In re McInerney

451 N.E.2d 401, 389 Mass. 528, 1983 Mass. LEXIS 1539
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 20, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 451 N.E.2d 401 (In re McInerney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re McInerney, 451 N.E.2d 401, 389 Mass. 528, 1983 Mass. LEXIS 1539 (Mass. 1983).

Opinion

Liacos, J.

On September 28, 1970, the Boston Bar Association filed an information in the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk County seeking disciplinary action against the respondent, Attorney Timothy J. Mclnerney. On November 18, 1971, a single justice entered an order suspending Mr. Mclnerney from the practice of law and specified that Mr. Mclnerney could not seek the termination of the order of suspension for at least one year. Mr. Mclnerney did not pursue his right of appeal from the order.

Following the order of suspension, evidence of additional improper conduct by Mr. Mclnerney came to light. Between [529]*5291974 and 1977, a series of hearings was held before the single justice concerning these matters and to consider motions by Mr. Mclnerney to terminate his suspension. On September 25, 1981, the single justice filed a memorandum and findings of fact and ordered that a hearing be held concerning disposition. This hearing was held on March 8, 1982. At that time, a stipulation by the respondent and Bar Counsel was filed with the single justice containing a recommendation that Mr. Mclnerney be disbarred, effective May 16, 1977. Having received the stipulation and certain additional exhibits, the single justice entered a memorandum and order for judgment disbarring Mr. Mclnerney, effective May 27, 1982.

Mr. Mclnerney argues that the single justice abused his discretion and committed an error of law by making the order of disbarment effective May 27, 1982, rather than May 16, 1977.1 We have the memoranda and findings of fact filed by the single justice as the source of facts relevant to this appeal. We also have before us the stipulation filed by the parties, a transcript of the March 8, 1982, hearing, and various exhibits and documents. We affirm the judgment of the single justice.

1. Standard of Review.

We consider first the standard of review we shall apply to a decision of a single justice in a bar discipline matter in the circumstances of the instant case. We recently said, in a case involving the discipline of a lawyer who had been convicted of serious crimes, that “the full court, in reviewing any disciplinary decision, should inquire whether the judgment is markedly disparate from those ordinarily entered by the various single justices in similar cases.” Matter of Alter, ante 153, 156 (1983). That particular standard is of limited [530]*530usefulness here because the instant case presents circumstances which can be described only as unique.2

Mr. Mclnerney argues that we should review the decision of the single justice to determine whether it is supported by sufficient evidence, constitutes an abuse of discretion, and is free from any error of law. For the purposes of deciding this case, we will apply this standard.3

2. Misconduct Through and Including 1977.

Mr. Mclnerney argues that the single justice’s decision constituted an abuse of discretion because disbarment, even if effective May 16, 1977, was an extreme and excessive penalty.4 The thrust of this argument is that Mr. Mclnerney never committed an act serious enough to warrant disbarment. He also seeks to mitigate the seriousness of his actions during the period of his suspension by pointing out that before June 3, 1974,5 this court had not adopted explicit rules concerning the proper conduct of a suspended attorney. There was no error.

[531]*531The flaw in Mr. Mclnerney’s first point is that it fails to consider the totality of the circumstances. The single justice had before him a persistent and extended pattern of improper and unethical behavior by Mr. Mclnerney which was undeterred by the imposition of lesser sanctions. The various circumstances which occasioned Mr. Mclnerney’s suspension, and the circumstances which followed his suspension, provided the single justice with more than sufficient evidence to conclude that Mr. Mclnerney’s failure to meet the ethical obligations imposed on an attorney were neither isolated nor unintentional.

Mr. Mclnerney’s suspension in 1971. Mr. Mclnerney was suspended for his part in the execution of a deed by Flora Hayden, an eighty year old woman who was under a conservatorship, conveying a parcel of land to Mr. Mclnerney’s client, a stepson of Hayden. A judge of the Superior Court set aside the deed, stating that it had been “procured by undue influence exercised on (the grantor therein) by (the grantee) with the knowledge and participation of Mr. Mclnerney.” After a hearing on the matter, the single justice entered the November 18, 1971, order suspending Mr. Mclnerney.

The single justice found that Flora Hayden had been under conservatorship by reason of mental weakness at all times since September 23, 1962. When Mr. Mclnerney spoke to her about the preparation of the deed, and when he procured the execution of the deed by her on September 5, 1965, at a nursing home, she did not have sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature, significance, effect, and consequences of the execution and delivery of the deed. She was incapable of transacting such business. At all times material to the case, Mr. Mclnerney knew the facts of the conservatorship of the grantor and knew of her lack of sufficient mental capacity to understand, execute, and deliver a deed.

The flagrant nature of what the single justice referred to as Mr. Mclnerney’s “gross misconduct” is shown in the findings of the single justice that between the date that Mr. Me[532]*532Inerney first spoke to the grantor about preparing the deed and the date that he procured its execution, Mr. Inerney received written notice from the conservator about the grant- or’s lack of mental capacity. Despite such knowledge, and despite the written notice from the conservator, Mr. Mclnerney prepared and caused the deed to be executed by the incompetent grantor.

Other improper conduct. At the October 2, 1975, hearing, evidence was presented concerning Mr. Mclnerney’s dealings with Agnes and Ella O’Connor, aged eighty-eight and eighty-six, respectively.6 In June, 1975, Mr. Mclnerney assisted the O’Connors in creating several joint bank accounts and joint ownership of certain securities. The single justice found Mr. Mclnerney’s conduct improper in that his acts were akin to practicing law. Since the establishment of these joint accounts could produce results different from the testamentary schemes which the O’Connors provided for in their wills, the single justice found that “[tjhey were entitled to have the advice of a lawyer in good standing on the question of [the] impact of the new joint ownerships . . . ,”7

Also, in 1973 the full court referred to the single justice certain information about four cases in which this court had occasion to include words of sharp reproof for Mr. Mclnerney’s misconduct. In Gardner v. State Taxi, Inc., 336 Mass. 28, 30 (1957), the court stated that Mr. Mclnerney had made an “improper” argument to a jury and court “far beyond permissible limits.” In McInerney v. Massasoit Greyhound Ass’n, 359 Mass. 339, 348 (1971), we said that Mr. Mclnerney’s “evident wilful noncompliance with clear restrictions well known to him, and his arrangement of a [533]

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In THE MATTER OF McINERNEY
451 N.E.2d 401 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
451 N.E.2d 401, 389 Mass. 528, 1983 Mass. LEXIS 1539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcinerney-mass-1983.