Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
While participating as counsel in the trial of a cause the petitioner, Joe J. Fisher, was adjudged guilty of contempt committed in the presence of the court by the District Court of Jasper County, Texas. The petitioner’s client was the plaintiff in an action under the state workmen’s compensation law. The case was being tried before a jury and the parties had stipulated as to the average weekly wage of the claimant and the rate of compensation per week. The only remaining questions to be determined were as to the extent and duration of the incapacity resulting from an injury to the claimant’s foot. Seven special issúes, designed to furnish an answer to these problems and limited to them, were submitted to the jury.
Thereafter petitioner began his opening argument to the jury during which the following occurrence took place, as shown by the trial court’s order of contempt and commitment:
“Opening argument to Jury of Plaintiff’s Attorney, Joe J. Fisher
“Now, bear in mind, gentlemen, that this is what we call a specific injury. A general injury is an injury to the entire body. This is what is known as a specific injury, and it is confined to the left foot. We have specific injuries where you have injuries*157 to the eye, to your hand, and to your foot; this is an injury to the foot, to the left foot; and the law states the amount of maximum compensation which a person can receive for such an injury, that is, one hundred and twenty-five weeks. That is the most compensation Anderson Godfrey could receive, would be one hundred and twenty-five weeks, because his injury is confined to his left foot. That is all we are asking. Now, that means one hundred and twenty-five weeks times the average weekly compensation rate.
“By Mr. Cox: Your Honor please—
“By the Court: Wait a minute.
“By Mr. Cox: The jury is not concerned with the computation; it has only one series of issues. That is not before the jury.
“By the Court: That has all been agreed upon.
“By Mr. Fisher: I think it is material, Your Honor, to tell the jury what the average weekly compensation is of this claimant so they can tell where he is.
“By the Court: They are not interested in dollars and cents.
“By Mr. Fisher: They are interested to this extent—
“By the Court: Don’t argue with me. Go ahead. I will give you your exception to it.
“By Mr. Fisher: Note our exception.
“By the Court: All right.
“[By Mr. Fisher:] This negro, as I stated, can only recover one hundred and twenty-five weeks compensation, at whatever compensation the rate will figure under the law.
“By Mr. Cox: I am objecting to that discussion, Your Honor, as to what the plaintiff can recover.
*158 “By the Court: Gentlemen! Mr. Fisher, you know the rule, and I have sustained his objection.
“By Mr. Fisher: I am asking—
“By the Court: Don’t argue with me. Gentlemen, don’t give any consideration to the statement of Mr. Fisher.
“By Mr. Fisher: Note our exception. I think I have a right to explain whether it is a specific injury or general injury.
“By the Court: I will declare a mistrial if you mess with me two minutes and a half, and fine you besides.
“By Mr. Fisher: That is all right. We take exception to the conduct of the Court.
“By the Court: That is all right; I will fine you $25.00.
“By Mr. Fisher: If that will give you any satisfaction.
“By the Court: That is $50.00; that is $25.00 more. Mr. Sheriff come get it. Pay the clerk $50.00.
“By Mr. Fisher: You mean for trying to represent my client?
“By the Court: No, sir; for contempt of Court. Don’t argue with me.
“By Mr. Fisher: I am making no effort to commit contempt, but merely trying to represent the plaintiff and stating in the argument—
“By the Court: Don’t tell me. Mr. Sheriff, take him out of the courtroom. Go on out of the courtroom. I fine you three days in jail.
“By Mr. Fisher: If that will give you any satisfaction; you know you have all the advantage by you being on the bench.
“By the Court: That will be a hundred dollar fine and three days in jail. Take him out.
*159 “By Mr. Fisher: I demand a right to state my position before the audience.
“By the Court: Don’t let him stand there. Take him out.”
The sheriff held the petitioner in custody upon the verbal order of the court until an amended order in conformity with Texas law,
Historically and rationally the inherent power of courts to punish contempts in the face of the court without further proof of facts and without aid of jury is not open to question.
There must be adequate facts to support an order for contempt in the face of the court. Contrary to the contention of the petitioner the state Supreme Court evaluated the facts to decide whether there was sufficient evidence to support the judgment of the trial court and held that there was. The opinion of the Texas Supreme Court states that the court set out to review the facts “for the purpose of determining whether they constituted acts sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the court” to enter the contempt order.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Texas must be affirmed. In a case of this type the transcript of the record cannot convey to us the complete picture of the courtroom scene. It does not depict such elements of misbehavior as expression, manner of speaking, bearing, and attitude of the petitioner. Reliance must be placed upon the fairness and objectivity of the presiding judge. The occurrence must be viewed as a unit in order to appraise properly the misconduct, and the relationship of the petitioner as an officer of the court must not be lost sight of.
The state Supreme Court pointed out that its practice of submitting special issues to the jury was adopted in order to remove from the jury’s consideration the effect on the ultimate outcome of the case of their answers to questions of disputed facts.
“It was the duty and power of the trial judge in the trial of the compensation suit to determine the type, manner and character of the argument before the jury. Of course his rulings thereon were subject to review in the appellate courts, but he has the power to make them whether right or wrong. If they are erroneous the injured party has the plain, simple and adequate remedy of appeal. It was thus the duty of counsel to abide by his decisions even if erroneous; and if any rights of his clients were violated the remedy was by exception and appeal. Any other procedure would result in mockery of our trial courts and would destroy every concept of orderly process in the administration of justice.”8
This judgment of the Supreme Court turned on their understanding of Texas law and practice. We see nothing in their opinion or conclusion that indicates any disregard of petitioner’s rights. The conduct of a judge
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Texas accordingly is
Affirmed.
The power to punish for contempt committed in open court was recognized long ago as a means of vindicating the dignity and authority of the court. See Ex parte Terry,
Fisher’s conviction is sustained because it is said that he persisted in trying to tell the jury what the judge held to be improper. I do not so read the record. The judge sustained an objection to Fisher’s attempt to get
“By Mr. Cox: The jury is not concerned with the computation; it has only one series of issues. That is not before the jury.
“By the Court: That has all been agreed upon.
“By Mr. Fisher: I think it is material, Your Honor, to tell the jury what the average weekly compensation is of this claimant so they can tell where he is.
“By the Court: They are not interested in dollars and cents.
“By Mr. Fisher: They are interested to this extent — ■
“By the Court: Don’t argue with me. Go ahead. I will give you your exception to it.
“By Mr. Fisher: Note our exception.
“By the Court: All right.”
Fisher never again tried to get the amount of weekly compensation of the injured person into the record. He abided by the ruling of the judge. What next happened was as follows:
“By Mr. Fisher: This negro, as I stated, can only recover one hundred and twenty-five weeks compensation, at whatever compensation the rate will figure under the law.
“By Mr. Cox: I am objecting to that discussion, Your Honor, as to what the plaintiff can recover.
“By the Court: Gentlemen! Mr. Fisher, you know the rule, and I have sustained his objection.
“By Mr. Fisher: I am asking—
“By the Court: Don’t argue with me. Gentlemen, don’t give any consideration to the statement of Mr. Fisher.
“By Mr. Fisher: Note our exception. I think I have a right to explain whether it is a specific injury or general injury.”
It is said that the statement was improper under Texas practice. But it took a ruling of the Texas Supreme Court to make it so, and even then Justice Sharp dissented. If Texas law on the point is so uncertain that the highest judges of the State disagree as to what is the permissible practice, is a lawyer to be laid by the heels for pressing the point? Yet it was for pressing the point of law on which the Supreme Court of Texas divided that Fisher was held in contempt.
It is said, however, that such elements of misbehavior as expression, manner of speaking, bearing, and attitude of Fisher may have given the words a contemptuous flavor that the cold record does not reveal. I do not think freedom of speech should be so readily sacrificed, even in a courtroom. If that were the offense, it is not too much to ask that the judge make it the ground of his ruling. Certainly the judge did not purport to fine and imprison Fisher for the manner of making the objection, for the tone of his voice, or for his facial expression. The dispute was merely over the bounds of permissible comment before a jury. Fisher having been stopped at one point tried another strategy. He was
There is for me only one fair inference from the record— that the judge picked a quarrel with this lawyer and used his high position to wreak vengeance on him. It is shown, I think, by the commencement of the critical colloquy:
“By the Court: I will declare a mistrial if you mess with me two minutes and a half, and fine you besides.
“By Mr. Fisher: That is all right. We take exception to the conduct of the Court.
“By the Court: That is all right; I will fine you $25.00.”
This lawyer was the victim of the pique and hotheadedness of a judicial officer who is supposed to have a serenity that keeps him above the battle and the crowd. That is as much a perversion of the judicial function as if the judge who sat had a pecuniary interest in the outcome of the litigation. Tumey v. Ohio,
Notes
Ex parte Kearby, 35 Tex. Crim. Rep. 531,
4 Bl. Comm. 286; Ex parte Terry,
Ex parte Terry,
See also Cooke v. United States, supra, 534; Ex parte Hudgings,
This rule is well established in Texas. Ex parte Testard,
Clark v. United. States,
Ex parte Fisher,
Rule 269, Vernon’s Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; Ramirez v. Acker,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Petitioner told the jury three times, without objection, that his client was entitled to compensation for one hundred and twenty-five weeks. He then began discussion of the “average weekly compensation,” and the Court told him that the jury was “not interested in dollars and cents.” To this ruling he excepted, believing that the amount of possible recovery should be considered by the jury. He then repeated what he had said three times before, without objection, on a different subject, and was told that he should not “mess with” the court. Quite naturally, he objected to the court’s conduct; Texas
A trial judge must be given wide latitude in punishing interference with the orderly administration of justice. See Ex parte Terry,
An appellate court can rarely correct abuse such as this. “If the judge intends to be unfair, the trial will be a farce no matter how many detailed rules we provide for him.” McElroy, Some Observations Concerning the Discretions Reposed in Trial Judges by the American Law Institute’s Code of Evidence, Model Code of Evidence, pp. 356, 358. A printed record cannot reveal
I would reverse the judgment.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Without recounting further than is done in other opinions the facts of this unfortunate episode, I have concluded that the record here discloses answers or remarks made by petitioner to the court which, in some instances, may well have justified punishment for contempt, but for one circumstance. That is, I regret to say, the conclusion to which I have been forced from the record as a whole that in the course of the colloquy and especially in the rapid succession of fines, commitment to jail, and order for removal from the courtroom, as well as in the unjudicial language employed by the judge, the trial court acted in the heat of temper and not with that calm control which the fair administration of judicial office commands under all circumstances.
Lawyers owe a large, but not an obsequious, duty of respect to the court in its presence. But their breach of this obligation in no case justifies correction by an act or acts from the bench intemperate in character, over
