830 A.2d 1205 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 2002
The plaintiff, attorney Nancy Burton, appeals from the decision of the defendant, the statewide grievance committee (grievance committee), reprimanding her for violating rule 8.2 (a) of the Rules of Professional Conduct. The rule provides that "[a] lawyer shall not make a statement that the lawyer knows to be false or with reckless disregard as to its truth or falsity concerning the qualifications or integrity of a judge, an adjudicatory officer or public legal officer, or of a candidate for election or appointment to judicial or legal office." For the reasons stated herein, the court dismisses the appeal.
In the meantime, the plaintiff initiated a second round of proceedings. The plaintiff sent another letter to the justices of the Supreme Court in September, 1997, this time alleging that Judges Moraghan and Mihalakos had "testif[ied] falsely against [her] under oath" at the first grievance hearing. Contemporaneously, the plaintiff provided a copy of the letter to the Danbury News-Times, which newspaper ran an article quoting the same accusation of false testimony. The plaintiff's letter to the Supreme Court and the newspaper article form the basis of the second and present grievance against the plaintiff, based on a referral to the grievance committee by Judge Moraghan.
The reviewing committee of the grievance committee conducted hearings on the present grievance over six days between August, 1998, and August, 1999. The reviewing committee issued a proposed decision on July 28, 2000. Two members of the reviewing committee recommended that the plaintiff be reprimanded for having violated rule 8.2 (a) in making the September, 1997 statements. The third member of the reviewing committee recommended that the plaintiff be presented to the Superior Court for disciplinary action. On September 22, 2000, the grievance committee affirmed the proposed decision of the majority of the reviewing committee and reprimanded the plaintiff. This appeal followed.
Our courts have stated: "[I]n reviewing a decision of the statewide grievance committee to issue a reprimand, neither the trial court nor this court takes on the function of a fact finder. Rather, our role is limited to reviewing the record to determine if the facts as found are supported by the evidence contained within the record and whether the conclusions that follow are legally and logically correct." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Somers v. Statewide Grievance Committee,
The grievance committee must prove the case by a clear and convincing standard of proof. "[C]lear and convincing proof denotes a degree of belief that lies between the belief that is required to find the truth or existence of the [fact in issue] in an ordinary civil action and the belief that is required to find guilt in a criminal prosecution. . . . [The burden] is sustained if evidence induces in the mind of the trier a reasonable belief that the facts asserted are highly probably true, that the probability that they are true or exist is substantially greater than the probability that they are false or do not exist." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Wildwood Associates, Ltd. v. Esposito,
In the grievance committee's response brief, the grievance committee argues that the plaintiff waived review of her claims by failing to raise them in the grievance proceedings and abandoned them by failing to brief them adequately. The plaintiff, thereafter, submitted a reply brief, after securing permission from the court, Wiese, J., in which she sets out the testimony in question, supplies citations to the record, cites legal authorities and provides discussion of several claims of error.
It is generally improper for an appealing party to raise issues for the first time in a reply brief. Williams Ford, Inc. v. Hartford Courant Co.,
Although the plaintiff did file a petition for certification on behalf of her client rather than an appeal as of right, and Judge Moraghan acknowledged during the second grievance proceedings that he "was mistaken," through her petition, the plaintiff unsuccessfully challenged Judge Moraghan's ruling. If anything, Judge Moraghan's characterization of the petition as an appeal was overly favorable to the plaintiff, as the Appellate Court apparently did not even deem the plaintiff's appellate challenge worthy of full review.
The third area of inquiry focuses on the testimony of Judge Mihalakos at the first grievance hearing that he "made it a habit whenever [he] had a pretrial with [the plaintiff] to do it in open court with a stenographer present so that anything she said, [the judge] said, and he said, there would be a record of it." The plaintiff interprets that testimony to mean that the judge conducted pretrials with the plaintiff on the record "on his own motion." The plaintiff then argues that this testimony, so construed, was false because in 1994, Judge Mihalakos conducted a pretrial with the plaintiff on the record at the plaintiff's request instead of on his own motion. The record reflects, however, that Judge Mihalakos did not state that he conducted pretrials involving the plaintiff on the record "on his own motion." Whether the pretrial in 1994 took place on the record as a result of the judge's own motion or as a result of the plaintiff's request, it was still Judge Mihalakos who made the final decision to conduct the hearing on the record. The court concludes that there is nothing false in his statement that he conducted pretrials involving the plaintiff on the record.
In her current grievance, the plaintiff accuses Judge Mihalakos of testifying falsely when he claimed that the plaintiff's letter accused him of "trying to line Judge Moraghan's pockets by forcing her to pay to a crony of Judge Moraghan, an attorney, moneys so that he could pay Judge Moraghan a portion of this settlement." Although Judge Mihalakos did not repeat the exact language used in the plaintiff's letter, that fact alone does not make his testimony false. At a minimum, the testimony of Judge Mihalakos was a fair characterization and summary of the plaintiff's charge that he had engaged in "judicial corruption."
The plaintiff can refer to no objective, material fact that the judges deliberately misstated. Indeed, the plaintiff's charge that judges testified falsely against her under oath amounts to puerile quibbling over phraseology. To charge that a judge has testified falsely under oath because the judge testified that the plaintiff had unsuccessfully appealed, when in fact the plaintiff's petition for certification was denied, is to engage in word games unbecoming of a member of the bar. While this one example of unsubstantiated accusations against a judge would be sufficient in itself to justify professional discipline of the plaintiff, none of her four claims of false testimony has any merit. The second claim concerning her difference of opinion with Judge Moraghan about the documentation "in support" of her letter is another such example. The claims concerning whether Judge Mihalakos conducted pretrials with the plaintiff on the record on his own motion or her motion is similarly puerile. The last claim concerning Judge Mihalakos' characterization of her statements concerning him is another such claim. The court finds from the record and a review of those claims, that there was clear and convincing evidence supporting the reviewing committee's decision to sanction the plaintiff.
Although a lawyer does not surrender her freedom of expression upon admission to the bar, once admitted, a lawyer must temper her criticisms in accordance with professional standards of conduct. United StatesDistrict Court for the Eastern District of Washington v. Sandlin,
For all the foregoing reasons, the appeal is dismissed.