Matter of Carton

658 A.2d 1211, 140 N.J. 330, 1995 N.J. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 2, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 658 A.2d 1211 (Matter of Carton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Carton, 658 A.2d 1211, 140 N.J. 330, 1995 N.J. LEXIS 253 (N.J. 1995).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This proceeding against respondent, Lawrence A. Carton, III, a municipal court judge, arose out of a letter from Robert E. Levy, Supervising Deputy Attorney General of the Office of New Jersey Attorney General, dated November 5, 1992, that he filed with the Advisory Committee on Judicial Conduct (Committee or ACJC). That letter advised that in the course of the Attorney General’s investigation of the Old Bridge Municipal Court Clerk’s Office, “certain actions were taken, and statements made, by Judge Lawrence Carton III of the Old Bridge Municipal Court, which may have been in violation of Canon 1 and Canon 2 of the Code of Judicial Conduct. Additionally, during the course of the investigation two other incidents have come to our attention which may constitute judicial misconduct.”

A formal complaint was filed with the ACJC containing three counts. After three days of hearings in which eleven witnesses had testified and forty-three exhibits had been filed, the ACJC issued a presentment in which it found that respondent had violated certain Court Rules and Canons 1, 2A, and 2B of the Code of Judicial Conduct. Those violations consisted of making telephone calls to the municipal court judge and municipal prosecutor of another municipality in an attempt to influence the disposition of charges against a business owned by respondent (Count I); and permitting a fax transmission to be sent from his law office to the *332 judge of another municipal court about a matter pending in that court (Count II). The ACJC, however, dismissed Count III in which it was alleged that respondent had made remarks to the staff of the Old Bridge Municipal Court to intimidate them and otherwise persuade them not to cooperate with an investigation by the State Police of possible criminal activities by the clerk of that court. The ACJC recommended that this Court publicly reprimand respondent. We then ordered respondent to show cause why removal proceedings should not be initiated against him and why he should not otherwise be publicly disciplined.

Based on our independent review of the record, we concur in the ACJC’s determination that respondent violated the standards of judicial conduct. Although we agree that respondent should be publicly reprimanded, we do so on different grounds than the ACJC. While we agree with the ACJC that clear-and-convincing evidence is present to support the ACJC’s findings with respect to Count II, and that sufficient evidence is lacking to support Count III, our de novo examination of the record persuades us that the ethics charges against respondent with respect to Count I have not been established by clear-and-convincing evidence. We therefore dismiss Count I, the Sea Bright matter. Accordingly, the public reprimand that we impose is only for respondent’s conduct in Count II, the Sayreville matter.

I

SEA BRIGHT — COUNT I

In determining the nature and extent of discipline, we “carefully scrutinize the substantive offenses that constitute the core of respondent’s misconduct, the underlying facts and the surrounding circumstances.” In re Collester, 126 N.J. 468, 472, 599 A.2d 1275 (1992) (citing In re Connor, 124 N.J. 18, 22, 589 A.2d 1347 (1991) (other citations omitted)). Our review of the surrounding circumstances leads us to conclude that the record does not contain clear-and-convincing evidence that respondent *333 violated the Code of Judicial Conduct with respect to the Sea Bright matter.

As previously observed, the allegations against the respondent in the presentment all arose out of the State’s investigation of the Old Bridge Municipal Court Clerk’s Office. Most of the testimony at the ACJC hearing focused on the allegations made in Count III — whether respondent’s remarks to court clerks had been intended to impede the State’s investigation.

In August 1990, several deputy clerks of the Old Bridge Municipal Court, led by First Assistant Deputy Clerk Carol Butewicz (Clerk Butewicz), compiled what they felt to be incriminating evidence against the Chief Clerk of that court, a close friend of respondent. Those clerks gave that evidence to the Old Bridge Police Department and to Judge Foley who also was a municipal judge in Old Bridge. Judge Foley turned that evidence over to the Attorney General’s Office. Judge Foley also advised the deputy clerks to keep from respondent his and their involvement in the Attorney General’s investigation.

During the course of that two-year investigation, Clerk Butewiez and Gail Taylor, another deputy clerk (Clerk Taylor), received a preliminary notice of charges and proposed disciplinary action on November 8, 1991. Both women were charged with neglect of duty, insubordination, and conduct unbecoming of a public/judicial employee. According to the notices that were signed by respondent, he alleged that Clerks Butewicz and Taylor participated in the filing of two false reports concerning him. The clerks were suspended with pay.

Five days after her suspension, during the state-police investigation on November 13, 1991, Clerk Butewicz reported to an Attorney General investigator that she had heard from another source that respondent had once tried to influence the municipal judge in Sayreville. That allegation formed the .basis of Count II, the Sayreville incident.

*334 Clerks Butewicz and Taylor then filed suit in 1991 against respondent and Old Bridge Township in the Chancery Division, alleging, among other things, wrongful discharge from employment because they had assisted in the Attorney General’s investigation. The Assignment Judge appointed a special prosecutor who conducted an investigation, prepared the matter for trial, and took the position that the suspension of the clerks was proper. On May 18, 1992, the matter was settled. The plaintiffs dismissed their claims, and as part of that settlement, they were transferred to other positions within the township, and letters of public reprimand were permanently placed in their personnel files.

During the time they were suspended by respondent, Judge Foley requested that Clerks Butewicz and Taylor work in the Sea Bright Municipal Court. Judge Foley also was prepared to testify on behalf of Clerks Butewicz and Taylor in their civil action against respondent.

On September 23, 1992, after the conclusion of the wrongful-discharge case, Judge Foley was interviewed by the State Police with respect to allegations made by Clerk Butewicz that respondent had interfered with the Attorney General’s investigation. When asked at the conclusion of the interview if he had anything else to add, he volunteered that respondent, seven months previously, during the pendency of the civil action, had had a conversation with him concerning two garbage summonses pending in Sea Bright. Although he could not recall the exact circumstances of the incident, he did recall that Clerks Butewicz and Taylor had been present at the Sea Bright Municipal Court when the alleged incident had taken place. That comment from Judge Foley was the genesis of Count I.

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Bluebook (online)
658 A.2d 1211, 140 N.J. 330, 1995 N.J. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-carton-nj-1995.