In Re Plotner

488 P.2d 385, 5 Cal. 3d 714, 97 Cal. Rptr. 193, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 281
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1971
DocketS.F. 22799
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 488 P.2d 385 (In Re Plotner) 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 Plotner, 488 P.2d 385, 5 Cal. 3d 714, 97 Cal. Rptr. 193, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 281 (Cal. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

THE COURT.

Petitioner seeks review of a report and recommendation of the Disciplinary Board that he be disbarred.

In 1967, petitioner was convicted, on his guilty pleas, of violations of section 496 of the Penal Code (receiving stolen property) and section 274 of the Penal Code (supplying or administering an abortion). In 1968, this court, for his conviction of section 496, a crime involving moral turpitude, suspended him from practice until further order. After his convictions became final, this court referred the matter to the State Bar for a hearing, report, and recommendation as to the nature and extent of discipline *716 to be imposed for the violation of section 496 and as to whether the facts and circumstances surrounding thq commission of the violation of section 274 involved moral turpitude and, if so found, for a recommendation as to the nature and extent of the aggregate discipline to be imposed. (See Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 6101-6102.)

A Special Administrative Committee hearing was held on April 20, 1970, and on December 11, 1970, the Disciplinary Board held a hearing. The committee unanimously found, and the board found by a 10 to 1 vote, that petitioner’s violation of section 274 of the Penal Code involved moral turpitude. Both the committee (by a vote of 2 to 1) and the board (by a vote of 9 to 2) recommended disbarment. Petitioner has a prior record of discipline (private reproval by the Board of Governors in 1953 and public reproval by Disciplinary Board I in 1967 1 ); and, in recommending disbarment, the Disciplinary Board took into consideration such prior record.

Petitioner, who was admitted to practice in this state in 1943 and is an experienced practitioner, concedes the “inexcusable” nature of his offenses, but he urges that mitigation is warranted due to a claimed amphetamine addiction which allegedly affected his mind, colored his thinking, and underlay his actions. He further claims that he is presently rehabilitated and is now in a condition to engage in the practice of law on the conditions that he be of good moral character and abstain from the use of amphetamine drugs.

The burden is on petitioner to show that the Disciplinary Board’s recommendation is erroneous or unlawful (see Monroe v. State Bar, 70 Cal.2d 301, 307 [2] [74 Cal.Rptr. 733, 450 P.2d 53]; McKinney v. State Bar, 62 Cal.2d 194, 195 [2] [41 Cal.Rptr. 665, 397 P.2d 425]). Upon an examination of the record, however, we have concluded that petitioner’s crimes were not caused solely by an amphetamine addiction but were the result of his deliberate and knowing acts and that he has sought by various deliberate maneuvers, from the time he was arrested, to avoid the foreseeable consequences in both the criminal action and this disciplinary pro *717 ceeding, that is, imprisonment and disbarment. As a result, petitioner has not met the burden imposed upon him.

Petitioner was arrested July 18, 1967. On September 6, 1967, he pleaded guilty in the municipal court to both felony offenses. On September 22, 1967, he was referred by the superior court to the county probation department. The probation officer’s report was filed November 27, 1967, and recommended that probation be denied. In the report it is stated, among other things: “An amoral personality, this defendant has consistently evidenced self-destructive tendencies, also affecting those with whom he has come in contact. He shows little guilt and perhaps simply does not perceive himself as deviant.”

The day the probation officer’s report was filed, criminal proceedings against petitioner were suspended to permit a 90-day observation of him at the California Medical Facility at Vacaville. He was received at Vacaville December 7, 1967; and, as a result of observations made of him there, the staff prepared a “cumulative case summary.” As will hereinafter appear, it was recommended by the facility that petitioner be denied probation.

On the resumption of the criminal proceedings on March 14, 1968, petitioner sought for the first time to set aside his guilty pleas on the ground of alleged mental incapacity at the time of his offenses and at the time of his pleas of guilty. On March 29, 1968, the municipal court denied petitioner’s motion; and on April 4, 1968, the superior court _ denied probation and sentenced petitioner to state prison. Petitioner was later delivered to the Department of Corrections at Vacaville. Thereafter, he sought unsuccessfully, by a timely notice of appeal, to urge his claims of mental incapacity in the Court of Appeal. On June 2, 1969, he was released from Vacaville and since July of that year has been employed in the law offices of Smith, Paduck & Clancy in Oakland as a law clerk.

The record shows that a client of petitioner’s, while in the Contra Costa County jail in June 1967, asked petitioner to see another inmate in the jail, Mrs. Judy A. Epperson (about 20 years old) and to find a place for Mrs. Epperson to live when she was released. Petitioner agreed to help Mrs. Epperson, and some time after her release, she came to petitioner’s-office.

Mrs. Epperson told petitioner that she wanted to obtain an abortion; and petitioner referred her to a former client of his, John Simpson, who, according to petitioner, was “the type of person who can get it for you wholesale.” At the committee hearing, petitioner was asked, in substance, if he had agreed to procure an abortion for Mrs. Epperson in return for her *718 sexual favors, and he replied: “No. It was not an understanding, but I had hopes, to be honest, but there was not—it didn’t reach the point of a verbalization.” He later testified that he had introduced Mrs. Epperson to Simpson without being promised anything, but with the hope that it would endear him to her and lead to a “close sexual relation with her.”

On July 14, 1967, petitioner and his 17-year-old son met Mrs. Epperson and went to an apartment in Oakland. According to petitioner, the events of that day occurred substantially as described by Mrs. Epperson to the probation officer and as reported by the latter in his report to the superior court in the criminal case against petitioner. The probation officer’s report reads, in part: “On Friday, July 14, 1967, [petitioner] arrived, saying he had some clothes for Epperson in Oakland. The clothes were reportedly stolen and she was to have her choice.

“They drove to an unknown apartment in Oakland where six Negro males were present. Everyone was drinking and it appears Epperson was offered a beer that was drugged. At this point, Epperson was asked if she could ‘get rid’ of some stolen bonds to be given her by the men in the apartment. Information also reveals that [petitioner] had conversation with the other men present regarding possible ‘fencing’ of the stolen bonds. This subject was dropped for the time being as the group continued drinking. Apparently, various types of stimulants were being used and [petitioner], arid his son, were also taking stimulants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
488 P.2d 385, 5 Cal. 3d 714, 97 Cal. Rptr. 193, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-plotner-cal-1971.