The Pennsylvania Attorney General and the Philadelphia County District Attorney have filed a petition in quo warranto directed to this Court’s original jurisdiction, naming Judge Deborah S. Griffin of the Philadelphia Municipal Court as Respondent, and seeking her removal from office. The primary issue raised is whether Respondent’s felony convictions for fraudulently procuring a credit card constitute “infamous crimes” for purposes of Article II, Section 7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, which prohibits anyone convicted of such an offense from holding an office of trust or profit in the Commonwealth.
In 1984, federal prosecutors obtained a criminal indictment against Respondent, charging her with various felony counts for using a false social security number on several credit card applications. Additionally, she was charged with using a false social security number on an employment application. Respondent pled guilty to two of these counts, and the remaining ones were dismissed on the consent of the Government. The federal sentencing court suspended the imposition of Respondent’s prison sentence, placed her on concurrent three-year terms of probation for each count, and ordered her to pay restitution totaling approximately $1,200.00.
See generally Office of Disciplinary Counsel v. Griffin,
Respondent was eventually elected to serve as a judge of the Philadelphia Municipal Court, and began serving in that position in January 2002; she was retained for a second six-year term in the November 2007 municipal election. At some point during Respondent’s first term in office, the Judicial Conduct Board became aware of her felony convictions, and referred the matter to Petitioners. In its referrals, the Board expressed its view
The Judicial Conduct Board subsequently filed an application for leave to file original process and complaint in
quo warranto
with this Court. In its complaint, the Board requested that Respondent be declared unqualified for the office of Judge of the Philadelphia Municipal Court, be ousted from the office, and be permanently prohibited from occupying or holding herself out as occupying such office and from receiving any compensation, expense, reimbursement, or other emolument of office. This Court ultimately dismissed the claim, concluding that, although it had jurisdiction to address an action in
quo warranto
challenging a Philadelphia municipal court judge’s right to hold office, the Judicial Conduct Board lacked standing to pursue the matter.
See Commonwealth ex rel. Judicial Conduct Bd. v. Griffin (Griffin I),
The Commonwealth, on relation of the Petitioners herein, then initiated the present action on August 15, 2007, by filing an application for leave to file original process, which was granted, and a complaint in quo warranto. In its complaint, the Commonwealth requested a declaration that, by virtue of Respondent’s federal convictions for crimen falsi felony offenses, Article II, Section 7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution bars her from holding office as a judge of the Philadelphia Municipal Court. 3 That section provides in full:
No person hereafter convicted of embezzlement of public moneys, bribery, perjury or other infamous crime, shall be eligible to the General Assembly, or capable of holding any office of trust or profit in this Commonwealth.
Pa. Const, art. II, § 7. Since Respondent was not convicted of embezzlement, bribery, or perjury, the central issue is whether the crimes of which she was convicted were constitutionally “infamous.” Although this
quo warranto
litigation was initiated by Petitioners, Respondent bears the burden of proving her right to continue in office.
See In re Stout,
Respondent asserts, as a threshold matter, that she was never convicted of any crime because her federal prison sentence was suspended and she was instead required to serve a term of probation. However, the mere suspending of a defendant’s prison sentence does not nullify the underlying conviction. As Respondent acknowledges, the applicable federal statute clarifies that such a suspension may only occur upon the entry of a “judgment of conviction.” Brief for Respondent at 34 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3651 (repealed)). Indeed, a sentence of probation is a criminal sentence in the federal system, both as a general matter,
see
18 U.S.C. § 3563(b)(1),
Addressing the central issue in this matter, Respondent concedes that the offenses to which she pled guilty were felonies,
see
Brief for Respondent at 19, but she maintains that the proscription of Article II, Section 7 does not apply to those crimes because they did not affect the public administration of justice. She acknowledges recent precedent from this Court which she interprets as holding that any felony or
crimen falsi
offense constitutes a constitutional basis for removal from office under Article II, Section 7,
see id.
at 20 (citing
Commonwealth ex rel. Baldwin v. Richard,
In Shaver, after a thorough historical review, this Court ultimately described the category of infamous offenses as follows:
The offenses which disqualify a person to give evidence, when convicted of the same, are treason, felony, and every species of the crimen falsi — such as forgery, subornation of perjury, attaint of false verdict, and other offenses of the like description, which involve the charge of falsehood and affect the public administration of justice.
Id.,
Contrary to Respondent’s argument, in the years since
Shaver
was decided this Court has consistently adhered to an interpretation in which felonies and
crimen falsi
offenses are distinct (albeit overlapping) categories, both of which contribute to the definition of infamous crimes. This understanding is exemplified by cases as old as
Schuylkill County v. Copley,
This also comports with the understanding of the term “infamous” at common law. As one commentator has observed:
[U]nder the early common law certain crimes were called “infamous” on account of the shameful status which resulted to the person convicted of one of them. Crimes which were regarded as infamous were treason, felonies, any offense tending to pervert the administration of justice, and such crimes as came within the general scope of the term “crimen falsi” of the Roman law, such as perjury, subornation of perjury, barratry, conspiracy, swindling, cheating, and other crimes of a kindred nature.
M.C. Dransfield, Annotation, What is an Infamous Crime or One Involving Moral Turpitude Constituting Disqualification to Hold Public Office, 52 A.L.R.2 d 1514, § 2(a) (emphasis added). 5
Furthermore, that the three examples given — forgery, subornation of perjury, and attaint of false verdict — are all
crimen falsi
offenses supports the position that the qualifying language in
Shaver
(relating to “involv[ing] the charge of falsehood and affect[ing] the public administration of justice”) was only meant to apply to the last item (i.e., “every species of the
crimen falsi
”). Indeed, the logical extension of Respondent’s argument would mean that treason, as well, would only be considered infamous if it undermined the public administration of justice. Finally, the interpretation urged by Respondent would render
Shaver’s
use of the term “felony” superflu
ous, because all crimes that “involve the charge of falsehood and affect the public administration of justice” are
crimen falsi. See generally Commonwealth v. Jones,
Even were we to disregard the felony status of Respondent’s convictions, her case would not be substantially aided. There is no dispute that' her offenses were
crimen falsi
and, as the Commonwealth correctly points out, such offenses — when committed by an official ultimately imbued with the public trust — have broadly been viewed to undermine the public administration of justice. For example, in
In re Greenberg,
“The place of justice is a hallowed place; and therefore not only the bench but the foot-pace and precincts, and purprise thereof ought to be preserved without scandal and corruption ....” So spoke Sir Francis Bacon in the 16th Century. For generations before and since it has been taught that a judge must possess the confidence of the community; that he must not only be independent and honest, but, equally important, believed by all men to be independent and honest.
Greenberg,
Respondent next avers that the doctrines of laches, waiver, and estoppel bar relief in this case. Throughout her argument, she uses these three terms together as a unit and does not attempt to distinguish them substantively as separate legal doctrines. The gravamen of her claim, however, goes primarily to the issue of laches. 9 In this respect, she observes that her felony convictions have been a matter of public record since 1984, and that the Philadelphia County District Attorney’s office had actual notice of her crimes as far back as 1989, since she had worked in that office and her employment was ultimately terminated when it became known that she had failed to disclose her convictions on her application to the Pennsylvania Bar (see supra note 1). Respondent complains that she was prejudiced by Petitioners’ delay in bringing the present application for quo warranto relief, because she gave up her law practice and expended money to run for office, initially in 1999, and again in 2001. She notes that she also continued to refrain from practicing law when she sought retention in 2007, and emphasizes further that, if she is removed from the bench, she will now have to re-start a law practice “from scratch” because her client base has been transferred elsewhere.
Laches bars relief when the plaintiffs lack of due diligence in failing to timely institute an action results in prejudice to another. Because it is an affirmative defense, the burden of proof is on the defendant or respondent to demonstrate
Initially, while laches may be invoked in disciplinary proceedings for professional misconduct,
see Kindle,
We do not foreclose the possibility laches may apply in circumstances where there has been gross and unreasonable delay by the government, and allowing an action to proceed under Article II, Section 7 would be injurious to the public welfare or would manifestly subvert the interests of justice.
Accord Junior College Dist. No. 526,
As to Respondent’s proffer in particular, insofar as she asserts that it is generally more difficult to build a new law practice than to continue a successful one in existence, her argument is certainly plausible — and, indeed, it may be true that she would have been better off financially if she had been permanently precluded from running for office by an immediate and successful
quo warranto
action filed in 1999 when she first sought judicial office. The difficulty, however, is that her allegations concerning any actual prejudice that she suffered are highly generalized and conclusory. For example, Respondent has not provided this Court with any information concerning her prior law practice or the opportunity cost she incurred by serving as a judge. Without a more specific set of averments, they do not equate to the types of proof concerning prejudice that the
Richard
court delineated as a necessary component of a successful laches defense.
Cf.
Reply Brief for Commonwealth at 12 (“In any case, the office of judge is one of honor and responsibility. Many are willing to give up substantial pay in order to serve.”). To the extent that Respondent highlights that she spent energy and resources running a campaign for election as judge, moreover, the Commonwealth observes that she fully served out her first term in office, and that she has not stated how much money she expended on her retention effort. As a judge, Respondent has enjoyed the full salary and benefits attaching to that office and this Court cannot determine from the pleadings and briefs whether such compensation was significantly below that which would have been available to her in private practice.
See generally Richard,
To the degree Respondent’s waiver claim is distinct from her laches argument, it is predicated on Petitioners’ failure to bring the present action when the Judicial Conduct Board initially contacted them about the matter in 2004 and 2005. As such, unlike the laches claim it does not depend primarily upon an asserted lengthy delay in initiating legal proceedings, but rather, on Petitioners’ failure to do so at its first opportunity following their receipt of correspondence from the Board. Respondent argues that their act of deferring to the Board, rather than instituting legal proceedings themselves, manifested their
“A waiver in law is the act of intentionally relinquishing or abandoning some known right, claim or privilege. To constitute a waiver of legal right, there must be a clear, unequivocal and decisive act of the party with knowledge of such right and an evident purpose to surrender it.”
Brown v. City of Pittsburgh,
Respondent additionally contends that she cannot be removed from office under Article II, Section 7 of the Constitution because that provision does not apply to sitting judges. Although her argument is somewhat lacking in clarity, it appears to have several parts. First, she maintains that because she was retained for a second term pursuant to the retention process outlined in Article V, Section 15(b), the electorate has already decided the question of whether she should continue in office, thus rendering moot any challenge under Article II, Section 7. Respondent additionally states that the exclusive authority to remove a judge for misconduct is contained in Article V, Section 18(d) of the Pennsylvania Constitution. In this respect, she references the principle that, where two provisions of law are in irreconcilable conflict, the specific one should be construed to prevail over the general one. See generally 1 Pa.C.S. § 1933 (setting forth this principle for purposes of statutory construction). She also states that the Article V procedures must be deemed exclusive in order to maintain judicial independence.
The procedure for the electorate to decide whether to retain a judge is wholly separate from the question of
Additionally, Respondent does not explain how judicial independence from the other two branches of government is threatened by an interpretation of Article II, Section 7 in which the phrase “office of trust or profit in this Commonwealth” is understood to include a judicial office. This provision does not give any other branch of government final authority to decide whether a sitting judge may continue in office; although proceedings for removal of a judge under Article II, Section 7 may be instituted by the executive branch, such proceedings, like the present one, are judicial in nature and the final decision rests with the courts. Cfi Pa. Const, art. VI, §§ 4-5 (relating to impeachment by the House of Representatives and conviction by the Senate); id., § 6 (making the Governor and “all other civil officers” liable to impeachment); id., § 7 (relating to the removal of civil officers).
Nor does Respondent demonstrate that any irreconcilable conflict exists between Article II, Section 7 and Article V, Section 18(d). The former provision constitutes an absolute bar to holding an office of profit or trust when the individual in question has been convicted of one of the enumerated classes of offense; it applies whether or not the criminal conduct occurred while in office. As discussed, it is not a disciplinary provision designed to impose punishment for misconduct, but a standard of eligibility concerned with ensuring the good character of public officials. The latter provision, on the other hand, is concerned with discipline. Subsections (a) through (c) of Article V, Section 18 establish the Judicial Conduct Board, the Court of Judicial Discipline, and procedures for review of the decisions of that tribunal. By its terms, subsection (d), on which Respondent relies, is limited to disciplinary action brought “pursuant to this section,” i.e., Section 18. Pa. Const, art. V, § 18(d). This provision is also addressed to a broader range of factors affecting the judicial office than that covered by Article II, Section 7. In particular, the relevant subsections state as follows:
(1) A justice, judge or justice of the peace may be suspended, removed from office or otherwise disciplined for conviction of a felony; violation of section 17 of this article [pertaining to prohibited activities]; misconduct in office; neglect or failure to perform the duties of office or conduct which prejudices the proper administration of justice or brings the judicial office into disrepute, whether or not the conduct occurred while acting in a judicial capacity or is prohibited by law; or conduct in violation of a canon or rule prescribed by the Supreme Court. In the case of a mentally or physically disabled justice, judge or justice of the peace, the [C]ourt [of Judicial Discipline] may enter an order of removal from office, retirement, suspension or other limitations on the activities of the justice, judge or justice of the peace as warranted by the record....
(3) A justice, judge or justice of the peace convicted of misbehavior in office by a court, disbarred as a member of the bar of the Supreme Court or removed under this section shall forfeit automatically his judicial office and thereafter be ineligible for judicial office.
(4) A justice, judge or justice of the peace who files for nomination for or election to any public office other than ajudicial office shall forfeit automatically his judicial office.
Pa. Const, art. V, § 18(d)(1), (3), (4).
Of additional relevance is that, although subsection (d) allows for lesser punishments than removal from office for certain types of misconduct, it does not preclude a judge’s removal pursuant to any other provision of the Constitution. Accordingly, nothing in Article II, Section 7 is contrary to the substantive provisions of Article V, Section 18(d), and hence, we see no need to invoke the principle that a specific legal provision prevails over a general one when the two conflict irreconcilably.
As a final matter, Respondent states that Article II, Section 7 cannot be applied to members of the Judiciary because the provision is found within the portion of the Constitution pertaining to the Legislature. While this argument has some facial appeal, on closer examination it is unavailing. Article II of the Pennsylvania Constitution is entitled, “The Legislature,” and the first six sections deal exclusively with the two Chambers of that body — the Senate and the House of Representatives. Section 7, by contrast, applies more broadly as, by its own terms, it pertains to eligibility both to the General Assembly and to
“any
office of trust or profit in this Commonwealth” (emphasis added). Respondent does not offer any explanation of why a judicial office should not be considered an office of trust within the Commonwealth. Indeed, consistent with the sweeping nature of the text, Section 7 has been broadly applied to other offices besides Member of House or Senate.
See, e.g., Hughes,
For the reasons stated, we grant in part the relief requested by the Commonwealth. It is ordered that Respondent, Deborah Shelton Griffin, Judge of the Municipal Court of Philadelphia, be and she is hereby removed from that office. Respondent is disqualified from holding that office or any other office of trust or profit in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The Commonwealth’s request that Respondent’s name be removed from the retention ballot in the November 6, 2007 municipal election is dismissed as moot.
Notes
. In the
Office of Disciplinaiy Counsel
case, this Court suspended Respondent from practicing law in Pennsylvania for two years because.
among other things, she falsely stated in her 1988 application for admission to the Pennsylvania Bar that she had never been arrested or prosecuted for any crime.
See also Matter of Griffin,
.
Quo warranto
is the proper means by which to test title or right to public office.
See In re Bd. of Sch. Dirs. of Carroll Township,
. The Commonwealth also sought a declaration that the Article II, Section 7 bar prevented Respondent from standing for retention in the November 2007 municipal election. That request is now moot as the election has occurred and Respondent was retained and sworn in for a second term on the bench.
. Although this passage facially relates only to disqualification as a witness in court,
Shaver
determined that the classification as recited constituted the category of offenses that were constitutionally infamous for purposes of disqualification from public office pursuant to the relevant provision of the Pennsylvania Constitution then in effect— namely, Article VI, Section 9. While the present Article II, Section 7 varies somewhat in its phraseology, the portion relating to disqualification from office premised upon conviction of an infamous crime is not substantively different,
see In re Greenberg,
.
Accord People ex rel. Keenan v. McGuane,
. In Greenberg, this Court entered a per curiam order suspending the judge from all activities of his office pending the outcome of his federal appeal. Three Justices issued a memorandum opinion supporting the order in full, and three Justices reasoned that Judge Greenberg should be permitted to perform administrative tasks to help relieve severe docket congestion. All six Justices, however, agreed that the conviction was for an infamous crime under Shaver.
.
See also Richard,
. As noted, Respondent argues that the public trust was not undermined because her fraudulent activities occurred within the framework of private transactions and, hence, there was no misuse of her office or theft of public funds. She cannot prevail on this basis, however, as the underlying actions in Greenberg also affected only private parties. Further, the Commonwealth observes that the fraudulent use of a false social security number has at least some public facet, as it impairs the United States government's system for official identification of its citizens.
. In her pleadings, Respondent does allege that Petitioners waived their right to bring this action because they declined to do so when initially contacted by the Judicial Conduct Board, as related above.
See
Answer and New Matter at 4. This aspect of the procedural history is addressed below. Respondent does not, however, plead or discuss the concept of estoppel as a separate basis for relief. We note that the doctrine of laches contains an estoppel component in any event, and it is sometimes referred to as “estoppel by laches.”
See, e.g., Kindle v. State Bd. of Nurse Exam’rs,
.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Stovall v. Meneley,
The legality of a public office ... is subject to challenge by quo warranto during the entire period of incumbency. Because of the public’s interest in its government by legal public officers, there can be no waiver of quo warranto entitlement by inaction during the passage of time.
Carleton v. Civil Serv. Comm’n of City of Bridgeport,
. “Where the time delay is grossly unreasonable, the defendant's burden of proof may be proportionately eased and the ‘necessity for
specifics regarding prejudice or injury becomes less crucial.’ ”
Weinberg,
. As for the portion of this claim sounding in estoppel, the doctrine contains three elements: “1) misleading words, conduct, or silence by the party against whom the estoppel is asserted; 2) unambiguous proof of reasonable reliance upon the misrepresentation by the party asserting the estoppel; and 3) the lack of a duty to inquire on the party asserting the estoppel.”
Chester Extended Care Ctr. v. Department of Pub. Welfare,
