In Re Fengling Liu

664 F.3d 367, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 23326, 2011 WL 5839658
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 22, 2011
DocketDocket 09-90006-am
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 664 F.3d 367 (In Re Fengling Liu) 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 Fengling Liu, 664 F.3d 367, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 23326, 2011 WL 5839658 (2d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This Court’s Committee on Attorney Admissions and Grievances (“the Committee”) has recommended that Fengling Liu, an attorney admitted to the bar of this Court, be publicly reprimanded. We adopt the Committee’s report, except as discussed below, and PUBLICLY REPRIMAND Liu for her misconduct in this Court.

I. Summary of Proceedings

By orders filed in February and July 2009, this Court referred Liu to the Committee for investigation of the matters described in those orders and preparation of a report on whether she should be subject to disciplinary or other corrective measures. The relevant portions of those orders are appended to this decision.

During the Committee’s proceedings, Liu had the opportunity to address the matters discussed in the Court’s referral order and to testify under oath at a hearing held in June 2009. Presiding over the hearing were Committee members David Fein, Paul Curnin, and the Honorable Howard A. Levine. In June 2010, the Committee filed with the Court the record of the Committee’s proceedings and its report and recommendations. Thereafter, the Court provided Liu with a copy of the Committee’s report, and Liu responded.

In its report, the Committee concluded that there was clear and convincing evidence that Liu had engaged in “conduct unbecoming a member of the bar” warranting the imposition of discipline. Report at 12 (quoting Fed. R.App. P. 46(c)). Specifically, the Committee found, inter alia, that Liu had: (1) through negligence or gross negligence, defaulted on a number of cases in this Court, causing their dismissal; (2) failed to keep her clients apprised of the status of their cases; (3) failed to properly terminate her representation in a number of cases; (4) failed to exhaust administrative remedies for claims later presented to this Court; (5) failed to properly supervise less experienced associates, resulting in their filing of briefs in this Court that presented unexhausted claims without any explanation for why this Court should reach the merits despite the failure to exhaust; (6) improperly filed petitions for review in this Court despite knowing that it was an incorrect venue, and negligently relied on a court employee’s advice that the petitions could be so filed; and (7) violated her duty of candor by helping pro se petitioners draft and file petitions for review in this Court without disclosing her involvement to the Court (the “ghostwriting” charge). Id. at 2 n. 1, 4-7, 9-11. After considering various aggravating and mitigating factors, id. at 12, *369 the Committee recommended that Liu be publicly reprimanded and subject to certain reporting requirements, id. at 12-13.

In her response to the Committee’s Report, Liu stated, inter alia, that: (1) she has reduced her caseload significantly; (2) the filing of petitions for review in the wrong venue had not been done with wrongful intent, occurred only after a court clerk had informed her that the petitions could be filed in this Court, and ceased as soon as she learned that it was improper; (3) she agrees that she had neglected to properly withdraw from representation, but asserts that her failure to do so had been the result of inexperience and not receiving timely guidance from the Court; (4) she disagrees with the Committee’s finding that her clients had been prejudiced when their cases were defaulted; and (5) she agrees that she had failed to properly supervise the associates who drafted several deficient briefs. Liu Aff. at 2-6. Liu also acknowledged that she had helped clients draft petitions for review that were then filed pro se in this Court without her involvement being disclosed; however, Liu explained that she did so primarily to ensure that her clients did not miss the thirty-day filing deadline. Id. at 3. Finally, Liu noted several mitigating factors, stated that she will “make sure any case [she] take[s] in the future will be handled diligently and competently,” and requested that she be reprimanded privately, rather than publicly. Id. at 1-2, 5-6.

II. Ghostwriting of Pro Se Pleadings

We adopt all of the Committee’s findings except those pertaining to Liu’s undisclosed ghostwriting of petitions for review. For the following reasons, we conclude that her ghostwriting did not constitute sanctionable misconduct.

Although there have been a number of recent cases in this Court in which a pro se party’s pleadings were drafted, or appeared to have been drafted, by an attorney, this Court has not yet addressed the issue of attorney ghostwriting. 1 However, a number of other federal courts have found that attorneys who had ghostwritten briefs or other pleadings for ostensibly pro se litigants had engaged in misconduct. In Duran v. Carris, for example, the Tenth Circuit admonished an attorney for ghostwriting a pro se brief for his former client without acknowledging his participation by signing the brief. 238 F.3d 1268, 1271-73 (10th Cir.2001) (per curiam). The court stated that the attorney’s conduct had inappropriately afforded the former client the benefit of the liberal construction rule for pro se pleadings, had shielded the attorney from accountability for his actions, and conflicted with the requirement of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(a) that all pleadings, motions, and papers be signed by the party’s attorney. See id. at 1271-72; see also, e.g., Ellis v. Maine, 448 F.2d 1325, 1328 (1st Cir.1971) (disapproving of members of bar “representing] petitioners, informally or otherwise, and preparing] briefs for them which the assisting lawyers do not sign, and thus escape the obligation imposed on members of the bar ... of representing to the court that there is good ground to support the assertions made”); Ira P. Robbins, Ghostwriting: Filling in the Gaps of Pro se Prisoners’ Access to the Courts, 23 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 271, 285 *370 and n. 73 (2010) (“The federal courts have almost universally condemned ghostwriting.” (collecting cases)). 2

On the other hand, a number of bar association ethics committees have been more accepting of ghostwriting. The ethics committee opinions described in the following paragraphs are representative of the range of views on the subject and suggest a possible trend toward greater acceptance of various forms of ghostwriting.

A 1987 opinion of the New York City Bar’s Committee on Professional and Judicial Ethics requires an attorney who drafts “any pleadings” for a pro se litigant, other than a “previously prepared form devised particularly for use by pro se

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Bluebook (online)
664 F.3d 367, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 23326, 2011 WL 5839658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fengling-liu-ca2-2011.