2011-05 (February 3, 2011)
Government Commissions; Appearance of Impropriety;
Extrajudicial Activities
Rules 1.2; 3.1; 3.2; 3.4
Issue: May a
Judicial Official serve on an ad hoc advisory
committee to an Executive Branch official in the
following circumstances: (1) the Executive Branch
official’s department or agency regularly
participates in proceedings in Connecticut’s courts,
both as a litigant and as a service provider, (2)
the advisory committee is not required by statute or
regulation and will be in existence only for a
limited period of time, and (3) while the advisory
committee is responsible for seeking input and
providing recommendations to the Executive Branch
official on how the official’s department or agency
can more effectively meet its mission by working
together with public and private entities that serve
the same people, the Judicial Official would not
participate directly in deciding or providing policy
advice and basically would limit his or her role to
connecting the Executive Branch official to people
in some of the constituencies that the official’s
department or agency serves?
Additional Facts:
The Executive
Branch official’s department or agency is
responsible for a wide range of programs and
services including, but not limited to, providing
services for mentally ill and emotionally disturbed
clients, establishing work programs, performing data
collection, auditing and outreach, as well as
providing services to persons involved with the
courts. The department or agency has also been the
subject of federal litigation and federal court
supervision for many years. The Judicial Official
would recuse himself or herself from presiding over
cases involving the Executive Branch department or
agency during the period that he or she served on
the committee.
Response: Three of the four
Committee members in attendance determined that the
Judicial Official’s service on the advisory
committee would be prohibited by Rule 3.4 of the
Code of Judicial Conduct, which provides that “[a]
judge shall not accept appointment to a governmental
committee, board, commission or other governmental
position, unless it is one that concerns the law,
the legal system, or the administration of justice.”
The Committee majority emphasized that, however
salutary for the public a judicial official’s
service on governmental committees or commissions
may be, Rule 3.4 prohibits such service unless the
commission “is one that concerns the law, the legal
system or the administration of justice.” Comment
(3) to the rule states that it is “intended to
prohibit a judge from participation in governmental
committees, boards, commissions or other
governmental positions that make or implement public
policy unless they concern the law, the legal system
or the administration of justice.”
The Committee
majority adopted the position, as articulated in
ethics opinions from other jurisdictions, that in
order for a governmental committee or commission to
qualify as one that concerns the law, the legal
system or the administration of justice, “there must
be a direct nexus between what a governmental
commission does and how the court system meets its
statutory and constitutional responsibilities – in
other words, how the courts go about their
business.” Massachusetts Advisory Opinion 98-13. See
also Utah Informal Advisory Opinion 98-11; Florida
Advisory Opinion 2001-16; U.S. Advisory Opinion 93
(1998); Indiana Advisory Opinion 2-01. Applying the
“direct nexus” standard to the facts presented, the
Committee majority concluded that the scope of the
advisory committee’s responsibilities (as described
above) far exceeds the range of activities within
the scope of the exception to Rule 3.4.
The
Committee majority also expressed concern about the
possibility of an appearance of impropriety under
Rule 1.2, as well as conflict with the provisions of
Rule 3.1(1), (2) and (3) that could arise from the
Judicial Official’s service on the advisory
committee, based upon the following factors: the
Executive Branch department’s or agency’s role as a
frequent litigator and service provider in
proceedings in Connecticut’s courts, and the fact
that the Executive Branch department or agency is
the subject of federal litigation and federal court
supervision. See generally JE 2008-24, JE 2009-10
and JE 2010-05.
One of the Committee members
dissented from the view of the majority of Committee
members. The dissenting Committee member supported a
broader interpretation of the phrase “the law, the
legal system, or the administration of justice”, as
has been adopted by some jurisdictions, and would
have found the advisory committee to fall within the
exception provided by Rule 3.4. That member cited
Comment (1) to Rule 3.4, which acknowledges the
value of judges accepting appointments to entities
that concern the law, the legal system or the
administration of justice, and the approach taken by
such states as South Carolina, Utah and Alaska,
which on occasion have permitted a judge to serve on
a governmental commission with a mission that
extended beyond the law, the legal system or the
administration of justice to issues of a legislative
or executive nature, only if the judge is able to
limit his or her involvement narrowly to those
matters dealing with the administration of justice
by, for example, just serving on a subcommittee or
limiting participation to matters directly
concerning the courts or the administration of
justice. See generally South Carolina Opinion
8-1996, Utah Informal Opinion 94-2 and Alaska
Opinion 2001-01.
The Committee noted that this
opinion involves conduct subject to Rule 3.4, not
Rule 3.2, and that its opinion does not necessarily
reflect how the Committee may construe Rule 3.2.