In the Matter of David J. Farnham

860 S.E.2d 547, 312 Ga. 65
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 21, 2021
DocketS21Y0597
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 860 S.E.2d 547 (In the Matter of David J. Farnham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of David J. Farnham, 860 S.E.2d 547, 312 Ga. 65 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

312 Ga. 65 FINAL COPY

S21Y0597. IN THE MATTER OF DAVID J. FARNHAM.

PER CURIAM.

The State Bar initiated this disciplinary matter in 2019 with

the filing of a Formal Complaint, charging respondent David

Farnham (State Bar No. 255410),1 with numerous disbarable

violations of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct, see Bar Rule

4-102 (d), stemming from two grievances. Without holding a

hearing, the Special Master, LaVonda R. DeWitt, granted the State

Bar’s motion to strike Farnham’s answer and discovery responses as

a discovery sanction and thereafter issued a Final Report and

Recommendation, recommending that the Court disbar Farnham.

The Review Board, following briefing and oral argument,

recommended that this Court remand the matter to the Special

1 Farnham was admitted to the Bar in 1986 and previously received

disciplinary sanctions in the form of a public reprimand, a letter of admonition, and two investigative panel reprimands. See In the Matter of Farnham, 300 Ga. 645, 647 (797 SE2d 84) (2017). Master for the completion of discovery and consideration of the case

on the merits. We agree that a remand to the Special Master is

appropriate, but for the more limited purpose of a hearing on the

motion to strike.

The relevant procedural history is undisputed. The Bar mailed

the Formal Complaint to Farnham on April 12, 2019, and on June

14, he filed an acknowledgment of service, which was dated May 22.

Farnham filed his answer on June 25, after obtaining an extension

of time; in his answer, he denied any wrongdoing.

On August 5, the State Bar e-mailed Farnham and requested

that he provide dates on which he would be available for a deposition

over the next 45 days. Farnham’s assistant replied on August 7,

stating that Farnham had become very ill during the last week of

July; that Farnham’s doctor had recommended several treatments

that would prohibit his return to work until September; and that she

would be unable to schedule anything until there were further

updates on his health. On August 12, the State Bar sent another e-

mail requesting dates in September that Farnham would be

2 available for a deposition and asking Farnham to file a medical leave

of absence. One of Farnham’s employees promptly e-mailed the

State Bar an “Emergency Medical Leave of Absence” that included

a statement from a doctor indicating that Farnham had been in his

care since July 29 and would be able to return to work on August 26.

In response, the State Bar stated that it was willing to delay the

proceedings until the following month and requested that Farnham

provide dates that he would be available for a deposition in

September. After receiving no reply, the State Bar e-mailed

Farnham on August 15, stating that it was prepared to notice the

deposition for a date not covered by the medical leave if he did not

provide responses by 10:00 a.m. the following day addressing

whether there were any court dates that would conflict with a

deposition and Farnham’s preference for a location. The next

morning, Farnham’s assistant replied that the best dates for

Farnham were September 25 or 26 and that he would come to the

State Bar’s headquarters. The State Bar then served Farnham with

discovery, including interrogatories and requests for admissions and

3 production of documents. Eventually, Farnham and the State Bar

agreed to set Farnham’s deposition for October 11 at the State Bar’s

headquarters, but then agreed to reschedule for October 15, and the

Bar noticed the deposition for that date.

Meanwhile, on September 8, the Special Master e-mailed the

parties to request a scheduling conference, and, after receiving no

response from Farnham, notified the parties on September 13 that

the conference would be held, by telephone, on September 19 at 4:00

p.m. Farnham responded on September 16, stating that his August

medical leave pushed his cases into September, making scheduling

difficult; and suggested September 20 as an alternate date for the

conference. The conference with the Special Master was held by

telephone on September 20, and during that conference, Farnham

requested that his deposition be rescheduled for November 5 and

that he be allowed an extension until October 28 to respond to the

State Bar’s outstanding discovery requests. With the State Bar’s

agreement to those requests, the Special Master issued a scheduling

order on September 23, giving Farnham until October 28 to respond

4 to the discovery requests and setting the deposition for November 5

at the State Bar’s headquarters. The State Bar also formally noticed

the deposition. On October 29, Farnham filed a “Rule 5.2

Certificate,” see Uniform Superior Court Rule 5.2 (2),2 stating that

he had served his discovery responses by mail on October 28.

However, the responses received by the State Bar were not verified

and did not include a response to the request for documents.

On November 4, at 5:58 p.m., the evening before his deposition,

Farnham e-mailed the State Bar, stating that he had been ill all

weekend and would not be able to appear for his deposition and that

the parties would need to modify the scheduling order to reschedule

it. He indicated that his doctor would reevaluate him the following

week and suggested that the parties reschedule for another date

2 Uniform Superior Court Rule 5.2 (2) provides: “A party serving Interrogatories, Requests for Production of Documents, Requests for Admission and Answers or responses thereto upon counsel, a party or a non- party shall file with the court a certificate indicating the pleading which was served, the date of service (or that the same has been delivered for service with the summons) and the persons served.” This Court has not addressed whether the Uniform Superior Court Rules apply in Bar disciplinary proceedings. See In the Matter of Levine, 303 Ga. 284, 285 n.1 (811 SE2d 349) (2018).

5 after November 15. The follow morning, Farnham provided to the

State Bar a doctor’s letter, which was dated November 4 and stated

that “it remains medically necessary that [Farnham] only work part

time for at least the next 2 weeks [and that he] cannot participate

in a jury trial for at least the next 2 weeks.” The State Bar

responded that it was not willing to suspend disciplinary

proceedings while Farnham continued to show up in court and

represent clients; that it intended to appear at the appointed time

and make a record; and that Farnham should present the Special

Master with any legally sufficient requests to reschedule. Farnham

responded with a lengthy e-mail, stating that he had been quite ill,

he intended to defend himself, and he had confidence that when all

the facts were examined, the situation would appear much

differently than as alleged in the Formal Complaint. Farnham did

not appear for his deposition and did not contact the Special Master.

The State Bar went forward with the deposition, made a record of

Farnham’s non-appearance, and offered various exhibits, including

the e-mail threads about his non-appearance. On November 6, the

6 State Bar e-mailed the Special Master about Farnham’s failure to

appear, and although Farnham was copied on the e-mail, he did not

respond.

On November 22, the State Bar filed its motion to strike

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