In the Matter of Hillman James Toombs

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 19, 2026
DocketS26Y0212
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of Hillman James Toombs (In the Matter of Hillman James Toombs) 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 Hillman James Toombs, (Ga. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia No. S26Y0212

In the Matter of Hillman James Toombs

Decided: May 19, 2026

PER CURIAM. This disciplinary matter is before the Court on the report and recommendation of the State Disciplinary Review Board (“Review Board”), which reviewed the report and recommenda- tion of Special Master Adam M. Hames at the request of Hillman James Toombs (State Bar No. 714655), pursuant to Bar Rules 4- 214, 4-215, and 4-216. The Special Master concluded that Toombs, who has been a member of the Bar since 1988, violated Rules 1.4(a)(2), (a)(3), and (b); 8.1(a); and 8.4(a)(4) of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct found in Bar Rule 4-102(d), for which the Special Master recommended disbarment. The maxi- mum penalty for a violation of Rule 1.4 is public reprimand, while the maximum penalty for a violation of Rules 8.1(a) and 8.4(a)(4) is disbarment. The Review Board adopted the Special Master’s findings of fact and conclusions of law but recommended that Toombs receive a two-year suspension. The State Bar and Toombs have both filed exceptions to the Review Board’s report. After our careful review of the record, we agree with the Review Board and conclude that a two-year suspension is appropriate, as more fully discussed below.

1. Procedural History In December 2023, the State Bar filed a formal complaint against Toombs, alleging violations of multiple Bar Rules. A Spe- cial Master was then appointed and after acknowledging service, Toombs filed his answer. Following an evidentiary hearing, the State Bar and Toombs filed post-hearing briefs, and the Special Master then issued his report and recommendation.

2. Special Master’s Report and Recommendation

(a) Factual Findings Based on the State Bar’s formal complaint, Toombs’s an- swer, the evidentiary hearing, and the post-hearing briefs, the Special Master recounted the following. In December 2021, Toombs agreed to represent a client in a divorce case, taking over the matter for another attorney, and the client paid a fee of $6,500 in installments for the representation. As for scope of work, the agreement provided that the legal work included “all necessary court appearances, research, investigation, correspondence, prep- aration and drafting of pleadings and other legal documents, trial preparation and related work to properly represent [the client].” The client met with Toombs twice before trial, and Toombs told the client that the judge likely would have each party pay their own attorney fees. The client wanted the divorce to go to trial, and Toombs was able to accomplish that goal. Following trial in Feb- ruary 2022, the client was happy with the outcome of the final judgment and decree of divorce, as he was primarily concerned with obtaining custody of his daughter, which he received. The final judgment entered in March 2022 also provided that the parties could submit a request for attorney fees. The deadline for submission was March 15, 2022, but Toombs believed that the deadline for submitting this request was March 16, 2022. When the client inquired about the letter brief requesting the at- torney fees, Toombs told him that he still had time, and the client

2 testified that Toombs did not tell him he filed the letter brief a day late. Toombs’s paralegal attempted to email the letter brief to opposing counsel and the court. Toombs believed that the letter brief was properly submitted to the trial court (as opposing coun- sel had responded to the email containing his letter brief). But Toombs’s paralegal included the wrong email address for a court staff member, although she did not realize it at the time because she did not get a bounce-back notification. It was not until the paralegal saw an order awarding attorney fees to the client’s ex- wife that she realized that the letter brief was never sent to the court, and Toombs purportedly did not understand this until he was deposed in this disciplinary matter years later. However, Toombs acknowledged that he was ultimately responsible for where his paralegal sent the letter brief. The order for attorney fees issued on June 29, 2022, stating that only the client’s ex-wife submitted a letter brief requesting fees. The June 29 order awarded opposing counsel $14,900 to be paid by Toombs’s client within 60 days of the date of the order. The order also required the parties to split the cost of the guard- ian ad litem’s bill for an additional $1,045. When the client received a copy of the order, he texted Toombs, who told him that he would look at the order when he got back from vacation. Toombs later texted the client: “I am back; will call you before the weekend.” However, Toombs did not call him before the weekend or otherwise return his calls. The client went to Toombs’s office, and Toombs avoided speaking with him. During the next 30 days, Toombs did not do anything about the award of attorney fees. At the hearing in this matter, Toombs ex- plained that he interpreted the order awarding attorney fees to be based upon the conduct of the client’s previous attorneys in

3 this case, as Toombs himself had represented the client in his di- vorce proceeding for only three months. Nevertheless, at some point the client and Toombs dis- cussed a motion for reconsideration (“MFR”), which was prepared by Toombs and verified by the client on August 19, 2022. Toombs’s paralegal claimed that she attempted to e-file the MFR but then discovered later by inquiry that it was not filed. It was not until June 2023 — almost a year later — that Toombs and his paralegal attempted to re-file the MFR and received notice that because it had been more than 30 days after the order awarding attorney fees had issued, a new action would have to be filed. Toombs filed the MFR as a new civil action in June 2023, but he failed to file a complaint and never served the defendant (the client’s former wife) because he did not have a current address for her, so the action was dismissed for want of prosecution. The MFR was even- tually filed in the original case in December 2023 — over a year after the client filed his grievance in this matter and after Toombs believed he had been fired. Toombs claimed that he submitted the December 2023 MFR to protect the client’s interests. Toombs’s paralegal stated that it took so long to file it because the practice was having com- puter issues that obscured the fact that the MFR was not properly e-filed in August 2022. The Special Master concluded the parale- gal’s testimony was “unlikely and implausible.” The Special Mas- ter found that if there was any question of whether the MFR was filed or not, a simple check of the docket would have confirmed this. The client testified that the award of attorney fees was dif- ficult for him financially. At the evidentiary hearing, Toombs took responsibility for the trial court having awarded attorney fees without the trial court first hearing from the client. The Special

4 Master also found that the client was a combat veteran, disabled, and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”), anx- iety, and panic attacks, and Toombs was aware that the client was on a fixed income for disability.

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