," but averred that the attorney incorrectly stated the capacity in which Judge Taylor served when she advised the clerk regarding the appealability of the May 3rd order. Judge Taylor asserted that she was functioning as the presiding judge, not as the chief judge, at all times when addressing the clerk regarding the appealability of the May 3rd order. Judge Taylor therefore requested that the formal charges asserted in the Commission's Notice be dismissed.

On March 10, 2009, the Commission conducted an evidentiary hearing on the charges, at which time Judge Taylor was present and represented by counsel. The Commission members voted unanimously to bifurcate the hearing as follows: (1) evidence about a violation of the Canons, and if the Commission found a violation, then (2) other evidence regarding the appropriate sanction, if any.

As part of the evidence before the Commission, the parties stipulated that when K.M.'s counsel tried to file a notice of appeal to the May 3rd order, the deputy clerk advised Judge Taylor that K.M.'s counsel was attempting to file a notice of appeal and Judge Taylor "confirmed that the order by its express terms was not appealable, but did not state to the deputy clerk that the notice of appeal should not be accepted." The parties further stipulated that "[t]he deputy clerk then informed [K.M.'s counsel] that the order was not appealable and, therefore, the notice of appeal would not be accepted."

Judge Taylor testified that at the conclusion of the May 2, 2007 hearing on K.M.'s misdemeanor assault charge, she ordered K.M. securely detained "in order to safeguard the community" and ordered a social history, which is a complete background investigation on K.M. Judge Taylor testified that she did not recall K.M.'s counsel's request for a final appealable order.

Judge Taylor testified that in ruling on K.M.'s motion for reconsideration, she said to his counsel:

[W]hat I'm going to do is I'm going to put all of my authority [in the order] to make sure that . . . just in case you get a Circuit Court judge who we were talking about, you know, perhaps a Circuit Court judge shooting from the hip, and that was the expression that I had used, thinking that a lot of times they were busy, they had a very hectic docket, and because we deal with these juvenile codes so frequently, I wanted to make sure that the Circuit Court judge was aware I was relying upon the Juvenile Code.

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Alred v. Commonwealth, Judicial Conduct Commission
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Christian Urias v. Winkler's, Inc.
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177 L. Ed. 2d 304 (Supreme Court, 2010)
Weems v. State
673 S.E.2d 50 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
685 S.E.2d 51, 278 Va. 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jud-inquiry-review-comn-of-va-v-taylor-va-2009.