Opinion 22-92
June 30, 2022
Please Note:
See AO-347 concerning the status of Section 100.4(H)(2).
Digest: (1) A full-time judge who is a mortgagee need not report mortgage interest
income to the clerk of the court under Section 100.4(H)(2). (2) A full-time judge who rents real property through Airbnb must report
rental income to the clerk of the court under Section 100.4(H)(2) if the
judge nets more than $150 in a calendar year from it. Rules: 22 NYCRR 100.2; 100.2(A); 100.4(H)(1); 100.4(H)(2); Opinions
22-63/22-74(A)/22-87; 21-98; 14-67. Opinion: The inquiring full-time judge is both a mortgagee (i.e. the lender/holder of a
mortgage) and a property owner who rents out certain real property through Airbnb.
The judge asks if it is necessary to report the mortgage interest and rental income to
the clerk of the court as "compensation" for an extra-judicial activity under Section
100.4(H)(2). A judge must always avoid even the appearance of impropriety (see 22 NYCRR
100.2) and must always act to promote public confidence in the judiciary's integrity
and impartiality (see 22 NYCRR 100.2[A]). A full-time judge may receive
compensation for permissible extra-judicial activities if its source does not give the
appearance of influencing the judge's performance of judicial duties or otherwise
give the appearance of impropriety, subject to certain limitations (see 22 NYCRR
100.4[H][1]). In addition, Section 100.4(H)(2) provides: A full-time judge shall report the date, place and nature of any activity for
which the judge received compensation in excess of $150, and the name of the
payor and the amount of compensation so received. ... The judge's report
shall be made at least annually and shall be filed as a public document in the
office of the clerk of the court on which the judge serves or the office
designated by law. The language of Section 100.4(H)(2), by its terms, applies only when a full-time judge
receives over $150 in compensation for a permissible extra-judicial "activity" (22
NYCRR 100.4[H][2]). "Compensation" may include payment, reimbursement, earnings,
fee, remuneration, salary, wages, stipend, honorarium, revenue, profits and income
(see Opinion 21-98). In Opinion 14-67, we concluded that receipt of interest income does not
constitute compensation for extra-judicial activities undertaken by the judge within
the meaning of the rule. Accordingly, the judge is not required to file a report under
Section 100.4(H)(2) with respect to interest income, even when that income is paid
pursuant to a mortgage instrument previously issued by the judge. We note there
could potentially be reporting obligations under Part 40, which we cannot address.1 Conversely, rental income received from renting out real property via Airbnb is
compensation for an extra-judicial activity and is therefore subject to reporting
under Section 100.4(H)(2) if the judge nets more than $150 in a calendar year from it
(see Opinion 22-63/22-74[A]/22-87). _______________________________ 1 The Unified Court System's Ethics Commission (tel. 1-212-428-2899) is the agency with the authority
to interpret Part 40.