Dallas County's Worst Judge Has Dragged a Simple Eviction Case on for Five Years

Categories: The Courts

DmetriaBenson.jpg
D'metria Benson
Five years ago this month, a Dallas County justice of the peace signed an order evicting Clifford Holland from the $1.2 million home he was renting on Caruth Boulevard, a block outside of University Park. Aside from the eye-popping $6,000-per-month rent, the case was a routine tenant-landlord dispute: Landlord claims renter doesn't pay rent, landlord sues, tenant has to pay overdue rent and find somewhere else to live.

Also fairly routine was Holland's decision to appeal the judgment. Where things started to break down, and where a simple rent dispute began to turn into the Jarndyce-esque legal morass Holland's case has become, is when the appeal wound up in Judge D'metria Benson's courtroom. Five years and multiple appellate decisions later, the case continues to grind its way through the legal system.

"We've been to the court of appeals four times," says an exasperated Bill Wolf, a University Park attorney and owner of the Caruth Boulevard home. "It's over a $6,000 rent payment in August 2009. [These things are] supposed to be done expeditiously."

Benson was first elected in 2006 as part of the electoral wave that put Dallas County's entire judiciary in Democratic hands. She's been consistently rated as the worst civil court judge in the county in the Dallas Bar Association's biennial judicial poll. The results aren't even close. Eighty-six percent of 294 lawyers surveyed in 2013 said Benson's performance "needs improvement," 25 points worse than the second-worst civil judge. This case offers a glimpse of why.

CliffordHollandAmberAlert.jpg
Texas Department of Public Safety
Clifford Holland

Holland, who has represented himself for most of the case, left the house sometime in 2010. As of 2013 he was living under an alias at the Ritz-Carlton, according to the University Park police officers who tracked him there after he allegedly snatched his two kids from his ex-wife's home while she was out jogging.

That left Holland and Wolf ostensibly fighting over a missed $6,000 rent payment from August 2009. But Benson, in her pique over Wolf's continued attempts to evict Holland as the case stalled and an appeals court that has repeatedly overturned her decisions in the case, has raised the stakes immensely.

Benson's first run-in with the appellate court in the case came in January 2010. Wolf, tired of waiting for the trial to resume, had gone back and won an additional eviction judgment for rent due the previous month. Benson accused Wolf of trying to "usurp the authority of this court" and tried to strike down the JP's ruling, but the Fifth Court of Appeals ruled that she didn't have the authority. She tried to strike down a subsequent JP ruling, but the Fifth Court again intervened. Benson wrote testily in a court filing that the appellate court's decision was "manifestly unjust" and accused Wolf of withholding evidence in his appeal. She also signed an order preventing Wolf from selling the Caruth Boulevard house, which was then on the market through Ebby Halliday for $1.4 million.

By then, Wolf had decided that Benson was "aligned with Clifford Holland" and "biased and/or prejudiced against creditors" and filed two motions to have her recused. She ignored both, and the case went to trial on September 20. She ruled in Holland's favor, as Wolf had predicted, but did Holland one better and ordered Wolf to pay him nearly $30,765.62 in attorney's fees, even though Holland had represented himself for most of the case and despite the fact that the attorney who briefly represented him had asked to be removed from the case citing unpaid legal fees, and $68,400 for the "reasonable value of Holland's time."

The Fifth Court again stepped in and, in 2013, declared the trial void. It waded into the case for a fourth time this week to invalidate another Benson ruling, again deciding that she'd interfered with JP cases outside of her authority by preventing their contempt orders from being carried out. Holland had been arrested on one at a hearing in Benson's court the month before. Wolf says he would have had Holland arrested elsewhere, but his court dates were the only time he could be found.

The case continues to drag on, but this time the Fifth Court of Appeals might have had enough. Along with its most recent opinion, the appellate court sent Dallas County's presiding civil judge a note wondering "whether this case should be transferred from County Court at Law No. 1 to another court to provide for the efficient administration of justice."

A more satisfactory option might be removing Benson herself from County Court at Law No. 1. Russell Roden, the Republican she replaced in 2006, is seeking to regain his seat. He left office with a 91 percent approval rating from the Dallas Bar.

Send your story tips to the author, Eric Nicholson.


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56 comments
rufuslevin
rufuslevin

the woman is too stupid to pour piss out of a boot.

moore583
moore583

The only thing worse than a bureaucrat with a little bit of authority is a bureaucrat with a lot of authority. This thing we have to call a judge can do a lot of damage. The trial lawyers love her. They love stupid judges and stupid jurors. She is pathetic and apparently could give a rats about how she's perceived in the legal community or beyond.

noblefurrtexas
noblefurrtexas topcommenter

When the Dallas GOP lost to Democrats because a number of Republicans didn't vote that year, Democrats elected an incompetent DA, an incompetent Sheriff,and several judges whose judgements have received horrible reviews by attorneys. 

But, D'metria Benson takes the cake, and has brought disgrace and disdain on the judiciary - not to mention herself and many people appearing in her "court". 



WatchingSouthDetroit
WatchingSouthDetroit

This is the danger of voting by party line - judges especially are unknown.  Incompetent crap like this and the DA get into office.

WilliamWilson
WilliamWilson

Former Judge Roden was no great public servant.  After he was beaten in 2006, he basically skipped out of work for a couple of months because he was cared more about being a sore loser than doing this job.  This latest story is just a hack job a few days before the election, and anyone who watches the pro-Roden videos will see immediately that they are the product of Tea Party nut cases and are an embarrassment to Roden's campaign.

WilliamWilson
WilliamWilson

Former Judge Roden was no great public servant.  After he was beaten in 2006, he basically skipped out of work for a couple of months because he was cared more about being a sore loser than doing this job.  This latest story is just a hack job a few days before the election, and anyone who watches the pro-Roden videos will see immediately that they are the product of Tea Party nut cases and are an embarrassment to Roden's campaign.

fordamist
fordamist

With 70+ Judges in Dallas County,  like the rest of the world,  some percentage are crazy as an outhouse rat.

I can name a half dozen who are close to being as bad as D'Metria.  (I won't,  ask any lawyer who goes to the Courthouses for their list.)

Nutty Judges come in all parties.   Some of the Repubs were nuttier than D'Metria.  My favorite was known as Judge Kook,  was given to crying during the final argument of Plaintiff's lawyers 'cause he hated the insurance company lawyer.  Juries usually identify with the Judge,  his crying sent a huge message to them.




roscoejette
roscoejette

Any doubters should sit through a few hours in her court.  I don't think she evicts anybody, including criminals with multiple police calls to properties who don't pay their rent (not mine thank goodness).

My tenant refused to pay and filed as a pauper (so how can he afford rent at all, even if it's $350 under market?).  So he paid rent to the county while the eviction worked its way through the system. She would not evict him so I'm stuck for now.  I'm supposed to be able to collect rent paid to her court instead of me, but good luck with that. She practically threw me out of her court room and told me to get an attorney - which would cost as much as the rent!  The clerks look at me like I'm crazy to try to collect.

lzippitydoo
lzippitydoo

We have some jokers like this as an elected judge. Need to just vote them out unless they are on the same ticket as Craig Watkins, Clay Jenkins or John Wiley. Then it is the numbskull voters who have been snookered again!

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

One more example of why electing Judges is a very, very bad idea.

Texas needs to end this, Judges should be appointed.

James080
James080

She is exactly the type of attorney and judge Dallas' Democrat majority wants running the courts, running the district attorney's office, and running the commissioner's court.

bipartisan
bipartisan

@moore583 Look at the Dallas Bar Association's judicial poll before you claim "the trial lawyers love her.

riconnel8
riconnel8

@noblefurrtexas  I think the "affluenza" elected Tea Party Judge Jean Boyd pretty much takes the cake.  Thank God she's retiring.  Benson isn't any good either but at least she doesn't have blood on her hands.

markzero
markzero

@WatchingSouthDetroit Have to agree that voting a straight party ticket is bad. Voters have an obligation to either do research on each candidate in a particular race, or skip voting in that race.

noblefurrtexas
noblefurrtexas topcommenter

@WilliamWilson The Tea Party doesn't do ads.  Ad agencies and political consultants do that. 


If you're somehow trying to defend D'metria Benson, you're either on a fool's errand or have no clue why she gets such horrible ratings as a jurist.


And, if you're judging Judge Roden based on the last two post-election months of his career, then you're in more serious trouble that I thought. 


I'm told Roden had a great deal of vacation time coming to him, and decided to take much of it after his defeat as a result of one-party voting. But, in any event, he also needed to look for a job since his income would come to a screeching halt in January.


Are you suggested the Democratic judges defeated by Republicans in the 80s didn't do the same thing? 

markzero
markzero

@WilliamWilson if you have specific information about the other candidate's fitness (or lack thereof) for the job, great, post it and enlighten us. But in the meantime: is there anything in this article that isn't true?

TXD0321
TXD0321

@TXD0321 You might ask how much money was expended in these efforts?  Expenditure under specific and stated amounts depending on whether it is an election year or not are not required to have "Paid for by" attribution.


Racist?  Don't see it.  Racist against Red Necks!  And I would encourage all red necks to complain.


"Rumor has it ...." that's about as definitive as the rest of your post.


You need to get up to date on precisely what amount of money can be spent without attribution.

oldbrit
oldbrit

@TXD0321  All of the stuff you mention is not attributed. In Texas, it is illegal for anyone to run ads against a candidate without "Paid for by" attribution.


Please do look at the stuff. It's racist. Rumor has it that Roden refused to state that he was not behind these attacks.



bvckvs2
bvckvs2

@roscoejette 

I had a similar problem, and looked to the UCC for answers. When I realized that a landlord can just walk into the rental property and take personal property - without even having to go to court - the problem resolved itself.


Guesty
Guesty

@mavdog I don't think people understand what a terrible dynamic is at play when judges are elected.  It isn't the usual party politics.  


The only pool of qualified challengers are the people who have to appear in these courts and must ask the incumbent judges to do something on behalf of their clients.  Add in the fact that the only groups who really pay attention and know what is going on at the courts make their livelihood trying to get the incumbent judges to decide cases in their favor, and you have a trulycombustible situation.  True or not, the perception is that backing a challenger can really hurt your clients and being a primary challenger can end your career.  Unless you have a political machine backing a primary challenge who has a ready source of income to sustain her if she fails (e.g. the assistant DAs), the attorney who sticks her neck out in a primary to challenge an incumbent can expect to have her career take a nose dive if she comes up short.    

noblefurrtexas
noblefurrtexas topcommenter

@mavdog While I used to think electing judges was a good idea, despite the crazy arrangements for taking contributions from those who practice in their courts, I've become a fan of the Missouri plan where judges are appointed, but can easily be recalled by the voters.  (That's the short version.)


When Republicans took over Dallas County, several excellent judges lost their jobs - despite long and distinguished service on the bench.  The same thing happened when Democrats took over the county.


The only way to stop this is have the Governor appoint judges, and then have them stand for re-election every few years.

becoolerifyoudid
becoolerifyoudid

@mavdog  I think with this election most of the judges are de facto appointed by the Dallas County Democrats.  Not a lot of contested elections.


But I agree with you, we can have appointed judges for federal we can have appointments for state judges as well.  I'm more concerned about court of appeals and supreme court elections than district and county courts.

noblefurrtexas
noblefurrtexas topcommenter

@James080 Don't forget the former baggage inspector who became Sheriff.

Myrna.Minkoff-Katz
Myrna.Minkoff-Katz topcommenter

@James080 Perhaps if the Republicans didn't hand over their party to right-wing extremists more people would be willing to consider voting for Republican judges.

noblefurrtexas
noblefurrtexas topcommenter

@bipartisan She may be one of the most unloved humans on the planet.  I ran into a fellow judge last night at a party, and he made no bones about the fact that she is an embarrassment to the judiciary as well as the Dallas Bar.

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@Myrna.Minkoff-Katz 

an OOPS would appoint, and the nominee would go thru a confirmation process.

it works, and there is every reason to believe the process of appointing/confirming put much more qualified people in place than elections do.

becoolerifyoudid
becoolerifyoudid

@Myrna.Minkoff-Katz @James080  Actually, a fair amount of the judges just join whichever party is in power.  That way they can get into office on the lever pull of straight ticket voters. 


I have also heard many Republican attorneys that initially grumbled when the Democrats swept into power praise some the Democrat judges.  There are some exceptions but overall there are some fair and learned judges in this county.  Take a look at the ballot.  You will note that there are not a lot of contested elections for judges.  There is a reason Benson and Montgomery have opponents. 

ghkyluhhje
ghkyluhhje

@becoolerifyoudid @Myrna.Minkoff-Katz @James080  To be fair, at the municipal/county level you're probably less likely to get judges who will be leveraging their positions for political party gains, mostly because at that level, you're dealing with pretty unremarkable stuff, like evictions, traffic citations, and the occasional wedding. It's pretty much "same boring shit, different fucking day", only with a better paycheck than a lot of routine jobs.

TXD0321
TXD0321

@ghkyluhhje @becoolerifyoudid @Myrna.Minkoff-Katz @James080


County Court at Law in Dallas County, Texas, has concurrent jurisdiction with the District Courts. This is a very important position for this county.  



There are no traffic citations.  There are no criminal cases here.  This is a County Court at Law ... would very much like to clear up that misconception.

dc005
dc005

@ghkyluhhje @becoolerifyoudid @Myrna.Minkoff-Katz @James080 

You have no idea what you're mumbling about.

County and District Judges in Dallas have equal jurisdiction,  they both try cases asking for tens of millions.  

I've never known a trial judge who didn't want to get on the Court of Appeals,  the Supremes,  or the Crims (the highest criminal appeals court is the Court of Criminal Appeals)

Municipal Court Judges,  appointed and subject to being canned by the Council,  always want to move to the Big Courthouse,  the gig is much more secure.  All they have to do is get appointed or elected ... politics.


JP Courts,  if they're lawyers,   they want to move up to the Big Courthouse.  Most aren't,  but act even more Noble than the Lord Chief Justice.




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