Eight members of the State Commission
on Judicial Performance recommend that Judge Arthur P. Roy BE
RETAINED. Two members of the Commission have no opinion on
retention, because they did not receive adequate information.
Judge Roy was appointed to the Colorado Court of Appeals on January
6, 1994, and sworn in on March 4, 1994. A Louisiana native, raised
in Iowa, Judge Roy graduated from Iowa State University in 1963
and, after serving in the United States Army, received his law degree
from the University of Colorado in 1969. Thereafter, until his appointment
to the bench, Judge Roy was a government attorney with the State
Board of Agriculture, the Fort Collins City Attorney's Office, and
the Office of the District Attorney for the Nineteenth Judicial
District, and for 20 years, was in a general private law practice,
primarily in Greeley, Colorado. Over the years he has served as
officer and director of several charitable, civic, and professional
organizations, and presently serves on the Court of Appeals' Electronic
Records Committee, Building Facilities Committee, Technology Committee,
and on a court committee seeking methods to increase the court's
efficiency in issuing opinions.
Judge Roy is a well-respected member of the bench. He prides himself
on his hard work ethic, his integrity, and the courtesy he shows
to colleagues, counsel, and court staff. These qualities are reflected
in the survey responses by attorneys and judges. Ninety-nine percent
of the judges recommended that he be retained in office, while 81%
of the attorneys favored his retention.
The survey responses also indicate that Judge Roy could be more
timely in issuing opinions, and that his written opinions could
be clearer and include more legal support. The timeliness issue
could be attributed, in part, to the fact that Judge Roy authors
more concurring and dissenting opinions than other judges on the
court, which requires additional time. |