In Re the Reinstatement of Massey

2006 OK 21, 136 P.3d 610, 2006 Okla. LEXIS 18, 2006 WL 924033
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 11, 2006
DocketSCBD 4886
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2006 OK 21 (In Re the Reinstatement of Massey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Reinstatement of Massey, 2006 OK 21, 136 P.3d 610, 2006 Okla. LEXIS 18, 2006 WL 924033 (Okla. 2006).

Opinion

LAVENDER, J.

¶ 1 Petitioner, Thomas Allen Massey filed a petition for reinstatement to membership in the Oklahoma Bar Association (OBA). The matter is before us pursuant to Rule 11 (Reinstatement), Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings (RGDP), 5 O.S.2001, Ch.l, App.l-A, as amended. The OBA, through the Office of the General Counsel, opposes reinstatement and a Professional Responsibility Tribunal trial panel (PRT) that held a hearing in the matter, recommends reinstatement be denied. After de novo review we deny reinstatement.

' ¶ 2 This petition for reinstatement was filed in February 2004. 1 The PRT held a hearing on September 30, 2004 and filed its trial panel report in November 2004. The *612 parties’ briefs were filed in December 2004. The record (including the transcript and exhibits) was filed in March of 2005.

¶ 3 In March of 1993 in Supreme Court Bar Docket (SCBD) Case Number 3905, petitioner filed an affidavit requesting he be allowed to resign his membership in the OBA and relinquish his right to practice law. At the time, twenty (20) grievances were pending against him with the OBA. The OBA requested this Court to approve petitioner’s resignation pending disciplinary proceedings, which the Court did by an Order filed March 22, 1993. The grievances against him as spelled out in his March 1993 affidavit involved multiple and varied claims of misconduct. The claimed misconduct included, but was not limited to, neglect of client matters, failure to communicate with clients, receiving referrals from one or more other law firms or attorneys without authorization from the client, misrepresentation to a client and failure to provide appropriate accountings to clients. As will be explored in more detail below, petitioner on multiple occasions was also embezzling money from his attorney trust fund account, conduct which eventually led to his pleas of guilty and convictions on five State felony charges, four of embezzlement by an attorney and one of forgery in the second degree, based on a plea bargain/agreement.

¶ 4 Petitioner was admitted to practice law in OMahoma in 1968. At the time of his offending conduct he had been an attorney for over two decades. We do not deem it necessary to detail every position petitioner has held from 1968 to the present. Early in his legal career he worked as an Assistant District Attorney in Hughes County, Oklahoma. He then worked as an attorney with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. 2 He also was a general counsel for a corporation in Pennsylvania for a period of time. 3 Apparently, from 1976 until some time in 1988 he was a self-employed attorney in Oklahoma, although during some of this period he also worked for the United States Military as a contracting or procurement officer, having joined the National Guard in 1953. For about two years in the late 1980s he worked for the United States Department of Defense as a Deputy to the Secretary of Defense. From about May 1991 to about February 1993 he was self-employed by Massey & Associates in Oklahoma City, basically his law firm.

¶ 5 Petitioner started Massey & Associates after agreeing with another law firm to accept overflow referrals of personal injury type cases. He started with only a secretary, but the case load was large and the firm grew to about twenty (20) employees. At some point in time during the existence of Massey & Associates petitioner began embezzling money from his attorney trust fund account to assist him in running the law firm, including making payroll. Petitioner appeared to testify at the PRT hearing in this matter that he did not pay himself (i.e., his salary) with any of the embezzled funds and that he paid himself from other cases he was working on. In his December 1, 2004 brief filed in this matter at note 2, page 13 he appears to have recognized the personal benefit to himself by his misconduct in that it is stated, “[petitioner] did benefit by keeping his office open and his staff paid, including his own salary.” As we understand his testimony, initially he paid the money back, but at some point in time he was not in a position to do so.

*613 ¶ 6 At least fifty (50) victims were involved and as we understand the record at least $136,000.00 was embezzled by petitioner. In other words, petitioner’s misconduct was not an isolated event, but was widespread. The OBA Client’s Security Fund paid out almost $53,000.00 as a result of petitioner’s misconduct. Petitioner has made restitution in the approximate amount of $136,000.00, either through payments made to the Oklahoma Department of Corrections (DOC) or the OBA. The final payment was made to the OBA in April 2004.

¶7 Criminal charges were filed against petitioner in Oklahoma County. Pursuant to a plea bargain/agreement he pled guilty to five State felony charges, four of embezzlement by an attorney and one of forgery in the second degree. He was sentenced on the convictions in June 1995. Title 21 O.S.1991, § 1454 4 , the embezzlement statute to which he pled guilty, and was convicted and sentenced as to four charges, provided:

If any person being a trustee, banker, merchant, broker, attorney, agent, assign-ee in trust, executor, administrator or collector, or being otherwise entrusted with or having in his control property for the use of any other person, or for any public or benevolent purpose, fraudulently appropriates it to any use or purpose not in the due and lawful execution of his trust, or secretes it with a fraudulent intent to appropriate it to such use or purpose, he is guilty of embezzlement.

Title 21 O.S.1991, § 1592, the forgery in the second degree statute to which he pled guilty, and was convicted and sentenced as to one charge, provides:

Every person who, with intent to defraud, utters or publishes as true any forged, altered or counterfeited instrument or any counterfeit gold or silver coin, the forging, altering or counterfeiting of which is hereinbefore declared to be punishable, knowing such instrument or coin to be forged, altered or counterfeited, is guilty of forgery in the second degree.

¶ 8 The Judgment and Sentence in each criminal case (all dated June 29, 1995) and some other pertinent documents from the criminal cases are in this record. They show petitioner received five year suspended sentences on the four embezzlement convictions, three of the sentences (CF-94-6092, CF-94-6093 and CF-94-6094) to run concurrently, but consecutively to the remaining conviction in CF-94-6091. In other words, after the five year suspended sentence in CF-94-6091 was served, he would begin to serve the five year suspended sentences (concurrently) for the other three embezzlement convictions, for a total of ten (10) years on suspension. On the remaining conviction in CF-94-6095 for forgery in the second degree he received a seven year suspended sentence, which was to run concurrent with the sentence in CF-94-6091. Thus, petitioner’s suspended sentenced) did not terminate until on or about June 29, 2005, i.e., subsequent to the time he filed this petition for reinstatement. 5

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Bluebook (online)
2006 OK 21, 136 P.3d 610, 2006 Okla. LEXIS 18, 2006 WL 924033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-reinstatement-of-massey-okla-2006.