Inquiry Concerning Judge Cary Hays III ( 2022 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: February 1, 2022
    S21Z1181. INQUIRY CONCERNING JUDGE CARY HAYS III.
    PER CURIAM.
    This judicial discipline matter is before the Court on an
    agreement between the Director of the Judicial Qualifications
    Commission (“JQC”) and Cary Hays III, Chief Magistrate of
    Crawford County, to resolve the formal charges brought against
    Judge Hays arising from a physical altercation with a defendant
    that appeared before him. The agreement calls for Judge Hays to
    serve an unpaid, 30-day suspension to be followed by a public
    reprimand. Pursuant to JQC Rule 23, the agreement was submitted
    to the JQC’s Hearing Panel, which voted 2-1 to accept it, and then
    filed it with this Court. Because the record and the limited relevant
    precedent we have found support the proposed discipline, we accept
    the agreement and order that Judge Hays be suspended for 30 days
    without pay and be publicly reprimanded for his violations of the
    Georgia Code of Judicial Conduct.
    According to the formal charges, the allegations of which Judge
    Hays admits are true, Judge Hays engaged in a verbal and physical
    altercation with a defendant. The defendant had appeared before
    Judge Hays for a first appearance hearing held in the jail complex
    in December 2020. The defendant began cursing at Judge Hays in
    response to the judge’s bond determination. The defendant
    continued to curse at Judge Hays while being led out of the hearing.
    Judge Hays verbally engaged with the defendant and then followed
    him into a hallway, at which time Judge Hays exchanged a few more
    words with the defendant before grabbing him and pushing him
    against the wall. The defendant was handcuffed and his feet
    shackled and was accompanied by a law enforcement officer. At no
    time did the defendant physically threaten Judge Hays or anyone
    else or attempt to flee. The defendant was not physically injured.
    The JQC investigated the incident and charged Judge Hays
    with three violations of the Georgia Code of Judicial Conduct: Rule
    2
    1.1, which requires that judges “respect and comply with the law”;
    Rule 1.2 (A), which requires that judges “act all times in a manner
    that promotes public confidence in the independence, integrity, and
    impartiality of the judiciary”; and Rule 2.8 (B), which requires that
    judges be “patient, dignified, and courteous to litigants[.]”
    As JQC Rule 23 allows, Judge Hays and the Director of the
    JQC entered into an agreement to resolve the formal charges with a
    30-day unpaid suspension to be followed by a public reprimand, and
    they submitted the proposed resolution to the JQC Hearing Panel.
    By a 2-1 vote, the Hearing Panel recommends that we accept.1
    In authorizing this resolution and submitting it to this Court
    for approval, the Hearing Panel considered past disciplinary cases
    in which public reprimands were sought and rightly concluded that
    a public reprimand alone was an insufficient sanction for Judge
    Hays’s conduct. The Hearing Panel did not find an analogous
    disciplinary case in Georgia, and we also have not found one. The
    1 The dissenting Hearing Board member did not articulate explicitly in
    his dissent what sanction, if any, he believes would be appropriate, but stated
    that the proposed agreement neither educates judges nor protects the public.
    3
    Hearing Panel points to a disciplinary case in Mississippi with more
    egregious facts. See Miss. Commn. on Judicial Performance v. Guest,
    717 S2d 325 (Miss. 1998). There, a judge was fined and suspended
    for 90 days, without pay, for repeatedly hitting a defendant in a
    crowded courtroom and directing profanity at him; the judge’s use of
    profanity in that case was particularly serious given that the judge
    had just found the defendant guilty of the offense of public profanity.
    See id. at 327 & n.2. Moreover, that case involved allegations of
    racially derogatory remarks by the judge both in and out of the
    courtroom, and the judge did not readily acknowledge the
    seriousness of his attack on the defendant; he argued that it was
    necessary to protect the court clerk, notwithstanding that the clerk
    he purported to protect had to pull him away from the handcuffed
    defendant. See id. at 327.
    The proposed sanction is one of the most significant we have
    ever imposed, short of removal from office. And given the
    circumstances, it would have to be. We agree that the facts that
    Judge Hays admits constitute violations of each of the three rules
    4
    charged. And the way he violated those rules is particularly serious.
    It is a grave violation for a judge to use violence against any person
    appearing before him, except in self-defense or defense of others,
    which was not the situation here. The rule of law enables our society
    to resolve disputes without resort to force. When a judge uses force
    against someone appearing before him, that judge thus undermines
    the rule of law. It removes the judge from the role of neutral arbiter.
    Plainly, a mere reprimand is insufficient.
    At the same time, we do not see the necessity for removal from
    judicial office.2 The incident — grave as it was — was momentary,
    and no actual injury was inflicted. And, as noted by the Hearing
    Panel’s majority, several mitigating circumstances exist. Judge
    Hays is a well-respected member of the community who has served
    2 Some of us might impose a longer suspension of 60 or 90 days if we had
    the discretion to do more than simply accept or reject this proposed discipline
    by consent. But Rule 23 limits our choices to accepting the discipline by consent
    and imposing a 30-day suspension or rejecting it and returning the case for
    further proceedings. See JQC Rule 23 (D). Rejecting the discipline by consent
    merely to impose a slightly longer suspension would substantially delay the
    resolution of this matter with little benefit. We also consider it appropriate to
    afford some amount of deference to the determination of the JQC’s
    Investigative Panel ⸺ which would have to prosecute this case if it proceeded
    ⸺ that this resolution is sufficient.
    5
    his country honorably as a member of the military. He lacks a prior
    disciplinary history, and he has forthrightly accepted full
    responsibility for this isolated, but serious, incident.
    Accordingly, the Court accepts the agreement and orders that
    Judge Hays be suspended without pay for 30 days and receive a
    public reprimand upon his return to the bench. The public
    reprimand shall be imposed on him in person in open court by a
    judge designated by this Court. Upon issuance of this opinion, all
    fillings made in this Court in this matter shall be unsealed. See JQC
    Rule 23 (D).
    Discipline by consent accepted. Thirty-day suspension and
    public reprimand. All the Justices concur, except Colvin, J.,
    disqualified.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S21Z1181

Filed Date: 2/1/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/1/2022