ELWOOD S. MCKENNEY vs. COMMISSION ON JUDICIAL CONDUCT.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
March 28, 1980
380 Mass. 263
Suffolk. December 7, 1979. — March 28, 1980. Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., QUIRICO, BRAUCHER, WILKINS, LIACOS, & ABRAMS, JJ.
A single justice of this court did not abuse his discretion in declining to review the sufficiency of an amended complaint filed with the Commission on Judicial Conduct where no extraordinary justification was shown which would warrant interlocutory review of the commission‘s actions. [265-269] LIACOS, J., concurring.
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk on May 14, 1979.
The case was heard by Kaplan, J.
Thomas J. May for the plaintiff.
Terry Jean Seligmann, Assistant Attorney General, for the defendant.
BY THE COURT. The plaintiff, Elwood S. McKenney, First Justice of the District Court Department, Roxbury Division, appeals from a single justice‘s denial of his application for further declaratory relief.2 As was the case on a
The allegations of the amended complaint are grounded entirely on the same television broadcast that formed the basis of the original complaint. The complaint again consists of a short, signed statement attached to a transcript of that broadcast, and the complainant (a commission member) again acknowledges that she has no personal knowledge of the truth or falsity of the matters alleged. The new complaint, however, in contrast to the original, does set forth ten separate allegations.4
After hearing, the single justice granted the commission‘s motion to dismiss the plaintiff‘s petition on the basis that there was “no occasion for departing from the rule excluding premature court review of administrative activity.” At the time of his decision, the single justice did not know that the commission had, two days previously, denied the plaintiff‘s motion to dismiss the complaint and had begun an investigation. On the basis of these actions by the commission, the plaintiff filed with the single justice a motion for reconsideration, arguing that his petition for further declaratory relief was the only available method for testing the sufficiency of the amended complaint. After hearing, this motion was denied. We affirm.
Denial of interlocutory relief. In our prior decision, while concluding that we should reach the merits of the plaintiff‘s request for declaratory relief, we had occasion to “stress . . . the extraordinary nature of this [previous] proceeding,” and to note that we would “look with disfavor on attempted interlocutory review of commission actions in the future.” McKenney v. Commission on Judicial Conduct, 377 Mass. 790, 794 (1979). We can find no basis on the record before us for concluding that the single justice abused his discretion by adhering to this general rule. See generally Assuncao‘s Case, 372 Mass. 6, 8-9 (1977); East Chop Tennis Club v. Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, 364 Mass. 444, 450-453 (1973).
We departed from our general policy in the prior case because the issue was one of first impression, presenting an
The rationale against interlocutory review, furthermore, is “particularly cogent” when a proceeding is still in “its earliest stage[s],” Assuncao‘s Case, 372 Mass. 6, 9 (1977), and the party seeking declaratory relief has access to additional administrative procedures which may correct or render moot any alleged error. The plaintiff‘s challenge to the sufficiency of the complaint in this case strikes at the earliest possible stages of the commission‘s procedures. “The immediate consequence of the filing of a complaint [accepted as valid by the commission] can be no more than the initiation of a confidential investigation by the commission.” McKenney v. Commission on Judicial Conduct, 377 Mass. 790, 800 (1979). “It must be remembered that the question whether to conduct an investigation is a preliminary one, and that a new specification of charges must be made before the commission may proceed to a hearing.” Id. at 802. Any error the commission may have made in evaluating the adequacy of the amended complaint would be rendered harmless should the commission‘s investigation lead it to dismiss the complaint‘s allegation as groundless.
In sum, the requirement that a party exhaust his administrative remedies prior to seeking judicial relief reflects “a sound principle of law and jurisprudence aimed at preserv-
We add that the statutory prohibition against the commission‘s conducting any “investigation” before the judge has had the opportunity to review the complaint and respond in writing8 does not preclude the commission‘s communicating with those persons who make allegations of judicial misconduct in either the electronic or print media. Broad and unsubstantiated allegations, no matter how sensational, do not become a sufficient basis for a complaint before the commission merely by being published or broadcast. Where such reports rely on specific allegations made
Finally, the plaintiff asks not only that we declare the amended complaint invalid but that we also bar all “further proceedings in this matter.” It cannot be assumed, however, that termination of the commission‘s investigation would necessarily put an end to all proceedings in this matter. “If the commission cannot or does not proceed with the investigation of certain of [the allegations of misconduct], [this court] could undertake to do so in the exercise of our constitutional and statutory obligations of general superintendence of the courts of the Commonwealth.” McKenney v. Commission on Judicial Conduct, 377 Mass. 790, 803 (1979). We have already indicated that “[i]n our judgment, at least certain of the matters referred to in the [first] complaint clearly warrant serious consideration for investigation.” Id.
The plaintiff has not asked us to undertake the investigation of the charges against him under our general superintendence powers; were he to do so, we would give his request serious consideration. At a minimum, in view of the fact that the commission‘s proceedings have not been stayed since the date of our prior rescript, we think the commission should inform us of the progress of its investigation. Within fourteen days of the date of this rescript, the commission should report to this court and to the plaintiff the expected date by which it will have completed its investigation and determined whether or not “sufficient cause exists . . . that a hearing is warranted.”
The order of the single justice denying the plaintiff‘s “Petition for Contempt or Other Further Relief” is affirmed.
So ordered.
LIACOS, J. (concurring). The genesis of this case is a television broadcast on January 11, 1979, which made allegations of misconduct against the plaintiff judge and two other judges. More than one year later the matter appears to remain stalled in its preliminary stage. The legal skirmishing which has ensued since the original complaint (based solely on that telecast) was filed on January 30, 1979, is partially described in the opinion of the court and in our previous opinion, McKenney v. Commission on Judicial Conduct, 377 Mass. 790 (1979) (McKenney I). The court, in McKenney I, granted declaratory relief but expressed the view that it looked “with disfavor on attempted interlocutory review of commission action in the future.” McKenney I, supra at 794. I joined in that view because I felt, as the present opinion states, that the interests of both the judge
To accept the validity of such policy considerations, however, does not warrant a failure to speak to some of the significant issues which are presented by this appeal. The plaintiff has a substantial stake here, and he is entitled to insist that the commission adhere to the law. Additionally, the issue he persists in raising is, contrary to what the court indicates today, one of significance to the public, and to the judicial system. It is an issue which the parties have argued. It deserves to be addressed, and the commission clearly requires further guidance. Wellesley College v. Attorney Gen., 313 Mass. 722, 731 (1943). It appears to me that the delay in this case is not attributable to frivolous claims for interlocutory relief. Rather, much of the delay seems attributable to what I view as a certain obstinacy on the part of at least some members of the Commission on Judicial Conduct (commission).
The court relies on Assuncao‘s Case, 372 Mass. 6 (1977); East Chop Tennis Club v. Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, 364 Mass. 444 (1973), and McKenney I, as the basis of its opinion that this case involves an interlocutory appeal which properly was dismissed by the single justice. The court states, “The rationale against interlocutory review, furthermore, is ‘particularly cogent’ when a proceeding is still in ‘its earliest stage[s]’ . . . and the party seeking declaratory relief has access to additional administrative procedures which may correct or render moot any alleged error.” Supra at 266.1 Later, the court states: “In
In relying on Assuncao and East Chop, the court overlooks a number of fundamental points. First, although the court‘s opinion treats the commission as an “agency” and refers to “administrative activity,” supra at 265, the commission is not an “agency” as was the member of the Industrial Accident Board in Assuncao or the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination in East Chop. The commission, created by
McKenney I, relied on by the court here, thus must be viewed not as holding that the exhaustion doctrine applies to this commission as a matter of law, but simply that the court, using that doctrine as an analogy, will refrain as a matter of policy from allowing interlocutory appeals which will defeat the purpose of efficient, fair, and expeditious disposition of matters by the commission under its legislative mandate. Yet, the court in applying the exhaustion doctrine here in rigid and formulaic fashion declines to recognize that even where an administrative agency is involved, interlocutory appeals will be heard in various circumstances. East Chop Tennis Club, supra at 451. For exam-
I now express my views on the validity of the plaintiff‘s claim. The commission is entirely a creature of statute.
The plaintiff argues that the second complaint fails on both requirements. As to the question of specificity,7 it is my view that the complaint satisfies the minimum requirements set forth in McKenney I. But the complaint must fall, nevertheless, if it lacks sufficient indicia of reliability. The present complaint is defective in this regard. In McKenney I, we listed some of the factors to be utilized to determine whether a complaint had sufficient reliability to warrant an investigation. We stated:
“Among those factors are: the extent to which the allegations of misconduct are based on the personal knowledge of the complaint [8] or on reliable sources described by the complaint; [9] the extent to which any of the allegations are
Of the six factors listed by the court, only one appears to have been met, and that one factor is marginally satisfied. I conclude, therefore, that this complaint, like the first signed by Carolyn K. Dik, is invalid as a basis for proceedings under
The plaintiff would have us conclude our inquiry at this point. The prayers of his petition ask that we should bar “further proceedings.” In seeking to quash these proceedings, the plaintiff overlooks a number of salient points. The first is that this court has stated: “In our judgment, at least certain of the matters referred to in the [first] complaint clearly warrant serious consideration for investigation.” McKenney I, supra at 801. Second, this court, pursuant to the operating rules of the commission and at the commission‘s request, on July 2, 1979, appointed special counsel to conduct such an investigation.15 Third, the commission,
