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8. CANON 5 - AN ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE SHOULD REGULATE EXTRA-JUDICIAL
ACTIVITIES TO MINIMIZE THE RISK OF CONFLICT OF JUDICIAL DUTIES.
- Extra-Judicial Duties In General.
A judge shall conduct all of the judge’s extra-judicial activities
so that they do not cast reasonable doubt on the judge’s capacity
to act impartially as a judge, demean the judicial office, or interfere
with the proper performance of judicial duties.
- Avocational Activities. Click
to See Commentary on B
A judge may write, lecture, teach, and speak on extra-judicial subjects
and may participate in or engage in other extra-judicial activities,
such as the arts, sports, and other social and recreational activities.
- Civic and Charitable Activities. Click
to See Commentary on C
A judge may participate in civic and charitable extra-judicial activities.
A judge may serve as and be listed as an officer, director, trustee,
or non-legal advisor of an educational, religious, charitable, fraternal,
or civic organization not conducted for the economic or political
advantage of its members, subject to the following limitations:
- A judge shall not use or permit the use of the prestige of the judge’s
office in public fund-raising activities.
- A judge should not serve if it is likely that such an organization
will be engaged in proceedings that would ordinarily come before the
judge or will be regularly engaged in adjudicative proceedings before
any agency for which the judge serves.
- Financial Activities. Click
to See Commentary on D
- A judge should refrain from financial and business dealings that
tend to reflect adversely on impartiality, demean the judicial office,
interfere with the proper performance of judicial duties, exploit
the judge’s judicial position, or involve the judge in frequent
transactions or continuing business relationships with lawyers or
persons likely to come before the agency for which the judge serves.
- Subject to the requirements of subsection D, subdivision (1), a
judge may hold and manage investments of the judge and members of
the judge’s family, including real estate, and engage in other
remunerative activity, unless otherwise prohibited by law.
- A judge shall manage the judge’s investments and other financial
interests to minimize the number of cases in which the judge is disqualified.
As soon as the judge can do so without serious financial detriment,
the judge shall divest himself or herself of investments and other
financial interests that might require frequent disqualification.
- A judge shall not accept, and members of the judge’s family
residing in the household of the judge should not accept a gift, bequest,
favor, or loan from anyone except:
- a gift incident to public testimonial to the judge, books, tapes,
and other resource materials supplied by publishers on a complimentary
basis for official use, or an invitation to the judge and the judge’s
spouse or guest to attend a bar-related function or activity devoted
to the improvement of the law, the legal system, or the administration
of justice;
- a gift, award, or benefit incident to the business, profession,
or other separate activity of a spouse or other family member of
a judge residing in the judge’s household, including gifts,
awards, and benefits for the use of both the spouse and other family
member and the judge (as spouse or family member), provided the
gift, award, or benefit could not reasonably be perceived as intended
to influence the judge in the performance of official duties;
- ordinary social hospitality;
- a gift from a relative or friend for a special occasion, such
as a wedding or engagement gift, or an anniversary or birthday gift;
- a loan from a lending institution in its regular course of business
upon the same terms generally available to persons who are not judges;
- a scholarship or fellowship awarded on the same terms applied
to other applicants;
- a gift, bequest, favor, or loan from a relative or close personal
friend whose appearance or interest in a matter would in any event
require disqualification under section 6, subsection E;
- any other gift, bequest, favor, or loan only if the donor is not
a party or other person who has come or is likely to come, or whose
interests have come or are likely to come, before the judge, and
a gift is not otherwise prohibited by law.
- A judge is not required by this code to disclose income, debts, or investments,
except as may be provided in sections 6, 8, and 9.
- Information acquired by a judge in a judicial capacity should not be
used or disclosed by the judge in financial dealings or for any other
purpose not related to judicial duties.
- Fiduciary Activities. Click
to See Commentary on E
A judge should not serve as an executor, administrator, or other personal
representative, trustee, guardian, attorney in fact, or other fiduciary,
if such service will interfere with the proper performance of judicial
duties, or if it is likely that as a fiduciary the judge will be engaged
in proceedings that would ordinarily come before the judge, or if the
estate, trust, or ward becomes involved in adversary proceedings before
an agency which the judge serves. While acting as a fiduciary, the judge
is subject to the same restrictions on financial activities that apply
to the judge in the judge’s personal capacity.
- Arbitration And Mediation.
A full-time administrative law judge employed by the office of administrative
hearings may act as an arbitrator or mediator only for that office,
but shall not act as an arbitrator or mediator in the same proceeding
in which the judge serves as the judge. A temporary, contract administrative
law judge may act as an arbitrator or mediator, but shall not act as
an arbitrator or mediator in the same proceeding in which the judge
serves as judge.
- Practice of Law. Click
to See Commentary on G
A full-time administrative law judge employed by the office of administrative
hearings shall not practice law. A temporary, contract administrative
law judge may engage in the practice of law, but shall not represent
a client in any matter which involves or is likely to involve any agency
for which the judge serves or has recently served. The agency for which
the judge serves may waive this restriction on temporary, contract administrative
law judges. Also, even though a judge may be disqualified under the
provisions of this subsection, he or she may participate in the proceedings
under the remittal of disqualification provisions of subsection F of
section 6. A judge may act pro se and may, without compensation, give
legal advice to and draft and review documents for a member of the judge’s
family.
- Extra-Judicial Appointments. Click
to See Commentary on H
A judge should not accept appointment to a governmental committee,
commission, or other position that is concerned with the issues of
fact or policy on specific matters which may come before the judge.
COMMENTARY - Canon 5. Subsection
B: top
Complete separation of a judge from extra-judicial activities is
neither possible nor wise; a judge should not become isolated from the
society in which the judge lives. However, a judge must be mindful that
a judge’s conduct and associations reflect upon the office and affect
the public confidence in the office.
Subsection C, Subdivisions (1) and (2): top
The changing nature of some organizations and of their relationship
to the law makes it necessary for a judge to regularly examine the activities
of the organization with which the judge is affiliated to determine if
it is proper to continue a relationship with it.
This subsection is not intended to discourage participation in the
identified organizations or preclude the use of a judge’s name on
stationery or other material used to solicit contributions, provided the
judge’s name is in no way selectively emphasized.
Paragraph D, Subdivision (4), Paragraph (h): top
This paragraph prohibits judges from accepting gifts, favors, bequests,
or loans from lawyers or their firms if they have come or are likely to
come before the judge; it also prohibits gifts, favors, bequests, or loans
from clients of lawyers or their firms when the client’s interests
have come or are likely to come before the judge.
Financial Matters, Canons 3, 5, and
6 Compared: top
Section 6 (Canon 3) requires a judge to disqualify himself or herself
in any proceeding in which the judge has a financial interest, however
small. Section 8 (Canon 5) requires a judge to refrain from engaging in
business and financial activities that might interfere with the impartial
performance of judicial duties. Section 9 (Canon 6) allows a judge to
receive compensation for activities outside the judge’s judicial
office under certain circumstances. A judge has the rights of an ordinary
citizen, including the right to privacy of the judge’s financial
affairs, except to the extent that limitations thereon are required to
safeguard the proper performance of the judge’s duties.
Subsection E: top
A judge’s obligation under this section and the judge’s obligation
as a fiduciary may come into conflict. For example, a judge should resign
as a trustee if it would result in detriment to the trust to divest it
of holdings whose retention would place the judge in violation of another
section of this code.
Subsection G: top
This subsection recognizes that temporary, contract administrative law
judges are part-time judges who must also be allowed to continue to engage
in the private practice of law. Such engagement in the practice of law
is permitted provided other provisions of this code are not violated.
Subsection H: top
Valuable services have been rendered in the past to the states and
the nation by judges appointed by the executive to undertake important
extra-judicial assignments. The appropriateness in confirming these assignments
on judges must be assessed, however, in light of the demands on judicial
resources created by today’s crowded dockets and the need to protect
judges from involvement in extra-judicial matters that may prove to be
controversial. Judges should not be expected or permitted to accept governmental
appointments that could interfere with the effectiveness and independence
of the judiciary. However, judges may accept governmental appointments
for entities which do not appear before the agency for which they serve.
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