In the Matter of Sharon L. Barksdale

897 S.E.2d 415, 318 Ga. 150
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 17, 2024
DocketS24Y0016
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 897 S.E.2d 415 (In the Matter of Sharon L. Barksdale) 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 Sharon L. Barksdale, 897 S.E.2d 415, 318 Ga. 150 (Ga. 2024).

Opinion

318 Ga. 150 FINAL COPY

S24Y0016. IN THE MATTER OF SHARON L. BARKSDALE.

PER CURIAM.

This disciplinary matter is before the Court on Special Master

William T. Davis’s report and recommendation. The Special Master

recommends that this Court accept the Petition for Voluntary Discipline

filed by Sharon L. Barksdale (State Bar No. 037981) in response to the

Bar’s formal complaint, see Bar Rule 4-227 (c), and that we impose a

public reprimand for Barksdale’s admitted violations of Rules 1.3 and 1.4

of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct, found in Bar Rule 4-102

(d).1 We agree that a public reprimand is appropriate under the

circumstances of this case.

In response to the Bar’s formal complaint against her, Barksdale

filed a petition for voluntary discipline that was supported by the Bar.

The Special Master recounted that Barksdale admitted the following

facts in her petition.

1 The maximum sanction for a single violation of Rule 1.3 is disbarment,

while the maximum sanction for a single violation of Rule 1.4 is a public reprimand. A client retained Barksdale’s services to defend against a complaint

for modification of child custody and support filed by the child’s father.

During litigation, the superior court appointed a guardian ad litem. A

final hearing was held on July 22, 2019, during which the court heard

evidence of the father instigating unsubstantiated investigations by the

Georgia Division of Family and Children Services against the client,

starting a smear campaign against the client and her boyfriend with the

client’s employer, and behaving abusively toward the client in telephone

calls. The judge also spoke to the child privately in chambers. The court

found that there was no evidence of a material change in circumstances

to warrant a change in custody from the client to the father, and that the

client was adequately taking care of the child. The court then ordered

that the summer visitation schedule would be modified so that the client

would have the first three weeks and the final week, and the father would

have the four weeks in the middle; that the father would have visitation

over fall and spring breaks; that the father would pick the child up in

Georgia for visitation; and that the father would receive a $500 travel

deviation in his favor on the child support worksheet. The court directed

2 Barksdale to prepare a proposed order and show it to opposing counsel

before the court signed it.

Barksdale did not prepare the order as directed. In October 2019,

the court’s office e-mailed counsel for both parties, seeking an update on

the proposed order. Barksdale did not respond to the e-mail, but she later

called the court’s office to state that she was working on the order.

However, Barksdale did not tell the client that she had failed to prepare

and submit the order. The Special Master expressed concerns with

Barksdale’s “willful lack of communication with her client” and opined

that “[w]hile a lawyer’s discomfort in admitting a mistake to a client may

warrant stress in the lawyer, it is no excuse for not explaining the full

situation to the client.”

In March 2020, the father moved to modify the court’s oral order

from the July 2019 hearing. The father’s attorney sent service copies of

the motion and a notice of hearing to Barksdale at an incorrect address.

Thus, Barksdale never received service of the father’s motion to modify

or the notice of hearing. The court held the hearing on June 29, 2020.

Barksdale did not appear for the hearing or inform the client about it

because she was unaware that it had been scheduled.

3 The trial court issued an order on the father’s motion on July 6,

2020. In the order, the court noted that Barksdale had not submitted a

proposed order, parenting plan, or child support worksheet

memorializing the court’s ruling from the July 2019 hearing. The court’s

July 2020 order was less beneficial to the client’s interests than the July

2019 ruling had been, especially as to visitation. Among other things, the

July 2020 order granted visitation to the father for every Thanksgiving

and for the first half of Christmas Day, with the client receiving visitation

only on the afternoon of Christmas Day in Virginia, and alternating

visitation for spring, fall, and winter breaks. The order also directed that

the exchange of visitation would occur at the father’s residence in

Virginia.

Neither Barksdale nor the client was aware of the July 2020 order

until July 22, 2020, when the father told the client that the child would

not be returning to Georgia but would stay in Virginia to attend school.

The client then contacted Barksdale to ask what happened in the

modification action. Barksdale told the client that she needed to “sleep

on it” to determine how to resolve the issue. She did not file a motion for

new trial or a motion to set aside the July 2020 order. Up to this point,

4 Barksdale still had not told the client that she failed to submit the

proposed order in July 2019.

Barksdale admitted that she had no justifiable excuse for failing to

submit the proposed order after the July 2019 hearing. Instead, she

stated that it was because she was overwhelmed with other contested

domestic matters and was struggling to keep up with her cases.

The Special Master made a few additional observations about

Barksdale’s case. He observed that Barksdale did not blame any other

party for her actions; that she admitted that her inaction resulted in her

abandonment of the client’s matter; and that she was sincerely apologetic

to the client for the negative impact her inactions had on the outcome of

the case. The Special Master also noted that the client had retained

Barksdale through a pre-paid legal service provided by the client’s

employer, to which the client paid premiums toward legal representation,

and that the legal service paid the client’s attorney fees pursuant to a fee

arrangement between Barksdale and the legal service. The only legal fees

Barksdale received were $30 from the client for an office visit, and $1,500

for representing the client in the modification action, which was paid by

the legal service. The only expenses paid by the client were a $750

5 guardian ad litem fee and $326.35 for a copy of the client’s deposition

transcript.2

Applying the ABA Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions (“ABA

Standards”), the Special Master examined (1) the duty violated; (2) the

lawyer’s mental state; (3) the potential or actual injury caused by the

lawyer’s misconduct; and (4) the existence of aggravating or mitigating

factors. See In the Matter of Morse, 265 Ga. 353, 354 (2) (456 SE2d 52)

(1995). Barksdale admitted to violating Rule 1.33 by failing to promptly

prepare and present the proposed order, parenting plan, and child

support worksheet as directed by the court on July 22, 2019; failing to

communicate with the client about her delay in presenting the proposed

order to the court; and failing to collaterally attack the July 6, 2020 order

after receiving notice of the issues caused by the father’s counsel mailing

service copies to an incorrect address. Barksdale admitted to violating

2 Barksdale noted in her petition for voluntary discipline that she – not

the client — paid for the transcript.

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