STATE EX REL. AREA 25 TRIAL OFFICE, and, MISSOURI STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER, Relators-Appellants v. HONORABLE KENNETH G. CLAYTON, ASSOCIATE CIRCUIT JUDGE, Respondent-Respondent

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 2021
DocketSD37064
StatusPublished

This text of STATE EX REL. AREA 25 TRIAL OFFICE, and, MISSOURI STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER, Relators-Appellants v. HONORABLE KENNETH G. CLAYTON, ASSOCIATE CIRCUIT JUDGE, Respondent-Respondent (STATE EX REL. AREA 25 TRIAL OFFICE, and, MISSOURI STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER, Relators-Appellants v. HONORABLE KENNETH G. CLAYTON, ASSOCIATE CIRCUIT JUDGE, Respondent-Respondent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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STATE EX REL. AREA 25 TRIAL OFFICE, and, MISSOURI STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER, Relators-Appellants v. HONORABLE KENNETH G. CLAYTON, ASSOCIATE CIRCUIT JUDGE, Respondent-Respondent, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE EX REL. AREA 25 TRIAL ) OFFICE, and, MISSOURI STATE ) PUBLIC DEFENDER, ) ) Relators-Appellants, ) ) v. ) No. SD37064 ) HONORABLE KENNETH G. ) Filed: August 3, 2021 CLAYTON, ASSOCIATE CIRCUIT ) JUDGE, ) ) Respondent-Respondent. )

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN PROHIBITION

PRELIMINARY WRIT OF PROHIBITION MADE PERMANENT

The Missouri State Public Defender and its Area 25 Trial Office (“Relators”) seek

a permanent writ of prohibition against the Honorable Kenneth G. Clayton, Associate

Circuit Judge of the 25th Judicial Circuit (“Respondent”) to prevent Respondent from

enforcing an order (“the sanctions order”) that directed the Area 25 Trial Office to pay

$762.68 as sanctions after an attorney assigned to that office traveled internationally to

Mexico the week before he was scheduled to try a jury case before Respondent.

Respondent, sua sponte, continued the trial on the ground that he would not expose court

personnel and a jury panel to a potential COVID-19 risk. The sanction amount was equal

to the prosecutor’s mileage reimbursement paid to the complaining witness in the case.

1 Because Respondent did not find that Relators had acted in bad faith in,

respectively, approving and then engaging in that international travel, and no evidence in

the record indicates that Relators acted in bad faith, we now make permanent our

preliminary writ of prohibition.

Background

Andrew Russek (“Mr. Russek”), an Assistant Public Defender in the Area 25

Trial Office, was assigned to represent Charles Allee in his criminal case. Mr. Russek

filed a motion asserting his client’s right to a speedy trial, and the trial was scheduled for

January 21, 2021.

In December 2020, with the approval of his supervisor, District Defender

Matthew Crowell (“Mr. Crowell”), Mr. Russek planned to vacation in Mexico from

January 10, 2021, to January 18, 2021. The prosecutor for the State, Kevin Hillman

(“Mr. Hillman”), was aware that Mr. Russek was going to Mexico and would be

returning shortly before trial. The parties had scheduled depositions for Tuesday, January

19, 2021, two days before the trial was scheduled to begin.

When a legal dispute arose with respect to those depositions, Mr. Hillman

contacted Respondent on Friday, January 15th, and asked him if he would have time to

conduct a Webex hearing on the parties’ dispute. Mr. Hillman noted that Mr. Russek was

in Mexico on vacation but would return soon. Respondent replied by email to Mr.

Hillman and Mr. Russek on Monday, January 18th, writing:

As Mr. Russek was recently in Mexico, a hotspot for Covid19 according to the [Center for Disease Control (“CDC”)], it is my opinion that, according to the CDC travel guidelines, he must quarantine for 7 days with a negative test or 10 days without a test upon returning to the United States.

2 I do not expect to have a jury trial or any appearance in court in person by Mr. Russek until compliance with the CDC guidelines is demonstrated to me.

If you [Mr. Hillman] or Mr. Russek has a different opinion, I am available at 8:30 or 1:30 tomorrow to discuss by Webex.

Mr. Hillman responded that day by informing Respondent and Mr. Russek that his

complaining witness, the victim in the case, had already traveled to Missouri from

Maryland for the trial.

The court held a Webex hearing on the Covid issue on Tuesday, January 19th.

During the hearing, Mr. Russek informed Respondent that he had returned from Mexico

the previous day. Mr. Russek said that he had not been tested for COVID, and he had not

quarantined. He said his understanding was that the CDC guidelines requiring those who

had traveled to Mexico to quarantine for at least 7 days upon return did not go into effect

until January 25th, a date after the trial would be over.

Even though Mr. Hillman and Mr. Russek announced that they were ready to try

the case as scheduled, Respondent cancelled the trial setting, stating that he was “not

gonna have a trial under these circumstances.” He suggested to Mr. Hillman that he

could request other relief, and the parties could have a separate hearing on that request.

On January 20th, Respondent entered a written order continuing the trial on his

own motion, and it stated that

[t]he Court, being advised that [Mr. Russek] has recently traveled to Cancun, Mexico, and has not complied with the CDC guidelines for travel to Mexico since his return, and being advised that a positive test for Covid-19 has been suffered by an employee of the Pulaski County Prosecuting Attorney and other employees who work in the Pulaski County Courthouse, hereby orders the jury trial of this matter canceled for January 21, 2021.

3 Mr. Hillman then filed a motion seeking sanctions (“Motion for Sanctions”) that

alleged the State was fully prepared to go to trial, and that Mr. Russek had “[a] week

before trial, . . . announced that he was travel[]ing to Cancun, Mexico for a vacation from

January 15-19, 2021.” The Motion for Sanctions claimed that Administrative Order

2020-01 of the 25th Judicial Circuit had been in place since March 2020, and it prohibited

anyone who had traveled to a foreign country within the last 14 days from entering into a

courthouse in that circuit. It also claimed that CDC guidelines recommended that anyone

traveling internationally by air get tested for COVID-19 and quarantine for at least 7 days

upon their return. The Motion for Sanctions stated that the complaining witness had

traveled by car, 982 miles one way, in order to be present for trial. The Motion requested

that “[t]he Office of the Public Defender” be ordered to pay the victim’s mileage at the

rate of $0.37 per mile, which totaled $726.68.

Respondent granted the Motion for Sanctions and ordered that the amount

requested be “deposited with the Pulaski County Circuit Clerk by the Missouri State

Public Defender, Area 25 Trial Office within 30 days of this Order.”

Standard of Review

We review a trial court’s decision to invoke its inherent powers to sanction for an abuse of discretion. Rea v. Moore, 74 S.W.3d 795, 799 (Mo.App.S.D.2002). The trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling “is clearly against the logic of the circumstances and is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to shock the sense of justice and indicate a lack of careful consideration.” Id. “[I]f reasonable persons can differ about the propriety of the action taken by the trial court, then it cannot be said that [it] abused its discretion.” Anglim v. Mo. Pac. R. Co., 832 S.W.2d 298, 303 (Mo. banc 1992) (internal quotation marks omitted). We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling. See id.

Hale v. Cottrell, Inc., 456 S.W.3d 481, 488 (Mo. App. W.D. 2014).

4 Analysis

While we are skeptical that a particular branch office of the Missouri Public

Defender is an appropriate entity to sanction, we need not decide that question. Relators’

first point claims that Respondent abused his discretion in imposing sanctions as “there

was no finding or evidence in the record of ‘bad faith’ by [Mr. Russek], [Mr. Crowell,] or

the Area 25 Trial Office.” That assertion has merit, and it is dispositive of Relators’

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Related

Rea v. Moore
74 S.W.3d 795 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2002)
McPherson v. U.S. Physicians Mutual Risk Retention Group
99 S.W.3d 462 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)
Anglim v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
832 S.W.2d 298 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1992)
A.J.H. ex rel. M.J.H. v. M.A.H.S.
364 S.W.3d 680 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2012)
Davis v. Wieland
557 S.W.3d 340 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)

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STATE EX REL. AREA 25 TRIAL OFFICE, and, MISSOURI STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER, Relators-Appellants v. HONORABLE KENNETH G. CLAYTON, ASSOCIATE CIRCUIT JUDGE, Respondent-Respondent, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-area-25-trial-office-and-missouri-state-public-defender-moctapp-2021.