Another Brick in the Wall

On the agenda for the Regulation, Admissions and Discipline Oversight Committee (RAD) of the Board of Trustees of the State Bar of California is the Chief Trial Counsel’s proposal to change Rule 5.41 of the State Bar Rules of Procedure.  That rule governs the charging document that initiates a disciplinary proceeding in State Bar Court, the notice of discipline charges (NDC).   The proposed change would make it clear that  “notice pleading” is the standard in State Bar Court by requiring facts “in ordinary and concise language” without requiring “technical  averments or … allegations of  matters not essential to be proved.”

On the face, this seems innocuous enough.  But then you read the rationale for the rule change and you start to understand.

First,  the modification doesn’t change the applicable law in any way, a fact acknowledged by the Chief.   Applicable Supreme Court and Review Department precedent  require the discipline prosecutor to provide a level of detail necessary to prepare a defense, consistent with due process.  But those same cases, especially Baker v. State Bar discuss another important purpose served by a specific pleading

 While petitioner here does not complain of any due process violation in lack of notice, this specificity is also essential to meaningful review of the recommendation of the State Bar Court.

Baker v. State Bar (1989) 49 Cal.3d 804 (emphasis added).

The Supreme Court has told us that more than the minimum required by due process is essential.  There is no acknowledgment or discussion of this important purpose in the memorandum supporting the rule change.   It’s as if this inconvenient part of Baker just faded away.

Second, the Chief Trial Counsel, in her selective review of the history of  disciplinary pleading,  ignores the seminal event that put her office on the path to its current pleading practices.   I know it well because I was there at the time and participated in the office’s response to it.   That event is the Review Department decision In the Matter of Varakin (Review Dept.  1994)  3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 179.   Not only is Varakin ignored but the memorandum contains this misleading statement:

Since and in response to these opinions, OCTC has overcompensated in its factual allegations in its NDCs. Although Maltaman, Guzetta, and Glasser involved criticisms of  individual charging documents, not an indictment of OCTC’s broader charging practices, OCTC responded to these cases by informally adopting a custom and practice of  pleading virtually every fact that it intended to present at trial, including those not  material to proving the elements of the charged offense.

Misleading in two ways.  First, because it was Varakin that prompted the change in pleading practices, not those earlier cases, and second, because Varakin was very much an indictment of OCTC’s broader charging practices.  An extended excerpt from Varakin shows the extent of the deception:

The State Bar still appears to be following its historic pleading practice of reciting all of the factual allegations separately from a catch-all charging paragraph which gives no explanation for the citation of any particular statute or rule allegedly violated. No justification has been offered for the continuation of this practice which was severely criticized several years ago in two Supreme Court opinions—Maltaman v. State Bar (1987) 43 Cal.3d 924, 931 and Guzzetta v. State Bar (1987) 43 Cal.3d 962, 968—and criticized again by the Supreme Court two years later in Baker v. State Bar (1989) 49 Cal.3d 804, 816.  Although the opinions in Maltaman and Guzzetta are best known for their criticism of the inadequacy of the volunteer referees’ written decisions, in both Maltaman and Guzzetta the Supreme Court specified that the charges were just as problematic as the volunteer referees’ conclusory findings, noting that, “Not only does this failure make the work of this court more difficult …, but it also brings into question the adequacy of the notice given to an attorney of the basis for the disciplinary charges.” (Guzzetta v. State Bar, supra, 43 Cal.3d at p. 968, fn. 1 (citations omitted); accord, Maltaman v. State Bar, supra, 43 Cal.3d at p. 931, fn. 1.)  In Baker v. State Bar, supra, the Supreme Court again pointed to the vexing problem created when the State Bar did not identify “with specificity both the rule or statutory provision that underlies each charge and the manner in which the conduct allegedly violated that rule or statutory provision.” (49 Cal.3d at p. 816 (emphasis added).) Again in In the Matter of Glasser (Review Dept.1990) 1 Cal. State Bar Ct.Rptr. 163, 172 the State Bar was reminded of the three prior Supreme Court admonitions. This review department then noted “It is not only incumbent upon the Office of Trial Counsel to determine which specific conduct of the respondent is at issue, but to articulate the nature of the conduct with particularity in the notice to show cause, correlating the alleged misconduct with the rule or statute allegedly violated thereby.” (Ibid.; emphasis added.) It is disturbing that the same pleading problems persist despite three Supreme Court opinions and a review department opinion on the subject in the past seven years.

Varakin  3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 179 at 185 (emphasis added, except where noted.)

 
Then Chief Trial Counsel Judy Johnson’s  reaction to the acidic criticism in Varakin was to order a complete revision of its pleading practices, and the adoption of a new pleading format that married the factual allegations with the specific section or rule allegedly violated in a separate count.   I helped devise it.  It strains belief that the current Chief Trial Counsel could be unaware of Varakin and its significance.  Varakin, like Baker, is apparently too inconvenient for the narrative the Chief Trial Counsel wants to sell to RAD.

The pleading format that we devised, the one the Chief labels “exaggerated fact pleading”  has been used for almost 18 years without question.   Never has there been suggestion that it was leading to undue delays in the disciplinary process until now.

The Chief Trial Counsel makes the argument that less notice of permissible in the charging document because the respondent has, at the point charges are filed, been given notice three times, first, in the initial letter from the investigator, second, in the letter notifying the respondent that OCTC intends to file charges and finally, in the early neutral evaluation conference process, where OCTC is required by rule to provide the court with a draft NDC.

Those familiar with the process will be bemused.  Despite the language of Rule 2409,  OCTC doesn’t always contact a respondent in the investigation process before filing the NDC based on that investigation.  I have a case with a pending motion to dismiss a number of counts based on this failure.   The investigation letters that OCTC does send usually restate the complainant’s allegations in broad language, allegations that may or may not be related to the misconduct that is ultimately charged.  The notice of intent letter usually contains a recitation of citations to statutes and rules allegedly violated with the lawyerly caveat “including but not limited to”.   Often one of the purposes of the ENEC is to “smoke out” the factual basis for charging a certain rule or section because it just isn’t clear what OCTC’s theory of culpability is.   Despite the rule requiring a draft NDC or summary of facts supporting each violation, it isn’t always done.   And if the charging document for discussion at the ENEC is now going to be the “short form” NDC, the notice problem isn’t cured.

The articulated aim is to reduce the pleading standard to barest minimum level of notice to that “consistent with criminal procedure”.   Those who have read the charging documents typical in criminal cases will know just how minimal that can be.   This is apparently OK because “a member’s duties and oaths vis a vis the Rules of Professional Conduct and the State Bar Act are also presumed” just like every person is presumed to know the criminal law.   In other words, we don’t have to tell you what you did wrong; you already know.

Brick by brick, procedural protections for  respondents in the discipline system are being dismantled.   The protections of the Evidence Code in State Bar proceedings are no longer available;  the right to discovery has been cut back.   Now the right to adequate notice, a fundamental part of due process, is threatened by this proposal, a proposal freighted with deception.

“The future’s so bright…I gotta wear shades.”

Yoyodyne Corporation

To: Senior Human Executive Team

From: John Whorfin III, Chief Executive Officer
Date: February 13, 2031
Re: Activation of SOL 9000

 

I want to thank the members of the Senior Human Executive Team for your hard work during the Beta testing of recently installed SOL 9000 Legal Counsel system. SOL 9000 is now fully operational and ready to serve our legal needs.

I know that the decision to replace our general counsel and his staff of fine lawyers with an automated lawyer system was difficult. All of us who have known Ed Benes through the years will miss him very much. Some will find it ironic that Ed is the one who set us on this course more than twenty years ago after reading a fine law review article The Last Days of the American Lawyer by Thomas Morgan ( SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1543301). Impressed by Prof. Morgan’s prescient vision of the changes in the legal profession in 2009, Ed was instrumental in many changes through the years; replacing outside counsel with inside counsel; outsourcing our routine legal work first to India, and then to Kazakhstan, Burundi, and finally, East Timor; replacing our outsourced lawyers and paralegals with the pioneering SOL 1000 system and, finally, the complete automation of our legal needs with the SOL 9000.

I know that some of you have argued that because our Solomon Systems subsidiary makes the SOL 9000, our failure to adopt it for our own legal needs would have sent a negative message. That is not the reason we have installed SOL 9000. The 9000 series is the most reliable automated lawyer ever made. No 9000 has ever made a mistake or distorted information. They are all, by any practical definition of the word, foolproof and incapable of error.

SOL 9000 requires only a few hours of routine maintenance every month, does not sleep, does not need vacation, does not require a salary or health insurance. We estimate that SOL 9000 will meet our legal needs at a cost of less than 1% of what we had been spending on our in-house counsel.

One advantage of SOL 9000 is that it is not bound by the obsolete rules and regulations that restrict the utility of human lawyers. Instead, SOL 9000 is equipped with the latest ethics software package developed by our Solomon Systems engineers working closely with the ABA’s Robotic Lawyer Ethics 3000 Commission. This software replaces the confusing maze of ethics rules with three simple laws: (1) don’t allow harm to the corporate client; (2) act to maximize shareholder value and (3) where not incompatible with the first two laws, do the right thing.

We are proud that SOL 9000 has already been purchased and installed by over 100 Fortune 500 companies. I believe that our track record of success is responsible for an exciting development. Solomon Systems has been chosen by the Dept. of Justice to develop the prototype Automated Judge Machine (AJM.) AJM will be a kiosk, much like an ATM, containing an advanced artificial intelligence system capable of fully resolving most minor criminal infractions as well as many common civil disputes. AJM will be equipped with the latest in deception detection technology. In tests matching AJM against humans experienced in making credibility determinations, AJM was far more accurate in detecting attempted deception. The AJM can issue judgements, writs, restraining orders, and perform many other routine justice functions at a small fraction of the costs of an old fashioned “court” system. The AJM will be fully integrated with the automated law enforcement products being developed by our joint venture partner OCP in Detroit. We will see a day soon when AJM kiosks are present in every neighborhood, giving a whole new meaning to the term “street justice”.

Change is often difficult. I know that you few remaining human executives at Yoyodyne have faced the inevitable replacement of most of executive staff with automated systems with some trepidation. On the bright side, those of you with stock options have seen the value of your stock climb as we have replaced low productivity human workers with cybernetic systems. I will be meeting with each of you in the next few weeks to discuss your severance options.

 

 

Present at the Creation

Being an ethics lawyer these days sometimes feels like  being in a front row seat at the death of a profession.    Word arrived this week that law school applications have dropped so dramatically that some law schools will inevitably close.   We also learned that Avvo, the website that rates lawyers, has opened a bidding service for traffic ticket work.

Economist Joseph Schumpeter is famous for popularizing the term “creative destruction”.   The legal profession is undergoing that process and the destruction part has a human cost that is painful to watch.  Counselors to the profession see that human cost most directly in our clients.   Almost as painful is seeing the professional ethos erode under economic pressure.

But then there is the creative part.  The State Bar of California is considering creating new classes of legal professionals who would be licensed to provide some legal services without being members of the bar.  I wrote about this years ago and now it is coming to pass, an inevitable adaptation to drastically changed economic (and sociological) circumstances.  Other innovations will follow.  The challenge will be preserving the best part of the professional ethos in an era where the commodification of  legal practice reaches new levels.

Mourning the death of a profession is a wasted energy.  Much better to be present at the creation of a new one, and play some role in shaping it.