ROBERT GARDNER -- The Verdict
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The old Newport Beach City Hall originally was a two-room schoolhouse.
When converted to a city hall, one room housed the city clerk and the
city treasurer. The other room, one night a month, was the meeting place
for the City Council. It was a multipurpose room the rest of the time.
It was, among other things, my courtroom when I was the city judge of
Newport Beach.
The “bench” was simply a desk on a slightly elevated platform. It
overlooked the long table at which the City Council met. However, during
the time when it wasn’t being used by that group, it was the workplace
for some people from the county auditor’s office who spent their days
poring over big books. They never looked up and seemed impervious to the
other activities going on.
Take me, for instance. I was looking right down on them, but they
never looked up.
Over to my right when I was on my so-called bench was a machine, a
very noisy machine, which was putting out water bills. Again, the lady
operating that noisy machine ignored me.
To my left was a representative from the Department of Motor Vehicles
who was putting out driver’s licenses. Directly behind me on the wall was
the eye chart used by the man giving out driver’s licenses.
Some odd things happened as a result of that eye chart. Drunks would
come in and when I would ask their names, as often as not, they would
start reading letters off the eye chart.
In one corner was a small office which housed a desk and two chairs.
In that desk was a bottle of whiskey. That was the office of Frank
Rinehart, the city clerk. Frank explained that the bottle was for public
relations.
So in my so-called courtroom, you could get a driver’s license, pay
your water bill, complain about your assessment and get a drink of
whiskey from Frank Rinehart. And if you wanted to wait around for a
couple hours, one night a month you could attend a City Council meeting.
Now, when young judges in the Orange County courthouse complain about
their accommodations, I just smile and tell them about my original
judicial accommodations. That usually stops the complaining.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column appears Tuesdays.
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