In re Ortiz

2013 NMSC 27
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2013
Docket33,829
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 NMSC 27 (In re Ortiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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 Ortiz, 2013 NMSC 27 (N.M. 2013).

Opinion

I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document New Mexico Compilation Commission, Santa Fe, NM '00'04- 10:05:17 2013.07.19

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2013-NMSC-027

Filing Date: June 24, 2013

Docket No. 33,829

IN THE MATTER OF PATRICIA S. ORTIZ, Esquire

An Attorney Licensed to Practice Before the Courts of the State of New Mexico

Christine E. Long, Assistant Disciplinary Counsel Albuquerque, NM

for Disciplinary Board

The Bryant Law Office, LLC Daniel A. Bryant Ruidoso, NM

for Respondent

OPINION

CHÁVEZ, Justice.

{1} The oath taken by every attorney upon admission to the practice of law in New Mexico includes a promise to “maintain civility at all times, abstain from all offensive personality, and advance no fact prejudicial to the honor or reputation of a party or witness unless required by the justice of the cause with which [the attorney is] charged.” Rule 15- 304 NMRA. By that same oath, every attorney practicing in New Mexico promises to “maintain the respect due to courts of justice and judicial officers.” Id. Those solemn promises are reflected within our Rules of Professional Conduct, which prohibit a lawyer from engaging in conduct during the course of representing a client that has “no substantial purpose other than to embarrass, delay or burden a third person,” Rule 16-404(A) NMRA, and from making statements concerning the qualifications or integrity of a judicial officer that the lawyer knows are false or that the lawyer makes with reckless disregard for the truth, Rule 16-802(A) NMRA.

{2} This disciplinary proceeding arises from a series of incidents in which an attorney

1 failed in her commitment to civility and respect toward others, eroding public confidence in the legal system and weakening the effectiveness of the litigation on many levels. Treating others with respect and abstaining from offensive conduct are not standards unique to the legal profession, but maintaining such standards of behavior is critical to the proper functioning of our adversarial system of justice. Without a steadfast commitment to treating others with respect and dignity, the reputation of our legal system will continue to diminish, and the public’s willingness to rely on our legal system to resolve disputes will continue to erode. This opinion underscores this Court’s commitment to enforce ethical standards of behavior that will promote a civil and respectful environment within our legal system.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

{3} This case began with the filing of a specification of charges against attorney Patricia S. Ortiz (Respondent) for three counts of violating our Rules of Professional Conduct through her oral and written statements. The charges arose from three separate incidents that occurred during Respondent’s representation of three different clients in three different domestic matters in district court. As a result of her conduct, complaints were filed with our disciplinary board by opposing counsel or an opposing party in each case. The disciplinary board’s hearing committee issued findings of fact and conclusions of law on each of the three incidents.

{4} Findings on the first incident involved a series of oral and written statements made by Respondent during the course of a domestic violence proceeding. In one conversation between Respondent and opposing counsel, Respondent referred to a fellow member of the bar as a “dumb bitch.” During another hearing, Respondent also made uncomplimentary and demeaning comments in the presence of opposing counsel and his client to the effect that the domestic violence commissioner was “a freak” or that the proceedings in his courtroom were “a freak show.” In a subsequent letter to opposing counsel, Respondent made other uncomplimentary and demeaning comments about the opposing party and his family, and also stated that opposing counsel was “despicable to be so new to the profession.” In yet another letter, Respondent referred to opposing counsel as “eternal lying scum,” and in an email one year later accused the opposing party of “lying through his frigging teeth.” The hearing committee found that Respondent “demonstrated a pattern of intemperate, disparaging, demeaning, insulting, threatening, uncomplimentary, and unprofessional use of language” throughout the entire course of the proceeding that “aggravated and inflamed the tone of the litigation” and “adversely impacted the progress of the litigation and caused [the opposing party] to incur unnecessary additional expense.”

{5} Findings on the second incident arose out of a domestic relations matter involving “very contentious issues” concerning custody, visitation, and a parenting plan. At issue was a prior custody and visitation arrangement ordered by the judge previously assigned to the case, who had since retired. Respondent and her client were in the courtroom with opposing counsel, her client, and his family. The current judge assigned to the case was not in the courtroom while the parties discussed a possible resolution to the case.

2 {6} During the course of their discussion, opposing counsel, her client, and his family heard Respondent either use the word “drunk” with respect to the retired judge or heard Respondent refer to the retired judge as a “drunkard on the bench,” a “drunken idiot on the bench,” or “drunk on the bench,” while being critical of the order he had entered. They also heard Respondent say that the opposing party’s mother had “bought off” the retired judge, which was an accusation that Respondent had previously made to opposing counsel. Although Respondent contended that her remark was made to her client during a confidential conversation in the courtroom, the hearing committee nevertheless found that Respondent’s statement was recklessly made in a public venue and was not made in a confidential conversation with Respondent’s client, but was instead made toward opposing counsel and her client. In addition to finding that Respondent’s comments about the retired judge increased the acrimony in the case and fueled an adversarial climate, the hearing committee found that Respondent made numerous recurring, uncomplimentary, and demeaning comments to and about the opposing party, referring to him as “goofy” as well as a “dimwit,” a “dingbat,” and a “duffus.”

{7} Findings on the third incident at issue in this disciplinary proceeding, Respondent implied in an email that the judge and opposing counsel in yet another domestic matter were engaged in an impermissible relationship that improperly influenced the judge by stating that “the two of them are bosom buddies.” In the same email, Respondent also stated that “we already know that [the judge] did not tell the truth to the teacher—God only knows what she and CASA [Court Appointed Special Advocates for Children] said to each other.” Regarding the statements in the email, the hearing committee found that there was no evidence to support Respondent’s accusations. During the course of that case, Respondent accused opposing counsel of making improper comments in hearings before the district court that were “designed only to attempt to influence the presiding judge into adopting the same foul, inhumane attitudes that [opposing counsel] holds for fallible human beings.” As with Respondent’s other accusations, the hearing committee found that there was no evidence to support Respondent’s accusations of inappropriate conduct by opposing counsel and that her statements had “no identifiable redeeming justification other than to insult or intimidate opposing counsel or inappropriately [try] to influence the trier of fact.”

{8} In light of the foregoing conduct, the hearing committee concluded that Respondent violated several Rules of Professional Conduct.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 NMSC 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ortiz-nm-2013.