In Re Mostman

765 P.2d 448, 47 Cal. 3d 725, 254 Cal. Rptr. 286, 1989 Cal. LEXIS 6
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1989
DocketS005191
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 765 P.2d 448 (In Re Mostman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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 Mostman, 765 P.2d 448, 47 Cal. 3d 725, 254 Cal. Rptr. 286, 1989 Cal. LEXIS 6 (Cal. 1989).

Opinions

Opinion

THE COURT.

The Review Department of the State Bar Court has recommended that petitioner Paul I. Mostman be suspended from the practice of law following his plea of guilty to the charge that he sought to have a former client assaulted and seriously injured. The review department found that the circumstances of the offense demonstrated moral turpitude and recommended that petitioner serve an actual suspension of eighteen months as one condition of probation from a five-year period of suspension. Petitioner urges us to adopt the more lenient approach of the hearing panel, which found that his crime did not involve moral turpitude and recommended no actual suspension. We conclude that actual suspension is warranted, but we find the review department’s recommendation of 18 months inadequate and, in accordance with the Standards for Attorney Sanctions for Professional Misconduct (Rules Proc. of State Bar, div. V), increase the period of actual suspension to two years. With that modification, we adopt the recommendation of the review department.

[729]*729Facts

Petitioner was admitted to the bar on January 7, 1962, and was a general practitioner in Los Angeles when the events underlying the present matter occurred. Petitioner was arrested on November 24, 1982, and was charged in a two-count information with solicitation to commit assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury (Pen. Code, § 653f, subd. (a)) and solicitation to commit murder (Pen. Code, § 653f, subd. (b)). On November 4, 1983, he pled guilty to the first charged offense and was sentenced to two years in state prison.

The charges against petitioner stemmed from his acquaintance with one John Roper, alleged by petitioner to be a self-professed “hit-man” related to an organized crime figure. Petitioner initially met Roper in the late 1970’s, when Roper sought advice about a personal injury case involving his wife then being handled by another attorney. After petitioner declined to take the case and advised Roper that the other attorney was handling the matter properly, the two men became friends and occasionally met for lunch and dinner. Between 1979 and 1981, petitioner also handled one personal injury case and a pair of disputes with neighbors for Roper. Early in the relationship, Roper stated that he was the nephew of a man reputed to be the leader of an organized crime family and had performed killings for him. Petitioner did not fully believe these statements, but “someone else” subsequently confirmed the identity of Roper’s uncle.

In late 1981, tension began to develop between the two men as a result of two incidents. First, Roper brought two friends to petitioner for legal advice about an auto accident. During the initial interview, petitioner decided not to take the case because Roper insisted upon answering all of the questions. When Roper’s friends insisted that petitioner had to take the case because he was Roper’s “partner,” petitioner explained that Roper was only a non-lawyer friend. Roper was evidently angry at being contradicted in his friends’ presence, and petitioner had to warn him against making any such arrangements or statements in the future.

Soon after this incident, Roper asked petitioner to prepare a notice of lis pendens in one of his disputes with a neighbor. Petitioner declined. Roper, apparently assisted by petitioner’s secretary at the time, then had the document prepared on petitioner’s letterhead and recorded it without petitioner’s consent. When petitioner discovered this action, he told Roper he wanted him to sign a release of the lis pendens. Roper refused, and the two men had a “disagreement” over the matter, Roper telling petitioner he would let him know the following Monday whether he would do as petitioner requested.

[730]*730That weekend, files pertaining to Roper and his two friends were taken from petitioner’s office without his permission. Petitioner later learned that the files had been given by Roper to another attorney, who called petitioner to ask him to sign a substitution of attorneys form. Petitioner advised the attorney of the circumstances under which the files had been removed from his office and agreed to sign the form after the attorney promised that Roper would deliver the files to petitioner for copying.

When the two men met for this purpose, petitioner accused Roper of burglarizing the office. Petitioner also asked about the files, which Roper had not brought with him, but Roper told petitioner to “sign the substitutions and like it.” Petitioner responded that he was tempted to file a complaint with the police, to which Roper replied that if the police were called, petitioner might “find [his] little girl hanging from a tree.” That was the end of the conversation, and petitioner had no further direct contact with Roper.

Three months later in January 1982, petitioner changed office locations. Within a few days of moving into his new building, a “condominium type building,” he discovered that Roper was working in an office on the floor above him in the same building. Over the course of that year, several unusual events involving petitioner took place. Petitioner, for reasons never made clear, believed Roper was responsible in some fashion for each incident. As the events are critical to our review of petitioner’s conduct, we address them in some detail and note the chronology.

February 1982: Tom Finney, a former client of petitioner’s, told petitioner that he had been paid by Roper to file a complaint against petitioner with the State Bar. Although Finney withdrew the complaint, he said he thought petitioner should know Roper was “after” him.

February — March 1982: Sean Donnelly, a former client of petitioner’s, came to see him in February to complain that Roper was bothering Donnelly’s mother by insisting he was owed a fee for the case involving Donnelly that Roper had referred to petitioner. Donnelly was very upset with Roper and said he “wanted to fix [Roper’s] wagon.” Petitioner refused involvement in such an endeavor. Donnelly called again the next month, asking to borrow some money so he could hire someone to help him beat up Roper. Petitioner turned him down.

March 1982: The city building department received an anonymous tip that a retaining wall around petitioner’s house did not comply with local regulations and eventually ordered petitioner to rebuild the wall. The contractor who built the wall had been recommended to petitioner by Roper, and he apparently had told only Roper that the wall was not “up to code.”

[731]*731April — June 1982: Donnelly came to see petitioner again, bringing with him an acquaintance who had been in an automobile accident and wanted a lawyer. In a private conference held at Donnelly’s request, Donnelly again expressed his anger at Roper and indicated he wanted to “off” him. Petitioner understood Donnelly to mean he wanted to kill Roper and again refused involvement.

June — July 1982: Various cars petitioner parked in his assigned space in the office building’s secured garage were vandalized. The initial incidents appear to have resulted mainly in minor damage. The paint on petitioner’s Italia, an expensive and rare sports car he had recently had restored, was scraped all around the car with a sharp object. While the Italia was being fixed, petitioner drove his mother’s Chevrolet to work. The first day he did so, he returned to the car after work to find that its radio antenna had been broken in half.

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In Re Mostman
765 P.2d 448 (California Supreme Court, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
765 P.2d 448, 47 Cal. 3d 725, 254 Cal. Rptr. 286, 1989 Cal. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mostman-cal-1989.