McDonald v. ETHICS COMMITTEE, KY JUDICIARY

3 S.W.3d 740
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1999
Docket99-SC-00531-OA
StatusPublished

This text of 3 S.W.3d 740 (McDonald v. ETHICS COMMITTEE, KY JUDICIARY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. ETHICS COMMITTEE, KY JUDICIARY, 3 S.W.3d 740 (Ky. 1999).

Opinion

3 S.W.3d 740 (1999)

Judge Michael McDONALD, Kentucky Court of Appeals (Retired), Chief Judge John P. Hayes, Kentucky Court of Appeals (Retired), Judge Earl O'Bannon, Jr., Jefferson Circuit Court (Retired), Judge Ellen B. Ewing, Jefferson Circuit Court (Retired), Chief Judge Charles B. Lester, Kentucky Court of Appeals (Retired), Judge Benjamin F. Shobe, Jefferson Circuit Court (Retired), Chief Judge Richard A. Revell, Jefferson Family Court (Retired), Judge Michael J. O'Connell, Jefferson Circuit Court (Retired), Movants,
v.
The ETHICS COMMITTEE OF THE KENTUCKY JUDICIARY, Respondent.

No. 99-SC-00531-OA.

Supreme Court of Kentucky.

October 21, 1999.
As Amended November 15, 1999.

*741 Peter L. Ostermiller, Louisville, for Appellant.

Byron L. Hobgood, Franklin, Gordon & Hobgood, Madisonville, B.M. Westberry, The Ethics Committee of the Kentucky Judiciary, Paducah, for Appellee.

KELLER, Justice.

Eight retired judges who previously served as elected regular Judges at various levels of the Kentucky Court of Justice move this Court pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 4.310(4) to review Kentucky Judicial Ethics Committee Opinion JE-95. We must determine whether Supreme Court Rule 4.300, Canon 5 A(1)(b) of the Kentucky Code of Judicial Conduct prohibits retired judges who subjectively intend to accept future appointments as special judges from endorsing nonpartisan judicial political candidates.

Kentucky Constitution Section 121 gives the Kentucky Supreme Court the authority to regulate judicial conduct. Pursuant to that authority, the Court issued Supreme Court Rule IV which governs Judicial Retirement and Removal. This rule includes the Kentucky Code of Judicial Conduct (Code), codified at SCR 4.300, which is intended "to state basic standards which should govern the conduct of all judges in establishing and maintaining high standards of judicial and professional conduct." SCR 4.300.

We are asked to examine the Code's application to a class of judges referred to as special judges. Kentucky Constitution Section 110(5)(b) empowers the Chief Justice of the Kentucky Supreme Court to "assign temporarily any Justice or Judge of the Commonwealth, active or retired, to sit in any court other than the Supreme Court, when he deems such assignment necessary for the prompt disposition of causes." Id. Historically, the Chief Justice of the Kentucky Supreme Court has appointed special judges to the bench to address situations where a judge is unavailable because of vacancies or conflicts. In Jacobs v. Commonwealth, Ky.App., 947 S.W.2d 416 (1997), the Court of Appeals noted the Chief Justice has authority "to appoint retired Judges as Special Judges" pursuant to both Kentucky Constitution Sections 110 and 112(4) and KRS 26A.020(1). Id. at 418. KRS 26A.020(1) refers to a retired judge who replaces a disqualified regular judge as a special judge. Chief Justices have traditionally and logically turned to experienced, retired judges when the need for an appointment arises.

*742 The Code recognizes that retired judges sitting as special judges may draw their income from other sources, and it exempts special judges from certain judicial canons:

All judges should comply with this Code except as provided below
A. Part-Time Judge or Special Judge.[1] A part-time judge is a judge who serves on a continuing or periodic basis, but is permitted by law to devote time to some other profession or occupation and whose compensation for that reason is less than that of a full-time judge.
(1) is not required to comply with Canon 4D(3), E, F, and G[2]. SCR 4.300.

The issue before the Court hinges, however, on a Canon from which SCR 4.300 does not provide exemption. Canon 5 A(1)(b) reads:

A Judge or a candidate for election to judicial office shall not make speeches for or against a political organization or candidate or publically endorse or oppose a candidate for public office.

This matter arises out of Judicial Ethics Opinion JE-95 issued by the Ethics Committee on April 20, 1999, in response to a question sent to the Committee by a candidate for judicial office:

Question: May retired judges who intend to act as Special Judges endorse judicial candidates?
Answer: No. Retired judges are bound by Canon 5 which prohibits any judge from endorsing candidates for public office.
A majority of the Judicial Ethics Committee agrees that retired judges who intend to act as Special Judges are prohibited from endorsing candidates for public office. The test is a subjective one. If, after retiring, a judge intends to serve as a Special Judge, he must forego whatever opportunities he has to endorse candidates for public office.
/s/ Chairman

The movants in this action seek review of JE-95 in this Court and argue that JE-95 interprets Canon 5 A(1)(b) in a manner inconsistent with the free speech guarantees in the Kentucky and United States Constitutions. We agree free speech issues are relevant to this analysis, but we frame our review of Judicial Ethics Opinion JE-95 as an issue of interpretation. Specifically, we address whether the Code applies to retired judges who subjectively intend to serve as special judges in the future, as construed by JE-95, or whether the Code applies only to special judges while they are serving as such. The question we answer is "when is a special judge a special judge?" JE-95 interprets the Code to treat as special judges all retired judges who subjectively intend to accept future appointments as special judges. We conclude that the interpretation in Judicial Ethics Opinion JE-95 is incorrect, and hold that the Code applies only to special judges during the period of time they are performing judicial duties. In other words, we conclude that a person is only a special judge, for Code purposes, during the period of time he or she is then serving as special judge.

Supreme Court Rule IV contains language in a number of places which evidences an intent to apply the disciplinary rules of the Code only to those persons who are currently performing judicial functions or are seeking judicial office. First, SCR 4.000, which defines the scope *743 of Rule IV governing the Judicial Retirement and Removal Commission applies Part IV:

... to all proceedings before the Judicial Conduct Commission involving the discipline, retirement or removal of justices of the Supreme Court and judges of the Court of Appeals, circuit court, and district court. SCR 4.000.

The very next section, SCR 4.010, clarifies that current judicial activity is implicit in Rule IV's definition of "judge" as "any judge or justice of the Court of Justice or other officer of the Court of Justice performing judicial functions." SCR 4.010 (emphasis added). SCR 4.025(3) goes even further and explains that the Judicial Retirement and Removal Commission cannot discipline former judges after they have left the bench and a brief period of time has passed:

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McDonald v. Ethics Committee of the Kentucky Judiciary
3 S.W.3d 740 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.3d 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-ethics-committee-ky-judiciary-ky-1999.