In re DeMarco

733 F.3d 457, 2013 WL 5495314, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 20300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 2013
DocketDocket 09-90045-am
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 733 F.3d 457 (In re DeMarco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re DeMarco, 733 F.3d 457, 2013 WL 5495314, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 20300 (2d Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Pursuant to this Court’s Local Rule 46.2, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that Mario DeMarco is PUBLICLY REPRIMANDED for the misconduct described in the appended report of this Court’s Committee on Admissions and Grievances (“the Committee”), except as discussed below.

I. Summary of Proceedings

By order filed in April 2009, this Court referred DeMarco to the Committee for investigation of the matters described in that order and preparation of a report on whether he should be subject to disciplinary or other corrective measures. During the Committee’s proceedings, DeMarco had the opportunity to address the Court’s referral order and to testify under oath at hearings held in September 2009, April 2010, and June 2011. DeMarco proceeded pro se before the Committee.

Although a draft Committee report and recommendation was prepared after the second hearing, a dissenting Committee member requested that additional evidence be obtained and, as a result, the Committee reopened the proceeding to hear additional testimony from DeMarco and from a new witness. See Committee Report at 2. After that third hearing, a new draft Committee report was prepared. However, one Committee member dissented in part from the Committee report and recommendation in a separate “minority report.” The minority report caused the Committee to meet in plenary session and, after discussing the issues raised by the minority report, the full Committee adopted the majority’s report and recommendation (the “Committee Report”) by a vote of 8 to 1 with one member absent. See Addendum to Report.

In January 2012, the Committee filed with the Court the record of the Committee’s proceedings, the Committee Report, the minority report, and the addendum to the Committee Report. Thereafter, the Court provided DeMarco with a copy of the reports, and DeMarco responded.

In the Committee Report, the Committee concluded that there was clear and convincing evidence that DeMarco had engaged in misconduct warranting the imposition of discipline. See Committee Report at 14-15. Specifically, the Committee found that DeMarco had: (a) in two companion cases (referred to here as the “Morales cases”), failed to timely file petitions for review and submitted deficient briefs which did not address an issue that the Court had instructed DeMarco to ad *460 dress, 1 (b) failed to timely file this Court’s “Form C/A” in eleven cases, and (c) failed to timely file a brief in ten cases. Id. at 5-12. After considering various aggravating and mitigating factors, id. at 13-15,16, the Committee recommended that DeMarco be publicly reprimanded and be required, inter alia, to submit periodic status reports concerning his legal practice, id. at 15-16.

The minority report concurred with the Committee’s conclusion that DeMarco had violated various professional obligations, but dissented from several findings of the Committee and the Committee’s recommendation. The minority report recommended that DeMarco be suspended for at least two years, in addition to being publicly reprimanded. Minority Report at 56. The disagreement with the Committee Report primarily related to the dissenting member’s conclusions that DeMarco had been directly responsible for the misconduct at issue, as opposed to merely failing to adequately supervise his staff, and had knowingly made false statements to the Committee and this Court regarding his failure to comply with filing deadlines and other Court orders. Id. at 2.

In his response to the Committee Report, DeMarco objected to the Committee’s recommendation of public reprimand. See Response to Report. However, DeMarco did not address the Committee minority’s recommendation that DeMarco be suspended, id., although he had been advised by the Court that “the form and degree of discipline that may be imposed by the Court is not limited to that recommended by the Committee,” see Order Requiring Response to Report.

II. Credibility Determinations

We give “particular deference” to the factual findings of the Committee members who presided over an attorney disciplinary hearing where those findings are based on demeanor-based credibility determinations, and somewhat lesser deference to credibility findings based on an analysis of a witness’s testimony. See In re Payne, 707 F.3d 195, 201-02 (2d Cir.2013).

In the present case, the Committee majority and minority disagreed over DeMarco’s credibility, based on both his demeanor and an analysis of the evidence. While the observations of the minority report are not without force, we see no reason not to accept the credibility assessments reflected in the Committee Report. The totality of the evidence supports the Committee’s conclusions that DeMarco’s deficient conduct was negligent rather than deliberate, that he did not deliberately mislead the Court or Committee, and that some of the deficient conduct resulted from inadequate supervision of employees rather than his own direct negligence.

III. Attribution of Fault to Law Firm and Court Employees

A. Defaults Relating to Intra-Office Communications

First, the testimony of DeMarco, his paralegal, and his former associate, and an affidavit from his former office manager, support a finding that some, but not all, of the defaults and violations of Court orders were caused by one or more of DeMarco’s employees who failed to timely pass along mail, to notify DeMarco of deadlines or *461 other directives, or to timely file documents. We see no reason to reject this evidence, although we reach somewhat different conclusions than the Committee. As in any office, DeMarco’s delegation of various tasks to subordinates carried with it the risk that subordinates might, on occasion, fail to timely complete a task or pass along important information. Attributing some of the fault to subordinates did not, in this context, suggest an attempt by DeMarco to unfairly blame others for his own errors, particularly since DeMarco conceded that he had failed to properly supervise those subordinates.

However, even where employees were responsible for defaults, we conclude that DeMarco, rather than having only indirect supervisory responsibility, often shared direct responsibility, for the reasons discussed in the following subsections B and C.

B. Responsibility for the Morales Briefs

DeMarco’s testimony regarding responsibility for the Morales briefs changed over the course of the hearings. When asked why he had failed to obey the Court’s instruction in its March 2007 order to brief the Suspension Clause issue, his first response was that he “wasn’t the lead attorney on that brief,” though he also suggested that he may have been at least partially responsible, remarking that “[w]e just did not do a good job in that case from top to bottom.” Transcript (“Tr.”) at 39.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
733 F.3d 457, 2013 WL 5495314, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 20300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-demarco-ca2-2013.