People v. T & C Design, Inc.

178 Misc. 2d 971, 680 N.Y.S.2d 832, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 555
CourtJustice Court of Village of Westbury
DecidedSeptember 9, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 178 Misc. 2d 971 (People v. T & C Design, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Justice Court of Village of Westbury primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. T & C Design, Inc., 178 Misc. 2d 971, 680 N.Y.S.2d 832, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 555 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

[972]*972OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas F. Liotti, J.

The defendants are charged with violations of local laws in that it is alleged that they illegally conducted a retail business for the manufacture of bathing suits and accessories out of their basement and engaged in construction and alterations therein without obtaining building and electrical permits.

The defendants have appeared before this court pro se. They were represented by counsel until recently when their attorney asked to be relieved. That application was granted. Thereafter, the defendants appeared in court pro se, by Carmela Cardoza. She had not appeared in the matter previously. At her first appearance she asked to make some introductory comments, wherein she stated that she was not asking this Judge to recuse himself and stated that she felt he “could be fair.” In her introductory comments she stated that her husband, an attorney, had been my opponent for Village Justice in 1991.1 ran unopposed in 1995 and I was reelected to a second four-year term.

The court is writing this decision to address two issues. The court raises these questions sua sponte. First, does the defendant’s reference to the previous election contest with the defendant’s husband require my recusal even in the absence of a motion by the defendants? Second, is the question of recusal properly decided by the Judge whose recusal is sought?

The first question is not one of first impression.1 Nonetheless, a question involving an appearance of impropriety may not lend itself to a per se rule. If the question involves a mandatory recusal, then little needs to be said concerning appearances of impropriety which frequently involve more subjective determinations. A per se determination, particularly when the application for recusal is to be granted, may lend itself to an early determination by the Judge whose recusal is mandated.

Section 14 of the Judiciary Law mandates recusal when the following factors exist:

[973]*973(1) The Judge is a party in the matter; or

(2) The Judge has been an attorney or counsel in the proceeding; or

(3) The Judge is interested in the matter; or

(4) The Judge is related by consanguinity or affinity, within the sixth degree (as defined by the statute), to any party to the proceeding.

This is not a case of mandatory recusal. {See, Code of Judicial Conduct Canon 3C; Rules of Chief Administrator of Cts [22 NYCRR] § 100.3 [E].) Rather, if anything, it is a discretionary decision. {See, People v Moreno, 70 NY2d 403 [1987].)

The second question is one of first impression. The law in both Federal and New York’s State courts is that questions of recusal are decided by the Judge whose recusal is sought. The Judge then is being asked to make a subjective determination involving his or her ability to be fair and impartial. Further, whether the Judge’s continued involvement in the case creates an appearance of impropriety is not an issue best determined by the Judge whose recusal is sought.2 Given the present state of the law, many litigants believe that a recusal motion will [974]*974antagonize the Judge whose recusal is sought. They then are confronted by a conundrum of sorts — whether to make the motion or not make it. Many decide not to make it even though they may believe that the Judge’s continued involvement in the case is unfair to them or creates an appearance of impropriety. If the Judge waits for the motion to be made before acting, then the Judge is not using his or her judicial antennae, sua sponte, to ferret out or raise questions of fairness and impropriety, both in a gray area of the law relating to recusal. The malfunctioning of judicial radar in questions of recusal becomes of even greater importance with pro se defendants where the court must extend additional efforts to be fair and, indeed, raise questions, that a defense lawyer might properly present if he or she were present in the case. (See, Morris, Village, Town and District Courts in New York § 2:21.) Ultimately, the issue of recusal is not about whether a Judge’s “nose gets out of joint”, rather, it’s all about fairness to the litigants.

It should be noted that when this defendant was represented by counsel in this case, the court, sua sponte, on at least two separate occasions, inquired of defense counsel as to whether he wished that I recuse myself. On those occasions defense counsel responded in the negative. The defendants were not present on those occasions, their appearances having been waived.

An application for recusal or a desire to make such an application, by either the client or the lawyer, may cause a rift to occur between them. Courts must therefore be sensitive to these dilemmas by meeting them head on.

Lawyers too are often very reluctant to make recusal motions for fear that by doing so their clients or their clients’ interests might be jeopardized. Lawyers are also sometimes concerned that the fallout from the motion may adversely af[975]*975feet their ongoing relationship with the court or the Judge.3 They reason that if the motion is made and not granted then the Judge will be angry at them for having made it and hurt them and their clients during the trial. The Judge’s upset, while stated or unstated, may be reflected in adverse rulings or judicial temperament during the balance of the proceedings. Judges may demonstrate their attitudes with a scowl or a change in the tone of their voices, matters that are all “off the record”, but which may nonetheless demonstrate their bias or otherwise affect the outcome of the proceedings. Judges must be sensitive to these duplicitous, insidious appearances that impact on the litigants and their lawyers. Judges often decide the merits of the motion for recusal alone without giving due consideration to how the making of the motion will affect them in its aftermath.

Lawyers have other concerns as well. They fear that their motion in a particular case will be viewed as an insult by the Judge and thereafter affect their ongoing relationship with that Judge or the Bench as a whole. Lawyers do correctly surmise that some Judges talk with other Judges about lawyers and litigants. Unfairly and behind the scenes, a lawyer may be made into a pariah with no chance to counter or rebut the charges against that lawyer that are bandied about in the judicial rumor mill. This kind of skullduggery by some Judges, offended by recusal motions or simply using the recusal motion as an excuse to grind their axes against lawyers, can injure or destroy a lawyer’s reputation and practice. This result can happen either by design or indirectly as a result of judicial scuttlebutt.4

[976]*976Recusal may also be used as a weapon by Judges against lawyers and their clients. When Judges recuse themselves with no application having been made by lawyers or litigants, the present state of law is that they need not comment as to their reason for doing so. (See, Laird v Tatum, 409 US 824 [1972]; IX Opns of Advisory Comm on Jud Ethics Opn 92-75; Morris, Village, Town and District Courts in New York § 16:83.) Lawyers then must attempt to explain to their clients why the Judge has recused himself or herself.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Misc. 2d 971, 680 N.Y.S.2d 832, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-t-c-design-inc-nyjustctwestbur-1998.