Court Opinion

ID: 2739086
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-10-01 22:06:14.47337+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:33:58.512911
License: Public Domain

[J-59 A-2013]
                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                               MIDDLE DISTRICT

    CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, McCAFFERY, STEVENS, JJ.

IN RE: MAGISTERIAL DISTRICT JUDGE : No. 84 MM 2013
MARK A. BRUNO, MAGISTERIAL        :
DISTRICT 15-1-01                    Petition to Vacate the Order of the Supreme
                                  :
                                             Court dated February 1, 2013
                                           :
PETITION OF: MARK A. BRUNO                 :
                                           :
                                           : ARGUED: September 10, 2013

                                       OPINION

                                                      DECIDED: August 28, 2014
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CASTILLE                       OPINION FILED: October 1, 2014
      On August 28, 2014, this Court vacated its Order dated February 1, 2013, by

which the Court suspended Magisterial District Judge Mark A. Bruno without pay

pending further Order of this Court. See In Re: Bruno, --- A.3d ---, 2014 WL 4251283,

(Pa. 2014) (per curiam). This Opinion follows.

      The matter before the Court arises out of our supervisory actions following the

2011 federal investigation and subsequent indictment of Philadelphia Traffic Court

personnel on allegations of corruption involving “ticket-fixing.”1 The immediate issue is

1
         The federal investigation has resulted to date in the prosecution of nine judges
elected, or assigned, to Traffic Court: Michael J. Sullivan, Michael Lowry, Robert
Mulgrew, Willie Singletary, Thomasine Tynes, Mark A. Bruno, H. Warren Hogeland,
Kenneth Miller, and Fortunato N. Perri, Sr.; administrative personnel: William Hird; and
two local businessmen: Henry P. Alfano and Robert Moy. As the federal district court
has recounted, the central allegation was that “the Traffic Court was used by the alleged
conspirators to give preferential treatment to certain ticketholders, most commonly by
‘fixing’ tickets for those with whom they were politically and socially connected.” See
U.S. v. Sullivan, 2013 WL 3305217 (E.D. Pa. July 1, 2013). The cases of Hogeland,
Miller, Perri, Hird and Alfano were resolved by plea. The remaining defendants
(continued…)
whether this Court has the power to act and order the interim suspension from the

bench of a sitting jurist charged with a felony for conduct on the bench, and particularly

whether such authority exists given the formal disciplinary process available, as vested

in the Judicial Conduct Board (the “Board”) and Court of Judicial Discipline (the “CJD”).

This Opinion thus resolves overarching constitutional questions of the Court’s authority

and jurisdiction with respect to sitting members of the Judiciary. For the reasons that

follow, we hold that:

       1.    The Supreme Court has the supervisory power, an aspect of its authority
at King’s Bench, to order the interim suspension without pay of sitting jurists.

      2.      The Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction at King’s Bench to resolve
the instant dispute, which implicates supervisory actions of the Court relating to
personnel of the Unified Judicial System.

      3.     Acting within their respective authorities and jurisdictions, both the
Supreme Court and the CJD have authority to issue orders of interim suspension and to
impose sanctions upon jurists. To the extent that any such orders ultimately or
necessarily conflict, the order of the Supreme Court is “supreme” and controlling.

       Aside from foundational issues regarding the Court’s power and jurisdiction is the

difficult discretionary question of when to exercise the Court’s authority. This Opinion

discusses the broad considerations attending that question.

                                   I.        Background

       On January 29, 2013, a federal grand jury indicted Judge Bruno in the U.S.

District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (“district court”) on felony charges

(…continued)
proceeded to a joint trial, which resulted in the outright acquittal of Sullivan, Bruno, and
Moy. Mulgrew, Tynes and Lowry were convicted of perjury; Singletary was convicted of
making false statements to the FBI.

                                        [J-59 A-2013] - 2
of criminal conspiracy, mail fraud, and wire fraud. On February 1, 2013, the Supreme

Court entered an order, without dissent, that relieved Judge Bruno “of any and all

judicial and administrative responsibilities as a judge of the Magisterial District Court”

and suspended Judge Bruno “without pay” pending further Order of this Court. The

Order issued without prejudice to the right of Judge Bruno to seek relief in this Court for

the purposes of vacating or modifying the Order.          Order, 2/1/2013 (per curiam)

(“February 2013 Order”).2 Judge Bruno did not immediately seek such relief.

       Meanwhile, on January 31, 2013, the Board filed a petition with the CJD seeking

relief similar to that accorded by this Court, the interim suspension without pay of Judge

Bruno. The CJD scheduled a telephone conference for February 1, 2013, to consider

the Board’s petition. According to the Board, around 2:30 P.M. on February 1, 2013,

the CJD received notice of this Court’s action and, as a result, cancelled its conference

and took no immediate action on the Board’s petition.

       On March 13, 2013, Judge Bruno filed an application for relief in the federal

district court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief from this Court’s February 2013

Order, on the theory that the Order violated his due process rights. On May 13, 2013,

the district court denied the request for a preliminary injunction. See Bruno v. Supreme

Court of Pennsylvania, 946 F. Supp. 2d 392 (E.D. Pa. 2013). The district court also

denied reconsideration. In June and July 2013, Judge Bruno filed several other motions

in the district court, which he then withdrew following the directive of this Court to

reinstate his pay during his suspension.

2
        President Judge James P. MacElree of the Chester County Court of Common
Pleas independently suspended Judge Bruno on the day of the indictment. That action
is not challenged in this matter.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 3
      In parallel, Judge Bruno also responded to the Board’s request that the CJD

suspend him without pay. The CJD held a hearing on April 8, 2013. On May 24, 2013,

nearly four months after Judge Bruno was indicted, the CJD issued an order,

accompanied by opinion, suspending Judge Bruno with pay. The CJD ordered that any

compensation withheld from Bruno since February 2013 be paid immediately to him.

See In re Bruno, 69 A.3d 780 (Pa. Ct. Jud. Disc. 2013). The CJD’s directive necessarily

assumed a power to overturn this Court’s prior order.

      On May 28, 2013, Judge Bruno filed a petition with the Supreme Court to vacate

its February 1, 2013, Order for suspension without pay. The Administrative Office of the

Pennsylvania Courts (the “AOPC”) entered its appearance as respondent. On June 20,

2013, Judge Bruno filed a petition to expedite decision, in which he requested a hearing

before the Court. On July 11, 2013, the Court acted on Judge Bruno’s petition to vacate

by listing the matter for oral argument. The Court requested briefing and argument on

three constitutional issues. The issues briefed are:

             (1) Whether the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has
             jurisdiction to enter orders of interim suspension of jurists.

             (2) Whether the Court of Judicial Discipline has exclusive
             jurisdiction to enter orders of interim suspension of jurists, or
             whether the Court of Judicial Discipline’s jurisdiction is
             concurrent with the jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania Supreme
             Court.

             (3) If both tribunals act, which order is supreme.
In re Bruno, 71 A.3d 249 (Pa. 2013) (per curiam). The Court also directed the AOPC to

recommence paying Judge Bruno’s salary retroactive to February 1, 2013, pending

resolution of the dispute, albeit we did not vacate our prior order. Finally, the Court

invited the Judicial Conduct Board to participate in oral argument. The petition for

expedited consideration and a “timely hearing” was dismissed as moot. Id.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 4
      On July 25, 2013, upon a joint application by the parties that the Court granted,

this matter was consolidated for briefing and argument with the distinct case involving

Philadelphia Traffic Court Judge Christine Solomon, a case which was tangentially

related to the federal investigation into Traffic Court corruption, but which implicated

similar constitutional claims.3 In addition, the Court received amicus curiae briefs from

3
        We do not dispose of the Solomon matter in this Opinion. However, our
expression necessarily describes and touches upon arguments which the parties
illustrate by reference to Judge Solomon’s circumstances. Briefly, the background facts
of Solomon relevant to the issues argued by the parties are as follows.

       In October 2011, upon notice of the ongoing federal investigation, the First
Judicial District of Pennsylvania (comprising Philadelphia County) (the “FJD”), which
was already undertaking a reform initiative authorized by this Court, expanded the
scope of its autonomous administrative review to encompass Traffic Court operations.
The FJD directed the consulting firm it had retained for its reform initiative, Chadwick
Associates, to conduct the review. The immediate goal of the review was to secure and
preserve evidence, to facilitate full cooperation with the federal investigation, and to
reestablish the probity of Traffic Court operations. Judge Solomon, who had recently
been elected to a vacancy on the Traffic Court, met with the Honorable Gary S. Glazer,
Judge of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, who was serving as the new
Administrative Judge of the Philadelphia Traffic Court, and representatives of Chadwick
Associates on March 13, April 5, and April 10, 2012. In November 2012, the FJD
released the report prepared by Chadwick Associates (“FJD Report”), which indicated
that Judge Solomon had refused to cooperate with the administrative review.

      On April 18, 2013, this Court issued a rule to show cause why Judge Solomon
“should not be subject to a suspension from her judicial duties without pay for a period
of ninety (90) days based upon her refusal to cooperate with the Court-ordered
administrative review of the Traffic Court.” The rule was returnable on April 29, 2013.
See Order, 4/18/2013 (per curiam). Mr. Justice McCaffery noted his dissent. Judge
Solomon filed an answer to the rule to show cause, challenging the findings of the FJD
Report regarding her lack of cooperation.

       On May 21, 2013, this Court appointed the Honorable William H. Platt, Senior
Judge of the Superior Court of Pennsylvania, to serve as the Court’s Special Master in
the Solomon matter. The AOPC would attend the hearings and participate as
necessary. The Court retained jurisdiction. See In re Solomon, 66 A.3d 764 (Pa. 2013)
(per curiam). On May 31, 2013, Judge Solomon asked the Judicial Conduct Board to
(continued…)

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 5
the Special Court Judges Association of Pennsylvania (the “SCJAP”) and from the

Pennsylvania Bar Association (the “PBA”).

       In August 2014, a federal jury acquitted Judge Bruno of felony charges (criminal

conspiracy, mail fraud, and wire fraud) relating to his service on the bench at

Philadelphia’s Traffic Court. Our Order of August 28, 2014, vacating the February 1,

2013, Order freed Judge Bruno to return to service on the bench. This Opinion now

addresses the constitutional issues briefed.

                            II.    The Parties’ Arguments

       The arguments of the Board and Judge Bruno (together, “petitioners”) overlap to

a significant degree. Essentially, petitioners argue that the Supreme Court lacks power

to enter orders suspending jurists and to act otherwise in any matter that may be

considered “disciplinary.” In these litigants’ view, the CJD’s jurisdiction is exclusive in

these cases. As a result of this theory, the question of which order is supreme when

both the CJD and the Supreme Court act should not and would not arise again. The

(…continued)
participate in any proceedings relating to the rule to show cause. On June 6, 2013, the
Board followed up with a petition filed in this Court to stay proceedings on the rule to
show cause or, in the alternative, for permission to intervene in the proceedings before
Judge Platt. The Board challenged the Supreme Court’s authority to issue a rule to
show cause, to act upon the rule, or to appoint a special master. The AOPC responded
to the Board’s petition.

        On July 12, 2013, this Court granted the Board’s petition, stayed the proceedings
before Judge Platt, and directed the Board to participate in oral argument on the
constitutional issues raised regarding the Court’s authority to act in the case of Judge
Solomon. In the Solomon matter, the constitutional questions are the same as those in
the Bruno matter insofar as they relate generally to an order for the suspension of a
jurist, whether a disciplinary action is pending or not before the CJD.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 6
AOPC responds that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has “King’s Bench” jurisdiction

over the Bruno matter pursuant to its administrative and supervisory authority over the

courts and judicial officers of the Unified Judicial System. According to the AOPC, this

jurisdiction is concurrent with that of the CJD over disciplinary matters; however, this

Court’s authority is “supreme,” overriding inconsistent directives of the CJD. In addition

to the parties’ arguments, we also recount those offered by the PBA in analyzing the

constitutional issues implicated here. We note that the PBA has filed a particularly

helpful brief, which dispassionately addresses the dispute before the Court in the true

spirit of “friend of the Court” advocacy.4

                              A.     Petitioners’ Arguments

                                              1.

        Petitioners suggest that the Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction over the Bruno

case.    According to petitioners, the Court’s general supervisory and administrative

authority over all courts and magisterial district judges, while broad, does not include

any matter implicating judicial discipline.

4
         This sui generis matter does not present the same prudential concerns of issue
preservation and presentation normally posed in cases before the Court. See Anderson
v. McAfoos, 57 A.3d 1141, 1149 (Pa. 2012) (“Issue preservation and presentation
requirements are enforced in our system of justice for principled reasons . . . as they
facilitate the open, deliberate, and consistent application of governing substantive legal
principles from the foundation of a case through its conclusion on appellate review.
Loose shifting of positions after the entry of judgments by those challenging them
disrupts the stability and predictability of the process, fostering the potential for
unfairness.”). Indeed, the AOPC, which has taken the nominal role of respondent in this
matter, has in fact advocated from the role of “friend of the court” rather than of counsel,
not having had the opportunity to confer with a “client.” The Supreme Court in this
sense is not a client of the AOPC in this matter, even while it stands in the position of a
quasi-litigant.

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 7
       Petitioners begin by noting that any authority of this Court over inferior tribunals

originates in the King’s Bench power, which was first recognized by the Act of May 22,

1722, and is memorialized in the current Pennsylvania Constitution at Article V, Section

10. Board’s Brief at 27-29 & nn. 10, 13 (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(a) (1968); 42

Pa.C.S. § 502). According to petitioners, when Article V, Section 10 was drafted in

1968, the power of the Supreme Court was, “at best, loosely defined in the area of

judicial discipline.” Until 1968, petitioners state, the Constitution did not provide for the

discipline of judges short of removal, which was available via one of three exclusive

methods: impeachment, address, or conviction for misbehavior in office or of any

infamous crime.5     Petitioners note that the Supreme Court could also exercise “its

inherent common law supervisory powers over the entire judicial system” to remove,

suspend, or discipline jurists, but that the Court had never squarely addressed the

extent of its disciplinary authority.      This authority, petitioners assume, was never

applied, it was “untried and untested,” and, as a result, it was not an established power

of the Court.     Indeed, according to petitioners, with respect to removal of jurists,

5
        Like its 1874 predecessor, as amended, the Constitution of 1968 provides for the
following means of removing jurists by other branches of government, and for automatic
forfeiture of the judicial office. The House of Representatives has the sole power of
impeachment: “The Governor and all other civil officers shall be liable to impeachment
for any misbehavior in office, but judgment in such cases shall not extend further than to
removal from office and disqualification to hold any office of trust or profit under this
Commonwealth.” PA. CONST. art. VI, §§ 4, 6 (1968). Moreover, “[a]ll civil officers
elected by the people, except the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, members of the
General Assembly and judges of the courts of record, shall be removed by the Governor
for reasonable cause, after due notice and full hearing, on the address of two-thirds of
the Senate.” PA. CONST. art. VI, § 7 (1968). Finally, Article V, Section 18 provides that
“A justice, judge or justice of the peace convicted of misbehavior in office by a court,
disbarred as a member of the bar of the Supreme Court or removed under this section
shall forfeit automatically his judicial office and thereafter be ineligible for judicial office.”
PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(d)(3) (1968).

                                       [J-59 A-2013] - 8
decisions of the Court suggested that the methods for removal expressly included in the

Constitution were exclusive and the Supreme Court was absent from the removal

process.   Board’s Brief at 28-29 (citing Burton R. Laub, THE JUDICIARY: REFERENCE

MANUAL No. 5, at 158, 167, 169, 195 n.1 (1968); In re Bowman, 74 A. 203, 204 (Pa.

1909) (“constitutional direction as to how a thing is to be done is exclusive and

prohibitory of any other mode which the Legislature may deem better or more

convenient”); Commonwealth v. Gamble, 62 Pa. 343, 343 (Pa. 1869) (“gift of power to

remove a judge by impeachment or address excludes power to remove in any other

manner”); and Carpentertown Coal & Coke Co. v. Laird, 61 A.2d 426, 428-29 (Pa. 1948)

(“Carpentertown”) (describing King’s Bench power)); see also Bruno Brief at 22.

      Petitioners maintain that, against this background, the Constitutional Convention

of 1968 approved the creation of the Judicial Inquiry and Review Board (“JIRB”), whose

processes were dominated by this Court: the Court appointed a majority of the

members and the Court had ultimate de novo authority to decide whether discipline

would be imposed and what form that discipline would take. The Convention added

Section 18 -- addressing judicial discipline -- and, for the first time, expressly removed

disciplinary functions from the Court’s administrative and supervisory powers.

According to petitioners, the separate functions overlapped, and the disciplinary system

was “an adjunct” to the power of the Court to administer and supervise the courts. The

Supreme Court maintained disciplinary decisional authority following action and

recommendations by the JIRB.        Petitioners argue that the Court’s power was not

“limitless” because the Court could only act upon recommendation of the JIRB rather

than commence proceedings independently.          Board’s Brief at 30-33 (citing In re

Subpoena on Jud. Inquiry & Rev. Bd., 517 A.2d 949, 952 (Pa. 1986) (“JIRB

Subpoena”); First Amendment Coalition v. Jud. Inquiry & Rev. Bd., 460 A.2d 722, 724

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 9
(Pa. 1983); JOURNAL    OF THE   PA. CONST. CONVENTION, Vol. I, No. 44, at 835 (Feb. 15,

1968)); see also Bruno Brief at 22-26.

       Petitioners note that the judicial disciplinary scheme changed in 1993, when the

people, acting upon the General Assembly’s proposal, amended the Pennsylvania

Constitution to eliminate the JIRB in favor of the Board and the CJD. Petitioners offer

that the 1993 amendment separated the two functions: this Court retained general

administrative and supervisory authority while a new two-tier apparatus was created

with exclusive jurisdiction over disciplinary functions. In petitioners’ view, the amended

Article V, Section 18 limits the general powers of supervision and administration that the

Supreme Court has under Article V, Section 10(a). Petitioners argue that the specific

enumeration of the powers and authority in the disciplinary sphere of the Board and of

the CJD acts as an implicit limitation on any general power of the Court. Petitioners go

so far as to claim that the Court’s power to discipline in the first instance, as an adjunct

of its administrative or supervisory authority, “has been eliminated.” Board’s Brief at 32-

35 (citing PA. CONST. art. V, §§ 10(a), 18); see also Bruno Brief at 26-28, 57-58.

Additionally, petitioners assert that this Court’s published decisions and orders in

disciplinary matters reveal that the Court exercises an “extremely limited” power of

review and respects the CJD’s exercise of discretion, which implicitly shows that the

Court recognizes the CJD’s exclusive authority to discipline jurists. Bruno Brief at 39

(citing In re Merlo, 58 A.3d 1, 14-15 (Pa. 2012)).

       For petitioners, the salient question in this matter is whether the Supreme Court’s

intervention by its action against a judicial officer is either supervisory or disciplinary in

nature. Petitioners emphasize a perceived dichotomy in the exercise of the Supreme

Court’s authority: petitioners concede that the Court has plenary power to address

supervisory or administrative matters but they insist that the Court lacks any authority to

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 10
“discipline” jurists in the first instance. Board’s Brief at 41-43 (citing In re Assignment of

McFalls, 795 A.2d 367, 373 (Pa. 2002) and In re Assignment of Avellino, 690 A.2d
1138, 1143 & n.6 (Pa. 1997) (“Avellino I”); Bruno Brief at 38-39 (quoting In re

Melograne, 812 A.2d 1164, 1167 (Pa. 2002) (“It is beyond cavil that the [CJD] has

jurisdiction over the general subject matter presented here, namely, determining

whether an individual engaged in judicial misconduct.         In fact, that is the tribunal’s

constitutional raison d’être.”)); see also In re Assignment of Avellino, 690 A.2d 1145

(Pa. 1997) (“Avellino II”).6 According to petitioners, the drafters of Section 18 believed

that supervisory and administrative concerns are separable from disciplinary matters

and, as a result, the drafters crafted a patently distinct provision governing discipline.

Following the 1993 amendment, petitioners assert, the two-tiered disciplinary system

operates independently from the Supreme Court. For example, the Supreme Court’s

general authority to promulgate rules of procedure does not apply in the disciplinary

realm; the Board and the CJD promulgate their own rules of procedure. Board’s Brief at

50 (comparing PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(a)(6) (1993) with PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(j) (1968)

(repealed)).

       Petitioners claim that the Court’s decisions in Avellino I and McFalls, supra, are

not to the contrary. In Avellino I and McFalls, according to petitioners, the jurists had

refused judicial assignments, creating administrative concerns properly addressed by

the Court in its supervisory or administrative capacity.        Petitioners assert that the

6
       The Avellino I Court held that the Supreme Court had authority at King’s Bench
to impose sanctions when a judicial officer refused to comply with the assignment to
preside over criminal trials in the “felony-waiver program” of the court of common pleas,
for the calendar year 1997. In Avellino II, the Court held that a sanction of suspension
without pay for three months, followed by submission of performance reports for six
months, was warranted under the circumstances.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 11
Avellino I Court recognized the distinction, holding that the Court in that matter was

exercising its supervisory power and addressing an affront to its authority, rather than

stating that it had the authority to discipline or actually imposing any disciplinary

sanction in the first instance. In both Avellino I and McFalls, petitioners assert, the

Supreme Court intervened in ongoing disputes and acted quickly on the jurists’

disobedience, suggesting administrative or supervisory action.             By comparison,

petitioners opine, the Court’s actions in Bruno (and also in Solomon) are disciplinary in

nature and subject to the CJD’s exclusive jurisdiction.

         Petitioners explain the distinction between disciplinary and administrative action

by reference to Judge Solomon’s circumstances.             See supra n.3. According to

petitioners, the Court’s decision to issue a rule to show cause upon Judge Solomon

suggests disciplinary action because more than a year lapsed between Judge

Solomon’s alleged failure to cooperate with the Traffic Court investigation and the

Court’s rule to show cause and, during this time, the FJD did not request any action by

the Supreme Court to induce Judge Solomon’s cooperation before the rule issued.

Petitioners also observe that no other judges who failed to cooperate with the court-

ordered review of Traffic Court, e.g., by invoking the right against self-incrimination,

were subject to a similar rule to show cause. Petitioners claim that the Supreme Court’s

targeted action involving the sitting jurist was intended to discipline rather than to assure

the functioning of the judicial system.     Furthermore, petitioners emphasize that the

Supreme Court’s action involves a fact-finding investigation into Judge Solomon’s past

conduct, which they believe takes the case “into the area of asserted misconduct”

subject to the CJD’s exclusive dominion. Board’s Brief at 35-42; see also Bruno Brief at

59-62.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 12
        Finally, petitioners suggest policy concerns with the Court’s actions.          For

instance, according to petitioners, an original investigation through a master “has the

potential for intruding” upon the Board’s constitutional duties to investigate and

prosecute judicial misconduct and upon the CJD’s constitutional authority to impose

discipline. Petitioners claim that any disciplinary action would “arguably preclude” the

CJD from imposing a sanction on a Board-filed complaint so as not to subject the jurist

to two disciplinary sanctions for the same conduct. Moreover, petitioners remark that a

Court inquiry would not be subject to the confidentiality and other due process

protections afforded by Article V, Section 18.        Bruno Brief at 57-58 (citing JIRB

Subpoena, 517 A.2d at 954); see also Board’s Brief at 42-44.

        As an alternative, petitioners offer that, if the Supreme Court were to hold that it

has authority to act in disciplinary actions, the Court should nevertheless refrain from

acting and, instead, should refer the sitting judge to the Board.7          This argument

proceeds as follows: an approach of employing a master suffers from practical

impediments and fails to ensure a fair process: for example, the parties receive no pre-

hearing discovery; there is no predictable procedure or investigation; the charges are

not specific; discipline takes place on an ad hoc basis; and resulting sanctions may lack

parity. In such an instance, the Supreme Court “appear[s] to perform concurrently as

the investigator, prosecutor and judge. . . [a] comingling of constitutional functions” that

violates due process.     Accordingly, a hearing before the master is “unseemly” and

“difficult.”

        Moreover, the Court’s involvement at this stage would “undermine any later

disciplinary case,” as res judicata and collateral estoppel would operate. And, if the

7
      This particular argument is made in the jurists’ joint brief and is not forwarded
here by the Board.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 13
CJD were to impose parallel discipline, the Supreme Court would be in the difficult

position of appearing to have pre-judged the matter prior to the jurist’s appeal of right,

should one follow. Referral to the Board for disciplinary action is therefore preferable

and would be sufficient to vindicate the Court’s supervisory responsibilities and

authority. The referral would allow agencies with appropriate resources to investigate

and prosecute disciplinary matters. Bruno Brief at 48-62.

       With respect to the circumstances specific to the Bruno matter, petitioners rely in

part on the supervisory / disciplinary dichotomy already developed, but primarily

develop an analysis of Article V, Section 18(d)(2), the constitutional provision which

expressly addresses interim suspensions by the CJD.

       Petitioners argue that Article V, Section 18(d)(2) vests by its plain language

“exclusive” authority in the CJD to direct the interim suspension of a jurist who has been

charged with a felony or against whom charges have been filed by the Board with the

CJD. In petitioners’ view, because the constitutional language refers to the authority of

no entity other than the CJD to enter interim suspensions, the intent of the drafters was

that only the CJD -- and not the Supreme Court -- would have that power. Petitioners

further claim that the Constitution expressly eliminates the Supreme Court from the

process entirely by prohibiting appeals of interim suspension orders. See Board’s Brief

at 46-48, 57; Bruno Brief at 18-19.

       Looking beyond the plain language, petitioners remark that the 1993 amendment

provided for the first time constitutional authority to order interim suspensions of jurists,

and allocated that authority expressly to the CJD, with the intent to remove any residual

supervisory and administrative authority vested in the Supreme Court.            Petitioners

assert that the drafters of the 1993 amendment to Section 18 of Article V must be

presumed to have been aware of the state of the law at the time of promulgation,

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 14
specifically, that the Court had relied on Article V, Section 10(a) to impose an interim

suspension in In re Franciscus, 369 A.2d 1190 (Pa. 1977). Board’s Brief at 51-53 (citing

PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(a)). Petitioners claim that, by granting the authority to impose

interim suspensions to the CJD instead, the drafters of the 1993 amendment must have

intended to remove the same authority from the Court.           Interpreted together, the

argument goes, Sections 10(a) and 18(d)(2) exclude the Supreme Court from

disciplinary matters because the CJD’s Section 18(d)(2) authority is an express carve-

out from and limitation on the general supervisory and administrative powers of this

Court articulated in Section 10(a).      According to petitioners, the Court’s general

administrative or supervisory power must yield to the CJD’s specific authority in this

regard, consistent with the rule of interpretation that “the specific must prevail over the

general.” Id. at 54; accord Bruno Brief at 33-37.

       Petitioners also suggest that the legislative history of the 1993 amendment

supports the interpretation that legislators sought a “dramatic” departure from the

previous system of disciplining jurists, which had not functioned well, by creating an

independent disciplinary system outside the control of the judiciary. See Board’s Brief

at 55-56 (citing 1992 Pa. Legislative Journal-House 1513, 1516-18, 1523 (June 24,

1992); 1992 Pa. Legislative Journal-Senate 2481, 2482-83 (July 1, 1992); 1993 Pa.

Legislative Journal-House 53, 62 (January 27, 1993)). Petitioners add that the citizenry

approved the amendment, whose purpose was described in the referendum ballot

question as “establish[ing] a new system for disciplining Pennsylvania justices, judges,

and justices of the peace (now known as district judges).” Id. at 57 (quoting Pa. Bull.

Vol. 23, No. 8, at 816 (Feb. 20, 1993)). According to petitioners, the 1993 amendment

was intended to eliminate judicial domination of the disciplinary system and to “strip” the

Supreme Court of the power to impose discipline. Petitioners conclude that, as a result

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 15
of the 1993 amendment, “[w]hatever authority this Court had exercised in those [interim]

circumstances ha[s] been transferred to the CJD.” The 1993 amendment “essentially

removed this Court from participation in the system until an appeal from a final order

from the CJD.” Id.; accord Bruno Brief at 26-28.8

      Judge Bruno subscribes to the same interpretation of Section 18(d)(2) of Article

V as the Board but adds, in the alternative, the argument that the Supreme Court may

have the supervisory authority to suspend a jurist on a temporary interim basis, if the

CJD does not act timely. According to Judge Bruno, once the Court orders an interim

suspension, “the matter should be immediately transferred to the [CJD] for the [CJD] to

make the final decision and to have a hearing on the issue of the interim suspension.”

After that, Judge Bruno asserts, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would no longer have

any authority because an interim suspension order is not appealable. Judge Bruno

posits that this “compromise” solution would resolve any problems, including that the

Court is not in the position to provide a timely hearing post-deprivation after ordering an

interim suspension. Bruno Brief at 34, 36-37, 40-41.

8
       Judge Bruno alleges that the 1993 amendment was a reaction of “the public” and
the General Assembly to the conduct of Supreme Court Justices in the discipline of
former Justice Rolf Larsen. Bruno Brief at 24-28 (citing Matter of Larsen, 616 A.2d 529
(Pa. 1992)). The AOPC notes that counsel’s conjecture that Section 18 was a response
to disputes among members of the Supreme Court is not “legislative history” as that
term is generally understood. The AOPC also rejects the Board’s choices of legislative
history, stating that the Board misapprehends the record. For example, the comments
of Representative Piccola cited by Judge Bruno were made in the context of a rejected
amendment and do not reflect the language of Section 18 as proposed to the people.

       In light of our disposition, we find it unnecessary to resolve disputes regarding
the alleged background or the legislative history of the 1993 amendment to Article V,
Section 18.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 16
                                             2.

       With regard to the second issue upon which we received briefing, petitioners

assert that the CJD’s jurisdiction is exclusive. Petitioners reject the notion of concurrent

jurisdiction over “disciplinary” matters, pursuant to which both this Court and the CJD

would have authority to issue orders of suspension.         According to petitioners, the

language of Article V, Section 18 is plain that the CJD has exclusive jurisdiction to

discipline jurists for alleged wrongdoing and to issue interim suspensions pending

resolution of a complaint by the Board or outcome of felony charges.

       Petitioners assert that, although this Court has acted to issue interim

suspensions in the past, the decisions upon which the Court relied, e.g., Franciscus,

Avellino I, and McFalls, do not support the exercise of the Court’s authority here.

Petitioners note that Franciscus pre-dates the 1993 amendment of Article V, Section 18,

which changed the constitutional paradigm. Furthermore, petitioners remark that the

authority the Franciscus Court relied upon to impose interim suspensions was the

Court’s supervisory power, rather than a broader King’s Bench power. “If ever [King’s

Bench authority] was a separate source of this Court’s power to issue interim

suspensions, it no longer is,” according to the Board. Board’s Brief at 59-60 (citing

Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1192); see also Bruno Brief at 37-39.

       Petitioners distinguish Avellino I and McFalls as “judicial assignment” and not

“judicial misconduct” cases because those cases involved administrative circumstances,

in which jurists refused to take the bench. The Court did not enter interim suspensions

or endeavor “to head off public disesteem for the judicial system likely to develop when

a judge charged with crimes continues to ‘hold court’” pending resolution of criminal

charges, as is the case with Judge Bruno. Petitioners also note that there was no

exigency for the Court to act in Avellino I and McFalls, which is why the Court’s action in

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 17
those matters was administrative and, therefore, proper. Board’s Brief at 58-59 (quoting

Bruno, 69 A.3d at 805 (Clement, J., concurring)). By comparison, petitioners opine that

the Court should have refrained from acting in recent “disciplinary” matters, such as

Bruno, In re Joyce, No. 394 Jud. Admin. Docket 1 (Pa. Aug. 21, 2007) (per curiam); In

re Merlo, No. 361 Jud. Admin. Docket (Pa. Dec. 22, 2010) (per curiam); In re Melvin,

No. 384 Jud. Admin. Docket (Pa. May 18, 2012) (per curiam); In re Mulgrew, No. 388

Jud. Admin. Docket (Pa. Sept. 19, 2012) (per curiam); In re Nocella, No. 391 Jud.

Admin. Docket (Pa. Nov. 9, 2012) (per curiam); In re Lowry, No. 397 Jud. Admin.

Docket (Pa. Feb. 1, 2013) (per curiam); and In re Sullivan, No. 398 Jud. Admin. Docket

(Pa. Feb. 1, 2013) (per curiam). Id. at 58-59 & n.23.9

      Judge Bruno adds to the constitutional analysis the practical concern that

concurrent jurisdiction creates a conundrum for the AOPC regarding which order to

obey where, as here, orders of the CJD and of the Supreme Court are at odds.

                                           3.

      In light of its conclusion that the CJD’s jurisdiction to enter interim suspension

orders is exclusive, petitioners state that the last question we ordered to be briefed,

concerning the hierarchy of orders if both the CJD and this Court act, need not be

reached.

      According to petitioners, this Court is not authorized to act, even where the CJD

fails to act, because any action is within the CJD’s exclusive discretion. Thus, the

9
        The Board distinguishes the matter of In re Singletary, No. 377 Jud. Admin.
Docket (Pa. Jan. 5, 2012) (per curiam), on the ground that the interim suspension
followed an administrative decision, which ultimately resulted in removal by the CJD.
According to the Board, this Court had jurisdiction under such circumstances, for which
Article V, Section 18(d)(2) of the Constitution does not provide.

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 18
Board declares that, “[a] failure to order a suspension does not allow th[e Supreme]

Court to do as it pleases if it disagrees with the action or inaction of the CJD in failing to

order a suspension.” Petitioners also offer that this Court has “already answered the

question” of which order takes precedence by vacating its order imposing a suspension

without pay and “essentially enforc[ing] the CJD’s [o]rder.” See In Re: Bruno, 71 A.3d
249 (Pa. 2013) (per curiam). According to petitioners, competing orders force parties to

litigate in two fora “unnecessarily and inappropriately.” Petitioners characterize “such

dual jurisdiction” as absurd and “to be avoided in constitutional construction.”

Petitioners seek resolution of the first two issues in accord with their positions “so that

the third never occurs again.” Board’s Brief at 61-62; accord Bruno Brief at 46-47.

       Judge Bruno adds that the conflict between orders of the Court and of the CJD,

as well as the inconsistent adherence by the AOPC to directions regarding pay, affect

the public’s perception regarding the integrity and fairness of the judicial system. Judge

Bruno contrasts his own situation (this Court ordered suspension without pay, the CJD

ordered suspension with pay, and the AOPC withheld pay until further order of this

Court) with the circumstances of former Justice Joan Orie Melvin and Judge Thomas M.

Nocella, who were suspended with pay by this Court and without pay by the CJD, and

the AOPC again withheld pay premised upon the CJD’s order. The “situation should

never be reached,” and will not be reached, Judge Bruno argues, if this Court refrains

from entering interim suspension orders. Bruno Brief at 44-46.10

10
        Amicus curiae SCJAP filed a brief in which it purports to undertake an Edmunds
analysis of Article V, Sections 10 and 18. SCJAP essentially replicates petitioners’
arguments with respect to the plain language and legislative history of the provisions. In
addition, SCJAP argues that the Supreme Court may not exercise extraordinary
jurisdiction in a disciplinary matter because “the CJD is not a component part of the
[U]nified [J]udicial [S]ystem” but “a constitutional agency independent in its own right.”
SCJAP Brief at 26-27 (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 1, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 301, 1701).

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 19
                     B.      Arguments of the AOPC and the PBA

                                            1.

       The AOPC responds that the Supreme Court may exercise King’s Bench

jurisdiction to issue an order of interim suspension in a situation such as that involving

Judge Bruno.    According to the AOPC, the Court’s authority is broad and includes

superintendency over inferior tribunals and their members. The breadth of authority fits

the Court’s responsibility to safeguard the integrity of the Unified Judicial System,

against judicial impropriety and even against the appearance of judicial impropriety.

The AOPC argues that the 1993 amendment, while creating the Board and the CJD, did

not divest the Supreme Court of its powers of superintendency over Pennsylvania

courts and its judicial officers. AOPC Brief at 11-13 (quoting Carpentertown, 61 A.2d at

428-29). The PBA offers additional helpful perspective and detail regarding the Court’s

King’s Bench jurisdiction.

       King’s Bench power, the PBA states, was vested in this Court by the Act of May

22, 1722, and has survived enactments and revisions of the Pennsylvania Constitution.

PBA Brief at 3-4 (citing PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1; 42 Pa.C.S. § 502; Carpentertown,
61 A.2d at 429). Today, the Pennsylvania Constitution provides that the Court has

“such jurisdiction as shall be provided by law.”    Id. (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 2).

Aspects of the Court’s King’s Bench authority are recited in the Constitution, at Sections

2 and 10 of Article V; these provisions address the Supreme Court as the “supreme

judicial power” and as the “general supervisory and administrative authority.” Moreover,

Section 502 of the Judicial Code explicitly codifies that the authority of the Court of

King’s Bench has continued in the Supreme Court since 1722. Id. (citing 42 Pa.C.S. §

502). The PBA notes that the Court has called upon the King’s Bench authority in

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 20
cases similar to those of Judge Bruno and Judge Solomon. Id. at 5-7 (citing Franciscus;

Avellino I; Merlo, supra).

       The AOPC and the PBA emphasize that the 1993 amendment left Sections 2

and 10 of Article V intact. As the AOPC explains, the 1993 amendment did not “affect,

restrict, or suspend sub silentio” the King’s Bench powers of the Court but simply

“altered” the mechanism for investigating and adjudicating charges of judicial

misconduct. The PBA notes that Article V, Section 18 simply delineates the CJD’s

authority within the disciplinary process and does not purport to limit the Court’s

authority to supervise the court system, which is a separate matter. PBA Brief at 7-9

(citing In re Merlo, 17 A.3d 869, 871 (Pa. 2011)); accord AOPC Brief at 25 (“[T]here is

nothing ‘inherently inconsistent’ between the existence of the supervisory and

administrative authority of the Supreme Court and the disciplinary authority of the

[Board] and the CJD.”). The PBA offers that the CJD is an inferior tribunal that is part of

the Unified Judicial System and, as a result, is under this Court’s supervisory authority.

PBA Brief at 7-9 (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 1); see also AOPC Brief at 29-30 (citing PA.

CONST. art. V, § 18(c)(1)-(3) (right to appeal CJD decision to Supreme Court)).

Accordingly, the PBA rejects the predicate dichotomy perceived by petitioners between

the authority of the Court to act upon conduct resulting in disciplinary action and

supervisory intervention. PBA Brief at 10-11 (quoting Merlo, 17 A.3d at 871).

       The PBA submits that Sections 2 and 10 of Article V must be given effect

alongside the 1993 amendment “because the Constitution is an integrated whole.” To

give full effect to the Supreme Court’s constitutional supervisory power and its

designation as the “supreme judicial power of the Commonwealth” means that the Court

has jurisdiction to act under circumstances such as those involving Judge Bruno.

Indeed, the AOPC and the PBA note that the Court has already exercised its

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 21
supervisory authority in similar circumstances since the 1993 amendment. AOPC Brief

at 14-16 (citing Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1143; Office of Disciplinary Counsel v. Jepsen,

787 A.2d 420, 425 (Pa. 2002)); PBA Brief at 11.

      The PBA adds that the Court “may undertake its own investigation of matters

implicating the proper functioning of the judiciary. This is implicit . . . in this Court’s

power to exercise its supervisory authority even in the absence of any related

proceeding before a lower court . . . [and] a necessary feature of this Court’s King’s

Bench power.” PBA Brief at 14 (citing Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1140 and Carpentertown,
61 A.2d at 429); accord AOPC Brief at 29-30 (citing Friedman v. Corbett, 72 A.3d 255,

256 (Pa. 2013)).    The AOPC adds that “[t]he Solomon matter is solidly within the

administrative authority of this Court” and is akin to an internal labor dispute or an

employment hearing, like the disputes in Avellino I and McFalls.

      The PBA and the AOPC also dismiss petitioners’ policy concerns. Thus, the

PBA argues that the exercise of supervisory power by the Supreme Court does not

affect the separate authority of the Board to investigate a jurist’s same conduct pursuant

to Article V, Section 18 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. PBA Brief at 16-17 (quoting

McFalls, 795 A.2d at 373) & 36-37.        Moreover, the AOPC notes that the Board’s

investigation of jurists is confidential and the Court becomes aware that the CJD is

acting only if the jurist waives confidentiality. As a result, the AOPC argues, there is

uncertainty whether the Board and the CJD is acting and, accordingly, timely Supreme

Court action is generally appropriate. AOPC Brief at 42-44.

      Furthermore, the hearing before a Court’s master, the AOPC states, comports

with due process requirements. The AOPC extends the labor and employment analogy

to suggest that a similar standard of due process is required here: notice and an

opportunity to be heard; an opportunity to obtain discovery is not required. Id. at 44

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 22
(citing Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 546 (1985)). Furthermore,

the AOPC suggests that the Court need not guarantee confidentiality of the proceedings

before a master because, in a case implicating the Court’s supervisory authority, the

public requires transparency. The PBA adds that “the requirements of due process are

flexible” and “this Court may fashion appropriate procedures in carrying out its broad

supervisory powers.” Indeed, the PBA notes, this Court has already rejected the notion

that its administrative and supervisory authority should be exercised by any particular

mechanism prescribed by general rule, or that any right to discovery or a jury trial exists.

PBA Brief at 14-15 (quoting Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1140 n.1 & 1142 n.3).

       The AOPC concludes that the Supreme Court is required to act in cases such as

Solomon, “and properly did so within the Court’s inherent supervisory authority.” King’s

Bench authority serves in this context “to protect and promote the public confidence in

the judicial system, to maintain a high standard of professional ethics and propriety, and

to guard and protect the dignity and authority of the [C]ourt, and the safety and

protection of the public.” AOPC Brief at 16, 33-34 (internal quotations omitted) (quoting

Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1194-95). While the Court has in the past referred jurists to the

Board for investigation, the AOPC notes, such an action is not required in every case;

“the Supreme Court must retain its constitutional supervisory discretion to act as the

supervisory power over the Unified Judicial System as necessary, and on a case by

case basis.” Id. at 45-46. The PBA agrees: the Court may elect to defer to the Board

for investigation where appropriate, but it is not constitutionally required to do so. PBA

Brief at 15 (citing Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1143 n.6).

       In Judge Bruno’s case, the AOPC disputes petitioners’ reading of Article V,

Section 18(d)(2). According to the AOPC, the two provisions of the Constitution at issue

here, Sections 10(a) and 18(d)(2) of Article V, are not in conflict and the Court should

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 23
interpret them to give effect to both. The AOPC claims that Article V, Section 10(a)

vests general, broad supervisory and administrative power in the Supreme Court, while

Article V, Section 18(d)(2) is restricted by its express terms to disciplinary actions

brought within the framework of Section 18.        These separate powers available for

addressing the same, or similar, circumstance do not create an inherent inconsistency,

even though the result may be asymmetric. AOPC Brief at 25 (citing Mohamed v. Dep’t

of Transp., 40 A.3d 1186, 1193 (Pa. 2012) (quoting Pa. Turnpike Comm’n v. Sanders &

Thomas, Inc., 336 A.2d 609, 614 (Pa. 1975)).

       The language of Section 18(d)(2), the AOPC states, is plain: the CJD is

authorized to enter interim suspension orders and the provision simply does not

address whether the Supreme Court may do so as well. The AOPC notes that the word

“exclusive,” which the Board and Judge Bruno read into the provision as a necessary

buttress for their argument, is absent from Section 18(d). The AOPC also argues that,

in light of this plain language, the premise that the CJD’s jurisdiction became exclusive

following the 1993 amendment cannot be implied. Section 18(d)(2) did not repeal by

implication Section 10(a) because the provisions are neither irreconcilable nor does

Section 18(d)(2) cover the whole subject of Section 10(a) so as to invite an

interpretation that it was clearly intended as a substitute for, or as an implied repeal of,

the earlier provision.   In the AOPC’s view, this Court’s prior decisions confirm this

interpretation. AOPC Brief at 22-25, 27 (citing In Re: Jud. Conduct Bd. Subpoena No.

96076, 703 A.2d 461, 463 (Pa. 1997) (“JCB Subpoena”); Jepsen; Avellino I; Franciscus,

supra).

       The PBA adds that interim suspension orders are entered by the Court in its

supervisory function, to assure the integrity of the judicial system rather than being

“meted out as a form of punishment.” PBA Brief at 10 (citing Franciscus, 369 A.2d at

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 24
1195). The PBA notes that the Court acts upon the threat to the smooth functioning of

the system posed, for example, by the pendency of misconduct charges.               No final

decision is made related to the charges because an interim suspension is not the result

of investigation or adjudication of misconduct charges. Id. (quoting Merlo, 17 A.3d at

871). Indeed, the PBA suggests that the same conduct that gives rise to the Court’s

administrative / supervisory action may also result in disciplinary sanctions. The Court’s

action of interim suspension, according to the PBA, does not affect the Board’s

independent authority to investigate the same conduct and, in fact, the Court has

referred suspended jurists to the Board. Id. at 11-12 (citing McFalls; Merlo, supra). The

PBA notes that the judicial conduct at issue here threatens the public’s perception of the

judiciary and justifies administrative action, regardless of whether the allegations are

ultimately pursued or proven via the Article V, § 18 process.

       Similarly, the AOPC notes that the Court’s authority to issue interim suspensions

is not limited to instances in which a jurist “directly defies authority” within the judicial

system. “The fact that some prior cases involved that circumstance does not serve to

cabin [the Court’s] supervisory authority.” Indeed, the AOPC explains, the Court has

suspended jurists for other reasons, such as when the jurist was indicted for crimes

stemming from a fraudulent insurance claim. AOPC Brief at 16 (quoting Merlo, 17 A.3d

at 871-72 and citing, e.g., In re Joyce, No. 301 Jud. Admin. Docket 1 (Pa. Aug. 17,

2007)).

                                             2.

       On the second issue, the AOPC and the PBA agree that the Court and the CJD

have concurrent jurisdiction. The PBA reiterates that the 1993 amendment did not

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 25
revoke or diminish the Supreme Court’s supervisory powers, pursuant to which the

Court may enter interim suspension orders. PBA Brief at 16.

      Moreover, the PBA rejects the suggestion that the non-final and not-appealable-

of-right nature of CJD interim suspension orders has any bearing on the question of the

Court’s authority to act. According to the PBA, a non-final order does not prevent

review. The Court’s exercise of supervisory powers, the PBA argues, “is not confined to

appellate review of lower court orders”; the Court may intervene and order an interim

suspension, independent of the CJD. Id. at 19 (citing, e.g., Pa.R.A.P. 311 (interlocutory

orders appealable of right); Pa.R.A.P. 312 (interlocutory appeals by permission);

Pa.R.A.P. 313 (collateral order doctrine)); accord AOPC Brief at 38-39 (comparing PA.

CONST. art. V, § 18(d)(2) with Pa.R.A.P. 341) (prohibition against taking appeal from

interim suspension order is similar to general rule governing appeal from other

interlocutory order and does not alter relationship between CJD and Supreme Court).

The PBA states that an order from this Court issuing an interim suspension “is outside

the ambit of Section 18(d)(2)’s restriction on appellate jurisdiction over orders entered

by the CJD.”      “A contrary position” impairs the Court’s ability to perform its

constitutionally-mandated duties. Id. at 18-19.

      Finally, the PBA rejects the notion that, in issuing interim suspension orders, this

Court is pre-judging the merits of a CJD disciplinary action, even when the disciplinary

matter is premised upon the same conduct. The PBA notes that this Court may enter

interim suspension orders simply upon reviewing the nature of the charges and the

Court’s assessment of their impact upon the public perception of the judiciary, rather

than based upon any investigation or adjudication of the pending charges. PBA Brief at

20 (citing Merlo, 17 A.3d at 872); see also AOPC Brief at 36-37. This limited approach

does not entail addressing the legal or factual merits of the underlying charges, which

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 26
may be problematic. The PBA notes that the CJD has taken the approach of examining

not only the nature of the charges, but also what the CJD deems to be the merits of the

charges in deciding whether to issue interim suspensions. The PBA suggests that this

approach “risks an inappropriate collateral attack on the validity of th[e criminal]

charges” and potentially embarrassing conflicts with the criminal court adjudicating the

charges. PBA Brief at 21.

       The AOPC adds that concurrent jurisdiction is in accord with precedent, as

explained in Franciscus, Avellino, and McFalls. Melograne, according to the AOPC, is

not to the contrary. In Melograne, the question before the Court was whether the CJD

had jurisdiction to discipline a jurist who was no longer on the bench during the

pendency of the disciplinary action. The Melograne decision simply did not address

whether the CJD’s jurisdiction was “exclusive,” as petitioners claim, and the case is,

therefore, inapposite. AOPC Brief at 18 (citing 812 A.2d at 1167 n.2). The AOPC adds

that the CJD has jurisdiction to act only after the Board determines that probable cause

exists for discipline and files charges; but, the Supreme Court’s broader powers take

into consideration the Court’s responsibilities to the judicial system and the necessity for

immediate action in some circumstances. Id. at 19 (quoting Franciscus, 369 A.2d at

1193-94).11

11
        The PBA also offers five recommendations intended to avoid future jurisdictional
conflicts that it views as “counterproductive to a central purpose of the judicial discipline
system,” i.e., “to promote public confidence in the integrity of the judiciary.” See PBA
Brief at 22-25. The recommendations are:

       1.     That the Supreme Court should allow the CJD to make interim
       suspension decisions in the first instance following a complaint and motion
       of the Board.
       2.     That, if the circumstances require the Supreme Court to enter an
       interim suspension order, the Court should specify whether the CJD may
(continued…)

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 27
                                            3.

       With regard to this last issue, the PBA states that the 1993 amendment “did not

elevate” the CJD’s authority over that of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court,

according to the PBA, retains its supervisory power over inferior tribunals, including the

CJD. Moreover, the PBA argues that the Court need not decline to exercise jurisdiction

here out of deference to the CJD, an argument already rejected in prior cases. PBA

Brief at 17 (quoting Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1194). And, because the Court is the

“supreme judicial power in the Commonwealth,” the PBA suggests that CJD orders are

necessarily subordinate to and may not conflict with the Supreme Court’s directives,

unless the Court’s order expressly allows for subsequent adjudication by the CJD.

       Similarly, the AOPC argues that the Supreme Court is the highest court of the

Commonwealth, vested with “supreme” judicial power; the Court’s orders may not be

modified, altered, amended, set aside, or disturbed by an inferior court, such as the

CJD.   The CJD, according to the AOPC, is a court inferior to the Supreme Court

(…continued)
     act; absent specification, the CJD should not be permitted to enter an
     inconsistent order.
     3.     A judicial officer who is the subject of an interim suspension order
     by the Supreme Court may apply to the Court to vacate or modify the
     suspension order.
     4.     The CJD should establish a “fast track” mechanism for addressing
     interim suspension requests.
     5.     The Supreme Court should define the scope of the inquiry for the
     CJD when reviewing a request for an interim suspension order. Inter alia,
     the CJD’s inquiry should be confined to the nature of the charge and its
     effect on the public perception of the judiciary.

      We appreciate the PBA’s thoughtful input and, in many respects, our judgment is
guided by these recommendations.

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 28
because the Supreme Court retains the ultimate power to review on appeal the CJD’s

decisions. The AOPC states that, while both the Supreme Court and the CJD are

capable of determining appropriate discipline, the Court is the final arbiter of the

sanction. AOPC Brief at 37-38 (quoting Jepsen, 787 A.2d at 423). The AOPC asserts

that the Supreme Court may invoke either its extraordinary jurisdiction, to intervene in

an ongoing matter, or its King’s Bench jurisdiction, where no matter is pending before

the CJD, to enter interim orders of suspension.         When exercising these forms of

jurisdiction, the AOPC argues, the decision of the Supreme Court is “preeminent.”

AOPC Brief at 40-42.

                III.   The Opinion of the Court of Judicial Discipline

      As noted, on May 24, 2013, the CJD issued an order of interim suspension with

pay in the Bruno matter. The CJD’s opinion in support of the order, as well as the

concurring opinion, touched upon the constitutional issues which we address in our

Opinion. Indeed, petitioners expressly rely upon a concurring expression in Bruno in

fashioning their argument to this Court. The CJD reasoned as follows.

      Initially, the CJD held that the crimes with which Judge Bruno was charged -- one

count of mail fraud, one count of wire fraud, and one count of conspiracy to commit wire

and mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1349, respectively -- relate to his everyday

duties as a judicial officer and thus his continued presence on the bench pending

resolution of these charges would have “a possible negative impact on the

administration of justice and could possibly harm the public confidence in the judiciary.”

In re Bruno, 69 A.3d 780, 782 (Pa. Ct. Jud. Disc. 2013). The CJD then held that

suspension with pay was appropriate.

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 29
      As relevant here, the CJD recognized that its order was in tension with this

Court’s February 2013 Order. The CJD considered whether the February 2013 Order

barred the CJD’s action on the Board’s petition; it rejected the notion for three reasons.

First, the CJD said that it issued its order based upon a developed record not available

to the Supreme Court at the time that the February 2013 Order issued. Second, the

CJD indicated its agreement with the CJD concurring opinion that Section 18(d)(2) of

Article V “plainly confer[s] authority to issue orders of interim suspension on th[e CJD],”

including under the circumstances of Judge Bruno’s case. The CJD concluded that the

Supreme Court recognized the authority of the CJD to issue interim orders of

suspension in cases in which the Court had already acted, and that the CJD’s order

would control regardless of whether it conflicted with the initial order of the Supreme

Court. Id. at 798-99.

      The concurring opinion represented the views of three members of the CJD who

also joined the majority opinion. The concurrence specifically addressed the CJD’s

decision to suspend Judge Bruno with pay while this Court’s Order to suspend Judge

Bruno without pay was in force. The concurrence opined that the CJD’s authority to

issue interim suspensions is exclusive. According to the concurrence, following the

1993 amendment of the Pennsylvania Constitution, the Supreme Court was “wrong” to

rely on the decision in Franciscus, which interpreted Section 18 as added in 1968, to

impose interim suspensions. In the view of the concurrence, the 1968 provision differed

in quality from the 1993 amendment because the latter “greatly diminish[ed] the

Supreme Court’s supervisory powers.” Id. at 802 (Clement, J., concurring, joined by

Cellucci and Mullen, JJ.) (emphasis omitted). The concurrence recounted that, under

the 1968 version of Section 18, the Court had authority to impose discipline de novo,

while the JIRB had no such authority at all, including to enter interim suspensions. The

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 30
concurrence argued that the 1993 amendment “seriously circumscribed” the Supreme

Court’s review of disciplinary matters decided by the CJD and expressly transferred the

power to enter interim suspensions to the CJD.              “[I]t is quite reasonable to regard

Section 18(d)(2) as an express transfer of responsibility for interim suspensions to [the

CJD] because [the provision] contains an express diminishment in the Supreme Court’s

supervisory powers by expressly providing that the Supreme Court has no authority to

review orders of [the CJD] imposing interim suspensions.” Id. (emphasis in original).

The concurrence concluded by opining that the drafters of Section 18(d)(2)

“specific[ally] and emphatic[ally]” intended the CJD to have exclusive jurisdiction over

interim suspensions, an intent that the Court’s opinions since the 1993 amendment

have nullified. Id. at 802-03 (citing Avellino I, supra).

       Moreover, the concurrence argued that there was a conflict between Sections

10(a) and 18(d)(2) of Article V, which, the concurrence believed, requires resolution in

accordance with the legislative rules of statutory construction.             According to the

concurrence, “it is beyond argument” that the people of the Commonwealth, in

delegating a power to enter interim suspension orders to the CJD -- orders which may

not be directly appealed as of right -- “intended that those orders were not to be

overridden and that the [CJD] should be free from interference in performing its duty so

assigned.” The concurrence maintained that when the Supreme Court enters interim

suspension orders, whether in accord or in conflict with a CJD order in the same matter,

Section 18(d)(2) is rendered meaningless. To resolve the conflict, the concurrence

stated, Section 18 should be interpreted as the specific provision which controls the

inquiry over and above Section 10, the general provision that grants the Supreme Court

authority over administrative matters -- just as a statute would be interpreted under the

precept governing general and specific provisions. According to the concurrence, the

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 31
Court’s powers under Section 10 do not include “matters of suspension, removal,

discipline and other sanctions” because these are addressed by Section 18.          The

Supreme Court’s power under Section 10, the concurrence opined, is restricted to

assignment of judges.     The title of Section 10 is “Judicial Administration” which,

according to the concurrence, implies that discipline is not among the considerations of

the provision.

       The concurrence further argued that the decisions in Avellino I and McFalls

supported its interpretation, insofar as both cases implicated the assignment of jurists

rather than discipline. The concurrence also noted that the actions of the Court in

Avellino I and McFalls were not “interim” suspensions but temporary suspensions

without pay for refusal to take the bench.        These scenarios, according to the

concurrence, are distinguishable from the circumstances in Franciscus, where the Court

entered an interim suspension so as to protect the integrity of the judiciary.      The

concurrence dismissed the decisions in Avellino I and McFalls as “not hav[ing] the

precedential credentials ascribed to them by the Supreme Court” when they were cited

to support interim suspension orders by the Court in post-1993 amendment cases.

       The concurrence also challenged the Supreme Court’s authority to enter interim

suspension orders pursuant to the Court’s King’s Bench powers. Thus, the concurrence

quoted this Court’s decision in Carpentertown and concluded that the King’s Bench

power of superintendence is over lower courts and tribunals, but does not encompass

“the behavior of lower court judges.” Id. at 806. In a footnote, the concurrence noted

that “the superintendence of the latter [lower court judges] is conferred separately” in

Section 18, to the Board and the CJD. Id. at 806 n.13.

       The concurrence next quoted a report on the state of the law provided to the

1968 Constitutional Convention to support its conclusion that, while the Supreme Court

                                  [J-59 A-2013] - 32
may have had authority under King’s Bench and as part of its general supervisory

powers to “remove or discipline lower court judges,” the power had not been exercised

historically and, in fact, may have been rendered meaningless because the Supreme

Court had held that “the express constitutional procedures for removing judges, i.e.,

impeachment, address, and conviction of a crime, are exclusive.” Id. at 807 (citing Laub

at 168-69).   Under these circumstances, the Convention created the JIRB which,

according to the concurrence, was ill-equipped to address the emergent circumstances

in Franciscus. As a result, the Court acted because, in the concurrence’s opinion: “it

does not ‘look good’ for a judge so charged [with crimes relating to his official duties as

a justice of the peace] to be ‘judging others,’ at least until he should be exonerated. For

a fact the public is apt to be scandalized, and any confidence it may have had in the

integrity of the judicial system is jeopardized so long as that state of affairs continues.”

Id. The concurrence also felt that the JIRB’s authority was inadequate to address the

exigencies of the matter.

       But, the concurrence argued, the CJD is equipped to prevent any delay in

entering an interim order; and thus, the Supreme Court’s intervention is no longer

necessary. Accordingly, the concurrence concluded that, even if the Court were to

decide that the authority of Section 10(a) or of the King’s Bench power is a basis upon

which to enter interim suspension orders, such action is not appropriate in light of the

1993 amendment to Section 18 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. Id. at 808-09.

       In our analysis below, we will discuss the observations of the CJD majority and

concurrence when these themes are made relevant by petitioners’ own arguments, and

also where relevant to our explication of the relative roles and powers of the CJD and

this Court.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 33
IV.    The Power of the Supreme Court Vis-à-vis the Court of Judicial Discipline12

      We granted oral argument to address challenges to the jurisdiction of the Court.

Although couched as jurisdictional, the parties’ arguments touch upon the separate

notions of “jurisdiction” and “power” of the Court, as evident from the parties’

interchangeable use of the terms.       The principles at work are distinct, however:

jurisdiction “relates solely to the competency of the particular court or administrative

body to determine controversies of the general class to which the case then presented

for its consideration belongs.” Conversely, the power or, more aptly, the authority of the

Court is its capacity “to order or effect a certain result.” Vine v. Commonwealth, 9 A.3d
1150, 1165 (Pa. 2010); accord PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1 (“Supreme Court shall

exercise all the powers and, until otherwise provided by law, jurisdiction now vested in

the present Supreme Court”); PA. CONST. art. V, § 2(a) (addressing Supreme Court’s

power) & § 2(c) (addressing Supreme Court’s jurisdiction); 42 Pa.C.S. § 502

(addressing Supreme Court’s general powers) & §§ 721-726 (addressing Supreme

Court’s jurisdiction). Insofar as the subject matter jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is

12
       We preface our discussion by acknowledging the undercurrent of criticism,
leveled at our prior decisions by petitioners and the CJD, premised upon the notion that
the Court is in the position of passing upon its authority to act. The situation is not as
remarkable as the criticism would suggest: courts resolve routinely questions implicating
their jurisdiction and their authority to act in cases. See, e.g., Commonwealth v.
Morales, 80 A.3d 1177 (Pa. 2013) (per curiam); Mercury Trucking, Inc. v. Pennsylvania
Pub. Util. Comm’n, 55 A.3d 1056, 1066-67 (Pa. 2012); Board of Revision of Taxes v.
City of Philadelphia, 4 A.3d 610, 620 (Pa. 2010); Vine v. Commonwealth, 9 A.3d 1150,
1165-66 (Pa. 2010). Any degree of discomfort that might be present if members of the
Court had a personal interest in the ruling is absent where the interest at issue is vested
in the Supreme Court itself and is, therefore, institutional -- as here. Cf. Driscoll v.
Corbett, 69 A.3d 197, 207 (Pa. 2013). And, as an institution, the Court is not arrogating
new powers for itself but is explaining its existing ones. Accordingly, we proceed to
address the merits of petitioners’ claims.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 34
concerned, the presentations dispute whether the Court is competent to decide matters

implicating the suspension of jurists for disciplinary or other reasons. Regarding the

Court’s power, the presentations disagree on whether the Court has the authority to

commence an investigation into the conduct of a jurist, and to order the interim or

temporary suspension of a jurist.

         All Pennsylvania courts derive power or authority, and the attendant jurisdiction

over the subject matter, from the Constitution and laws of the Commonwealth. PA.

CONST. art. V, § 2; 42 Pa.C.S. § 502; see Mercury Trucking, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Pub.

Util. Comm’n, 55 A.3d 1056, 1067 (Pa. 2012) (quoting In re Administrative Order No. 1–

MD–2003, Appeal of Troutman, 936 A.2d 1, 5 (Pa. 2007)); Housing Auth. of County of

Chester v. Pa. State Civil Serv. Comm’n, 730 A.2d 935, 941 & n.13 (Pa. 1999). Our

decision implicates the interpretation and application of the Pennsylvania Constitution of

1968, as amended, and of the Judicial Code. Accordingly, the inquiry is subject to de

novo and plenary review. Commonwealth v. Cromwell Twp., 32 A.3d 639, 646 (Pa.

2011).

         As an interpretive matter, the polestar of constitutional analysis undertaken by

the Court must be the plain language of the constitutional provisions at issue.         A

constitutional provision requires unstrained analysis, “a natural reading which avoids

contradictions and difficulties in implementation, which completely conforms to the intent

of the framers and which reflects the views of the ratifying voter.” Jubelirer v. Rendell,

953 A.2d 514, 528 (Pa. 2008); Commonwealth ex rel. Paulinski v. Isaac, 397 A.2d 760,

766 (Pa. 1979). Stated otherwise, the constitutional language controls and “must be

interpreted in its popular sense, as understood by the people when they voted on its

adoption.” Stilp v. Commonwealth, 905 A.2d 918, 939 (Pa. 2006); Ieropoli v. AC&S

Corp., 842 A.2d 919, 925 (Pa. 2004).

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 35
       In this case, petitioners in particular have adverted to statutory construction

principles in advocating their view regarding what was intended by the 1993

amendment. We acknowledge that the canons of constitutional construction reflected in

decisional law often employ the familiar language of statutory construction rules to

elucidate ambiguous language, including the notion that a specific provision would

prevail over a general principle found elsewhere in the charter.                 And, while

acknowledging that the Court will not delimit the meaning of the plain constitutional

words by reference to a supposed intent, we have also referred to statements of the

drafters of constitutional provisions to confirm a particular interpretation of the plain

language of the Constitution. Finally, when necessary to our explicatory analysis of the

plain language, we have addressed decisional law and policy considerations argued by

the parties that may have been insightful and persuasive.             Indeed, reference to

interpretive rules is at times appropriate and helpful. See, e.g., Walsh v. Tate, 282 A.2d
284 (Pa. 1971) (“[W]here a conflict exists between a specific constitutional provision,

which is unquestionably applicable to a particular case, and certain general provisions,

which, were it not for such conflict, might apply, the specific provision will prevail.”); see

also Jubelirer, 953 A.2d at 528 (same). See, e.g., Robinson Twp. v. Commonwealth, 83
A.3d 901, 952-53 (Pa. 2013) (Opinion Announcing Judgment of Court) (referencing

statement of drafter accepted into House Legislative Journal and explicatory questions

and answers provided voters in advance of referendum upon amendment at issue); id.

at 944 (citing Jubelirer, 953 A.2d at 525 n.12 and Edmunds, 586 A.2d at 895

(addressing decisional law and policy considerations argued by parties)).13

13
       This approach finds support in academic commentary concerning how state
constitutional interpretation is to be undertaken. Recently, we referenced one such
scholarly article penned by our colleague Mr. Justice Saylor, who noted that: “there is
some degree of consensus [among courts interpreting state constitutions] that the
(continued…)

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 36
       But, reliance on interpretive rules derived from statutory construction concepts is

tempered by robust countervailing limitations particular to the constitutional arena.

Notable among these limitations -- and particularly relevant here -- is the recognition

that “the Constitution is an integrated whole” and, as a result, the Court must strive in its

interpretation to give concomitant effect to all constitutional provisions. See Jubelirer,
953 A.2d at 528; Sprague v. Casey, 550 A.2d 184, 191 (Pa. 1988); Cavanaugh v.

Davis, 440 A.2d 1380, 1381-82 (Pa. 1982). This rule of constitutional interpretation

reflects an understanding that our charter is a fundamental document, which, in

recognizing citizens’ rights and establishing government, provides essential checks and

balances whose complexity is to be neither undervalued nor disregarded. See, e.g.,

Driscoll v. Corbett, 69 A.3d 197 (Pa. 2013) (interpreting Article V, Section 16(b) vis-à-vis

relevant provisions of Declaration of Rights); Robinson Twp., 83 A.3d at 946-50 (placing

Article I, Section 27 within constitutional context). Additionally, reliance upon legislative

(…continued)
overarching task is to determine the intent of voters who ratified the constitution. In
furtherance of this aim, courts reference, inter alia, text; history (including ‘constitutional
convention debates, the address to the people, [and] the circumstances leading to the
adoption of the provision’); structure; underlying values; and interpretations of other
states.” Robinson Twp., 83 A.3d at 944 (quoting Thomas G. Saylor, PROPHYLAXIS IN
MODERN STATE CONSTITUTIONALISM: NEW JUDICIAL FEDERALISM AND THE ACKNOWLEDGED
PROPHYLACTIC RULE, 59 N.Y.U. Annual Survey of Am. L. 283, 290–91 (2003) (footnotes
omitted) (focusing on state provisions that have federal counterparts, and in context of
prophylactic rules, author observes that, in era of new federalism, there is diversity but
also some consensus among state courts in approach to development of constitutional
decisional law)); accord Robert F. Williams, THE BRENNAN LECTURE: INTERPRETING STATE
CONSTITUTIONS AS UNIQUE LEGAL DOCUMENTS, 27 Okla. City U.L. Rev. 189, 194-95 & 200
(2002) (state constitutions, ratified by electorate, are characterized as “voice of the
people,” which invites inquiry into “common understanding” of provision; relevant
considerations include constitutional convention debates that reflect collective intent of
body, circumstances leading to adoption of provision, and purpose sought to be
accomplished).

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 37
history, especially those statements memorializing the intent of individual framers, is

particularly suspect in a constitutional context because the emphasis in constitutional

construction is upon the intent of the ratifying citizenry. Accord Commonwealth ex rel.

MacCallum v. Acker, 162 A. 159, 160 (Pa. 1932). As a practical matter, the ratifying

voters can hardly be deemed to have approved a supposed intention that is not fairly

encompassed in the language of the provision put before them.                 Long ago, in

Commonwealth v. Balph, 3 A. 220 (Pa. 1886), the Court explained the reasons for

exercising restraint in relying on constitutional debates to resolve interpretative disputes:

                     In the consideration and discussion of this section of
              the [C]onstitution we throw out of view the copious citations
              which have been furnished us from the debates in the
              convention. They are of value as showing the views of
              individual members, and as indicating the reasons for their
              votes; but they give us no light as to the views of the large
              majority who did not talk; much less of the mass of our fellow
              citizens whose votes at the polls gave that instrument the
              force of fundamental law. We think it safer to construe the
              [C]onstitution from what appears upon its face, nor do we
              propose to go beyond the necessities of this case. Other
              delicate questions may arise in the future upon this section,
              and we leave them until they are presented.
Id. at 229; accord Bowers v. Pa. Labor Relations Bd., 167 A.2d 480, 487 (Pa. 1961)

(relevancy of constitutional debates limited). For these reasons, examination of the

purposes and policies underlying constitutional provisions is not “routinely” performed

and becomes appropriate “only when a constitutional precept contends with a precept of

equal or greater authority. . . . Then it devolves upon the Court to discern which should

control the facts presented, by among other things, assessing the purposes and policies

underlying each.” In Re: Interbranch Comm’n on Juvenile Justice, 988 A.2d 1269, 1273

(Pa. 2010) (“ICJJ”) (quoting JIRB Subpoena, 517 A.2d at 953).            The Pennsylvania

Constitution and the Judicial Code do not expressly address questions regarding the

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 38
Court’s jurisdiction and power to act in cases such as that of Judge Bruno.              The

authority and the respective spheres within which the CJD and the Supreme Court

operate are a function of their respective roles -- constitutional and statutory -- within the

structure of Pennsylvania’s judiciary.

                         A.     The Court of Judicial Discipline

       In May 1993, the voters approved an amendment to Section 18 of Article V of the

Pennsylvania Constitution, which created the Judicial Conduct Board as a prosecutorial

body, and the Court of Judicial Discipline as an adjudicatory body. See ICJJ, 988 A.2d

at 1273 n.4. Section 18 addresses, among other things, the composition of the CJD.

The CJD consists of eight members: three judges, one magisterial district judge, two

non-judge attorneys, and two non-lawyer electors.           Of these members, four are

appointed by the Supreme Court and four are appointed by the Governor, each for a

term of four years. Members cannot serve consecutive terms; any additional term can

only follow after a year in which the person was not on the CJD. As a result, the CJD is

not devised for easy decisional continuity. The members of the CJD are unpaid, entitled

only to reimbursement of expenses, and by constitutional command not all are judges,

and not all can be lawyers. In essence, it is a court of citizen volunteers, who should be

commended and deeply appreciated for their donation of time and talents to the

betterment of the cause of justice. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(1)-(3).

       Section 18 makes clear that the CJD is a court of extremely limited jurisdiction

and power, passing upon a single subject matter. The provision authorizes the CJD to

review and decide formal disciplinary charges filed by the Board against judicial officers,

including magisterial district judges. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)-(d); 42 Pa.C.S. §

1604; accord 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 3331-32 (“suspension, removal, discipline and compulsory

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 39
retirement of magisterial district judges” governed by Article V, Section 18). The CJD

has the authority to “order removal from office, suspension, censure or other discipline”

of jurists. PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(5). The CJD is not the highest authority, even

within its sphere: final decisions of the CJD are subject to direct appellate review by the

Supreme Court, upon application of the jurist or of the Board.14 See PA. CONST. art. V,

§§ 9 & 18(c)(1)-(3); see also In Re: Carney, 79 A.3d 490, 509-10 (Pa. 2013) (reversing

CJD’s decision to dismiss Board’s complaint relating to jurist’s conduct in road rage

incident, which was held to constitute “disrepute” in violation of Article V, Section

18(d)(1) of Pennsylvania Constitution; remand for proceedings to determine sanction).

       The CJD has original jurisdiction over actions alleging judicial wrongdoing

prosecuted by the Board. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(5). The Supreme Court has

exclusive jurisdiction over appeals from the CJD. 42 Pa.C.S. § 725(2); see PA. CONST.

art. V, § 18(c)(1).

       Section 18(b) denominates the CJD a court of record, which is to conduct

hearings “in accordance with the principles of due process and the law of evidence” and

whose decisions must be in writing and must contain findings of fact and conclusions of

law. PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(5). Members of the CJD enjoy immunity “from suit for all

conduct in the course of their official duties.” PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(6).

       Section 18(d) demarcates the constitutional bounds of the CJD’s authority. The

CJD may act in enumerated circumstances to issue orders involving a jurist subject to

disciplinary action.   The actions which the CJD may take against a jurist are also

14
        The only exception is where a Justice of the Supreme Court is subject to CJD
discipline. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(c)(1). An appeal from a disciplinary decision
implicating a Justice is subject to review by a special tribunal selected from among
judges of the intermediate appellate courts.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 40
specified; such actions include suspension or removal from office, and forfeiture of

judicial office.   See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(d)(1), (3)-(4).   Additionally, the CJD is

empowered to order the interim suspension, with or without pay, of any jurist “against

whom formal charges have been filed with the [CJD] by the [B]oard or against whom

has been filed an indictment or information charging a felony.” PA. CONST. art. V, §

18(d)(2).

       As an Article V adjudicative body and a “court of record,” the CJD is a part of the

Unified Judicial System.         The Constitution states that enumerated courts of the

Commonwealth and magisterial district judges, in addition to “such other courts as may

be provided by law,” compose the Unified Judicial System. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 1.

Among such other courts for which “law” provides -- here, the Constitution -- is the CJD.

See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b); 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 1601-1606.15

                          B.    The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

                     1.        Constitutional and Statutory Framework

       The Unified Judicial System exercises the judicial power of the Commonwealth.

See PA. CONST. art. V, § 1.          At the apex of the Unified Judicial System is the

Pennsylvania Supreme Court. PA. CONST. art. V, § 2(a) (Supreme Court is “highest

court” of the Commonwealth).             In its capacity as the highest court of the

Commonwealth, the Supreme Court is vested with important constitutional and statutory

powers and responsibilities. The structure and composition of the Court ensure a

15
       Parenthetically, other provisions confirm that the CJD is a part of the Unified
Judicial System. For example, funding for the CJD is secured as part of the annual
budget request by the Supreme Court on behalf of the Judicial Branch to the General
Assembly. PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(4); 42 Pa.C.S. § 1603.

                                       [J-59 A-2013] - 41
measure of experience, stability and continuity, and place the Court in a position to call

upon the broad experience of its members in matters affecting all aspects of the Unified

Judicial System, while remaining accountable to the public.

       The Supreme Court is composed of seven members, all of whom are members

of the Pennsylvania bar, who are elected statewide, not appointed (except in cases of

intra-term vacancy), and serve ten-year terms. There is no restriction upon consecutive

terms of service (excepting age). Following initial contested elections, Justices may

obtain successive terms by way of non-partisan, uncontested retention elections, that

permit electors to indicate their confidence in the jurist by a yes or no vote. Justices are

salaried, with the amount set by the General Assembly, but with a constitutional

protection against diminution in salary intended to protect the independence of the

judicial branch. See generally Stilp, 905 A.2d 918.16

       The Constitution is explicit regarding the breadth of the Court’s authority over the

Unified Judicial System. In the Supreme Court “shall be reposed the supreme judicial

16
       By way of illustration respecting the stability and continuity of the Court, the Chief
Justice is determined by seniority. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(d); Pa. R.J.A. No.
706(a). The last six Chief Justices assumed that role with the following years of Court
service under their belts: Castille (14); Cappy (13); Zappala (19); Flaherty (17); Nix
(12); Roberts (20). Mr. Chief Justice Roberts, the last chief justice elected under the
provisions of the Constitution of 1874, was also the last of the 21-year term justices:
under that charter, justices served a single 21-year term. Of the Justices currently on
the Court, many have over a decade of experience on this Court, and all have been in
continuous judicial service for over a decade: Castille (21st year on the Court); Saylor
(17th year on the Court, preceded by service on the Superior Court); Eakin (13th year
on the Court, preceded by service on the Superior Court); Baer (11th year on the
Court); Todd (7th year on the Court, preceded by service on the Superior Court);
McCaffery (7th year on the Court, preceded by service on the Superior Court). Mr.
Justice Stevens, before his appointment to this Court in 2013, had served on the
Superior Court for 16 years, including as President Judge of that Court for two years. In
addition, Justices Baer, McCaffery, and Stevens all have experience as trial judges.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 42
power of the Commonwealth.” PA. CONST. art. V, § 2(a). Moreover, in addition to its

judicial power, the Supreme Court has “general supervisory and administrative authority

over all the courts and [magisterial district judges] . . . .” PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(a). The

Judicial Code helps to implement the primacy of the Supreme Court within the Unified

Judicial System. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 501 (derived from PA. CONST. art. V, § 2). The

General Assembly has also recognized that the Court has “[a]ll powers necessary or

appropriate in aid of its original and appellate jurisdiction which are agreeable to the

usages and principles of law” and any powers vested in it by statute, including the

Judicial Code. 42 Pa.C.S. § 502. Section 1701 of the Judicial Code states that the

Court has general supervisory and administrative authority over the judicial system and

may exercise powers enumerated in subsequent provisions “in aid” of that authority. 42

Pa.C.S. § 1701 (derived from PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(a)). The enumerated powers

include authority over “all courts and magisterial district judges” and over “personnel of

the system.” 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 1723, 1724. Personnel of the system include “judicial

officers,” among them magisterial district judges. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 102 (definitions:

personnel of the system, judicial officers, judges).

       As part of its administrative responsibility, the Court oversees the daily

operations of the entire Unified Judicial System, which provides a broad perspective on

how the various parts of the system operate together to ensure access to justice, justice

in fact, and the appearance that justice is being administered even-handedly. See PA.

CONST. art. V, § 10 (judicial administration).         One aspect of this responsibility is

management of judicial personnel. Thus, for example: (1) the Chief Justice, acting upon

requests from the AOPC, may assign additional jurists to temporary judicial service on

any court; (2) the Court may certify jurists for senior status, and these jurists may be

assigned by the Chief Justice as needed; and (3) the Court approves jurists for

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 43
assignment or re-assignment to divisions of the courts of common pleas. See PA.

CONST. art. V, §§ 10(a), 16(c); Pa. R.J.A. Nos. 701, 702. Judicial leave is monitored by

the Supreme Court, and jurists are required to file reports related to the status of cases

submitted to them for adjudication. Pa. R.J.A. Nos. 703, 704. The AOPC records,

reviews, and reports to the Supreme Court on matters related to the operation and

efficiency of the Unified Judicial System and its component parts; system personnel are

expected to cooperate with the AOPC in these respects and any failure to cooperate is

referred to the Supreme Court for review. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(b); Pa. R.J.A.

Nos. 505, 506; 701-704.

       Another important facet of judicial administration is the authority to devise rules of

procedure governing adjudications before inferior tribunals (excepting the CJD). See

PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(c). While the CJD is permitted to devise its own rules of

procedure, the CJD is nevertheless bound in its substantive task to take general

direction from the Supreme Court, as this Court is responsible for the substance of the

codes of conduct that govern Pennsylvania jurists, which the CJD enforces, and our

interpretation of those codes controls. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(c); see also Pa.

Code of Jud. Conduct Canon 1 et seq.; Pa. St. Mag. Dist. J. Rule 1 et seq.; Carney,

supra. Additionally, the Court regulates the conduct of jurists via the Rules of Judicial

Administration. Notably among the Rules of Judicial Administration is the requirement

that any jurist who receives notice that s/he is the subject of any federal or state criminal

investigation must report the receipt of that notice in writing to the Chief Justice within

five days of its receipt. Pa. R.J.A. No. 1921.

       Moreover, the Court oversees judicial education, whether of judges who are law-

trained or of non-attorney jurists via dedicated courses of training and instruction. See

PA. CONST. art. V, § 12 (magisterial district judges “shall be members of the bar of the

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 44
Supreme Court or shall complete a course of training and instruction in the duties of

their respective offices and pass an examination prior to assuming office. Such courses

and examinations shall be as provided by law.”); 42 Pa.C.S. § 3112 (same); 42 Pa.C.S.

§ 3113 (subject to approval of Supreme Court, Minor Judiciary Education Board to

prescribe subject matter and examination for course of training and instruction required

of magisterial district judges and other judges not members of bar); 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 2132-

34 (members, officers, and staff of Minor Judiciary Education Board appointed by, or

with authorization of, Supreme Court); 42 Pa.C.S. § 3118 (continuing legal education for

magisterial district judges); Pa. St. Mag. Dist. J. Rule Nos. 19-21. And, for all members

of the Unified Judicial System, the Court provides training to maintain professional

competence under the auspices of the AOPC. Finally, the Court is responsible for

aspects of the legal profession involving the members of the judiciary indirectly: thus,

we oversee bar admission, continuing legal education of attorneys, and are responsible

for the Rules of Professional Conduct that govern lawyers and attorney discipline. See

PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(c); see also Pa. Rules of Prof’l Conduct 1.0 et seq.

      In addition to its general powers of adjudication, supervision and administration,

the Supreme Court also has “the power generally to minister justice to all persons and

to exercise the powers of the court, as fully and amply, to all intents and purposes, as

the justices of the Court of King’s Bench, Common Pleas and Exchequer, at

Westminster, or any of them, could or might do on May 22, 1722.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 502

(derived from Judiciary Act of May 22, 1722, 1 Smith’s Law 131). The Judicial Code

recognizes that these additional powers are vested in the Supreme Court by the

Constitution of Pennsylvania.    Id.   The Pennsylvania Constitution confirms that the

Supreme Court retains all powers vested in the Court at the time of the 1968

amendments of Article V, amendments that realized significant reform and

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 45
modernization of Pennsylvania’s judicial branch. PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1.17 The

Court has explained that its powers may be continued by statute “so far as they are

unimpaired by our constitutions, state and national.” Chase v. Miller, 41 Pa. 403, 411

(Pa. 1862).

       To aid in the exercise of these powers, the Court has such jurisdiction as “shall

be provided by law.” PA. CONST. art. V, § 2(c). Section 721 of the Judicial Code

enumerates the types of cases over which the Court has original jurisdiction: habeas

corpus, mandamus or prohibition to courts of inferior jurisdiction, and quo warranto as to

any officer of statewide jurisdiction.   42 Pa.C.S. § 721. Sections 722 through 725

describe the Supreme Court’s appellate jurisdiction. Section 726 addresses the Court’s

extraordinary jurisdiction to take cognizance, sua sponte or upon petition of a party, of

any matter pending before an inferior tribunal “involving an issue of immediate public

importance.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 726. In addition, the schedule to Article V of the Constitution

continues post-ratification the jurisdiction vested in the Supreme Court in 1968 -- such

as the jurisdiction of the King’s Bench. PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1; see, e.g., City of

Philadelphia v. Int’l Ass’n of Firefighters, Local 22, 999 A.2d 555 (Pa. 2010) (Supreme

Court exercised King’s Bench jurisdiction to review arbitration award upon writ of

certiorari, where right of appeal was statutorily prohibited).

                            2.      King’s Bench Powers Generally

       Particularly relevant to the dispute sub judice, as the parties recognize, are the

powers and jurisdiction of the Court at King’s Bench. In 1968, upon amendment of the

17
       The schedule is a part of the Constitution and it is intended that its provisions
“have the same force and effect as those contained in the numbered sections of [Article
V].” PA. CONST. SCHED. Preamble.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 46
Constitution and as before, the people positioned the Supreme Court “in the same

relation” to all inferior tribunals as the justices of the King’s Bench at Westminster had

occupied on May 22, 1722.        PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1; 42 Pa.C.S. § 502;

Commonwealth v. Ickhoff, 33 Pa. 80, 80-81 (Pa. 1859); see Stander v. Kelley, 250 A.2d
474, 483 (Pa. 1969) (plurality opinion) (summarily finding no merit to appellants’

contention that Pennsylvania Constitution of 1968 infringed upon King’s Bench powers

of Supreme Court). In Stander, a three-Justice concurrence expanded upon the Court’s

holding to explain that the judicial power of the Court continued as it existed before the

1968 amendments. 250 A.2d at 487 (Roberts, J., concurring, joined by Jones and

Pomeroy, JJ.).18   The concurrence noted that “some” of the original King’s Bench

powers of the Court were recited in the newly-ratified 1968 Constitution, among them

the authority to remove and discipline judges, the authority to transfer judicial

manpower, and the general supervisory and administrative authority of the Supreme

Court over all other courts and justices of the peace (now, magisterial district judges).

Id. at 486-87 (citing PA. CONST. art. V, §§ 2, 10, 18). Derived from the continuing

authority at King’s Bench, the Court possesses “every judicial power that the people of

the Commonwealth can bestow under the Constitution of the United States,” whether

enumerated in the Constitution or residual. See id. at 487 (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 2).

In this sense, King’s Bench powers exist independently of any statutory grant of

jurisdiction. Housing Auth. of County of Chester, 730 A.2d at 941 n.13; accord Stander,

18
       Although the concurrence in Stander stated that those three Justices concurred
in the result, the expression offered no disagreement with the lead opinion; indeed,
Justice Roberts began his expression by explaining that he wrote separately only
because he “deem[ed] it appropriate to discuss further appellants’ contentions dealing
with the abrogation of the right to habeas corpus, the right to civil jury trial and the
King’s Bench powers of this Court.” 250 A.2d at 485.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 47
250 A.2d at 487 (Roberts, J., concurring) (“judicial power reposed in this Court will

continue as before, unimpaired by any mistaken notion that the Legislature has the

constitutional authority to diminish, curtail or interfere with its functions”).

       The Constitution of 1968 also explicitly recognized several of the responsibilities

of the Court which had been exercised, before then, via King’s Bench. For example, the

Court’s earliest uses of the King’s Bench power commonly implicated common law

writs, primarily writs of error, writs of certiorari, and writs of mandamus and prohibition.

See Pa. Labor Relations Bd. v. Butz, 192 A.2d 707, 709-10 (Pa. 1963) (citing Pollock

and Maitland, History of English Law before Edward I) (footnote omitted) (“Alone of

English judicial tribunals, the High Courts of Westminster had the power to issue the

great prerogative writs of prohibition, certiorari, mandamus and quo warranto. These

writs, unlike other writs, were not mere formal judicial tools but rather weapons wielded

by the judicial arm of the Crown to curb ecclesiastical and baronial encroachments and,

as such, they were, as a matter of policy, used but sparingly and only when no other

remedy savoring less of monarchial arbitrariness was available.”); see, e.g., Petition of

Bell, 152 A.2d 731, 739 (Pa. 1959) (writ of certiorari); Martonick v. Beattie, 117 A.2d
715, 717 (Pa. 1955) (writ of certiorari); Carpentertown, 61 A.2d at 428-29 (writ of

prohibition); Schmuck v. Hartman, 70 A. 1091, 1092 (Pa. 1908) (writ of certiorari);

Appeal of Comm’rs of Northampton County, 57 Pa. 452, 453-54 (Pa. 1868) (writ of

certiorari); Commonwealth v. McCloskey, 2 Rawle 369, 379-80 (Pa. 1830) (writ of quo

warranto); Ebersoll v. Krug, 3 Binn. 528, 528 (Pa. 1811) (writ of error); Livezey v.

Gorgas, 2 Binn. 192, 194 (Pa. 1809) (writ of certiorari). In these instances, the Court

afforded relief or review of inferior tribunal decisions for which existing law did not

provide or which existing law prohibited. See, e.g., Schmuck, 70 A. at 1092 (where no

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 48
statutory right of appeal exists, Supreme Court may review decision at King’s Bench

upon writ of certiorari).

       The 1968 Constitution explicitly articulated a “right of appeal” which obviously

diminished the necessity of the resort to common law writs of error or certiorari

employed by the Court at King’s Bench. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 9 (“There shall be a

right of appeal in all cases to a court of record from a court not of record; and there shall

also be a right of appeal from a court of record or from an administrative agency to a

court of record or to an appellate court, the selection of such court to be as provided by

law; and there shall be such other rights of appeal as may be provided by law.”).

Notably, however, the Court has deemed the writ of certiorari to be viable in

circumstances where the Court’s duties might not otherwise be dischargeable. See,

e.g., City of Philadelphia, 999 A.2d at 563 (arbitration awards, which are not appealable

by statute, are reviewed by Court pursuant to certiorari procedure effecting King’s

Bench authority “because, among other things, no adjudicatory body has unlimited

discretion, and each and every adjudicator is bound by the Constitution and particularly

by the mandates of due process.”); accord City of Philadelphia v. Chase & Walker

Corp., 240 A.2d 65, 68 (Pa. 1968) (extension of Superior Court’s statutory jurisdiction

enacted to overcome effect of Bell, 152 A.2d 731, which held that Superior Court lacked

subject matter jurisdiction over appeal because General Assembly did not grant right to

appeal decision of county court; review available only within Supreme Court’s King’s

Bench jurisdiction upon writ of certiorari).

       The General Assembly has also standardized procedures for pursuing quo

warranto, mandamus, prohibition, and habeas corpus relief. See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 721,

9541-9546; see, e.g., Commonwealth v. Fahy, 737 A.2d 214, 223-24 (Pa. 1999) (Post

Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546, subsumes writ of habeas

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 49
corpus with respect to remedies offered by Act; reject request to review at King’s Bench

merits of statutorily time-barred claim).   Again, however, these codifications do not

affect the judicial power to employ the writs in appropriate circumstances, where no

other vehicle is available; and, in the case of habeas corpus, the General Assembly has

explicitly recognized the fact. 42 Pa.C.S. § 6501 (“The privilege of the writ of habeas

corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in the case of rebellion or invasion the

public safety may require it.”); see also Commonwealth v. Judge, 916 A.2d 511, 518-21

(Pa. 2007). Furthermore, in implementing legislative provisions addressing the Court’s

traditional powers -- again, as demonstrated most clearly in the case of habeas corpus -

- the Court has stressed the need to engage in broad constructions so as to avoid

tension with the traditional scope of the writ. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Haun, 32
A.3d 697, 702–05 (Pa. 2011); Commonwealth v. Cruz, 851 A.2d 870, 877–78 (Pa.

2004).

         Another example of the Court’s residual powers, even in the face of narrowing

legislation, may be found in cases arising under the Sentencing Code. The General

Assembly has severely limited the Court’s jurisdiction to review on allocatur claims that

implicate the discretionary aspects of sentencing.       See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9781(f) (“No

appeal of the discretionary aspects of the sentence shall be permitted beyond the

appellate court that has initial jurisdiction for such appeals.”). This Court has construed

the provision so as not to hinder the Court’s ability to review the Superior Court’s

application of governing legal principles in the discretionary sentencing arena. See

Commonwealth v. Smith, 673 A.2d 893, 895 (Pa. 1996); accord Commonwealth v.

Walls, 926 A.2d 957, 968 (Pa. 2007). Given the Court’s supervisory responsibility, and

the need for consistent review paradigms in Pennsylvania, the approach could hardly be

otherwise.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 50
       The General Assembly has also codified the Court’s power to exercise plenary

jurisdiction “in any matter . . . involving an issue of immediate public importance”

pending before an inferior tribunal at any stage, for the purposes of “enter[ing] a final

order or otherwise caus[ing] right and justice to be done.”         42 Pa.C.S. § 726

(extraordinary jurisdiction); see In re Dauphin County Fourth Investigating Grand Jury,

943 A.2d 929, 933 n.3 (Pa. 2007) (Court takes cognizance pursuant to Section 726 of

matters pending before lower tribunal, and at King’s Bench to exercise supervisory

power, when no matter is pending before lower court); Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1140-41

(same); Pa.R.A.P. 3309(a) (same); see, e.g., Joseph v. Scranton Times L.P., 987 A.2d
633, 636 (Pa. 2009) (per curiam) (Court exercised supervisory power in matter over

which it took cognizance via extraordinary jurisdiction).

       The Constitution of 1968 further addressed expressly the authority of the Court to

undertake specific administrative and supervisory tasks, which in the past had been the

subject of Supreme Court action premised upon the King’s Bench power. Compare,

e.g., PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(a) with In re Carbon County Judicial Vacancy, 141 A. 249

(Pa. 1928) (relating to temporary assignments of judges to fill vacancies on bench); PA.

CONST. art. V, § 10(e) with In re President Judge for 30th Judicial Dist., 216 A.2d 326

(Pa. 1966) (relating to establishment of priority of judicial commission). Importantly,

although the 1968 Constitution enumerated certain of the King’s Bench powers, the

Constitution and the Judicial Code continue to recognize that the Court’s King’s Bench

authority is broader still. See Commonwealth v. Reilly, 188 A. 574, 581 (Pa. 1936)

(statute addressing change of venue did not impair Supreme Court’s supervisory

powers to direct change of venue but made occasions for use of writ of certiorari for

such purposes fewer because parties could seek statutory relief); Fahy, 737 A.2d at 224

(same, respecting habeas corpus). The King’s Bench power and jurisdiction of the

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 51
Supreme Court continues today, in accordance with the following well-established

principles.

       The Supreme Court in 1859 explained that “justices of the King’s Bench are the

supreme and general justices (capitales et generales) of the kingdom, these terms

indicating both the order and the extent of their jurisdiction.” Ickhoff, 33 Pa. at 81. The

1968 Constitution articulated this concept in Sections 2 and 10 of Article V, which

denominate the Court as the “supreme” judicial power in the Commonwealth and the

“general” supervisory and administrative authority over all inferior tribunals in the

Commonwealth. See PA. CONST. art. V, §§ 2(a), 10(a). In 1862, the Supreme Court

noted that the abiding authority at King’s Bench “is a large charter.           There is no

temptation to widen it by judicial construction -- the inclination of the judicial mind is

rather to narrow it. But as it is a trust for the people of Pennsylvania, judges have no

right, from motives of ease and convenience, to surrender, weaken, or obscure, by

judicial refinements, one single one of the powers granted.” Chase, 41 Pa. at 411.

       By     its   “supreme”   nature,   the   inherent   adjudicatory,   supervisory,   and

administrative authority of this Court at King’s Bench “is very high and transcendent.”

See Commonwealth v. Chimenti, 507 A.2d 79, 81 (Pa. 1986) (citing Blackstone, Book 3,

ch. 4, § 42 and Commonwealth v. Onda, 103 A.2d 90, 91 (Pa. 1954)); accord

Respublica v. Cobbet, 3 Yeates 93, 1800 WL 2553 at *3 (Pa. 1800) (“The justices of the

Court of King’s Bench are stiled [sic] the keepers of the morals of the kingdom of

England; so are the justices of the Supreme Court as to this state.”). The exercise of

King’s Bench authority is not limited by prescribed forms of procedure or to action upon

writs of a particular nature; the Court may employ any type of process or procedure

necessary for the circumstances. Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1192-93 (citing Petition of

Squires & Constables Ass’n of Pa., 275 A.2d 657 (Pa. 1971)); Carpentertown, 61 A.2d

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 52
at 428-29 (same); Schmuck, 70 A. at 1092. The Court necessarily may exercise the

powers and jurisdiction of the King’s Bench sua sponte. See, e.g., Chimenti, 507 A.2d

at 81 (invoking King’s Bench powers, Court reviewed sua sponte question of whether

Superior Court had power to entertain plea bargain after trial court entered judgment of

sentence).

      Not all of these exercises of power result in published decisions; thus, a survey of

the Pennsylvania Reporter does not account for the parameters of the Court’s authority.

For example, in 2000, the Court sua sponte issued an order on the Judicial

Administration Docket, unrelated to any particular case then before it, declaring that

criminal defendants with a right of direct appeal to the Superior Court no longer had to

seek allocatur in order for their claims to be deemed exhausted for purposes of federal

habeas corpus review. See In Re: Exhaustion of State Remedies in Criminal & Post

Conviction Relief Cases, No. 218 Jud. Admin. Docket No. 1 (Pa. May 9, 2000) (per

curiam).19

19
      The exhaustion order reads:

                    AND NOW, this 9th day of May, 2000, we hereby
             recognize that the Superior Court of Pennsylvania reviews
             criminal as well as civil appeals. Further, review of a final
             order of the Superior Court is not a matter of right, but of
             sound judicial discretion, and an appeal to this Court will only
             be allowed when there are special and important reasons
             therefor. Pa.R.A.P. 1114. Further, we hereby recognize that
             criminal and post-conviction relief litigants have petitioned
             and do routinely petition this Court for allowance of appeal
             upon the Superior Court’s denial of relief in order to exhaust
             all available state remedies for purposes of federal habeas
             corpus relief.

                   In recognition of the above, we hereby declare that in
            all appeals from criminal convictions or post-conviction relief
            matters, a litigant shall not be required to petition for
(continued…)

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 53
      Similarly, to give full effect to its authority, the Court may assume plenary

jurisdiction over a matter even where no dispute is pending in a lower court. Avellino I,
690 A.2d at 1140; Balph, 3 A. at 226 (Supreme Court at King’s Bench, “by the plenitude

of its power, may as well proceed on indictments removed by certiorari out of inferior

courts as on those originally commenced here”); see, e.g., Creamer v. Twelve Common

Pleas Judges, 281 A.2d 57, 58 (Pa. 1971) (per curiam) (Supreme Court exercised

King’s Bench jurisdiction to review validity of governor’s judicial appointments where no

legal action was pending); Summers v. Kramer, 114 A. 525, 527-28 (Pa. 1921)

(Supreme Court exercised King’s Bench jurisdiction to resolve dispute between judicial

officers over payment to contractor examining common pleas files and records where

no legal action was pending).

      The “general” quality of the Court’s authority at King’s Bench denotes that the

justices of the Court have cognizance of all causes statewide, whether civil or criminal.

Summers, 114 A. at 528; Balph, 3 A. at 225 (quoting Blackstone, Book 3, ch. 4, § 42)

(Supreme Court “takes cognizance both of criminal and civil causes”); Commonwealth

v. Simpson, 2 Grant 438, 439 (Pa. 1854) (same).               The Court exercises a

comprehensive jurisdiction over civil and criminal causes, which includes the

competence to examine and decide, or to review decisions, relating to the type of

(…continued)
            rehearing or allowance of appeal following an adverse
            decision by the Superior Court in order to be deemed to
            have exhausted all available state remedies respecting a
            claim of error. When a claim has been presented to the
            Superior Court, or to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania,
            and relief has been denied in a final order, the litigant shall
            be deemed to have exhausted all available state remedies
            for purposes of federal habeas corpus relief. This Order
            shall be effective immediately.

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 54
causes committed generally or otherwise to an inferior jurisdiction. See In re Pollard, 17
A. 1087, 1090 (Pa. 1889). The Court has explained that the authority and jurisdiction to

examine and decide matters in the first instance “means something more than the trial

of the case before a jury,” as the exercise of the King’s Bench jurisdiction “is not, strictly

speaking, [the exercise of] original jurisdiction.” Balph, 3 A. at 230. The purpose of its

exercise is not to permit or encourage parties to bypass an existing constitutional or

statutory adjudicative process and have a matter decided by this Court, but aids the

Court in its duty to keep all inferior tribunals within the bounds of their own authority.

See id.; Onda, 103 A.2d at 91; see, e.g., Fahy, 737 A.2d at 224; Reilly, 188 A. at 581.

       Indeed, the Court will generally employ the King’s Bench authority when the

issue requires timely intervention by the court of last resort of the Commonwealth and is

one of public importance. See In re President Judge for 30th Judicial Dist., 216 A.2d at

326; accord In re Smith’s Estate, 275 A.2d 323, 326 (Pa. 1971) (circumstances did not

warrant exercise of Court’s supervisory authority and general power to “minister

justice”). The King’s Bench power is “exercised with extreme caution. . . . That it may

be abused is possible.” Balph, 3 A. at 230. But, the availability of the power is essential

to a well-functioning judicial system; and it appears that this is a point that is difficult to

fully appreciate without having served on the Court. The author of the opinion in Balph

explained:

                     I can readily imagine circumstances in the future
              which would make the exercise of this power the only barrier
              between a good citizen and gross oppression. If the people
              shall be of opinion that it was unwisely conferred, or that it is
              being improperly exercised, they can change it by a
              modification of fundamental law. The mere knowledge that
              such a power exists in th[e Supreme C]ourt it is believed will
              make its frequent use unnecessary.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 55
Id. The Court has generally called upon the powers of the King’s Bench to supplement

existing procedural processes that had proven inadequate to carry out the judicial,

administrative, or supervisory obligations of the Court in a manner that is expeditious

and determinate. King’s Bench authority “commands magistrates and others to do what

their duty requires in every case where there is no other specific remedy. It protects the

liberty of the subject by speedy and summary interposition.”          Commonwealth v.

Beaumont, 4 Rawle 366, 367 (Pa. 1834) (quoting Blackstone Book 3, ch. 4, § 42). In

certain instances, the Court cannot suffer the deleterious effect upon the public interest

caused by delays incident to ordinary processes of law, or deficiencies in the ordinary

processes of law making those avenues inadequate for the exigencies of the moment.

In short, King’s Bench allows the Supreme Court to exercise authority commensurate

with its “ultimate responsibility” for the proper administration and supervision of the

judicial system. Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1144 n.7.

      We have often undertaken flexible measures deriving from our broad power at

King’s Bench. Perhaps the most notable examples of the flexibility necessary for this

Court to ensure the integrity of the judiciary arose in our response to the revelation of

criminal charges involving two trial judges in Luzerne County, Michael T. Conahan and

Mark A. Ciavarella, Jr. The federal government announced guilty plea arrangements

with the judges in January of 2009, and the Court responded by immediately

suspending Ciavarella and revoking the certification of Conahan as a senior judge.

When it materialized that the judges’ illegal conduct also called into question the

legitimacy of adjudications of delinquency and other dispositions in juvenile matters

presided over by Ciavarella, the Court appointed the Honorable Arthur E. Grim, a Senior

Judge from Berks County, to serve as its Special Master to review all Luzerne County

juvenile court adjudications and dispositions that had been affected by Ciavarella’s

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 56
criminal actions, and to make recommendations to the Court concerning appropriate

remedial actions to rectify the situation as fairly and swiftly as possible. The Court

retained jurisdiction of the matter sub nomine In re J.V.R. Order (docketed at 81 MM

2008), 2/11/2009 (per curiam) (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 10; 42 Pa.C.S. § 502). We

appointed Judge Grim as our Master in order to determine the effects of Ciavarella’s

misconduct upon the minors who had appeared before him in juvenile court.

        The Court assumed “plenary jurisdiction over th[e] matter” and acted to afford

relief -- starting with the appointment of Judge Grim as the Court’s Master, premised

upon the Court’s constitutional power to supervise inferior tribunals and Section 502 of

the Judicial Code, which describes the King’s Bench authority of the Court. The Court

also directed the President Judge of the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas to file

monthly reports detailing significant events and actions taken to improve the functioning

of that court and access to justice.           See FINAL REPORT      ON   IMPLEMENTATION   ON

RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE INTERBRANCH COMMISSION ON JUVENILE JUSTICE at 1-5 (April 8,

2013)    (“Final   Report”),   online     at   www.pacourts.us/assets/files/setting-2032/file-

2570.pdf?cb=9e7037 (last accessed on September 18, 2014).20

        Judge Grim filed multiple reports and recommendations, upon which the Court

acted at King’s Bench to vacate adjudications of delinquency and consent decrees in all

cases in which Ciavarella acted between January 1, 2003 and May 31, 2008.

Moreover, the adjudications of delinquency and consent decrees were reversed and

20
       This report also addresses the amendments to the rules of procedure and
administration adopted in response to the recommendations of the Interbranch
Commission on Juvenile Justice. Notably, the Court adopted Rules of Judicial
Administration 1920 through 1922, which require a jurist to inform the Chief Justice
within five days if s/he receives notice of an investigation by law enforcement, “in order
for the Supreme Court to take appropriate action to prevent further misconduct and to
remove a judicial officer from his or her position.” Final Report at 2-3.

                                        [J-59 A-2013] - 57
dismissed with prejudice, and the records of juvenile defendants were expunged: (1) in

all cases, whether final or not, where a juvenile either proceeded before Ciavarella

without counsel, or was committed by Ciavarella to PA Child Care or Western PA Child

Care, the two juvenile facilities whose owner, Attorney Robert Powell, had secretly paid

Ciavarella and Conahan; (2) in any remaining cases that proceeded before Ciavarella

and were final, with copies of the records to be retained under seal in accordance with

any other order of court; and (3) with respect to those remaining cases that were not yet

final, the Luzerne County District Attorney was directed to submit a document under

seal to Judge Grim identifying the specific juvenile cases in which it intended to proceed

with further delinquency proceedings, and to file a sealed copy of the document with the

Supreme Court Prothonotary’s Office. The Court authorized Judge Grim to vacate and

dismiss with prejudice 2,401 juvenile adjudications and consent decrees, and to

expunge the records, in the remaining cases that were not identified by the

Commonwealth as matters that it would intend to pursue. The Court explained that

“[t]he situation at hand [wa]s so unique and extreme” that it had warranted exercise of

the Court’s King’s Bench powers, in this fashion, in the interest of justice. The Court

agreed with the Special Master that “‘neither the victims, the juveniles, nor the

community w[ould] benefit by having new proceedings’ in cases of juveniles who ha[d]

received final discharge either from commitment, placement, probation or any other

disposition and referral, and who ha[d] paid all fines, restitution, and fees. In addition,

[the Court] note[d] that the Commonwealth, in its objections, ha[d] . . . identified no

interest that would be served by permitting reprosecution in th[o]se cases.”         Order

(docketed at 347 Jud. Admin. Docket), 10/29/2009 (per curiam). Lastly, in October

2010, this Court authorized Judge Grim to implement the statute adopted by the

General Assembly in the wake of the scandal, establishing a special fund to

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 58
compensate the young victims of Conahan and Ciavarella’s criminal conduct. Order (81

MM 2008), 10/21/2010 (per curiam).

          Notably, the procedural and substantive measures we undertook in Luzerne

County to provide a broad and appropriate remedy did not derive from any existing

rules, statutes, or procedures. Following the announcement of the federal charges, the

power of King’s Bench allowed the Court to innovate a swift process and remedy

appropriate to the exigencies of the event. The process and remedy were unrelated to

and were unlike any disciplinary action or civil suit brought against Ciavarella or

Conahan.21

          Nor were the Court’s remedial actions in Luzerne County, arising from the

criminal conduct of sitting jurists, confined to affording affected juveniles a measure of

relief.   Thus, in Joseph v. Scranton Times L.P., 19 MM 2009, this Court assumed

jurisdiction at King’s Bench and appointed a master -- the Honorable William H. Platt --

to preside over a remand of a case involving a defamation action. The Court concluded

21
       In text, we describe the Court’s actions undertaken via King’s Bench after
revelation of the federal criminal charges lodged against Luzerne County Common
Pleas Judges Conahan and Ciavarella, which is the circumstance directly relevant here:
what can and should the Court do when a judge faces criminal charges relating to
conduct on the bench. In concurrence, Mr. Justice McCaffery opines that the Court’s
response in Luzerne County was “slow,” a position he justifies only by conflating the
pending court actions in Luzerne County as they were challenged prior to the criminal
charges being filed with the Court’s remedial actions after criminal charges against
Conahan and Ciavarella were announced. Make no mistake: no doubt all members of
the Court wish that we could have perceived in the prior circumstances the criminal
misconduct in Luzerne County, only made apparent by the filing of federal charges.
But, the hindsight concern is off-point, indeed gratuitous, respecting the discussion
here. Moreover, it is notable that Justice McCaffery never squares his hindsight
misgivings with his predicate caution that “members of the judiciary are vulnerable to
accusations of wrongdoing by disaffected litigants that are grounded in nothing more
than dissatisfaction with the resolution of a case.”

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 59
that the defendants had proffered evidence, not previously available, regarding the

irregular assignment of the case by Conahan and the non-jury trial before Ciavarella,

which raised a colorable claim that the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs was tainted by

the involvement of the two former jurists. Order (docketed at 19 MM 2009), 4/7/2009

(per curiam) (citing 42 Pa.C.S. § 502). The Court explained that “in terms of the present

case, an appearance of impropriety in either the assignment or trial of this case is

sufficient to establish prejudice.” Id. (citing PA. CONST. art. I, § 11; art. V § 10; In Interest

of McFall, 617 A.2d 707, 712-13 (Pa. 1992)).

       On remand, Judge Platt held a two-day hearing in July 2009 and submitted a

thorough and thoughtful report to this Court. Subsequently, this Court reviewed Judge

Platt’s findings and conclusions de novo and endorsed the relief recommended: (1) the

judgment in the case was vacated and a new trial was ordered; (2) the defendants’

request for an out-of-County judge was denied; and (3) the defendants’ failure to

request a jury remained binding for purposes of retrial. Joseph, 987 A.2d at 636-37.

The Court relied upon its supervisory powers to grant relief: “[t]here is no need to find

actual prejudice, but rather, the appearance of prejudice is sufficient to warrant the grant

of new proceedings. A trial judge should not only avoid impropriety but must also avoid

the appearance of impropriety.” Id. (citing PA. CONST. art. V, § 10(a); McFall, 617 A.2d

at 714). As with our actions respecting juvenile defendants appearing before Ciavarella,

our actions in Joseph were not undertaken to discipline Conahan and Ciavarella, but to

remedy an injustice perpetrated by the duo in a distinct case.

       Malinowski v. Nanticoke Micro Technologies, Inc., docketed at 51 MM 2009, was

yet another matter arising in the wake of the revelations concerning the criminal conduct

of Conahan and Ciavarella. In Malinowski, the Court again acted at King’s Bench and

remanded the case to the Honorable Chester Muroski of the Luzerne County Court of

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 60
Common Pleas for an examination of the plaintiff’s allegations that judicial corruption

had infected the matter. In the application for exercise of King’s Bench jurisdiction, the

plaintiff alleged that Conahan had been a member of the Board of Directors for First

National Bank, one of the defendants in the Malinowski case, during the pendency of

the matter, which was assigned to his co-conspirator Ciavarella for resolution.

Furthermore, the plaintiff alleged other questionable ties, including that, in his capacity

as president judge of the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, Conahan had

ordered that all district justice court funds be deposited at First National Bank, and that

Ciavarella and Conahan received financing from First National Bank to establish a

depository in Jupiter, Florida, for laundering the illegal payments they were receiving

from the owner of the juvenile facility to which Ciavarella routinely committed juvenile

defendants.   Judge Muroski was directed to submit a report and recommendations

regarding what, if any, further action should be taken, and the Court retained

jurisdiction. Order (51 MM 2009), 8/5/2009 (per curiam) (citing 42 Pa.C.S. § 502).

      Upon receiving Judge Muroski’s report and recommendations, the Court

concluded that the record amply supported the finding that there was an appearance of

judicial impropriety that required corrective supervisory action. The Court thus vacated

orders entered in December 2005 and May 2006, by which Ciavarella had dismissed

First National Bank from the action with prejudice and had entered judgment in favor of

all other defendants, and remanded the matter to the Luzerne County Court of Common

Pleas for further proceedings.     The Court granted relief premised upon the same

reasoning as in Joseph and rejected arguments that the Superior Court’s review of

unrelated issues on appeal had cured any appearance of impropriety.               Notably,

because the plaintiff had exhausted the appeals process, the Court acted upon the

miscellaneous filing while no matter was pending before an inferior tribunal, awarding

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 61
relief “in the interest of justice, to remedy judicial impropriety, . . . premised upon this

Court’s supervisory power over inferior tribunals.” Order (51 MM 2009), 6/24/2010 (per

curiam).

       Other instances in which the Court has exercised aspects of its flexible and

transcendent authority at King’s Bench include:

              1.     Pennsylvania State Ass’n of County Comm’rs v.
              Commonwealth, 681 A.2d 699 (Pa. 1996) (citing 42 Pa.C.S.
              § 726): the Court took cognizance of the action in its
              extraordinary jurisdiction noting the immediate public
              importance of the matter, and granted the request of the
              Pennsylvania State Association of County Commissioners
              for a writ of mandamus to compel the General Assembly to
              enact a statewide scheme of funding the courts of
              Pennsylvania. The Court retained jurisdiction and appointed
              the Honorable Frank J. Montemuro, Jr., as the Court’s
              master, for the purposes of recommending a scheme that
              would form the basis for the specific implementation of
              funding to be ordered.

              2.     Annenberg v. Commonwealth, 757 A.2d 333 (Pa.
              1998), and Annenberg v. Commonwealth, 757 A.2d 338 (Pa.
              2000): after the Commonwealth Court refused to take
              cognizance of the matter and remanded the case to the
              Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, the Court
              granted the plaintiff’s application for the exercise of
              extraordinary jurisdiction, 42 Pa.C.S. § 726. Initially, the
              Court held that the stock clause of the personal property tax,
              72 P.S. § 4821, facially discriminated against interstate
              commerce and was, as a result, unconstitutional. The Court
              also retained jurisdiction but remanded the matter to the
              Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas. President
              Judge Joseph A. Smyth -- serving as a special master for
              the Court -- held a hearing and issued an interim report on
              whether the stock clause of the personal property tax was a
              “compensatory tax.” Upon review of the report, the Court
              concluded “that the portion of the stock clause which
              excludes from the personal property tax stock held in

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 62
companies which are subject to the capital stock and
franchise taxes [wa]s unconstitutional.”

3.      Commonwealth v. Banks, 943 A.2d 230 (Pa. 2007)
(per curiam) (citing 42 Pa.C.S. § 726): in December 2004,
the Supreme Court assumed plenary jurisdiction over a
serial PCRA petition filed by Banks’s mother as “next friend”
on his behalf, seeking a stay of execution and alleging, inter
alia, that Banks was incompetent to be executed under Ford
v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 399 (1986). At the time, there was
no formal process -- by statute or Court rule -- in place for
the adjudication of Ford v. Wainwright claims. The Court
stayed the warrant of execution, and directed the trial court
to hold a competency hearing expeditiously in accordance
with Ford v. Wainwright. The Court retained jurisdiction,
employing the trial judge as a master for the Court to decide
the question of competency within the narrowly delimited
parameters. (Notably, Conahan served as the trial judge in
the matter and failed to act expeditiously or to confine
himself to the task devised to him.) Subsequently, the Court
reviewed the Master’s report, rejected the Master’s adoption
of Banks’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law
wholesale, and would have remanded the matter to the
Master for an autonomous judicial expression were it not for
Conahan’s removal from the bench. The Court remanded
the matter for appointment of a new jurist and a de novo
hearing. Commonwealth v. Banks, 989 A.2d 1 (Pa. 2009)
(per curiam). The Court relinquished jurisdiction in 2011.
Commonwealth v. Banks, 29 A.3d 1129 (Pa. 2011).

4.      ICJJ, 988 A.2d 1269: in January 2010, the Supreme
Court assumed King’s Bench jurisdiction over a petition of
the Judicial Conduct Board, in which the Board requested a
stay of an ICJJ’s subpoena that sought to compel answers
from witnesses and the production of documents relating to
misconduct complaints as to which formal disciplinary
charges had not been filed by the Board. The Court granted
relief in part, holding that the confidentiality clause of Article
V, Section 18 prevented discovery of some materials but not
others.

5.    Fagan v. Smith, 41 A.3d 816 (Pa. 2012) (per curiam):
in February 2012, the Supreme Court exercised King's

                       [J-59 A-2013] - 63
                 Bench jurisdiction over electors’ petition for mandamus, and
                 granted mandamus relief in part. The Court ordered the
                 Speaker of Pennsylvania House of Representatives to issue
                 forthwith writs of election for special elections to fill
                 vacancies in enumerated legislative districts for remainder of
                 then-current legislative term.
         These    examples     are   obvious   reminders   that   the   Court’s   supervisory

responsibilities only start at relatively mundane tasks relating to temporary assignments

of judges to fill vacancies on the bench, priority of commission, or judicial assignments

to divisions within a trial court, and related adjudicatory obligations. See, e.g., PA.

CONST. art. V, §§ 10(a), (e); Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1141 (“Because the authority [of trial

court’s administrative judge] under which [judicial] assignments [to trial court divisions]

are made ultimately derives from this Court, review and resolution of any disputes

concerning assignments must necessarily be subject to the authority of this Court.”).

But, the duties of the Court atop the Unified Judicial System transcend these ministerial

tasks.    The Supreme Court’s principal obligations are to conscientiously guard the

fairness and probity of the judicial process and the dignity, integrity, and authority of the

judicial system, all for the protection of the citizens of this Commonwealth.            See

Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1194; Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1143; accord In re Melograne, 888
A.2d 753, 757 (Pa. 2005) (disbarment is strongly considered sanction when “attorney

who holds judicial office commits misconduct that affects the fairness of an

adjudication”). “Under our system of government by law, the business of the court

should therefore always be so conducted as to command the respect of the people,

even in cases where some or many of them are not willing to accept its judgments or

decrees as correct; and hence it is but a truism to say that these requirements are

almost or quite as essential as the judicial system itself, if the stability of the

government, under that system, is to be maintained.” Summers, 114 A. at 527. The

highest standard of professional and personal ethics and propriety is essential to

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 64
maintain the confidence of the citizenry in the judicial system of the Commonwealth.

See Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1194. This Court takes seriously the observation of the

Rev. Henry Ward Beecher: “[i]f you should take all the robes of all the good judges that

ever lived on the face of the earth, they would not be large enough to cover the iniquity

of one corrupt judge.” HENRY W ARD BEECHER         IN THE   PULPIT 96 (Hugh R. Haweis ed.,

1886).

         It bears reiteration that the Court’s King’s Bench authority and jurisdiction

encompass, supplement, and transcend the other powers and jurisdiction enumerated

in the 1968 Constitution and the Judicial Code. As a corollary, the Supreme Court is

neither divested of its King’s Bench powers, nor is the supreme and general nature of

these inherent powers limited, unless the divestiture or limitation is clearly expressed or

necessarily implied in the Constitution. Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1143; accord Stander,
250 A.2d at 487 (Roberts, J., concurring) (“judicial power reposed in this Court will

continue as before, unimpaired by any mistaken notion that the Legislature has the

constitutional authority to diminish, curtail or interfere with its functions”). In Avellino I,

the Court explained that sixteen years earlier, the Franciscus Court had held that the

Court’s supervisory power over inferior tribunals had neither been revoked nor

diminished by the adoption of Article V, Section 18 and the creation of the JIRB. The

Avellino I Court then rejected the claim that the alteration of the disciplinary process,

which implicated the abolition of the JIRB in favor of creating the Judicial Conduct Board

and the CJD, necessarily indicated the intent of legislators and the people to diminish

the Supreme Court’s King’s Bench power. According to the Court, “had the people

intended to revoke or diminish that power in amending Section 18, the amendment

would have explicitly so provided.” 690 A.2d at 1143; accord Apex Hosiery Co. v.

Philadelphia County, 200 A. 598 (Pa. 1938) (Article III, Section 23 did not implicitly

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 65
remove inherent authority of Supreme Court to grant change of venue; only effect

statutes adopted pursuant to Article III, Section 23 have is to confer upon trial courts

power to change venue, power which they did not inherently possess); JCB Subpoena,
703 A.2d at 463 (Article V, Section 18 did not implicitly divest Commonwealth Court of

power or jurisdiction to enforce Judicial Conduct Board’s witness subpoena);

McCloskey, 2 Rawle 369, 379-80 (statute giving local elected officials “full power and

authority” to approve or set aside election did not implicitly remove Supreme Court’s

supervisory and King’s Bench authority to determine right to office following election via

writ of quo warranto); Respublica, 3 Yeates 93, 1800 WL 2553 at *4 (“There was a

strong necessity for giving [lower court judges] the authority of justices of the peace, by

the express words of the [C]onstitution, because it was intended that a new power

should be superadded to their offices; but that reason does not hold in our case, the

members of this [C]ourt having uniformly exercised the power, near seventy years

before[,]” by virtue of King’s Bench).

       Similarly, the Constitution provides that the Supreme Court exercises all

jurisdiction vested in the Court at the time of the adoption of the 1968 Constitution, until

otherwise provided by law. PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1. Jurisdiction granted by

statute may be removed by the General Assembly or via constitutional amendment,

either expressly or by necessary implication. See McCloskey, 2 Rawle at 379-80. By

comparison, the jurisdiction necessary to the exercise of the Court’s King’s Bench

powers -- constitutionally-granted powers that are by nature comprehensive and

inherently vested in the highest authority of the judicial branch -- may be divested only

by the people, expressly or by necessary implication. See Ebersoll, 3 Binn. at 531 (“It is

fully settled that the jurisdiction of the Court of King’s Bench is not ousted unless by

express words.”); accord Stander, 250 A.2d at 487 (Roberts, J., concurring) (General

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 66
Assembly has no constitutional authority to diminish, curtail or interfere with functions of

Supreme Court); Robinson Twp., 83 A.3d at 977 (citing Commonwealth ex rel. Carroll v.

Tate, 274 A.2d 193, 196–97 (Pa. 1971)) (General Assembly has no authority to remove

by statute attributes of governmental entity implicitly necessary to carry into effect

entity’s constitutional duties).

                V.      Exercise of King’s Bench Authority in this Case

                A.      Petitioners’ Challenges to the Court’s Authority

       As a general matter, “[j]urisdiction is the predicate upon which consideration of

the merits must rest” and is the default threshold issue of any decision. Riverlife Task

Force v. Planning Comm’n of City of Pittsburgh, 966 A.2d 551, 556-57 (Pa. 2009). That

is the case because most parties appear in a judicial tribunal to resolve a dispute, over

which a tribunal of proper competence must exercise jurisdiction. The proceedings

before us, however, commenced with the exercise by this Court of its authority at King’s

Bench as manifested in the order relating to the suspension of Judge Bruno. The

orders generated a subsequent dispute, which is now before the Court. Accordingly,

our analysis necessarily begins with the issue of whether the Court had the authority --

at King’s Bench or otherwise -- to issue its initial order. See Vine, 9 A.3d at 1165

(court’s power or authority measures capacity to order or effect certain result). As will

become apparent from our analysis, determining whether the Court had the capacity to

issue such an order is a necessary predicate to determining whether the Court has the

competency to decide matters in the general class of controversies to which the dispute

now before the Court belongs.

       The main thrust of petitioners’ argument is that, in suspending Bruno, the

Supreme Court acted to discipline the jurist; but, petitioners argue, the authority to

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 67
discipline a jurist is vested exclusively in the CJD by the Constitution of 1968, as

amended in 1993.       The exclusive “disciplinary” power of the CJD, according to

petitioners, is a carve-out from the “supervisory and administrative” authority of the

Supreme Court. Petitioners make the dual claim that the Supreme Court has never had

the power to discipline jurists and that, if that power ever existed, it was removed by the

“dramatic” revision of 1993 to Article V, Section 18.       According to petitioners, the

Supreme Court may now act in a disciplinary case only on appeal from the CJD, and

under an “extremely” limited standard of review. Petitioners essentially claim that this

Court usurped the exclusive constitutional authority of the CJD by ordering the interim

suspension of Bruno (and also by ordering the appointment of a special master and

raising the prospect of a temporary suspension in the related Solomon matter). The

AOPC and PBA respond that the Supreme Court issued a suspension order to Bruno in

a supervisory capacity, premised upon its King’s Bench authority. According to the

AOPC and the PBA, Section 18 of Article V created a disciplinary system for jurists, but

there is nothing contradictory about having a disciplinary authority vested in the CJD

and the concomitant exercise of the Supreme Court’s supervisory and administrative

power over the same jurist. The AOPC and the PBA suggest that the Court’s authority

to investigate and suspend a jurist is consistent with its overarching responsibilities and

the necessity of ensuring the integrity of the Unified Judicial System. Having already

surveyed at length this Court’s powers, there can be little doubt that the core position of

the AOPC and the PBA is correct.

       We begin by observing that petitioners create a false dichotomy in suggesting

that the Supreme Court is categorically prohibited to act in these matters in a way that

may be characterized as “disciplinary” rather than “supervisory/administrative”;

petitioners would have the decision turn on whether the action of the Court involving a

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 68
jurist may be characterized as punitive in the abstract. The proper focus of our inquiry

is, instead, on whether the Supreme Court has the constitutional authority to proceed

against a jurist in this fashion and, if that power exists, whether it may be exercised by,

inter alia, ordering the temporary or interim suspension of the jurist.22 We conclude that

the Supreme Court has the authority at King’s Bench to order the interim suspension of

a jurist, independent of the CJD’s authority to suspend the jurist pending criminal or

other charges, or to adjudicate disciplinary charges against the same jurist, upon

referral by the Judicial Conduct Board.

      The Supreme Court’s supervisory power over the Unified Judicial System is

beyond question. See, e.g., Respublica, 3 Yeates 93, 1800 WL 2553 at *4; accord 42

Pa.C.S. § 502 (citing Judiciary Act of May 22, 1722, 1 Smith’s Law 131). This power

implicates a dual authority: (1) over personnel of the system, among them jurists; and

(2) over inferior tribunals; both aspects are ultimately relevant to address petitioners’

complaints. Compare 42 Pa.C.S. § 1723 with 42 Pa.C.S. § 1724. The two facets of the

22
       The decisions in Franciscus, Avellino I and Avellino II, McFalls, and Merlo are
consistent with our approach. In Franciscus, the Court explained:

                    The order [of suspension] which this petitioner seeks
             to vacate was not meted out as a form of punishment.
             Rather, we are constrained to exercise our powers of
             supervision under the circumstances present here in order to
             guard and protect the just rights and independence of the
             bar, the dignity and authority of the court, and the safety and
             protection of the public.
369 A.2d at 1195 (internal quotation marks and footnote omitted); accord Avellino I, 690
A.2d at 1143-44 (sanctions necessarily available to ensure effectiveness of Supreme
Court’s supervisory powers); Avellino II, 690 A.2d at 1145; McFalls, 795 A.2d at 373;
Merlo, 17 A.3d at 871. In each instance, the Court was characterizing the nature of its
action in relation to the jurist, rather than speaking of any categorical approach
premised upon the type of remedy ordered, as petitioners would have it.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 69
Court’s supervisory authority are aspects of the King’s Bench power that, although

recognized by the 1968 Constitution and the Judicial Code, pre-date the adoption of

those laws. In practice, the express articulation of the Court’s supervisory authority in

our governing charter altered neither its constitutional effect nor its attributes as a power

of the King’s Bench. Stander, 250 A.2d at 483; id. at 487 (Roberts, J., concurring); see

PA. CONST. art. V, §§ 2, 10; PA. CONST. SCHED. art. V, § 1 (all powers at King’s Bench

continued).

       Stated otherwise, the Supreme Court exercises the express supervisory authority

in Article V, Section 10 as it would any other power at King’s Bench.             We have

examined at length the nature and breadth of this Court’s King’s Bench power. The

exercise of that power does not exclude actions that may be perceived as punitive, and

thus, we respectfully reject petitioners’ invitation to interpret our supervisory authority

over judicial personnel narrowly, on the ground that the King’s Bench power had not

been applied in that manner before ratification of the 1968 Constitution and was, as a

result, “untried and untested.”23 That the Court had not spoken in a published opinion to

its authority to suspend jurists (or to take any action that could be perceived as punitive)

before the ratification of the 1968 Constitution does not preclude recognition and

enforcement of the constitutional authority of the Court at King’s Bench as originally

23
        For the purposes of decision, we assume the accuracy of petitioners’ proposition
that the Court did not exercise its King’s Bench powers to suspend a jurist before the
ratification of the 1968 Constitution. We nevertheless note, for accuracy, that not all
decisions and orders of the Court are published, in particular those of earlier days. We
also note that we cannot simply assume that the same matters of grave and timely
importance facing the Court in recent years -- consider the example of former Judges
Ciavarella and Conahan in Luzerne County -- presented themselves to our judicial
predecessors. See ICJJ, 988 A.2d 1269. We cannot allow the absence of specific
judicial precedent to impair our own core duties brought about by the necessities of this
day and age.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 70
understood. Robinson Twp., 83 A.3d at 950; see District of Columbia v. Heller, 554
U.S. 570, 625 (2008). The Court has explained the prudential principle at work: “our

decisional law generally develops incrementally,          within the confines of the

circumstances of cases as they come before the Court.” Determinations spring from the

facts of the case; however, the Supreme Court’s “task is not simply to decide th[e] case

[before it], but also to provide [prospective] guidance upon the broader legal issue.”

Scampone v. Highland Park Care Center, LLC, 57 A.3d 582, 604-05 (Pa. 2012) (citing

Maloney v. Valley Med. Facilities, Inc., 984 A.2d 478, 489-90 (Pa. 2009) and Thierfelder

v. Wolfert, 52 A.3d 1251, 1264 n.9 (Pa. 2012)).

      As a substantive matter, established precedent pre-dating 1968 described the

King’s Bench power in the broadest of terms when providing prospective guidance

regarding the legal principle at issue. We would be remiss to interpret the Court’s

supervisory authority at King’s Bench in narrow terms, contrary to precedent and the

transcendent nature and purpose of the power. The Court long ago warned against any

judicial inclination to narrow that authority, lest the members of the Court abandon their

duty to exercise the power they hold in trust for the people. See Chase, 41 Pa. at 411.

From its adoption by the Commonwealth’s colonial government, the power of the King’s

Bench was intended to be supreme and general, and was understood to transcend

forms of procedure and requirements of action upon particular writs. See Schmuck, 70
A. at 1092. Such a broad articulation of the King’s Bench power obviously admits the

use of the Court’s supervisory authority to inquire into issues affecting the lower courts

and to suspend jurists, where that remedy is deemed necessary and appropriate.

Petitioners offer no convincing legal or logical support for the proposition that the large

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 71
supervisory charter of the Supreme Court cannot embrace the interim suspension of

jurists.24

        The effect of the 1993 amendment to Article V, Section 18, as relevant to the

Court’s King’s Bench power, at least, is negligible. Petitioners are correct that the 1993

amendment to Article V, Section 18 realized an overhaul of the formal process for

24
        Petitioners cite the Court’s decisions in Bowman, 74 A. 203, and Gamble, 62 Pa.
343, for the proposition that this Court has held that the methods for removal of jurists
from office expressly included in the Constitution are exclusive and the Supreme Court
is absent from the process. See Board’s Brief at 28-29. These matters are
distinguishable. Both Bowman and Gamble implicated the constitutionality of acts of the
General Assembly that purported to permit removal of judicial officers from office by
means other than those articulated in the Constitution. In Bowman, the General
Assembly authorized courts of common pleas to declare vacant an office of a justice of
the peace who failed for more than six months to reside or maintain an office in the
district where he was elected. 74 A. at 204. In Gamble, the General Assembly
repealed a statute that had created the judicial district to which the jurist had been
elected, thereby removing the jurist from his office as president judge of the abolished
district. 62 Pa. at 345. In both instances, the Supreme Court held that the statutes in
question violated constitutional provisions that expressly directed the means by which
the legislative branch may remove members of the judicial branch from office. The
Bowman Court said that “[a] constitutional direction as to how a thing is to be done is
exclusive and prohibitory of any other mode which the Legislature may deem better or
more convenient.” The Gamble Court, meanwhile, explained the substantial separation
of powers concerns that justified its holding.

       Petitioners suggest that, in acting in the Bruno matter, this Court fails to abide by
the same principle because Section 18 of Article V articulates the exclusive means of
suspending a jurist. But, Article V, Section 18 addresses the circumstances and means
by which the CJD, a body of limited powers -- and not the Supreme Court -- may
suspend a jurist. And, as the AOPC has noted, the word “exclusive” simply does not
appear in the provision; petitioners read it into the text. There is no constitutional
provision that places restrictions on the Supreme Court similar to those on the General
Assembly respecting the ability to restrict a judicial officer’s exercise of his or her office
by removal, suspension, or otherwise.           Moreover, the exercise of the Court’s
supervisory authority in this respect does not implicate the separation of powers
concerns that undergird the restrictions on the General Assembly upon which the
Gamble decision elaborated.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 72
disciplining jurists. Compare PA. CONST. art. V, § 18 (1993) with PA. CONST. art. V, § 18

(1968). As amended, the provision abolished the disciplinary process by which the

Supreme Court imposed judicial discipline in cases brought to us upon the

recommendation of the JIRB. Section 18 now describes a “self-contained system for

the investigation, prosecution, and imposition of discipline in cases of judicial

wrongdoing.” Commonwealth ex rel. Judicial Conduct Bd. v. Griffin, 918 A.2d 87, 94

(Pa. 2007) (“Griffin”). The initial adjudicatory authority in disciplinary matters under the

new scheme is the CJD. The CJD is a court of record of limited scope -- an appointed

tribunal within the judicial system whose functions are deliberately enumerated. See

PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)-(c); accord Griffin, 918 A.2d at 94 (describing in similar terms

prosecutorial function of Board). As a general rule, jurists have the right to appeal an

adverse decision of the CJD to the Supreme Court. The provision also seeks to ensure

basic conditions of fairness in the adjudication of formal disciplinary grievances lodged

against jurists. See, e.g., PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)(5) (due process). That the 1993

amendment transformed the disciplinary apparatus and process in Pennsylvania is

beyond dispute. We disagree, however, with the inferences petitioners derive from this

structure and with the meaning that petitioners attribute to Article V, Section 18, as

amended, as against this Court’s inherent powers.25

25
        In their briefs, petitioners cite portions of the legislative debates on Article V,
Section 18 in 1993, which support this undisputed notion of an overhaul of the
disciplinary system. Petitioners claim that debate rhetoric addressing the “dramatic”
nature of the amendment support their opinion that the Supreme Court was “stripped” of
any authority to act in matters such as Solomon and Bruno, i.e., matters where the
Board and the CJD might act. Petitioners’ reliance on the debates is of questionable
value as the statements they quote, unencumbered by petitioners’ gloss, offer no insight
regarding the issues actually before the Court today. See Board’s Brief at 55-57;
Solomon & Bruno Brief at 26-28.

(continued…)

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 73
       Article V, Section 18 provides no textual predicate for petitioners’ assertion that

the drafters and the ratifying voters intended the 1993 amendment to oust the

supervisory authority of the Court over judicial officers suspected of or chargeable with

wrongdoing. For the ouster of King’s Bench authority to be effective, the intent of the

ratifying voters must be expressed or necessarily implied by the constitutional language

itself. Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1143; McCloskey, 2 Rawle at 379-80. Such intent is

plainly not expressed: the Supreme Court’s King’s Bench powers simply are not among

the subjects addressed by Article V, Section 18. See generally PA. CONST. art. V, § 18.

       Nevertheless, petitioners argue that the creation of the self-contained disciplinary

apparatus and installation of the CJD as an adjudicatory authority in formal disciplinary

cases, necessarily implies that the Supreme Court has been divested of power in all

(…continued)
        We also note that petitioners’ recounting of the legislative debates is so selective
as to undermine their argument. For example, petitioners emphasize statements in
support of defeated amendments -- which, unlike the 1993 amendment as ultimately
adopted by the electorate, proposed that a majority of the Board’s and CJD’s
membership would be appointed by the Governor and that the budget of the disciplinary
system would be separate from that of the judiciary -- to suggest that Article V, Section
18 was intended to create a disciplinary process entirely independent of the Judicial
Branch. See 1993 Pa. Legislative Journal-House 53, 62 (January 27, 1993) (Piccola
amendment). Proponents of the version of Article V, Section 18 that actually prevailed,
however, emphasized dual principles supporting the 1993 amendment: “first, the
independence of the judiciary, and second, the accountability of the judiciary. . . . We
should look in the long run and in the long term as to the impact that too strong an
independent board would in fact wreck [sic] upon the separation of powers. We cannot
risk the intimidation of judges.” Parenthetically, what is absent from petitioners’
presentations to this Court is any reference to that part of the debate in which the
supporters of this prevailing version also noted with disapproval the case of a former
jurist who, although suspended by the Court, was not removed from the bench and
continued to receive pay for two years after conviction for public corruption. The
legislators decried inaction of the sort that petitioners now advocate should be this
Court’s chosen course. See 1992 Pa. Legislative Journal-House 1513, 1515-16, 1519
(June 24, 1992) (Broujos amendment).

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 74
matters implicating judicial wrongdoing. Petitioners claim that the disciplinary apparatus

of Article V, Section 18 operates entirely outside the inherent authority of the Supreme

Court, and that the CJD’s authority is paramount and exclusive in cases implicating

judicial wrongdoing. We respectfully, but no less fundamentally, disagree: the structure

of the disciplinary apparatus and the nature of the CJD make clear that the CJD is a

judicial body inferior to the Supreme Court, like every other tribunal within the Unified

Judicial System. PA. CONST. art. V, §§ 1, 2(a), 18(b)(5). The Supreme Court -- via its

inherent and exclusive constitutional supervisory power at King’s Bench -- keeps inferior

tribunals, including the CJD, within the bounds of their authority. Onda, 103 A.2d at 91;

see also Bell, 152 A.2d at 735. By comparison, the CJD is an entity of extremely limited

powers, possessing no inherent authority but only that authority expressly conferred

upon it by Article V, Section 18. Also worth noting is that, as we have explained, the

power to articulate substantive standards governing judicial conduct is vested in this

Court, both by promulgation of codes of conduct and our appellate decisions in matters

of judicial discipline. Any adjudicative discretion reposed in the CJD is cabined by these

standards. Neither adjudicative discretion, nor for that matter the CJD’s authority to

promulgate procedures governing the disciplinary proceedings before it, authorize

deviation from the substantive standards of conduct articulated by this Court. That the

CJD has the enumerated power to discipline Pennsylvania jurists, including justices of

the Supreme Court, in matters that the Judicial Conduct Board decides to pursue, does

not act to remove the CJD from the Unified Judicial System, nor does it elevate the CJD

by necessary implication above the reach of the Supreme Court’s supervision and

King’s Bench authority. Cf. Apex Hosiery Co., 200 A. at 598; McCloskey, 2 Rawle at

379-80.

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 75
       By creating a regularly convened apparatus to investigate, prosecute, and

adjudicate formal matters involving allegations of judicial wrongdoing, Article V, Section

18 did not impair the Supreme Court’s supervisory powers over personnel of the Unified

Judicial System, including judicial officers, although it certainly reduced the occasion for

the use of these powers to extraordinary circumstances. See Fahy, 737 A.2d at 224

(Court’s power to grant habeas corpus relief); Reilly, 188 A. at 581 (Court’s power to

grant change of venue relief); accord Balph, 3 A. at 230 (King’s Bench jurisdiction is not

exercise of original jurisdiction).   In the regular course of its business, the Judicial

Conduct Board receives and investigates complaints of judicial conduct, and may

initiate proceedings against Pennsylvania jurists.         The CJD adjudicates those

complaints. We have no doubt that the diligent operation of the Board and the CJD

over the last twenty years has contributed significantly to maintaining high standards of

integrity and professionalism for judicial officers in Pennsylvania.       This two-tiered

disciplinary process also has the advantage of preserving the resources of the Supreme

Court, which otherwise would have been obliged to act in every case of judicial

wrongdoing pursuant to its supervisory powers.        Nevertheless, the existence of the

Article V, Section 18 disciplinary process does not encompass and exhaust the

Supreme Court’s duty to the citizens nor does it discount the Court’s authority to act to

discharge those obligations. Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1194 (“As the highest court of this

Commonwealth, we would be remiss in our duty if we neglected to exercise our inherent

supervisory power on the theory that another means to resolve the problem may be

available, when the alternative solution would not adequately meet the exigencies of the

circumstances presented.”).

       Placed in the proper context, the respective constitutional responsibilities and

powers of the Supreme Court and of the CJD emerge plainly. It is also important to

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 76
note, however, that the fundamental distinction between this Court and the CJD is not

limited to our different constitutional roles and our places in the constitutional hierarchy.

We are well familiar with the core function of the CJD; a large part of our duties involves

varying levels of review with respect to decisions of similar adjudicative bodies. These

bodies determine the matters that come before them in the ordinary course. This Court,

in contrast, has a duty and a perspective that is exponentially broader. The Court’s

experience has proven the essential and continuing role of our King’s Bench authority in

addressing extraordinary or emergent circumstances. See examples, supra.

                    B.     The Exercise of Discretion in Employing

                           the Court’s Supervisory Authority

       As we have explained, within the large charter of the King’s Bench authority, the

Pennsylvania Supreme Court has the capacity to bring its supervisory power to bear

swiftly to vindicate its responsibilities to the citizens, in matters affecting the Unified

Judicial System.    But, it is a very different question of whether and when, in our

discretion, we should exercise that power. This litigation -- including in no small part the

presentations of the parties and of the PBA -- has brought about a greater appreciation

of the fact that the Article V, Section 18 process has diminished the necessity and

reduced the occasion for use of these powers to extraordinary circumstances. We have

confidence that the standardized procedure of Article V, Section 18 will, in the vast

majority of circumstances, adequately respond to punitive concerns and the necessities

of protecting the integrity of the Unified Judicial System, against judicial impropriety and

the appearance of judicial impropriety.

       Having explained that the King’s Bench authority persists, we need not decide

here what circumstances are sufficiently extraordinary to demand the exercise of that

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 77
authority in a supervisory context.    Judge Bruno has been acquitted, and we have

vacated our suspension order. The law in this area can develop incrementally, should

the occasion arise. We write now to note some general concerns illustrated by the

parties’ presentations.

       In determining whether to exercise the discretion to act in matters implicating

judicial misconduct, and in calibrating a response to specific incidents of misconduct,

the critical inquiry is what impact the alleged or established judicial wrongdoing and its

aftermath may have on subsequent actions of the jurist on the bench, how these actions

affect and reflect upon the Unified Judicial System generally, and what measures may

be required to instill confidence in the citizenry that the delivery of fair and even-handed

justice will not be poisoned. Accord Joseph, 987 A.2d at 634 (quoting McFall, 617 A.2d

at 714) (“A trial judge should not only avoid impropriety but must also avoid the

appearance of impropriety.”). The Court has discretion in fashioning the appropriate

remedy.26

       Our discretion is cabined primarily by the interests we have already examined:

supervisory orders issued upon judicial personnel must be congruent with our ultimate

responsibility to maintain the fairness and probity of the judicial process and the dignity,

integrity, and authority of the judicial system in Pennsylvania.        The countervailing

consideration implicates due process or fairness concerns. See City of Philadelphia,

26
        The remedy at issue in the Bruno matter is the interim suspension of the jurist
without pay. Article V, Section 18 permits the Board to request, and the CJD to grant,
this type of relief via a standardized procedure that reduces the necessity for the Court
to act in a similar fashion. We note, however, that the range of remedies available to
this Court as an administrative or supervisory matter is broader, in accord with the
powers at King’s Bench. Available remedies would include, for example, removal from
duties to preside over cases, administrative leave, and also interim suspension in
extraordinary cases.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 78
999 A.2d at 563 (“no adjudicatory body has unlimited discretion, and each and every

adjudicator is bound by the Constitution and particularly by the mandates of due

process”); accord In re Hasay, 686 A.2d 809, 815 (Pa. 1996) (disciplinary matter is civil

proceeding but, in light of severity of potential sanctions, recognize that jurist is “clothed

with the fundamental constitutional rights available to criminal defendants”).

       We do not take the prospect of exercising our supervisory power or of imposing

sanctions upon a jurist lightly. We are judges as well. We approach cases aware of the

presumption of innocence attending criminal charges and mindful of the obligation that

our supervisory intervention be fair to the jurist. Nevertheless, in appropriate cases, any

private interest of the jurist in continuing to preside over cases, and, furthermore, to

receive compensation if suspended, may have to yield to the public interest of

protecting the fairness and probity of the judicial process, and the integrity, dignity, and

authority of the Unified Judicial System. See Franciscus, 369 A.2d at 1194; Avellino I,
690 A.2d at 1143; see also 1 Pa.C.S. § 1922(5). We have explained that “[a] judicial

office represents a public trust,” and the conduct of a judicial officer in the decision-

making process and in his or her private life may “stain[] the integrity of the position” and

“bear[s] upon the independence and integrity of the judiciary.” Carney, 79 A.3d at 506.

Those holding the privileged office of judge should be acutely sensitive to situations that

may impugn the integrity and dignity of the office, and thereby of the judiciary as a

whole. And so, for example, jurists should hold themselves to a standard higher than

one of merely avoiding a felony conviction; conduct leading to a colorable felony charge

is sufficient to implicate the supervisory authority of this Court. The failure of a judicial

officer to appreciate the seriousness and effect on the entire system of his or her

conduct raises questions as to the competency of that individual to hold judicial office.

Cf. Matter of Cunningham, 538 A.2d 473, 482 (Pa. 1988) (receipt of cash for favorable

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 79
adjudication prohibited by canons of judicial conduct; reject claim that Canon 1 of Code

of Judicial Conduct was not violated because language was aspirational and vague, and

did not specifically address circumstances at issue: “one who asserts his or her

competency to hold judicial office [should not] have difficulty in understanding concepts

such as ‘integrity,’ ‘independence’ and ‘impartiality’”).27, 28

27
        Parenthetically, we note that this Court also exercises its supervisory power over
judicial officers in its adoption of the Code of Judicial Conduct and the Rules Governing
Standards of Conduct of Magisterial District Judges. The last few decades have
witnessed this Court implementing increasingly more comprehensive prophylactic rules
respecting judicial conduct. See, e.g., Final Report at 3 (noting that Court directed
review of existing rules of judicial conduct in light of Luzerne County events). In drafting
these rules, we persist in the aspiration that the judicial office summons in those who
serve the highest quality of professionalism and personal comportment. Yet, situations
find us that defy these lofty expectations and call for judicial discipline or supervisory
action, and further refinement of the rules. The exercise of the transcendent King’s
Bench power in individual cases permits the Court to address novel, extraordinary
circumstances for which the existing rules of judicial conduct may not yet provide. “The
mere knowledge that such a power exists in th[e Supreme C]ourt it is believed will make
its frequent use unnecessary.” Balph, 3 A. at 230. As a corollary, we note that not only
the formal rules and the spirit in which they were drafted, but also each case of judicial
wrongdoing and attendant disciplinary and supervisory actions puts judges on notice of
the potential pitfalls and consequences of judicial wrongdoing.

28
        With respect to the issue of consistency in the actions of this Court and the CJD,
petitioners have stressed the fact that the language of Article V, Section 18 does not
permit an appeal to this Court from an interim order of the CJD. See PA. CONST. art. V,
§ 18(d)(2) (“An interim order under this paragraph shall not be considered a final order
from which an appeal may be taken.”). However, that restriction is not a limitation on
this Court’s King’s Bench authority over an inferior tribunal to review such an order sua
sponte or upon application of the Board or of the jurist for the exercise of extraordinary
jurisdiction. And, as in other areas, we can exercise the power to ensure consistency in
review paradigms. See discussion and examples cited in Part IV, supra.

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 80
                     VI.    The Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court

       We also address whether the Court is competent to determine controversies in

the general class to which the Bruno matter belongs.29       Petitioners argue that the

Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction because such disputes implicate the discipline of

jurists, over which jurisdiction is vested exclusively in the CJD by the Pennsylvania

Constitution.   According to petitioners, Article V, Section 18 explicitly divested the

Supreme Court of jurisdiction over judicial discipline matters. Petitioners then seek to

distinguish Franciscus and Avellino as supervisory or administrative (rather than

disciplinary) matters, over which petitioners concede the Court has jurisdiction. The

AOPC and the PBA question petitioners’ approach. According to the AOPC and the

PBA, irrespective of the disciplinary process created by Article V, Section 18, the Court

has jurisdiction at King’s Bench to act.

       We have already announced and explained our conclusion that the Supreme

Court has the authority to order interim suspensions pursuant to the Court’s

supervisory authority. Nevertheless, we address petitioners’ overarching claim that any

controversy that may be characterized as “disciplinary” is within the exclusive original

jurisdiction of the CJD.

29
        There is an apparent contradiction between petitioners’ argument that the Court
lacks jurisdiction over that general class of cases to which the Bruno matter belongs
and their acquiescence in the exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction. For the reasons we
explain, we hold that the Court has jurisdiction. Indeed, if it were otherwise, an
adjudication on the merits of the dispute would be inappropriate, because “[a] party, or
the parties by agreement, may not vest subject matter jurisdiction in a court which does
not have it otherwise.” Mercury Trucking, 55 A.3d at 1066 (citing Smethport Area Sch.
Dist. v. Bowers, 269 A.2d 712, 715 (Pa. 1970)). Equally importantly, we note that the
issues which we ordered briefed were articulated in terms of “jurisdiction.” Although, as
we explain, the central dispositive principle implicates the Court’s “authority,” we
acknowledge that the parties’ briefs have implicated both questions of authority and
jurisdiction, and so we proceed to address the jurisdiction question.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 81
          We recognize that Article V, Section 18 grants the CJD “original” jurisdiction over

those causes of action implicating Board-initiated prosecutions of misconduct charges

against jurists; the Supreme Court has “appellate” jurisdiction in such cases, with a

limited exception not applicable here. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(b)-(c). Article V,

Section 18 does not purport to allow the CJD to take cognizance of any other type of

action.

          A dispute in which a jurist challenges the Supreme Court’s exercise of its

supervisory authority to investigate and/or suspend the jurist is a type of action distinct

from that which is subject to the CJD’s original jurisdiction. In such cases, as in Bruno,

the Board is not the prosecuting body.          Rather, the Supreme Court’s decision to

exercise its supervisory power is what gave rise to the dispute now before the Court.

Petitioners concede, and there can be no reasonable dispute, that this Court is

competent at King’s Bench to review and resolve disputes that implicate the Court’s

exercise of its supervisory and administrative powers over jurists, including members of

the minor judiciary. See Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1141 (where authority for administrative

decision derives from Court, resolution of dispute is necessarily within jurisdiction of

Court); see, e.g., Carbon County Judicial Vacancy, 141 A. at 250 (exercise of King’s

Bench jurisdiction relating to temporary assignments of judges to fill vacancies on

bench); President Judge for 30th Judicial Dist., 216 A.2d at 326 (exercise of King’s

Bench jurisdiction relating to establishment of priority of commission).

          As we have already explained, the exercise of King’s Bench jurisdiction is distinct

from the exercise of the Court’s original jurisdiction. Balph, 3 A at 230 (King’s Bench

jurisdiction “is not, strictly speaking, original jurisdiction”); accord 42 Pa.C.S. § 721

(original jurisdiction of Court). At King’s Bench, the Court may take cognizance over

any civil matter statewide, regardless of whether the matter is pending before an inferior

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 82
tribunal. See Summers, 114 A. at 528. Article V, Section 18 of the Constitution is not to

the contrary because it simply addresses the narrow jurisdiction of the CJD over Board-

prosecuted cases of judicial misconduct. The provision neither expressly, nor impliedly,

purports to restrain the exercise of King’s Bench jurisdiction by this Court. See Ebersoll,
3 Binn. at 531 (comprehensive jurisdiction at King’s Bench may be ousted only by

express words).

       Accordingly, the Court’s supervisory action with respect to a judicial officer is

separate from any disciplinary proceeding that the Judicial Conduct Board may initiate

and disciplinary sanction that the CJD may ultimately enter against the same jurist

pursuant to their respective Article V, Section 18 authorities. The distinct nature of the

proceedings before the CJD and proceedings at King’s Bench has two practical

implications.

       First, the principle of concurrent original jurisdiction is inapplicable here.

Concurrent jurisdiction refers to the notion that two tribunals share the competency to

determine controversies of the general class to which the case under consideration

belongs. See, e.g., Dep’t of Pub. Welfare v. Presbyterian Med. Ctr. of Oakmont, 877
A.2d 419 (Pa. 2005). Bruno is in the general class of controversies that implicate the

jurisdiction at King’s Bench, which is exclusively vested in the Supreme Court. See

Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1141; Bell, 152 A.2d at 735. The CJD’s jurisdiction is limited to

the adjudication of matters enumerated in Article V, Section 18, i.e., Board-prosecuted

charges of judicial misconduct. Whether the Supreme Court may also take cognizance

over matters committed generally to an inferior jurisdiction, i.e., the CJD, in the exercise

of King’s Bench jurisdiction or of concurrent original jurisdiction is not an issue

implicated in the actions before us. Cf. Griffin, 918 A.2d at 94-95 (power of Judicial

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 83
Conduct Board delineated to include prosecution of judicial misconduct before CJD but

not quo warranto action). See Pollard, 17 A. at 1090.

      Second, even where this Court would choose to act, in an extraordinary matter,

the Board may continue to pursue sanctions before the CJD. The Supreme Court’s

exercise of its supervisory authority does not intrude upon the CJD’s constitutional

authority to mete out disciplinary sanctions upon jurists, nor does it preclude the CJD

from imposing disciplinary sanctions upon a later Board-filed complaint. See Merlo, 17
A.3d at 871. The constitutional powers of the Supreme Court and the CJD, and the

legal predicates for their respective actions, are distinct and may comfortably operate

separately. That the remedies available to the Supreme Court and the CJD are similar

in some instances -- such as temporary suspensions or interim suspensions -- does not

equate to exposing a jurist to two “disciplinary sanctions” for the same conduct, as

petitioners suggest.    Properly understood, any such supervisory action is not

punishment, but instead represents action undertaken to preserve the integrity of the

judiciary. Moreover, because the supervisory action does not punish a jurist for alleged

misconduct, and as no decision of the CJD is before the Court for review, we also reject

petitioners’ argument that the Court would be placed in a position of appearing to have

prejudged an appeal from the CJD’s ultimate disciplinary decision. The issues are

distinct: on appeal, the Supreme Court reviews the decision of the CJD for error on the

law or facts and for whether the sanctions imposed were lawful; in a supervisory action,

the Court is guided by the duty to safeguard the fairness and integrity of the Unified

Judicial System. Compare PA. CONST. art. V, § 18(c)(2) with Avellino I, 690 A.2d at

1143.30

30
       The question of whether the Supreme Court may exercise another facet of King’s
Bench jurisdiction -- extraordinary jurisdiction -- to take cognizance of a matter pending
before the CJD is a separate issue. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 726. That question implicates
(continued…)

                                   [J-59 A-2013] - 84
       Finally, we reject Judge Bruno’s suggestion that notions of fairness require the

Supreme Court to refer all matters like these to the Board and the CJD, respectively, for

further investigation and hearing. Having already rejected the jurists’ claims of per se

due process violations in the processes employed by the Court, we simply note that the

Court certainly had the authority and discretion to rely on or defer to the disciplinary

system. At the time we acted, the exigencies of the cases -- viewed in the context of

the widespread corruption in the Traffic Court -- and the uncertainty of whether the CJD

would act and in what manner, impressed upon the Court the necessity to proceed

swiftly.31 We might prefer that the present situation had not found us; indeed, it is

disappointing that any judge in Pennsylvania would think to interfere ex parte in a case

(or even act in a fashion that would give rise to an appearance of interfering ex parte in

a case). But, such were the allegations which this Court was required to assess in

determining whether it was necessary to act, and the life of the law being largely a

function of experience, we acted. See OLIVER W ENDELL HOLMES, JR., THE COMMON LAW

1 (1881) (“The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience.”).

(…continued)
the supervisory power of this Court over the CJD, an inferior tribunal, and is not before
us. See, e.g., Joseph, 987 A.2d at 636. We note that, in a case in which the Court
exercises extraordinary jurisdiction over a pending matter, the exercise of the Court’s
jurisdiction would preempt proceedings before the CJD. See, e.g., Carpentertown, 61
A.2d at 428. This is not the scenario presented to the Court here, since the Court and
the CJD are acting independently, within their separate respective spheres of authority.

31
        The Court may assume plenary jurisdiction in a matter pending before an inferior
tribunal pursuant to Section 726 of the Judicial Code. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 726. This
provision is inapplicable. The Court assumed plenary jurisdiction immediately without
knowing whether, if, or when a disciplinary action might be pursued before the CJD;
accordingly, the Court exercised its King’s Bench powers rather than extraordinary
jurisdiction.

                                    [J-59 A-2013] - 85
       Having said this, the Court nevertheless is suitably appreciative of the reassuring

swiftness and responsibility displayed by both the Judicial Conduct Board and the CJD

in this matter. We are also cognizant of the salutary benefits of avoiding even the

prospect of competing orders arising from the same basic conduct. The sui generis

nature of this appeal has provided an unforeseen opportunity at dialogue and greater

understanding for all entities.       As a result of the process, which included excellent

advocacy from all participants, this Court will surely proceed in future such matters with

a greater awareness and sensitivity to the issues (and inherent tensions) which have

been so ably articulated to us.

                               VII.     Hierarchy of Authority

       Last, we address a question upon which we have already touched in part: when

an order of the Supreme Court and an order of the CJD relating to the suspension of a

jurist conflict, which order takes priority?

       Petitioners reiterate their absolutist position that the Supreme Court is prohibited

from acting in “disciplinary” matters and that, as a result, only the CJD’s orders are valid

and should be enforced.        Petitioners suggest that the Supreme Court has already

acknowledged this constitutionally-derived system by ordering continued payment of

Judge Bruno’s salary and “essentially enforc[ing] the CJD’s order.” Judge Bruno adds

that inconsistent adherence by the AOPC to directions regarding pay -- withholding pay

each time, whether upon order of this Court or of the CJD -- harms the public perception

of the Unified Judicial System. The AOPC and the PBA reject the notion that the Court

must defer to the CJD because the Court is the supreme judicial power in the

Commonwealth and its orders may not be disturbed by an inferior tribunal. Where the

Supreme Court has made a decision, that decision is “preeminent,” according to the

                                        [J-59 A-2013] - 86
AOPC. While remaining sensitive to the concerns we articulated at the conclusion of

the prior section of this Opinion, where there is such a conflict, we agree with the core

position of the AOPC and PBA.

       As we have explained at length, supervisory actions of the Supreme Court and

disciplinary proceedings prosecuted by the Board and adjudicated by the CJD are

distinct. The Supreme Court and the CJD have constitutional authority to investigate a

jurist and order sanctions, if warranted, where the legal predicates for their respective

actions are met. Where the orders of the CJD and the Supreme Court are in accord

with respect to the propriety of a suspension and the continuation or withholding of a

jurist’s pay, the directive to the AOPC is clear.

       Where the orders of the Supreme Court and the CJD are dissonant, however,

any order of this Court obviously is “supreme.” As we explained, the Supreme Court

has supreme and general authority over the Unified Judicial System, which includes

inferior tribunals and its personnel. See PA. CONST. art. V, § 2(a); 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 502,

1723, 1724. This authority articulated by the 1968 Constitution is derived from the

power at King’s Bench, inherent only to the Supreme Court. Bell, 152 A.2d at 735. In

practical terms, the Supreme Court’s broad King’s Bench mandate manifests as the

power to sanction a jurist as a supervisory matter, see Avellino I, 690 A.2d at 1143, and

as the power to keep inferior tribunals within the bounds of their authority, see Onda,
103 A.2d at 91.

       Going forward, we expect that our present explanation of the fundamental

underpinnings at work, as well as our greater appreciation for the concerns articulated

to us in these matters, will help avoid any conflicts between orders of the Supreme

Court and the CJD.

                                     [J-59 A-2013] - 87
         This Opinion disposes of the broad constitutional questions presented to us

concerning the Court’s responsibility, authority, and jurisdiction. Having already vacated

the February 2013 Order suspending Judge Bruno without pay, jurisdiction is now

hereby relinquished.

         Messrs. Justice Eakin, Baer, and Stevens join the opinion.

         Mr. Chief Justice Castille files a special concurring opinion.

         Mr. Justice Saylor files a concurring opinion, in which Madame Justice Todd

joins.

         Mr. Justice Baer files a concurring opinion.

         Madame Justice Todd files a concurring opinion.

         Mr. Justice McCaffery files a concurring opinion.

                                      [J-59 A-2013] - 88