IMO JUDGE LAWRENCE A. CARTON, III
Case Date: 06/02/1995
Docket No: SYLLABUS
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(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued March 27, 1995 -- Decided June 2, 1995
PER CURIAM
This ethical proceeding against Old Bridge Municipal Court Judge Lawrence A. Carton, III arose
out of a November 5, 1992 letter from a supervising Deputy Attorney General of the Office of the Attorney
General (AG) that was filed with the Advisory Committee on Judicial Conduct (ACJC). That letter advised
the ACJC that in the course of the AG's investigation of the Old Bridge Municipal Court Clerk's Office,
certain actions were taken or statements made by Judge Carton that may have been in violation of Canons 1
and 2 of the Code of Judicial Conduct.
The ACJC filed a three-count complaint against Judge Carton. Following three days of hearings, the
ACJC filed a presentment in which it found that Judge Carton had violated certain Court Rules and Canons
1, 2A, and 2B of the Code of Judicial Conduct. Those violations consisted of: making telephone calls to the
municipal court judge and municipal prosecutor of another municipality in an attempt to influence the
disposition of charges against a business owned by Judge Carton, the Sea Bright matter, (Count I); and
permitting a fax transmission to be sent from his law office to the judge of another municipal court about a
matter pending in that court, the Sayreville matter, (Count II). The ACJC dismissed Count III in which it
was alleged that Judge Carton had made remarks to the staff of the Old Bridge Municipal Court to
intimidate them and otherwise persuade them not to cooperate with an investigation by the State Police of
possible criminal activities by the court clerk.
The ACJC recommended that the Supreme Court publicly reprimand Judge Carton. The Court
then ordered Judge Carton to show cause why removal proceedings should not be initiated against him and
why he should not otherwise be publicly disciplined.
HELD: For his violations of Canons 1, 2, and 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct, Lawrence A. Carton, III,
Judge of the Old Bridge Municipal Court, is publicly reprimanded.
1. Based on the Court's independent review of the record, it concurs with the ACJC's determination that
Judge Carton violated the standards of judicial conduct. Although the Court agrees that Judge Carton
should be publicly reprimanded, it does so on grounds different than those found by the ACJC. (pp. 3)
2. The record does not contain clear and convincing evidence that Judge Carton violated the Code of
Judicial Conduct in respect of Count I, the Sea Bright matter. There is a paucity of evidence that would lead
to the conclusion that Count I has been proven by clear and convincing evidence. Judge Carton has served
as a municipal court judge since 1982. His prior record as an attorney and as a municipal court judge has
been unblemished. That he would attempt to fix a case that would at most lead to a $50 fine does not
comport with common sense. Moreover, there was no complaint filed after the illicit conversation between
Judge Foley and Judge Carton. The information was volunteered during the AG's investigation amidst a
background and history of substantial antagonism between the judges. As such, it cannot be found that
Judge Carton is clearly and convincingly guilty of the allegations in Count I. (pp. 3-11) 3. The record does establish that during the latter part of 1989, Judge McGowan of the Sayreville Municipal Court received an unsigned fax transmission from Judge Carton's law office about a matter pending in that
court. Thus, there is clear and convincing evidence present to support the ACJC's findings with respect to
Count II, the Sayreville matter. (pp.11-15)
4. The Court agrees with the ACJC's finding that the evidence does not clearly and convincingly show that
Judge Carton impeded or sought to impede the investigation by the State Police of the actions of the Office
of the Chief Clerk of the Old Bridge Municipal Court. Therefore, Count III was properly dismissed. (pp.
15-16)
5. Because Counts I and III are dismissed, the discipline to be imposed on Judge Carton results from his
misconduct in connection with Count II, the Sayreville matter. Municipal court judges are not to participate
in criminal or quasi-criminal matters and are not to contact judges or other personnel from another
municipal court regarding any matters pending in that court. In the Sayreville matter (Count II), Judge
Carton violated Canons 1, 2, and 3 and has engaged in conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice
that brings the judicial office in disrepute. For that, a public reprimand is warranted.
So ordered.
CHIEF JUSTICE WILENTZ and JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK, GARIBALDI, STEIN, and
COLEMAN join in the Court's opinion. JUSTICE O'HERN did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
IN THE MATTER OF
LAWRENCE A. CARTON, III,
Judge of the Old Bridge
Municipal Court.
Argued March 27, l995 -- Decided June 2, 1995
On an Order to show cause why removal
proceedings pursuant to R. 2:l4 and N.J.S.A.
2B:2A-1 to -11 should not be instituted or
why respondent should not be publicly
disciplined.
Patrick J. Monahan, Jr., Counsel, argued the
cause on behalf of Advisory Committee on
Judicial Conduct.
Thomas F. McGuane argued the cause for
respondent (Carpenter, Bennett & Morrissey,
attorneys).
PER CURIAM This proceeding against respondent, Lawrence A. Carton, III, a municipal court judge, arose out of a letter from Robert E. Levy, Supervising Deputy Attorney General of the Office of New Jersey Attorney General, dated November 5, l992, that he filed with the Advisory Committee on Judicial Conduct (Committee or ACJC). That letter advised that in the course of the Attorney
General's investigation of the Old Bridge Municipal Court Clerk's
Office, "certain actions were taken, and statements made, by
Judge Lawrence Carton III of the Old Bridge Municipal Court,
which may have been in violation of Canon l and Canon 2 of the
Code of Judicial Conduct. Additionally, during the course of the
investigation two other incidents have come to our attention
which may constitute judicial misconduct."
respondent to show cause why removal proceedings should not be
initiated against him and why he should not otherwise be publicly
disciplined. In determining the nature and extent of discipline, we "carefully scrutinize the substantive offenses that constitute the core of respondent's misconduct, the underlying facts and the surrounding circumstances." In re Collester, l 26 N.J. 468, 472 (l992) (citing In re Connor, l24 N.J. l8, 22 (l99l) (other citations omitted)). Our review of the surrounding circumstances leads us to conclude that the record does not contain clear-and
convincing evidence that respondent violated the Code of Judicial
Conduct with respect to the Sea Bright matter.
signed by respondent, he alleged that Clerks Butewicz and Taylor
participated in the filing of two false reports concerning him.
The clerks were suspended with pay.
on behalf of Clerks Butewicz and Taylor in their civil action
against respondent.
the tickets and that Ms. Glisson had been going to take care of
them and had done so.
Respondent, never having been confronted with the
allegations until two years after the alleged incident, can
specifically recall having returned Foley's call, but has no
recollection of any discussion of the Sea Bright matter. He
insists that he never received the summonses and never would have
discussed their disposition with Judge Foley. Indeed, given the
hostility between the two judges, he testified he would never
have asked Foley for any help.
Alluding to the difficulty in recalling an incident that
happened three years before, Mr. Ansell testified that he had not
taken respondent's comments to mean anything improper.
Respondent was a party; it was his company that was being
charged. As the prosecutor noted, parties before the Municipal
Court routinely call the prosecutor. He did not perceive
respondent's telephone call as an attempt to influence him. We
believe that Ansell's attempt to restate its contents falls far
short of corroboration of any attempt on the part of respondent
to fix the case.
of the original investigation. It resulted from an open-ended
question near the conclusion of the investigation, a question put
to Judge Foley about whether there was "anything else he wanted
to tell" the investigators. One would assume that an attempt to
fix a case would have been reported immediately by Judge Foley.
However, Judge Foley did not report those comments then or
anytime thereafter, but only volunteered the comments during the
course of another investigation. The lateness of the charge and
the circumstances under which it was made -- following a long
period of hostility between the two judges -- is one factor in
our determination today. Besides Judge Foley's version of the
conversation -- with which respondent's version totally differs -- the only other proof is ambiguous. That corroboration is a
conversation respondent had with the prosecutor at Judge Foley's
request. Ultimately, however, the conversation's innocence, or
at least its ambiguous quality, both in its origin and in its
content, makes this proffered evidence weak in its alleged
corroboration of the charge.
unblemished. He served with distinction, and had an absolutely
clear record insofar as judicial conduct is concerned. In this
matter, respondent is portrayed as attempting to fix a case that
at most would lead to a $50 fine, which involves a minimal
offense. Such a proposition does not comport with common sense.
After the alleged illicit conversation, no complaint was
filed and no report made until the information was volunteered
amidst a background and history of substantial antagonism between
the judges. With that background and on this record, we are
unable to find that respondent is clearly and convincingly
guilty. Count II also arose from a remark made by Clerk Butewicz five days after respondent had filed the complaint against her and Clerk Taylor. Nonetheless, the record does establish that
during the latter part of l989, Robert J. McGowan, Jr., Judge of
the Sayreville Municipal Court, received an unsigned fax
transmission from respondent's law office. On this point, all
parties agreed at the hearing before the ACJC, although they
sharply disagreed about the subject matter of the fax. Neither
Judge McGowan nor respondent was able to produce a copy of the
fax in question.
permitted Mark Fallon to send it from
Respondent's law office. Judge McGowan
replied that Respondent could not represent
Mark Fallon and that it was improper for him
to intercede on Fallon's behalf. McGowan
said that Respondent should not be involved
in the matter at all, and Respondent replied
that McGowan was blowing the incident out of
proportion because Respondent was not asking
him to do anything.
* * * *
For his part, Respondent maintained before
this Committee that Judge McGowan was
mistaken in testifying that the contact
concerned any case involving Mark Fallon.
According to Respondent, Joyce Wetstein, one
of the employees of the Old Bridge Municipal
Court, called him at his law office on
Friday, October l3, l989, because her son,
Brian Wetstein, had been found guilty of an
offense in the Sayreville Municipal Court and
the appeal period was going to expire the
following Monday. Respondent told Ms.
Wetstein to have Brian call him and Brian did
so shortly thereafter. When Brian Wetstein
called Respondent, Respondent was in a hurry
to go somewhere, and he told Brian to write
out a summary about the case and, if all else
failed, Respondent would help Brian draft a
letter applying for a new trial to deliver to
the judge in Sayreville that Monday.
When Respondent found out that Robert McGowan
was the Judge of the Sayreville Municipal
Court, he called McGowan's law office,
identifying himself only as "Larry Carton,"
and asked to speak to McGowan. Respondent's
intention was "simply to ask him whether he
would accept a letter from a lawyer -- from a
fellow who was no longer represented as an
indication of a new trial." Respondent spoke
to McGowan's secretary, and she said that she
would have him return the call. He did not
return the call. The following Monday, October l6, Respondent had to be out of the office once again. He called his office and asked one of his
secretaries to call Judge McGowan's law
office and ask if McGowan would be able to
speak to him that morning. Later on, he
called back and spoke to the secretary once
again. She told him that she had called
McGowan's law office and that McGowan's
secretary had suggested she fax a request for
adjournment to the office. Respondent said
that without checking with him, the secretary
went ahead and drafted and faxed such a
request. Respondent told the Committee that
he was upset at what his secretary had done,
and he apologized profusely to Judge McGowan
when they both attended a conference some
months later. Respondent denied, however,
that he had any telephone conversation about
the matter with Judge McGowan at any time.
Respondent presented testimony from both
Joyce Wetstein and Brian Wetstein in support
of his contention that the fax transmission
sent to Judge McGowan concerned Brian
Wetstein and was sent by a secretary who
acted without authorization. Respondent did
not present testimony from that secretary;
instead, he represented to the Committee that
she had no memory of the event. The ACJC properly concluded that irrespective of whether the fax was on behalf of Mark Fallon or Brian Wetstein, respondent's office undoubtedly sent a fax to Judge McGowan concerning a matter pending before him in court. Although determining that Brian Wetstein's account lacked credibility, the ACJC found that the evidence indicated that respondent had given him legal advice in a pending criminal matter. Giving respondent the benefit of any doubt, the ACJC found "that respondent is charged with the running of his office and his failure to do so properly in this instance gives rise to conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice that brings the judicial office into disrepute." Our
independent review of the record leads us to agree with the
findings of the ACJC. Based on our de novo review of the record, we also agree with the ACJC's finding that the evidence does not clearly and convincingly show that respondent impeded or sought to impede the investigation by the State Police of the actions of the Office of the Chief Clerk of the Old Bridge Municipal Court. The ACJC's presentment fairly describes and explains the incident that led to Count III: On August 20, l990, the New Jersey State Police began an investigation into the Old Bridge Municipal Court by executing a warrant for the search of the files of that court. The investigation was begun after employees of the court compiled information to the effect that Joan Fallon, the clerk of that court, may have used her position to favor her sons and others by failing to schedule cases for trial, collect fines, enforce court orders or report traffic violations to the Division of Motor Vehicles. In the Third Count of the Complaint before this Committee, it was alleged that Respondent had made a number of remarks to the members of his court staff to intimidate them and otherwise persuade them not to cooperate with the investigation being conducted by the State Police. Respondent acknowledged having made, if not the alleged remarks, remarks that were essentially the same; but he testified that he was referring not to the State Police but to the Old Bridge Police Department. Certain employees of the Old Bridge Municipal Court were close to officers of the Old Bridge Police Department and filed reports with that department
concerning matters within the Old Bridge
Municipal Court. It was, according to
Respondent, with reference to such reports
and contacts that he made the remarks in
question.
Finding that the evidence presented was not "clear and
convincing," the ACJC properly dismissed the Third Count of the
complaint. Accordingly, with the dismissal of Counts I and III, the discipline to be imposed on respondent results from his misconduct in connection with Count II, the Sayreville matter. It has long been the rule that municipal court judges "shall not practice in any criminal, quasi-criminal or penal matter." R. l:l5-l(b). It is well-established that municipal court judges should not be contacting the judges or personnel of another municipal court on behalf of parties to matters pending before the other court. In re Santini, l 26 N.J. 29l, 298 (l99l) (citing In re Murray, 92 N.J. 567 (l983)). In both Santini, supra, and Murray, supra, we disciplined two part-time municipal court judges for contacting officials in other municipal courts with respect to pending matters. In both cases, the judges recognized, as did respondent here, that they could not represent clients before another municipal court. Unfortunately, in both cases through a series of mishaps, they were unable to secure the immediate services of another attorney. In Santini, supra, the judge called a zoning officer, a municipal
court clerk, and another municipal court judge to discuss the
pending matter. l26 N.J. at 293-94. Despite the fact that
Santini's client was facing an arrest warrant from the municipal
court, we emphasized that "[u]nder no condition may a municipal
court judge communicate with the judge or clerk of the court in
which the proceeding is pending." Id. at 296. The municipal
court judge in Murray, supra, wrote a letter to a municipal court
judge to advise him that his former clients were out of state.
92 N.J. at 570. Because of his position, we found that the
municipal judge in Murray, supra, had used "his power, prestige,
and influence" to persuade other judges and that such action was
insensitive to public perceptions of his judicial role. Id. at
57l. In both Santini and Murray, although unique time pressures
and circumstances were involved and both judges had unblemished
records, we found that they both violated judicial Canons l, 2
and 3 of the Code of Judicial Conduct. As a result, both were
publicly reprimanded.
judge not convey or permit others to convey the impression that
they are in a special position of influence; Canon 3A(6)
prohibits a judge from either initiating or considering ex parte
or other communications concerning a pending or impending
proceeding.
Chief Justice Wilentz and Justices Handler, Pollock,
Garibaldi, Stein, and Coleman join in this opinion. Justice
O'Hern did not participate.
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