In Re Rome

685 F. App'x 49
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 2017
Docket15-90101-am
StatusUnpublished

This text of 685 F. App'x 49 (In Re Rome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rome, 685 F. App'x 49 (2d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER OF GRIEVANCE PANEL

Thomas Scott Rome was admitted to the New York State bar in 1983, and to this. Court’s bar in 2014. Based on his conduct in several appeals in this Court, we or *50 dered Rome to show cause why disciplinary or other corrective measures should not be imposed on him pursuant to Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure 46(b) and (c) and Second Circuit Local Rule 46.2. Upon due consideration of the conduct described in that prior order (the “Show-Cause Order”), Rome’s response and supplemental responses to the Show-Cause Order, and the additional matters discussed below, it is hereby ORDERED that Rome is PUBLICLY REPRIMANDED for his misconduct in this Court.

Rome was referred to this panel as a result of his conduct in five appeals in this Court in which he represented the appellants: Saintil v. Lynch, 14-3542, Gordon v. Lynch, 14-4361, Clue v. Lynch, 15-1992, Vu v. Lynch, 15-2209, and Salcedo v. Lynch, 15-3305. After Rome responded to the Show-Cause Order, he was asked to address a sixth appeal in which he represented the appellant: Forbes v. Lynch, 15-3899. The relevant portions of the Show-Cause Order are appended to the present order. In this order, we address Rome’s misconduct in each of the relevant appeals.

I. Saintil v. Lynch, 14-3542

As a preliminary matter, concerning Saintil v. Lynch, 14-3542, we agree with Rome that some of the conduct attributed to him in the Show-Cause Order should be attributed to the appellant himself, who proceeded pro se from the inception of the appeal in September 2014 until Rome filed his notice of appearance in May 2015. See Saintil v. Lynch, 14-3542, doc. 49 (May 2015 notice of appearance). Thus, Rome is not responsible for the defaults that culminated in the January 2015 dismissal of the appeal. He entered the appeal only after Saintil, pro se, successfully obtained reinstatement in March 2015.

Nevertheless, Rome is responsible for two subsequent dismissals, in November 201b and October 2016, both resulting from his defaults. See id., doc. 60 (order stating appeal will be dismissed if Form C/A is not filed by specified date), doc. 62 (notice of defective Form C/A, warning of dismissal if corrected form was not timely filed), entry 69 (stating dismissal order had become effective, based on failure to file Form C/A), doc. 150 (order stating appeal will be dismissed if brief is not filed by specified date), entry 155 (stating dismissal order had become effective, based on failure to file brief).

The November 2015 dismissal was based on a defect in Rome’s first version of Form C/A: his failure to attach a copy of the order being appealed. See id., doc. 62. Rome did not file a new version of Form C/A until five weeks after he was notified of the defect, long after the deadline for filing the new version and two weeks after the November 2015 dismissal. See id., doc. 70. The new version of Form C/A was found defective for different reasons: Rome’s failure to make it text-searchable and his failure to move for reinstatement. See id., doc. 71. Rome’s response to the Show-Cause Order addresses only the text-searchable defect: he states that the paralegal who filed the defective form was not familiar with the software that would have made it text-searchable. See Response at 2-3. Rome does not explain the five-week delay between the rejection of his first Form C/A and his attempted filing of the second Form C/A.

The. October 2016 dismissal of the appeal was based on Rome’s failure to file a brief. See Saintil, 14-3542, doc. 150 and entry 155. Rome states that he was not responsible for that default since he had been relieved of his representation of Saintil in April 2016, well before entry of the order setting the October 2016 briefing deadline. See First Suppl. Response at 1. Rome is incorrect.

*51 The April 2016 order cited by Rome clearly stated that Rome had moved to withdraw as counsel for Saintil only in the consolidated appeal docketed under 16-302, and, in granting the motion, the order explicitly advised that “Mr. Rome shall remain as counsel of record for the lead appeal, docket no. 14-3642.” Saintil, 14-3642, doc. 117. Similarly, Rome’s motion to withdraw reflected only an intention to withdraw from the appeal docketed under 16-302. See Saintil v. Lynch, 16-302, doc. 14. Additionally, the docket reflects that Rome understood that he remained as counsel in the lead appeal after the April 2016 order was issued: three months after that order relieved him as counsel in the consolidated appeal, he filed a scheduling notification letter proposing a deadline for his brief in the lead appeal. See Saintil, 14-3642, doc. 144. When Rome failed to file that brief, the appeal was dismissed. See id., entry 165.

Rome’s incorrect belief that he was not responsible for the October 2016 dismissal leaves this Court without an explanation for the default that caused that dismissal.

II. Gordon v. Lynch, 14-4361

Regarding Gordon v. Lynch, 14-4361, Rome concedes that he failed to respond to telephone messages left by Court employees about a defective motion, and failed to timely cure that defective motion, resulting in dismissal of the appeal. See Response at 3. He states that these failures resulted from “the press of other matters,” and that he did not become aware of his deficient conduct until after the default dismissal. Id. He also states that technological problems caused him to file certain motions in a defective format, that an “office failure” caused him to omit a required form from another filing, and that he overlooked the need to file another form as a result of the technological problems he was experiencing with other filings. Id. at 3-4.

III. Clue v. Lynch, 15-1992, and Vu v. Lynch, 15-2209

Rome states that his defaults in both Clue v. Lynch, 15-1992, and Vu v. Lynch, 15-2209, occurred during a period when he was occupied by his.father’s hospitalization and death, and his wife’s subsequent hospitalization. See Response at 4-5. He further states that his failure to satisfy the relevant deadline in Clue also resulted from, in part, his client’s difficulty in providing him with required information. See id. at 4.

The events addressed by Rome in his response to the Show-Cause Order occurred in roughly June through August 2015. While we find his explanation for the defaults during that time period satisfactory, we note that Rome caused a later default in Vu. Specifically, nearly one year later, the Vu appeal was dismissed when Rome failed to file his brief by the June 2016 deadline that he himself had proposed. See Vu, 15-2209, docs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 F. App'x 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rome-ca2-2017.