Drayton Beecher Smith, II v. Board of Professional Responsibility Of The Supreme Court Of Tennessee

551 S.W.3d 712
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 2018
DocketW2017-00247-SC-R3-BP
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 551 S.W.3d 712 (Drayton Beecher Smith, II v. Board of Professional Responsibility Of The Supreme Court Of Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drayton Beecher Smith, II v. Board of Professional Responsibility Of The Supreme Court Of Tennessee, 551 S.W.3d 712 (Tenn. 2018).

Opinion

Jeffrey S. Bivins, C.J.

Drayton Beecher Smith, II ("Attorney") pled guilty in 2007 to federal charges of receipt and possession of images depicting child pornography and was sentenced to five years of imprisonment. In conjunction with these charges, Attorney consented to his disbarment, which was ordered in 2008. In August 2014, after being discharged from prison and while on probation, Attorney petitioned to be reinstated to the practice of law in Tennessee. The Board of Professional Responsibility ("BPR") opposed Attorney's petition, and a hearing panel was appointed ("the Panel"). After an evidentiary hearing, the Panel denied Attorney's petition. Attorney sought review in chancery court, and the chancery court reversed the Panel's decision and ordered Attorney reinstated. The BPR sought review in this Court. Initially, we hold that the chancery court had subject-matter jurisdiction of Attorney's petition in spite of the BPR's untimely filing of its application for costs. We further hold that the chancery court misapplied the applicable standard of review and thereby committed reversible error. Accordingly, we reverse the chancery court's ruling and reinstate the Panel's decision.

Factual and Procedural Background

Attorney originally was admitted to the practice of law in Tennessee in 1974 and established himself in the practice area of trusts and estates. As of 2007, Attorney had not been disciplined by the BPR. In November 2006, Attorney was arrested on a seven-count federal indictment related to the receipt and possession of child pornography, based on images discovered on Attorney's laptop computer. In June 2007, Attorney pled guilty in federal court to three of these counts. In conjunction with these charges, Attorney executed a Consent to Disbarment Affidavit in August 2007, and an Order of Disbarment was entered in May 2008. After serving a portion of his five-year sentence of imprisonment, on October 4, 2011, Attorney was transferred to a Memphis halfway house. Attorney was discharged on March 16, 2012, after completing his sentence of incarceration.

Attorney's sentence included ten years of supervised probation following his release from imprisonment. The conditions and restrictions of Attorney's probation include: (1) answering truthfully all inquiries by his probation officer, (2) registering with the sexual offender registration agency for Tennessee, (3) participating in a specialized sex offender treatment program that may include the use of a polygraph, (4) refraining from direct or indirect contact with any child under eighteen (18) years of age, (5) not possessing any pornography, (6) not using sexually oriented telephone numbers or services, (7) participating in mental health treatment as directed by his probation officer, and (8) refraining from excessive use of alcohol. Additionally, Attorney's conditions of probation provide that he "shall not possess, or use, a computer with access to any 'on-line computer service' at any location (including employment) without prior approval of the Probation Officer."

Attorney filed his petition for reinstatement on August 11, 2014. At the ensuing evidentiary hearing before the Panel, Attorney called several character witnesses, two of his treating physicians, the deputy director of the Tennessee Lawyers Assistance Program ("TLAP"), and a medical expert. 1 Attorney also testified on his own behalf. The BPR adduced a written report prepared in May 2013 by Dr. A. J. Reid Finlayson, the Medical Director of the Vanderbilt Comprehensive Assessment Program ("VCAP"), following Attorney's participation in an evaluation conducted through VCAP ("the VCAP Evaluation"). Attorney participated in the VCAP Evaluation at the suggestion of TLAP in conjunction with Attorney's effort to be reinstated.

The conduct for which Attorney was prosecuted consisted of his downloading onto his computer between thirty and forty photographs of girls, between nine and fourteen years of age, appearing either nude or engaged in sex acts. There was no proof, however, that Attorney ever had engaged in sexual physical contact with a child. Following his incarceration, Attorney was diagnosed with pedophilia.

Attorney testified about the conduct that resulted in his convictions:

At the time I was suffering from chronic clinical depression. I was having trouble sleeping. I was staying up late at night. I was working on researching an appeal for my brother, who was convicted of a felony in California. And I would get tired of research, so then I would go to play games, video games, on the computer, like Spades or Hearts with other people. Online live video games.
After that, if I got tired, I would go to look at other websites and then sometimes I would go to porn sites. I went to a couple of the porn sites, and there were things called pop-ups which said come to this site and see this, and one of them mentioned minors, and I was just curious to see what it was. It was curiosity that got me in trouble. I went there and looked at it, and I guess I downloaded-I did download a few images, not a whole lot, but enough to get me in trouble.
Some people have thousands and thousands and thousands. I think I had less than 40, but they were enough to get me in trouble, and I did download some of those images.

Attorney added that he "just wanted to see what was going on, what people were doing" and that he was "just curious to see how wild and crazy it could be." Attorney acknowledged that he knew his conduct was wrong at the time and that he "shouldn't have done it." He explained that "at the time [he] thought it was a victimless crime" and that he "did not think [he] was hurting anybody." Since his arrest, he had come to understand through counseling the harm that his actions caused to the persons in the images.

After his release from prison, Attorney participated in a specialized sex offender treatment program through Counseling Resources of America. The entire program consisted of four phases, all of which he had completed by the time of the hearing. Attorney stated that it took him approximately two and one-half years to complete the program. The first phase consisted of weekly meetings, with the latter phases requiring meetings every other week. Following this program, Attorney completed a ten-week pilot program involving cognitive behavior that was led by his probation officer.

Attorney stated that he had not had any violations of his probation.

On cross-examination, Attorney stated that he participated in the VCAP Evaluation "[t]o have professional people assess [him] to see if [he was] mentally and physically fit to practice law." Asked if he was truthful during his evaluation, Attorney responded, "[p]ainfully brutally truthful. They couldn't help me if I wasn't." Attorney confirmed that, as reflected in the VCAP Evaluation, he had used his computer after his release to alter adult comic strip figures in order to make them appear nude for self-gratification. 2 He explained, "I was having trouble adjusting. I was having trouble with my wife's health. I'm not allowed to have pornography. I was taking images on a scanner and changing them to erotic images to help me with my fantasy. I was not saving them.

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Bluebook (online)
551 S.W.3d 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drayton-beecher-smith-ii-v-board-of-professional-responsibility-of-the-tenn-2018.