Attorney Grievance v. Ficker

477 Md. 537
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 2022
Docket17ag/20
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 477 Md. 537 (Attorney Grievance v. Ficker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney Grievance v. Ficker, 477 Md. 537 (Md. 2022).

Opinion

Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland v. Robin Keith Annesley Ficker Misc. Docket AG No. 17, September Term, 2020.

Attorney Discipline – Competence & Diligence – Candor Before Tribunal & Misrepresentation – Supervision of Non-Lawyer Assistant – Disbarment. Disbarment is the appropriate sanction where an attorney with a lengthy disciplinary history of similar ethical violations failed to appear for the scheduled trial of a client, and made false statements to that court concerning whether he had reviewed and signed a continuance motion that had been prepared, signed, and filed by his office manager and that contained a materially false statement concerning the position of the opposing party.

Maryland Attorneys’ Rules of Professional Conduct 19-301.1, 19-301.3, 19-303.3(a), 19-305.3(a)- (b), 19-308.4(a), (c)&(d). Circuit Court for Prince George’s County Case No. CAE20-15282 Argued: December 2, 2021

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

Misc. Docket AG No. 17

September Term, 2020 _____________________________________

ATTORNEY GRIEVANCE COMMISSION OF MARYLAND

v.

ROBIN KEITH ANNESLEY FICKER _____________________________________

Getty, C.J., *McDonald Watts Hotten Booth Biran Gould,

JJ. _____________________________________

Opinion by McDonald, J. _____________________________________

Filed: March 3, 2022

*McDonald, J. now retired, participated in the Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal hearing and conference of this case while an Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic. active member of this Court; after being recalled 2022-06-07 14:55-04:00 Pursuant to MD Constitution, Article IV, Section 3A, he also participated in the decision and adoption of this opinion. Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk Respondent Robin K.A. Ficker has been disciplined for professional misconduct on

eight occasions, both in this Court and the United States District Court for the District of

Maryland. Beginning in 1990, when the Attorney Grievance Commission filed the first set

of charges against Mr. Ficker, those occasions arose, variously, from his failures to appear

in court on dates scheduled for his clients’ trials, failures to adequately prepare for his

clients’ cases, failures to supervise the lawyers whom he employed to work on his clients’

cases, lack of candor to the court, and, in one instance, failure to safeguard client property.

Four disciplinary proceedings resulted in published opinions. In all, three generations of

Bar Counsel have brought charges and 27 members of this Court have deliberated whether

a particular sanction for Mr. Ficker’s repeated infractions would deter further such

practices and thus protect those who seek out his services. The Court’s prior deliberations

resulted in private reprimands, public reprimands, and indefinite suspensions of Mr. Ficker

from the practice of law.

Here, once again, the Commission has charged Mr. Ficker with a slate of violations

of the Maryland Attorneys’ Rules of Professional Conduct (“MARPC”). In this case, the

charges all stem from a situation in which Mr. Ficker failed to appear for a trial in the

District Court sitting in Prince George’s County; assured the trial judge that his office had

contacted his absent client about the trial date without a basis to believe that assurance to

be true; and made contradictory statements as to whether he had personally signed a

continuance motion that contained misstatements and that in fact had been signed and filed

by his office assistant (a disbarred former attorney). While a missed court date by an over-scheduled attorney who relies on office staff

to meet the demands of a busy schedule or a good faith fumble in the filing of a continuance

motion would not typically result in disbarment, the circumstances of Mr. Ficker’s cases

are far from typical. Mr. Ficker has consistently failed to comply with elementary

standards of the legal profession that are intended for the protection of clients and for the

efficient administration of justice in our courts. The sanctions that the Court has imposed

on Mr. Ficker in the past have apparently not had the desired effect. The process must

come to an end. Mr. Ficker has forfeited the privilege of practicing law in Maryland and

will be disbarred.

I

Mr. Ficker’s Disciplinary History

Mr. Ficker has been a member of the Maryland Bar since June 1973. His lengthy

disciplinary history since his admission may be unique in the annals of the bar. This Court

has previously observed that his misconduct regarding a single client “cannot be viewed in

a vacuum.”1 So, too, the violations currently at issue must be considered in the context of

Mr. Ficker’s persistent failure to operate his law practice in compliance with the rules of

professional conduct. It has been said that “what’s past is prologue.”2 We begin with a

review of Mr. Ficker’s past misconduct.

1 Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Ficker, 349 Md. 13, 32 (1998). 2 William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act II, sc. 1.

2 This is Mr. Ficker’s fifth appearance before this Court as a respondent in an attorney

disciplinary proceeding. See Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Ficker, 319 Md. 305 (1990)

(Ficker I); Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Ficker, 349 Md. 13 (1998) (Ficker II); Attorney

Grievance Comm’n v. Ficker, 399 Md. 445 (2007) (Ficker III); Attorney Grievance

Comm’n v. Ficker, 454 Md. 76 (2017) (Ficker IV). In addition to those proceedings, Mr.

Ficker has twice been the subject of private reprimands by the Commission, as well as

reciprocal disciplinary proceedings in the federal district court.3

Ficker I

In Ficker I, this Court determined that Mr. Ficker violated the rules of professional

conduct in his representation of two clients during the 1980s. In one case, a woman had

been charged with driving while intoxicated. 319 Md. at 308-09. Mr. Ficker agreed to

represent her at her trial in the District Court. However, he did not enter his appearance in

the case, as required by the Maryland Rules, and did not appear for the trial, apparently

because he failed to record the trial date on his calendar. Unrepresented, the client pled

guilty to the charge.

3 As recounted in this opinion, Mr. Ficker may have the unique distinction of having violated three iterations of the rules of professional conduct. At the time he was admitted to the Maryland Bar, the ethical rules were contained in the Code of Professional Responsibility. Maryland Rules, Appendix F (1971). In 1987, this Court adopted the Maryland Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct (“MLRPC”). Maryland Rule 1230, Appendix (1987). The MLRPC were amended from time to time over the years. Effective July 1, 2016, the MLRPC were renamed the MARPC and recodified without substantive change in Title 19, Chapter 300 of the Maryland Rules. The rules have retained their previous numbering in a modified format, e.g., former MLRPC Rule 1.1 is now MARPC Rule 19-301.1. For ease of reference and as permitted by the rules, we use the shorter designations of the MLRPC in this opinion. See Maryland Rule 19-300.1(22).

3 The second case also involved a client charged with drunk driving and facing trial

in the District Court sitting. 309 Md. at 309-11. Mr. Ficker went to court on the initial

trial date but did not enter his appearance, again contrary to the Maryland Rules. The trial

was continued at the State’s request because the arresting officer was not on hand, but Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
477 Md. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-grievance-v-ficker-md-2022.