In re Judicial Ethics Op. 2020-3
Decision Date | 02 June 2020 |
Docket Number | 2020-3 |
Citation | 481 P.3d 913 |
Parties | JUDICIAL ETHICS OPINION 2020-3 |
Court | Oklahoma Judicial Ethics Advisory Panel |
¶1. QUESTION(S)
Is an employee of a District Judge (Secretary Bailiff) who files as a candidate for a county office (Court Clerk) in the same county where the Judge is located subject to any portion of the Code of Judicial Conduct as a candidate? Is there any conflict in the employee performing duties in a non partisan judicial office while the employee is a candidate for a partisan office?
Yes to both questions.
Although the candidate in this question is not a candidate in a judicial election, a prior decision of this panel is clear that a Judge's employee "may reasonably be required to forfeit certain rights and privileges; again, to help insure the independence and impartiality of the judiciary and the perception thereof." 2010 OK JUD ETH 3, ¶ 7, 233 P.3d 815. The opinion goes on to address specifically a race for the office of Court Clerk as follows:
The opinion is therefore clear that a District Judge's employee should not be a candidate for a partisan political office, especially an office such as Court Clerk, which has daily interaction with the Judges office.
The implied endorsement of a District Judge whose Secretary Bailiff is a candidate for Court Clerk in the County where the Judge presides, is in contravention to Canon 5 (A) (1) (b) (c), which "prohibits a Judge from endorsing or opposing another candidate for public office." Indirectly this makes the Secretary Bailiff under these facts subject to the Code of Judicial Conduct, and absolutely creates a conflict in the employee/ (Secretary Bailiff) performing duties in a non partisan judicial office while the employee is a candidate for a partisan office.
It is not clear from the facts presented whether or not the Judge in question is the Presiding Judge of the Judicial Administrative District. If the Judge in question is not the Presiding Judge, then these facts may present a "chain of command" issue pursuant to Rules on Administration of Courts, Rule 2, since administration and supervisory control over the Secretary Bailiff rests with the Presiding Judge. Canon 5 (A) (1) (b) (c) would apply to the Presiding Judge as well.
Attached for reference is 2010 OK JUD ETH 3
/s/ Honorable Edward C. Cunningham
/s/ Honorable Bill Hetherington
/s/ Honorable April Sellers White
/s/ Honorable Allen McCall
/s/ Honorable Jerry Bass
Attachment
JUDICIAL ETHICS ADVISORY PANEL
¶1 Question(s): May a judge's bailiff endorse, participate in the campaign of or otherwise support a candidate for political office when the candidate is a close personal friend of the bailiff?
¶3 Facts: The candidate in this particular case is a candidate for court clerk who is elected in a partisan political race. The position is in the county in which the judge sits.
¶4 Discussion: Canon 5 (A)(1)(b)(c) prohibits a judge from endorsing or opposing another candidate for public office.
¶5 Canon 5 1. A. (3)(b) provides a judge or judicial candidate "should prohibit employees and officials who serve at the pleasure of the candidate from doing on the candidates behalf what the candidate is prohibited from doing" under the Section of this Canon.
¶6 Judges and judicial candidates are prohibited by statute from engaging in partisan political activities even to the extent that they are prohibited from publicly stating their partisan political affiliation. These are rights and privileges that judges and judicial candidates are required to give up if they seek to serve as a judge which is a non-partisan public office in our state. The reason behind this prohibition is to ensure the independence of the judiciary and the public perception of impartiality.
¶7 The question becomes "May a judge require an employee to abide by the same standards?" The Code 5 1. A. (3)(a) provides that a judge or judicial candidate should encourage members of the...
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