Opinion 15-202
December 3, 2015
Please Note:
While it does not affect the outcome here, see AO-347 concerning the status of Section 100.4(H)(2).
Digest: A full-time judge may not participate in a continuing legal education
program that (1) is advertised in a way clearly and improperly implying
attorneys attending will be placed in a special position to influence the
judge and (2) offers an honorarium designed to maximize the number of
paying attendees. Rules: 22 NYCRR 100.2; 100.2(A); 100.2(C); 100.4(A)(1)-(3); 100.4(B);
100.4(C)(3)(b)(ii); 100.4(D)(3); 100.4(H)(1)-(2); Opinions 12-62/12-69;
11-128; 04-111; 00-120. Opinion: A full-time judge was invited to teach in a continuing legal education program
entitled “What Civil Court Judges Want You to Know” sponsored by an entity
apparently in the legal education business.1 The judge learned the organization
marketed the program to lawyers, without the judge’s knowledge or consent, as “an
easy and convenient way” to (a) “spend a day with the judges you come before”; (b)
“tailor” and “customize your presentation to each judges’ specific likes and dislikes”;
(c) learn “tricks”; and (d) “learn what the specific nuances are for each judge.”
Attorneys must pay over $350 to attend, and the entity offers the inquiring judge, as
compensation, the choice of an honorarium of $10 per paid attendee or a voucher to
attend a future program. The judge asks whether he/she may participate. A judge must always avoid even the appearance of impropriety (see 22 NYCRR
100.2) and must always act in a manner that promotes public confidence in the
judiciary’s integrity and impartiality (see 22 NYCRR 100.2[A]). Therefore, a judge
must not lend the prestige of judicial office to advance private interests and must not
convey or permit others to convey that they are in a special position to influence the
judge (see 22 NYCRR 100.2[C]). A judge may not be a speaker or guest of honor at a
not-for-profit organization’s fund-raising event, subject to exceptions not applicable
here (see 22 NYCRR 100.4[C][3][b][ii]) and a full-time judge may not be an active
participant in a business entity (see 22 NYCRRR 100.4[D][3]). Subject to these and
other limitations, a judge may speak, teach and lecture, provided doing so is not
incompatible with judicial office, and does not cast reasonable doubt on the judge’s
capacity to act impartially as a judge, detract from the dignity of judicial office or
interfere with the proper performance of the judge’s judicial duties (see 22 NYCRR
100.4[A][1]-[3]; 100.4[B]). A full-time judge may receive compensation for
permissible extra-judicial speaking engagements to the extent permitted by the Rules
Governing Judicial Conduct (see 22 NYCRR 100.4[H][1]). Among other restrictions,
the source of such payments must not “give the appearance of impropriety” (id.) and
amounts greater than $150 are subject to a reporting requirement (see 22 NYCRR
100.4[H][2]). Although judges may speak or appear in a variety of settings, they may not
participate in an extra-judicial speaking engagement which involves a “marketing
campaign ... that [is] grossly insensitive to the judges’ ethical obligations” (Opinion
12-62/12-69). In Opinion 12-62/12-69, the sponsoring organization advertised to attorneys
that its program “is a ‘convenient way to spend a day with the judges you come
before’ and to ‘tailor’ or ‘customize your presentation to each judge’s specific likes
and dislikes.’” The inquiring judges were concerned that the marketing “seems to
use the judges as the attraction and inappropriately stresses the importance of
getting to know the judges in a setting outside the courtroom” (id.). The Committee
observed that had the organization asked the judges their permission to market the
program in such manner, the inquiring judges would have emphatically refused (see
id.). Thus, the Committee concluded that the judges must cancel their participation
in the program and object to it in writing (see id.). The Committee further
instructed the judges that their written objections: should, to the extent that they have not already done so,
request a retraction, “advise the [organization] to cease
from using from using the advertisement in any form” and
“instruct the [organization] not to use [their] name in a
similar manner in the future” (Opinion 12-61). Beyond this
the inquiring judges need not take any further action, as
they “cannot control what the organization chooses to do
in response to [their letters], and this Committee has no
authority to advise or direct the organization with respect
to its actions in this matter” (Opinion 12-62/12-69). Here, the marketing campaign is nearly identical to, and marketed by the
same organization as, Opinion 12-62/12-69. Therefore, this judge should similarly
decline participation in the program. To the extent practical and appropriate under
the circumstances, the judge should likewise object in writing, request a retraction,
and advise the organization not to use his/her name in a similar manner in the future
(id.). The judge should also withdraw from participating in this CLE program due to
the specific structure of the offered honorarium (see Opinions 11-128; 04-111). Even
where a sponsoring organization is legally organized as a not-for-profit entity,
compensation of its instructors based on the number of paid attendees “can only be
perceived as commercial in nature” (Opinion 11-128). Thus, the Committee has
advised that a full-time judge should not participate in a program that “appears to be
deliberately designed to provide instructors with a financial incentive to maximize
the number of paying attendees” (id.; see also 22 NYCRR 100.4[D][3]). Here, the
organization charges attendees over $350, and the organization is offering
compensation to the judge calculated per attendee. The public is likely to perceive
this as an attempt to provide the judge with a financial incentive to maximize the
number of paying attendees (see Opinion 11-128). Under these circumstances, the
organization’s offer of an “alternative” form of compensation (i.e. a voucher for a
future program, presumably valued over $350), does not change the overall
appearance that the program is essentially commercial in nature and therefore
impermissible for a full-time judge. Therefore, the inquiring full-time judge may not participate in this program as
its marketing campaign and compensation structure contravene the Rules Governing
Judicial Conduct. _____________________________ 1 The entity is legally organized as a not-for-profit organization, but (as
discussed later in this opinion) appears to operate as if it were a commercial
enterprise. It is not a bar association.