In re Application of Poignon

2012 Ohio 2915, 132 Ohio St. 3d 395
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 2012
Docket2011-1423
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2012 Ohio 2915 (In re Application of Poignon) 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 Poignon, 2012 Ohio 2915, 132 Ohio St. 3d 395 (Ohio 2012).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} Daniel Paul Poignon of Monelova, Ohio, applied as a candidate for admission to the Ohio bar and applied to take the July 2011 bar exam. Expressing serious concerns about Poignon’s failure to take responsibility for his crimes that resulted in felony convictions on two counts of theft of drugs and the revocation of his license to practice pharmacy, his lack of attention to his family’s current financial affairs, and his failure to seek or obtain gainful employment for over three years, the Board of Commissioners on Character and Fitness recommends that Poignon’s application be disapproved and that he not be permitted to reapply for admission to the Ohio bar. Poignon objects to the board’s recommendation, arguing that this court should permit him to address the board’s concerns and to reapply for admission to the Ohio bar. We overrule Poignon’s objections and adopt the board’s recommendation.

Summary of Proceedings

{¶ 2} In November 2010, the Toledo Bar Association admissions committee recommended that Poignon’s application be disapproved based upon his felony conviction for theft of controlled substances and the resulting revocation of his *396 Ohio State Board of Pharmacy license, neglect of his personal financial responsibilities, and his failure to accept responsibility for his mistakes.

{¶ 3} Poignon timely appealed from the admissions committee’s recommendation, and the board appointed a panel to review his character, fitness, and moral qualifications. The panel conducted a hearing on May 26, 2011, at which it heard testimony from Poignon and three other witnesses who appeared in his behalf.

{¶ 4} Poignon testified that he graduated from pharmacy school and obtained his Ohio pharmacist’s license in 1984. He worked at St. Vincent Hospital in Toledo for several years. In 1990 he accepted a job at McLeod Regional Hospital in South Carolina, but during his employment, other members of the pharmacy staff accused him of drug use. He stated that he had been cleared of drug use, but had been asked to resign based on allegations that he had self-prescribed a medication. Poignon claimed that an intern had written the prescription for him but that the intern later denied having done so.

{¶ 5} Following Poignon’s departure from McLeod, he worked at the Florence Community College in South Carolina before returning to Ohio in 1995. In Ohio, he worked at Gabon Community Hospital for a short time before accepting a position at Tiffin Mercy Hospital — where he was terminated for abusing drugs.

{¶ 6} Poignon’s pharmacy career ended with his employment at Drug Corner Pharmacy in Toledo. In connection with the sale of the pharmacy to Rite Aid, the Ohio State Board of Pharmacy conducted an investigation that revealed discrepancies in the pharmacy’s narcotics supply. Poignon was indicted and pleaded no contest to two counts of theft of drugs, 1 both fourth-degree felonies, and in October 1999, he was sentenced to six months in a correctional treatment facility followed by five years of community control. Poignon successfully completed the treatment program, and his community control was terminated in 2001 — approximately four years early. Thereafter, he had his criminal record expunged. But as a result of his convictions, the Ohio Board of Pharmacy revoked his license to practice pharmacy.

{¶ 7} Although Poignon claims to accept responsibility for his crimes and for losing his license to practice pharmacy, he has also offered many explanations and excuses for his conduct, leading the board to doubt his sincerity. Poignon claimed during his admissions-committee interview and his testimony before the panel that he had entered his no-contest plea because he faced a contempt charge for mistakenly missing a trial date and because his lawyer had mishandled his case. He blamed his supervisor, who he reports was convicted of similar misconduct involving controlled substances, for the missing drugs. And he *397 claimed that virtually every pharmacist who worked at Drug Corner Pharmacy was stealing and using drugs and that such acts are common practice within the profession.

{¶ 8} Although Poignon conceded that the pharmacy board had acted within its discretion when it revoked his license, he placed some of the blame for his license revocation on his attorney, who had withdrawn approximately five days before his hearing. He admitted, however, that he had not requested a continuance of the hearing or even notified the board that his attorney had recently withdrawn.

{¶ 9} Poignon’s employment history as a pharmacist shows that his use and abuse of prescription drugs spanned at least seven years. The evidence demonstrates, however, that he successfully completed a course of drug treatment as part of his criminal sentence, and it does not appear that he has had any further incidents of substance abuse.

{¶ 10} In addition to its concerns about Poignon’s history of drug use and his felony theft convictions, the board also expressed concern about his neglect of his family’s financial affairs. Despite his family’s financial problems, at the time of his hearing in May 2011, Poignon had not been employed since April 2008, though he had occasionally done odd jobs for neighbors. Following his release from drug treatment in 2000, he held several short-term jobs from which he had voluntarily resigned. He had also worked for a solo practitioner while in law school and reported on his bar application that he had left for lack of work. That employer, however, reported to the National Conference of Bar Examiners that he was terminated for lack of experience. Poignon testified that he had never been told that his performance was unsatisfactory, and he attributed the employer’s response to a personality conflict with the employer’s mother, who served as the office manager. Thomas Matuszak, formerly of Roetzel & Andress, testified that Poignon had worked as a paralegal for that firm during law school. He stated that he had never had any reason to doubt Poignon’s honesty and that he believed that Poignon had grown from his mistakes and was now able to exercise good judgment.

{¶ 11} The panel found Poignon’s seeming ignorance of and indifference to his family’s financial affairs even more disturbing than his dismal employment history. His credit rating was poor — due in part to delinquent accounts and a poor history of paying bills on time. While Poignon identified his wife as the primary wage earner, he also admitted that she had filed for bankruptcy in 2010. He testified that he has no knowledge of the bankruptcy proceeding because it is his wife’s filing and she is handling it. He believed, however, that the primary reason for the filing was to prevent foreclosure on their home.

{¶ 12} With respect to the foreclosure, the summons and complaint served on Poignon plainly identified him as a party defendant, advised him that he had 28 *398 days after service of the summons to file an answer, and stated that if he failed to file an answer, a default judgment would be rendered against him. Yet Poignon, a law-school graduate when he was served with the complaint, incredibly testified before the panel that he did not believe himself to be a party to the action.

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2012 Ohio 2915, 132 Ohio St. 3d 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-poignon-ohio-2012.