Superior Court Judge Ann Moorman rejected a bid for a change of venue by attorneys for the County of Mendocino, who argued Friday that intense local news coverage of Auditor Chamise Cubbison’s contentious civil lawsuit against the Board of Supervisors prejudices an outcome.
Moorman brushed aside criticism in court filings made by a San Francisco law firm about local public scrutiny, including county lawyers raising questions about her own impartiality and that of other local judges.
“My fellow judges in this county and I decide the outcome of cases based on the records developed during court proceedings,” declared Moorman. A judicial canon of ethics that demands judges stay “immune from public influence” is the bedrock of her judicial practices, said Moorman.
For now, the Cubbison civil case will continue in Moorman’s court. Moorman, after denying the venue change, scheduled more legal briefings for August. She then put attorneys on notice that she wants to bring the case to a close by fall.
“I expect to hear oral arguments to be made by then,” said Moorman. The Cubbison civil case has dragged on since December 2023. Cubbison last February resumed her duties as Auditor after District Attorney David Eyster filed felony criminal charges against she and the county’s former Payroll Manager Paula June Kennedy. The charges focused on $68,000 in extra
pay for Kennedy. Moorman tossed the case at the end of a lengthy preliminary hearing.
Cubbison’s attention then shifted to her efforts to win 17 months of back pay and benefits from the county and for damages to her professional reputation. So far, the county has spent more than a quarter of a million dollars resisting her claims.
The latest strategy was making a bid to move the Cubbison civil case to Marin County, creating more costly delays.
County attorney Morin Jacob of the law firm of Liebert Cassidy Whitmore did not respond to a written request Friday for comment on Moorman’s denial of the change of venue.
However, Jacob claimed in court filings on June 12 that a change of venue “is appropriate because of the extensive community and unfolding judicial bias against the County related to this matter.”
Jacob contended that the “overwhelming and slanted nature of the media coverage – regurgitating allegations of County misconduct without balance or scrutiny – has created a hostile environment that continues to intensify.”
“As this drumbeat of prejudicial reporting grows louder and more persistent, the risk to the integrity of this proceeding will only increase, making immediate transfer the only path forward to safeguard the County’s right to a truly impartial forum,” argued Jacob.
Cubbison lawyer Therese Cannata of San Francisco argued against the venue change, calling it in a formal court filing “blatant forum shopping.”
“It is driven by procedural gamesmanship and seeks to manipulate the legal system for strategic advantage,” said Cannata.
Cannata noted that a change of venue should be brought at the earlier possible time in a legal proceeding, instead of the County waiting 17 months.
Also, Cannata argued that “even if the County could demonstrate anything more than local news reports about events affecting a local elected official, the County cannot point to facts or legal authority to support transfer (of a civil writ proceeding) that will be decided by a judge, not a jury.”
Lastly, Cubbison’s lawyer ripped the County claim news coverage and a judicial bias was creating public prejudice.
“The County appears to be claiming without a shred of evidence, that the judge hearing this civil writ proceeding has been influenced by local press coverage or community opinion,” said Cannata.
An irony is that Cubbison “was and is subject to the same, if not more public attention and potential bias.”
Cannata said the fact of the matter is that Cubbison was “scrutinized and her reputation smeared when she was suddenly suspended from her elected position and criminally charged with mismanaging public funds.”
County attorney Jacob in her most recent court filings wants the civil litigation to focus only on the narrow interpretation of a disputed county statute surrounding whether a “county treasurer” can be suspended if criminally charged. Jacob, who advised county Supervisors in October 2023, they could immediately suspend Cubbison without pay after she was criminally charged, seeks a “straightforward statutory analysis.”
Cubbison lawyer Cannata, however, contends the disputed state statute does not authorize a suspension without pay.
It also does not, Cannata argues in her formal response, “authorize the County CEO and District Attorney to withhold evidence that would have made the suspension illegal in all respects.”
Cannata said the Board of Supervisors’ hasty decision to order Cubbison immediately suspended without a duly noticed public hearing was wrong.
It “created a symphony of unlawful conduct for which the County now must be held to account,” Cannata conclude.
Moorman scoffed at the County’s complaints that comments she made in dismissing criminal charges against Cubbison, and the brief appearance of two judges in the courtroom at separate times during the preliminary hearing somehow constituted the entire court bench was biased against the Board of Supervisors.
Moorman said she personally doesn’t read local media accounts surrounding civil and criminal cases, and that she strictly adheres to the judicial canon of ethics.
Moorman is a widely respected attorney with experience in civil litigation and criminal cases in state and federal courts. She was elected in 2010 to the Mendocino County Superior Court and has been re-elected unopposed twice.