In Re the Reinstatement of Mumina

2009 OK 76, 225 P.3d 804, 2009 Okla. LEXIS 81, 2009 WL 3113260
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 29, 2009
DocketSCBD-5499
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 2009 OK 76 (In Re the Reinstatement of Mumina) 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 Mumina, 2009 OK 76, 225 P.3d 804, 2009 Okla. LEXIS 81, 2009 WL 3113260 (Okla. 2009).

Opinions

WATT, J.

1 1 On December 8, 1997, we approved the attorney's voluntary resignation from the Bar Association pending disciplinary proceedings arising from his misappropriation of approximately $50,000.00 in fees belonging to his employer law firm. In July of 2000, Mumina was indicted on twenty counts relating to his actions as trustee of a bankruptey estate. Nineteen of those counts involved the utilization of over $100,000.00 of bank-ruptey funds during 1995 and 1996 for his own purposes. A plea agreement resulted in the dismissal of the first nineteen counts; and the attorney pled guilty to the only remaining count, filing a false report in the bankruptcy proceedings. On January 12, 2009, approximately eleven years after having resigned his office of attorney, Mumina filed a petition for reinstatement.

T 2 Upon a de novo review,1 we determine that the attorney presented clear and convincing evidence that, if readmitted, his conduct would conform to the high standards of a member of the Bar Association.2 Costs of $2,796.78 are imposed.3 Our decision to allow Mumina to return to the practice of law [807]*807is supported by: testimony from an elected official, a former federal prosecutor, and two sitting district judges indicating that the attorney's reinstatement would be advantageous to the judicial system, the Bar Association, and his community;4 the attorney's unqualified acceptance of responsibility for his admittedly wrongful acts;5 the fact of complete monetary restitution to the victims of his misdeeds and his on-going efforts in meeting his tax obligations; his recognition that he must react differently to the situations causing stress in his life; and his attempts to help young lawyers avoid the pitfalls of his experiences in the practice of law.

FACTS RELEVANT TO REINSTATEMENT PROCEEDINGS

T3 Mumina was admitted to the practice of law in 1988. On May 5, 1997, the Bar Association filed a three-count complaint against the attorney. All three charges involved Mu-mina's having misappropriated, for his own use, funds belonging to his employer firm and his dishonesty in responding to firm inquiries about the monies. Count one related to the attorney having accepted a personal check from a client in the amount of $32,500.00 while representing to the firm that he was having difficulty obtaining the attorney fee funds. The second count involved Mumina's having misappropriated $6,848.00 in fees and $1,804.48 in expenses awarded in his law firm's favor contemporaneous with misrepresenting to the firm that there had been no award. Count three described Mu-mina's having taken $11,870.52 in funds in-

tended for the firm in the form of fees and communicating to the firm that no fees would be paid until some future date when the cause was finally concluded. Prior to the filing of the complaint, the attorney made full restitution to the firm.6

{ 4 Mumina's resignation, prompted by the Bar Association's complaint, ended an admirable legal career. Prior to that time, the attorney clerked for a federal bankruptcy judge and had been named as a partner in one firm and as a shareholder in another. He was active in the Bar Association on both a state-wide and county level and instrumental in forming the William J. Holloway, Jr. American Inn of Court which he served as President and Secretary-Treasurer. Contemporary therewith, Mumina was also involved in his local community. Nevertheless, the attorney was experiencing turmoil in his private life. His wife was diagnosed with a life-threatening disease which required her to resign her employment. One of Mumina's children was experiencing significant psychological problems related to the lack of attention she was receiving from her father resulting in an attempted suicide. Finally, the attorney did not believe he was getting the staff support he had been promised at his new firm or that all aspects of his compensation package were being paid at the expected levels.7

T 5 During the same time period, the attorney learned that he was under investigation for his activities while serving as a bankruptcy trustee. On July 5, 2000, a twenty-count indictment issued. The first nineteen counts [808]*808alleged misappropriation and embezzlement of approximately $115,000.00 belonging to the bankruptey estate. The final count involved the filing of a false report in the bankruptcy proceedings. The counts relating to misappropriation and embezzlement were dismissed as part of a plea negotiation after Mumina restored almost $105,000.00 to the bankruptcy estate.8 The attorney pled guilty to the single remaining count. On March 7, 2001, Mumina was ordered to pay restitution in the total amount of $35,425.73 and to serve a maximum of twenty-one months imprisonment. The attorney was released from prison on November 21, 2002 and satisfied the restitution judgment in 2008.9 Although the attorney filed personal bankruptey in 2001, the record reveals that he is satisfying his delinquent tax obligations to the state and federal governments.10

T6 The reinstatement hearing was held before the trial panel on April 2, 2009. The trial panel issued is report on May 4, 2009 determining that Mumina had presented clear and convincing evidence of all the factors necessary for reinstatement and recommending the same. On the same date, the Bar Association filed its application for the assessment of costs in the amount of $2,796.78. Although Mumina waived the right to file an opening brief, he did file a reply to the Bar Association's response brief. The briefs were filed on April 1, 2009 and May 26, 2009, respectively, completing the briefing cycle.

JURISDICTION, STANDARD OF REVIEW, AND BURDEN OF PROOF

17 It is this Court's nondelegable, constitutional responsibility to regulate both the practice and the ethics, licensure, and discipline of practitioners of the law. The duty is vested solely in this department of government.11 Our determinations are made de novo.12 Although given great weight,13 neither the findings of fact of the trial panel nor its view of the evidence or the eredibility of witnesses bind this Court. The recommendation is merely advisory.14 We are [809]*809bound neither by its findings nor its assessments as to the weight or credibility of the evidence.15 A thorough and complete exploration of all relevant facts is mandatory in consideration of matters to regulate the practice of law and legal practitioners.16 Attorneys suspended for disciplinary reasons will not automatically be reinstated on a prima facia showing that the attorney has not engaged in improper conduct during the suspension period.17

[808]*808"... As requested, this letter should serve as a summary of your federal term of supervised release. You were sentenced on March 7, 2001, to serve a 21-month term of confinement for violation of 18 U.S.C. § 152(2). False statement in relation to a case under Title 11 of the United States Code. The court ordered a two-year term of supervised release to follow and restitution in the amount of $35,425.73.

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Bluebook (online)
2009 OK 76, 225 P.3d 804, 2009 Okla. LEXIS 81, 2009 WL 3113260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-reinstatement-of-mumina-okla-2009.