Kansas and regional news
Fellow justice wants probe into meeting
April 25, 2006
Advertisement
Topeka In an unprecedented move, Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Kay McFarland on Monday called for an investigation into what fellow Justice Lawton Nuss said to two senators about the pending school finance case.
"The public trust and confidence in the judiciary is vital to our system of government," McFarland said in a prepared statement.
She said the allegations of inappropriate communications by Nuss should be investigated by the Commission on Judicial Qualifications, a 14-member board that investigates alleged judicial misconduct and makes recommendations for discipline.
Ron Keefover, a spokesman for the court, said it was the first time in memory that a chief justice has sought a probe of another justice on the court.
The judicial commission's next meeting is May 5.
Last week, it was disclosed that Nuss had lunch March 1 with Senate President Steve Morris, R-Hugoton, and Sen. Pete Brungardt, R-Salina.
At the lunch, Nuss discussed the school finance lawsuit, the most high-profile case before the court.
Nuss recuses himself
When the lunch meeting was about to be made public Thursday, Nuss announced he would recuse himself from future dealings in the lawsuit.
The decision, he said through Keefover, was to avoid the appearance of impropriety "even though there was no discussion with the senators of what amount of funding might eventually be acceptable to him or to the court as a whole."
But that has not satisfied some lawmakers who have said Nuss violated a basic tenet of law by talking with parties in a pending lawsuit outside the courtroom.
House Speaker Doug Mays, R-Topeka, has said he is considering a legislative investigation, and the attorney general's office has interviewed several legislators about what was said at the lunch.
Justice Lawton Nuss
More about Justice Lawton Nuss
- Documents
- Nuss gets off with warning over school finance talk
- Nuss talks turn political
- Communication between governor's office and Kansas judicial branch (.pdf)
- Code of judicial conduct (.pdf)
- Rules relating to judicial conduct(.pdf)
- Justice Nuss' response to the allegations (.pdf)
- KSGovernor.org: Sebelius responds to wide-ranging open records requests
- Justice Lawton Nuss biography, from Kansas Supreme Court web site
- KSCourts.org: Recusal Statement
- School Finance Proposed Expenditures Comparison (.pdf)
- Video
- 6News video: Nuss controversy ends with questionable punishment
- 6News video: Nuss meeting descends to bickering
- 6News video: Committee begins interviews in Nuss affair (06-08-06)
- 6News video: Committee begins investigation into Nuss affair (05-25-06)
- 6News video: Kansas lawmakers determine school finance plan (05-02-06)
- Stories
- House panel votes to expand Nuss probe (06-09-06)
- Senator from Lawrence declines to testify for now (06-09-06)
- Senator denies court contact before Nuss lunch (06-08-06)
- Nuss says he regrets meeting (06-02-06)
- Supreme Court justices at a glance (08-20-04)
- More about the 'Nuss Fuss'
- More about the school finance case
If the Commission on Judicial Qualifications finds convincing evidence to support allegations, it can warn the judge, tell the judge to stop what he or she is doing or recommend the state Supreme Court discipline the judge. Discipline could range from public censure to suspension or removal.
Morris declined to comment on McFarland's statement.
But earlier in an interview Monday, Morris said nothing improper was discussed at the lunch at Carlos O'Kelly's.
Morris said Nuss had prepared a table that had columns showing the amount of school funding called for by a consultant study, a legislative study and a proposed House plan.
"He didn't realize that the House plan was cumulative. He was glad to know how it worked," Morris said.
Morris said he noted that state leaders had said earlier in the session that they hoped to produce a bipartisan school finance plan. "He (Nuss) picked up on that and said that sounded good to him," Morris said.
The conversation on school finance lasted about five minutes, Morris said. He said Nuss' comments had had no influence on him.
The Kansas Supreme Court has ruled the school finance system unconstitutional and ordered the Legislature to increase funding and change the ways funds are allocated to help poor students more.
Last year, lawmakers increased school funding by $290 million to push appropriations to more than $3 billion. They will return Wednesday for a wrap-up session to decide how much more to increase funding.
Work of commission
Karl Peterjohn, executive director of the Kansas Taxpayers Network, said he was glad to hear of McFarland's request, but he noted that much of the Commission on Judicial Qualification's work is done behind closed doors.
"I wish there was an open forum and discussion to provide a way of maintaining appropriate behavior among some of our top state officials," Peterjohn said.
Last year Peterjohn had filed a complaint against Nuss with the Commission on Judicial Qualifications, saying Nuss should have recused himself from the school finance case because Nuss was formerly an attorney with the law firm that represented one of the main plaintiff school districts.
The commission, however, dismissed Peterjohn's complaint.
McFarland said the commission was "fully equipped to conduct whatever fact-finding may be needed to determine whether any of the Canons of Judicial Conduct have been violated."
Because of the seriousness of the allegations, McFarland said, the commission should "conduct a thorough examination as expeditiously as possible."
In the meantime, Nuss continues working on the bench. The court heard arguments in several cases Monday.
More like this
- Chief justice calls for investigation into Nuss 11 comments / April 24, 2006
- Kansas Supreme Court justice steps down from school case 7 comments / April 20, 2006
- Lawmakers return amid judge turmoil April 26, 2006
- Justice recuses self from school funds case 4 comments / April 21, 2006
- Nuss probe is witch hunt May 3, 2006
Top ads RSS
Marketplace
Arts & Entertainment · Bars · Theatres · Restaurants · Coffeehouses · Libraries · Antiques · Services
- Blog: Palin Book Could Be Your Cheapest Source For Winter Fuel November 20, 2009 · 87 comments
- Mangino's contract outlines probe November 21, 2009 · 72 comments
- Nation has right to ask ‘why?’ November 21, 2009 · 58 comments
- Blog: Coaches Temper & Abusive Behavior = Bad Sportsmanship November 21, 2009 · 3 comments
- Palin stirs feminist ambivalence November 21, 2009 · 28 comments
- Blog: We Noticed November 19, 2009 · 126 comments
- Mangino denies validity of former player allegations November 19, 2009 · 158 comments
- Wright’s role clarified November 21, 2009 · 18 comments
- Lawrence man charged in hit-and-run accident that killed bicyclist November 19, 2009 · 116 comments
- Poll: How much are you contributing to the United Way this year? November 21, 2009 · 15 comments
- Winter sports officially begin for city schools November 17, 2009
- Message warns students at Perry-Lecompton not to attend class today April 20, 2007
- The cowboy way: Williamstown church ministry draws unique following November 21, 2009
- No line at H1N1 immunization clinic November 21, 2009
- Health and stress affect grades November 10, 2008
- Lawrence couple excel in triathlons November 21, 2009
- Americans save more but earn less as interest rates fall November 21, 2009
- Four decades in crisis mode November 21, 2009
- Developers propose redesigned Boardwalk Apartments November 22, 2009
- Wright’s role clarified November 21, 2009


25 April 2006
at 11:35 a.m.
Suggest removal
Permalink
Jamesaust (Anonymous) says…
Again, there appears to be nothing substantively wrong with Nuss' actions but the appearance created is improper.
Peterjohn simply reveals that his 'opinion' is agenda-driven - he fears (or now, feared) Nuss' vote on an issue that seems likely to require higher taxes, which Peterjohn is paid to avoid. It seems perfectly clear that if Nuss had been a vote against funding public schools Peterjohn would be making excuses for him.
How judges conduct themselves while in office should not be evaluated on the basis of their judicial determinations but by the objective facts of their actions. Nuss should not have met privately with anyone involved with the case regardless of the content discussed. He has recused himself from further consideration of this case. If further investigation finds that discussions went beyond 'clarification' of facts then public censure is probably deserved. But there is nothing to support anything further here.
25 April 2006
at 4:09 p.m.
Suggest removal
Permalink
billybeanbag (Anonymous) says…
Lawton Nuss is a good justice and shouldn't be overly persecuted for this. I've met him several times and I think this was a simple error and not a sign of unfitness for his duties.
25 April 2006
at 9:39 p.m.
Suggest removal
Permalink
KU7679 (Anonymous) says…
Justice Nuss is as decent a person as you will meet. He probably deserves a slap on the wrist. After that, he will serve many distinguished years on the Court.