Application of Schaeffer

541 P.2d 1400, 273 Or. 490, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 346
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 541 P.2d 1400 (Application of Schaeffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Schaeffer, 541 P.2d 1400, 273 Or. 490, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 346 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Applicant passed the Oregon bar examination in 1973. However, the Board of Bar Examiners was unable to recommend his admission to practice because it failed to find that he possessed the “good moral character” required by OBS 9.220(2) and by Buie 4.05(3) of the Buies for Admission of Attorneys. Thereafter, the Oregon State Bar filed with this court its Statement of Objections to the Admission of the Applicant to which applicant filed an answer. A hearing on the objections was held before a three-person trial committee which filed its findings, conclusions and recommendations with this court. Its members unanimously recommended that applicant be admitted. Applicant then filed a petition requesting a favorable review by this court of the trial committee’s decision and recommendation. Neither applicant nor the Oregon State Bar argued or submitted briefs on the matter.

The first two objections to applicant’s admission were his “[failure] to disclose on his Application for Admission under subparagraphs 16(b) and (k) the *492 issuance of three (3) citations for driving while suspended, together with the subsequent issuance of bench warrants for Applicant-Petitioner’s Arrest on account thereof:” and “[f]ailure of Applicant-Petitioner to act responsibly with regard to the above matter by ignoring the aforementioned citations until forced to do otherwise some eight (8) months later upon issuance of bench warrants for Applicant-Petitioner’s arrest.” In answer thereto applicant “ [admitted] that he failed to disclose on his application for admission under subparagraph (k) the issuance of three citations for driving while suspended,” and “[admitted] that he did not promptly appear to answer to the aforementioned citations.” It is apparent from the application form, however, that only the answer to the question in subparagraph 16(b) is relevant to this review. In his answer to the question, “Have you ever been accused of, charged with, or arrested or detained for, the violation of any state, federal, municipal or other law, statute or ordinance, including juvenile or expunged offenses?”, applicant failed to list the three citations issued for driving while suspended.

The evidence discloses that while applicant was a law student, he was cited for failure to stop at a stop sign. His driver’s license was then revoked for his failure to make any appearance in response to the citation. Thereafter, in the course, of his being stopped for matters such as out-of-date vehicle license and defective equipment, applicant was cited three times for driving while suspended. He made no appearance in response to these citations as well. These incidents took place between November 1972 and January 1973. Applicant’s application for admission to the bar, which failed to disclose these incidents, was dated April 24, 1973.

In August 1973 applicant was called by his mother *493 from her home in Springfield and was told by her that a police officer had called at her home attempting to locate applicant and that the officer had warrants for applicant’s arrest. Applicant then made a voluntary appearance in the courts where the driving-while-suspended charges were pending.

Thereafter applicant was summoned by letter for an interview with a member of the Board of Bar Examiners, which had received letters from two sources suggesting a check of applicant’s moral qualifications. During a telephone call which applicant made to arrange the exact date of interview with a member of the Board, applicant indicated there was an omission from his application which he wished to disclose. During the interview on August 31, 1973, he voluntarily disclosed that on his application he omitted the circumstances relating to the citations. He subsequently satisfied the charges which were the basis for the citations.

Applicant’s explanation of his failure to disclose these matters on his application was that he did not realize the question on the application solicited this kind of information. He said he assumed disclosure on his part was unnecessary since he had given a release to the Bar for all driver’s license information and that it would therefore be informed of these matters upon its check of applicant’s motor vehicle record. He did not explain what suddenly prompted him, upon being summoned to an interview by a member of the Board of Bar Examiners, to decide that perhaps he should have disclosed the information upon his application. The check by the Bar with the Motor Vehicles Division did not disclose the occurrences since there had been no final disposition at that time and the courts had not transmitted the information to the Division.

Applicant explained that he did not make an initial *494 appearance on the traffic matters because, lacking sufficient funds at the time with which to take care of the citations and fearing he would be sent to jail and be forced to drop out of law school if he appeared and could not pay, he was attempting to delay an appearance until he was able to pay a fine. He admitted the original charge of failure! to stop could have been taken care of by posting bail of approximately $15. His testimony revealed he was divorced from his then wife in November 1972, which divorce resulted from his. misconduct with a third person, and that he had the attendant costs and expenses to pay together with $75 child support and family bills. His income had been approximately $230 a month under the “GI” bill during attendance at law school, $1,500 per year borrowed from the state scholarship fund, and whatever money he could earn during the summers. Prior to the family disruption his wife had been employed as a Salem school teacher.

Applicant was prone to financial difficulties. Before starting law school he attended Naval Officers’ Candidate School in Pensacola, Florida, and borrowed funds available there which he had not fully repaid. Subsequent to his divorce he married the woman who was the cause of his defection from his first marriage and, at the time of the hearing before the trial committee, he was in the throes of a divorce from her by virtue of which he was accumulating another swatch of bills.

The trial committee was of the opinion that the omission to disclose the three charges of driving while suspended “is not of sufficient magnitude as to represent lack of good moral character or general fitness” and that “[t]he Applicant’s failure to respond promptly to the traffic citations is considered by the trial committee to be an error in judgment on behalf of Applicant, but does not evidence lack of good *495 moral character or general fitness to be admitted as a member of the Oregon State Bar.” With these conclusions this court does not fully agree for the reasons hereinafter set forth.

The next charge against applicant was a “[misrepresentation * * * on his Application for Admission and upon personal interview by an Oregon State Bar representative of the circumstances and manner of resolution of a credit action brought against Applicant-Petitioner deriving from and subsequent to the dissolution of his marriage in 1972;”.

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Related

In Re Rowell
754 P.2d 905 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1988)
Application of Taylor
647 P.2d 462 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
541 P.2d 1400, 273 Or. 490, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-schaeffer-or-1975.