Sonoma County Superior Court | |
---|---|
39°31′13″N 122°12′01″W / 39.52018°N 122.20027°W | |
Established | 1891 |
Jurisdiction | Sonoma County, California |
Location | Santa Rosa |
Coordinates | 39°31′13″N 122°12′01″W / 39.52018°N 122.20027°W |
Appeals to | California Court of Appeal for the First District |
Website | sonoma |
Presiding Judge | |
Currently | Hon. Shelly Averill[1] |
Assistant Presiding Judge | |
Currently | Hon. Robert LaForge[1] |
Court Executive Officer | |
Currently | Arlene D. Junior[1] |
The Superior Court of California, County of Sonoma, also known as the Sonoma County Superior Court or Sonoma Superior Court, is the California superior court with jurisdiction over Sonoma County.
Sonoma County was one of the original counties formed in 1850 after California became a state.
The county seat was originally in the city of Sonoma; the first transaction regarding a courthouse building in the Court of Sessions was on March 18, 1850, to settle the rent for the building, owned by Judge H. A. Green. Later, it was decided to purchase the building, which was occupied by the court until it left Sonoma for the new county seat of Santa Rosa, following a vote in 1854.[2]: 18–19 The Sonoma courthouse was not well loved; the local Sonoma Bulletin warned in February 1854 "our worthy officers of the law ... run the risk of being crushed beneath a mass of mud and shingles, for we really believe it will cave in the next heavy rain" and a grand jury report called it "an old dilapidated adobe of small dimensions, in part roofless and unfit for a cattle shed".[2]: 20
Local business owners from Santa Rosa met with the county board of supervisors and promised to have a courthouse ready by November 3, 1854, which was the final condition to remove the county seat to Santa Rosa.[2]: 22–23 The Bulletin editorialized "We are only sorry they did not take the Court-house along—not because it would be an ornament to Santa Rosa, but because its removal would have embellished our plan. Alas! old casa de adobe".[2]: 24 The Court of Sessions, presided over by Judge Frank W. Shattuck, held its first meeting in Santa Rosa on October 2, 1854, at the old Masonic Hall. The first courthouse in Santa Rosa was completed in December 1854, at the corner of Fourth and Mendocino; at about the same time, land was donated for another courthouse and jail.[2]: 25–26 The more permanent courthouse was built near the current Exchange Bank in downtown Santa Rosa.[3]
Although the new courthouse and jail was ready on December 28, 1855, the county board of supervisors refused to accept it, and the contractor finally settled on February 8, 1856, accepting a payment of $10,400. The 1855 courthouse was expanded by adding a second story from 1859 to 1860, and again, the board disputed the contractor's invoice; although the original cost was $15,000, the final bill was $40,891.23 including "charges extra"; the final cost of the expansion was US$29,601.30 (equivalent to $1,004,000 in 2023).[2]: 27–28
After assuming his seat on the county board of supervisors in January 1883, T.J. Proctor of Santa Rosa immediately moved to construct a new courthouse in Santa Rosa; Petaluma countered a month later, proposing to donate Hill Plaza Park (now Penry Park) and $100,000 for construction of a new courthouse, provided the county seat be moved there instead.[4]: 161 The tension between Santa Rosa and Petaluma grew to a point where Petalumans began circulating petitions to secede and form a new county.[5]
In March, the mayor of Santa Rosa agreed to surrender the title for the land on which the new courthouse would be built, and with Petaluma failing to send a representative by April to discuss their proposal, plans proceeded for the new courthouse in Santa Rosa. The new courthouse was designed by Curtis & Bennett, and the construction contract was let for $80,000 to Carle & Crowley of Sacramento on September 2, 1883, with the condition that it be completed by January 1, 1885.[4]: 161–163 The cornerstone for the new courthouse was laid on May 7, 1884, made of granite quarried from Rocklin; the ceremony was presided over by General Mariano G. Vallejo, considered to be the first person who settled in Sonoma County.[4]: 140–141
The courthouse, completed in 1885, measured 107 by 115 ft (33 by 35 m) in area, approximating a Greek cross; the four pediments were topped with statues of the Goddess of Justice, and a dome in the center, topped with a statue of Minerva.[4]: 140–141 It was formally accepted on March 6, 1885, and proceedings began on April 3. The architects, Albert A. Bennett and John M. Curtis, would have a falling out over their share of the contract and dissolved their partnership shortly after it was completed; later county courthouses in Eureka (Curtis, 1889) and Auburn (Curtis, 1897) closely resembled their 1885 design for Sonoma County.[6]
After the 1885 courthouse was destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, a replacement was completed in 1910, designed by J.W. Dolliver.[7] Following an earthquake in 1957, an examination of what was initially thought to be superficial damage to the building's fascia led to an estimate of $425,000 in needed repairs. The terra cotta cladding was stripped in 1958, and a consultant for the city recommended abandoning and selling the building.[8] The 1910 replacement was demolished in 1966 after being declared seismically unsafe; the site was rededicated as "Old Courthouse Square" in 1967.[9] The 1910 building, which had included a significant amount of reinforcing steel, was so sturdy the contractor hired to demolish it was unable to complete the razing within the 75-day window allotted.[8]
Court operations moved to a new county center. The Sonoma County Hall of Justice was built between 1963 and 1965 to a design by J. Clarence Felciano & Associates.[10]
For much of its history, the judiciary of Sonoma County was divided into two primary court systems- the Municipal Court and the Superior Court. The two courts would merge and be reorganized as a single Superior Court in 1996. Two years later, with the passage of Proposition 220 in 1998, the rest of California's counties who had not already merged their court systems would do the same.
After years of deterioration and maintenance concerns, it was announced that a new courthouse would be constructed adjacent to the current hall of justice. Construction on the project began in late 2021 and is expected to be completed in 2023.
The facilities for the Sonoma County Superior Court are all in the city of Santa Rosa. Three venues handle all adult cases, led by the Hall of Justice in the County Administration Center; juvenile cases are held separately at the Juvenile Justice Center.
Courtroom | Judge | Year Joined Court | Law School |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Troye Shaffer | 2021 | UC Hastings |
2 | Vacant | N/A | N/A |
3 | Mark Urioste | 2018 | Lewis & Clark |
4 | Karlene Navarro | 2021 | University of San Francisco |
5 | Dana B. Simonds | 2007 | University of the Pacific |
6 | Laura Passaglia | 2021 | University of San Francisco |
7 | Vacant | N/A | N/A |
8 | Vacant | N/A | N/A |
9 | Robert M. LaForge | 2010 | Western State College of Law |
10 | Brad DeMeo | 2010 | Santa Clara University |
11 | Virginia G. Marcoida | 2008 | Santa Clara University |
12 | Vacant | N/A | N/A |
13 | Christopher Honigsberg | 2018 | University of San Francisco |
14 | Anthony Wheeldin | 2011 | UCLA |
15 | Shelly Averill | 2010 | Empire College |
16 | Patrick M. Broderick | 2010 | University of the Pacific |
17 | Arthur A. Wick | 2006 | Northrop University |
18 | Jennifer V. Dollard | 2017 | Southwestern |
19 | Gary Nadler | 2002 | University of San Francisco |
20 | Vacant | N/A | N/A |
21 | Peter Ottenweller | 2010 | UC Hastings |
22 | James G. Bertoli | 2000 | University of San Francisco |
23 | Lawrence Ornell | 2013 | Empire College |
24 | Kenneth J. Gnoss | 2005 | Western State College of Law |
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