Thursday, May 1, 2008

NY's Chief Judge Denies Judicial Work "Slowdown"

NY's Chief Judge Denies Judicial Work "Slowdown" Over Salaries
The New York Law Journal by Vesselin Mitev and Daniel Wise - April 30, 2008

Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye wrote Governor David A. Paterson yesterday to assure him that reports of judicial "slowdown" were "without basis." In addition, the court system's Advisory Committee on Judicial Ethics issued an opinion Monday determining that Chief Judge Kaye's recent lawsuit to compel an increase in judicial salaries does not require judges to recuse themselves, but they may do so as a matter of individual conscience. On Monday, Mr. Paterson cautioned the state's judges against engaging in any tactic that would slow litigation in order to press their case for a raise. A day earlier The New York Post had reported that increasing numbers of judges, most of them upstate, were refusing to hear cases where law firms with state legislators as members are appearing before them.

In her letter to Mr. Paterson yesterday, Chief Judge Kaye wrote, "while some judges have individually chosen to recuse themselves from matters in which legislators or their firms appeared before them, there has not been - nor will there be - an adverse impact on litigants." Meanwhile, a Long Island judge who was instrumental in bringing the first lawsuit to force a pay raise recused himself Monday from a matter where one of the parties was represented by a law firm that has two legislators as members. Steven Schlesinger, the managing partner of the firm with the two legislators, Jaspan Schlesinger Hoffman, said yesterday that statewide about 20 judges had recused themselves from cases involving his firm in the last three months.

Brooklyn Justice Arthur Schack, who is a plaintiff in the first pay-raise case, Maron v. Silver, 06-021984, said that he was unaware of any Brooklyn judges recusing themselves. Justice Schack himself has recused from several cases in which firms employing legislators appeared before him on grounds that he is a litigant in the pay raise case. A Bronx judge, who asked not to be identified, and a court official in the Fifth Judicial District, which includes Syracuse, said he was unaware of any recusals within their areas. The New York Post reported that six upstate judges have recused themselves from cases where legislators' law firms are appearing. On Sunday, the Times Herald Record also reported that a County Court judge in Orange County is considering recusing himself from all cases involving a firm that was founded by a state senator who no longer is a member but continues to advise the firm.

Advisory Ethical Opinion

The latest opinion from the ethics advisory committee was requested by four judges who wanted to know if Chief Judge Kaye's filing of a lawsuit on April 10 required judges to recuse themselves from cases involving lawmakers and their firms. The committee concluded that the lawsuit does not require recusal, but also stated that judges must step aside if they feel they cannot be fair.

The committee concluded that the filing of a lawsuit, with the chief judge and the unified court system as plaintiffs, is "too remote a factor, in and of itself, to reasonably call into question a judge's impartiality" with respect to cases where legislators or their firms are appearing. The committee explained that since individual judges are not parties to Kaye v. Silver, they have "the same financial interest in the outcome of the lawsuit" as they would have "in the outcome of ordinary legislative debates about judicial pay. Thus, the nature of this particular financial interest is not, standing alone, a sufficient factor to alter the very distant relationship between the individual State legislators and individual State-paid judges." The committee's opinion, No. 08-76, went on to say, however, that if a judge after "searching his/her personal conscience" concludes that either the controversy over judicial pay or the pending pay-raise lawsuit raises "genuine doubts" regarding the ability to be fair, recusal is mandatory.

The opinion about the circumstances of a mandatory recusal mirror a conclusion the panel reached in Opinion 07-190 which it issued on Dec. 6, 2007, when a single judge asked whether recusal was required if the judge could not be fair because of the "current salary adjustment crisis." In yet an earlier opinion, which was issued in response to an inquiry from then-Chief Administrative Judge Jonathan Lippman, now Presiding Justice of the First Department, the committee concluded that judges should not recuse themselves solely because of the "long-standing issue of judicial salary increases pending before the Legislature." The committee wrote in No. 07-25, that "in our opinion," the sole issue of the pay dispute is not "a circumstance which, in and of itself, gives rise to the conclusion that the judge's impartiality might be reasonably questioned" when state legislators or their firms appear in a case.

Long Island Recusal

The judge who recused himself in the Long Island suit, which involves the developer Donald Trump, was Supreme Court Justice Leonard B. Austin. Justice Austin was asked to recuse himself by Ronald J. Rosenberg of Rosenberg Calica & Birney in Garden City, who was seeking to intervene in the case to block Mr. Trump from proceeding with plans to put a restaurant on the ocean-front property. In his five-page decision in Trump on the Ocean, LLC v. Cortes-Vasquez, 5329-08, Justice Austin, who sits in Nassau County, stated that he had been an "active participant," but not a party, in the Maron case, the first of what has now become three cases by judges seeking to compel a pay raise. The decision will be published Monday.

In explaining his rationale for recusal, Justice Austin wrote, "The integrity of the judicial process requires that all attorneys and their clients believe that the decisions of this or any other court are based upon the facts and the law and not some issue in an unrelated matter which can be perceived as affecting the Court's impartiality or sense of fairness." Justice Austin lives in the same condominium community as Mr. Trump's partner, caterer Steven M. Carl. Two members of the firm representing Mr. Trump, Jaspan Schlesinger, are state legislators: Senator Craig M. Johnson and Assemblyman Marc S. Alessi, both Democrats. The case before Justice Austin involves a bid by Mr. Trump to put a restaurant on oceanfront state property on Jones Beach.

6 comments:

  1. It is incredible that the judiciary is so united on recusals regarding their pay raise, when they think nothing of allowing and actually retreiving from another judge, a case where the attorney he worked with for several years was arrested on a DWI..and of course was adjudicated by THIS judge to an impaired..no fine.. which is given to all defendants, including those of the PD not incarcerated , but a CD!
    This is also true with cases of attorneys where the relatives are also friends of the judge and his family and are blatantly "taken" care of by this judge without a blink for recuasal.
    Stories like this go on daily..but all of a sudden they "all" agree that "ethics" must be their conduct of choice... because of money..sounds like CORRUPTON to me!

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  2. Remember, it's the bad lawyers and bad judges that make the honest, hard working ones also look bad.

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  3. 'Chief' Judge Kaye?!? She couldn't be the 'chief" waiter at a hog dog stand. History will remember this idiot as presiding over the most widespread public corruption ever in any state in the US.

    The biggest thing she has 'denied' is her own incompetence, and complicity by her inaction and silence, in the corruption.

    Get rid of her now, so that law and order may be restored in New York.

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  4. the NY Post said there was an email that listed the "Black-Listed" attorneys/firms. They said they had a copy. So where is the Dept. of Justice et al., these Judges, including the Chief Judge Kaye should all be arrested. They are violating the law in my opinion. Doesn't anyone see that!

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  5. Trump losses enough money.
    He gets things done, he is not paid by the hour, he wants thinks done maybe we get lucky and he sheds some light on judges that should be removed from thier job if they refuse to thier job.
    It just proves that judges should be prosectuted, held accountable for fraud for refusing to do thier job because they want a raise.
    They do not like the pay quit and go home like erverone else.

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  6. this fat bitch kaye talks out of both sides of her fat face. she should be locked up, put her in jail.

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