In Re Millard

704 S.E.2d 779, 288 Ga. 449, 2011 Fulton County D. Rep. 41, 2011 Ga. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 10, 2011
DocketS10Y0723
StatusPublished

This text of 704 S.E.2d 779 (In Re Millard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Millard, 704 S.E.2d 779, 288 Ga. 449, 2011 Fulton County D. Rep. 41, 2011 Ga. LEXIS 18 (Ga. 2011).

Opinion

Per curiam.

This disciplinary matter presents an unusual example of an attorney who simply refuses to stop prosecuting either his client’s case, or this disciplinary matter, despite repeated indications from the overseeing tribunal that his positions lack merit. It is before the Court pursuant to the Report and Recommendation of the Review Panel of the State Disciplinary Board which adopted the findings of fact and the conclusions of law set out in the report and recommendation of the special master, Elizabeth V. Tanis, who was appointed following the filing of a Formal Complaint by the State Bar. Respondent Arthur F. Millard (State Bar No. 505990) acknowledged service of the Formal Complaint which alleged that in his representation of his client, Millard violated Rules 1.1,1.2 (a), 1.4,1.7 (a), 1.16 (a), 1.16 (d) and 3.1 of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct, see Bar Rule 4-102 (d). Although the Bar Rules allow for disbarment for a single violation of some of these Rules, the Review Panel recommends that the Court impose a three-year suspension for Millard’s conduct, and this Court agrees.

“ ‘This court is bound by the Review Panel’s findings of fact when there is “any evidence” to support them.’ ” In the Matter of Ellison, 280 Ga. 303 (627 SE2d 25) (2006), citing In the Matter of Morse, 265 Ga. 353 (456 SE2d 52) (1995). Although the facts of this case are highly unusual and very extensive, the record contains evidence sufficient to support the Review Panel’s findings, which we summarize as follows. A client retained Millard to represent her in municipal court in a case alleging that she violated a city ordinance. She was found guilty in September 2000 and sentenced to pay a $400 fine and serve three days in jail. Millard filed a motion for new trial, which was dismissed. Millard subsequently appealed to the superior court, apparently prosecuting the matter as a petition for certiorari and alternatively as a petition for habeas corpus and/or quo warranto. The city filed a counterclaim seeking attorney fees and expenses. Eventually, Millard’s claims before the superior court were dismissed and Millard filed an application to appeal in the Court of Appeals which, because it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over habeas corpus cases, properly transferred the application to this Court where it was dismissed in May 2001 for failure to follow *450 interlocutory appeal procedures. At this point the client expressed to Millard her reservations about how the case was progressing and asked why she was being sued for attorney fees. Millard responded that he was working on the issues and that her repeated inquiries would only delay his work further. Millard then returned to the superior court and sought reconsideration of his petition for certiorari, which was promptly denied. Eventually, the city was awarded attorney fees and expenses in the amount of $9,503.59 on grounds that the petition for certiorari was untimely and the pleading was completely lacking a justiciable issue of fact or law since the assertion of the claims (including habeas) in a petition for certiorari from the municipal court was frivolous. Although Millard did not tell his client of the award of fees until some time the following year, the client eventually paid the fees awarded, with interest. In the meantime, following the award of fees, Millard filed a new application for appeal in the Court of Appeals which again transferred the matter to this Court where the application was denied. See Northwest Social & Civic Club v. Franklin, 276 Ga. 859, 860 (583 SE2d 858) (2003) (when appellate court “examines a request for a discretionary appeal, it acts in an error-correcting mode such that a denial of the application is on the merits”).

Millard then started the process all over in July 2003, filing a second petition for writ of habeas corpus in the superior court, apparently seeking in addition to habeas relief, some sort of out-of time relief from the municipal court conviction. His action was dismissed on the city’s motion, both on the merits and on the basis of res judicata. Millard again appealed to the Court of Appeals, which again transferred the appeal to this Court, where it was dismissed in April 2005 for procedural deficiencies. In the meantime, the city moved for additional fees at which point Millard wrote his client admitting that “[he] had not bothered [her] previously with [the fees issue] because [he] knew [she] had enough on [her] mind and the important thing was to respond correctly and on time, which has been done.” While the superior court was considering the request for fees, Millard sought his client’s permission to withdraw on the grounds that she had not paid him. At an August 2005 hearing on the city’s motion for fees, the client objected to Millard’s withdrawal explaining that she did not know what else to do. The court refrained from ruling on the motion to withdraw at that point, but granted judgment against the client and Millard jointly and severally in the amount of $16,609.95, noting that the second habeas petition raised claims substantially identical to the claims raised in the first petition and that a motion to recuse, which Millard had filed, was frivolous. Rather than explain to his client the conflict of interest implications brought about by the joint and several award of fees and seek her *451 written consent to further representation, Millard advised her that he intended to withdraw his motion to withdraw as counsel and to appeal the fee award. Although Millard’s client refused to consent to the withdrawal of his motion to withdraw as her counsel and asked him not to go forward with the appeal as she could not afford it, he nonetheless withdrew his motion to withdraw and proceeded in late 2005 to file applications to appeal on both his own and his client’s behalf. Those applications to appeal were denied by this Court. Although Millard did not immediately tell his client that he had filed these appeals, he later sought reimbursement from her for the costs of the appeals.

In July 2006, the client filed a grievance with the State Bar regarding Millard’s conduct in her case. At approximately the same time, the city filed post-judgment discovery requests in its efforts to collect its fee award. In a letter to his client regarding that discovery, Millard acknowledged the client’s grievance; advised her that he did not hold it against her; and encouraged her to drop her Bar complaint and keep him as her lawyer. Millard also advised his client that because he had not “carried through with previously-initiated withdrawals” of counsel, he continued to be her counsel of record and that, as such, he must advise her that the Bar complaint was contrary to her interests and would distract him from addressing the issues that were actually adverse to her. Millard asserted that while the client was free to continue with the grievance, and while he would not charge her for the time he spent responding to the grievance, the grievance was contrary to her interests and most likely would be dismissed as lacking merit.

In the fall of 2006, after the client had advised the city that Millard no longer represented her, the superior court held a hearing on the city’s motion to compel discovery responses from Millard and the client, in which the city also sought sanctions. At that hearing, Millard announced that he was appearing both pro se and on his client’s behalf.

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Related

In the Matter of Jack O. Morse
456 S.E.2d 52 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1995)
Northwest Social and Civic Club, Inc. v. Franklin
583 S.E.2d 858 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2003)
In Re Ellison
627 S.E.2d 25 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
704 S.E.2d 779, 288 Ga. 449, 2011 Fulton County D. Rep. 41, 2011 Ga. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-millard-ga-2011.