Gerald Stanley Green v. Board of Professional Responsibility Of The Supreme Court Of Tennessee

567 S.W.3d 700
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2019
DocketW2017-02358-SC-R3-BP
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 567 S.W.3d 700 (Gerald Stanley Green 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
Gerald Stanley Green v. Board of Professional Responsibility Of The Supreme Court Of Tennessee, 567 S.W.3d 700 (Tenn. 2019).

Opinion

Cornelia A. Clark, J.

This direct appeal involves a lawyer disciplinary proceeding against a Memphis attorney arising from two client complaints and the lawyer's failure to satisfy fully Mississippi's requirements for pro hac vice admission before representing a criminal defendant in Mississippi. A Hearing Panel of the Board of Professional Responsibility ("Hearing Panel") determined that the lawyer had violated four provisions of the Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct ("RPC"). After consulting the ABA Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions ("ABA Standards") and considering the mitigating and aggravating circumstances, including the lawyer's seventeen prior disciplinary sanctions, the Hearing Panel suspended the lawyer for six months and directed thirty days of the sanction to be served on active suspension with the remainder to be served on probation with conditions, including a practice monitor, restitution, and continuing legal education focused on law office management, client communication, and client relations. The lawyer appealed the Hearing Panel's judgment, and the Chancery Court for Shelby County affirmed. The lawyer then appealed to this Court. After carefully reviewing the record, we affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Gerald Stanley Green obtained his license to practice law in Tennessee in 1981. Mr. Green's disciplinary record as a practicing attorney has been far from unblemished. Before the present disciplinary proceeding, Mr. Green had received the following seventeen disciplinary sanctions:

• Public Censure - February 27, 2015 (competence, diligence)
• Private Informal Admonition - June 29, 2006 (competence, diligence, misconduct)
• Private Informal Admonition - March 15, 2005 (neglect, communication)
• Private Informal Admonition - May 3, 2004 (neglect, communication)
• Six-Month Suspension (all probated) - May 3, 2004 (neglect, fees, failed to withdraw and return property, competence, neglect, communication)
• Private Informal Admonition - August 3, 2000 (neglect, communication)
• Public Censure - November 19, 1999 (late-filed appellate brief, neglect, communication, scope of representation)
• Private Informal Admonition - November 16, 1999 (communication, safekeeping property and funds)
• Private Reprimand - October 1, 1998 (delayed filing petition for bankruptcy)
• Private Informal Admonition - February 28, 1997 (failed to pay a medical lien or prepare a written settlement statement)
• Private Informal Admonition - October 1, 1996 (neglect, communication)
• Private Informal Admonition - August 5, 1996 (neglect, communication)
• Public Censure - May 24, 1995 (neglect, communication, misleading court)
• Private Informal Admonition - November 10, 1994 (neglect, communication)
• Private Informal Admonition - July 25, 1994 (neglect, communication)
• Private Reprimand - April 28, 1993 (fees, competence, neglect, communication)
• Informal Admonition - September 28, 1990 (neglect, communication)

Many of these prior sanctions were imposed by agreement and resolved multiple client complaints against Mr. Green for conduct similar to that at issue in this proceeding. For example, the six-month fully probated suspension resolved eight complaints by at least seven different clients and concerned Mr. Green's failure to communicate appropriately with his clients.

This present appeal also stems from multiple complaints against Mr. Green. Disciplinary counsel for the Board of Professional Responsibility ("Board") filed an initial petition for discipline on April 15, 2015, which included complaints from two of Mr. Green's former clients and the Board's complaint regarding Mr. Green's representation of a criminal defendant in Mississippi without complying with the Mississippi rule governing pro hac vice admission. Mr. Green responded to this initial petition in May 2015, and then, on October 23, 2015, Mr. Green submitted a conditional guilty plea. The conditional guilty plea included the sanction of public censure. The Hearing Panel and the Board approved the conditional guilty plea; however, on January 20, 2016, this Court rejected it "based on concerns about Mr. Green's lengthy prior disciplinary record" and returned the matter to the Board for further proceedings.

On March 22, 2016, the Board filed a supplemental petition against Mr. Green based on a third client complaint. The October 6, 2016 disciplinary hearing proceeded on both the initial and the supplemental petitions for discipline. Mr. Green and the Board presented a joint written stipulation of facts. Additionally, Mr. Green, two of the complaining former clients, Johnny Kizer and Augusta McKinney, and attorney George Higgs, testified at the hearing. Several exhibits also were introduced. A summary of the proof pertinent to each complaint appears below. 1

A. Johnny Kizer Complaint

Prior to October 2012, Mr. Kizer hired Roto-Rooter to perform plumbing work at his home. He obtained a loan from Springleaf Financial Services ("Springleaf") to pay for the work. Springleaf regularly financed loans for Roto-Rooter customers, but Springleaf and Roto-Rooter were separate entities. 2 Mr. Kizer was dissatisfied with Roto-Rooter's work and, as a result, refused to repay the loan to Springleaf. On October 23, 2012, Springleaf sued Mr. Kizer in General Sessions Court in Shelby County for non-payment of a debt. Mr. Kizer hired Mr. Green to represent him and paid Mr. Green $750. When the case was called in General Sessions Court, Mr. Green announced that the parties had resolved the matter to their mutual satisfaction, and the General Sessions Judge entered an agreed order against Mr. Kizer. Mr. Kizer authorized this resolution of the matter, and Mr. Green believed the case had concluded and his representation had ended.

Apparently, Mr. Kizer subsequently changed his mind about the agreement because he filed pro se an appeal to the Circuit Court for Shelby County ("Circuit Court"). Mr. Kizer did not consult Mr. Green about the appeal, but he identified Mr. Green as his counsel of record on the notice of appeal. Mr. Green first learned of Mr. Kizer's appeal from a letter the Circuit Court Clerk's office sent him. He contacted Mr. Kizer, and at Mr. Kizer's request, Mr. Green agreed to represent Mr. Kizer on the matter in Circuit Court for an additional $250 fee. 3

Before the case was heard in Circuit Court, Mr. Green attempted to resolve Mr. Kizer's dissatisfaction with Roto-Rooter's work. Mr. Green sent a plumber to Mr. Kizer's home to inspect Roto-Rooter's work at no expense to Mr. Kizer. Mr. Green, in conjunction with Mr. Higgs, the lawyer who represented Springleaf, convinced Roto-Rooter to extend the already expired warranty on its work.

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Bluebook (online)
567 S.W.3d 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerald-stanley-green-v-board-of-professional-responsibility-of-the-supreme-tenn-2019.