Pyrrhic Victories: Exoneration in State Bar Court

Complete exoneration of all disciplinary charges in State Bar Court used to be a rare thing.  While it still isn’t common, the anecdotal evidence is that it is becoming more common.  The person who can really tell us, the Chief Trial Counsel, doesn’t publish those statistics.

The most compelling evidence is brace of non-published opinions from the Review Department, In the Matter of Robinson (filed September 19, 2013) and In the Matter of Johnson (filed October 11, 2013.)  In both these cases, the Review Department found no culpability.

Robinson presents a compelling picture of prosecutorial over-reach.  The sole issue on appeal was whether Mr. Robinson was culpable of failing to co-operate in the discipline investigation against him; the Office of Chief Trial Counsel (OCTC) chose not to appeal the dismissal of the other three charges ((1) failing to perform competently, Rule Prof. conduct 3-110(A); (2) failing to return unearned fees, Rule Prof. Conduct 3-700(D) and (3) failure to communicate, Bus. & Prof. Code section 6068(m).)  The hearing judge also found Mr. Robinson not culpable of the failure to cooperate charge, because Robinson, had, in fact, cooperated.  He just did not do as fast as the State Bar wanted.

The whole timeline of the Robinson prosecution is worth examining.  OCTC originally wrote to him on February 6, 2012; Robinson spoke to her at the end of February but did not respond in writing.  The investigator wrote to him again on March 6, asking for response by March 26, 2012.  When no response was received, the discipline prosecutor apparently gave Mr. Robinson notice that the State Bar intended to file discipline charges against him because Mr. Robinson requested a pre-filing Early Neutral Evaluation Conference (ENEC) on April 27, 2012 (State Bar Rule Proc. 5.30.)  On May 8, 2012, two days prior to the ENEC, he filed a comprehensive written response supported by documents.

Despite this, discipline charges were filed on May 15, 2012. just 99 days after the investigator initially contacted the respondent.  All charges were dismissed by the hearing judge.

Johnson involved a 40 year veteran attorney who was the trustee of his mother’s trust for several years.  Although he made mistakes in the course of serving as trustee, those mistakes did not harm the estate and did not involve dishonesty.  Johnson was accused of violating several probate code sections in the handling of trust, which violations OCTC contented amount to Mr. Johnson’s failure to uphold the law.  He was also accused of revealing a witness’s name in court in a criminal matter, alleged to be a violation of Penal Code section 1054.2, which was also alleged to violate Mr. Johnson’s duty to uphold the law under section 6068(a).  Unlike, Robinson, Johnson was found culpable at trial in Hearing Department.

Johnson illustrates a different kind of OCTC over-reaching;  a misunderstanding of the duty to support the law that is codified in Business and Professions Code section 6068(a).  “We have held that an attorney’s good faith mistake, even when it results in a violation of law, may be a defense to discipline under Business and Professions Code, section 6068, subdivision (a).”  And so it was here.  The Review Department found that it didn’t even need to get in the weeds of interpreting section 1054.2.

Other cases support the trend toward more exonerations.  In the Matter of McHugh was a case that garnered headlines when the Hearing Department issued its scathing decision dismissing all charges on July 1, 2013: “The evidence offered by the State Bar in support…fails to prove any act of moral turpitude by Respondent. In many instances, the factual allegations are not supported by any evidence at trial whatsoever.”  The State Bar has charged Mr. McHugh with multiple acts of moral turpitude and charging an illegal and unconscionable fee.  One of the legal contentions of the Deputy Trial Counsel was that a fee that is not designated as “refundable”  in the retainer agreement should be presumed to be “non-refundable.”  The Court was underwhelmed by the State Bar’s response:

In its response to the above directive and issues, the State Bar was unable to identify any statute or case law to support either contention. Instead, with regard to its contention that a retainer is non-refundable in the absence of contrary language, it cited and quoted from cases holding that, unless an advance fee “is actually a true‟ retainer, any unearned portion thereof must be returned to the client upon termination of the attorney‟s services. In this court‟s view, that rule of law defeats the State Bar‟s contention, rather than supports it.”

Despite the Hearing Judge’s long exposition of why State Bar’s’ case was just wrong, factually as well as legally, the State Bar has requested review in the McHugh case.

From the respondent in State Bar Court’s point of view, nearly as “good” as an exoneration in State Bar Court is an admonition (State Bar Rule Proc. 5.126.)  An admonition is not discipline but a warning from the court that you committed a minor violation and don’t let it happen again;  the rules allow an admonition to be re-opened if the respondent is brought up on discipline charges in a different matter within two years.   A recent high profile case in State Bar Court, the prosecution of unsuccessful judicial election candidate Clinton Parish, recently resulted in an admonition based on Parish’s violation of Rule Proc. Conduct 1-700(A).

Like McHugh, this one is going up to the Review Department.  Which probably isn’t good news for Mr. Parish.  A majority of the cases appealed to the Review Department in recent years have resulted in greater discipline after de novo review by the Review Department.  That is part of why Robinson and Johnson are so striking.  The appellate department of State Bar Court has not shown itself particularly sympathetic to respondents in recent years (although they exonerated a respondent in 2011 (In the Matter of Eytan, after a particularly pointless prosecution ably defended by my colleague Jonathan Arons.)

Good is in quotations marks above for a “good” reason.   Exoneration in State Bar Court is exciting for the respondent’s counsel but pretty much bad news for everyone else, who wasted the time and resources trying a case that should never have been tried in the first place.   That’s includes the respondent, the State Bar Court, the Office of Chief Trial Counsel and its institutional client, The State Bar of California.

The most obvious explanation for an increase in exonerations lies in two factors:

(1) the demands placed on the system the speeding up of the discipline process to accomplish the same amount of work in roughly half the time,

In 2010, the median length of time taken to complete a complaint investigation leading to a prosecution was 234 days. In 2011, this was reduced slightly, to 212. In 2012, this figure was cut by an additional 40%, to 129 days.

The median length of time between the completion of an investigation and the filing of a Notice of Disciplinary Charges was 206 days in 2010. This was reduced in 2011 to 160 days. In 2012, this period was further reduced by more than 60% to just 58 days.

The median length of time between the completion of an investigation and the filing of a Stipulation to Discipline (i.e. a ―plea agreement‖) fell precipitously, from 337 in 2010 to 82 in 2011, and further to 72 in 2012.

The median total time from the receipt of a complaint to the filing of either a Notice of Disciplinary Charges or a Stipulation to Discipline stood at 414 days in 2010 and 392 days in 2011. In 2012, this fell by 40%, to 235 days.

State Bar 2013 Annual Discipline Report at page 2.

 and the (2) “zero/ zero goal”

Returning to the State Bar in this capacity gives me the opportunity to establish a zero/zero goal — that is getting the State Bar’s backlog down to zero and assuring that there is zero tolerance for attorney misconduct in California.”

State Bar Journal,  September 2011, Ex Bar Prosecutor Kim Named Chief Trial Counsel 

The story is told of veteran NASA engineer who was told of former administrator’s Dan Goldin’s “better, cheaper, faster” program.  “In the real world, you can have any two of those three,” he replied.  At this point, it looks like the State Bar’s prosecution office is doing no better than one out of three.  Overworked people make mistakes;  a policy that every violation should be punished makes sure the bias will be toward prosecution, not closure.

The politics of discipline underlie the current public protection zealotry.  The idea that the State Bar discipline was too lenient drove the governance reform demanded by the Legislature and the resulting purge of senior management in the Office of Chief Trial Counsel.   But public protection isn’t served when weak cases are prosecuted; it’s diminished because that time and energy could be used on cases that present real public protection issues.

Those prosecutions are also unfair to the respondent attorneys involved. A rule allowing exonerated respondents to recover both out of pocket costs and their attorney fees would go a long way toward making sure only meritorious cases are prosecute.  Of course, at the new State Bar, anything that would appear to benefit the respondent attorney is politically incorrect. For example, the use of nolo contendere pleas, a procedure allowed by statute and rule for express purpose of encouraging settlements in case with civil liability issues, has been forbidden by fiat of the Chief Trial Counsel.  So we can expect that the trend toward more exonerations in State Bar Court will continue.

Who’s the Boss? California Supreme Court Reminds Us

The California Supreme Court has taken the unusual step of rejecting a recommendation from the State Bar Court and imposing its own discipline (disbarment) (In the Matter of Duane Tucker.)  The case has an eventful  history.  In October 2011 Tucker and the Office of Chief Trial Counsel (OCTC) stipulated to a six month actual suspension, despite Tucker’s two prior disciplines.  In June 2012, the Supreme Court remanded the case back to State Bar Court along with a number of other stipulated decisions.  The matter was tried.  After trial, the Hearing Judge recommended two years actual suspension in decision dated January 11, 2013.  Shortly after, Mr. Tucker submitted his resignation with charges pending.  On August 21, 2013, the Supreme Court rejected the resignation, rejected the two year actual suspension recommended by the State Bar Court and disbarred Mr. Tucker.

It’s bedrock law in California’s attorney discipline jurisprudence that the California Supreme Court has “reserved, primary and inherent, power” to discipline  a lawyer limited only by reasonable legislative action that does not materially impair it (Obrien v. Jones (2000) 23 Cal.4th 40, 48.)  The Legislature expressly recognized this power in Bus. & Prof. Code section 6100 (“Nothing in this article limits the inherent power of the Supreme Court to discipline, including to summarily disbar, any attorney.”)  During and shortly after the overhaul of the State Bar discipline system in the late 1980’s, the Supreme Court seemed to step back from active involvement in the discipline system, especially after the “finality rules” were added the California Rules of Court in 1992, rules delegating certain powers to the newly created full time professional State Bar Court (Rule 9.10, et seq.)  The Supreme Court got out of the business of routinely writing decisions in attorney discipline proceedings and a few years later decided that they didn’t have to (In Re Rose On Discipline (2000) 22 Cal.4th 430.)

After the finality rules were adopted, Supreme Court decisions in disciplinary matters issued is spurts every five years or so: In the Matter of Morse (1995) 11 Cal.4th 184, In Re Brown (1995) 12 Cal.4th 205, Rose (supra), In Re Paguirigan (2001) 25 Cal.4th 1 and its companion case, In Re Lesansky (2001) 25 Cal.4th 11 and In the Matter of Silverton (2005) 36 Cal.4th 81.

Aside from these, the Supreme Court was almost entirely silent on discipline.  State Bar officials sought guidance on a number of issues, including recommendations from the Discipline Evaluation Committee issued in 1994 and were met with years of silence, or no response at all.  Even when the discipline system was shut down in June 1998 as a result of Governor Wilson’s veto the Supreme Court delayed acting for months, deferring to the Legislature, until finally riding the rescue with a special assessment at the end of 1998 (In re Attorney Discipline System (1998) 19 Cal.4th 582,)

Seemingly true to this loose schedule, the Supreme Court accepted a petition for review from the Office of Chief Trial in the Matter of Gary Grant in 2011.  That matter is still pending in the high court.  But the Supreme Court silence on discipline began to break earlier.  In the aftermath of the shutdown crisis, State Bar officials understood that they needed to move closer to the Supreme Court.  Proposals that might have been structured as State Bar Rules of Procedures in the 1990’s were instead re-cast as proposed California Rules of Court requiring Court approval.  This process accelerated in the post-Silverton era.  A new rule on resignation was adopted in 2007 requiring State Bar Court review, after the Supreme Court made its unhappiness with the the existing rule requiring Board action known.  In 2008, the Supreme Court disapproved such a proposal on permanent disbarment in a behind the scenes dialog with the State Bar.

In early 2010, the Supreme Court sent a shock to the discipline system by rejecting en masse approximately 30 resignations with charging pending.  Resignation with charges pending had played an important role in reducing the discipline system workload;  following this action, resignations were reduced to trickle, replaced by a previously unknown and more labor intensive mechanism, stipulation to disbarment.

A second shock ensued in 2012 when the Supreme Court returned 42 disciplinary stipulations “for further consideration in light of applicable discipline standards.”  Aside from taking some of the luster off new Chief Trial Counsel Jayne Kim’s reduction of the case backlog, this second shock dramatically increased the workload of the State Bar Court.  Historically about 15% of discipline cases were tried; now that has gone up to something over 30%. At the same time, the State Bar Court is reeling under the impact of rule changes enacted in 2011 that require discipline cases to be tried within 125 days of the filing of charges; the previously guideline was 8 months.  Presiding Judge Remke of the State Bar Court reported on the positive impact of these rule changes to the Regulation, Discipline and Admissions Oversight Committee (RADO) in July 2013 but warned that the decline in settlement rates threatens to reverse those gains.

Now the third shock of the Supreme Court’s action in Tucker, reportedly, a subject of much discussion at the regular meeting of State Bar Court judges.  Clearly, settlement rates are not going to increase any time soon;  moreover, the levels of discipline recommended after trial in State Bar Court will certainly go up as the latest message from the Supreme Court is taken to mean more than Mr. Tucker’s fate as a lawyer.

The discipline system is evolving into a system where many if not most cases will end up being tried.  It’s hard to see how the current constituted State Bar Court is going to keep up without a significant investment of resources, new judges and new staff.  But the California Supreme Court is the boss, even if the direction the boss wants to move in isn’t explicit.  Will the Legislature increase the dues assessment to pay for this direction? If not, perhaps the Supreme Court will utilize the power it acknowledged in Attorney Discipline System to pay for the discipline system it wants.  Now that’s being in charge.

ADDC Comment to State Bar “Consumer Alert” Proposal

September 10, 2013

Jeffrey Chappelle

Office of the Chief Trial Counsel

State Bar of California

1149 S. Hill St., 10th Floor

Los Angeles, CA 90015-2299

Re:  Comment to Board Item 2013-08

The Association of Discipline Defense Counsel (ADDC) submits the following comment on the proposed modification of the posting of a “Consumer Alerts” badge on the membership page of lawyers accused of misconduct, as set out in item 2013-08.

 The Association of Discipline Defense Counsel              

I am the President of ADDC, the bar association for lawyers who represent lawyers and others in disciplinary, admissions, and regulatory proceedings before the State Bar Court of California and the California Supreme Court.  Our members include former State Bar discipline prosecutors, former State Bar Court judges, and former members of the State Bar’s Standing Committee on Professional Responsibility and Conduct.   Collectively our members have hundreds of years of experience with the discipline system and the bar admission process.   I have practiced law for over 39 years, the last 18 of which I have specialized in attorney discipline defense.  From 1990-1995 I was a compensated Judge Pro Tem on the State Bar Court.

The Revised Consumer Alert Proposal

This proposal seeks modification of the State Bar’s existing policy to authorize the posting of a Consumer Alert: (1) where the NDC or petition for involuntary enrollment alleges any misappropriation of $25,000 or more (i.e. not limited to theft of client funds); (2) where the NDC or petition for involuntary enrollment alleges fifteen or more cases of professional misconduct (i.e. not limited to loan modification misconduct); and (3) where the State Bar has filed an application seeking Superior Court assumption of an attorney’s law practice, pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 6180 et. seq. or 6190 et. seq. The proposal further seeks authorization to keep the Consumer Alert on the member’s State Bar online profile page where the State Bar Court finds the member culpable of professional misconduct or grants the State Bar’s petition for involuntary inactive enrollment or where the Superior Court grants the State Bar’s application for court assumption of the member’s law practice.

The Consumer Alert Allows the Office of Chief Trial Counsel to Destroy an Attorney’s Practice without Having to Prove Disciplinary Charges

The economic impact on an attorney who has a Consumer Alert badge placed on his or her member page cannot be understated. It allows the State Bar to destroy an accused attorney’s practice without ever having to prove its case in State Bar Court.  Indeed, that is the rationale for it: to keep the accused attorney from acquiring new clients.  While filed discipline charges have always been accessible to the public, the internet has changed the way that many consumer clients choose counsel, just as it has changed the way everyone shops for goods and services:  more and more, those decisions are based on information acquired through the internet. While the Consumer Alert contains a disclaimer proclaiming that an accused attorney is presumed to be innocent of discipline charges, in practice that disclaimer will play no part in the consumer’s decision to hire counsel.  It is highly unlikely that any client who is aware of the Alert will employ that attorney.

It is established law that punishment is not a permissible aim of the discipline system.  A Consumer Alert issued on an attorney who is not a threat to the public is unduly punitive.  Any expansion of current policy must carefully define the circumstances where the Consumer Alert badge is posted.

For this reason that the Board of Trustees needs to be careful before expanding the current program.

The McHugh Case Illustrates the Potential Unfairness and Abuse of the Consumer Alert

The investigation and charging process of the Office of Chief Trial Counsel (OCTC) is not flawless.  This is illustrated by the recent Hearing Department decision In the Matter of McHugh (State Bar Court case no. 07-O-14334).[1]  Mr. McHugh was originally charged with 18 counts of misconduct in a single client matter; OCTC dismissed 5 counts before trial.  10 of the 13 remaining counts involved allegations of moral turpitude and the remaining three involved serious misconduct as well.   The Hearing Department’s decision after trial exonerated Mr. McHugh on a counts.  The hearing judge found with respect to almost all the counts that the evidence offered by the State Bar failed to prove any act of moral turpitude by Respondent, and that in many instances, the factual allegations were not supported by any evidence at trial whatsoever. Slip opinion at page 7.[2] 

Because he was exonerated at trial Mr. McHugh will be able to recover his out of pocket costs if the decision stands; he will not recover the substantial attorney’s fees that he paid his counsel for defense in State Bar Court (the Daily Journal in its article concerning this case reported McHugh’s attorney’s fees were $100,000).

It is the sense of ADDC and its membership that the McHugh decision is not an aberration, and that the pace of complete exonerations by the Hearing Department is increasing.  Only the Chief Trial Counsel would have precise number of cases that have resulted in complete or partial exoneration, or trends in that category, which information should be shared with this Committee to aid in its deliberations.

Mr. McHugh was subject to the Consumer Alert badge, although the disciplinary charges did not involve either loan modification misconduct or any allegation that he misappropriated more than $25,000.  It was placed on his Membership Records in apparent violation of the current policies adopted by the Board.  It has now been removed.  It is not clear whether the posting of the badge was intentionally done in violation of policy or through the negligence of OCTC in not understanding the parameters of the policy.

The Revised Proposed Policy Regarding Posting the Consumer Alert Badge after Any Culpability is Found is Unfair

The original proposal from the Chief Trial Counsel would have required the badge in every instance where a notice of disciplinary charges or 6007 petition was filed, regardless of the specifics of the alleged misconduct.  The proposal was withdraw after the May 9 meeting of the RAD Committee.[3] The proposal has now been modified to address the apparent unfairness of that original proposal to “badge” every attorney as a threat to the public regardless of the nature of the alleged misconduct by imposing a threshold where it is presumed the attorney is a threat to the public, i.e., where there are fifteen cases filed against the attorney.  It is our opinion there needs to be a clarification as to whether the fifteen case threshold refers to fifteen different counts, or to charges relating to fifteen distinct clients.  If fifteen cases means fifteen counts and not fifteen separate complainants, the threshold is subject to abuse by overzealous or repetitive pleading.

The revised proposed policy with respect to partial exonerations contains the same fundamental unfairness.  Regardless of the specifics of culpability or any mitigating circumstances,, or whether culpability was established by trial or by stipulation, or the level of discipline, every attorney found culpable of any misconduct would be subject to the “Consumer Alert.”

The use of term “Consumer Alert” can only mean that the attorney is a threat to the public.  But the purposes of discipline as set forth in Standard 1.3[4] include more than public protection; they also include protection of the courts and the legal profession; the maintenance of high professional standards by attorneys; and the preservation of public confidence in the legal profession. Rehabilitation of a member can also be a permissible objective of discipline. 

The fundamental unfairness of this portion of the proposal is manifest:  if the Consumer Alert is based on fifteen separate client matters, and the attorney is found culpable of one act of misconduct, no matter how insignificant it might be, the Consumer Alert would remain on the member page, even if the actual discipline was a public reproval.  Similarly, if an attorney was alleged to have misappropriated $25,000 and it turns out that all funds are properly accounted for and some far lesser misconduct is established (e.g., failure to promptly refund the unearned portion of a fee), the Consumer Alert remains.

Given the potential unfairness to attorneys found culpable of minor misconduct, the revised proposed policy needs further revision to establish appropriate thresholds for imposition of the Consumer Alert badge only where the factual basis of the discipline, inactive enrollment or assumption of jurisdiction demonstrates a threat to the public.

The Consumer Alert Should Be Removed on Completion of Reproval Conditions, Probation, or Return to Active Status

One of the permissive purposes of discipline is the rehabilitation of the attorney where it is not inconsistent with the other purposes of discipline (Standard 1.3.)  Rehabilitation has long been a purpose of the discipline system.  Attorneys are typically placed on disciplinary probation which serves both the public protection and rehabilitation goals of the discipline system.

The revised proposed policy should be amended to provide that the Consumer Alert badge should be removed when the disciplined attorney successfully completes his or her disciplinary reproval conditions, probation or resumes active status.  To maintain an alert on the page of a member who has been otherwise found to have completed  his or her probationary or reproval term successfully by the State Bar’s Office of Probation (and therefore, presumptively also by the Supreme Court or State Bar Court) would be punitive in nature while not furthering any substantial public protection goal inasmuch as the member has otherwise been determined to be fit to practice.

Conclusion

The revision of the proposed policy to impose a fifteen case threshold for imposition of the Consumer Alert on filing is an appropriate first step to protect the public as well as ameliorate potential unfairness to respondents.

The revised policy needs further revision to set appropriate thresholds for imposition of the Consumer Alert where the misconduct does not demonstrate a threat of harm to the public.

The revised policy needs further revision to provide that the Consumer Alert badge is removed on completion of reproval conditions, probation or return to active enrollment.      

                                                                                                Sincerely,

MICHAEL E. WINE

President, Association of

Discipline Defense Counsel

MEW:imc

VIA FIRST CLASS MAIL, FACSIMILE TO (213) 765-1029 AND E-MAIL TO                   Jeff.Chappelle@calbar.ca.gov


[2] The State Bar has appealed this decision to the Review Department.

[3]  The prior proposal did not provide for any public comment.  It merely asked the RAD Committee to recommend to the Board of Trustees to adopt the proposed policy.

[4]  Standard 1.3, Standards for Attorney Sanctions for Professional Misconduct, Title IV, Rules of Procedure of the State Bar of California.

The Mindful Lawyer

I had a head full of ideas

That were driving me insane

— Bob Dylan “Maggie’s Farm”

A mind might be a terrible thing to waste but for lawyers overuse is the greater danger.  Most of what we do involves a degree of mental effort, even the more drudgerous tasks.  Legal research often involves hours of focusing on the driest of material, looking for an elusive thread of hope amid the dust of otherwise forgotten controversies, and document review can seem like living death.  Trial presents its own different Hell, not being able to think quickly enough to parry some thrust from opposing counsel, or to keep the judge or jury from going south.

We are used to sweating about the details.  And understand the consequences when we don’t sweat hard enough.   Pessimism is part of what we do;  figuring out worst case scenarios for people or institutions, helping them evaluate risks, guiding them toward choosing the best options.   It’s stressful but we eat stress for breakfast! Tiger Lawyer would understand.

There is no doubt that the combination of intense mental effort required and the stress involved in most areas of law practice is not healthy for the people we call lawyers.  Not healthy for mind, body or soul.   Part of what seems a new acceptance of this reality was apparent at the recent meeting of the Association of Professional Responsibility Lawyers in San Francisco.  Scott Rogers and Prof. Jan Jacobwitz of the University of Miami presented their work on teaching mindfulness to law students.  Mindfulness refers to the practice of living in the present moment, an ancient discipline that finds validation in modern neuroscience and psychology to an audience of ethics lawyers.

APRL members are somewhat notorious for sharing their views, sometimes quite vocally and there might have been a time when this presentation would have been a little too far, even for the Left Coast.  But the people in the room, the people who are the lawyers’ lawyers got it.  They see the problems first hand, in minds, bodies and souls of the people that make up the profession.

Lawyers as a group are cocksure, often to a fault.  The stereotype of lawyers as arrogant and self-absorbed is a staple of popular entertainment.  But the slow realization that the bubble years are over has shaken off some of that old attitude, and the next generation of entering lawyers will shake off a lot of the rest.  Lawyers will have to get used to living in a world where they aren’t so special any more.

Jacobwitz and Rogers understand that the next generation of lawyers will need a different mindset to succeed, a mindset built on the reality of risk.   Mindfulness, the ability to focus on the here and now, is a skill that can be taught, and it will be regarded as a natural part of a lawyer’s toolkit.  But the greater benefit will be to enable a younger generation of lawyers a better life.   Mindfulness can only help the repudiation of the dehumanized lawyer as a role model.

Mark of Cain Episode 3: The Empire Strikes Back!

At the conclusion of Episode 2 (Mark of Cain, Continued), the State Bar’s Chief Trial Counsel had asked the Regulation, Admissions and Discipline Oversight Committee (RADO) to approve an expansion of the “Consumer Alerts” policy to place a prominent badge proclaiming the lawyer to be a threat on the lawyer’s web page on the State Bar website when any notice of discipline charges is filed alleging any misconduct.  As Draconian as that policy clearly would be, the most alarming part might have been that the Chief asked for the sweeping policy change without asking RADO to put the proposal out for public comment.

In a State Bar rocked by allegations that it operates in something far less than a transparent matter, the kindling was set for a firestorm of critical e-mails to Chair and members of RADO, once discipline defense counsel spread the word through email and listservs.  It was conceded at the RADO meeting in May 913 that public comment was necessary and the Office of Chief Trial Counsel indicated that a revised proposal would be submitted in July 2013.

And so it has.  You can read all 14 pages of its dense prose here.

Transparency is evidently not the same as clarity because it took a few passes to figure out the proposed new policy.  It boils down to this:  you will badged with the Mark of Cain if you are accused of misconduct in at least 15 “cases” in State Bar Court, whether by notice of discipline charges or 6007(c) petition, or if the State Bar files a petition in Superior Court to assume jurisdiction over your practice.  15 “cases” is not defined but in State Bar usage is usually means 15 separate investigation case numbers, usually representing 15 complaints.  If you found culpable of any misconduct in State Bar Court, the badge stays put, even if it far less than what was alleged.

This makes the new proposal three things:  (1) consistent with the previously adopted policy making 15 or more “loan modification” cases a qualification for the threat badge; (2) still unfair in penalizing lawyers who might be exonerated of most charges or the most serious charges at trial; and (3) a massive retreat from the previous proposal’s blanket assumption that any conduct sufficient to warrant discipline creates a threat to the public.

The function of public comment worked here as it is supposed to work.  It helped to prevent over-reaching by the government by forcing it to go back to drawing board and articulate some rational basis for it.  The irony is that it may have worked better this time because there was no call for public comment.  Lawyers that I spoke to regarding the original proposal were outraged by the proposal but even more outraged that they were asked to comment on it.

This when matters affecting the discipline system that are put out for public comment often generate only a trickle of public comment.  Without a doubt this current proposal will less interest and less public comment.  Putting any proposal out in July is a good recipe for an indifferent reaction and many local bar associations are operating a half speed during vacation season.

And this looks like the proposal that should have been offered in the first place and might have if comment had been solicited from the discipline defense bar prior to the original proposal being floated and promptly sunk.  But that doesn’t happen anymore.

Squishy Justice

Kafkaesq

One problem with moral turpitude is that the “incapable of precise definition” squishiness of the concept makes it difficult to evaluate the evidence.    “Incapable of precise definition” becomes a variant of “I know it when I see it”  and thus self-evident.   Witness this decision from the Hearing Department of the State Bar Court.

Another squishy legal doctrine appears in the decision.   The Office of Chief Trial Counsel also alleged that the respondent breached his duty to uphold the law of the State of California under Business and Professions Code section 6068(a) by committing breaches of fiduciary duty against his client (at page 37.)    In the Matter of Lilley (Review Dept. 1991) 1 Cal. State Bar Ct.  Rptr. 476, 487 held that section 6068(a) could serve as a “gateway” statute to find an an attorney culpable for a disciplinary violation of an…

View original post 176 more words