In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Cohen

853 P.2d 286, 316 Or. 657, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 88
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1993
DocketOSB 91-138; SC S39908
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 853 P.2d 286 (In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Complaint as to the Conduct of Cohen, 853 P.2d 286, 316 Or. 657, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 88 (Or. 1993).

Opinion

*659 PER CURIAM

This is a lawyer disciplinary proceeding. The Oregon State Bar charges that the accused represented two clients whose interests were in likely conflict without making required disclosures and that he continued to represent those clients when their interests were in actual conflict, in violation of DR S-IOSCE). 1 The trial panel found the accused not guilty.

The Bar sought review pursuant to BR 10.1, BR 10.3, and ORS 9.536(1). We review the record de novo. ORS 9.536(3). The Bar has the burden of establishing ethical misconduct by clear and convincing evidence. BR 5.2. “Clear and convincing evidence” means evidence establishing that the truth of the facts asserted is highly probable. In re Johnson, 300 Or 52, 55, 707 P2d 573 (1985). We find the accused guilty of violating DR 5-105(E) and reprimand him.

*660 FINDINGS OF FACT

The accused was admitted to practice law in Oregon in 1979. In late March 1989, Wife telephoned the accused and asked for legal assistance with a juvenile case and a possible criminal case. Both matters arose out of an incident that took place on September 2, 1988, in which Husband beat and injured Wife’s nine-year-old daughter from a previous marriage. Husband and Wife also had two children together. A petition had been filed in juvenile court regarding the nine-year-old, and criminal charges were expected to be brought against Husband.

Husband and Wife consulted the accused in person on April 3,1989. Wife expressed fear that the children might be taken away from her. The accused concluded, however, that “[t]he juvenile proceeding didn’t pose a realistic threat after eight months of nonattention of the juvenile system.” 2 With respect to the criminal proceeding, Husband told the accused that he did not want to go to trial; “he was quite contrite, and he wanted help.”

The accused concluded that no conflict existed between Husband and Wife as of April 3, 1989, because “[tjhey wanted to keep their family together,” although they seemed “aware that the likely result of the criminal proceeding would be that [Husband] would be ordered out of the home.” The accused advised Husband and Wife on April 3 that he could not represent them both “unless they were in complete agreement about what they wanted.” The accused did not put that advice in writing. He agreed to represent Husband and Wife and opened two files, “Criminal” and “Juvenile.”

On April 7,1989, Husband was indicted for criminal mistreatment in the first degree and released on his own recognizance. On or about June 22,1989, Wife telephoned the accused to express “a concern about [Husband’s] not going regularly to his counseling at the Men’s Resource Center *661 which was anger management counseling.” In that conversation, Wife said that she was “going to call the authorities.” From Wife’s “tone and the way she was saying things,” the accused knew ‘ ‘that her purpose would not be as an ally of her husband in making those phone calls.” The accused knew that Husband was required to attend the counseling as a condition of continued release on recognizance. The accused testified that he told Wife that she “had a right to make her own decision and go her own way” but that he would have to withdraw from representation if Husband and Wife no longer had the same goal. He testified that Wife responded that, “[i]f [Husband] will do what he was supposed to do, we’re still a team.”

In June 1989, before the plea hearing in Husband’s criminal case, the accused received the police report concerning the incident of criminal mistreatment involving the nine-year-old. The police report identified Wife as the person who had contacted the police initially about the incident.

On June 30, 1989, Husband entered a plea of guilty to the charge of criminal mistreatment. Sentencing in the case was set for late September 1989. In late August 1989, the accused received and read a copy of a presentence investigator’s report concerning Husband. The report stated in part:

“[Wife’s] moods and attitudes toward her husband fluctuate on a near daily basis. In talking with her on the phone prior to the interview in the office, she was very upset saying that the Defendant had been abusing her son and that he was refusing to go to anger management classes. * * * [Wife] then called the day after the interview and said that the defendant was threatening the family * *

After reading that report, the accused spoke with Husband and Wife to determine whether they still shared the common goal of keeping Husband out of j ail and in the family home. Husband and Wife assured the accused that they did. The accused concluded that there was “[a] unification of interest again,” and he continued to represent both parties thereafter, including representing Husband in sentence negotiations. At the sentencing hearing, the district attorney recommended a suspended sentence with probation and counseling. The court did not accept that recommendation, but sentenced Husband to six months in jail.

*662 LIKELY CONFLICT OF INTEREST

At the outset of the representation of Husband and Wife, there was a likely conflict of interest between them. On April 3, 1989, when the accused first met with Husband and Wife, he was aware of Wife’s concern that her children might be taken away from her in juvenile proceedings if Husband remained in the home. That is, Wife had expressed a concern that was inimical to Husband’s interests, even while stating that she and Husband had a common goal in seeking legal representation. Moreover, Wife’s “objective personal * * * interests,” DR 5-105(A)(2), as mother and guardian of her children, were adverse to Husband’s objective personal interest in seeking to minimize the consequences of his past criminal behavior within the home. 3

In the face of that likely conflict of interest, the accused failed to make a full disclosure, as required by DR 5-105(F) and as defined by former DR 10-101(B). The accused’s explanation to the parties at the outset of the representation, as depicted in his testimony, was inadequate to apprise Husband and Wife of the potential adverse impact of joint representation. In addition, the disclosure was not confirmed contemporaneously in writing. Full disclosure was, in fact, never made at any time during the representation. As a result of that conduct, the accused violated DR 5-105(E).

ACTUAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST

When the accused received the presentence report, he was made aware of an actual conflict of interest. Indeed, the accused testified:

“Q. Did you at that time consider that you possibly had a conflict of interest?
“A. Oh, yeah.
“Q. An actual conflict of interest?

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Bluebook (online)
853 P.2d 286, 316 Or. 657, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-complaint-as-to-the-conduct-of-cohen-or-1993.