Chesterfield court clerk sues chief judge
Chesterfield County Circuit Court Clerk Judy L. Worthington is suing the chief Circuit Court judge in a turf spat, among other things, over the county's Web site.
Worthington complains that in November, Judge Michael C. Allen issued an order authorizing lawyer Aubrey M. Davis Jr. to perform marriages. The order directed that Davis' name be added to a list of people authorized to do so on the clerk's page of the county Web site.
Last month, she asked the Supreme Court of Virginia to direct Allen to drop his order.
Worthington agrees judges can appoint celebrants but says the celebrant must first file a petition and the clerk collect a fee. She said Davis "had not filed the usual petition to be qualified, paid the normal statutorily-required fee, nor posted the bond required by the court."
It isn't the first legal scrape that Worthington, clerk since 1992, has had with Chesterfield judges.
In 2002, Worthington cost the county $389,000 in the settlement of a $5.35 million libel suit that Chesterfield Circuit Judge T.J. Hauler filed against her over a letter she wrote to the General Assembly's courts committees when Hauler came up for reappointment.
Davis, a former Richmond commonwealth's attorney, said yesterday that he has been authorized to perform civil marriages anywhere in the state for nearly 30 years but could not comment further because of the pending suit.
In a written response to Worthington's suit, Allen's lawyers wrote, "This case involves a simple order, which [Worthington] stubbornly refuses to accept."
Allen's position is that Davis was properly authorized to conduct marriages by the Richmond Circuit Court and posted the requisite bond there in 1980. His appointment remains in effect. Until last year, the Web page in question included Davis' name, Allen said.
Worthington contends she removed Davis' name from the Web page -- not affiliated with the courts -- so it would include only those marriage celebrants "who had been authorized by the Circuit Court for the County of Chesterfield."
At the same time Davis' name was removed from the list, which had been in alphabetical order -- Worthington's was added to the top.
Allen's lawyers suggested Worthington removed Davis' name from the list because the law firm he works for supported a candidate, L. Dennis Collins, who ran against Worthington in the 2007 Republican primary. Davis' name was on the Web site as recently as last year.
Worthington says that unlike Davis, "each and every marriage celebrant listed on the Web site has filed a petition, paid the filing fee, and posted a bond; [and that she] is bound by statute to treat each applicant equally."
"Politics played no part in the listing of marriage celebrants, as evidenced by the fact that Worthington's last political opponent for the clerk's job, L. Dennis Collins, is on the list today," she wrote.
Contact Frank Green at (804) 649-6340 or
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Reader Reactions
This shouldn’t be too much of a problem. Judge Allen isn’t known for actually enforceing the very court orders that he imposses. At least not without repeated returns to court to do the exact same thing over and over again. Will probably have to bring in a third party mediator (at a large cost for someone else to pay) to tell the court how to actually make a decision.
And the Devil Wears Prada in Chesterfield County.
There is enough intrigue being carried on in the catecombs of the courthouse complex to rival a Patricia Cornwell novel.
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