In re Platzer

624 P.2d 128, 290 Or. 521, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 687
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1981
DocketSC 25748
StatusPublished

This text of 624 P.2d 128 (In re Platzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Platzer, 624 P.2d 128, 290 Or. 521, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 687 (Or. 1981).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is a proceeding upon an application for reinstatement as a member of the Oregon State Bar by an attorney who had been suspended from membership upon conviction of a crime by a court in West Germany on July 15, 1977.1 On November 13, 1978, Mr. Platzer filed with this court an application for reinstatement.2 On July 10, 1979, the court ordered that the application be referred to the Oregon State Bar for hearing before a Trial Board. That hearing was held on May 27 to May 29, 1980.

On August 29,1980, the Trial Board made findings of fact, as discussed in this opinion, together with the conclusion that Mr. Platzer "possesses sufficient moral character and general fitness to be reinstated as a member in good standing of the Oregon State Bar” and recommended his reinstatement. On October 31,1980, the Disciplinary Review Board of the Oregon State Bar concurred in the findings, conclusions and recommendations by the Trial Board. Mr. Platzer then filed with this court a [524]*524petition for the adoption of the decision and recommendation of the Review Board and the Trial Board. The case was then set for oral argument before this court.

It is contended by the Oregon State Bar that in considering this application for reinstatement this court must give conclusive effect to the judgment of the German court convicting Mr. Platzer of the crime of "fraud as an accomplice.” For the purposes of proceedings such as this, some courts in the United States accept judgments of courts of other nations convicting persons of crimes as conclusive evidence that such persons were guilty of the crimes for which they were convicted. See Anno. 98 ALR 3d 357. The Trial Board concluded, however, after hearing testimony by Mr. Platzer and witnesses called to testify on his behalf, that Mr. Platzer was denied "procedural due process rights guaranteed by the legal system of this country,” with the result that it "need not give full faith and credit to the West German conviction,” but that "it may still treat that conviction as some evidence of the moral character and fitness of the applicant.”

At the time of oral argument before this court counsel for Mr. Platzer stated that he was in agreement with that conclusion by the Trial Board and that he was also in agreement with its conclusion that the burden of proof was upon Mr. Platzer, and that under this view of the case the primary issue to be decided is whether Mr. Platzer is a person of good moral character and whether he has sustained his burden to prove this by evidence relating not only to the subject matter of the German judgment, but by evidence of his reputation and conduct both before and after entry of that judgment, so as to be entitled to reinstatement as a member of the Oregon State Bar. Counsel for Mr. Platzer also agreed that this court hear this case de novo, as in a suit in equity.

Because we hold, based upon our review of the record and for reasons to be stated, that Mr. Platzer has not sustained that burden of proof, we need not consider the more difficult question whether the West German judgment must be accepted as conclusive evidence that Mr. Platzer committed the crime for which he was convicted by that corut or whether it is subject to collateral attack.

[525]*525 The Conviction of Crime by the West German Court.

On July 15, 1977, a court in West Germany entered a judgment finding that Mr. Platzer was guilty of the offense of "fraud as an accomplice.” The fraud in which Mr. Platzer was found to have participated involved a transaction in which one Hans Klenk exchanged certain Flemish paintings, which he claimed to be worth $10,000,000, plus a substantial amount of money, for certain raw emeralds which apparently had little value. Mr. Platzer, then an attorney in West Germany, was to act as trustee for Klenk in making that exchange, for which he was to be paid a fee of 51,000 marks. These facts are conceded. Mr. Platzer now contends, however, that the paintings were bogus and that he did not know that the emeralds were also bogus, so as to be guilty of the crime of aiding and abetting a fraud. He also contends that the judgment of conviction was based upon a confession by him which was not a true or voluntary confession, but was given by him under advice of an attorney as the only way in which he would be released from a prison where he had been illegally detained in solitary confinement for more than two years and was then in very poor health. That attorney appeared before the Trial Board and confirmed that advice. He also testified that he prepared the confession which Mr. Platzer read to the court and expressed the opinion that Mr. Platzer was an "absolutely meticulous man” and "is not capable of committing such a big fraud.”

Mr. Platzer also testified at some length that the actual reason for his arrest and confinement was not for participation in that fraud, but because of his activity as an attorney in claims against the West German government on behalf of widows of German pilots killed in crashes of Starfighter aircraft purchased from Lockheed Company in transactions involving payment of bribes to prominent West German officials. He also offered other evidence in support of that charge.

After considering this evidence the Trial Board made the following findings of fact:

"(4) During his years of law practice both in the State of Oregon and West Germany, the applicant specialized in and handled a large number of reparations cases against [526]*526the West German government arising out of the activities of the predecessor German government.
"(5) Before his arrest the applicant was involved in the respresentation of widows of West German Air Force pilots who had been killed in the line of duty piloting Starfighter planes manufactured by Lockheed and operated by the West German Air Force. These claims were of some general public interest in West Germany and the prosecution of the claims required that the applicant correspond with and make demands upon highly placed West German officials.
"At the time of his arrest the applicant was in the process of making demands upon high German officials for the production of documents and records relating to the purchase and modification of the Starfighters. The applicant had been warned by friends and associates that such action on his part placed him in personal danger.
"(6) The applicant’s decision to enter the plea of guilty was made after lengthy imprisonment, during which he was not actually charged with a specific crime nor permitted to confront his accusers. The decision to plead guilty was made on the advice of counsel familiar with the West German legal system, that the applicant could, and likely would, remain in jail indefinitely without trial if no plea was entered. At the time the decision to enter the plea was made the applicant’s physical and mental health was failing and he was under medication. It was represented to the applicant that his incarceration would be promptly terminated if he entered a plea.
"(7) There is substantial doubt as to whether he actually committed the fraud with which he was charged and to which he pled guilty.”

Based upon our examination of the record before the Trial Board, which consists primarily of testimony by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
624 P.2d 128, 290 Or. 521, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-platzer-or-1981.