In the Reinstatement Matter Involving Wiederholt

295 P.3d 396, 2013 WL 655117, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 17
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 2013
Docket6753 S-14690
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 295 P.3d 396 (In the Reinstatement Matter Involving Wiederholt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Reinstatement Matter Involving Wiederholt, 295 P.3d 396, 2013 WL 655117, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 17 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

STOWERS, Justice.

J.

Disbarred attorney Jon E. Wiederholt petitions for reinstatement to the practice of law in Alaska. Wiederholt was disbarred from the practice of law by Order of the Alaska Supreme Court of July 8, 1994. The factual basis and cireumstances leading to the disbarment are set forth in detail in In the Disciplinary Matter Involving Wiederholt, 877 P.2d 765 (Alaska 1994) (Wiederholt I). 1

Wiederholt has petitioned for reinstatement on four previous occasions. 2 Three of *398 his petitions were denied because either the Alaska Bar Association Area Hearing Committees considering his petitions or the Alaska Bar Association Board of Governors sitting as the Disciplinary Board reviewing his petitions recommended to the supreme court that he not be reinstated, and we agreed with those recommendations. 3 (His third petition was dismissed on procedural grounds. 4 )

Following his most recent petition, the Disciplinary Board adopted on October 26, 2012 the findings, conclusion, and recommendation of the Area Hearing Committee that Wieder-holt be reinstated to the practice of law. 5 The Committee's recommendation was unanimous, and contained no proposed conditions on reinstatement. 6 The Board agreed to reinstate Wiederholt, but a majority of the Board added a recommendation that the supreme court impose two conditions on Wied-erholt's reinstatement:

[Flor three years following reinstatement, there be some oversight in which Wiederholt has a professional mentor who is required to report to the Bar Association any areas of concern, and ...
Wiederholt disclose to future clients the fact of his prior disbarment and the basis for his disbarment. [7]

Wiederholt filed a Motion for Clarification, objecting to the conditions requested by the Board's majority. Wiederholt accepts that a reasonable period of mentoring may be required, but objects to the three-year term: He proposes a one-year term. He argues that more than a one-year period of mentoring crosses the threshold from being rehabilitative to being punitive. Wiederholt also objects to the condition of disclosure of his disbarment to future clients. He argues that requiring disclosure of his disbarment goes beyond any concern for protecting the public to being punitive. He also argues that the Board's requested conditions are inconsistent with the Committee's unanimous recommendation, the conditions were not ordered by this court when he was initially disbarred, and they weren't previously requested by the Bar.

The Board filed a Response arguing that it is ultimately a matter of this court's discretion what terms and conditions, if any, should be imposed in conjunction with the reinstatement of an attorney and that all the Board did was make two suggestions for the court's consideration.

We have independently examined the ree-ord and in the exercise of our independent judgment we agree with the Area Hearing Committee and the Disciplinary Board that Wiederholt has satisfied the high and rigorous standards necessary to be reinstated, and we grant his petition. We agree with the Board's recommendation that a three-year period of mentoring be required. We disagree that its proposed requirement of disclosure is appropriate.

IL.

Wiederholt's first petition for reinstatement was the first time that a disbarred *399 attorney had ever petitioned this court for reinstatement, and we set forth a comprehensive explanation of the standards to be applied in reinstatement proceedings:

With regard to the review of the Disciplinary Board's findings of fact, we view reinstatement as part of attorney discipline. We therefore employ the same standard used in reviewing attorney discipline proceedings:
Though this court has the authority, if not the obligation, to independently review the entire record in disciplinary proceedings, findings of fact made by the Board are nonetheless entitled to great weight. The deference owed to such findings derives from the responsibility to conduct disciplinary proceedings which this court has delegated to the Bar Association. Where findings of fact entered by the Board are challenged on appeal to this court, ... the respondent attorney bears the burden of proof in demonstrating that such findings are erroneous.... As a general rule ... we ordinarily will not disturb findings of fact made upon - conflicting - evidence.... [8]

We further explained that "[alecording to the American Bar Association (ABA), because the purpose of lawyer discipline is not punishment, disbarred attorneys may be readmitted to practice. Nevertheless, the ABA believes that the presumption should be against readmission." 9 We agreed with this presumption because "[the purpose behind the presumption is protection of the public. This reflects the purpose of the disciplinary process: to protect the public, not to punish the lawyer." 10 We also looked to ABA standards for reinstatement, noting that "the ABA recommends that a lawyer seeking readmission 'show by clear and convincing evidence' the following: 'rehabilita tion, compliance with all applicable discipline or disability orders or rules, and fitness to practice law.'" 11 Observing that "most jurisdictions impose very high standards on those petitioning for reinstatement," we explained:

The major consideration in reinstatement proceedings is whether the disbarred attorney has shown that those weaknesses that produced the earlier misconduct have been corrected. Therefore, courts often consider remorse, rehabilitation, and moral fitness to practice law to be key elements in the inquiry. Because a petitioner for reinstatement must demonstrate moral fitness and good character sufficient to be trusted again, the petitioner must make a showing of these characteristics that "overcome[s] the court's former adverse judgment" on the petitioner's character. [12]

We determined that "clear and convincing evidence" is the proper standard for Bar Rule 29 criteria for reinstatement, 13 and that Rule 29 requires the petitioner seeking reinstatement to prove two things: (1) that he has the moral qualifications, competency, and knowledge of the law requisite to the practice of law; and (2) that his reinstatement will not be detrimental to the Bar, the administration of justice, or the public interest. 14

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Bluebook (online)
295 P.3d 396, 2013 WL 655117, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-reinstatement-matter-involving-wiederholt-alaska-2013.