Misquez v. Baca

2002 NMCA 102, 132 N.M. 718
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 8, 2002
DocketNo. 22,443
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2002 NMCA 102 (Misquez v. Baca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Misquez v. Baca, 2002 NMCA 102, 132 N.M. 718 (N.M. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

PICKARD, Judge.

{1} Attorney Barry Byrnes appeals from two orders issued by Judge Grace Duran. The first order held Byrnes in contempt of court for disruptive behavior during a court hearing. The second suspended Byrnes from practicing in Division VI of the Third Judicial District. Because Byrnes defied two direct orders from Judge Duran while in court and disrupted the court proceeding, we affirm the order of contempt. Nonetheless, because Judge Duran failed to give Byrnes sufficient notice of the charges she was relying on in Byrnes’s suspension hearing, we reverse the suspension order. We address additional issues that Byrnes raises in order to clarify the authority of courts to suspend attorneys from practicing before them.

BACKGROUND

{2} Byrnes, an attorney in Las Cruces, New Mexico, practices in the area of domestic relations. In January 2001, Byrnes was hired to represent Susie Misquez in a custody dispute with her former husband, Louis Baca. The parties appeared before Judge Duran on June 13, 2001, for a hearing to establish a parenting plan for the couple’s two sons. A few days before the hearing, Baca had informed Misquez that he would agree to her proposed parenting plan, which split the custody of the couple’s two sons, giving Baca sole legal custody of the couple’s older son and Misquez sole legal custody of the younger son. On the morning of the hearing, about 20 minutes before the hearing was scheduled to begin, Baca’s attorney, Kenneth Egan, called Byrnes to confirm his client’s intention. Egan told Byrnes that he believed Baca would agree to the proposed parenting plan, but said he needed to confer with Baca to confirm. Egan indicated he would call Byrnes back before the hearing. When Byrnes did not hear back from Egan, he and his client hurried to the courthouse to attend the hearing. When the hearing began, Egan indicated that Baca wanted joint custody of both children and would not agree to Misquez’s parenting plan.

{3} Byrnes did not take this news well. He complained that “this is very weird and possibly a fraud on me and my client.” He alleged that Egan and his client purposely misled him in order to secure a default. Unmoved, Judge Duran asked the parties to go forward with the hearing. During a discussion about the purpose of the hearing, Byrnes commented that “this happens too frequently in this Court.” When Judge Duran asked him what he meant, he stated that “we start out with one thing and it gets changed to another.” Then, during a discussion about the proper scope of the hearing, the following exchange occurred:

THE COURT: I’m not going to go over testimony that has already been presented to the Court both in July and December—
MR. BYRNES: I don’t believe this testimony has ever been presented.
THE COURT: Mr. Byrnes, can you please refrain from interrupting my sentences while I’m speaking?
MR. BYRNES: Yes.
THE COURT: It is very difficult to get a record when that happens.

{4} Egan then called Misquez to the stand. While questioning the witness, Egan objected to an answer that included hearsay. The following exchange occurred:

MR. BYRNES: I think the witness should be allowed to answer instead of being cut off. It’s — this hearing is, I believe, improper, and it’s being limited, unduly limited, and I don’t believe her answers should be cut off.
THE COURT: All right, Mr. Byrnes, if we’re going to get through this, I think that you need to state the nature of your objection at—
MR. BYRNES: My—
THE COURT: Just a minute.
MR. BYRNES: My objection is she’s allowed to answer the question.
THE COURT: Just a — can you please refrain from interrupting me when I’m speaking? This is the second time I have had to admonish you. If you’re going to make an objection, make an objection regarding what has been testified to up to that point, not also adding as an aside whatever criticism you have of the proceeding. We are—
MR. BYRNES: Objection. This constitutes a legal denial of due process.
THE COURT: This is now the third time you’ve interrupted me, Mr. Byrnes. If I have finished, I’m sure you will know that I have finished because I will stop talking.

{5} Egan then continued questioning Misquez. Byrnes objected several times. Judge Duran overruled some objections, but sustained most of them. The questioning focused on Misquez’s insistence that the younger child was afraid to visit his father and would suffer emotional trauma if forced to visit him. Misquez was relying in part on the opinion of a therapist, Amy Kerrigan, who at a hearing in January had recommended that visitation be postponed while both father and son received therapy. During this questioning, the following exchange occurred:

MR. EGAN: Okay, do you have any evidence to show the Court that you didn’t show the Court back in the summer of last year? Do you have any new information to present the Court?
MS. MISQUEZ: I am not his therapist. I couldn’t say. I mean, you would have to talk to Amy Kerrigan. She is the one who has been seeing him.
MR. EGAN: She is not present here today, is she?
MS. MISQUEZ: No, she is not.
MR. BYRNES: Because of the representation by counsel—
MR. EGAN: At 20 minutes to ten.
MS. MISQUEZ: I didn’t even know we had court today.
MR. BYRNES: — this hearing wouldn’t be required. That’s why.
THE COURT: Just a minute.
MR. BYRNES: That’s why, Your Hon- or.
THE COURT: Counsel—
MR. BYRNES: Saturday is not 20 minutes to ten.
THE COURT: Mr. Byrnes. Mr.
Byrnes.
MR BYRNES: That is why I’m saying there has been a denial of due process here, and a fraud on me and my client.

{6} Once Byrnes concluded his fifth objection to the denial of due process and fraud, Judge Duran made the following statement before calling a recess:

THE COURT: All right. I am sick and tired, Mr. Byrnes, of you interrupting the Court. I am also sick and tired of you continuing to badger not only Mr. Egan but other people who are present in this courtroom. I am not going to tolerate any more. I am going to call a recess of this case at this time, and then the two of you will proceed in a gentlemanly fashion. Is that understood? Otherwise, Mr. Byrnes, I will hold you in contempt of court because I am not going to go through this again.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 NMCA 102, 132 N.M. 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/misquez-v-baca-nmctapp-2002.