IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2016-JP-01513-SCT
MISSISSIPPI COMMISSION ON JUDICIAL
PERFORMANCE
v.
JUDGE JOHN H. SHEFFIELD
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/06/2016
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CYNTHIA L. BREWER
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: JANELLE MARIE LOWREY
JEFFREY CARTER SMITH
COURTNEY BRADFORD SMITH
BEN LOGAN
DARLENE D. BALLARD
BONNIE H. MENAPACE
RACHEL WILSON MICHEL
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: MISSISSIPPI COMMISSION ON JUDICIAL
PERFORMANCE
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: DARLENE D. BALLARD
RACHEL WILSON MICHEL
MEAGAN COURTNEY BRITTAIN
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: BEN LOGAN
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - JUDICIAL PERFORMANCE
DISPOSITION: SUSPENSION FROM OFFICE FOR 120
DAYS WITHOUT PAY, PUBLIC
REPRIMAND, FINE OF $3,000 AND
ASSESSED ALL COSTS - 08/17/2017
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
DICKINSON, P.J., JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Lee County Justice Court Judge John H. Sheffield ordered James Harper to serve six
months in a work center for a conviction Harper already had appealed to a higher court, and
for which Harper already had satisfied his sentence. Because under the facts of this case,
Judge Sheffield’s conduct was not due to an innocent mistake, it amounts to judicial
misconduct. So we impose a public reprimand, a 120-day suspension without pay, and a
$3,000 fine, and assess all costs of the proceedings to Judge Sheffield.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. On June 11, 1996, James Harper was to appear before Judge John H. Sheffield in the
Lee County Justice Court on charges of driving under the influence and having an expired
inspection sticker. But Harper failed to appear, and Judge Sheffield issued a warrant for his
arrest.
¶3. Harper’s attorney contacted the justice court and set the matter for trial September 11,
1996. The trial went forward, and Judge Sheffield convicted Harper on both charges. Judge
Sheffield then imposed a six-month suspended sentence and a $600 fine for the DUI and a
$50 fine for the inspection sticker. That same day, Harper entered into a payment plan with
the Lee County Justice Court for his $600 fine. Two days later, he paid $50, which was
credited to the DUI case number.
¶4. On October 10, 1996, Harper appealed his DUI conviction to the County Court of Lee
County. The county-court clerk notified the Lee County prosecutor, Harper’s attorney, the
Lee County Justice Court, and Judge Sheffield. The notice of appeal and the clerk’s
notification were placed in the justice-court case file. Harper then was convicted in county
court on June 23, 1997, and he satisfied the terms of his sentence.
2
¶5. On April 9, 2013, Harper again was arrested for DUI in Lee County. At that point
he was told he could not post bond until he resolved a matter with Judge Sheffield. The next
day, Harper appeared before Judge Sheffield, who accused Harper of failing to pay the fines
imposed for the 1996 justice-court convictions.
¶6. Despite Harper’s protestation that he had appealed to county court, lost, and paid his
fines—and despite the fact that Judge Sheffield had with him the justice-court case files for
Harper’s earlier convictions, both of which contained Harper’s notice of appeal and the
county-court notification—Judge Sheffield sentenced Harper to serve six months at the Lee
County Work Center for the DUI conviction. Harper served four months in the work center
before being released due to an infection requiring hospitalization.
¶7. On August 21, 2014, the Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance filed a
complaint against Judge Sheffield. The Commission alleged that Judge Sheffield committed
judicial misconduct by sentencing Harper to the work center when Harper had appealed his
conviction to a higher court and had paid his fine. Following a hearing, the Commission
recommends that this Court find that Judge Sheffield committed misconduct; impose a public
reprimand, a 120-day suspension, and a $3,000 fine; and assess the costs of the proceedings
to Judge Sheffield. We accept the Commission’s recommendation.
ANALYSIS
3
¶8. The Mississippi Constitution grants this Court the power “[o]n recommendation of
the commission on judicial performance,” to “remove from office, suspend, fine or publicly
censure or reprimand any . . . judge of this state for . . . willful misconduct in office . . . or
. . . conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice which brings the judicial office into
disrepute.”1 In a judicial-performance case, we conduct “an independent inquiry of the
record before making a ‘final determination of the appropriate action to be taken in each
case[.]’”2 While we give careful consideration to the Commission’s findings of fact and
recommendation, we are not bound by them.3 To impose sanctions, we must find “‘clear and
convincing evidence of misconduct.’”4
I. Judge Sheffield committed judicial misconduct.
¶9. The Commission recommends that Judge Sheffield’s actions violated Canons 1, 2A,
3B(2), 3B(4), 3B(8), and 3C(1) of the Code of Judicial Conduct as well as Section 177A of
the Mississippi Constitution of 1890. We agree.
1
Miss. Const. art. 6, § 177A.
2
Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Shoemake, 191 So. 3d 1211, 1216
(Miss. 2016) (quoting Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Boone, 60 So. 3d 172,
176 (Miss. 2011)).
3
Shoemake, 191 So. 3d at 1216 (citing Mississippi Comm’n on Judicial
Performance v. Skinner, 119 So. 3d 294, 299 (Miss. 2013)).
4
Id. (citing Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Carver, 107 So. 3d 964, 969
(Miss. 2013)).
4
¶10. The Constitution permits this Court to impose discipline for judicial misconduct which
is willful, or which is “prejudicial to the administration of justice” and “brings the judicial
office into disrepute.”5 “[N]egligence, ignorance, and incompetence are sufficient for a
judge to behave in a manner prejudicial to the administration of justice which brings the
judicial office into disrepute.”6 Here, Judge Sheffield committed misconduct which at least
amounted to negligence, ignorance, and incompetence.
¶11. When Harper appeared before Judge Sheffield in 2013, Judge Sheffield had with him
the 1996 DUI case file. That record contained the notice of appeal to county court. Harper
protested that he had appealed and that he had satisfied his sentence. But Judge Sheffield
failed to recognize these simple facts, both articulated by Harper and sitting before him in
documents on his bench.
¶12. Canon 1 of the Judicial Code of Conduct provides:
An independent and honorable judiciary is indispensable to justice in our
society. A judge should participate in establishing, maintaining, and enforcing
high standards of conduct, and shall personally observe those standards so that
the integrity and independence of the judiciary will be preserved. The
provisions of this Code should be construed and applied to further that
objective.
5
Miss. Const. art. 6, § 177A.
6
Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Little, 72 So. 3d 501, 502 (Miss. 2011)
(citing In re Bailey, 541 So. 2d 1036 (Miss. 1989); In re Baker, 535 So. 2d 47 (Miss.
1988); In re Stewart, 490 So. 2d 882 (Miss. 1986); In re Garner, 466 So. 2d 884 (Miss.
1985); In re Lloyd Anderson, 412 So. 2d 743 (Miss. 1982)).
5
Judge Sheffield’s failure to devote sufficient attention to the record before him did not
represent the “high standards of conduct” required by Canon 1. Canon 2A provides that “[a]
judge shall respect and comply with the law and shall act at all times in a manner that
promotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.” Confidence
in the integrity of the judiciary is not promoted when a judge fails to devote sufficient
attention to the case before him that he cannot find a document in a record he has in his
possession, and wrongfully sentences an individual to serve time in a work center because
of his inattention.
¶13. Canon 3B(2) provides that “[a] judge shall be faithful to the law and maintain
professional competence in it.” Judge Sheffield’s conduct reflects anything but competence.
And Canon 3B(4) states “Judges shall be patient, dignified, and courteous to litigants, jurors,
witnesses, lawyers, and others with whom they deal in their official capacities, and shall
require similar conduct of lawyers, and of their staffs, court officials, and others subject to
their direction and control.” If Judge Sheffield’s failure to find the notice of appeal were not
enough, the testimony establishes that he was discourteous toward Harper in the face of
Harper’s attempt to point out Judge Sheffield’s errors.
¶14. Canon 3B(8) provides that “[a] judge shall dispose of all judicial matters promptly,
efficiently and fairly.” Nothing about this proceeding was prompt, efficient, or fair. Finally,
Canon 3C(1) provides “[a] judge shall diligently discharge the judge’s administrative
responsibilities without bias or prejudice and maintain professional competence in judicial
6
administration, and shall cooperate with other judges and court officials in the administration
of court business.” Judge Sheffield did not “maintain professional competence in judicial
administration.”
¶15. So we accept the Commission’s recommendation that Judge Sheffield’s actions
violated Canons 1, 2A, 3B(2), 3B(4), 3B(8), and 3C(1) of the Code of Judicial Conduct.
II. The Sanction to be Imposed
¶16. “The sanctions in judicial-misconduct cases should be proportionate to the judge’s
offense.”7 To determine the appropriateness of sanctions, this Court weighs six factors:
(1) the length and character of the judge’s public service; (2) whether there is
any prior caselaw on point; (3) the magnitude of the offense and the harm
suffered; (4) whether the misconduct is an isolated incident or evidences a
pattern of conduct; (5) whether moral turpitude was involved; and (6) the
presence or absence of mitigating or aggravating factors.8
A. The Length and Character of Judge Sheffield’s Service
¶17. Judge Sheffield has served as a justice-court judge for twenty-five years. Testimony
established that Judge Sheffield enjoys a reputation for fairness and appropriate courtroom
demeanor, and that he initiated a system for appointing public defenders for some criminal
defendants in justice court.
7
Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Littlejohn, 172 So. 3d 1157, 1161
(Miss. 2015) (quoting Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Harris, 131 So. 3d 1137,
1144 (Miss. 2013)).
8
Boone, 60 So. 3d at 85.
7
¶18. That said, this is not Judge Sheffield’s first instance of misconduct. In Mississippi
Commission on Judicial Performance v. Sheffield, this Court found that Judge Sheffield
committed misconduct when he suspended fines that would be paid to the county as
retribution for the county failing to provide adequate funding for a bailiff.9 We imposed a
public reprimand and $192 fine, and assessed Judge Sheffield court costs of $100.10
¶19. In another instance, Judge Sheffield and the Commission agreed to a private
admonishment and assessment of costs for a complaint filed when Judge Sheffield pressured
a bail bondsman to bring a litigant to jail for failure to appear, despite the bondsman’s
request to pay on the bond instead, and while the litigant was involved in a custody dispute
with Judge Sheffield’s brother. Further, Judge Sheffield has received two letters of caution
from the Commission regarding his courtroom demeanor, and another for acting in excess
of his court’s jurisdiction.
B. Whether there is any prior caselaw on point.
¶20. Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance v. Littlejohn and Mississippi
Commission on Judicial Performance v. Darby are similar cases involving the unlawful
incarceration of individuals.11 In Littlejohn, this Court imposed a thirty-day suspension, a
9
Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Sheffield, 883 So. 2d 546, 547 (Miss.
2004).
10
Id. at 549.
11
Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Littlejohn 172 So. 3d 1157 (Miss.
2015); Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Darby, 75 So. 3d 1037 (Miss. 2011).
8
$1,000 fine, and assessed the costs of the proceedings after Littlejohn unlawfully imprisoned
a man for three days and two nights.12 There, Chancellor Littlejohn modified a support
order.13 A litigant appealed and posted a supersedeas bond in an amount the chancery clerk
approved.14 Despite the fact that Chancellor Littlejohn acknowledged that the bond had been
posted and approved, he nevertheless held the litigant in contempt for his failure to pay on
the appealed judgment.15
¶21. In Darby, we imposed a public reprimand, a $500 fine, and assessed the costs of the
proceedings where Darby wrongly incarcerated a woman for three days.16 There, Judge
Darby held a litigant in contempt even though it was “undisputed that (1) no pleadings had
been filed which alleged that the mother was in contempt of court, (2) the mother was not
provided written notice of the hearing, (3) the mother was not given a reasonable amount of
time to prepare for the hearing, and (4) the mother was not afforded the opportunity to obtain
counsel.”17
C. The Magnitude of the Offense and the Harm Suffered
12
Littlejohn, 172 So. 3d at 1163, 1159.
13
Id.
14
Id.
15
Id.
16
Darby, 75 So. 3d at 1044.
17
Id. at 1040.
9
¶22. Judge Sheffield’s misconduct caused Harper to serve four months in the Lee County
Work Center. He was released when a serious infection required his hospitalization. We
have recognized that illegal incarceration is “one of the most severe forms of harm.”18
D. Whether the misconduct evidences a pattern of conduct.
¶23. As discussed above, Judge Sheffield has been issued letters of caution related to his
courtroom demeanor. That demeanor was at issue here. And Judge Sheffield has been both
privately admonished and publicly reprimanded for past misconduct. That said, Judge
Sheffield’s failure to see the notice of appeal is dissimilar from Judge Sheffield’s past
misconduct.
E. Whether the conduct was willful, intended to deprive the
public of assets, or exploited the judge’s position.
¶24. “To determine the extent to which the conduct was willful, ‘we will examine whether
the judge acted in bad faith, good faith, intentionally, knowingly, or negligently.’”19 Judge
Sheffield’s misconduct—while causing a severe outcome—appears to be due mostly to a
matter of inattention. The court file—which Judge Sheffield had with him at the
bench—conclusively established that Harper had appealed to county court. Harper also
argued this fact to Judge Sheffield. But Judge Sheffield failed to devote sufficient attention
to his work to find the notice of appeal. So Judge Sheffield’s conduct was clearly negligent.
18
Littlejohn, 172 So. 3d at 1160.
19
Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Harris, 131 So. 3d 1137, 1146 (Miss.
2013) (quoting In re Coffey’s Case, 949 A.2d 102, 115 (N.H. 2008)).
10
F. Mitigating and Aggravating Factors
¶25. Judge Sheffield’s failure to take personal responsibility for his error constitutes an
aggravating factor, and we find no mitigating factors for his misconduct. In sum, this Court
finds that the Commission’s recommended sanction is an appropriate one. We find this case
similar to Littlejohn. The severity of the harm to Harper requires suspension from office.
CONCLUSION
¶26. We thus order that Judge Sheffield be publicly reprimanded, suspended from office
for 120 days without pay, fined $3,000, and assessed costs of the proceedings. The public
reprimand shall be read in open court by the presiding judge of the Circuit Court of Lee
County on the first day of the next term of that Court in which a jury venire is present after
the issuance of this Court’s mandate in this case, with Judge Sheffield present.
¶27. The Clerk of this Court shall send copies of this opinion and the mandate of this Court
to the Chancery Clerk of Lee County, and to the Circuit Clerk of Lee County, as well as to
the Lee County Justice Court Clerk, the County Administrator of Lee County, and the Lee
County Board of Supervisors.
¶28. LEE COUNTY JUSTICE COURT JUDGE JOHN H. SHEFFIELD SHALL BE
SUSPENDED FROM OFFICE FOR A PERIOD OF 120 DAYS WITHOUT PAY,
EFFECTIVE ON THE DATE OF ISSUANCE OF THIS COURT’S MANDATE,
PUBLICLY REPRIMANDED, FINED $3,000, AND ASSESSED ALL COSTS. THE
PUBLIC REPRIMAND SHALL BE READ IN OPEN COURT BY THE PRESIDING
JUDGE OF THE LEE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE
NEXT TERM OF THAT COURT IN WHICH A JURY VENIRE IS PRESENT
AFTER THE ISSUANCE OF THIS COURT’S MANDATE, WITH JUDGE
SHEFFIELD IN ATTENDANCE.
11
WALLER, C.J., RANDOLPH, P.J., KITCHENS, COLEMAN, MAXWELL
AND BEAM, JJ., CONCUR. KING, J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN
PART WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. CHAMBERLIN, J., NOT
PARTICIPATING.
KING, JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART:
¶29. While I agree with the majority that Judge Sheffield committed misconduct, I disagree
with the majority’s determination that the recommended sanctions are proportionate to the
offense. I would remove Judge Sheffield from office. As this Court has recognized in the
past, most of Mississippi’s citizens “have their primary, if not their only, direct contact with
the law through the office of the justice court judge.” In re Bailey, 541 So. 2d 1036, 1039
(Miss. 1989). Thus, “justice court judges must scrupulously follow the Code of Judicial
Conduct.” Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Boone, 60 So. 3d 172, 183 (Miss.
2011).
¶30. This is not a case of a judge simply overlooking a notice of appeal in a case-file and
being sanctioned for misconduct. Instead, the judge, by his own admission, had knowledge
of the claim of appeal, had the evidence of the appeal before him, and yet still acted without
authority of law to imprison Harper illegally.
¶31. By Judge Sheffield’s own admission, Harper told him “that he had appealed the
charge.” Throughout the committee hearing, Judge Sheffield acknowledged that he searched
for evidence of an appeal. Judge Sheffield testified that he understood that an appeal from
justice court divested him from jurisdiction over the case. Despite Judge Sheffield’s notice
of Harper’s claim and his admitted knowledge of the law, Judge Sheffield, without authority
12
of law, sentenced Harper to serve six months on a sentence which Harper had appealed and
satisfied seventeen years earlier.
¶32. Further, Judge Sheffield’s assertion that he examined the entire contents of the case-
files before him is belied by the evidence in the record. This evidence raises questions as to
the credibility of Sheffield’s testimony that he examined each page of the case-file and
“checked the record as thoroughly as [he] could.” Two of the mere twenty-three pages of the
file were notices of appeal, but Judge Sheffield missed them in his “thorough check.” Also,
Judge Sheffield’s claim at the committee hearing that he was searching for evidence of
Harper’s payment of the fine further demonstrated that Sheffield’s examination of the case-
file was not “thorough.” An additional two pages—the deferred payment agreement and the
$50.00 dollar receipt—demonstrate some satisfaction of the fine, yet Judge Sheffield did not
notice them, either. While the partial payment of the fine alone would not have satisfied
Harper’s conviction, Judge Sheffield’s failure to notice these two documents calls into
question the credibility of his testimony at the committee hearing.
¶33. Also, Judge Sheffield failed to make “every reasonable effort” to determine if Harper
had appealed. While a justice court judge is not required to contact the county court every
time a defendant insists that he or she appealed a sentence, the testimony at the committee
hearing indicated that this was the general practice in the Lee County Justice Court. Judge
Sheffield, though, did not contact the Lee County Court to inquire about the appeal, or have
13
his clerks do so.20 Instead, he sentenced Harper without authority of law. In examining the
factors we analyze to determine appropriate sanctions, I conclude that a public reprimand and
suspension are not proportionate to Sheffield’s offense.
A. The Length and Character of Judge Sheffield’s Service
¶34. As the majority notes, Judge Sheffield has served as a justice court judge for twenty-
five years, and much of his service has been commendable. On the other hand, Judge
Sheffield does have instances of previous judicial misconduct in his record, as noted by the
majority. The private reprimand he received even included improper actions in attempting
to imprison someone.
B. Whether there is any prior caselaw on point.
¶35. The majority cites Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance v. Littlejohn,
172 So. 3d 1157, 1163 (Miss. 2015) and Mississippi Commission On Judicial Performance
v. Darby, 75 So. 3d 1037, 1044 (Miss. 2011) (finding judge’s “failure to adhere to procedure
. . . serious, given the deprivation of liberty in this matter”).
¶36. In this case, Judge Sheffield, unlike Judge Littlejohn, admitted that he knew the
appropriate law. Despite his knowledge of the law, Judge Sheffield sentenced Harper even
though Harper had appealed the 1996 conviction and satisfied the terms of his conviction in
county court. Despite Harper’s claims and the two notices of appeal in the case-file, Judge
20
Moreover, when sentencing someone on a seventeen-year-old case, extra diligence
is advisable.
14
Sheffield sentenced Harper to six months in the county work center. As in Littlejohn, Judge
Sheffield had previously been sanctioned by this Court for judicial misconduct where Judge
Sheffield had knowledge of the appropriate law. In contrast to Littlejohn and Darby,
Harper’s sentence was significantly longer than the imprisonments in those cases, and
resulted in Harper contracting a serious infection. And Harper’s actual time served was only
cut short due to that infection.
¶37. Additionally, in Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance v. Dodds, 680 So.
2d 180, 191 (Miss. 1996), this Court held that a justice court judge “acted unlawfully” and
“without any legal authority” when he entered a restraining order preventing the pastor of a
church from entering church property. The Dodds Court emphasized that “a specific intent
to use the powers of the judicial office to accomplish a purpose which Dodds knew or
should have known was beyond the legitimate exercise of his authority constituted bad faith
on his behalf.” Id. at 192 (emphasis in original). In Dodds, this Court removed the judge
from the bench and assessed the costs of the proceedings to him. Id. at 201.
¶38. Judge Sheffield knew, or at least should have known, that his actions were without
authority of law. In fact, he acknowledged that he knew that an appeal to a higher court
divested his court of jurisdiction.
C. The Magnitude of the Offense and the Harm Suffered
¶39. The majority acknowledges that illegal incarceration is “one of the most severe forms
of harm” that Judge Sheffield could have ordered against Harper. Littlejohn, 172 So. 3d at
15
1160; see also Darby, 75 So. 3d at 1044. Here, though, the length of incarceration and
resulting physical harm to Harper render Harper’s illegal incarceration more severe than the
incarcerations in Littlejohn and Darby. The citizens of Lee County also suffered harm from
Judge Sheffield’s disregard of the authority of the law. See Bailey, 541 So. 2d at 1039 (“If
[justice court] judges do not behave with judicial temperament and perform their duties
according to the law . . . there seems little hope that our citizenry at large may understand and
respect the legal process.”).
D. Whether the misconduct is an isolated incident or evidences
a pattern of conduct.
¶40. Judge Sheffield’s history with the Commission evidences the same type of conduct
by Judge Sheffield in the past as in this case with Harper. Judge Sheffield has twice received
letters concerning his courtroom demeanor, and twice received letters concerning procedural
issues. Judge Sheffield failed to heed one of the letters concerning a procedural issue, and
the Commission brought a formal complaint against him. Miss. Comm’n on Judicial Perf.
v. Sheffield, 883 So. 2d 546, 547 (Miss. 2004). There, this Court found that Judge Sheffield
had committed judicial misconduct for actions that attempted to “teach Lee County a lesson.”
Id. at 547, 549. Moreover, Judge Sheffield previously attempted to have a defendant
improperly incarcerated, and agreed to discipline by the Commission as a result. These
instances of misconduct demonstrate a pattern of conduct by Judge Sheffield. Judge
Sheffield knew what the law required of him in these previous cases and willfully ignored
the law, just as he did when he illegally incarcerated Harper.
16
E. Whether the conduct was willful, intended to deprive the
public of assets, or exploited the judge’s position.
¶41. “To determine the extent to which the conduct was willful, ‘we will examine whether
the judge acted in bad faith, good faith, intentionally, knowingly, or negligently.’” Miss.
Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Harris, 131 So. 3d 1137, 1146 (Miss. 2013) (quoting
In re Coffey’s Case, 949 A.2d 102, 115 (N.H. 2008)). Also, “specific intent to use the
powers of the judicial office to accomplish a purpose which the judge knew or should have
known was beyond the legitimate exercise of his authority constitutes bad faith.” Miss.
Comm’n on Judicial Perf. v. Boykin, 763 So. 2d 872, 874-75 (emphasis added).
¶42. The majority argues that Judge Sheffield’s misconduct “appears to be due mostly to
a matter of inattention.” I disagree.21 It is clear that Judge Sheffield should have known that
his actions were without the authority of law. The justice court case-file in Judge Sheffield’s
possession reflected that he had no jurisdiction to sentence Harper. The Commission found
that Judge Sheffield, regardless of his motive, “acted with gross unconcern for his conduct.”
The case-file contained two documents evidencing Harper’s appeal and two more documents
evidencing his partial payment of the fine, payment that Judge Sheffield repeatedly testified
that he was searching for in his “thorough check.”
21
If the majority is correct that this was mere inattention, it seems it should be
concerned that Judge Sheffield then lied to the Commission in his vociferous arguments that
he was very thorough in this case.
17
¶43. The Commission also found that Harper “did his best to explain that he appealed his
1996 charges, to no avail: ‘I was trying to talk to him, but he wouldn’t listen to me.’” Harper
also testified that Judge Sheffield “wouldn’t let me talk, he wouldn’t let me do none of that.”
Judge Sheffield admitted that Harper claimed he had appealed. Thus, Judge Sheffield acted
willfully in sentencing Harper. However, no evidence exists that Judge Sheffield acted to
deprive the public of assets or exploited his position as a judge.
F. The Presence or Absence of Mitigating or Aggravating
Factors
¶44. As the majority notes, Judge Sheffield never accepted personal responsibility for the
misconduct, which is an aggravating factor, and no mitigating factors exist.
¶45. After review, I am of the opinion that the sanctions recommended by the Commission
are not proportionate to Judge Sheffield’s offense. Judge Sheffield’s prior misconduct
demonstrates a pattern of willful misconduct despite clear knowledge of the law. Further,
the severe harm to Harper merits strong sanctions. Judge Sheffield’s actions cost Harper four
months of freedom and resulted in a serious infection. As a result, I believe that the
appropriate sanctions are removal from office, being assessed a $3,000 fine, and being
assessed the costs of the proceedings.
18