Celebrity Justice
Litigant to Judge Mathis -- I Ain't No Hillbilly, Dang It!

Judge MathisA litigant who appeared on the "Judge Mathis" television court show has sued Greg Mathis, Warner Bros and Telepictures (which co-owns TMZ), claiming she was done in by the show and essentially called a hick.

Melody Burnham says the show contacted her over a lawsuit she had filed against a tenant. Burnham, a resident of San Diego, alleges producers never explained that Mathis was not a sitting judge in a real court. By the way, the show flew Burnham and a friend to Chicago for the taping, put her up in a hotel and paid for her meals. -- not generally something the Cook County Circuit Courts do. And it's unclear why she thought a "real" court in Chicago would hear a San Diego landlord/tenant case.

And it gets better!

Burnham goes on to allege that when she actually appeared before Mathis and the cameras (and the crew and the studio audience), she was still in the dark that it was not a real court. She says she didn't figure that out for more than a year. Ding dang!

So Burnham's suit against Mathis, filed in San Diego County Superior Court, claims she was held hostage in a dressing room for six hours without food. She also claims, among many other things, she didn't know she was going to be countersued until minutes before the trial.

But the unkindest cut of all -- Mathis "....ridiculed her for the pictures showing her washing machine outside, calling her a 'hillbilly.'"

According to the suit, Mathis dismissed the case, awarded damages to neither party, and stated, "I'm sending you hillbillies back to the hills.

The suit seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

UPDATE: As TMZ first reported, San Diego resident Melody Burnham sued TV's Judge Greg Mathis and his show's production companies, claiming she didn't know Mathis was not a real judge in a real court. She also says Mathis called her a "hillbilly" on the show.

A spokesperson for Telepictures Productions, the company that produces "Judge Mathis," tells TMZ: "We absolutely believe this case has absolutely no merit. Greg Mathis is a respected lawyer and former judge. The show, currently in its ninth season, follows strict procedures for case selection, releases and binding awards. All participants sign releases before appearing on the program and any allegations that this was not a real case are unfounded and fabricated. Judge Mathis' track record for advocacy and fairness to all speaks for itself."

TMZ is a joint venture between Telepictures and AOL


Reader Comments

(Page 7 of 7) Previous 15 Comments

91. This is a letter I sent to the Judge Mathis Show before I found out he wasn't actually a sitting judge in a real court :

Judge Mathis:

Let me start by saying that I am in no way demeaning your path. I think it’s great that you were able to turn your life around and become the man that you are today. With that being said, I believe that your condescending and inconsistent approach to handling the litigants in your courtroom is outrageous.

I know that this letter is one of many, and you tend to disregard the comments of your viewers (mentioning ‘complainers’ and ‘whiners’ often in your courtroom), but I really feel you need to start listening before you jump down the throats of people who honestly have a case. And even when they don’t, tell them that and let it go. You want to crack a joke, make the audience laugh, give your ratings a boost, then fine – but don’t do it at the expense of others.

I know you have a LAW DEGREE and that makes you some sort of authority on right and wrong, but sometimes I believe that your moral compass points in the wrong direction. You tend to ‘talk down’ to people often and make them feel insignificant and unintelligent, but you only come off as being a biased and unfair human being who sits on a throne with the most pompous attitude. I know it’s supposed to be great TV, but is that what you signed up for when you took those law courses? Did you say to your self that you were going to become a lawyer, then a judge and make sure you humiliate others once you’ve achieved your goal? Did you tell yourself it was okay to disgrace and debase others because someone is handing you a paycheck and a ratings sheet? What is going on? I’m a teacher, in the inner city, teaching chemistry and physics to kids who hate the idea of coming to school and some with no goals or home training (as my mom called it). Yes, I get frustrated. Yes, I get overloaded sometimes. Yes, I have 40 kids in one class when I only have room for 25. But do I make them feel like they are idiots? NO. And even if they are, no amount of teasing and chiding would change the fact that he or she is an idiot. Correct? And please don’t tell me that the age makes a difference and if you were addressing a teenager it would be a different situation, because the truth is, they are all human beings. They all should be respected. They should all be looked at equally and not degraded on national TV.

If you need an example, which I’m sure you do – seeing how you probably don’t feel you’ve done anything of the sorts – I just finished watching the episode that aired today, October 9, 2007. Among other smart comments from the JUDGE (the person who should be the non-bias party) fussed at the young man for handing you the before and after pictures of his bike. WHAT? You can’t tell the difference? I’m no judge, but I know that if someone tells me his bike was in pristine condition before and was jacked up after a fall, I would then look at the pictures and say to myself…..’Self…this must be the AFTER pictures because he wouldn’t give me BEFORE pictures with DENTS’. Novel idea isn’t JUDGE? I must be smart to figure that one out YOUR HONOR.

I try not to watch your show (I stopped because of the reasons mentioned in this letter) because it upsets me a lot, but I happened to catch it because, as a middle school teacher, a wife, and a mother of two children, I get tired and just want to lay on the couch and not move after making my pickups, running a carpool, fixing dinner, giving baths, doing homework, and reading books before the kids get to bed. So definitely don’t look at this as a ‘glass half full’ scenario. I know how ‘hams’ think (that’s another word my momma used, if you don’t know what it means, ask your producers who are getting paid off of you). You guys say ‘Well as long as you are watching and hating on me, I’m cool, cause you’re boosting my ratings…keep on watching and writing letters…you’re just putting money in my pocket’. Let’s get this straight. I do not watch your show, don’t want to ‘catch it’ anymore, and don’t want friends and family to watch it.

My main point is to make sure that you understand that you are too quick to pick sides as a judge in a real courtroom with real situations and that it’s not just me that feels this way. A lot of people talk about this issue with you and how you are not keeping it real. I’m not saying that you are a ‘sellout’ like others are saying, because it wouldn’t matter to me if you were white or black.

Although I know you will regardless, have a great life.

Posted at 10:32AM on Oct 28th 2007 by T. McKenzie

Previous 15 Comments