In re Application of Goodstein

2013 Ohio 4586, 1 N.E.3d 328, 137 Ohio St. 3d 461
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2013
Docket2013-0402
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 Ohio 4586 (In re Application of Goodstein) 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
In re Application of Goodstein, 2013 Ohio 4586, 1 N.E.3d 328, 137 Ohio St. 3d 461 (Ohio 2013).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} Daniel Robert Goodstein of Ada, Ohio, was expected to graduate from the Ohio Northern University Pettit College of Law in May 2013. He has applied as a candidate for admission but has not applied to take the bar exam.

{¶ 2} Two members of the Hardin County Bar Association’s admissions committee interviewed Goodstein. Although one of the interviewers noted that Goodstein had revealed a “situation” regarding the overpayment of unemployment benefits that he was working to repay, the committee recommended that his character, fitness, and moral qualifications be approved.

{¶ 3} The Board of Commissioners on Character and Fitness exercised its authority to sua sponte investigate Goodstein’s character. See Gov.Bar R. I(10)(B)(2)(e). After conducting a hearing, a panel of the board issued a report expressing several concerns about Goodstein’s character including (1) an administrative determination by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services (“ODJFS”) that the agency had overpaid him unemployment-compensation benefits and that the overpayment was due in part to fraud, (2) his failure to disclose his unemployment-compensation fraud on his original application, (3) his failure to disclose that he had been subject to discipline as an undergraduate at Xavier *462 University for incidents involving alcohol, (4) his failure to disclose a speeding ticket, and (5) inaccuracies in the reporting of his employment history.

{¶ 4} The panel recommended that Goodstein’s pending application be disapproved, that he be required to fully reimburse ODJFS for the unemployment-compensation overpayment, plus interest, before reapplying as a candidate for admission to the Ohio bar, and that he be permitted to apply to take the July 2014 bar exam. The board adopted the panel’s findings of fact and recommendation of disapproval but recommends that Goodstein be permitted to apply to take the February 2015 bar examination provided that he has made restitution to ODJFS. The board further recommends that we require Goodstein, upon his reapplying as a candidate for admission, to undergo a complete character and fitness investigation. Having thoroughly reviewed the record, we adopt the board’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Rather than permitting him to apply for the February 2015 bar exam, however, we will permit him to apply for the July 2015 bar exam.

The Underlying Improprieties

Unemployment-Benefits Fraud

{¶ 5} The panel found that in February 2012, Goodstein sent the National Conference of Bar Examiners (“NCBE”) an amendment to his application updating his response to one of the questions, but he did not submit the amendment to the Office of Bar Admissions. The amendment reflected that he had collected unemployment benefits after being “laid-off ’ from his employment as a sales representative for Total Quality Logistics 1 but that ODJFS had later determined that a portion of those benefits had been overpaid due to fraud. Goodstein reported in the amendment that ODJFS had determined that he became ineligible to receive unemployment benefits when he accepted a new job through an employment agency and then quit that job without providing notice to the employment agency. He explained that he had quit the new job because he could not afford the commute for the three weeks before he would have received his first paycheck.

{¶ 6} Goodstein further stated in the amendment that by the time he learned that ODJFS expected him to repay a portion of the benefits that he had received, he had found work as a part-time janitor and that with the payments he received from unemployment and the work, he “was barely able to make [his] monthly rent and utilities payments.” The panel initially believed that this statement indicated that Goodstein had been reporting his earnings to ODJFS and had been *463 receiving a reduced unemployment benefit. At the hearing, however, Goodstein provided two ODJFS Determinations on Eligibility for Unemployment Benefits issued on April 28, 2010, and a later issued Director’s Redetermination of another determination that had been issued on that date, that proved otherwise.

{¶ 7} One ODJFS determination disallowed Goodstein’s claim for certain benefits on the finding that he had failed to report earnings from SMX Staffing (for the job that he had quit) for the period of September 6, 2009, through September 12, 2009, with the intent to obtain benefits to which he was not entitled. Goodstein appealed another determination regarding that job that had also gone against him, and the director of ODJFS issued a modified redetermination that was substantially similar to the appealed determination, characterizing the payment of benefits for the week that included Goodstein’s voluntary termination of his employment as fraudulent because he had quit without just cause, while characterizing his claims for the ensuing period for the weeks of September 19, 2009, through December 26, 2009, as denied, but not fraudulent. Therefore, the director ordered Goodstein to repay 16 weeks of benefits at $198 per week, a total of $3,168.

{¶ 8} A different ODJFS determination found that Goodstein had not reported his earnings from the Jewish Community Center for the period of January 3, 2010, through April 24, 2010, and that he had withheld that information with the intent of obtaining benefits to which he was not entitled. This determination declared that his collection of those benefits was fraudulent and ordered him to repay the $3,168 in benefits that he had received for that 16-week period.

{¶ 9} While Goodstein sought to characterize his unemployment-benefits fraud solely as a misunderstanding about his eligibility following his voluntary termination of short-term employment, the panel expressed concern that he failed to acknowledge his “larger” fraud — falsely answering questions about his employment and income every week from at least January through May 2010 in order to collect unemployment benefits while he was gainfully employed — until he was cross-examined at the hearing. The panel was particularly troubled that Gold-stein had disclosed the true nature of his “problem with ODJFS” to a law-school classmate, who testified at the hearing that Goodstein “had drawn unemployment while also having a job,” yet had attempted to conceal it during the admissions process.

{¶ 10} Goodstein paid $1,000 to ODJFS on July 14, 2010, and made two small payments totaling $43 on March 11, 2011. In September 2012, he told the admissions-committee interviewers that he was working hard to establish a repayment plan, but he made only two additional payments of $50 after that interview — one on November 30, 2012, and the other on January 4, 2013. At the time of that last payment, his outstanding balance, with accrued interest, was *464 $6,705.04. Although Goodstein initially claimed that his ODJFS case manager had advised him that he could not make partial payments on his account because the overpayments had been fraudulently obtained, he conceded on cross-examination at the hearing that R.C. 4141.35 and an authoritative resource explaining repayment procedures appear to contemplate that repayment plans are acceptable, even in cases of fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 Ohio 4586, 1 N.E.3d 328, 137 Ohio St. 3d 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-goodstein-ohio-2013.