In Re Antonio Cordova Gonzalez

726 F.2d 16, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25933
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1984
Docket83-1214, 83-1326
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 726 F.2d 16 (In Re Antonio Cordova Gonzalez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Antonio Cordova Gonzalez, 726 F.2d 16, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25933 (1st Cir. 1984).

Opinion

BOWNES, Circuit. Judge.

Antonio Cordova Gonzalez appeals an order of the district court assessing him $6,500 as a sanction because he withdrew as counsel for the defendant in a criminal case eight days prior to the date set for the start of the trial. His withdrawal necessitated a trial continuance of four months. The $6,500 represented costs incurred by the prosecution preparing for trial, an estimate of its costs for getting ready for the second trial and attorney’s fees.

I.

A detailed statement of facts is necessary. On April 30, 1982, a twenty-five count indictment alleging Medicare fraud *17 was returned against Hector Segarra Iri-zarry. On May 3 Cordova filed an appearance on behalf of Segarra. A status conference on the case attended by Cordova and the prosecutor was held by the district court on May 20. After the conference, the court entered an order setting June 9, 11, and 14 as the dates for discovery of the government’s evidence by the defendant. These dates were chosen to accommodate Cordo-va. The order also set June 14 as the date for the next status conference and noted that July 9 was the Speedy Trial Act deadline.

On June 14 Cordova moved for a continuance of the status conference scheduled for that same day. The motion was granted and the conference was rescheduled for June 16. Cordova was informed by the court that no further continuances would be granted. At the conference on June 16 Cordova informed the court that the government had supplied him with all the documents it intended to use in its case-in-chief, about two hundred pages, but that he had not yet had a chance to inspect them. He said that on June 18 he would file for an extension of time in which to prepare pretrial motions. Cordova was told by the court that if the motion for extension was not filed promptly or was not justified, the case would be set down for a final pretrial conference and trial.

On June 18 Cordova moved for an extension of the trial and offered to waive the speedy trial rights of his client. The reasons given for the requested extension were: the voluminous documentary material that had to be examined; that Cordova planned to take depositions in a civil case from June 21-25; and that he had planned a two-week vacation after the depositions.

On June 21 the court gave Cordova until July 9 to complete the document inspection and file pretrial motions. The court advised Cordova that taking civil depositions and a vacation “are not reasons for extending the speedy trial limits and should not be presented to the court as such.” Cordova was also told that no further extension would be granted for filing pretrial motions and that the court would review the file on July 9 for pretrial motions and that, if defendant’s pretrial motions were not before the court, the case would be set for a final pretrial conference and trial within two weeks. No pretrial motions were filed on behalf of the defendant by July 9. On July 12, the court scheduled a final pretrial conference for July 23 and trial for July 28.

On July 20 Cordova requested permission to withdraw as counsel for the defendant. The only reason given was that the defendant had not paid the attorney fees requested. Cordova was notified by mail and telephone that there would be a hearing on his motion on July 23. Cordova was thirty minutes late for the hearing.

The first witness at the hearing was the defendant, Segarra Irizarry. Segarra is a member of the bar of Puerto Rico, but does not practice law. He testified as follows. He first learned of Cordova’s intention to withdraw as his counsel only a few days prior to the hearing. No written fee agreement was entered into between Cordova and himself. In May he received a request for a retainer of $10,000. He did not contest the total amount of the charges, but was not able to pay at this time.

In his testimony, Cordova emphasized something that had not been brought to the attention of the court prior to this time, the failure of the defendant to help him prepare the case for trial. According to Cordo-va, Segarra had agreed to go through the documents furnished by the government “and make reports to me [Cordova] in connection with the pertinency in the defense of the case.” Cordova also testified about difficulties he had with defendant’s cousin, Attorney Luis Guillermo Zambrana, who Cordova asserted was co-counsel in the case. Cordova ended his testimony by stating, “defendant for whatever reason he has had, has not put me in a position to defend him properly.”

Neither the defendant nor Cordova specified the total fee that was to be charged.

On July 28 the court issued a detailed order recounting the procedural history of the case prior to the date on which the *18 motion for withdrawal was filed. The court pointed out that the defendant’s cousin, Attorney Zambrana, did not appear on the record as counsel for the defendant and that “the only attorney who has appeared in court since the arraignment and bail reduction hearing has been Mr. Cordova Gonzalez.” The court specifically found:

Defense counsel justifies his failure in filing the pretrial motions he had announced and his lack of preparation for trial on the fact that defendant did not prepare the relation and study of documents that he had requested from him. It is no secret that any defendant confronted with criminal charges is under stress and hardship. Mr. Cordova Gonzalez’ dependence on defendant is unjustified and unnecessarily places the burden on his client beyond permissible limits. His representations to the Court, if accepted as valid, would force us to allow a situation in which an attorney abandons his duty to prepare adequately in protection of his client’s interests. It is beyond question that the primary responsibility for the preparation of this case rested on defense counsel and not on defendant. He accepted that obligation when he agreed to defend him. This is not a situation in which a defendant merely refuses to assist his attorney in preparing his defense but rather one in which the attorney has passed on to his client the study of the documentary evidence before he took it upon himself to discharge his duty towards defendant. One cannot help wondering if defense counsel views his role in this case as one of a stand-by counsel for a pro-se defendant rather than what it should be — that of a concerned attorney solely in charge of a complex case entrusted to him by a defendant who faces maximum penalties of 125 years imprisonment. Attorney Cordova Gonzalez was granted ample and sufficient time, at his own request, to prepare pretrial motions and failed to do so. His excuses for not complying with the deadline set by the Court are not acceptable. Defense counsel was given complete discovery by the government and all documentary evidence to be used at trial was made available to him.

The court further faulted Cordova for not entering into a fee agreement with his client at the outset of their relationship.

The court concluded:

After reviewing the entire file of this case and considering the testimony of defendant and the statements of his counsel during today's hearing, the Court is convinced that the attorney has been negligent in his preparation of defendant’s defense and that he has unduly exposed his client and placed his interest in a speedy trial in jeopardy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
726 F.2d 16, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-antonio-cordova-gonzalez-ca1-1984.