Stanley v. Jones

9 So. 2d 678, 201 La. 549, 1942 La. LEXIS 1289
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 20, 1942
DocketNo. 36003.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 9 So. 2d 678 (Stanley v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley v. Jones, 9 So. 2d 678, 201 La. 549, 1942 La. LEXIS 1289 (La. 1942).

Opinions

ODOM, Justice.

This suit was brought by the Attorney General on October 14, 1940, to remove James W. Jones, Jr., from the office of Judge of the Tenth Judicial District Court for the Parishes of Red River and Natchitoches. The suit was brought as an orig *555 inal proceeding in this court under Sections 1 and 5, Article IX of the Constitution of 1921.

Section 1, Article IX of the Constitution, reads as follows:

“All State and district officers, whether elected or appointed, shall he liable to impeachment for high crimes and misdemeanors in office, incompetency, corruption, favoritism, extortion, or oppression in office, or for gross misconduct, or habitual drunkenness.”

Section 5 of that article provides that “For any of the causes specified in Section 1 hereof, the judges of the courts of record may be removed by judgment of the Supreme Court”, and that “Such suits may be instituted by the Attorney General”.

The defendant excepted to the petition filed by the Attorney General on various grounds. Each of the exceptions was overruled by this court in an opinion handed down on April 10, 1941, and a rehearing was refused on April 28. Stanley, Attorney General, v. Jones, 197 La. 627, 2 So.2d 45.

In that opinion will be found a full and complete statement, not only of the charges preferred against the defendant by the Attorney General, but of the issues of law involved. It is not necessary, therefore, to restate in full those issues here.

The Attorney General alleged, and it is shown, that the defendant had been continuously serving as judge of his judicial district since January 1, 1931, and alleged that he was subject to removal for high crimes and misdemeanors in office, incompetency, favoritism, extortion, oppression in office, and gross misconduct. In our former opinion we held that a proceeding by the Attorney General for the removal of a district judge from office could. be based on offenses committed by the judge prior to his present term of office. We held also that, under Section 1, Article IX of the Constitution, a district judge may be removed from office not only for “misdemeanors in office” but also for “gross misconduct” not connected with his office; that misdemeanor in office is synonymous with misconduct in office, and that the framers of the Constitution intended that a public officer could be impeached and removed from office not only for official misconduct but for “gross misconduct” not connected with the office, “gross misconduct” and “habitual drunkenness” being specified as additional or further causes for impeachment and removal.

As relates to the causes for which a district judge may be removed from his office, our former opinion is the law of this case. In the former case the defendant, by filing certain exceptions, squarely presented the question whether. a district judge may be removed from office for gross misconduct not connected with his office. The exceptions filed by him raising that issue were overruled. The case is now before us on the merits.

Two briefs have been filed in support of defendant’s contention that the testimony adduced before the Commissioner, who was appointed by this court to take the testimony, does not support the Attorney General’s charges and is not sufficient to *557 warrant the conclusion that he should be removed. One of the briefs seems to have been written by defendant himself, the other by his attorneys. In these briefs the writers discuss in detail and at great length the testimony found in the record on which the Attorney General relies to support his argument that the defendant should be removed, and discuss also at length and in detail the testimony on which the defendant rfelies to refute the charges brought against him.

The record of the testimony is contained in Tour volumes and covers approximately 2,000 pages. There were something like 150 witnesses called and examined before the Commissioner. The testimony of these witnesses relates to the conduct, official and otherwise, of the defendant during a period of' some 10 or 12 years. The defendant requested that his testimony be taken before this court instead of before the Commissioner. His request was granted, and he was before this court as a witness for about three days. His testimony is in the record and covers nearly 500 pages.

The charges preferred against the defendant by the Attorney General are set out in his original and supplemental petitions, containing in the aggregate 110 articles. Articles 4-30, inclusive, contain charges that the defendant was paid, and accepted, certain sums of money as bribes to influence him in the conduct and performance of his official duties. We shall not discuss these charges further than to say that in our opinion the testimony as a whole is not sufficient to warrant a holding that the defendant was guilty of accepting bribes.

The Tenth Judicial District of Louisiana is composed of the Parishes of Natchitoches and Red River. The defendant resided at Natchitoches in the Parish -of Natchitoches, and in the performance of his official duties it was necessary for him to make trips from Natchitoches to Coushatta, the parish seat of Red River Parish. Act No. 206 of 1?26 provides that those judges of district courts whose districts comprise two or more parishes shall be entitled to be reimbursed their actual travelling and hotel expenses incurred in the discharge of their official duties in the respective parishes of their districts other than the parishes in which they reside. The act provides further that the amount of such expenses shall be payable monthly on their own warrants, “to which shall be attached statements of said expenses, which shall not exceed the sum of six hundred dollars for any judge in any one year”.

Articles 31-47, inclusive, relate to charges made by the Attorney General that defendant had rendered false statements of his expenses over a period of years in order to collect the maximum amount allowed for such expenses under the act. In Article 35 it is alleged that in the month of July, 1939, the defendant claimed eight trips to Coushatta at $5 per trip, plus $10 for hotel expenses, whereas during that month he made only three trips to Coushatta on official business and held court there only three days during that month. In Article 36 it is alleged that in the month of August, 1939, the defendant claimed ex *559 penses for six trips to Coushatta, whereas he made only one trip during the month and opened court on one day. In Articles 37-47, inclusive, similar allegations were made as to the padding of his expense account during succeeding months up to June, 1940.

To support these charges, the Attorney General offered the testimony of the clerk of court and the sheriff of Red River Parish to show that, as a matter of. fact, the defendant did not hold court in the Parish of Red River for the number of days shown on the account rendered by him; The clerk’s testimony was based upon his examination of the minutes of the court, which showed the number of days the court was in session.

The defendant was questioned as to these charges and did not dispute the testimony given by the clerk and the sheriff as to the number of days court was held.

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Bluebook (online)
9 So. 2d 678, 201 La. 549, 1942 La. LEXIS 1289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-jones-la-1942.