In re Eric D. Troutt

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2006
Docket04-4212
StatusPublished

This text of In re Eric D. Troutt (In re Eric D. Troutt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Eric D. Troutt, (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 04-4212 IN RE ERIC D. TROUTT, Respondent-Appellant,

____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 04-mc-0029-MJR—Michael J. Reagan, Judge. ____________ ARGUED OCTOBER 27, 2005—DECIDED AUGUST 21, 2006 ____________

Before RIPPLE, KANNE, and WOOD, Circuit Judges. WOOD, Circuit Judge. This appeal concerns the way in which the district court handled what began as an attorney discipline matter. The central actors are Eric D. Troutt, the attorney, and District Judge Michael J. Reagan. Briefly put, Judge Reagan concluded that Troutt had failed to live up to his obligations to the bar of the Southern District of Illinois, and, even worse, had conducted himself in a way that amounted to criminal contempt of court. Troutt has appealed from the district court’s order of November 16, 2004, finding him in criminal contempt and suspending him from practicing law in the district court for five years. Although we by no means condone the behavior that Troutt displayed before the district court, we conclude that the procedures the court followed do not pass muster, and we therefore reverse and remand for further proceed- ings. 2 No. 04-4212

I The imbroglio began when, on September 4, 2002, Troutt filed an affidavit of resignation from the bar of the State of Oklahoma, pending disciplinary proceedings that were then before the Oklahoma Supreme Court. That court accepted his resignation and struck his name from its roll of attorneys. Troutt was ineligible to file an application for reinstatement to practice in Oklahoma for a five-year period. Some months later, in February of 2003, Troutt sought and won admission to practice in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. On May 18, 2004, however, upon receiving a copy of the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s order approving Troutt’s resignation from the state bar pending disciplinary proceedings, the district court sent a notice to Troutt pursuant to Local Rule 83.4(c) of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. The notice informed Troutt that he had 30 days in which to inform the court “why the imposition of similar discipline by th[e] Court, consisting of disbarment from practice in this Court, would be unwarranted.” On May 24, 2004, Troutt responded in a detailed letter, claiming that he had neither consented to disbarment in Oklahoma nor resigned to avoid discipline. Instead, he asserted, the allegations against him in Oklahoma “were dismissed and never proven” and “no discipline was imposed against him.” Accordingly, he argued, because he had “never been disciplined by any Bar,” “there [was] no basis for this Court to impose discipline.” The judges in the Southern District of Illinois saw matters differently, and in an order dated June 25, 2004, they suspended Troutt from practice in that district. On July 6, 2004, Troutt filed a motion to alter the June 25 order. His motion largely rehashed the arguments he had made in his original letter about the circumstances sur- rounding his resignation from the Oklahoma bar. In No. 04-4212 3

response, the court set a status conference for July 30, to address whether it was necessary to have a hearing on Troutt’s motion. At the status conference, the court directed Troutt to file an affidavit providing the details about his resignation from the Oklahoma bar, including relevant documents from that proceeding, and it informed Troutt that it would issue a written order upon receipt of this affidavit. Troutt complied, and after reviewing the affidavit and the documents, the court issued an order on August 5 rescinding the earlier order suspending him from practice and directing the clerk to reinstate his name to the roll of attorneys. Importantly for what was to come, the reinstate- ment order was not an unqualified vindication of Troutt; it included the following critical observations: The undersigned Judge consulted with each of the Judges who signed the June 25, 2004 Order suspending Troutt. They accept the undersigned Judge’s recommen- dation that the suspension be lifted. However, in conferring with the other Judges, it became clear that Troutt’s performance in the District Court has been less than stellar. Indeed he was more than 30 minutes late for the status conference in the instant case. The Court cautions Troutt that further misconduct may result in imposition of the same discipline this Order vacates, or worse. Judge Michael J. Reagan, to whom the matter had been assigned randomly, signed this order. Believing that the August 5 order “disparage[d] [his] character” and “malign[ed] his performance before the court,” Troutt filed a “Response to Court Order.” His response took exception to the characterization of his work as “less than stellar” and objected that the court had failed to give him notice and an opportunity to re- spond to its accusations of misconduct. He went on to complain that the whole matter had come about in re- 4 No. 04-4212

taliation for his reporting a former law partner, Terry Sharp, for fraudulent billing practices; it was Sharp, Troutt believed, who had sent the Oklahoma court’s order to courts all around the country. The next day, Troutt filed a “Motion to Alter or Amend Order,” in which he asked the court to strike the last three sentences of its August 5 order and, if the court thought that Troutt had committed misconduct of any kind, to proceed under Local Rule 83.4(d)(1) (“Disciplin- ary Rule IV—Standards for Professional Conduct”), which assures notice and an opportunity to be heard for an attorney accused of misconduct. Troutt’s motion contained harsh language about the court itself, claiming that “rather than following the rules of due process, [the court] takes its secret information and imposes discipline by public repri- mand and admonishment without giving Respondent his due process rights under Rule 83.4(d)(1).” He also accused the court of relying on “illusory references to unknown information obtained by ‘conferring with other judges.’ ” On August 18, Judge Reagan issued a Rule To Show Cause order directing Troutt to explain why the court should not hold him in criminal contempt for his “vitriolic” response to the court’s order reinstating him to practice. The court gave three reasons for its order, which we reproduce in full to give a sense of the escalating problem: First, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide no procedural vehicle for an attorney who is dissatisfied with a Court Order to excoriate the Judge issuing that Order. In appropriate circumstances, motions may be filed. . . . But lawyers may not engage in mordacious attacks on the Court via diatribes labeled as a “Re- sponses” [sic] to Orders. Second, the substantive contents of the Response warrant issuance of a Show Cause Order. Troutt pointedly accuses the undersigned Judge of disparaging his character and maligning his performance. Troutt claims that the Judge has found him guilty of “miscon- No. 04-4212 5

duct” without providing Troutt notice and an opportu- nity to be heard. In fact, the August 6th Order did no such thing. The Order did mention that other District Judges had expressed concerns regarding Troutt’s performance in past cases in this District, and the Order did caution Troutt about being late for Court appearances. But the Order granted Troutt’s motion and reinstated him to the rank of lawyers authorized to practice before this Court. Third, Troutt’s Response not only constitutes an unbridled attack on the undersigned Judge’s authority, Troutt also appears to be using this Court’s electronic case filing system as a bully pulpit from which to belittle his former business partner, attorney Terry Sharp.

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