JUDICIAL INQUIRY AND REVIEW v. Shull

651 S.E.2d 648, 274 Va. 657, 2007 Va. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 2, 2007
DocketRecord 071014.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 651 S.E.2d 648 (JUDICIAL INQUIRY AND REVIEW v. Shull) 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
JUDICIAL INQUIRY AND REVIEW v. Shull, 651 S.E.2d 648, 274 Va. 657, 2007 Va. LEXIS 123 (Va. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION BY Justice BARBARAMILANO KEENAN.

The Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission (the Commission) filed the present complaint against James Michael Shull, Judge of the Thirtieth 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 alleged that its charges against Judge Shull for allegedly violating the Canons of Judicial Conduct (the Canons) are well founded in fact, and that the violations are of sufficient gravity to require that this Court censure or remove him from office.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On December 20, 2006, the Commission issued an order pursuant to Code § 17.1-911(A) and (C), suspending Judge Shull from the exercise of his judicial powers. The suspension initially arose from two incidents that occurred at a custody and visitation hearing over which Judge Shull presided in the Wise County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court (the juvenile and domestic relations court).

After receiving the order of suspension, Judge Shull requested that the Commission conduct a hearing allowed by Code § 17.1-911(B) to review whether "justice would be served" by continuing his suspension from office pending resolution of the charges. 1 See id. Judge Shull asserted that due process required that the Commission present evidence supporting its decision to suspend him, and maintained that the Commission should bear the burden of proving that "justice would be served" by continuing his suspension. Judge Shull further asserted that he should be permitted at the hearing to cross-examine any witnesses who had provided evidence supporting the Commission's decision temporarily suspending him from office. 2

On January 9, 2007, the Commission conducted the requested hearing (the suspension hearing), at which the Commission entered into evidence a two-page written summary stating the Commission's factual basis for temporarily suspending Judge Shull (the statement of facts). In the statement of facts, the Commission alleged that in December 2006, Tammy L.H. Giza (Giza) obtained a temporary protective order against her husband, Joseph A.K. Giza (Keith Giza), based on her allegation that he had assaulted her. The Commission alleged that on December 12, 2006, in a hearing in the juvenile and domestic relations court, Judge Elizabeth S. Wills granted Giza's request for a continuance, extended the protective order for a three-day period until December 15, 2006, and directed Giza to notify the juvenile and domestic relations court when she retained counsel. The Commission further alleged that during a hearing in the juvenile and domestic relations court on December 15, 2006, in which Judge Shull presided, Giza sought to extend the protective order against her husband and to secure custody of her two children (the Giza custody hearing). Judge Shull denied Giza's request for a continuance to obtain counsel.

According to the Commission, during the Giza custody hearing, Giza claimed that Keith Giza had inflicted a wound on her thigh. Keith Giza disputed the nature and existence of the wound. The Commission alleged that when Giza told Judge Shull she could not exhibit the wound without lowering her pants, Judge Shull indicated that he would not extend the protective order without first viewing the wound. The Commission alleged that Judge Shull twice directed Giza to lower her pants in the courtroom so that he could inspect the wound. The Commission further alleged that during a recess in the Giza custody hearing, Judge Shull initiated an ex parte telephone call to a hospital where Giza stated she had been treated for the wound.

At the suspension hearing, Judge Shull presented two witnesses who testified about the events that took place at the Giza custody hearing. Those witnesses were Daniel W. Fast, who represented Keith Giza at the Giza custody hearing, and Amy Johnson, a probation officer who also was present at the Giza custody hearing.

Fast and Johnson both testified that Giza offered to show her wounds to Judge Shull before he first directed her to do so. Fast also stated that before viewing the wound on the second occasion, Judge Shull "told [Giza] he wanted to see the stitch wounds," left his seat on the bench, and directed Giza to lower her pants. At the conclusion of the suspension hearing, the Commission determined that justice would be served by continuing Judge Shull's suspension.

On February 9, 2007, the Commission issued three formal charges against Judge Shull for alleged violations of Canons 1, 2, 2(A), 3(B)(2), 3(B)(3), 3(B)(4), and 3(B)(7).

The Commission alleged that Judge Shull initiated an improper ex parte telephone call during a recess in the Giza custody hearing and treated Giza in an undignified, discourteous, and uncivil manner when he twice directed her to lower her pants in the courtroom. In addition, the Commission alleged that during a different hearing involving visitation over which Judge Shull presided, when the two parents could not agree upon which parent would receive the preferred share of a divided holiday visitation period, Judge Shull directed that the issue would be determined by the toss of a coin, and twice tossed a coin in the courtroom while court was in session to resolve the dispute.

Judge Shull responded to the charges by asserting that he had not violated the Canons. While Judge Shull admitted that he had determined a contested legal matter by twice flipping a coin during a courtroom proceeding, he argued that his action was intended to encourage the litigants to resolve the custody issues by themselves and to "demonstrate . . . that his award of custody . . . would be as random as a coin toss." Judge Shull also maintained that neither parent had objected to resolving the custody dispute by a coin toss.

Judge Shull admitted in his response to the Commission that during the Giza custody hearing, Giza twice lowered her pants in the courtroom to allow him to inspect her thigh wound, but asserted that Giza volunteered to lower her pants and that he merely permitted her to do so. According to Judge Shull, he directed the bailiff to close "privacy curtains" before allowing Giza to lower her pants, and the only people present in the courtroom who could see Giza exposed were officially involved in the Giza proceedings. Judge Shull admitted that he could have "handled" the Giza custody hearing "in a more sensitive manner," but maintained that his conduct was not a violation of the Canons.

Judge Shull admitted that he initiated an ex parte telephone call to the hospital where Giza alleged she was treated, but asserted that before he placed the call, he informed everyone in the courtroom that he planned to do so. Judge Shull maintained that "it is not uncommon" for judges in the juvenile and domestic relations court to place telephone calls to ascertain the truth when resolving a factual dispute.

On April 10 and 11, 2007, the Commission conducted an evidentiary hearing (the April hearing) on the charges. At the April hearing, Judge Shull conceded that he had tossed a coin to decide a visitation issue, and that this action was "wrong." Judge Shull also admitted that the ex parte telephone call he made during the Giza custody hearing was a violation of Canon 3(B)(7). Judge Shull further stipulated at the April hearing that he "admitted to violations" of "Canons 2 and 3."

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Bluebook (online)
651 S.E.2d 648, 274 Va. 657, 2007 Va. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judicial-inquiry-and-review-v-shull-va-2007.