State Ex Rel. Garlovsky v. Eastmoore

393 So. 2d 567
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 14, 1981
Docket79-289
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 393 So. 2d 567 (State Ex Rel. Garlovsky v. Eastmoore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Garlovsky v. Eastmoore, 393 So. 2d 567 (Fla. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

393 So.2d 567 (1981)

STATE ex rel. Joseph T. GARLOVSKY, Appellant,
v.
The Honorable E.L. EASTMOORE, Circuit Judge, Appellee.

No. 79-289.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

January 14, 1981.
Rehearing Denied February 13, 1981.

Dan R. Warren of Judge & Warren, Daytona Beach, for appellant.

Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Gregory C. Smith, Asst. Atty. Gen., Daytona Beach, for appellee.

COBB, Judge.

During the course of a criminal prosecution in the circuit court, the appellant, Joseph Garlovsky, who was defense counsel, was adjudicated guilty of direct criminal contempt pursuant to Rule 3.830, Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure,[1] by the trial judge, the Honorable E.L. Eastmoore. The appellant was fined $100.00 or, in default thereof, he was to be confined in the county *568 jail for 24 hours. Execution of sentence was stayed pending disposition of this timely appeal.

Garlovsky was representing one Marian McCrae in two separate trials in Putnam County. McCrae had been charged by information in Case No. 327 and in Case No. 328 with selling cannabis to an undercover agent, Harold Lee. In a pre-trial deposition held on September 6, 1979, Lee stated that he had never sworn under oath before any state attorney, assistant state attorney, or notary public concerning the events alleged in the two pending informations against McCrae prior to the filing of said informations on May 14, 1979.

On September 7, 1979, the state filed an amended information based on the then sworn testimony of Lee given at the deposition, which was attended by the assistant state attorney prosecuting the case. The amended information was identical to the first information which had been filed in May. At a hearing held immediately prior to trial on September 10, 1979, in Case No. 327, the trial court denied the defense motion to dismiss, holding that the defect had been cured and that there was no prejudice to the defense which would necessitate a continuance.

During the trial of Case No. 327 on September 10, 1979, attorney Garlovsky, in cross-examination of Lee, inquired as to whether he had appeared in person before the assistant state attorney and sworn to the charges against McCrae. The state's objection of irrelevancy was sustained by the court. Garlovsky attempted to make a further statement after the court's ruling, and got as far as saying, "Your Honor, I would introduce —" when he was cut off by the court's admonition that the objection had been sustained. Garlovsky, in the face of the prior rulings, persisted. The next question was: "Did you ever appear before any notary ... and swear to the facts that you are testifying here today?" The state again objected, and the objection again was sustained.

At the close of the state's evidence in Case No. 327, defense counsel again raised the point regarding the failure of the state to have Lee's sworn testimony prior to filing of the original information, and again received an adverse ruling. Thereafter, the defendant was convicted.

On September 26, 1979, a pre-trial hearing was held in Case No. 328. This followed the filing of an amended information in the case on September 21, setting forth the identical charge as in the original information filed in May. At the hearing, attorney Garlovsky moved ore tenus to dismiss on the same grounds he had pursued in Case No. 327, relating to the state's belated compliance with Rule 3.140(g), Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure.[2] It was Garlovsky's contention that the originally defective information could not be cured by amendment because of constitutional proscriptions. The trial court advised defense counsel: "I'll treat your motion as filed and deny it just as I did in the other case. The Court does not agree with your view."

Case No. 328 proceeded to trial on October 10, 1979. After completion of jury selection, defense counsel renewed his pre-trial motion to dismiss based on the allegedly defective information, and the trial court against denied the motion. At this point, a portentous colloquy ensued between the attorney and the trial judge:

MR. GARLOVSKY: Thank you, Your Honor. I have one final statement, and that is our personal relationship.
In the last trial I stated that I felt that — well, I moved to disqualify, and I suggest at this time not to waive that, that you disqualify yourself in this case.
*569 And I feel, Your Honor, that maybe our relationship has reached a point — you know, you have told me on many times I've bored you and bored the jury. You called me aside at side-bar when I feel I'm only making legitimate objections. I was not interfering with the processes of the jury or the Court. That you chastise me on the form of my questions where there were no objections.
THE COURT: I did what, sir?
MR. GARLOVSKY: You chastised me.
THE COURT: I did not chastise you, sir. I directed you to frame your questions in a certain manner. There is a great deal of difference, Mr. Garlovsky, between that and chastisement.
MR. GARLOVSKY: Judge, I feel because you're a stern task-master in your own courtroom, that the stern manner —
THE COURT: That adjective is yours, not mine.
MR. GARLOVSKY: Okay. Well, with the manner in which you, I would say, conduct the trial in this cause, that you have a manner in speaking to me that is different than speaking to the State Attorney.
I may have offended you, and I feel sorry about that because I feel it's an honor to come to Putnam County and try cases here. But I feel that our —
THE COURT: Mr. Garlovsky, let me hasten to assure you, sir, that this Court welcomes you to come to Putnam County or any other courtroom over which I preside as a jurist.
You have not offended me in that it would lead to any prejudice towards your client.
I will assure you I will not do or say anything in the presence of the jury that will do anything but engender a sense of fairness in the trial.
Now, you do have, however, a rather unfortunate tendency which is that even after the Court has ruled you are inclined to want to speak to the same subject.
You're inclined not to phrase your questions in the way that the Court directs.
In those events, I assure you, sir, I will speak sharply to you because you will follow the directives of this Court in the conduct of these proceedings.
Once the Judge has ruled, whether it be a slow ruling or whether it be a quick ruling, then there is absolutely no point in arguing to the Court or asking the Court to recede from its ruling.
But all attorneys, as officers of the Court, are bound to follow the directives of the Court in the conduct of the proceedings.
If the Judge is wrong, there is an Appellate Court to tell him so, and they have on occasion told me that I was wrong.
But the procedure that we use in running this courtroom is the procedure that we normally use, it's the procedure we'll use in this case, and as far as I know will be the procedure we'll continue to use.
You're welcome to come here. You have not offended me. If you do, you'll find out about it.
Your motion or suggestion for disqualification is denied.

The next day, Garlovsky

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Bluebook (online)
393 So. 2d 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-garlovsky-v-eastmoore-fladistctapp-1981.