In Re Schwartz

644 P.2d 833, 31 Cal. 3d 395, 182 Cal. Rptr. 640, 26 A.L.R. 4th 1077, 1982 Cal. LEXIS 180
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1982
DocketL.A. 31489
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 644 P.2d 833 (In Re Schwartz) 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 Schwartz, 644 P.2d 833, 31 Cal. 3d 395, 182 Cal. Rptr. 640, 26 A.L.R. 4th 1077, 1982 Cal. LEXIS 180 (Cal. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

THE COURT.

We review a recommendation of the State Bar Court that petitioner Bill David Schwartz be disbarred from the practice of law because of the circumstances surrounding a crime involving moral turpitude and because of his conviction therefor. He challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the factual findings of the State Bar Court and claims that disbarment is unwarranted because his conduct did not involve moral turpitude and because of various mitigating circumstances. We conclude otherwise.

Petitioner was admitted to the practice of law on October 22, 1975, and has no prior record of discipline.

On March 14, 1979, petitioner was convicted on his plea of guilty to one count of using a fictitious name for the purpose of conducting by means of the United States Postal Service a scheme to defraud and obtain property by false pretenses. (18 U.S.C. § 1342.) He was sentenced to three years in prison, with sentence suspended on condition that he serve three months at a community treatment center; and he was placed on probation for four years.

On March 22, 1979, we determined that the offense for which petitioner was convicted involved moral turpitude and placed him on interim suspension. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6102, subd. (a).) Thereafter we referred the matter to the State Bar for a hearing, report and recommendation as to discipline. (Id., § 6102, subd. (c).)

On December 19, 1980, a State Bar hearing panel unanimously recommended that petitioner be disbarred. On June 16, 1981, the review department of the State Bar Court confirmed that recommendation by an 11-to-3 vote. (Two of the dissenters recommended a five-year suspension; the third, an “extended” one.)

The State Bar found that petitioner was involved with others during the period from June 3, 1977, to November 20, 1977, in a complex scheme to obtain merchandise from various companies by fraudulent *398 means. The bar noted petitioner’s claim that he had engaged in the plan as a means to recover approximately $15,000 which he asserted had been obtained from him fraudulently by an acquaintance, Ronald Levin, who subsequently was a codefendant in the criminal proceedings against petitioner.

We summarize the principal details of the scheme. In June 1977 Levin contacted petitioner, proposing that they form a company, QST Industries, Inc. (QST), which would order large quantities of merchandise and sell the goods cheaply for a quick profit. To establish a line of credit permitting the purchases, false credit information was generated through the creation of fictitious entities; the appearance of authenticity was achieved by opening bank accounts in the names of the fictitious entities and by establishing telephone answering and mail receiving services for them.

Petitioner agreed to assist in the creation of the false credit information. To that end, using an illegally obtained driver’s license which bore a fictitious name — “David Grindeland” — petitioner opened a bank account in the name of “Hillman Manufacturing Company” and signed the bank signature card with the name “David Grindeland.” Petitioner was fully aware that no such company existed. In like fashion, petitioner established a mail receiving service in the name of another fictitious company, “Southwestern Holding Corporation,” by executing a postal service form in the name of “David Grindeland, President.” Each of these companies provided false credit information on behalf of QST.

In October 1977 petitioner used a $2,066.25 check drawn on the account of QST to pay for chrome plating done on his automobile, presenting to the payee a QST business card and representing himself to be “David Grindeland,” attorney for a division of QST’s business. The check was issued to help establish QST’s credit. Payment was stopped on the check and the payee was not compensated by petitioner until February 1979, almost a year after a 24-count indictment was returned against petitioner and others in the United States District Court alleging the fraudulent scheme.

Petitioner also knowingly obtained, in furtherance of the scheme, false corroboration of QST’s good credit from an acquaintance, Frank Stamps, who was employed by an automotive parts company. Apparently, petitioner’s participation in the fraudulent scheme did not extend to the actual acquisition of any merchandise, but was limited to the es *399 tablishment of a false credit rating. It is significant, however, that when first questioned by postal inspectors, petitioner denied all knowledge of the scheme, of QST and of the name “David Grindeland.” He admitted his involvement only after he was identified as “Grindeland” by bank employees.

Petitioner argues that the evidence does not support most of the State Bar’s findings of fact, including the finding that he was aware of the illegality of the QST scheme. In support of that contention, petitioner challenges the testimony of a United States postal inspector who related several interviews he had with petitioner both before and after the latter’s indictment. According to the inspector, in those interviews petitioner admitted his involvement in the creation of the above mentioned fictitious entities and others. Other evidence, including that of a fingerprint and handwriting analyst, corroborated that connection.

While contradicting the postal inspector’s testimony concerning his admission of knowing involvement in an illegal scheme, petitioner freely admitted the following: his participation in the merchandising enterprise with Levin, who earlier had defrauded petitioner of $15,000, signing the fictitious name “David Grindeland” and using a QST business card when paying for chrome plating of his automobile with a QST check, signing the “Grindeland” name and using a “Grindeland” driver’s license to open a bank account for the fictitious “Hillman Manufacturing Company,” and using the pseudonym in connection with certain collection work which he did. Petitioner further acknowledged that he knew the Hillman account was to be used as a credit reference for QST and that his representation on the bank signature card that “David Grindeland” was the president of Hillman was false. While claiming that he had become “uneasy about what was going on” in August 1977 and “wanted to get out of this whole thing,” petitioner admitted using the QST check two months later to “help establish credit for QST.” With respect to his solicitation of Stamps in the scheme, petitioner freely acknowledged that Stamps’ function was falsely to represent to third parties that his company was doing business with QST in order to vouch for QST’s credit with those parties.

It is apparent from the findings of the State Bar Court that petitioner’s disclaimer of a knowing involvement in the fraudulent scheme was not credited, and petitioner bears the burden of showing that those findings are not supported by the evidence. (Gallagher v. State Bar (1981) 28 Cal.3d 832, 837 [171 Cal.Rptr. 325, 622 P.2d 421]; Ramirez v. *400 State Bar (1980) 28 Cal.3d 402, 411 [169 Cal.Rptr.

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Bluebook (online)
644 P.2d 833, 31 Cal. 3d 395, 182 Cal. Rptr. 640, 26 A.L.R. 4th 1077, 1982 Cal. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schwartz-cal-1982.