Payola Justice: How Texas Supreme Court Justices Raise Money from Court Litigants
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Introduction
In the late 1980s, a corruption scandal engulfed the Texas Supreme Court. The nation's leading newspapers editorialized against the freewheeling way that Texas justices:
This heightened media scrutiny peaked in December 1987, when the investigative
program "60 Minutes" broadcast its Texas Supreme Court feature
"Justice for Sale."
At the crux of the scandal was a simple disbelief. Could Texas Supreme
Court justices be schizophrenic enough to rake in $1 million in campaign
contributions with one hand while impartially swinging the gavel with the
other? This was all the more of a stretch given that parties with business
before the court doubled as the justices' leading contributors. Concerns
about this seamy side of the court reflect the relatively recent collision
of the Texas Constitution (which mandates the election of supreme court
justices) with exorbitant modern political campaigns1.
Texas is the largest of just nine states in which voters select Supreme
Court justices through partisan elections2.
In a 1973 trickle down from Watergate, the Legislature tightened campaign
reporting requirements for Texas candidates, making it harder to ignore
these judicial conflicts of interest. In the latter half of the 1970s,
a little-known Supreme Court candidate pulled off an unusual upset. This
upset benefited from voters who confused the names of the winning candidate
with the names of unrelated public figures3.
Such flukes convinced political consultants that name recognition is the
name of the game in statewide races at the periphery of the electorate's
radar screen. When candidates cannot cash in on a famous name, name recognition
must be manufactured with huge advertising expenditures.
Like today, the court majority prior to the 1980s was widely seen as favoring
defense lawyers and their corporate clients over plaintiffs' trial lawyers,
who typically represent citizens in damage suits filed against corporations
and insurance companies. In the late 1970s and early 1980s a high-stakes
battle broke out for control of the Texas Supreme Court. The battle pitted
corporate interests against the interests of plaintiffs' trial lawyers.
By 1983, justices backed by plaintiffs' trial lawyers had garnered a court
majority.
Two of the new trial lawyer-backed justices, Bill Kilgarlin and Ted Robertson,
came to office with tens of thousands of dollars from controversial oil
man Clinton Manges or his attorney, Pat Maloney. In 1982, a trial court
found that Manges, as manager of oil leases that he co-owned with a South
Texas family named Guerra, had violated his fiduciary duties to that family.
In a decision upheld by an appellate court, the jury removed Manges as
lease manager and awarded the Guerras $882,000 in damages.
Manges and Maloney appealed to the Supreme Court. After unsuccessfully
trying to persuade the court to sign a draft opinion in which the Guerras
would "take nothing," trial lawyer-backed Justice C. L. Ray wrote
a final court opinion that preserved Manges' role as lease manager and
cut his total damages from $882,000 to $382,000. Manges-backed Justice
Robertson initially indicated that he would recuse himself from the case,
but reversed himself when it became clear that Justice Ray needed his vote
to prevail4.
McGinnis, Lochridge & Kilgore, the law firm representing the Guerras,
then filed a request for the court to rehear the case without the participation
of Justices Kilgarlin and Robertson. This highly unusual request trained
a spotlight on the financial conflicts of the justices. Manges v.
Guerra and similar scandals prompted investigations of Supreme Court
justices by the House Judicial Affairs Committee and the behind-closed-doors,
Supreme Court-controlled Commission on Judicial Conduct.
It soon became clear that many interests with business before the court
were busily stuffing the coffers of Supreme Court candidates in the 1980s.
Pennzoil and its lead attorney, Joe Jamail, contributed heavily to justices
around the time that the court declined to review an $11 billion judgment
that Pennzoil won against Texaco. The Texas Medical Association's PAC also
spent freely to elect justices who were likely to sympathize with the medical
establishment in malpractice suits. Going into the 1988 election, the Texas
Medical Association's PAC spent $27,500 on Justice Gonzalez alone.
When Chief Justice John Hill tried to confront the raging court crisis
in 1987 by resigning to promote the merit selection of judges, Republican
Governor Bill Clements appointed Tom Phillips as a temporary replacement.
Chief Justice Phillips first ran for the office in 1988, when he limited
contributions to his campaign to $5,000 and headed a bipartisan "Clean
Slate" of Supreme Court candidates backed by the business interests.
Reacting to the Supreme Court scandals, voters tossed out incumbent Democratic
justices financed by trial lawyers and replaced them with "Clean-Slate"
justices financed by corporations and their defense lawyers.
To this day, Phillips campaign materials credit him with salvaging the
court's reputation from being "ridiculed and pilloried." Yet
Phillips and three other incumbent justices raised more than $1 million
each in their 1996 races and much of this money came from contributors
with business before the court. Phillips campaign materials also omit the
role of citizen groups. After "60 Minutes" aired "Justice
for Sale," Texas Public Citizen, Common Cause Texas, the League of
Women Voters of Texas and similar groups kept up the reform drumbeat. In
1992 and 1993, reformers released a two-part report called "Political
Contributions to the Supreme Court of Texas: An Appearance of Impropriety."
Responding to cries for reform, the Texas Legislature enacted the 1995
Judicial Campaign Finance Act. Though touted as fundamental reform, this
law set indulgent contribution limits that allow Supreme Court candidates
to take up to:
Few people realize that candidates can tap donors for
these limits as many as three times: once for the primary, once for the
runoff and once again for the general election.
Ten years after "Justice for Sale" aired, this study concludes
that—while the faces and ideologies of the justices and their paymasters
have changed—justices continue to take enormous amounts of money from litigants
who bring cases before the court. The fact that the parties who finance
the justices' campaigns repeatedly reappear on the court's docket documents
the extent to which justice is still for sale in the Texas Supreme Court.
Bad Calls? During the Texas Supreme Court scandal of the 1980s, serious
allegations arose about justices improperly communicating outside of the
court room with just one side of pending court disputes, an indiscretion
known as ex parte communications. Investigations into such contacts
reportedly prompted former Chief Justice C. L. Ray to instruct his secretary
to shred his phone records. Nonetheless, that court voluntarily disclosed
its justices' phone records6,
even though the records documented calls to lawyers with cases before the
Supreme Court7. |
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