Sorci v. Iowa District Court for Polk County

671 N.W.2d 482, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 203, 2003 WL 22674395
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 2003
Docket03-0936
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 671 N.W.2d 482 (Sorci v. Iowa District Court for Polk County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sorci v. Iowa District Court for Polk County, 671 N.W.2d 482, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 203, 2003 WL 22674395 (iowa 2003).

Opinion

STREIT, Justice.

The Youth Law Center, a non-profit organization which provides legal representation to children, challenges three administrative orders of the Chief Judge of the Fifth Judicial District. The administrative orders removed Youth Law Center (YLC) lawyers. • from hundreds of cases, on account of an alleged conflict of interest on the part of its (now former) executive director, Martha Johnson. We affirm the district court’s removal of the YLC from cases in which Johnson had substantial responsibility as an assistant county attorney. Because the YLC should be permitted to rebut the presumption its lawyers still possess confidential information now that Johnson has left the YLC, however, we reverse, in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. Facts and Procedural Background 1

From 1999 to 2002, Martha Johnson worked as an assistant county attorney for Polk County, Iowa. Johnson worked in the juvenile division of the office. From July 2001 to August 2002, she was an intake attorney.

Approximately 1100 Child In Need of Assistance (CINA) petitions were initiated while Johnson was intake attorney. Johnson filed and signed CINA petitions after receiving a request for intervention from the Department of Human Services (DHS). DHS would contact the county attorney’s office and forward the pertinent information to one of two non-lawyer intake specialists. The intake specialists would prepare each CINA petition by filling in blanks in a standard form using information DHS provided. Johnson reviewed the petition. If she found it ac *486 ceptable, Johnson signed and filed it in the district court.

Johnson considered DHS her client. Johnson actively worked with DHS case workers, medical personnel, and other professionals to determine when CINA petitions ought to be filed. In addition to signing and filing CINA petitions, in some cases Johnson would prepare and file applications for the temporary removal of children from their homes. On occasion, Johnson also represented the State at removal hearings. Johnson was the contact person for DHS in the county attorney’s office whenever it needed a court order.

In late 2002, Johnson resigned from the Polk County Attorney’s Office, and became the executive director of the YLC. The YLC is a non-profit organization which provides legal representation to children and is under contract to the State Public Defender’s Office. The YLC has an executive director and five staff attorneys. The Polk County Juvenile Court regularly appoints YLC attorneys to serve as guardians ad litem for children.

When apprised of Johnson’s move, District Associate Judge William Price advised Johnson to obtain a formal opinion from the ethics committee of the bar association concerning any potential conflicts of interest in her new position as YLC director. Neither Johnson nor the YLC sought such an opinion. Johnson did, however, receive a letter from the Administrator of the Polk County Department of Human Services for the Des Moines Service Area, in which the Administrator “waive[d] any conflict or appearance of a conflict that may arise from Ms. Johnson’s change in employment.”

Upon her hire, the YLC did not erect a so-called Chinese Wall, a screening device for lawyers who may have conflicts of interest. See Doe v. Perry Cmty. Sch. Dist., 650 N.W.2d 594, 601 (Iowa 2002) (approving use of Chinese Walls to overcome imputed disqualification in certain circumstances). As executive director of the YLC, Johnson had access to the organization’s case files, although she stated she did not touch them unless she was filing papers. Johnson admitted the YLC “operates on a pretty open basis” and she had, from time to time, heard other lawyers talking about cases in which she had been involved while working in the county attorney’s office. Johnson participated in some of these conversations. On at least one occasion a subordinate attempted to consult Johnson about a case in which Johnson had prior involvement as assistant county attorney. Johnson told the subordinate to “handle [it] on her own.”

The issue of Johnson’s potential conflict of interest rapidly created a predicament for the Polk County Juvenile Court. On May 5, 2003, Judge Robert Blink disqualified, on the motion of the child’s mother, a YLC attorney from a contested termination case in which Johnson had actively participated as assistant county attorney. Judge Blink ruled Johnson’s conflict imputed to the YLC attorney and disqualified the YLC, finding Johnson’s prior involvement on the case had been “substantial and significant.”

The next day, Johnson sent a letter to the Polk County juvenile judges and to the Chief Judge of the Fifth Judicial District, Arthur Gamble. Johnson informed the judges she had advised YLC attorneys to “raise the issue of conflict of interest at every hearing they attend.” Johnson told the judges she would prepare a waiver for YLC attorneys to present to the other parties and the court. Johnson asked the judges if the standard for disqualification was indeed “substantial and significant” as Judge Blink had ruled, and invited “any opinion or direction” the judges might wish to share with her. Johnson also of *487 fered to urge the YLC Board of Directors to seek a formal ethics opinion, if the judges so desired.

The next week, Johnson sent another letter to the judges. She gave the judges a description of her duties in the county-attorney’s office, a list of cases in which she had substantial and significant participation, and the DHS waiver. Johnson also offered to prepare a list of YLC cases, categorized by dates, which could be screened for substantial and significant involvement.

On May 19, 2003, Judge William Price held an evidentiary hearing in a contested permanency case to determine whether another YLC lawyer, Michael Sorci, had a conflict of interest. Both parents had moved to disqualify Sorci for a conflict of interest. On May 28, Judge Price disqualified Sorci because of Johnson’s prior involvement in the case.

In the case before him, Judge Price found Johnson had, among other activities, reviewed, signed, and filed the CINA petition; completed, executed, and swore to the application for order of temporary removal; prepared orders for temporary removal and a removal hearing; appeared on behalf of the State at the removal hearing; and represented the State at the pre-trial conference. On occasion, DHS may have told Johnson the identity of the child abuse reporter in a juvenile case — confidential information which may not be disclosed to other parties. Finding Johnson’s involvement was significant and substantial as assistant county attorney, Judge Price disqualified Sorci. He also noted “the appearance of impropriety is real and. in this matter extensive.”

On May 22, 2003, Chief Judge Arthur Gamble met with Johnson and two other YLC representatives, including attorney Victoria Herring, president of the YLC. There is no record of the meeting, but less than a week later Herring faxed a letter to Judge Gamble which set forth YLC’s position on the conflict of interest and proposed solutions to what was, by then, a growing problem in the district court.

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Bluebook (online)
671 N.W.2d 482, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 203, 2003 WL 22674395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sorci-v-iowa-district-court-for-polk-county-iowa-2003.