In Re Ivy

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 2016
Docket7106 S-15450
StatusPublished

This text of In Re Ivy (In Re Ivy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska 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 Ivy, (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

In the Disciplinary Matter Involving ) ) Supreme Court No. S-15450 DEBORAH IVY, Attorney. ) ABA File No. 2010D233 ) ) OPINION ) ) No. 7106 – May 20, 2016

Appeal from the Alaska Bar Association Disciplinary Board.

Appearances: Charles E. Cole, Law Offices of Charles E. Cole, Fairbanks, for Deborah Ivy. Kevin G. Clarkson, Brena, Bell & Clarkson, P.C., Anchorage, for Alaska Bar Association.

Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, and Bolger, Justices. [Maassen, Justice, not participating.]

BOLGER, Justice.

FABE, Chief Justice, dissenting.

I. INTRODUCTION After remand the Alaska Bar Association Disciplinary Board again recommends disbarring an attorney who testified falsely in private civil litigation and in these disciplinary proceedings. Previously we directed the Board to reconsider sanctions in light of our holding that the attorney violated Alaska Rule of Professional Conduct 8.4 and Alaska Bar Rule 15, but not Rules of Professional Conduct 3.3 and 3.4, because the misconduct did not arise in a representative capacity. After independently reviewing the record, we now conclude that the severity of this misconduct warrants disbarment. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

We set out the facts and proceedings relevant to this bar matter in In re Ivy.1 Here we recapitulate those facts most relevant to the imposition of sanctions. Deborah Ivy and her brother, David Kyzer, were involved for several years in now-settled litigation over the dissolution and unwinding of business organizations and joint property holdings of Ivy, Kyzer, their two sisters, and others. During that litigation, relations between Kyzer and Ivy grew so acrimonious that a no-contact order was issued in December 2007. This order prohibited in-person or telephone contact between Ivy and Kyzer without an attorney present and prohibited each party from coming within 500 feet of the other’s residence. Ivy subsequently testified that Kyzer made improper contact with her on three occasions after this order issued. In response Kyzer filed an ethics grievance with the Alaska Bar Association, claiming that Ivy fabricated these incidents, in violation of the Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct. Two of the alleged incidents bear on the sanctions inquiry. First, on January 7, 2008, Ivy provided a 30-minute statement to a police officer, claiming that Kyzer had stalked her at a women’s clothing store about ten days earlier. Based on Ivy’s statement and because Ivy claimed to be in hiding and did not want to come to the courthouse, the officer offered to request a telephonic hearing for a domestic violence restraining order. The day Ivy made the police report was the same day she was scheduled to give a deposition in the litigation with Kyzer. A few days before, on January 3, the superior court had denied Ivy’s motion to stay the deposition, and on January 4 we denied Ivy’s emergency motion to stay the superior court order denying her request. Ivy did not appear at the January 7 deposition despite having been ordered to do so. In response to a follow-up order to appear for the deposition, Ivy’s attorney

1 350 P.3d 758 (Alaska 2015).

-2- 7106 reported the alleged stalking incident to the superior court. Ivy ultimately was deposed on March 13. At that deposition, Ivy testified about the alleged stalking incident. She described in great detail her movements among the various racks of clothing and the dressing rooms, Kyzer’s allegedly menacing use of his vehicle, and her response. The second incident occurred in July 2010 when Ivy claimed that Kyzer assaulted her in a courtroom and that his actions constituted criminal sexual assault. To support this claim, Ivy filed a Notice of Sexual Assault with the court accompanied by an affidavit describing the alleged incident. In December 2010 Kyzer filed an ethics grievance with the Alaska Bar Association, alleging that Ivy violated several Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct by falsely testifying that Kyzer stalked her and assaulted her in the courtroom. After an investigation by a special bar counsel and a hearing, the Area Hearing Committee found that Ivy knowingly provided false testimony at the deposition, in her affidavit, and during the disciplinary proceedings. Specifically the Committee found that Ivy’s testimony about the stalking incident was “not credible,” that her description of how Kyzer moved his vehicle in the clothing store parking lot was “not physically possible,” and that when confronted with this physical impossibility during cross-examination, Ivy “fabricated a new story,” continued to testify falsely, and did not acknowledge that her account was flawed. The Committee also found that courtroom video accurately depicted the alleged assault and largely contradicted Ivy’s claims. It further found it “not reasonably possible for someone to have experienced the inadvertent and minor bump of a brother attempting to be excused . . . and then to honestly or mistakenly believe that they had been sexually assaulted.” The Committee also noted that Ivy testified that she had not been mistaken and that she had not imagined or hallucinated the alleged courtroom assault.

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Based on clear and convincing evidence, the Committee concluded that Ivy violated Rules of Professional Conduct 3.3(a)(1) and (3); 3.4(b); 8.4(a), (b), and (c); and Bar Rule 15(a)(3). Applying this court’s three-step attorney sanctions inquiry,2 the Committee recommended disbarment given the ethical violations, Ivy’s intentional mental state, the serious actual or potential injury caused by her misconduct, the recommended sanction under the American Bar Association Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions,3 and the balance of aggravating and mitigating factors. The Committee also recommended awarding $61,282.75 in attorney’s fees and costs, about $26,000 less than bar counsel requested. The Board adopted the Committee’s findings and recommendations in full. Ivy appealed. In that initial appeal we agreed with the Board’s findings about both the alleged stalking incident and the alleged courtroom assault.4 We also agreed that sufficient circumstantial evidence established that Ivy’s testimony was objectively false and that Ivy knew her testimony was not true.5 Accordingly we concluded that Ivy violated Rule of Professional Conduct 8.4 and Bar Rule 15.6 However because Ivy’s misconduct arose in a purely personal capacity, we concluded that Ivy did not violate

2 See In re Shea, 273 P.3d 612, 622 (Alaska 2012). 3 STANDARDS FOR IMPOSING LAWYER SANCTIONS, AM. BAR ASS’N (1992) [hereinafter ABA STANDARDS], http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/ administrative/professional_responsibility/corrected_standards_sanctions_may2012_ wfootnotes.authcheckdam.pdf. 4 In re Ivy, 350 P.3d at 761-62. 5 Id. at 762. 6 Id. at 759.

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Rules of Professional Conduct 3.3 and 3.4.7 Therefore we remanded the matter to the Board to reconsider sanctions.8 Finally we “f[ou]nd no fault” with the attorney’s fees and costs award.9 We indicated only that the Board “may revise the award if it determines that reconsideration . . . is warranted.”10 Upon reconsideration, the Board again recommends disbarment and the same fee and cost award. Ivy again appeals. III.

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In Re Ivy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ivy-alaska-2016.