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PASADENA — Until last week, the five judicial candidates vying for an open seat on the Municipal Court bench here were engaged in a polite and uneventful June 3 primary race.
But controversial ratings released last Thursday by the Los Angeles County Bar Assn. have caused tempers to flare among the five first-time candidates in the nonpartisan election.
Of the five, only Deputy Dist. Atty. Judson Morris received a “well qualified” grade, the highest of three ratings given by the association.
Attorneys Bill Paparian and Helen Bunt Smith were rated “not qualified” to hold the office, grades which angered both. Municipal Court Commissioner Kevil W. Martin said he was equally
disturbed by the “qualified” rating he received.
Municipal Court Commissioner Robert Lutz was rated “qualified,” a mark that he said does not “unduly concern” him.
Paparian and Smith accused the association of political favoritism in its rating procedures and said, as did other Superior and Municipal Court candidates in Los Angeles County who received
unfavorable marks, that the system is unfair.
“I really think that what you’re looking at is a courthouse popularity contest,” said Paparian, who has emerged as a spokesman for Pasadena’s increasingly vocal and influential Armenian
community. The 37-year-old attorney, while admitting that he was angered by his rating, said he doubted it would have any effect on the primary election.
“I would be concerned if I thought the evaluation had any integrity and was a fair one,” he said.
Paparian was rated as “not qualified” because he “lacks experience necessary to be a judge of the Municipal Court,” the association’s rating report said.
The bar association has rated judicial candidates since 1976, using confidential questionnaires and interviews with candidates and their professional associates. An association committee
then ranks the candidates as “well qualified,” “qualified” or “not qualified” based on professional ability, experience, integrity and temperament. Those who receive less than the highest
rating are invited to address the committee. Smith, Paparian and Martin said they had done so, but were not satisfied with the results.
The association does not reveal specific information involved in the ratings, a practice that infuriated Smith, 43, a Pasadena attorney rated “unqualified” because she “lacks the judicials
skills necessary to be a judge of the Municipal Court,” the association’s report said.
“How can you answer something that isn’t even defined and, second of all, how can you answer it when you don’t even know what it is?” Smith asked. “I’ve been practicing law for 13 years,
doing all sorts of things, so I don’t know what they mean.”
In responding to such criticism, Donald Wessling, chairman of the committee that evaluated the candidates, said, “It doesn’t surprise me that someone who is disappointed with their
evaluation would seek to find fault with it.
“But the committee does receive information that is given in confidence,” Wessling added. “If you were to reveal who the information is from, you would find that those who have information
would be reluctant to give it.”
Smith, who is married and has two children, said she did not know what effect the rating would have on her campaign. “It’s so unfair of a system. . . . I just hope the public will understand
this,” she said.
Morris, who was rated “well qualified” by the association, said he found no fault with the rating procedure. “I have every confidence in the rating system, which is easy for me to say, of
course.”
The five candidates in the Pasadena Judicial District, which has about 120,000 registered voters and encompasses Sierra Madre, San Marino, South Pasadena, Pasadena and portions of Temple
City and Altadena, are vying for the office being vacated by Municipal Court Judge Samuel L. Laidig, who is retiring after 15 years on the bench. To avoid a runoff in the November general
election, a candidate must receive more than 50% of the votes cast.
Municipal Court Commissioner Martin said his decision to seek higher office was “really economic for me, rather than ego.” In Pasadena Municipal Court, Martin said, commissioners and judges
perform virtually the same duties. “The reason I’m running,” he said, “is there’s a little bit of an increase in pay and the retirement system is a hell of a lot better. As long as I’m doing
the job, I figured I might as well have the title, too.”
Martin, 43, has more than 14 years of experience in legal affairs, having worked six years in the Pasadena city prosecutor’s office and two years in private practice before being appointed a
commissioner in 1981. He is divorced and has two children.
Paparian, who opened his Pasadena law firm in 1980, has hired Cerrel Associates Inc., a well-known political consulting firm, to run his campaign. Paparian, who is married and has two sons,
has received endorsements from several city officials, including City Directors Rick Cole and Jess Hughston, and from organizations such as the Teamsters. He is an outspoken advocate of
Pasadena’s Armenian community, which totals about 15,000 people, and is chairman of the local chapter of Armenian National Committee.
If elected, Paparian’s foremost goal would be to make the court system less isolated from the community, he said. “I think that judges have a responsibility to go into the community and talk
to citizens groups and tell them what’s going on,” he said. “I think the public needs to be educated and some of the mystique that surrounds the courts needs to be taken away.”
Morris, 43, has been a deputy district attorney for 10 years and has gained a reputation as a tough prosecutor. His most notable case was in September, when he successfully prosecuted
Frances Caccavale, a 70-year-old Temple City grandmother, for the murder of her husband. In Pasadena Superior Court, Morris refuted the elderly woman’s claim that she stabbed her husband to
death in self-defense after enduring years of abuse. She was later convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 15 years to life in prison.
After serving six years in the district attorney’s downtown office, Morris was assigned to Pasadena in 1983. Before passing the Bar in 1974, he had been a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy
for nine years. He decided to run for judge, he said, because “it’s a way to be a little more effective in a system that I really believe in.” Morris, who is married and has two children,
said his campaign has consisted mostly of mailing flyers and going door-to-door in the community.
Smith, a family-law attorney, said she is running in the primary election because “I think that I would be fair to all people and hear both sides. I just feel that being familiar with the
community, and the people, and having a concern that all are treated fairly, is very important.”
Lutz, who has been a Rio Hondo Municipal Court Commissioner for 18 years, said that, if elected, his experience in administrative court matters would greatly enhance his judicial
performance. “I have a lot of procedural knowledge,” he said.
Married with three grown children, Lutz, 63, said he is running a low-key campaign marked by post cards and newspaper advertisements. “I think it’s going to be difficult for any one person
to win the primary, but I think I have a very good chance of making it into a runoff,” he said.