in Re Hon Sylvia a James ( 2011 )


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  • Order                                                                       Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    December 15, 2011                                                                 Robert P. Young, Jr.,
    Chief Justice
    143942                                                                            Michael F. Cavanagh
    Marilyn Kelly
    Stephen J. Markman
    Diane M. Hathaway
    Mary Beth Kelly
    Brian K. Zahra,
    Justices
    IN RE:
    SC: 143942
    HONORABLE SYLVIA A. JAMES                                      JTC: Formal Complaint 88
    22ND DISTRICT COURT
    BEFORE THE JUDICIAL TENURE COMMISSION
    ____________________________________________/
    On order of the Court, the petition for interim suspension is considered, and it is
    GRANTED. The Honorable Sylvia A. James, Judge of the 22nd District Court, is
    suspended with pay until further order of this Court. In order to expedite the resolution
    of this matter, we ORDER the Judicial Tenure Commission and the Master to coordinate
    their schedules to ensure that the JTC recommendation of action, if any, will be submitted
    to this Court within five months of the date of this order. See MCR 9.207(F) and
    9.219(A).
    YOUNG, C.J. (concurring).
    There is no gainsaying that the dissent’s demand that Judge James’ pay be
    withheld has a strong populist appeal. She has, after all, been publicly accused of very
    serious offenses. I write to explain why this appeal should be resisted.
    In this Court’s history, a judge accused of wrongdoing has been suspended
    without pay prior to the completion of the Judicial Tenure Commission (JTC)
    adjudicative process only under a very rare set of circumstances – where the misconduct
    had already been conclusively established, rendering the JTC’s determination of
    misconduct largely irrelevant. 1 Here, the dissent would suspend the respondent without
    pay based on allegations, before her misconduct has been proven at a hearing. For the
    1
    There have been only three occasions where this Court has ordered a suspension
    without pay before the completion of the JTC hearing. Two involved judges who had
    been convicted of crimes prior to the resolution of judicial disciplinary proceedings. See
    In re Callanan, 
    419 Mich 376
     (1984), and In re Szymanski. In In re Lawrence, 
    417 Mich 1129
     (1983), the third such matter, the judge admitted that he had not performed the
    duties of his judicial office.
    2
    foregoing reasons, I believe that placing respondent on interim suspension without pay is
    inappropriate. 2
    The dissent asserts that “the total amount of public funds respondent is alleged to
    have misappropriated . . . is $131,030.” However troubling, these are allegations rather
    than established fact; moreover, the allegations are disputed by Judge James. 3
    Because the allegations have not been tested and proven in a hearing, at this point
    it should not be assumed that the most serious allegations will be proved. Similarly, even
    if the lesser allegations are proved, it is not certain that the appropriate sanction would
    exceed the suspension from office that respondent will have already incurred by being
    placed on administrative leave as well as any sanction served in response to the JTC’s
    petition to suspend.
    The dissent cites three justifications favoring suspending respondent without pay:
    (1) a “potentially diminished regard for the self-disciplinary processes of the judiciary[;]”
    (2) the diminished likelihood of recovering “misappropriated public funds” for the City
    of Inkster; and (3) the diminished likelihood of recovering the misappropriated funds to
    provide “adequate restitution” to crime victims.
    First, the entire thrust of the dissent is that more “discipline” needs to be meted out
    to Judge James by this Court now before the charges leveled against her are even heard
    by the JTC. The rationale for the dissent falters because the dissenter seeks either to
    make respondent an example (to prevent other judges from engaging in the kind of
    peculation with which she is charged) 4 or transform a disciplinary process into a
    2
    I do not need to address the question of our underlying authority to suspend a judge
    without pay prior to the JTC’s determination of misconduct because I address prudential
    reasons why we should not exercise that authority in this case. The precedents of this
    Court establish a prudential limitation that we ought not exercise such authority when the
    underlying misconduct is contested. Unlike the dissenting justice, I believe that
    prudential limitation is a wise one that should be respected.
    3
    This point is made more emphatic because the JTC has not even requested that
    respondent have her pay withheld pending resolution of the merits of its charges against
    her.
    4
    The dissent’s clear message to judges is that—whether guilty or not—they had better
    not stand accused of wrongdoing because the mere accusation of wrongdoing is enough
    to warrant withholding a judge’s salary in order to “mitigate” the effects of alleged
    wrongdoing. Admittedly, this is a very strong message—challenging JTC allegations
    will impoverish you—and it treads perilously close to prejudging an accused’s guilt; we
    3
    restitution recovery mechanism. According to the dissent, the Court’s failure to make
    this additional sanction will undermine regard for the judiciary and demonstrate that the
    Court is unconcerned about the seriousness of these charges. All of these concerns are
    without foundation or actually undermine important principles of due process that this
    Court ought always to vindicate.
    In placing respondent on administrative leave earlier this year, this Court promptly
    responded to the results of the SCAO audit that showed some irregularities. The matter
    was then immediately turned over to the JTC for investigation. In so doing, this Court
    prevented any additional harm that the respondent might have caused by continuing to
    administer the 22nd District Court. Thus, suspension without pay is not related to the
    recovery of any funds that may have been misappropriated by Judge James prior to being
    placed on administrative leave. The dissenter does not dispute this fact, he merely
    ignores it because it undercuts his restitution argument.
    Nor can it reasonably be said that this Court’s failure to suspend respondent
    without pay does anything to diminish “the public regard for the self-disciplinary
    process.” Withholding respondent’s pay before completing the adjudicative process
    results in the very harm the dissent claims to fear – “diminished regard for the self-
    disciplinary processes of the judiciary.” Indeed, where the material facts are in dispute,
    those concerned with the integrity of the judicial system and “the public regard for the
    self-disciplinary process” should insist upon permitting the JTC process to conclude
    before the imposition of the punishment the dissent favors. While a lynch mob is surely
    effective in dispensing its view of justice without benefit of a trial, the judicial system is
    designed to be a bulwark against this and other forms of “mob justice.” Consistent with
    our commitment to having guilt determined after a trial, the Court’s action today both
    protects the public and maintains the integrity of the self-disciplinary process. Moreover,
    by order issued today, this Court has expedited the JTC proceedings to ensure that
    resolution of this matter occurs as quickly as possible.
    The dissent, while purporting to understand the principles of our judicial
    disciplinary system, fails utterly to apply them. This is best illustrated by the dissent’s
    inexorable focus on the desire to secure “restitution” – for the victims of crime and the
    citizens of Inkster. This restitutionary justification for withholding pay before a JTC
    adjudication is entirely without legal foundation in the judicial disciplinary system. As
    the dissent acknowledges, the purpose of judicial disciplinary proceedings “is not to
    impose punishment on the respondent judge, or to exact any civil recovery, but to protect
    the people from corruption and abuse on the part of those who wield judicial power.” 5
    ordinarily allow people accused of wrongdoing the benefit of a trial before sanctioning
    them.
    5
    In re Jenkins, 
    437 Mich 15
    , 28 (1991) (emphasis added).
    4
    However, this is precisely what the dissent seeks to accomplish—to exact a civil recovery
    for judicial wrongdoing. 6
    Significantly, and consistent with the principles stated above, Art 6 Sec 30 of our
    constitution makes no provision for restitution as a sanction, nor is such a sanction easily
    reconciled with those sanctions specifically enumerated. Consequently, it is not
    surprising that the JTC rules do not provide a mechanism for “restitution.” Accordingly,
    the dissent’s justification for suspending respondent without pay prior to the JTC process
    is premised on a reason that is inappropriate to the very purpose of judicial disciplinary
    proceedings. This is all made worse by the fact that the dissent exacts “restitution”
    before a determination of guilt. 7
    This case has gathered a fair bit of public notoriety in the media. Regardless, the
    role of the courts – and the role of the JTC process – is to ensure the rule of law. Media
    coverage is not grounds to end run the JTC process. While “sentence first – verdict
    afterwards” might satisfy the Queen of Hearts, 8 I believe it is inappropriate to suspend
    respondent without pay when the underlying claims of misconduct are contested. Doing
    so disserves any Court aspiring to follow the rule of law.
    MARKMAN, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    I respectfully dissent from the Court’s order to the extent that it grants the Judicial
    Tenure Commission’s petition for respondent’s interim suspension with continued salary.
    Instead, I would order the suspension without salary, and have respondent’s salary held in
    escrow pending the final resolution of her disciplinary proceedings.
    The JTC’s complaint alleges that respondent, the chief judge of the 22nd District
    Court in Inkster, has misappropriated approximately $131,000 in public funds.
    Specifically, the complaint alleges that she employed a checking account established for
    an alternative sentencing program, the Community Service Program (CSP), as “her
    6
    Under our rules, a disciplined judge may be ordered to pay costs and fees to the
    commission, but only where the judge makes misrepresentations or misleading statements
    during the JTC adjudicatory process. MCR 9.205(B).
    7
    The right to restitution for victims is available only for criminal acts and this right has
    been established by statute. Needless to say, a JTC proceeding is not a criminal
    prosecution. I am aware of no basis for the citizens of Inkster to recover “restitution”
    under any circumstance based on the allegations lodged against Judge James, and the
    dissent provides none. However, the dissent is undeterred by these legal “trivialities” in
    its determination to make an “example” of the respondent.
    8
    Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, p 179 (Philadelphia, Pa: H Altemus, 1896).
    5
    personal slush fund.” The JTC further alleges that 50% of the monies collected through
    CSP were required to be applied to crime victim restitution, and that this did not occur.
    I would not allow the respondent to receive additional public funds during her
    present suspension — one predicated upon allegations of past misappropriations of public
    funds — and would instead hold her salary in escrow pending resolution of disciplinary
    proceedings. In my judgment, both the breadth and the explicitness of our authority
    under the Constitution make clear that there is constitutional warrant in this Court to
    undertake this action. Although I do not believe the majority acts unreasonably in
    choosing not to exercise this authority, I also do not believe that my decision to the
    contrary is unreasonable. By the time this matter is finally resolved by the Tenure
    Commission and this Court, respondent will have been provided between 12-15 months
    of additional salary, without having performed a single day of judicial service for the
    people of her District.
    In light of this Court’s “extraordinary” constitutional authority over matters of
    judicial discipline — an authority that is “bounded only by the exigencies which call for
    its exercise,” and in light of our separate constitutional authority to “suspend [a judge]
    with or without salary,” I believe this Court clearly possesses the authority to ensure that,
    where a judge has been alleged to have misappropriated public funds, reasonable
    precautions can be taken to ensure that if the allegations are eventually borne out, (a) the
    judge will not financially benefit by the misappropriation; and (b) the taxpayer and the
    intended beneficiaries of the public funds, in this case the victims of crime within Inkster,
    will be afforded some possibility of restitution. Reasonable precautions can be
    undertaken by a court in advance of trial even in a criminal matter to protect the interests
    of the public, and this Court’s authority to uphold the integrity and reputation of the
    judiciary in a non-criminal disciplinary matter constitutes a far broader authority.
    Contrary to the concurrence, the exercise of such constitutional authority is not
    comparable to a “lynch mob,” does not resemble “mob justice,” involves no
    “prejudgment” of the charges against respondent,” does not “disserve the rule of law,”
    and is not otherwise “inappropriate” in any way.
    I. “ALLEGATIONS”
    The concurrence asserts that my position is “inappropriate” because it fails to
    recognize that the allegations against respondent are not “established fact” and are
    “disputed.” I am well aware of this, although I am also well aware that this is not a
    criminal proceeding, see Part II, infra, and there are considerations that come into play
    that are distinct, including those pertaining to the integrity of the judicial process, public
    confidence in the judiciary, and the protection of the public from judicial corruption. At
    this stage of the disciplinary process, all the Court has before it are allegations. Yet on
    the basis of allegations alone, each Justice must determine how to exercise his or her
    constitutional authority most responsibly. In my judgment, by exercising our authority to
    6
    suspend without salary (and to have this held in escrow), it will be made considerably
    less likely that respondent could potentially benefit financially by the diversion of public
    funds, and it would be made considerably more likely that at least some restitution could
    potentially be made to taxpayers and to those who are the intended beneficiaries of these
    funds — if she is not ultimately vindicated. I do not believe that our Constitution, which
    grants this Court such broad judicial disciplinary authority, renders us helpless to achieve
    either of these objectives.
    And it is no more to “ignore” that we have only allegations at this point than for a
    trial court to “ignore” this when it detains a criminal defendant pending trial, places
    conditions on a defendant’s release pending trial, or otherwise takes into consideration
    prophylactic measures in order to protect the public or to avoid a risk of defendant’s
    flight prior to trial. And in each of those circumstances — unlike in the instant matter —
    there is a genuine criminal proceeding. To read our Constitution as tying the hands of
    this Court in attempting to mitigate the damage of judicial corruption — if it is
    established — has no grounding in our state’s Constitution.
    A bit of perspective is in order:
    -- Every member of the majority, as well as myself, supported
    placing respondent on administrative leave before this matter was ever
    referred to the JTC, and on the basis of evidence compiled by our own State
    Court Administrator’s Office. Respondent will never be able to recover
    that lost service.
    -- Every member of the majority, as well as myself, now supports
    suspending respondent, and doing so for an indefinite period, before the
    JTC has completed its investigation or issued a final report. Respondent
    again will never be able to recover that lost service.
    The only difference between the majority’s and my positions is that I would also
    place respondent’s salary in escrow during her suspension, an action specifically
    contemplated by our Constitution. And in this regard, unlike respondent’s loss of service,
    she will eventually be made whole if she is vindicated, for her salary will be held in
    escrow. The concurrence is plainly wrong in its assertion that I would “exact [restitution]
    before a determination of guilt.” Rather, there would be no restitution until, and unless,
    misappropriation charges are established by the JTC and this Court. Pending such a
    determination, respondent’s salary would be held in escrow in order that such funds not
    be dissipated, and the Constitution is explicit that the Court is authorized to suspend a
    judge “without salary.”
    With this bit of perspective, it is clear that whatever the merits of our respective
    positions, nothing even remotely implicates a failure on my part to appreciate that there
    7
    are only allegations against respondent, and that these have not yet been established. The
    single difference I have with the majority has no bearing in any way upon my
    determination to preserve a fair judicial disciplinary process. I am no less committed to a
    fair process for respondent than any other Justice of this Court, and I am no less mindful
    than any other Justice that there is a difference between allegations and proofs.
    With regard to the concurrence’s allusions to a “lynch mob” and to “mob justice”
    in describing my position as to Judge James, there is little that I can productively say
    concerning such discourse, and so I will hold my tongue. Res ipsa loquitur.
    II. PURPOSES OF JUDICIAL DISCIPLINE
    “Judicial disciplinary proceedings are unique and ‘fundamentally distinct’ from all
    other criminal or civil legal proceedings.” In re Ferrara, 
    458 Mich 350
    , 372 (1998). A
    judicial disciplinary proceeding “lacks the essential characteristics of a criminal
    prosecution.” In re Mikesell, 
    396 Mich 517
    , 528 (1976) (Citation and quotation marks
    omitted.). Similarly, a disciplinary order from this Court “does not operate as a sanction
    for criminal guilt but as a judgment on judicial fitness.” 
    Id.
     This Court has repeatedly
    stated that the object of these proceedings “is not to inflict punishment.” 
    Id.
     (Citation
    and quotation marks omitted.); see also In re Jenkins, 
    437 Mich 15
    , 28 (1991); In re
    Moore, 
    464 Mich 98
    , 118 (2001); In re Haley, 
    476 Mich 180
    , 195 (2006). Rather, the
    purpose is “to determine whether one who exercises judicial power is unfit to hold a
    judgeship,” Mikesell, 
    396 Mich at 528
    ; “to maintain the integrity of the judicial process,”
    Haley, 476 Mich at 195; “to restore and maintain the dignity and impartiality of the
    judiciary,” In re Ferrara, 472 Mich at 371; and “to protect the people from corruption
    and abuse on the part of those who wield judicial power.” In re Jenkins, 
    437 Mich at 28
    .
    “The judicial system is for the benefit of the litigant and the public, not the judiciary.”
    Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 1.
    III. CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY
    This Court has ordered interim suspensions without pay in the past, see, e.g., In re
    Lawrence, 
    417 Mich 1129
     (1983), and, in my judgment, there is no doubt regarding our
    authority to do so. 9 “Our authority to discipline members of the state judiciary flows
    9
    The concurrence believes that it does “not need to address the question of our
    underlying authority to suspend a judge without pay prior to the JTC’s determination of
    misconduct,” believing it sufficient to address only the “prudential reasons why we
    should not exercise that authority in this case.” This strikes me as exactly backwards.
    One might think that an assessment of our “underlying authority” would be a first step in
    assessing the disciplinary issue before this Court, and that this would be done before
    assessing any supposed “prudential” limits on that authority. See infra at n 3. If, as with
    the concurrence, I had not resolved the question of our underlying authority, I too would
    8
    from two sources, §§ 30 and 4 of article 6 of the Michigan Constitution.” In re Probert,
    
    411 Mich 210
    , 229 (1981). Const 1963, art 6, § 4 embodies a general grant of power, the
    power of superintending control. It states in relevant part:
    The supreme court shall have general superintending control over all
    courts. . . . The supreme court shall not have the power to remove a judge.
    We elaborated upon the breadth of this power in In re Huff, 
    352 Mich 402
    , 417-
    418 (1958):
    “The power of superintending control is an extraordinary power. It
    is hampered by no specific rules or means for its exercise. It is so general
    and comprehensive that its complete and full extent and use have
    practically hitherto not been fully and completely known and exemplified.
    It is unlimited, being bounded only by the exigencies which call for its
    exercise. As new instances of these occur, it will be found able to cope with
    them. Moreover, if required, the tribunals having authority to exercise it
    will, by virtue of it, possess the power to invent, frame, and formulate new
    and additional means, writs, and processes whereby it may be exerted.”
    [Quoting 14 Am Jur, Courts § 256]
    The principal limit to the “extraordinary power” of judicial superintendency under
    our Constitution is that “[t]he supreme court shall not have the power to remove a judge.”
    Const 1963, art 6, § 4. Our case-law makes clear that a suspension — with or without
    pay — is not tantamount to removal. In Probert, 
    411 Mich at
    229 n 11, we looked to
    definitions of these terms and explained:
    “Suspension” is defined as “[a]n ad interim stoppage or arrest of
    official power and pay;—not synonymous with ‘removal’ which terminates
    wholly the incumbency of the office or employment.” [Quoting Black’s
    Law Dictionary (4th rev ed).]
    Accordingly, suspending respondent without salary pending the resolution of her
    disciplinary proceedings does not impinge on § 4’s exclusive limitation. Ordering her
    salary placed in escrow for the pendency of these proceedings is fully consistent, in my
    judgment, with this Court’s power “to invent, frame, and formulate new and additional
    means, writs, and processes whereby [our superintending control authority] may be
    exerted.” In re Huff, 
    352 Mich at 418
    . Indeed, it is precisely this superintending power
    that has already served as the basis for this Court placing respondent on administrative
    have reached the same conclusion as the concurrence, for this Court can never act
    without authority.
    9
    leave earlier this year. Surely, the same broad superintending authority that was
    exercised by this Court before the JTC acted can also be exercised afterwards.
    The other source of our disciplinary authority, Const 1963, art 6, § 30, prescribes
    the actions that this Court may undertake in a disciplinary matter. Section 30(2) states in
    pertinent part:
    On recommendation of the judicial tenure commission, the supreme
    court may . . . suspend with or without salary, . . . for . . . misconduct in
    office . . . or conduct that is clearly prejudicial to the administration of
    justice. [Emphasis added.]
    Section 30(2) grants the Court the authority to suspend “without salary” “on
    recommendation” of the JTC. While respondent argues that “recommendation” should
    be given a technical meaning — as referring only to the JTC’s final “recommendation”
    — it seems clear that the petition for interim suspension is equally a “recommendation.”
    That is, the JTC has conducted an initial investigation and determined, in its judgment,
    that an interim suspension is warranted. However, because the JTC lacks the authority to
    impose a suspension, it is petitioning this Court, which does possess such authority. It is
    difficult to understand how this can be characterized as anything other than a
    “recommendation” by the JTC. 10 Accordingly, this Court has the authority to suspend
    “with or without salary.” Indeed, this authority is confirmed by the majority’s own action
    in suspending the respondent with salary, for there is no constitutional distinction
    between a suspension “with or without salary.”
    For these reasons, I believe that both §§ 4 and 30(2) of our Constitution provide
    this Court with the clear authority to order the interim suspension of respondent without
    salary and to have these funds held in escrow pending the resolution of disciplinary
    proceedings. 11
    10
    Although the exercise of this Court’s disciplinary authority must be triggered by a JTC
    “recommendation,” we have not viewed ourselves as bound by its specific
    recommendation. See, e.g., In re Cynthia Hathaway, 
    464 Mich 672
     (2001). In any
    event, the JTC is silent in this matter as to whether its recommended suspension should
    be with or without pay.
    11
    This conclusion is consistent with our precedents, which make clear that this Court
    possesses the constitutional authority to suspend a judge without salary. See, e.g., In re
    Callanan, 
    419 Mich 376
     (1984); In re Lawrence, 
    417 Mich 1129
     (1983); In re
    Szymanski, 
    394 Mich 798
     (1975). The “prudential limits” to this authority identified by
    the concurrence has neither been articulated by this Court nor is it compatible with the
    breadth of our disciplinary authority under Const 1963, § 4. See Huff, 
    supra
     at Part III.
    10
    IV. EXERCISE OF CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY
    Having determined that this Court possesses the constitutional authority to
    suspend on an interim basis without pay, the harder question, in my judgment, is whether
    we should exercise this authority in a particular matter. In making this determination, I
    remain mindful of the nature and the purposes of judicial disciplinary proceedings. See
    Part II, supra.
    As explained in Probert, 
    411 Mich at 225
    , in making a determination in a judicial
    discipline matter, the Court
    must be responsive to individual considerations . . . . [But such]
    decision . . . must also be responsive to a significant institutional
    consideration, the preservation of the integrity of the judicial system.
    [Citation and quotation marks omitted.]
    In light of this concern, I believe that it is a proper exercise of our authority in this matter
    to suspend respondent without salary, and to place her salary in escrow pending final
    resolution of this matter. I would not take this action to impose “punishment,” or as a
    “sanction for criminal guilt,” any more than would the majority, but rather: (a) to protect
    the “institution,” and preserve the “integrity” of the judiciary; and (b) to afford some
    reasonable prospect for the recovery of public funds for their intended purpose if
    respondent is not ultimately vindicated of the JTC’s allegations.
    That is, I would not continue to compensate respondent with public funds during
    an indefinite suspension premised upon — indeed, necessitated by — allegations of past
    misappropriations of public funds. While respondent may ultimately be vindicated, and
    while this Court cannot fully undo any damage caused to the judiciary if she is not
    ultimately vindicated, we can at least undertake responsible action within our authority to
    mitigate such damage. By exercising our authority to suspend without salary (and to
    have this held in escrow), it would be made considerably less likely that respondent could
    potentially benefit financially by the diversion of public funds, and it would be made
    considerably more likely that at least some restitution could potentially be made to
    taxpayers — if she is not ultimately vindicated. 12 I do not believe that our Constitution,
    12
    Whatever “message” to judges the concurrence deconstructs from this dissent, the
    only intended message is to the public. And it is that this Court should be prepared to do
    what is reasonably within our constitutional authority to ensure that a judge who
    misappropriates public funds does not benefit from such conduct, and that restitution will
    be afforded the victims of such misconduct, whether that be taxpayers or the intended
    beneficiaries of public programs. The concurrence notwithstanding, the judicial
    disciplinary process is not a “criminal trial” process, but it is intended principally to
    11
    which grants this Court broad disciplinary authority “to invent, frame, and formulate new
    and additional means, writs, and processes,” renders us helpless to achieve either of these
    ends. 13
    In coming to these conclusions, I seek to balance the respective harms of our
    alternative courses of action. On the one hand, withholding respondent’s salary until
    after the charges against her have been fully resolved poses a potential, albeit temporary,
    harm if she is eventually vindicated because her salary would have been withheld during
    this time. This is a legitimate concern, and it is why I believe the majority’s course of
    action is not unreasonable. On the other hand, there are the competing harms if
    respondent is not ultimately vindicated: (a) the diminished likelihood that
    misappropriated funds will ever be recovered on behalf of the people of Inkster; (b) the
    diminished likelihood that adequate restitution will ever be afforded the victims of crime
    for whom such funds were intended; and (c) the potentially diminished public regard for
    the self-disciplinary processes of this judiciary.
    V. “POPULIST APPEAL”
    I do not know exactly what the concurrence has in mind when it describes my
    position as having “strong populist appeal,” an odd response to a dissent. I suppose it is
    to intimate that my position cannot also be legally sound, or that it has been undertaken
    on the basis of improper considerations. I am confident that a review of my record on
    this Court will make clear that I have cast no fewer “hard” or “non-populist” votes than
    other Justices, and that I have decided cases on the basis only of what, in my judgment,
    was required by the law, “strong populist appeal” or not. If on this occasion, there
    happens to be “strong populist appeal” for my position, then I am pleased, for I
    “protect the people from corruption and abuse on the part of those who wield judicial
    power.” See Part II, supra.
    13
    Although I disagree with the concurrence that this Court could not itself order
    restitution in a proper case, it is worth noting that precautions to prevent the dissipation of
    misappropriated public funds also serve the interest of justice in the event that a
    respondent voluntarily consents to pay restitution or is criminally prosecuted and required
    to pay restitution. Moreover, it bears repeating that my position “exacts” no restitution,
    but rather holds respondent’s salary in escrow in order to make it more likely that some
    restitution could be made if she is not ultimately vindicated.
    12
    believe it is the correct position. This may also be indicative that I have been mindful
    that “the judicial [discipline] system is for the benefit of the litigant and the public, not
    the judiciary.” Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 1.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    In conclusion, I believe that the potential harm to the integrity of the judiciary, to
    the treasury, and to public confidence in the judicial disciplinary process outweighs the
    undeniable, albeit temporary, harm to respondent. As a result, consistent with our
    authority under §§ 4 and 30(2) of Article 6 of the Constitution, and in the present
    circumstances in which allegations of judicial misconduct involve the misappropriation
    of public funds, I would order respondent’s interim suspension without salary, and that
    her salary be held in escrow until the charges have been resolved.
    I, Corbin R. Davis, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the
    foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
    December 15, 2011                   _________________________________________
    t1214                                                                Clerk