NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.
In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: June 25, 2024
S22Z0180. INQUIRY CONCERNING JUDGE CHRISTINA
PETERSON.
PER CURIAM.
We have explained before that “[t]he judiciary’s judgment will
be obeyed only so long as the public respects it, and that respect will
not long survive judges who act in a manner that undermines public
confidence in their judgment and integrity.” Inquiry Concerning
Coomer (“Coomer II”), 316 Ga. 855, 855-856 (892 SE2d 3) (2023). In
this case, Douglas County Probate Court Judge Christina Peterson
has been charged with a number of violations of the Code of Judicial
Conduct (“CJC”), including a number of violations that the Judicial
Qualifications Commission (“JQC”) says exhibited a pattern of
judicial misconduct while in office. The JQC Hearing Panel found
that Judge Peterson violated multiple rules in the CJC and that
those violations warrant her removal from the bench.
We agree that removal is warranted here. As we explain more
below, the Hearing Panel found that the Director proved by clear
and convincing evidence 28 of 30 counts alleging that Judge
Peterson violated the CJC, and that discipline is authorized under
the Georgia Constitution for 20 of those 28 counts. With respect to
all 20 of those counts, we conclude that the Hearing Panel’s findings
are not clearly erroneous. And we agree with, and affirm, the
Hearing Panel’s conclusion that Judge Peterson’s misconduct
warrants discipline with respect to 12 of them, because the Director
met her burden of showing that Judge Peterson’s conduct
constituted willful misconduct in office or conduct prejudicial to the
administration of justice which brings the judicial office into
disrepute. See Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a).1 The
seriousness of certain of those violations, the pattern of misconduct
the Director proved by clear and convincing evidence, and the
1 As explained more in Division 2 (e) below, we pretermit whether other
conduct by Judge Peterson, as set forth in eight other counts of the formal
charges, constitutes violations of the CJC.
2
adverse demeanor and credibility determinations the Hearing Panel
made after observing live testimony from Judge Peterson all
contribute to the conclusion we reach today.
1. Background and Procedural History
Judge Peterson was admitted to the State Bar of Georgia in
2013, and on March 5, 2020, she qualified to run for the office of
judge of the Douglas County Probate Court and therefore became a
judicial candidate for purposes of the CJC. See Inquiry Concerning
Coomer (“Coomer I”), 315 Ga. 841, 851 (885 SE2d 738) (2023). In
June 2020, she won a contested primary election. She then won the
general election, in which she was unopposed, and she was sworn in
for a four-year term as the Douglas County Probate Court judge on
December 29, 2020.
In September 2021, the JQC filed formal charges against
Judge Peterson alleging several violations of the CJC. The JQC
amended its charges in February 2022 and again in July 2022,
3
alleging 50 counts of misconduct.2 The JQC Director dismissed 20
counts before and during the final hearing, which was held over the
course of seven days beginning in September 2023 and concluding
2 In September 2021, the JQC Director filed a motion to suspend Judge
Peterson pending the final outcome of its investigation. See JQC Rule 15 (C)
(providing that this Court may suspend a judge with pay upon “receipt of
sufficient evidence demonstrating that [the] judge poses a substantial threat
of serious harm to the public or to the administration of justice”). We denied
that motion in October 2021, concluding that although we were “concerned
about the number and the escalation in seriousness of the allegations against
Judge Peterson,” there was not at that time “sufficient evidence to demonstrate
that [she] pose[d] the ‘substantial threat of serious harm to the public or to the administration of justice’ necessary to support her interim suspension from
office,” in part given the passage of time since the alleged misconduct. The
Director filed a second motion seeking interim suspension of Judge Peterson
in July 2022. In August 2022, we denied the motion, noting that many of the
charges against Judge Peterson were “quite significant” and “may well warrant
severe discipline,” but that she disputed the allegations; that it was “not at all clear that her alleged actions show[ed] that she ‘pose[d] a substantial threat of
serious harm to the public or to the administration of justice’”; and that
although JQC Rule 15 (C) permitted suspension, it does not permit interimsuspension proceedings to be used as a substitute for a hearing on the charges.
On June 21, 2024, the JQC Director filed a third motion for interim suspension
of Judge Peterson based on alleged conduct that occurred on June 20, 2024. In
it, the Director asked that this Court “immediately impose an interim
suspension pending the Court’s final determination in the above-styled matter;
or in the alternative, direct the JQC’s Hearing Panel to conduct a hearing on
this Motion and file with this Court a record of the proceeding and a report
setting forth findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a recommendation
regarding interim suspension.” The conduct alleged in that motion has not yet
been the subject of any hearing, and in any event, we hereby dismiss that
motion as moot because, as a result of this decision, Judge Peterson has now
been removed from office. See Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VIII (“Due
process; review by Supreme Court. No action shall be taken against a judge
except after hearing and in accordance with due process of law.”).
4
in February 2024, leaving 30 counts remaining for the Hearing
Panel’s resolution.3
The Hearing Panel issued a Report and Recommendation on
March 31, 2024, finding that the Director had proven 28 of the 30
counts by clear and convincing evidence, but that discipline was
authorized pursuant to the Georgia Constitution for only 20 of those
counts.4 In so doing, the Hearing Panel concluded that Judge
3 Specifically, the Director dismissed Counts 5-12, 16-18, 20, 22-24, 27,
29, 36, 45, and 47. We note that the Director dismissed Counts 5-12 because
they were premised on Judge Peterson’s conduct before she became a judicial
candidate, and as we concluded in Coomer I, the CJC “governs only those
actions taken while a person is a judge or judicial candidate.” 315 Ga. at 851
(emphasis omitted).
4 The counts that the Hearing Panel found were not proven by clear and
convincing evidence or for which discipline was not authorized under the
Georgia Constitution included Counts 1-4 (related to social media posts Judge
Peterson made; the Panel found that the Director proved by clear and
convincing evidence violations of CJC Rules 1.2 (A), 1.2 (B), and 3.1 (A), but
determined that no sanction was warranted because the Director failed to
prove that Judge Peterson’s actions, taken outside her judicial capacity, were
done in bad faith such that discipline was authorized under the Georgia
Constitution); Counts 25-26 (related to Judge Peterson’s allegedly obstructing
the JQC’s access to public records; the Panel found that the Director failed to
prove these counts by clear and convincing evidence); Counts 44, 46, and 48
(related to Judge Peterson’s handling of a petition for letters of administration; the Panel found that the Director proved the counts by clear and convincing
evidence but failed to prove that Judge Peterson acted in bad faith, such that
discipline was authorized under the Georgia Constitution); and Count 49
(related to Judge Peterson’s alleged practice of backdating judicial orders; the
5
Peterson had violated multiple rules in the CJC and recommended
as a sanction that this Court remove her from office. Judge Peterson
filed a Notice of Exceptions to the Report and Recommendation
(“Exceptions”), see JQC Rule 24 (F), arguing that the Director had
not sufficiently proven that she committed sanctionable conduct,
and the Director filed a response to those Exceptions.
2. Analysis
As discussed more below, we agree with and affirm the Hearing
Panel’s conclusion that Judge Peterson’s misconduct with respect to
12 of the 20 counts (Counts 13, 28, 30-35, 37, 39-40 and 42) at issue
here was proven by clear and convincing evidence and warrants
discipline.5 Those counts relate to four separate matters, which
Panel found that the Director proved this count by clear and convincing
evidence but failed to prove that Judge Peterson acted in bad faith, such that
discipline was authorized under the Georgia Constitution). The Director has
not challenged the Hearing Panel’s conclusions regarding these counts, so we
do not address them. In addition, we note that Judge Peterson does not argue,
and the record does not show, that any of the 20 remaining counts at issue here
involved conduct that occurred before she became a judge or judicial candidate.
See Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 851.
5 As we also explain below, although the Hearing Panel’s findings as to
the eight remaining counts (Counts 14-15, 19, 21, 38, 41, 43, and 50) are not
6
include Judge Peterson’s handling of a criminal contempt matter
(Counts 31 to 34), certain aspects of her conduct toward county
personnel (Counts 28 and 30), her conduct during a meeting of her
neighborhood homeowner’s association (“HOA”) (Count 13), and her
handling of a petition for year’s support (Counts 35, 37, 39-40, and
42). We discuss each of these four matters in turn below, applying
the following analytical framework.
First, we review the Hearing Panel’s findings as to Judge
Peterson’s conduct with respect to each matter. “We generally
review factual findings by the JQC Hearing Panel for clear error and
defer to the Hearing Panel’s credibility determinations.” Coomer II,
316 Ga. at 860. See also Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 847 (explaining that
“‘we give substantial consideration and due deference to the
[Hearing Panel’s] ability to evaluate the credibility of the witnesses
clearly erroneous, we need not decide whether the Hearing Panel correctly
concluded that Judge Peterson’s conduct as to those counts constituted
violations of the CJC and warrants sanction, because affirmance of those
counts is not necessary to reach our ultimate conclusion that Judge Peterson’s
removal from the bench is the proper sanction in this case.
7
who appear before it’”) (citation omitted).6 Judge Peterson’s primary
argument in her Exceptions to the Report and Recommendation is
that the Hearing Panel’s factual findings as to each of the matters
at issue are clearly erroneous, because the Panel either failed to
credit or to expressly mention in its Report and Recommendation
evidence that Judge Peterson says supported different findings. In
this respect, Judge Peterson devotes dozens of pages in her
Exceptions to recounting this other evidence. But we need not and
do not detail most of that evidence below; although Judge Peterson
is correct that some of the evidence she notes (if credited by the
Hearing Panel) could have supported different findings, the record
in this case does not compel those different findings. To the extent
the record contains evidence that could support findings in either
direction, the Hearing Panel was authorized to make the findings
6 As we explained in Coomer II, although we generally defer to the
Hearing Panel’s factual findings, “the broad and discretionary nature of our
review in judicial discipline matters means that we need not always defer even
in situations where we would defer to a factfinder in an ordinary appeal.” 316
Ga. at 860 n.5. We reiterate that principle here, but also see no reason to
depart from our general application of deference as articulated above.
8
that it did. See Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 860-861 (rejecting a judge’s
similar argument that evidence in the record could have supported
different findings by the Hearing Panel, because the record did “not
compel the different findings that he prefer[red]”) (emphasis in
original). After thoroughly reviewing the record and the parties’
briefing, we conclude that the findings the Hearing Panel made that
are material to our ultimate conclusion in this case are not clearly
erroneous, and we defer to the findings that the Hearing Panel
made, as outlined below.
Second, we consider whether these findings support the
Hearing Panel’s conclusions that Judge Peterson’s actions, with
respect to each matter, amounted to violations of the CJC rules the
JQC charged. In considering whether the Director has proven
violations of the CJC, “we employ a ‘clear and convincing proof
standard.’” Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 847 (citation omitted). And we
review the Hearing’s Panel’s legal determinations de novo. See id.
As explained below, we agree with the Hearing Panel’s conclusions
that Judge Peterson violated multiple rules in the CJC.
9
Third, our review of the Hearing Panel’s findings and
conclusions is necessarily conducted through the lens of the Georgia
Constitution, and specifically the grounds for discipline that the
Georgia Constitution authorizes. Article VI, Section VII, Paragraph
VII (a) of the Georgia Constitution (“Paragraph VII (a)”) sets out five
grounds for discipline: “for willful misconduct in office, or for willful
and persistent failure to perform the duties of office, or for habitual
intemperance, or for conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude,
or for conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice which
brings the judicial office into disrepute.” Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec.
VII, Par. VII (a). See also Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 858. As detailed
below, we agree with the Hearing Panel’s conclusion that Paragraph
VII (a) authorizes discipline against Judge Peterson for the counts
discussed below because the Director has met her burden of proving
that Judge Peterson’s conduct with respect to each of the four
matters at issue constitutes at least one constitutional basis that
authorizes discipline: either willful misconduct in office or conduct
prejudicial to the administration of justice which brings the judicial
10
office into disrepute. See Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a).
We then briefly review the Hearing Panel’s findings as to the
eight remaining counts (Counts 14-15, 19, 21, 38, 41, 43, and 50)
that the Panel found were proven by clear and convincing evidence
and warranted sanction. Although those findings are not clearly
erroneous, we need not decide whether the Hearing Panel correctly
concluded that Judge Peterson’s conduct as to those counts
constituted violations of the CJC and warrants discipline, because
affirmance of those counts is not necessary to reach our ultimate
conclusion that Judge Peterson’s removal from the bench is the
proper sanction in this case.
Finally, after reviewing all of the conduct underlying Judge
Peterson’s numerous violations of the CJC, we assess the proper
sanction. On that point, we agree with the Hearing Panel that
removal from office is the appropriate discipline here. See Coomer
I, 315 Ga. at 847, 862 (explaining that “this Court is not well
positioned to resolve the factual questions of intent that are crucial
to determining whether discipline is constitutionally permitted,” but
11
that we review “legal determinations and the ultimate outcome de
novo”).
We now apply the analytical framework described above,
beginning with an evaluation of the counts that the Hearing Panel
found were proven by clear and convincing evidence and with which
we agree warrant discipline. We address first the most troubling
allegation: Judge Peterson’s handling of a criminal contempt
matter.
(a) Handling of a Criminal Contempt Matter (Counts 31 to 34)
(i) The Hearing Panel’s Findings Are Not Clearly
Erroneous as to the Material Facts Pertaining to
Counts 31 to 34
With respect to Counts 31 to 34, the Hearing Panel found the
following facts pertaining to Judge Peterson’s handling of a criminal
contempt matter. On August 2, 2021, a petitioner, who is a
naturalized United States citizen but born in Thailand, filed in the
Douglas County Probate Court a petition to amend her marriagelicense application, which she had filed with the court in May 2016.
The petitioner sought to correct the name she had listed as her
12
father’s name on the marriage-license application. In support of her
petition, the petitioner attached a copy of her birth certificate, which
had been translated from Thai into English. The copy said that the
document was “not recommended as a legal document.” After
reviewing the petition to amend, Judge Peterson issued on August
12, 2021, a “Notice of Trial or Hearing,” which informed the
petitioner that she was required to attend an in-person hearing on
her petition on August 24 and that court-reporting services would
be provided only if the petitioner arranged for them. The notice
made no mention of any charges of contempt and did not advise the
petitioner that she was entitled to have counsel present.
At the hearing on the petition to amend (which was not
transcribed), the petitioner presented the copy of the translated
birth certificate, and Judge Peterson concluded that it was
“fictitious,” “fraudulent,” and “forged.” The petitioner explained to
Judge Peterson that she previously had listed her uncle’s name,
rather than her father’s name, on her marriage-license application
in 2016 because her father was not involved in her life and her uncle
13
had raised her. Judge Peterson ultimately determined that the
petitioner was trying to defraud the court and held her in contempt.
The contempt order stated that the petitioner “willfully provided
false information on the marriage application”; the court had been
“alerted to the fraudulent misrepresentations on August 2, 2021
when [the petitioner] filed a Petition to Amend Marriage Record”;
and the petitioner was “in blatant disregard of the laws of the State
of Georgia and of this [c]ourt evidenced by her fraudulent
misrepresentations to the [c]ourt via her filings with the [c]ourt.”7
7 During her testimony before the Hearing Panel, Judge Peterson
repeatedly referred to the allegedly fraudulent nature of the petitioner’s
translated birth certificate, a copy of which was admitted into evidence. When
the Hearing Panel asked Judge Peterson what aspect of that document led her
to conclude that the petitioner was defrauding the court, Judge Peterson said
that at the hearing on the petition to amend, the petitioner “admitted under
oath that this was not her birth certificate” and that she was trying to assist
her mother in emigrating to the United States. The Hearing Panel then
pointed out that Judge Peterson’s contempt order appeared to refer only to the
petitioner’s marriage-license application as false (not the birth certificate), and Judge Peterson responded:
It was the documentation. But when you have somebody coming
into court, swearing under oath that I knew I lied; I lied; and the
only reason I am changing this and updating the court is because
I am trying to get my mother in the country; here is [a] copy version
of something, a nonlegal document; so I want you to take this as
true on who my father is, even though I swore under oath that my
father was over here; that was an issue to the court. That was a
14
Judge Peterson sentenced the petitioner to the maximum allowable
term of incarceration for contempt—20 days in jail—but allowed her
to “purge” herself of the contempt order after serving two days if she
paid a $500 fine. After the petitioner served two days in the Douglas
County Jail and paid the $500 fine, she was released from custody.
The Hearing Panel found that Judge Peterson “provided
neither a firm nor a proper basis when she held [the petitioner] in
contempt and, without explanation or justification, imposed the
maximum term of incarceration plus a fine.” (emphasis in original).
It determined that the petitioner, who testified before the Panel, was
“in good faith trying to correct” what appeared to be “an innocent
mistake borne out of ignorance rather than ill-intent.” The Hearing
Panel noted that Judge Peterson testified that the petitioner sought
to amend the marriage-license application so that her mother could
emigrate from Thailand to the United States (although Judge
decision that was made on the time. It appeared like it was a
fictitious document, or what I thought as a fraudulent document,
as well as the representations and the lies under oath, so I did hold
her in contempt.
15
Peterson could not explain how the amendment would assist the
petitioner in obtaining emigration documents for her mother),
whereas the petitioner testified that she became aware of the
mistake on her marriage-license application while she was
completing emigration documents for her mother and believed she
should correct the application so that it would not be inconsistent
with her birth certificate. The Hearing Panel expressly credited the
petitioner’s testimony over Judge Peterson’s.
In addition, the Hearing Panel expressly discredited Judge
Peterson’s testimony that she had not concluded that the petitioner
made fraudulent representations before issuing the notice of the
hearing on the petition. In this respect, the Hearing Panel found
that Judge Peterson “predetermined that [the petitioner] had made
a ‘fraudulent misrepresentation . . . via her filings with the court on
May 3rd of 2016’ before ever conducting a hearing on the matter.”
The Hearing Panel noted that Judge Peterson denied making any
such predetermination and testified before the Panel that she found
the petitioner in contempt based on her submission of the
16
supposedly fictitious birth certificate at the hearing on the petition,
but the Panel found that testimony to be false, because it
“contradict[ed] the plain language of the order,” which referred only
to the alleged fraudulent misrepresentations in the marriage
application.
Because evidence presented at the hearing supports the
Hearing Panel’s findings that are material to our ultimate
conclusion, those findings, as recounted above, are not clearly
erroneous. See Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 860-861.8
(ii) Judge Peterson Violated CJC Rules 1.1, 1.2 (A), 1.2 (B), and
2.2
The Hearing Panel concluded that the Director proved by clear
8 Judge Peterson correctly points out in her Exceptions that the Hearing
Panel noted, among other things, that the petitioner’s “father was such a
remote actor in her life that [the petitioner] did not even know his name in
2016 when she completed the license application,” which contradicts
undisputed evidence that the petitioner possessed the translated copy of her
birth certificate, which correctly listed her father’s name, for several years
before she completed the marriage-license application. But that error does not
affect our ultimate conclusion on Counts 31 to 34 because the Hearing Panel
expressly noted other reasons for crediting the petitioner’s testimony,
including her demeanor and motive in testifying, and because the Hearing
Panel’s finding that the petitioner did not know her father’s name when she
completed the license application is not material to our ultimate conclusions
related to this incident. See Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 860-861.
17
and convincing evidence that Judge Peterson violated CJC Rules 1.1
(Count 31), 1.2 (A) (Count 32), 1.2 (B) (Count 33), and 2.2 (Count 34)
in connection with the contempt matter.9 We agree.
To begin, the Hearing Panel credited the petitioner’s testimony
over Judge Peterson’s account and found that, in attempting to
amend her marriage-license application, the petitioner was “in good
faith trying to correct” an “innocent mistake.” After affording proper
deference to that credibility determination, see Coomer I, 315 Ga. at
847, it is clear to this Court that Judge Peterson’s contempt ruling
was baseless. In response to the petitioner’s good-faith effort to
amend her marriage-license application so that it would not be
inconsistent with her birth certificate, Judge Peterson made an
unsubstantiated finding that the petitioner was somehow
9 CJC Rule 1.1 says, “Judges shall respect and comply with the law.”
CJC Rule 1.2 (A) says, “Judges shall act at all times in a manner that promotes
public confidence in the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the
judiciary.” Rule 1.2 (B) says, in pertinent part, “An independent and honorable
judiciary is indispensable to justice in our society. Judges shall participate in
establishing, maintaining, and enforcing high standards of conduct, and shall
personally observe such standards of conduct so that the independence,
integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary may be preserved.” CJC Rule 2.2
says, “Judges shall dispose of all judicial matters fairly, promptly, and
efficiently.”
18
attempting to defraud the court, and then unjustifiably held her in
contempt. Indeed, the Hearing Panel determined that Judge
Peterson, in testifying before the Panel, lied about the basis for her
contempt ruling when she repeatedly referenced her belief that the
translated birth certificate was fraudulent, notwithstanding that
her written contempt order focused only on the alleged fraudulent
misrepresentations in the marriage-license application (not the
birth certificate).
Judge Peterson’s untruthful testimony in this respect
underscores her conscious wrongdoing in determining that the
petitioner had defrauded the court before issuing the notice of the
hearing on the petition, because, as the Hearing Panel found, Judge
Peterson purposely issued the notice without advising the petitioner
that a criminal contempt charge on the allegation of fraud would be
adjudicated at the hearing, so that the petitioner would be
unprepared to defend herself when Judge Peterson summarily
found her guilty of criminal contempt. As we explain below, these
actions of misconduct evinced a willful disregard for the basic
19
requirements of due process.
It is well established that “‘[c]riminal contempt is a crime in
the ordinary sense,’” and “‘criminal penalties may not be imposed on
someone who has not been afforded the protections that the
Constitution requires of such criminal proceedings.’” Intl. Union,
United Mine Workers of America v. Bagwell, 512 U.S. 821, 826 (114
SCt 2552, 129 LE2d 642) (1994) (citations omitted).10 In this respect,
although a judge may announce punishment summarily and
without further notice or hearing when “‘contumacious conduct’”
occurs in the judge’s presence and “‘threatens a court’s immediate
ability to conduct its proceedings, such as where a witness refuses
to testify, or a party disrupts the court,’” when the “‘alleged
contumacious acts’” are committed outside the judge’s presence, due
process requires that the alleged offender is entitled to “‘more
10 Criminal contempt differs from civil contempt, which “seeks only to
‘coerc[e] the defendant to do’ what a court had previously ordered him to do.”
Turner v. Rogers, 564 U.S. 431, 441 (131 SCt 2507, 180 LE2d 452) (2011)
(citation omitted). Here, it is undisputed that the contempt was criminal
(rather than civil), as Judge Peterson was not seeking to compel the petitioner
to comply with a previous judicial order.
20
normal adversary procedures.’” Ramirez v. State, 279 Ga. 13, 14-15
(608 SE2d 645) (2005) (citations omitted). See also OCGA §§ 15-9-34 (a) (“The judge of the probate court shall have power to enforce
obedience to all lawful orders of his or her court . . . by attachment
for contempt under the same rules as are provided for other
courts.”); 15-1-4 (a) (1) (providing, as pertinent here, that “[t]he
powers of the several courts to . . . inflict summary punishment for
contempt of court shall extend only to cases of . . . [m]isbehavior of
any person or persons in the presence of such courts or so near
thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice”).
Thus, a person being tried for contempt related to an act
committed outside a judge’s presence (also known as indirect
contempt) “‘must be advised of charges, have a reasonable
opportunity to respond to them, and be permitted the assistance of
counsel and the right to call witnesses,’” among other things.
Ramirez, 279 Ga. at 15 (quoting Young v. U.S. ex rel. Vuitton et Fils
S.A., 481 U.S. 787, 798-799 (107 SCt 2124, 95 LE2d 740) (1987)).
See also, e.g., Taylor v. Hayes, 418 U.S. 488, 497-498 (94 SCt 2697,
21
41 LE2d 897) (1974) (explaining that although a judge may, “for the
purpose of maintaining order in the courtroom,” “punish summarily
and without notice or hearing contemptuous conduct committed in
his presence and observed by him,” “summary punishment always,
and rightly, is regarded with disfavor” and “reasonable notice of a
charge and an opportunity to be heard in defense before punishment
is imposed are ‘basic in our system of jurisprudence’”) (cleaned up).
Here, Judge Peterson’s contempt order shows that her ruling
was based on the petitioner’s allegedly providing fraudulent
information on her marriage-license application—conduct that
necessarily happened outside Judge Peterson’s presence, since the
petitioner filled out the application and submitted it to the court
more than five years before being ordered to appear for a hearing—
and as discussed above, the Hearing Panel discredited Judge
Peterson’s testimony to the contrary.11 Even assuming for the sake
11 Moreover, there is no allegation, let alone evidence, that the
petitioner’s conduct “‘threaten[ed]’” or “‘disrupt[ed]’” the “court’s immediate
ability to conduct its proceedings,” see Ramirez, 279 Ga. at 14 (citation
omitted), as would be required for summary punishment.
22
of argument that the information the petitioner initially supplied
the court was fraudulent—and also assuming that filing such
information could warrant a sanction of criminal contempt—the
petitioner’s alleged conduct constituted indirect contempt at most,
such that the petitioner was entitled to the due-process protections
generally afforded to other criminal defendants. Thus, before
holding the petitioner in contempt, Judge Peterson was required to
advise the petitioner of the contempt charges, provide her a
reasonable opportunity to respond to them, and permit her the
assistance of counsel and the right to call witnesses, among other
processes and protections. See Ramirez, 279 Ga. at 15.
As the Hearing Panel determined, however, Judge Peterson
provided the petitioner none of these foundational due-process
protections before sentencing her to serve 20 days in jail. Even
worse, the Panel concluded that Judge Peterson decided that the
petitioner had committed fraud on the court before she issued the
notice of the hearing on the petition and then purposely issued the
notice in a way that failed to advise the petitioner that a criminal
23
charge would be adjudicated at the hearing. As the Hearing Panel
pointed out, the contempt order stated that Judge Peterson “was
alerted to the [petitioner’s alleged] fraudulent misrepresentations
on August 2, 2021[,] when [the petitioner] filed a Petition to Amend
Marriage Record.” Yet Judge Peterson’s notice of the hearing on the
petition, which was issued 10 days after Judge Peterson “was
alerted to” the alleged fraud, provided the petitioner no notice of the
contempt charge, such that the petitioner could obtain counsel or
meaningfully defend against the charge before she was summarily
found guilty and sentenced. Noting that Judge Peterson testified
that she knew the difference between direct and indirect contempt
because she had previously “research[ed]” the issue, the Hearing
Panel determined that Judge Peterson “knew the procedures she
employed failed to meet . . . due process requirements” when she
“predetermined” that the petitioner committed criminal contempt;
issued the notice of the hearing without informing the petitioner
that the criminal contempt matter would be adjudicated; ambushed
the petitioner at the hearing by alleging that she had committed a
24
crime; summarily found the petitioner guilty and sentenced her; and
then lied about her actions in her testimony before the Panel.12
Given these circumstances, we have no difficulty concluding,
as the Hearing Panel did, that the Director proved by clear and
convincing evidence that Judge Peterson failed to “comply with the
law,” in violation of CJC Rule 1.1, by failing to provide the petitioner
basic due-process protections in a criminal proceeding; acted in such
a manner as to severely diminish “public confidence” in the
“integrity” and “impartiality of the judiciary,” in violation of CJC
Rules 1.2 (A) and (B); and failed to adjudicate the contempt matter
fairly, in violation of CJC Rule 2.2. See In re Judicial Qualifications
12 In this regard, the Hearing Panel found that Judge Peterson
“predetermined” “before ever conducting a hearing on the matter” that the
petitioner had committed fraud when she filed her marriage-license
application; Judge Peterson then issued the notice of the hearing on the
petition to amend the marriage-license application, which made “no mention
of contempt (or the risk of being fined or sent to jail)”; the petitioner’s “hearing lacked any meaningful due process protections and essentially amounted to
summary punishment—and incarceration—for conduct that occurred outside
the presence of [Judge Peterson], which is prohibited”; and that to the extent
Judge Peterson denied in her testimony before the Panel that she had
predetermined the petitioner’s guilt before she issued the notice of the hearing
on the petition, the Panel “d[id] not credit such testimony because it
contradicts the plain language of the [contempt] order which is a more reliable
contemporaneous record of the events.”
25
Comm. Formal Advisory Opinion No. 239, 300 Ga. 291, 297 (794
SE2d 631) (2016) (explaining that former Canon 2 (A) of the CJC,
which said that “‘[j]udges shall respect and comply with the law,’”
“is not implicated by ‘mere decisional or judgmental errors’” but is
violated by “[a] knowing and willful misapplication of the law”)
(citation omitted); Inquiry Concerning Fowler, 287 Ga. 467, 468 &
n.1 (696 SE2d 644) (2010) (concluding that a judge violated former
Canon 2 (A) and former Canon 1, which said “‘[j]udges shall uphold
the integrity and independence of the judiciary,’” in the prior CJC,
because he improperly stated on a routine basis to criminal
defendants that they had the burden of proving their innocence); In
re Inquiry Concerning a Judge, 275 Ga. 404, 405-409 & n.4 (566
SE2d 310) (2002) (determining that a magistrate judge violated
former Canon 2 and former Canon 3, which required judges “‘to
perform the duties of the judicial office impartially and diligently,’”
of the prior CJC when he ordered a litigant to pay a fine without
providing notice and a hearing, ordered another litigant to pay
damages without notice and a hearing, and ordered a warrantless
26
search without determining whether probable cause existed); Matter
of Inquiry Concerning a Judge, 265 Ga. 843, 848-851 (462 SE2d 728)
(1995) (concluding that a judge’s conduct in refusing to set appeal
bonds to which two criminal defendants were entitled by law,
issuing two bench warrants without probable cause, and forcing a
criminal defendant to plead guilty without counsel violated former
Canons 1, 2, and 3 of the prior CJC, and noting that the judge’s
“cavalier disregard of these defendants’ basic and fundamental
constitutional rights exhibit[ed] an intolerable degree of judicial
incompetence, and a failure to comprehend and safeguard the very
basis of our constitutional structure”); Matter of Inquiry Concerning
a Judge No. 94-70, 265 Ga. 326, 329 (454 SE2d 780) (1995) (holding
that a judge violated former Canon 2 (A) and other canons of the
former CJC by “exercis[ing] [her] contempt power in order to
intimidate and coerce other elected officials”).
(iii) Judge Peterson’s Conduct Constitutes Willful Misconduct
in Office, Such that Discipline is Authorized Under
Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia Constitution
Having determined that Judge Peterson violated CJC Rules
27
1.1, 1.2 (A), 1.2 (B), and 2.2, we now turn to whether the Georgia
Constitution authorizes discipline for these violations. In its Report
and Recommendation, the Hearing Panel found that Judge
Peterson’s actions regarding this incident constituted willful
misconduct in office because she acted in bad faith. See Ga. Const.,
Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a). The Hearing Panel’s factual findings
that Judge Peterson’s conduct involved bad faith are supported by
the record and are therefore not clearly erroneous. See Coomer II,
316 Ga. at 866-873. Based on those findings, we agree that Judge
Peterson’s actions constituted “willful misconduct in office” and that
discipline is authorized. Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a).13
“We interpret ‘willful misconduct in office’ to mean actions
taken in bad faith by the judge acting in her judicial capacity.”
13 The Hearing Panel alternatively concluded that additional
constitutional bases existed that would warrant discipline: that Judge
Peterson’s conduct with respect to this matter constituted habitual
intemperance and judicial conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice.
See Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a). We need not decide whether
those determinations were correct, because Paragraph VII (a) authorizes
discipline on the ground that Judge Peterson committed willful misconduct in
office.
28
Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859 (citation and punctuation omitted). And
as we recently explained, bad faith generally encompasses at least
two characteristics: “that the duty breached by the actor was known
to that actor, and that the actor was acting with some self-interest
or ill will. It certainly ‘must involve something more than
negligence.’” Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 866 (citation omitted). “‘[B]ad
faith is not simply bad judgment or negligence, but it imports a
dishonest purpose or some moral obliquity, and implies conscious
doing of wrong, and means breach of known duty through some
motive of interest or ill will.’” Id. (citation omitted).14
Here, Judge Peterson was clearly acting in her judicial capacity
when she found the petitioner guilty of criminal contempt and
14 We articulated these general characteristics in analyzing one of the
other bases for judicial discipline under Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia
Constitution, “conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice which brings
the judicial office into disrepute.” As discussed more below, that disciplinary
ground is implicated in two circumstances: when a judge’s inappropriate
actions outside her judicial capacity are taken in bad faith and when a judge’s
inappropriate actions in her judicial capacity are taken in good faith, but are
“‘unjudicial and harmful to the public’s esteem of the judiciary.’” Coomer I, 315
Ga. at 859 (citation omitted). As we explained in Coomer I, both prejudicial
conduct outside a judge’s judicial capacity and willful misconduct in a judicial
capacity require a showing of bad faith. See id. at 859-860. Thus, the general
characteristics of bad faith that we set forth in Coomer I are applicable here.
29
sentenced her. And the Hearing Panel’s findings that she was acting
in bad faith are supported by the evidence presented at the hearing.
The Panel determined that Judge Peterson knew about the basic
due-process requirements for indirect contempt proceedings, a
finding that is supported by Judge Peterson’s testimony on that
point. The Hearing Panel also concluded that Judge Peterson
“predetermined” that the petitioner had committed criminal
contempt well before she issued the notice of the hearing on the
petition to amend the marriage record, yet she purposely issued the
notice without informing the petitioner of any such criminal charge
and then summarily sentenced the petitioner without providing her
any of the fundamental due-process protections to which she was
entitled. As the Hearing Panel noted, the plain language in the
notice of the hearing and in the contempt order contradicts Judge
Peterson’s testimony that she had not predetermined the
petitioner’s guilt before she issued the notice, such that the Panel
was authorized to conclude that Judge Peterson’s testimony in this
respect was false and indicated that she was attempting to conceal
30
her wrongdoing. This credibility determination by the Hearing
Panel was based in significant part on its observations of Judge
Peterson’s (and the petitioner’s) testimony during the hearing, and
it is “the kind of finding to which we offer considerable deference.”
Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 866.
In sum, the Hearing Panel’s finding of bad faith with respect
to Judge Peterson’s wrongful summary adjudication of the criminal
contempt matter is authorized by the evidence presented at the
hearing, particularly her dishonest testimony about her
wrongdoing. As we have explained, although we do not expect
judges to be perfect, “we can and do expect them to be honest. The
judiciary has no place for dishonest persons,” as “‘[t]he judiciary’s
authority . . . depends in large measure on the public’s willingness
to respect and follow its decisions.’” Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 866
(citation omitted). Because Judge Peterson’s actions were not
merely negligent, but painted a picture of conscious wrongdoing
motivated by ill will, we agree that her actions were taken in bad
faith. Thus, Judge Peterson’s conduct constitutes willful misconduct
31
in office, such that Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia Constitution
authorizes discipline for her actions with regard to this matter. See
Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a). See also Coomer II, 316
Ga. at 866-873 (holding that a judge’s violations of CJC “Rule 1.1
and/or Rule 1.2 (A),” which were not done negligently but with selfinterest and showed that he could not “be trusted to handle judicial
matters before him with honesty and integrity,” amounted to bad
faith); In re Judicial Qualifications Commission Formal Advisory
Opinion No. 239, 300 Ga. at 297 (explaining that “[a] knowing and
willful misapplication of the law, of course, would amount to bad
faith and thereby implicate the Code of Judicial Conduct”); Fowler,
287 Ga. at 468-472 (noting that a judge’s “ignorance of the law [wa]s
inexcusable” where he “fail[ed] to grasp the basic tenets of criminal
procedure to the extent that he d[id] not even understand the burden
of proof in a criminal matter” and stemmed “not from unintentional
mistakes or a lack of legal education, as [the judge] contend[ed], but
from ‘willful misconduct in office,’” among other things). Cf.
Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 831 (explaining that the contempt power
32
“uniquely is liable to abuse,” and in the context of civil contempt
noting that “sanctioning the contumacious conduct . . . often strikes
at the most vulnerable and human qualities of a judge’s
temperament, and its fusion of legislative, executive, and judicial
powers summons forth . . . the prospect of the most tyrannical
licentiousness”) (citations and punctuation omitted).
(b) Conduct Toward County Personnel (Counts 28 and 30)
(i) The Hearing Panel’s Findings Are Not Clearly Erroneous
as to Counts 28 and 3015
With respect to Counts 28 and 30 (conduct toward county
personnel), the Hearing Panel found as follows. By way of
background, in April 2021, the Chief Judge of the Douglas County
Superior Court limited Judge Peterson’s after-hours access to the
Douglas County courthouse following an incident in which she
15 As explained more below in Division 2 (e), we review in this subsection
only some of the conduct the Director charged with respect to Counts 28 and
30. And because we conclude that at least some of the charged conduct
constitutes a violation of the CJC, we need not address the Hearing Panel’s
additional conclusions regarding other conduct the Director charged with
respect to these counts.
33
allegedly improperly admitted public citizens to the courthouse
without ensuring that they had undergone security screening by
sheriff’s deputies. During the days in which her after-hours access
to the courthouse was limited, Judge Peterson submitted three
“Event Worksheets,” each of which requested three sheriff’s
deputies to be present at the courthouse after it was closed to the
public so that she could have after-hours access. Specifically, she
requested deputies to be present from 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m. on April
22 to 23; 5:00 p.m. to 11:59 p.m. on April 23; and 12:00 a.m. to 8:00
a.m. on April 25 to 26. Although these requests would necessarily
require taxpayer-funded deputies to work overtime, Judge Peterson
was unable to provide a particular reason why she needed to be
physically present in the courthouse at those times, most of which
were overnight. Although Judge Peterson argues in her Exceptions
that she often worked later than regular court hours and that her
testimony on that point showed that her requests for after-hours
access to the courthouse (and the presence of security) were
legitimate, she also admits that the requests “might not have been
34
the most appropriate response.” The Hearing Panel expressly noted
Judge Peterson’s testimony about these requests and found that
Judge Peterson “never put forth a particular reason why she needed
to be physically present inside the courthouse on the dates and times
she requested.”
In a separate event related to Judge Peterson’s treatment of
courthouse personnel, the sheriff’s deputy who was scheduled to
escort Judge Peterson from her chambers to her courtroom on May
11, 2021 did not arrive in Judge Peterson’s chambers on time.
Believing that she would be late for court, she pushed the panic
button under her desk to summon the deputy. Thinking there was
an emergency in Judge Peterson’s chambers, sheriff’s deputies
hurried to her chambers. When they arrived, they realized that
there was no emergency. At her hearing before the Hearing Panel,
Judge Peterson testified that she did not know the button was a
“panic button” that was to be used only in emergencies. The Hearing
Panel expressly discredited Judge Peterson’s testimony on that
point.
35
After reviewing the record and considering Judge Peterson’s
Exceptions, we cannot say that the Hearing Panel’s findings as to
these incidents—which are supported by record evidence—are
clearly erroneous. See Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 860-861.
(ii) Judge Peterson Violated CJC Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8 (B)
With respect to Count 28, the JQC charged Judge Peterson
with violating CJC Rule 1.2 (B), alleging that her requests for afterhours court access and her activation of the panic button when there
was no emergency were not in accordance with the “high standards
of conduct” necessary to preserve the “independence, integrity, and
impartiality of the judiciary.” And with respect to Count 30, the JQC
charged Judge Peterson with violating CJC Rule 2.8 (B) by failing
to demonstrate “patient, dignified, and courteous” conduct to the
county personnel involved in the matters discussed above.16 Based
on the findings detailed above, the Hearing Panel determined that
16 CJC Rule 2.8 (B) says, “Judges shall be patient, dignified, and
courteous to litigants, jurors, witnesses, lawyers, and others with whom they
deal in their official capacity, and shall require similar conduct of all persons
subject to their direction and control.”
36
the Director proved by clear and convincing evidence that Judge
Peterson violated Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8 (B), because her actions were
not consistent with the “high standards that Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8
(B) require of members of the judiciary.” The Hearing Panel
determined that Judge Peterson “made multiple frivolous requests
for middle-of-the-night courthouse access without any showing that
she in fact intended to be in the building during these times—and
plainly without consideration of the taxpayer expense that comes
with paying multiple deputies overtime for each such demand,” and
that she “abused the courthouse panic button system when, losing
patience after waiting only several minutes, she accelerated her
deputy escort’s arrival via that button rather than by phone or email.” The Panel found that Judge Peterson’s actions “raise grave
concerns about [her] general judicial demeanor and the manner in
which she treats others.”
We agree with the Hearing Panel that Judge Peterson violated
37
CJC Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8 (B).17 By requesting sheriff’s deputies to
work throughout the night so that she could have after-hours access
to the courthouse (without any showing that she actually planned to
be in the building, let alone work, during those wide-ranging
timeframes) and using the panic button to summon a deputy to
escort her to court, Judge Peterson did not demonstrate the decorum
and temperament required of a judge. As discussed above, the
Hearing Panel expressly found that Judge Peterson’s testimony that
she did not know the button was a “panic button” that was to be used
only in emergencies was “unconvincing[].” We defer to that
credibility finding. See Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 847. We therefore
agree with the Hearing Panel’s conclusions that Judge Peterson
failed to maintain the “high standards” required to preserve the
“integrity” of the judiciary and failed to demonstrate a “patient,
dignified, and courteous” demeanor to county personnel.
(iii) Judge Peterson’s Conduct Constitutes Willful Misconduct
in Office, Such that Discipline is Authorized Under
17 Judge Peterson does not argue in her Exceptions that the Hearing
Panel’s findings of misconduct do not constitute violations of CJC Rules 1.2 (B)
and 2.8 (B).
38
Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia Constitution
With respect to Counts 28 and 30, the Hearing Panel concluded
that Judge Peterson’s conduct was in her judicial capacity and in
bad faith, such that it constitutes willful misconduct in office. See
Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a).18 We agree. The Hearing
Panel found that, with respect to Judge Peterson’s requests for afterhours deputy coverage and her activating the panic button, she
“knowingly acted discourteously and impatiently in order to advance
her self-interest.” This finding is supported by the evidence
presented at the hearing, including Judge Peterson’s inability to
explain during her testimony why she needed to be present at the
courthouse for extended periods of time in the middle of the night
and her false testimony that she was unaware of the proper use of
the panic button. The Hearing Panel also found that Judge Peterson
18 The Hearing Panel alternatively concluded that two other
constitutional bases existed that would warrant discipline: that Judge
Peterson’s misconduct constituted habitual intemperance and was prejudicial
to the administration of justice which brings the judicial office into disrepute.
See Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a). But because we conclude that
Judge Peterson’s actions stemmed from willful misconduct in office, we need
not decide whether these alternate bases for discipline apply.
39
“summoned the deputy in bad faith” when she pressed the panic
button because she “likely was motivated by ill will toward the
Sheriff’s Office” after the incident that led to her restricted afterhours access to the courthouse. Because the Hearing Panel found
that Judge Peterson’s actions were not merely negligent but were
motivated by self-interest, and that finding is not clearly erroneous,
we conclude that Judge Peterson’s actions were taken in bad faith
while she was acting in her judicial capacity, such that she
committed willful misconduct in office. Thus, discipline is
authorized for this conduct. See Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par.
VII (a); Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859-860.
(c) HOA Meeting (Counts 13 to 15)
(i) The Hearing Panel’s Findings Are Not Clearly
Erroneous as to Counts 13 to 15
With respect to Counts 13 to 15, the Hearing Panel found the
following pertaining to Judge Peterson’s conduct during a meeting
of her neighborhood HOA in March 2022. Judge Peterson,
representing herself, filed a lawsuit against the HOA and members
40
of the HOA Board of Directors in July 2021. The lawsuit alleged,
among other things, that the defendants had breached the HOA
bylaws by holding an improper election to select the Board of
Directors and sought an injunction to compel a special election in
accordance with the bylaws. Judge Peterson knew that the
defendants were represented by counsel.
On March 31, 2022, while her lawsuit was still pending, Judge
Peterson attended an HOA meeting, over which two members of the
Board of Directors presided. The meeting was video-recorded, and
the recording showed that during the meeting, Judge Peterson
asked the two members of the Board of Directors questions about
her “lawsuit,” urged them to “call a special election,” and offered to
“dismiss the lawsuit” if they did so. When other meeting attendees
spoke out against Judge Peterson, she engaged in hostile exchanges
and made sarcastic remarks toward them, such as, “You are in a low
place.” After the meeting, Judge Peterson told the members of the
Board of Directors that their counsel was giving them bad legal
advice.
41
The Hearing Panel’s findings, as summarized above, are not
clearly erroneous, because there was evidence presented at the
hearing to support them. See Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 860-861.
(ii) Judge Peterson Violated CJC Rule 1.1
We agree with the Hearing Panel’s conclusion that Judge
Peterson’s conduct in connection with this incident violated CJC
Rule 1.1 (Count 13).19 The Hearing Panel determined that Judge
19 As discussed more below in Division 2 (e), we do not address whether
the Hearing Panel correctly concluded that Judge Peterson violated CJC Rules
1.2 (A) and (B), as alleged in Counts 14 and 15. In addition, we note that Judge
Peterson briefly argues in her Exceptions that the Hearing Panel failed to
address her contention, advanced in a motion for a directed verdict filed during
her hearing, that certain CJC rules violated her right to free speech under the
First Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section I,
Paragraph V of the Georgia Constitution of 1983. Specifically, in her motion
for a directed verdict, Judge Peterson claimed that Counts 1 to 4 (which
charged violations of CJC Rules 1.2 (A), 1.2 (B), 3.1 (A), and 1.3, respectively,
based on social media posts that Judge Peterson made) and 13 to 15 (which
charged violations of CJC Rules 1.1 (premised on a violation of GRPC 4.2 (a)),
1.2 (A), and 1.2 (B), respectively, based on Judge Peterson’s conduct at the HOA
meeting) violated her right to free speech. The Hearing Panel rejected Judge
Peterson’s free-speech-violation claims in a section of its Report and
Recommendation addressing its conclusion that the Director had not proven
Counts 1 to 4 by clear and convincing evidence. It is not clear whether the
Hearing Panel also rejected Judge Peterson’s free-speech claims as to Counts
13 to 15 in its Report and Recommendation. But in any event, we note with
respect to those counts that Judge Peterson’s motion for a directed verdict
focused on her contention that CJC Rules 1.2 (A) and 1.2 (B) (which require
judges to preserve the “independence, integrity, and impartiality of the
judiciary”), as alleged in Counts 14 and 15, violated her right to free speech.
42
Peterson failed to “respect and comply with the law,” in violation of
CJC Rule 1.1, when she violated Rule 4.2 (a) of the Georgia Rules of
Professional Conduct (“GRPC”) for lawyers, which says: “A lawyer
who is representing a client in a matter shall not communicate about
the subject of the representation with a person the lawyer knows to
She made no specific argument, however, about CJC Rule 1.1 (which requires
judges to “respect and comply with the law” and which violation was premised
on her failure to comply with GRPC 4.2 (a)), as alleged in Count 13. Instead,
Judge Peterson implied in a single sentence in a footnote in her motion that
the free-speech arguments related to alleged violations of CJC Rules 1.2 (A)
and 1.2 (B) in Counts 14 and 15 were “applicable” to the Rule 1.1 violation
alleged in Count 13. And in her Exceptions, Judge Peterson makes only the
cursory assertion that “[a]s an individual, [she] has the right to associate with
and debate with her chosen association that is constitutionally protected by
the First Amendment.”
Even to the extent Judge Peterson has preserved her free-speech claims
as to Counts 13 to 15, we need not address her arguments that the alleged
violations of CJC Rules 1.2 (A) and 1.2 (B) in Counts 14 and 15, violated her
right to free speech because, as discussed more below, we do not address
whether she violated those rules. And as to her free-speech argument about
CJC Rule 1.1, as alleged in Count 13, we note that—contrary to the implication
in her motion for a directed verdict—the legal analysis that applies to that
claim is not the same analysis that applies to her free-speech claims regarding
alleged violations of CJC Rules 1.2 (A) and 1.2 (B) in Counts 14 and 15.
Compare Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada, 501 U.S. 1030, 1071-1074 (111 SCt
2720, 115 LE2d 888) (1991) (explaining that “lawyers in pending cases [are]
subject to ethical restrictions on speech to which an ordinary citizen would not
be” and “the speech of lawyers representing clients in pending cases may be
regulated under a less demanding standard than that established for
regulation of the press” because lawyers “have special access to information
through discovery and client communications,” such that “their extrajudicial
statements pose a threat to the fairness of a pending proceeding”). Thus, any
such claim with respect to Count 13 fails.
43
be represented by another lawyer in the matter, unless the lawyer
has the consent of the other lawyer or is authorized to do so by law
or court order.” By telling the two members of the HOA Board of
Directors that she would dismiss her lawsuit against the HOA and
the Board if they held a special election, Judge Peterson, who was
acting as her own lawyer in the matter, communicated (and even
attempted to negotiate) with parties to the lawsuit, even though she
knew they were represented by counsel. As a result, she violated
GRPC 4.2 (a). The “Terminology” section of the CJC defines “law”
as “denot[ing] court rules as well as statutes, constitutional
provisions, judicial emergency orders . . . and decisional law,
including the Code of Judicial Conduct and Advisory Opinions of the
Judicial Qualifications Commission.” “The GRPCs are rules
promulgated by this Court, which presumptively brings them within
the scope of ‘court rules,’” Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 862-863 (citation
omitted), and Judge Peterson makes no argument that the GRPCs
44
are not “court rules.”20
Noting her testimony at the hearing that her comment about
dismissing the lawsuit was not meant to be a formal offer and that
she did not actually believe that the two members of the Board of
Directors had any actual authority to settle the lawsuit (because, as
her lawsuit alleged, they were not properly elected), Judge Peterson
asserts in her Exceptions that she did not violate GRPC 4.2 (a)
because she was acting as a homeowner, not a lawyer, when she
offered to dismiss the lawsuit. But the Hearing Panel rejected that
version of Judge Peterson’s testimony, expressly discrediting her
“feigned ignorance” and instead finding that she was an
“experienced” attorney who knew that the lawsuit she personally
brought was still pending and that the defendants were represented
by counsel. We defer to the Hearing Panel’s credibility
determination, see Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 847, and likewise conclude
that Judge Peterson violated CJC Rule 1.1 for the reasons explained
20 As we noted in Coomer II, “[b]ecause no such argument is before us
today, we do not foreclose such an argument in a future case.” 316 Ga. at 863
n.7.
45
above.
(iii) Judge Peterson’s Conduct Outside Her Judicial Capacity
Was Undertaken in Bad Faith and Is Prejudicial to the
Administration of Justice, Such that Discipline is
Authorized Under Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia
Constitution
As discussed more below, a judge may be disciplined for
conduct undertaken “‘in good faith’” in her judicial capacity, if that
conduct “‘appear[s] to be unjudicial and harmful to the public’s
esteem of the judiciary.’” Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859 (citation
omitted).21 But “when a person who is a judge acts outside of that
capacity, this Court’s ability to discipline the judge is more limited.
In order for actions taken outside of a judge’s judicial capacity to
constitute ‘conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice’ and
21 It appears that we first used the term “unjudicial” when defining
“conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice which brings the judicial
office into disrepute” in 1995, see Matter of Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 94-70, 265 Ga. at 328, and have since repeated that term in two other judicial
discipline cases. See Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859; Matter of Inquiry Concerning a
Judge, 265 Ga. at 844 n.2. At least some of us are concerned that the word
“unjudicial” is conclusory and does little in the way of articulating a standard
of conduct that a reasonable judge would understand. But even if that is so, it
does not affect our analysis in this case, because the definition of the word
“unjudicial” is not central to any substantive analysis pertaining to whether it
is within our constitutional power to discipline Judge Peterson.
46
thus within our constitutional power to discipline, those actions
must be taken in bad faith.” Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 861. Thus, as
the Hearing Panel correctly noted in its Report and
Recommendation, we may discipline Judge Peterson for her
violation of CJC Rule 1.1 in connection with this incident only if her
conduct was carried out in bad faith.
In this respect, the Hearing Panel found that Judge Peterson
breached a known duty, because she testified that she was aware of
GRPC 4.2 (a) and because the evidence showed that she was a
prosecutor for several years (and then an elected judge) and was
therefore familiar with the GRPC. The Hearing Panel also
determined that Judge Peterson acted with self-interest and ill will,
because she sought to exploit her specialized knowledge as a lawyer
“in surprise settlement negotiations with laypersons on an unlevel
playing field” to obtain the relief she wanted in her lawsuit. See
Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 866 (explaining that the concept of bad faith
“generally encompasses at least two general characteristics: that the
duty breached by the actor was known to that actor, and that the
47
actor was acting with some self-interest or ill will”). The Hearing
Panel also noted that Judge Peterson’s violation of Rule 1.1 was
“clear” and that her “feigned ignorance” and “attempts to avoid
responsibility” for the violation in her testimony “bordered on the
farcical, severely eroding her credibility with the Hearing Panel.”
This express finding of bad faith, which was based in significant part
on the Panel’s personal observation of Judge Peterson’s testimony
and the credibility determinations that flowed from it, is one to
which we “offer considerable deference.” Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 866.
See also Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 862 (explaining that “this Court is not
well positioned to resolve the factual questions of intent that are
crucial to determining whether discipline is constitutionally
permitted,” and that the Hearing Panel, which has the opportunity
to hear live testimony and observe the demeanor of witnesses, is best
suited to make such findings). And because the Hearing Panel’s
finding of bad faith is supported by the evidence presented at the
hearing, such that it is not clearly erroneous, we defer to that finding
here. We likewise conclude that Judge Peterson’s actions in
48
communicating with represented parties about the lawsuit she had
filed against them paint a picture of a judge who will bend the rules
when it serves her self-interest, such that we can discern that her
actions were taken in bad faith and that discipline is authorized
under Paragraph VII (a). See Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 872-873 (holding
that the conduct underlying a judge’s violations of CJC “Rule 1.1
and/or Rule 1.2 (A),” which was done outside the judge’s judicial
capacity, was prejudicial to the administration of justice and
brought the judicial office into disrepute, because the record
generally supported the Hearing Panel’s findings that the judge
undertook the conduct in bad faith).
(d) Handling of a Petition for Year’s Support (Counts 35 and 37
to 43)
(i) The Hearing Panel’s Findings Are Not Clearly
Erroneous as to Counts 35 and 37 to 43
With respect to Count 35 and Counts 37 to 43, the Hearing
Panel found the following facts pertaining to Judge Peterson’s
handling of a petition for year’s support in the spring and summer
of 2021. In early 2021, a petitioner filed the petition for year’s
49
support, seeking to obtain funds from her deceased husband’s
estate.22 The petition listed the petitioner’s daughter as an
interested party and provided her out-of-state address. Judge
Peterson’s chief clerk sent by certified mail, with restricted delivery,
a notice of the petition to the address that was provided for the
daughter; the notice set the deadline to submit a caveat to the
petition by May 3, 2021. On April 5, 2021, the signature card for the
certified delivery of the notice of the petition was returned to the
probate court with a signature from someone else—not the
daughter.23 Judge Peterson’s chief clerk then asked Judge Peterson
22 See OCGA §§ 53-3-1 (providing, in pertinent part, that a decedent’s
surviving spouse is “entitled to year’s support in the form of property for [her]
support and maintenance for the period of 12 months from the date of the
decedent’s death” and that the provision of year’s support generally is “to be
preferred before all other debts or demands”) & 53-3-5 (a) (providing, in
pertinent part, that “[u]pon the death of any individual leaving an estate
solvent or insolvent, the surviving spouse . . . may file a petition for year’s
support in the probate court having jurisdiction over the decedent’s estate.”).
See also Mary F. Radford, 1 Georgia Wills & Administration § 10:1 (Nov. 2023
update) (explaining that “‘year's support’” is “defined in the law as property
that is set apart for the family’s support and maintenance for the period of 12
months from the date the decedent died” and is “based on the public policy of
providing support for the family of a decedent before allowing the estate to be
distributed to creditors or other distributees”).
23 The record shows that the signature card was signed by someone with
50
to search LexisNexis to try to obtain an alternate address for the
daughter. Judge Peterson conducted the search and found the
daughter’s email address. Judge Peterson’s chief clerk emailed a
second notice to the daughter, setting a new deadline to file a caveat
by July 10, 2021. The daughter eventually emailed her caveat to the
probate court clerk’s office.24 The chief clerk and the daughter then
spoke by phone, and the chief clerk asked about the status of the
original document and the filing fee, which were both required for
filing. The daughter said that she mailed the filing fee. The chief
clerk assumed that it was lost in the mail and ultimately took
payment from the daughter over the phone and filed the caveat on
July 14, 2021—four days after the July 10 deadline. None of the
chief clerk’s communications with the daughter included counsel for
the petitioner. The Hearing Panel found that although Judge
Peterson’s staff, including the chief clerk, knew that ex parte
the same last name as the daughter, but with a different first name; no other
evidence was presented about who signed the card.
24 The exact date of this filing is not clear from the record.
51
communications with parties to a proceeding were prohibited, Judge
Peterson “clearly failed to conduct proper oversight” to ensure that
the chief clerk was not participating in such communications.
The petitioner’s counsel filed a motion to strike the caveat as
untimely, and Judge Peterson denied it. Judge Peterson later
recused herself from the case, which was eventually transferred to
Douglas County Superior Court; that court struck the caveat as
untimely and granted the petition for year’s support about 15
months after it was first filed.
The record supports the findings summarized above, so we
conclude that they are not clearly erroneous. See Coomer II, 316 Ga.
at 860-861.
(ii) Judge Peterson Violated CJC Rules 1.1, 1.2 (A), 2.9 (A), 2.9
(B), and 2.9 (D)
We agree with the Hearing Panel that the Director proved by
clear and convincing evidence that Judge Peterson violated CJC
Rules 1.1 (Count 35), 1.2 (A) (Count 37), 2.9 (A) (Count 39), 2.9 (B)
(Count 40), and 2.9 (D) (Count 42) in connection with her handling
52
of the petition for year’s support.25
25 CJC Rule 2.9 (A) says,
Judges shall accord to every person who has a legal interest in a
proceeding, or that person’s lawyer, the right to be heard according
to law. Judges shall not initiate, permit, or consider ex parte
communications, or consider other communications made to them
outside the presence of the parties, or their lawyers, concerning a
pending proceeding or impending matter, subject to the following
exceptions.
(1) Where circumstances require, ex parte communications
are authorized for scheduling, administrative purposes, or
emergencies that do not deal with substantive matters or issues on
the merits, provided that:
(a) the judge reasonably believes that no party will
gain a procedural, substantive, or tactical advantage as a
result of the ex parte communication; and
(b) the judge makes provision promptly to notify all
other parties of the substance of the ex parte communication,
and gives the parties an opportunity to respond.
(2) Judges may obtain the advice of a disinterested expert on
the law applicable to a proceeding before the court, if they give
notice to the parties of the person consulted and the substance of
the advice, and afford the parties reasonable opportunity to
respond.
(3) Judges may consult with court staff and court officials
whose functions are to aid in carrying out adjudicative
responsibilities, or with other judges, provided the judge makes
reasonable efforts to avoid receiving factual information that is not
part of the record, and does not abrogate the responsibility
personally to decide the matter.
(4) Judges may, with the consent of the parties, confer
separately with the parties or their lawyers in an effort to mediate
or settle pending proceedings.
(5) Judges may initiate, permit, or consider ex parte
communications when authorized by law to do so, such as when
issuing temporary protective orders, arrest warrants, or search
warrants, or when serving on therapeutic, problem-solving, or
53
We turn first to the alleged CJC Rule 2.9 violations. By
accepting and considering the daughter’s emailed caveat, of which
the petitioner and her counsel had no notice, Judge Peterson
“permit[ted]” and “consider[ed] ex parte communications” in
violation of CJC Rule 2.9 (A). And as the Hearing Panel noted in its
Report and Recommendation, none of the exceptions listed in CJC
Rule 2.9 (A) that might authorize ex parte communications applied
here. Compare Lue v. Eady, 297 Ga. 321, 323 (773 SE2d 679) (2015)
(explaining, in the context of examining the denial of a motion to
recuse, that former Canon 3 of the prior CJC, which contained
language similar to Rule 2.9 (A) (1), authorized ex parte
accountability courts, including drugs courts, mental health
courts, and veterans’ courts.
CJC Rule 2.9 (B) says, “If a judge inadvertently receives an unauthorized ex
parte communication bearing upon the substance of a matter, the judge shall
make provision promptly to notify the parties of the substance of the
communication and provide the parties with a reasonable opportunity to
respond.” CJC Rule 2.9 (D) says, “A judge shall make reasonable efforts,
including providing appropriate supervision, to ensure that this Rule is not
violated by court staff, court officials, and others subject to the judge’s direction and control.”
As discussed further below in Division 2 (e), we do not decide whether
the conduct alleged in Counts 38, 41, and 43 constituted violations of the CJC.
54
communications with respect to scheduling hearings). By failing
“promptly to notify” the petitioner’s counsel of the second notice of
the petition that was sent to the daughter by email (with the
extended deadline for filing a caveat), Judge Peterson violated CJC
Rule 2.9 (B). And by failing to provide proper oversight to her own
chief clerk—who sent the daughter the second notice of the petition
and spoke to the daughter on the phone about the case, without
notifying the petitioner’s counsel of these communications—Judge
Peterson violated CJC Rule 2.9 (D) because she failed to “make
reasonable efforts, including providing appropriate supervision, to
ensure that [Rule 2.9] is not violated by court staff, court officials,
and others subject to the judge’s direction and control.” Accordingly,
Judge Peterson violated each of the provisions of CJC Rule 2.9 noted
above. See CJC Rule 2.9 Comment [11] (“Impending matters and
pending proceedings are only as good as the parties make them;
neutral and detached impartial judges should not be concerned
about augmenting cases.”); Inquiry Concerning Anderson, 304 Ga.
165, 166 (816 SE2d 676) (2018) (holding that a judge violated CJC
55
Rule 2.9 (A) when he communicated with parties to a lawsuit
individually, even if such communications were made “with good
intentions”). Cf. State v. Hargis, 294 Ga. 818, 823 n.11 (756 SE2d
529) (2014) (explaining that “trial judges ‘must scrupulously avoid
[improper] ex parte communications’”) (citation omitted).26
As to the other alleged rule violations pertaining to these
counts, the Hearing Panel concluded that Judge Peterson violated
CJC Rule 1.1 by failing to comply with Uniform Probate Court Rule
5.1, which generally prohibits judges from initiating or considering
ex parte communications with parties to a pending proceeding. The
Hearing Panel determined that Judge Peterson also violated CJC
Rule 1.2 (A), because permitting and sending communications to
only one of the interested parties in the case diminishes “public
confidence in the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the
judiciary” and weakens the public’s perception that the judge has
26 Judge Peterson argues in her Exceptions that the ex parte
communications were permissible because they were made in an effort to
perfect service. But her attempts to ensure that the daughter had notice of the
proceedings, even if undertaken in good faith, do not excuse her failure to
provide the same sort of notice to the petitioner.
56
afforded all of the parties the same right to be heard. We agree with
the Hearing Panel’s determinations in this regard.27
(iii) Judge Peterson’s Conduct Is Prejudicial to the
Administration of Justice, Such that Discipline is
Authorized Under Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia
Constitution
We agree with the Hearing Panel that Judge Peterson’s
“‘inappropriate [judicial] actions taken in good faith’” with respect to
her handling of the petition are prejudicial to the administration of
justice and bring the judicial office into disrepute. See Ga. Const.,
Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a). “‘Conduct prejudicial to the
administration of justice’ refers to inappropriate actions taken in
good faith by the judge acting in her judicial capacity, but which may
27 We note, however, that in determining the appropriate sanction in this
case, we afford little weight to the Hearing Panel’s conclusion that Judge
Peterson’s permitting and sending ex parte communications violated CJC Rule
1.2 (A), which covers a broad and wide-ranging category of conduct—
“promot[ing] public confidence in the independence, integrity, and impartiality
of the judiciary.” Generally speaking, when a specific rule governs a type of
conduct, that specific rule should be the focus of a disciplinary action, rather
than the CJC’s less specific, vaguer rules. Cf. Smallwood v. State, 310 Ga. 445,
452 (851 SE2d 595) (2020) (explaining, in the context of rejecting an appellant’s
argument that he should have received a lesser criminal sentence under the
rule of lenity, that “a specific statute will prevail over a general statute, absent any indication of a contrary legislative intent”).
57
appear to be unjudicial and harmful to the public’s esteem of the
judiciary.” Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859 (citation and punctuation
omitted).28 Judge Peterson was acting in her judicial capacity in
handling the petition and in directing or supervising her staff. As
the Hearing Panel noted, even if Judge Peterson did not intend to
favor one party over another, engaging in ex parte communications
is inappropriate and “unjudicial.” We agree; engaging in or allowing
ex parte communications presents to the public an image of a judge
who covertly interacts with a party in order to unfairly advance that
party’s interests and jeopardizes the appearance of the
independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary. Because
Judge Peterson’s inappropriate actions taken in her judicial
capacity, even if undertaken in good faith, appeared to be
“‘unjudicial and harmful to the public’s esteem of the judiciary,’”
Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859 (citation omitted), her conduct is
28 As explained above in connection with the charges related to the HOA
meeting, “‘[p]rejudicial conduct may also refer to actions taken in bad faith by
a judge acting outside her judicial capacity.’” Coomer I, 315 Ga. at 859 (citation omitted).
58
prejudicial to the administration of justice and discipline regarding
these counts is authorized under the Georgia Constitution. See Ga.
Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a).
(e) Other Alleged Violations Found by the Hearing Panel,
Which We Decline to Consider
In addition to the violations of the CJC that we determined
above that Judge Peterson committed and for which she may be
disciplined pursuant to Paragraph VII (a) of the Georgia
Constitution, the Hearing Panel concluded that the Director proved
by clear and convincing evidence eight other counts in the formal
charges (Counts 14-15, 19, 21, 38, 41, 43, and 50). We briefly discuss
below the Hearing Panel’s findings, which we determine are not
clearly erroneous, as to these counts. But ultimately, we need not
decide whether the Panel correctly determined that the conduct
underlying those counts constituted violations of the CJC or
sanctionable conduct under Paragraph VII (a), because the
affirmance of those counts is not necessary to reach the conclusion
that Judge Peterson’s removal from the bench is the appropriate
59
sanction in this case.29
As to Judge Peterson’s conduct at the HOA meeting, the
Hearing Panel concluded that Judge Peterson violated CJC Rules
1.2 (A) (Count 14) and 1.2 (B) (Count 15) when she “repeatedly cut
off homeowners as they attempted to speak; engaged in petty
quibbles with them; mocked them; and used cavalier, rude gestures
29 We also note that with respect to Judge Peterson’s conduct toward
county personnel as alleged in Counts 28 and 30 (discussed above), the Hearing
Panel made additional findings that formed alternate bases for the violations
of CJC Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8 (B). Specifically, the Panel found that Judge
Peterson sent an email to the Chief Judge of the Douglas County Superior
Court in which she questioned the Chief Judge’s authority and competency and
said to the Chief Judge, among other things, “Please retire as this county has
outgrown your spirit.” The Hearing Panel also determined that after Judge
Peterson had several email exchanges with an employee in the Douglas County
Information Services Department about transferring probate court case files
to a new case management system, Judge Peterson sent an email to the
employee and other county officials threatening to “move forward with legal
action” if the data transfer was not facilitated. Although Judge Peterson
argues in her Exceptions to the Report and Recommendation that the Hearing
Panel’s findings in these respects are clearly erroneous, she does not argue that
the Panel’s findings of misconduct do not constitute violations of CJC Rules 1.2
(B) and 2.8 (B). Although the Panel’s factual findings are not clearly erroneous,
we question whether those findings support the conclusions that Judge
Peterson violated Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8 (B). But because we determined above
that the Director proved Counts 28 and 30 by showing that Judge Peterson’s
requesting sheriff’s deputies and activating the panic button violated CJC
Rules 1.2 (B) and 2.8 (B), we need not address whether the Hearing Panel
correctly concluded that Judge Peterson violated those same rules in the other
ways that those counts alleged.
60
while communicating,” because those interactions fell short of the
high standards of conduct necessary to maintain the integrity of the
judiciary. And as to Judge Peterson’s handling of the petition for
year’s support, the Hearing Panel found that Judge Peterson
violated CJC Rule 2.9 (C) (Count 41), which prohibits judges from
“investigat[ing] facts in a pending proceeding,” by researching
alternative addresses for the daughter. The Panel also found that
Judge Peterson violated CJC Rule 2.5 (A) (Counts 38 and 43), which
says that “[j]udges shall perform judicial and administrative duties
competently, diligently, and without bias or prejudice,” because her
extension of the deadline to file a caveat and acceptance of the
untimely caveat created “an appearance of bias in favor” of the
daughter; her actions led to a 15-month delay in resolving the
petition, which was “anything but diligent”; and she incorrectly
transferred the case to the superior court and then failed to ensure
that the entire record was transmitted.
In addition, the Hearing Panel made findings as to a separate
incident, involving Judge Peterson’s conduct in allowing a party to
61
a wedding over which she was scheduled to preside to enter the
Douglas County Courthouse, while the courthouse was closed,
without ensuring that the party underwent security screening by
sheriff’s deputies, in contravention of an express directive from the
Division Commander for Court Services with the Douglas County
Sheriff’s Office not to allow the party inside (Counts 19 and 21). The
Hearing Panel ultimately concluded that Judge Peterson violated
CJC Rules 1.2 (B) (Count 19) and 2.5 (B) (Count 21), which says in
pertinent part that “[j]udges . . . shall cooperate with . . . court
officials in the administration of court business,” because she
violated the courthouse security protocol and the division
commander’s directive by allowing civilians to enter the courthouse
without required security screenings.
And finally, the Hearing Panel concluded that Judge Peterson
violated CJC Rule 2.4 (A), as alleged in Count 50 of the formal
charges, “by persistently and continuously failing to respect and
comply with the law and the [CJC] as alleged in Counts Sixteen
through Forty-Nine above, demonstrating systemic judicial
62
incompetence and a disregard for the law.” CJC Rule 2.4 (A) says,
“Judges shall be faithful to the law and maintain professional
competence in it. Judges shall not be swayed by partisan interests,
public clamor or intimidation, or fear of criticism.” The Hearing
Panel found in its Report and Recommendation that the Director
had proven this count by clear and convincing evidence “based on all
the findings of fact and conclusions of law above, as well as the
pervasive nature and expansive temporal scope of [Judge
Peterson’s] misconduct.”
The Hearing Panel’s factual findings with respect to Counts 14-15, 19, 21, 38, 41, 43, and 50 generally are supported by the evidence
presented at the hearing, but we need not decide whether the
Hearing Panel correctly concluded that Judge Peterson’s conduct
violated Rules 1.2 (A) and (B), 2.5 (A) and (B), 2.9 (C), and 2.4 (A),
as alleged in those counts, or whether discipline is authorized under
Paragraph VII (a) for any or all of the conduct at issue, because the
affirmance of those counts is not necessary to reach our conclusion
that Judge Peterson’s removal from the bench is the appropriate
63
sanction in this case.30
3. Removal Is The Appropriate Sanction
We have determined above that Judge Peterson violated eight
provisions of the CJC, as charged in 12 counts: CJC Rule 1.1 (Count
13) in connection with her communications with represented parties
at the HOA meeting; Rules 1.2 (B) (Count 28) and 2.8 (B) (Count 30)
in connection with her conduct toward county personnel; Rules 1.1
(Count 31), 1.2 (A) (Count 32), 1.2 (B) (Count 33), and 2.2 (Count 34)
in connection with the criminal contempt matter; and Rules 1.1
30 We note, however, that with respect to certain types of charges, some
of us have concerns about how to determine whether and what conduct would
rise to the level of a CJC violation such that discipline would be authorized
under the Georgia Constitution. To that end: the more generalized the
category of conduct, the more difficult it can be to discern whether the CJC
provides sufficient notice to judges about what conduct may violate the
provision. See, e.g., CJC Rules 1.2 (A) (requiring judges to “act at all times in
a manner that promotes public confidence in the independence, integrity, and
impartiality of the judiciary”); 2.5 (B) (requiring judges to “cooperate with other judges and court officials in the administration of court business”); 2.8 (B)
(requiring judges to be “patient, dignified, and courteous to litigants, jurors,
witnesses, lawyers, and others with whom they deal in their official capacity”).
We also note that Judge Peterson has not challenged the original public
meaning of the constitutional term “habitual intemperance,” and that the
Hearing Panel did not endeavor to construe that phrase before determining
that certain of Judge Peterson’s conduct demonstrated habitual intemperance
that would authorize discipline. But we need not resolve any of these questions
today to complete our analysis of the claims before us in Judge Peterson’s case.
64
(Count 35), 1.2 (A) (Count 37), 2.9 (A) (Count 39), 2.9 (B) (Count 40),
and 2.9 (D) (Count 42) in connection with her handling of the
petition for year’s support.31 We have also determined that
discipline for Judge Peterson’s violations of these rules is
constitutionally permitted, because her actions constituted willful
misconduct in office or conduct prejudicial to the administration of
justice which brings the judicial office into disrepute. See Ga.
Const., Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a).
The Hearing Panel noted in its Report and Recommendation
that the violations at issue here, when viewed individually, likely
would not warrant the sanction of removal from office. We agree.
See In re Inquiry Concerning a Judge, 275 Ga. at 406-412
(determining that removal from office was the proper sanction and
noting that “[c]onsidered in isolation, none of [the judge’s] actions
31 As we noted above, we pretermitted whether Judge Peterson violated
six provisions of the CJC, as charged in eight additional counts: CJC Rules 1.2
(A) (Count 14) and 1.2 (B) (Count 15) in connection with her conduct at the
HOA meeting; Rules 1.2 (B) (Count 19) and 2.5 (B) (Count 21) in connection
with admitting the wedding party to the courthouse; Rules 2.9 (C) (Count 41)
and 2.5 (A) (Counts 38 and 43) in connection with her handling of the petition
for year’s support, and 2.4 (A) (Count 50) related to the allegation of systemic
incompetence.
65
would warrant his removal from the bench” but that “[c]onsidered
as a whole, . . . [the judge’s] actions demonstrate[d] a troubling
pattern of ineptitude and misconduct”). But the Hearing Panel also
determined that Judge Peterson’s misconduct related to the
contempt matter was “troubl[ing]” and “discordant with one of the
judiciary’s primary purposes: to provide due process to all who come
into court, especially when one’s freedom is at stake,” and that her
pattern of misconduct related to the many other matters exhibits a
“persistent unwillingness to apply to herself the rules that apply to
everyone else.” In particular, the Hearing Panel’s findings (which
we have determined were not clearly erroneous) show that Judge
Peterson acted in bad faith in her judicial capacity by willfully
disregarding the petitioner’s basic due-process rights in the criminal
contempt proceeding, which portrays to the public an image of a
judge who believes she is above the law. And the Hearing Panel’s
findings that Judge Peterson acted in bad faith outside her judicial
capacity by knowingly communicating with represented parties at
the HOA meeting present a comparable image. See Coomer II, 316
66
Ga. at 865-866 (“[J]udges are not above the law and must respect
the law, because otherwise they cannot be trusted to apply the law
honestly and fairly.”); Fowler, 287 Ga. at 472 (“[W]e cannot expect
that members of the public will respect the law and remain confident
in our judiciary while judges who do not respect and follow the law
themselves remain on the bench.”); Matter of Inquiry Concerning a
Judge, 265 Ga. at 852 (explaining that judges “are entrusted with
the duty to safeguard the fundamental rights of others” and holding
that when “it is established by clear and convincing evidence that
an individual is not competent to sit as a judge because she has
breached that sacred trust, the same great authority that
established those fundamental rights commands us to protect the
citizenry and the judicial system from harm, and remove that
individual”). The Hearing Panel’s findings similarly establish that
Judge Peterson acted in bad faith in her judicial capacity toward
county officials when she requested sheriff’s deputies to be present
after regular courthouse hours—including overnight—and when she
activated the panic button in her judicial chambers. See id. at 852
67
(explaining that “[t]hose who are called upon to live the life of a judge
must act with dignity and respect toward others”). And although
Judge Peterson possibly acted in good faith by permitting the ex
parte communications with respect to the petition for year’s support,
her misconduct demonstrated a failure to comprehend and follow
the law, which in turn causes prejudice to the administration of
justice. As the Hearing Panel determined in recommending her
removal, Judge Peterson’s “misconduct has already demonstrably
eroded the public’s respect for the judicial system.” And regardless
of the extent to which the Hearing Panel considered the mitigating
evidence that Judge Peterson offered at the hearing and emphasizes
again before this Court, we conclude that such evidence is not
particularly persuasive, as the instances of misconduct at issue here
spanned nearly the entirety of Judge Peterson’s judicial career.
Moreover, the Hearing Panel’s determinations supported a
conclusion that Judge Peterson was “disingenuous, if not outright
dishonest,” during the JQC proceedings, because she provided
untruthful or evasive testimony with respect to, among other things,
68
her conduct regarding the HOA meeting and the courthouse
wedding. The Hearing Panel noted in this respect that Judge
Peterson “falsely testified” that she made no recording of the events
that took place at the HOA meeting, pointing out that the video
recording of the meeting that was admitted into evidence at the
hearing showed that she held up her cell phone, indicating that she
had in fact recorded the meeting. It also noted that Judge Peterson’s
“attempts to avoid responsibility” for violations related to the HOA
meeting “severely erod[ed] her credibility with the Hearing Panel.”
The Hearing Panel also found that Judge Peterson falsely
testified that after the division commander told her not to take the
wedding party into the courthouse, the sheriff overrode that
directive and “granted her permission to enter the courthouse” to
perform the wedding ceremony, because the Hearing Panel “fully
credit[ed]” the sheriff’s testimony, which “flatly contradicted” those
assertions. In addition, the Hearing Panel expressly concluded in
other sections of its Report and Recommendation that Judge
Peterson lied during her testimony, including when she claimed that
69
she had not predetermined that the petitioner was guilty of criminal
contempt before she issued the notice of hearing on the petition,
when she stated that she was not aware of the purpose of the panic
button, and when she “feigned ignorance” about communicating
with represented parties at the HOA meeting. As we recently
explained in determining that another judge’s “disingenuous, if not
outright dishonest” testimony during the JQC proceedings informed
our decision to remove him:
a judge faced with an ethics investigation by the JQC has
every right to defend himself. He can argue that his
actions do not violate a particular statute or rule,
including the Code of Judicial Conduct. He can disagree
with JQC staff or the Hearing Panel as to appropriate
sanctions. He can dispute the factual accuracy of the
allegations against him. And judges must be free to do all
of those things without fear that a sanction will be worse
if they simply fail to prevail. But judges cannot be
misleading during that process, any more than lawyers
can be misleading during State Bar disciplinary
processes.
Coomer II, 316 Ga. at 874. As in Coomer II, the Hearing Panel in
this case found multiple instances in which Judge Peterson
attempted to mislead the Panel by falsely testifying, indicating her
desire to conceal her misconduct. Because those findings are
70
supported by the evidence at the hearing, we consider them as an
aggravating favor in determining the proper sanction. See id. at
874-875 & n.19.32
In conclusion, in light of her multiple violations of the CJC
rules in relation to several matters—some of them reflecting a
flagrant disregard for the law, court rules, and judicial conduct
rules; the pattern of violations that the Director proved by clear and
convincing evidence; the extremely concerning nature of some of
those violations, in particular with respect to the criminal contempt
matter; and her behavior during the JQC inquiry, we conclude that
removal is the appropriate sanction. See, e.g., Fowler, 287 Ga. at
472 (holding that removal from office was the appropriate sanction
where the judge exhibited a “consistent pattern of misconduct” that
32 As we recognized in Coomer II, “imposing discipline on a judge solely
based on the judge’s response to a JQC inquiry”—in other words, conduct
during a JQC hearing—“without the JQC first filing formal charges against
the judge alleging such conduct constituted a violation of the Code of Judicial
Conduct, might raise due process concerns.” 316 Ga. at 874 n.19. But this
case, like Coomer II, does not present that scenario, because we have already
concluded that Judge Peterson violated several provisions of the CJC through
her actions that took place before the JQC inquiry and we consider her actions
during the JQC process as an aggravating factor only in determining the
proper sanction. See id.
71
stemmed from “willful misconduct in office . . . and conduct
prejudicial to the administration of justice which brings the judicial
office into disrepute,” among other things) (cleaned up); In re Inquiry
Concerning a Judge, 275 Ga. at 406-412 (determining that removal
from office was the proper sanction for a judge who, among other
things, demonstrated a lack of competence in the law, failed to
safeguard basic constitutional rights of litigants, and failed to
respect and comply with the law with respect to multiple matters of
misconduct, and noting that “[c]onsidered in isolation, none of [the
judge’s] actions would warrant his removal from the bench” but that
“[c]onsidered as a whole, . . . [the judge’s] actions demonstrate[d] a
troubling pattern of ineptitude and misconduct”); Matter of Inquiry
Concerning a Judge, 265 Ga. at 850-852 (concluding that removal
from office was the appropriate discipline for a judge who violated
multiple former canons of the prior CJC, including in five instances
disregarding defendants’ “basic and fundamental constitutional
rights,” which “exhibit[ed] an intolerable degree of judicial
incompetence, and a failure to comprehend and safeguard the very
72
basis of our constitutional structure”).
Accordingly, it is ordered that Judge Christina Peterson of the
Douglas County Probate Court be removed from office, effective
upon the date of this opinion. As a result, Judge Peterson “shall not
be eligible to be elected or appointed to any judicial office in this
state until seven years have elapsed” from the date of this opinion.
OCGA § 15-1-13 (a).
Removed from office. All the Justices concur, except Colvin, J.,
disqualified.
73
PETERSON, Presiding Justice, concurring.
I concur fully in the Court’s opinion today removing Judge
Christina Peterson from office. I write separately in response to
Commissioner Hyde’s thoughtful concurrence (joined by
Commissioners McBurney and Lopez) to the JQC Hearing Panel’s
Report and Recommendation. In his concurrence, Commissioner
Hyde writes that for some of the counts of lesser misconduct proven
by the JQC Director, he would have liked to have suggested a
suspension without pay, but he does not believe that to be a type of
judicial discipline authorized by the Georgia Constitution. I
appreciate this careful respect the Hearing Panel members show for
the constitutional limits on the authority of the JQC and this Court.
And I agree that the question is open to reasonable debate. But as I
explain below, I think that the best interpretation of relevant
provisions of the Georgia Constitution is that the constitutional
authority to discipline judges does include the authority to suspend
a judge without pay.
Article VI, Section VII, Paragraph VII (“Paragraph VII”) of the
74
Georgia Constitution explicitly provides three possible forms of
discipline of judges for various forms of misconduct — removal,
suspension, or other unspecified discipline. See Ga. Const. of 1983,
Art. VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (a). An earlier paragraph in that same
section of Article VI, Section VII, Paragraph V (“Paragraph V”),
provides in part that “[a]n incumbent’s salary, allowance, or
supplement shall not be decreased during the incumbent’s term of
office.” Commissioner Hyde’s concurrence understands this
provision to prohibit suspension without pay. That’s a reasonable
reading. But based on the text, history, and context of these
provisions, I conclude that the Georgia Constitution permits a judge
to be suspended without pay once the judge has been afforded due
process.33 See Elliott v. State, 305 Ga. 179, 188 (II) (C) (824 SE2d
33 This kind of suspension-as-discipline is imposed only by consent or at
the end of the full JQC disciplinary process and after a determination by this
Court that the judge violated the Code of Judicial Conduct and that discipline
is appropriate. That is different from the interim suspension that JQC Rule 15
permits upon indictment, see JQC Rule 15 (a) (suspension with pay),
conviction, see JQC Rule 15 (b) (suspension without pay), or a determination
that a judge poses a substantial threat of serious harm to the public or to the
administration of justice, see JQC Rule 15 (c) (suspension with pay or transfer
to inactive status with pay).
75
265) (2019) (“[A]ny decision about the scope of a provision of the
Georgia Constitution must be rooted in the language, history, and
context of that provision.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
Examining the text of the relevant provisions, there is nothing
about the term “suspension” that itself suggests continuing receipt
of pay. As Commissioner Hyde notes, a suspension with pay
amounts to little discipline at all, such that this key term in
Paragraph VII would be robbed of significant meaning if that were
all that “suspension” meant. This is especially so when imposed after
providing due process and concluding that a violation of the Code of
Judicial Conduct in fact has been committed and the conduct is of
such character as to invoke this Court’s authority to discipline under
Paragraph VII. And the language of Paragraph V on its face —
forbidding decrease in an incumbent’s “salary” during a term of
office — does not require us to impose this meaning on the term
“suspension” in Paragraph VII. “Salary” generally was defined
around the time of the ratification of the 1983 Georgia Constitution
as a fixed rate of pay for services when they are rendered. See
76
Webster’s New World Dictionary of the American Language (2d.
college ed. 1980) 1255 (defining “salary” as “a fixed payment at
regular intervals for services, esp. when clerical or professional”
(emphasis supplied)). Not paying a person while that person is
legally prohibited from rendering services for some period of time
does not decrease that person’s “salary” within the ordinary
meaning of that word.
This understanding of the meaning of the term “suspension” is
consistent with the context in which the people ratified the
constitution containing the current version of Paragraph VII.
Paragraph VII (a) was ratified in its current form in 1983. See
Inquiry Concerning Judge Coomer, 315 Ga. 841, 858-859 (6) nn.11-12 (885 SE2d 738) (2023). Paragraph V also entered the Georgia
Constitution with the 1983 overhaul. See Ga. L. 1981
(Extraordinary Session), pp. 143, 182; Ga. L. 1983, p. 2070. The 1976
Constitution contained neither the provision for suspension as a
form of judicial discipline nor the language forbidding a decrease in
a judge’s salary. See Ga. Const. 1976, Art. VI, Sec. XII; Art. VI, Sec.
77
XIII. In determining the meaning of a constitutional provision as
understood by the people when they ratified it, “it is the
understanding of the text by reasonable people familiar with its
legal context that is important[.]” Elliott, 305 Ga. at 207 (III) (C) (ii)
(citation and punctuation omitted). Just a few years before the
ratification of the current version of Paragraph VII, we suspended a
judge without pay as a means of judicial discipline. See In re Judge
Broome, 245 Ga. 227, 229 (264 SE2d 656) (1980). Although I have
found one instance prior to the voters’ approval of the 1983
Constitution34 where this Court imposed a suspension as a form of
judicial discipline without specifying whether the suspension was
with or without pay, see Inquiry Concerning a Judge; W.D. Josey,
J.P., No. 469, 249 Ga. 425, 427 (292 SE2d 59) (1982), I have not
found any reported case prior to the ratification of the 1983
Constitution in which this Court made clear that it was suspending
34 The people voted to approve the new Constitution on November 2,
1982. See Building Authority of Fulton County v. State of Georgia, 253 Ga. 242,
245 (3) (321 SE2d 97) (1984).
78
a judge with pay.35 This supports a conclusion that when the people
approved the current form of Paragraph VII, they understood the
term “suspension” as contained therein to mean suspension without
pay.
This conclusion about the meaning of the term “suspension”
also is consistent with our handling of judicial discipline matters
under the 1983 Constitution. We have suspended judges without
pay numerous times in the years since the ratification of that
Constitution.36 See Inquiry Concerning Judge Gundy, 314 Ga. 430,
434 (877 SE2d 612) (2022); Inquiry Concerning Judge Hays, 313 Ga.
148, 150 (868 SE2d 792) (2022); Inquiry Concerning a Judge 93-154,
263 Ga. 883, 884 (440 SE2d 169) (1994); Inquiry Concerning a Judge
Nos. 1546, 1564 & 1666, 262 Ga. 252, 253 (417 SE2d 129) (1992);
35 In 1978, in lieu of removal, we ordered that a Senior Judge of the
superior courts be “prohibited and restricted from presiding as judge of the
superior courts in any judicial proceeding whatsoever at any time after this
date.” In re Judge Dunahoo, 240 Ga. 617, 618 (242 SE2d 116) (1978).
36 Of course, the fact that we have done so does not mean that we were
right to do so. At least Gundy and Hays were suspended by consent. But while
a judge may consent to waive procedural rights, a judge cannot by agreement
confer on this Court power that it does not already possess.
79
Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 1228, 259 Ga. 146, 147 (378 SE2d
115) (1989); Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 1036, 257 Ga. 481, 481
(361 SE2d 158) (1987); Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 1035, 257
Ga. 479, 480 (361 SE2d 157) (1987); Inquiry Concerning a Judge No.
693, 253 Ga. 485, 486 (321 SE2d 743) (1984); Inquiry Concerning a
Judge No. 481, 251 Ga. 524, 525 (307 SE2d 505) (1983); Inquiry
Concerning a Judge No. 506, 250 Ga. 764 (300 SE2d 808) (1983).
Although we did not do so with any fulsome analysis of whether such
a sanction was consistent with Paragraph V, that may simply reflect
a consistent understanding that a suspension without pay is
constitutionally permissible.37
Another provision in Paragraph VII, addressing discipline for
judges who are the subject of criminal proceedings, bolsters this
37 Indeed, we have treated “suspension” as a serious sanction, bolstering
the idea that we understand suspension to be unpaid, something very different
from a paid vacation. See Inquiry Concerning Judge Crawford, 310 Ga. 403,
408 (851 SE2d 572) (2020) (Blackwell, J., concurring) (describing censure,
public reprimand, and limitations on the performance of judicial duties as
“lesser sanctions” than the removal and suspension sanctions expressly
authorized by the Constitution and concluding that they “fit comfortably
within the constitutional authorization for judges to be ‘otherwise disciplined’
for judicial misconduct”), concurrence cited favorably in Kinslow v. State, 311
Ga. 768, 774 (860 SE2d 444) (2021).
80
conclusion. See Ga. Const. Art VI, Sec. VII, Par. VII (b) (1). This
provision requires in certain cases the suspension of a judge who is
indicted for a felony in state or federal court pending final
disposition of the case or expiration of the judge’s term of office. See
id. This provision explicitly provides for that suspension to be with
pay under some circumstances, and without pay in others,
depending on the amount of process offered: “While a judge is
suspended under this subparagraph and until initial conviction by
the trial court, the judge shall continue to receive the compensation
from his office. After initial conviction by the trial court, the judge
shall not be entitled to receive the compensation from his office.” Id.
This suspension without pay is not equivalent to removal, as the
subparagraph provides that if the judge’s conviction is overturned
as a result of a direct appeal or application for a writ of certiorari,
the judge shall be reinstated immediately, at which point the judge
will be entitled to any withheld compensation. See id.
Of course, the Georgia Constitution provides that “[n]o action
shall be taken against a judge except after hearing and in
81
accordance with due process of law.” Ga. Const. Art. VI, Sec. VII,
Par. VIII. “Based on this provision, this Court has said the JQC’s
authority to enforce the Code is not unlimited, inasmuch as the
Constitution requires the Commission to afford due process to
judges and provides for this Court to review the imposition of
discipline.” Inquiry Concerning Judge Coomer, 315 Ga. at 849 (4) (a)
(citation and punctuation omitted). “Federal due process
requirements also apply” to the discipline of Georgia judges. Id. at
849 (4) (a) n.3. Therefore, this Court cannot suspend judges without
pay on an interim basis, before disciplinary proceedings have
afforded full due process. See id. at 844 (2) (noting that interim
suspension of judge was with pay per Paragraph V). But, although
this case does not require us to decide the question, my best reading
is that Paragraph V does not forbid the use of a suspension without
pay as a sanction for judicial misconduct once due process has been
provided.
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice Boggs joins in this
concurrence.
82