Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association v. McElroy

2014 Ohio 3774, 18 N.E.3d 1191, 140 Ohio St. 3d 391
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 2014
Docket2013-1626
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2014 Ohio 3774 (Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association v. McElroy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association v. McElroy, 2014 Ohio 3774, 18 N.E.3d 1191, 140 Ohio St. 3d 391 (Ohio 2014).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} Respondent, Kenneth Kelly McElroy of Cleveland, Ohio, Attorney Registration No. 0070478, was admitted to the practice of law in Ohio in 1999. On October 13, 2011, we suspended McElroy’s license to practice law on an interim basis following our learning of his September 20, 2005 conviction of forgery and tampering with records. In re McElroy, 129 Ohio St.3d 1499, 2011-Ohio-5244, 954 N.E.2d 1211.

{¶ 2} On August 6, 2012, relator, Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association, filed a 13-count complaint with the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline charging McElroy with violations of the Code of Professional Responsibility and the Rules of Professional Conduct arising from the conduct that led to his felony convictions. 1 The parties submitted stipulations 'of facts and violations and jointly recommended that McElroy be suspended from the practice of law for 18 months, with 6 months of the suspension stayed on the condition that he engage in no further misconduct.

{¶ 3} The parties jointly moved to waive the formal hearing, but a panel of the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline denied the motion. The panel conducted a hearing and adopted the parties’ stipulations of fact and misconduct, but recommended a two-year suspension with no reinstatement “until Respondent can demonstrate that he has broken this pattern of lying” that was of specific concern to the panel. The board recommended an indefinite suspension. No objections have been filed.

{¶ 4} We adopt the board’s findings of fact and misconduct, and we find that an indefinite suspension is appropriate, with no credit for time served under the interim felony suspension.

Misconduct

{¶ 5} The record demonstrates that McElroy has a disposition for not telling the truth. Many of his ethics violations arose from a relationship with a woman who, in May 2004, attempted to run over him with her automobile. Because he did not want her to be prosecuted for felony assault, McElroy testified in an *393 affidavit that “the whole situation was an unfortunate accident,” even though he later admitted in court and under oath that hers was an intentional act.

{¶ 6} MeElroy had purchased the automobile for this girlfriend, and then, after a disagreement with her, he took the vehicle. She wanted the car back, made attempts to get it back, and ultimately called the police, reported it stolen, and notified MeElroy that she had filed a report with the police. MeElroy later notarized her alleged signature on a motor vehicle title without administering the oath and without actually witnessing her sign it, transferring in that process the ownership of the vehicle from his girlfriend to an acquaintance.

{¶ 7} After a four-day bench trial and based on these facts, the trial court found MeElroy guilty of forgery and tampering with evidence, a fifth-degree and third-degree felony respectively. The court found that there was a “large gap of credibility” with respect to McElroy’s testimony. “In fact,” the judge continued, “the Court notes from the observations here of all of the circumstances that were testified to the fairly evasive manner that this Defendant answered questions, especially on cross-examination, and that his credibility is lacking.”

{¶ 8} During closing arguments at McElroy’s trial, and also at the sentencing hearing, his counsel stated that MeElroy “has no prior criminal convictions” and “no prior criminal record.” In fact, MeElroy had been convicted of assault in 1993, and at the time of his trial, another charge of assault was pending in South Euclid Municipal Court, on which he was found guilty on October 18, 2005. In the first instance, MeElroy did not correct his counsel’s representations to the judge, and in the second instance, MeElroy did not report the ultimate outcome to the judge or his probation officer, notwithstanding the court’s order for just such an update. MeElroy also did not report his felony convictions for forgery and tampering with evidence to any disciplinary authority.

{¶ 9} On September 1, 2005, perhaps attempting to avoid the inevitable, MeElroy took inactive status with respect to his license to practice law. Following our imposition of an interim suspension of his license, he represented to this court, in his “Motion to Dissolve and/or Modify Suspension (Expedited Review Requested)” that he had “formally resigned his license to practice law some time before the entry of his felony conviction on September 20, 2005.” (Emphasis added.) He claimed in that same filing that he “willingly left the legal profession before his conviction, for at least four years.” (Emphasis sic.) He became active again on February 18, 2009, three years and five months after he went inactive.

{¶ 10} On June 10, 2010, MeElroy filed in the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas a “Motion for Sealing of Record of First Offense,” attempting by this motion to expunge the criminal convictions he received in 2005. 2 Yet that *394 conviction was not his first offense; instead, it was the second of three criminal convictions.

{¶ 11} McElroy told much of his version of these events in a November 19, 2011 response to a written inquiry from relator regarding his felony convictions. Relator’s investigator interviewed McElroy on March 15, 2012, and while explaining his conduct, McElroy stated that the trial had lasted only one day, that he “never in any way shape or form ha[d] attempted to practice law for approximately four years.” When asked by the investigator whether any court actions occurred other than his trial and the prosecution of his girlfriend for assaulting him with a car, McElroy said no. But McElroy had been charged in 2004 with domestic violence and child endangering in Cleveland Municipal Court. These charges had been dismissed in June 2005, when his girlfriend failed to appear to testify.

{¶ 12} McElroy, during the disciplinary investigation, also made the following statements: (1) that his last conversation with his ex-girlfriend had been in July 2004, (2) that the judge in his trial during the sentencing hearing had asked the case’s detective for his opinion regarding sentencing and the detective had said “no jail time,” (3) that during that sentencing hearing, the judge stated that he was imposing alcohol and drug testing as part of McElroy’s probation because McElroy “probably or likely” had a substance- or alcohol-abuse problem because he let himself get into the negative situation with his ex-girlfriend. All of these statements were contradicted by his trial testimony and the trial transcript.

{¶ 13} To summarize, McElroy was convicted of forgery and tampering with evidence, made false statements in an affidavit, made false statements to a disciplinary investigator, made false statements to the trial court in his filings, allowed false statements to be made to the trial court without correction, made false statements to this court in his filing, notarized a signature without observing the person sign or administering the oath, and failed to report his felony convictions to a disciplinary body.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 Ohio 3774, 18 N.E.3d 1191, 140 Ohio St. 3d 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-metropolitan-bar-association-v-mcelroy-ohio-2014.