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Last Post 24 Mar 2009 06:03 PM by  ElizabethThornburg
R-09-0007 Supreme Court Rule 81. Arizona Code of Judicial Conduct
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kstott
Posts:

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09 Jan 2009 03:22 PM
    R-09-0007

    PETITION TO AMEND RULE 81, RULES OF THE SUPREME COURT: ARIZONA CODE OF JUDICIAL CONDUCT

    WOULD IMPLEMENT A NEW ARIZONA CODE OF JUDICIAL CONDUCT BASED ON THE ABA MODEL CODE OF JUDICIAL CONDUCT

    Petitioner:
    E. Keith Stott, Jr.
    Executive Director, Commission on Judicial Conduct
    on behalf of
    Hon. Peter Cahill, Chair of the Task Force on the Code of Judicial Conduct

    1501 W. Washington Street, Suite 229
    Phoenix, Arizona 85007
    Telephone: 602-452-3200
    E-mail address: [email protected]

    Filed January 9, 2009

    COMMENT PERIOD CLOSED.

    On June 2, 2009, the Court entered an order ADOPTING the proposal as amended, effective September 1, 2009.

    See http://www.supreme.state....R090007%206.2.09.pdf
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    ElizabethThornburg
    Posts:

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    24 Mar 2009 06:03 PM
    At the request of the Appellate Judges Education Institute, I researched the issue of the ethics of judges doing independent fact research. That research, in turn, led me to write an article concerning one of the provisions of the proposed ABA Model Code – Rule 2.9(C) and its discussion of the circumstances under which a judge may independently investigate the facts of a pending or impending case. Despite the hard work and best intentions of the ABA, I believe that because of the cross-reference to "judicial notice" the section as drafted will lead to confusion, inconsistency, and too much investigation outside the auspices of the adversary system. I therefore urge the Commission, when considering the new Code, to adopt a different version of Rule 2.9 and its related comment. Either allow research freely (from non-human sources), but only with notice to the parties and an opportunity to respond; or prohibit fact research entirely, whether of adjudicative or legislative facts, while encouraging the court to get any necessary information from the parties as part of the record.

    I attach for your information a copy of the article, which was just published in the University of Texas’s Review of Litigation. I hope it's helpful. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at 214-768-2613 or by sending email to [email protected].

    Elizabeth Thornburg
    Professor of Law
    SMU Dedman School of Law
    Dallas, TX
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