Matter of the Hon. J. Marshall Ayres

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 2017
Docket103
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of the Hon. J. Marshall Ayres (Matter of the Hon. J. Marshall Ayres) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of the Hon. J. Marshall Ayres, (N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

================================================================= This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports. ----------------------------------------------------------------- No. 103 In the Matter of the Hon. J. Marshall Ayres, a Justice of the Conklin Town Court, Broome County. Hon. J. Marshall Ayres, Petitioner, New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct, Respondent.

J. Marshall Ayres, petitioner pro se. Edward Lindner, for respondent.

PER CURIAM: Petitioner J. Marshall Ayres, a non-lawyer Justice of the Conklin Town Court, Broome County, since 2009, commenced this proceeding, pursuant to article VI, § 22 of the New York State Constitution and § 44 of the Judiciary Law, to review a determination of the New York State Commission on Judicial

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Conduct (Commission) sustaining charges of misconduct and removing him from office. Upon our plenary review of the record we sustain the Commission's findings and conclude that removal is warranted. The Commission issued a Formal Written Complaint containing two charges. The first alleged that petitioner lent the prestige of his judicial office to advance the private interests of his daughter by attempting to influence the disposition of a traffic ticket issued to her and, in the process, was discourteous to the prosecutor on the case. According to the evidence before the Commission, petitioner relied on his status as a judge to personally request from a court clerk and another Town Justice that his daughter's case be transferred from the assigned judge. The clerk did not comply with the request, and the Town Justice refused, and further rebuffed petitioner's attempts to discuss the merits of his daughter's case. Subsequently, petitioner attended his daughter's pre-trial conference with the prosecutor and made inappropriate reference to his judicial office, telling the prosecutor that "if this ticket was in my courtroom, I'd dismiss it," and that other judges he spoke with shared his view "that this should be dismissed." The prosecutor testified that she felt "extreme pressure" to dismiss the ticket. After the conference, the prosecution moved to dismiss the ticket and the

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court eventually granted the motion.1 The second charge alleged that, in connection with appeals from petitioner's restitution orders in People v Finch (Conklin Town Court, Case No. 10020071), petitioner mailed to Broome County Court eight letters, including five ex parte, that contained argumentative and biased statements. In these letters, petitioner asserted that the appeal was meritless and that defense counsel's arguments were "ludicrous" and "totally beyond any rational thought process." Petitioner also made biased, discourteous, and undignified statements about the defendant and defense counsel, including suggesting that defense counsel was attempting to "pad [his] bill" at taxpayer expense. Petitioner himself concedes that at least one letter addressed County Court with "snarky" language. County Court took the unusual step of responding to petitioner with a letter in which it explained why his arguments were misplaced, his conduct inappropriate, and his words and actions ill-suited to his judicial post. Even after receiving this correspondence, petitioner continued to send letters to County Court opining on the merits of the case and failed to timely comply with deadlines for filing returns in the Finch appeals.

1 In fact, the Judge on the case initially refused to accept the prosecutor's motion to dismiss, since, as he testified at the Commission hearing, he was worried that petitioner had exerted inappropriate influence during the pre-trial conference.

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The Commission unanimously concluded that petitioner's actions violated sections 100.1, 100.2 [A], 100.2 [B], 100.2 [C], 100.3 [B] [4], and 100.3 [B] [6] of the Rules Governing Judicial Conduct. As aggravating factors supporting removal the Commission noted petitioner's insistence that his actions were permissible as well as his persistent misconduct in the Finch appeals.2 The Commission properly identified the applicable judicial standards of ethics.3 As we stated in Matter of Esworthy

2 While two commissioners wrote separately, both agreed that petitioner committed misconduct and that removal from judicial office was warranted. 3 We reject as without merit petitioner's varied objections to the Commission's process. Contrary to his claims, the Commission did not employ improper investigative techniques or demand documents outside the scope of its authority, but instead acted well within its broad powers to request and review records (see Matter of New York State Commn. On Jud. Conduct v Rubenstein, 23 NY3d 570 [2014]). We similarly find nothing inappropriate in the Commission Deputy Administrator participating at petitioner's hearing, or the Commission referee advising petitioner of the possible negative inference to be drawn from petitioner's failure to testify. Petitioner's argument that he cannot be subject to the Commission's scrutiny because he relied on the Office of Court Administration and the Town and Village Courts Resource Center is unpersuasive because the Resource Center made clear that a judge may not use a judicial position to obtain special favors or outcomes, even if attending a court appearance as a parent. In any case, as the record establishes, petitioner did not seek help from the Resource Center with respect to the charges at issue here, even after he had been put on notice that he was acting inappropriately. Lastly, the Commission's Formal Written Complaint provided petitioner with adequate notice about the disconcerting tone of his letters which the Complaint described as containing "biased, discourteous and undignified statements

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(77 NY2d 280, 282 [1991]), a judge has a duty to act "in such a manner as to inspire public confidence in the integrity, fair-mindedness and impartiality of the judiciary." The Rules Governing Judicial Conduct expressly provide that a judge must "act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary" and "avoid . . . [even] the appearance of impropriety" (22 NYCRR 100.2, 100.2 [A]). In particular, a judge shall not "lend the prestige of judicial office to advance the private interests of . . . others" (22 NYCRR 100.2 [C]). As the Court has emphasized, "[f]ew principles are more fundamental to the integrity, fair-mindedness and impartiality of the judiciary than the requirement that judges not preside over or otherwise intervene in judicial matters involving relatives . . . . The same is true of intervention by a judge in proceedings involving family members pending in another court . . ." (Matter of LaBombard, 11 NY3d 294, 297 [2008]). Similarly, it is a violation of a judge's solemn oath to abandon the role of neutral decisionmaker or engage in ex parte communications on the merits of a case. As we have explained, both actions are fundamentally incompatible with the responsibilities of judicial office (see Matter of Blackburne, 7 NY3d 213, 221 [2006] [observing that, when "petitioner abandoned her role as a neutral arbiter," she acted in a way "completely

about the defendant and his counsel."

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incompatible with the proper role of an impartial judge"]; Matter of George, 22 NY3d 323, 330 [2013] [observing that engaging in ex parte communications about the merits of a case is "conduct . . . antithetical to the role of a judge"]). For this reason, the Rules Governing Judicial Conduct state unequivocally that "[a] judge shall not initiate . . .

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