In Re Vialet

460 F. App'x 30
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 2012
Docket09-90132-am
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 460 F. App'x 30 (In Re Vialet) 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 Vialet, 460 F. App'x 30 (2d Cir. 2012).

Opinion

SUMMARY ORDER

ORDER OF GRIEVANCE PANEL

I. Summary of Proceedings

By order filed in February 2010, this Court referred Vialet to the Committee for investigation of the matters described in *31 that order and preparation of a report on whether he should be subject to disciplinary or other corrective measures. During the Committee’s proceedings, Vialet had the opportunity to address the matters discussed in the Court’s referral order and to testify under oath at a hearing held in October 2010. Vialet proceeded pro se before the Committee. Presiding over the hearing were Committee members Terrence M. Connors and Kimberly A. Knox, and Committee chair Mary Jo White. In May 2011, the Committee filed with the Court the record of the Committee’s proceedings and its report and recommendation. Thereafter, the Court provided Vial-et with a copy of the Committee’s report, and Vialet responded.

In its report, the Committee concluded that there was clear and convincing evidence that Vialet had engaged in misconduct warranting the imposition of discipline. Report at 11. Specifically, the Committee found that Vialet had: (1) failed to comply with the Court’s scheduling orders in 31 cases, causing the dismissal of 11 of those cases, and continued to do so even after receiving notice of the Court’s referral order, id. at 5-7, 10; (2) improperly filed a case in this Court, instead of the proper venue, id. at 5, 6; and (3) filed deficient briefs in several cases, in violation of Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28, and continued to do so even after receiving notice of the Court’s referral order, id. at 7-8. After considering various aggravating and mitigating factors, id. at 10-11, the Committee recommended that Vialet be publicly reprimanded and required to complete certain continuing legal education (“CLE”) classes, id. at 11-12.

With regard to mitigation, the Committee noted, inter alia, Vialet’s assertion that he had been able to reopen, before the Board of Immigration Appeals, several cases that had been dismissed by this Court. Id. at 6. However, the Committee cited only two examples of cases that had been reopened, Diallo v. DBS, 08-0416-ag, and Diallo v. Holder, 08-4271-ag. Id.

In his June 2011 response to the Committee’s report, Vialet acknowledged his misconduct and agreed with the Committee’s findings and recommendations, with one exception — he argued that the Committee’s list of cases he had been able to reopen after their dismissal by this Court was incomplete. Aside from “the two mentioned by the Committee,” an apparent reference to the two Diallo cases cited on page 6 of the Committee’s report, he stated that he also had been able to reopen Sy v. Holder, No. 09-0779-ag, and unspecified “additional cases” for which he could not locate the docket numbers “at the present time.”

II. Mitigation

We construe Vialet’s argument that the Committee’s list of reopened cases is incomplete as a request that this Court consider mitigating information in addition to that specified by the Committee. However, we find that the Committee did, in fact, credit Vialet’s reopening of cases beyond the two cases cited in the report — despite Vialet’s own failure to identify such cases aside from Sy, Diallo, and Diallo — and accorded proper weight to that mitigating information.

Vialet has been on notice of the list of defaulted cases since March 2010, when he received a copy of the Court’s referral order. See Vialet letter dated March 10, 2010 (Tab D of Record). However, he never identified more than two or three reopened cases by name. In his May 2010 written response to the Committee’s order to show cause why he should not be disciplined, he noted that there had been “some instances” where he had moved to reopen *32 before the agency after dismissal of the case by this Court, but provided only one example, Sy. See Vialet letter dated May 13, 2010 (Tab G of Record) at 8. In a September 2010 letter to the Committee, he referred to another case that had been reopened by the agency, Diallo v. Holder, No. 08^1271-ag, see Vialet letter dated Sept. 24, 2010 (Tab I of Record) at 1, which was one of the reopened cases subsequently noted in the Committee’s report, see Report at 6. During the October 2010 hearing, he testified that two unspecified cases definitely had been reopened, another unspecified case may have been reopened, and other unspecified cases had motions to reopen pending. Transcript (Tab J of Record) at 45. One case that was apparently reopened by the agency was later identified as “Jello,” which may have been a mistranscription of “Diallo.” Id. at 46 (“For example, I think I filed on a case was reopened [sic], Jello ... ”). At a later point, Vialet stated his belief that “three other cases” had been reopened by the Court itself, but did not identify those cases. Id. at 50. Even as late as June 2011, when he filed his response to the Committee’s report — fifteen months after receiving notice of the Court’s referral order and of the need to provide mitigating information — Vialet still failed to provide names of additional reopened cases.

We find that, despite the conclusory nature of Vialet’s assertions regarding “additional” reopened cases, the Committee accepted those assertions. In its report, the Committee noted that Vialet “did not offer specific responses to each of the cases listed in the [Court’s] Referral Order but rather chose to address the issue more generally,” and then stated the following:

Mr. Vialet had some additional observations about certain cases and categories of cases. For example, he noted that in some of the cases that were dismissed by the Court, he was able to reopen the matter before the Board of Immigration Appeals and therefore sought to protect his clients’ interests by pursuing alternative relief. See, e.g., Diallo v. DHS, 08-0416-ag; Diallo v. Holder, 08-4271[-ag].

Report at 6. The reference to “some of the cases that were dismissed by the Court,” and the citation signal “See, e.g.,” clearly convey the Committee’s understanding that Vialet’s mitigation argument concerned more than two cases. Moreover, in its later findings concerning mitigating factors, the Committee stated that Vialet had “instituted various corrective measures,” id. at 11, which we read as including both his attempted and successful reopening of cases.

Under these circumstances, there was no need for the Committee either to specifically cite to Sy or to identify other reopened cases by name. Vialet himself failed to identify by name any cases other than Sy, Diallo, and Diallo, despite having ample opportunity to do so, and, in any event, the inclusion of additional case names in the Committee’s description of mitigating factors would not alter the result.

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Related

In re Vialet
120 A.D.3d 91 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2014)
In re Fisher
908 F. Supp. 2d 468 (S.D. New York, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
460 F. App'x 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-vialet-ca2-2012.