Grove v. State

258 P.3d 843, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 36, 2011 WL 2084086
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 27, 2011
DocketA-10622
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 258 P.3d 843 (Grove v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grove v. State, 258 P.3d 843, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 36, 2011 WL 2084086 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Richard M. Grove, who faced felony charges in the superior court, entered into a plea agreement with the State; under this agreement, Grove pleaded guilty to third-degree assault 1 and felony eluding a police officer.2 During the negotiations leading up to this plea agreement, and at the entry of plea and sentencing, Grove was represented by James Wheeler. Wheeler was an employee of the Alaska Public Defender Agency. He was a law school graduate, but he was not a licensed attorney.

After Grove was sentenced, he filed a petition for post-conviction relief in which he asserted that he had been denied the assistance of counsel. Grove contended that Wheeler had been practicing law as a "legal intern" for the Public Defender Agency under Alaska Bar Rule 44, and that Wheeler had violated the terms of his internship by appearing in court and representing Grove without the supervision of a licensed attorney. (Section 5(a) of Bar Rule 44 states that legal interns may appear and participate in superior court proceedings "if the [licensed] attorney representing the client is personally present and able to supervise the intern." A legal intern can be either a law student or a law school graduate.)

The State responded that Wheeler had not been practicing law as a legal intern under Bar Rule 44, but rather had been practicing law under the authority of AS 08.08.210(d). This statute provides:

Employees of the Department of Law, the Public Defender Agency, and the Office of Public Advocacy, whose activities would constitute the practice of law ... are required to obtain a license to practice law in Alaska no later than 10 months following the commencement of their employment.

The State argued that, under this statute, Wheeler could represent clients on behalf of the Public Defender Agency for up to ten months without being licensed as an attorney, and without a supervising attorney being present.

The superior court adopted the State's position on this matter and denied Grove's petition for post-conviction relief Grove now appeals the superior court's decision.

In his brief to this court, Grove takes the position that attorneys practicing under the authority of AS 08.08.210(d) should be subject to Bar Rule 44. In other words, he argues that AS 08.08.210(d) is a statute that purports to exempt legal interns from the requirements of Alaska Bar Rule 44 if the interns are practicing law on behalf of the Department of Law, the Public Defender Agency, or the Office of Public Advocacy. If this were indeed the case-that is, if the Alaska Legislature enacted AS 08.08.210(d) for the purpose of abrogating or relaxing the rules and requirements governing legal interns under Bar Rule 44-then AS 08.08.210(d) would probably be invalid.

The Alaska Supreme Court has repeatedly held that the judicial branch of government, not the legislative branch, has the authority to regulate the practice of law and to set the rules that define who will be allowed to practice law.3 In particular, the supreme court has repeatedly held that when there is a conflict between a statute and a bar rule regarding the rules that define who is eligible to practice law, the bar rule controls-because bar rules are enactments of the supreme court. As the supreme court [845]*845stated in Application of Houston,4 "the legislature ... may not require this court to admit [persons to the practice of law] on standards other than those accepted or established by this court." 5

Thus, the ultimate question is whether the challenged statute, AS 08.08.210(d), conflicts with Alaska Bar Rule 44, or whether the statute establishes an alternative method-ie, a method apart from the internships defined in Bar Rule 44-for authorizing law school graduates to practice law even though they have not been admitted to the practice of law by the Alaska Bar Association in the normal manner, and whether this alternative method has been accepted by the Alaska Bar Association.

We have examined the website maintained by the Alaska Bar Association, and it is apparent that the Bar Association treats AS 08.08.210(d) as a separate authorization to practice law, different from the authorization given to legal interns under Bar Rule 44. According to the Bar Association's web site, a person may apply to practice law either under the statute (which the Bar refers to as the "10-month rule") or under Bar Rule 44. The Bar Association sets forth different application processes depending on whether the applicant is seeking authorization to practice law under the statute or the bar rule.6

It is possible to argue that, because AS 08.08.210(d) provides an additional method for law school graduates to practice law in this state, the statute does not simply augment the Alaska Bar Rules, but rather con-ficts with the Bar Rules. But our decision on this issue must be shaped by the fact that the Alaska Bar Association does not perceive a conflict between the statute and the bar rules.

The Bar Association is the ageney charged with policing the practice of law and with determining which persons are eligible to practice law. Accordingly, we must defer to the Bar Association's interpretation of this matter unless we are convinced that the Bar Association's interpretation is clearly untenable or unreasonable. As the supreme court stated in Wilber v. Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission,7 "[when the interpretation of a statute or other question of law implicates agency expertise as to complex matters or as to the formulation of fundamental policy, we defer to the ageney's interpretation so long as it has a reasonable basis in the law." 8

The issue of whether AS 08.08.210(d) conflicts with Bar Rule 44 or whether, instead, the statute provides an alternative method for law school graduates to practice law in Alaska is a matter involving "the formulation of fundamental policy." And the Bar Association's conclusion-that the statute does not conflict with the bar rule-does not appear to be clearly untenable or unreasonable.

Indeed, while this opinion was undergoing technical review by the staff of this court, the Alaska Supreme Court resolved any doubt on this issue by amending Bar Rule 44 to explicitly acknowledge AS 08.08.210(d) as a dis-erete method by which a person can be authorized to practice law in this state.

On March 18, 2011, the supreme court issued Supreme Court Order No. 1708. This order, which took effect on April 1, amended Bar Rule 44 by adding a new section-Section 8-that addresses the practice of law under AS 08.08.210(d):

Practice of Law Under Statutory Authority. To be eligible to practice law without a license under the provisions of AS 08.08.210(d), a person must meet the eligibility requirements for obtaining a legal permit listed in Section 8(c)(1), (2), and (3) of this rule. Persons practicing under AS 08.08.210(d) must obtain a license to practice law in Alaska no later than 10 months following commencement of their employment. The authority for those per[846]*846sons to practice law terminates upon the failure of that person to pass any bar examination administered by Alaska or any other state of the United States or the District of Columbia.

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Related

Grove v. State
258 P.3d 843 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
258 P.3d 843, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 36, 2011 WL 2084086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grove-v-state-alaskactapp-2011.