In the Matter of L. Nicole Brantley

855 S.E.2d 625, 311 Ga. 61
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 1, 2021
DocketS21Y0339
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 855 S.E.2d 625 (In the Matter of L. Nicole Brantley) 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 L. Nicole Brantley, 855 S.E.2d 625, 311 Ga. 61 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

311 Ga. 61 FINAL COPY

S21Y0339. IN THE MATTER OF L. NICOLE BRANTLEY.

PER CURIAM.

This disciplinary matter is before the Court on the report and

recommendation of Special Master Quentin Marlin recommending

that the Court accept the petition for voluntary discipline filed by L.

Nicole Brantley (State Bar No. 320909) and impose a Review Board

reprimand for Brantley’s failure to return unearned fees after being

discharged by a client, who then obtained a fee arbitration award

that Brantley failed to pay in a timely manner.1

Brantley was admitted to the Bar in 2002 and, as detailed

below, has a lengthy history of disciplinary sanctions. The record

here shows that Brantley was retained to represent a client in a

criminal matter and paid $6,000 in advance, but after the client

1 This Court issued an order on January 12, 2018, comprehensively amending Part IV of the Rules and Regulations for the Organization and Government of the State Bar of Georgia. The former rules govern this matter because it was commenced prior to July 1, 2018, but because the Review Panel has been renamed the State Disciplinary Review Board, this opinion refers only to the Review Board. discharged Brantley, Brantley failed to refund the balance of

unearned fees. The client filed a petition for fee arbitration with the

State Bar of Georgia, but after the arbitration panel issued a $4,000

award in the client’s favor, Brantley failed to pay the award. In July

2015, the client filed a grievance with the State Bar, and in April

2016, the State Bar filed a Formal Complaint.

In its complaint, the State Bar recited the following chronology.

After being retained in October 2013, Brantley was discharged by

the client, who was dissatisfied with Brantley’s lack of

communication and failure to follow his instructions in handling his

case. Brantley, however, never submitted a written request to

withdraw, in violation of Uniform Superior Court Rule 4.3, and

failed to appear at a February 2014 hearing in the case. In April

2014, after Brantley had failed to return the unearned portion of her

retainer, the client filed a fee arbitration petition, seeking a refund

of $4,000. Brantley submitted an answer, in which she agreed to be

bound by the fee arbitration award, but thereafter failed to appear

at the fee arbitration hearing. In March 2015, written notification

2 of the fee award was sent to Brantley, with direction that the award

be paid within 90 days. After the 90-day period elapsed, the client

filed his grievance. Though Brantley attested, in her sworn response

to the Notice of Investigation, that she had never received notice of

the fee arbitration hearing or award, none of the written

communications from the fee arbitration office, which were sent to

her at the return address she had listed in responding to the fee

arbitration petition, had ever been returned as undeliverable.

In the Formal Complaint, the Bar charged only a violation of

Rule 1.16 (d) of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct found in

Bar Rule 4-102 (d). Rule 1.16 (d) addresses a lawyer’s obligations

upon the termination of a representation; requires, in relevant part,

that a lawyer refund any advance fee payment that has not been

earned; and sets a maximum sanction for a violation as a public

reprimand. The complaint, however, also noted that Brantley had

been subject to discipline on multiple prior occasions and that,

accordingly, she could be subject to suspension or disbarment. See

3 Bar Rule 4-103 (third or subsequent infraction “shall, in and of itself,

constitute discretionary grounds for suspension or disbarment”).

In her unsworn answer to the Formal Complaint, filed in June

2016, Brantley denied that she was terminated by the client; denied

that she had failed to refund unearned fees; and claimed that she

had “never received any notice of any [fee] award until this

proceeding.” However, in August 2016, Brantley filed her petition

for voluntary discipline, admitting, unconditionally, that she had

been discharged by the client, had failed to refund the client’s

unearned fees, and, though she had agreed to be bound by the fee

arbitration panel’s decision, had not paid the fee arbitration award.

Brantley made no representations as to whether she had received

notice from the fee arbitration office regarding the hearing or the

subsequent fee award. She offered, as mitigation, to pay the $4,000

fee arbitration award in monthly installments of $500.

In its response, the State Bar stated its position that the

interests of the public and Bar would be best served by acceptance

of the petition, but only after Brantley submitted proof that she had

4 refunded the full $4,000 fee award. After Brantley submitted proof

to the State Bar that she had completed the installment payments,

the Special Master issued his report and recommendation.2

The Special Master determined that Brantley’s conduct

violated Rule 1.16 (d); that, while Brantley had repaid the fee award,

she had not done so in a timely manner, as she should have

completed the payments in March 2017; and that she had been

sanctioned in 11 prior disciplinary cases. Specifically, the Special

Master noted that Brantley had received an Investigative Panel

reprimand in 2006; two Formal Letters of Admonition in 2010;

another Investigative Panel reprimand in 2010; a third Formal

Letter of Admonition in 2014; and, in 2016, a 180-day suspension.

See In the Matter of Brantley, 299 Ga. 732 (791 SE2d 783) (2016)

2 On July 22, 2020, this Court entered an order appointing Marlin as

Special Master; the order also vacated the 2016 order that had appointed a prior Special Master. Marlin issued his report on September 20, 2020. His thorough and helpful report reflects that Brantley submitted her proof of final payment to the State Bar in July 2017. The record does not reflect why the State Bar allowed the matter to sit idle for three years.

5 (“Brantley I”).3 The Special Master then considered various

aggravating and mitigating factors as set forth in the ABA

Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions. See In the Matter of

Morse, 266 Ga. 652, 653 (470 SE2d 232) (1996). While opining that

Brantley’s “disciplinary history suggests a more serious

consequence,” the Special Master noted that the maximum penalty

under Rule 1.16 is a public reprimand. Further noting that

Brantley’s misconduct, the fee arbitration, and the client grievance

all occurred while Brantley was litigating the matters giving rise to

her 2016 suspension, the Special Master concluded that Brantley’s

request for a Review Board reprimand should be accepted.

While we are mindful that the maximum sanction for a

violation of Rule 1.16 is a public reprimand, we are unable to view

Brantley’s conduct here apart from the larger context in which this

violation was committed and the apparent initial lack of candor

Brantley has displayed in this proceeding. With regard to the

3 Brantley was reinstated in 2017. See In the Matter of Brantley, 301 Ga. 653 (802 SE2d 252) (2017).

6 context, we note, as the Special Master did, that in 2016 this Court

suspended Brantley for 180 days based on professional misconduct

occurring in five matters. As set forth in Brantley I, that misconduct

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