In Re Boone

7 P.3d 270, 269 Kan. 484, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 16, 2000
Docket83,897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 P.3d 270 (In Re Boone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Boone, 7 P.3d 270, 269 Kan. 484, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 535 (kan 2000).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an original contested attorney discipline case filed by the office of the Disciplinary Administrator against Thomas Caleb Boone of Hays, Kansas, an attorney licensed to practice law in Kansas. The complaint alleged that Boone had violated KRPC 1.1 (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 284) (competence); KRPC 1.3 (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 294) (diligence); KRPC 3.1 (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 361) (meritorious claims and contentions); KRPC 3.2 (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 362) (expediting litigation); KRPC 3.4 (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 369) (fairness to opposing party and counsel); and KRPC 8.4(a), (d), and (g) (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 399) (misconduct).

A panel of the Kansas Board for Discipline of Attorneys (Panel) found that in six federal court cases and two state court cases, Boone had committed various violations of professional conduct, including filing frivolous lawsuits, disobeying court orders, failing to comply with court orders, and failing to dismiss nonmeritorious cases. The Panel found no violations of KRPC 1.1 or KRPC 8.46(a) or (g). The Disciplinary Administrator requested the Panel to recommend that Boone be indefinitely suspended from the practice of law. The Panel recommends that Boone be suspended from the practice of law for 2 years. The Panel further recommends that imposition of the discipline be suspended and Boone be placed on supervised probation for 2 years subject to terms and conditions.

*485 FACTS:

Disciplinary Administrator Mark Anderson initiated the investigation into Boone’s professional conduct upon receiving a copy of an order filed in United States District Court for the District of Kansas where United States Magistrate Judge John Thomas Reid ordered Boone to appear and show cause why he should not be held in contempt and referred to the Committee on Conduct of Attorneys and the Disciplinary Panel of the federal District Court to be suspended, disbarred, or otherwise disciplined for failing to obey the orders of the court. The Disciplinary Administrator appointed Brian Burris, an attorney practicing in Wichita, Kansas, to investigate Boone’s professional conduct.

The federal court order which formed the basis for the investigation was issued in Topliff v. Gross, a medical malpractice case where Boone represented tire plaintiff. The order stated that Boone had ignored deadlines set by the court, had failed to pay court-ordered sanctions imposed because of Boone’s failure to respond to a motion to compel, and had failed to repay the defendant an amount of money ordered by the court. The federal court order referred to another case, Paulie v. Cooperative Union Mercantile Company of Grinnell, Kansas, where Boone had failed to meet deadlines and the federal district judge had advised Boone to file no more cases until he demonstrated an ability to meet the deadlines in cases already on file. The federal court order noted with disapproval that Boone had filed five additional cases after the Pau-lie order.

The Disciplinary Administrator instructed Burris to review the matter's referred to in the Topliff order and the various cases referred to in the order and to expand his inquiry into Boone’s cases to the extent necessary to complete the investigation. Burris contacted Boone. Boone cooperated fully in the investigation.

Burris searched the files iix the federal District Court Clerk’s office and reviewed the cases where Booixe had represented parties. Documents from cases in which Burris identified possible disciplinary problems became exhibits fix the disciplinary hearing. A synopsis of the Panel’s findings axxd conclusions regarding those *486 cases and Boone’s response to those findings and conclusions are set out.

Berry v. Phillipsburg

Boone represented the plaintiff, Trudy Berry, in an action against the City of Phillipsburg, Kansas. The case was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Kansas on May 15, 1990, and rested on Berry’s allegations of police misconduct. Federal Magistrate Judge Reid presided over the case. During the 4-month period set aside for discovery, Boone conducted no formal discovery and failed to comply with the City’s requests for discovery. After the expiration of the discovery period, the City filed a motion to compel discovery. The federal judge granted the motion and entered an order to show cause as to why sanctions should not be assessed against Boone as a result of Boone’s failure to reply to discovery and to the motion to compel. Boone did not respond to the show cause order.

More than 2 months after the close of discovery, Boone filed a motion seeking additional time to conduct discovery. Magistrate Reid denied the motion to reopen discovery. In an order filed September 4, 1991, Magistrate Reid ordered Boone to pay the costs of the City’s motion to compel discovery, in the amount of $545.56.

An additional problem developed in the case because Boone failed to provide witness summaries to the City within the time deadline set in the scheduling order. On September 18, 1991, the City filed a motion to compel the production of the witness summaries. Without responding to the motion to compel and without filing a motion for additional time, Boone filed the witness summaries on September 20,1991. Magistrate Reid found that Boone’s failure to meet the deadline without a request for additional time was inexcusable, and costs were assessed against Boone in the amount of $391.10.

Discovery was reopened to permit the City to depose witnesses who were named for the first time in September 1991. As a result, the City incurred additional expenses. On April 24,1992, the court ordered Boone to pay $4,500 for costs incurred by the City by the *487 delay in discovery. Boone paid $1,350 of the order pursuant to a payment plan set out in the order. The case was subsequently settled in a timely manner, and Magistrate Reid reduced the sanction to $2,500.

At the disciplinary hearing, Boone admitted that he did not conduct any formal discovery in the Berry case but that he moved the court for an extension of time for discovery as a precaution in the event that formal discovery would be required. Boone explained his informal discoveiy methods:

“[I]n a practice like mine where I represent mostly exclusively plaintiffs in civil cases, although I do represent some criminal defendants in my practice, that I have to rely upon a lot of informal discovery, a lot of methods to save expenses and a very good example of that is what I did in the Berry case by interviewing die mayor of the city and a police officer of die city ex parte, which I was allowed to do as a former mayor and a former police officer. . . . The mayor gave me a story that was just veiy favorable to the plaintiff, so that’s a good example of how [informal discovery] was useful in diat case. The Summary Judgment in diat case was denied because of that use of die tool of the informal discovery that I used and I will say tiiis, if I may: We were able to settle the case for forty-five thousand dollars which was ten thousand more than Lawton Nuss told me he’d ever paid for a civil rights case.

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Related

In Re Dennis
188 P.3d 1 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2008)
In Re Pyle
156 P.3d 1231 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2007)
In Re Boone
66 P.3d 896 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2003)
In Re Arabia
19 P.3d 113 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 P.3d 270, 269 Kan. 484, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-boone-kan-2000.